iCita&ff)U-11, C%.,),opirete- l verhaul OtIM Scoring Is Proposed *4 4 Coed To -ra e Prize katir6s To State Show .W 4 th a tifth •place in the Penn ia • StateXarm Show inl-far 4riliurg last year and first prize in Hurlingdon Cunty round-up tt year, Dorothy M. Boring '44 will 'trot three of her four Elamp 44ffire lambs to the State Farm Show in Harrisburg the week of 4.4nuary 20 to vie for another hon or • IP , or--winning.. first prize for her 4,c n. in the Huntingdon show No wcinber. 23,• Miss Boring was per iirnltted to select the type of regis iered- rain. she wanted. Since her 41hirills -are Hampshire, •she chose .V.Tarupshire, • • -She 40tight the•lambs at the be ginning of 'this year and has been FO =lPllaNsliiike A picnic hike to the C.A. Cabin vihfch wtlt start from 304 Old ullyiain at 2 p.m. Saturday, and will continue until 8 p.m. Saturday, has C-en—planned by the Freshman I.llitnunr,-"Kathryn•R: Brong '44, so -.dal- chairman, announced today. • WE'RE BRINGMG •i -. IT. RAMC .. COMES THE NAVY' j Pail Ouliklien PECTURIZATION w . I4IGII4TY ADVIENTURE! -with.- Or:TIERNEY . a LAIRD CREGAR JOHN. SUTTON VIRGINIA FIELD. VINCENT PRICE N'IG:EL BRUCE . C. STILES By JEANNE fattening and. grooming them for shows since then. At the farm show in Harrisburg, buyers from meat companies and large hotels bargain for prize-winning mals. Before leaving for school, Miss Boring mixes rations suffiicent to feed the lambs until she can re turn home, and her sister and two brothers look, after them. An active member of the 4-H Club for 16 years, Miss Boring .will be ineligible to participate in 4-H Club activities next year since she will have passed the age limit, but "imagines someone in the family will continue the work she has begun." llEllitillllllllllllllllllWllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll No Late Permissions Granted For Panhel.. Ball No special permission has been granted by. WSGA Senate for the ' annual Panhellenic dance tomorrow night. Women students attending the dance will have regular one o'clock permissions, Senate an nounced. HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII/111111111111111111 Maids Match if ifh Pan-Hell Ball Brains and brawn will meet tux and tails tomorrow night at the Nittany Lion Inn when sorority Women treat their . dates to the maiden's match for IF, Panhellen-: ic's Annual Ball. 'Greek women are asking not, "Are you going?" but, "Whom are .you . taking?" " indicating that at least 250 couples will dance to the music of. Jimmy Leyden and his band from 9 to 12 p.m. Invitations have been extended to members of all campus sorori ties who are represented in Pan hellenic Council, stray Greeks or members of national sororities without chapters on this campus, 'an advisor from each sorority, and other guests. Names will be placed on a door list to' insure admission. Stray Greeks wishing to attend have been requested to submit their names to Leslie A. Lewis '4l, dance chairman, before noon today. Sororifies To Submit Dates for Formal Parties Schedtiles of dates on which each sorority• wishes to hold its five parties during formal rushing must be handed to Jean H. Krauser '42, Panhellenic Rushing Chair man, by Wednesday. it was decided at a Panhellenic Council meeting last night. Special permissiOn was granted for sorority women to visit their sisters living in McAllister Hall or Woman's Building. Sorority women rooming with transfers were asked to discourage their Greek sisters from visiting in their rooms to prevent viola tion of the rushing code. Limited association with its stip-. ulations of no planned parties, no specific dates except sports events, and no room Visiting ;will continue until Monday, January 20, the first day' of final examinatioris— .a strict silent period: during Anarweek,, The dining hall at Farmville, Va., State Teachers College uses 240 dozen eggs, 525 gallons of milk and 900 pounds Qf sugar a week. THE. DAILY COLLEGIAN We, The . Women Wanted! An Optimist A noted woman journalist has decried the pounding of ocracies and isms into college students, giv ing-as her reason the fact that the principles of life are being mud dled and obscured. She hit the nail on the head. In one breath is expounded the virtues of democracy and in an other the evils of democracy as a slow government and a govern ment unable to solve domestic problems. One man tells us to keep at all costs the freedom we have in‘Am erica while another explains that we are headed toward national bankruptcy and domestic chaos. In a few, years we will have compulsory military training for United States' youths says one per son. But there the anti-drafties speak up against this argument. We must help the warring de mocracies to save our own necks states a pro-Allyite, but the pa cifist argues that the Atlantic is wide enough to insure safety. They shout at us and whisper in our ears the blessings derived from democracy, naziism, fascism, communism, monarchism, paci fism, and the rest of the isms, ites, and ocracies. For each belief there is a count er argument. In the past year we have heard the older generathin say they refused to repeat what happened in 1918 proclaiming that each side loses no matter who is victorious. We have seen them about face and shout "It's different now." We have seen the difference and we fear for the future stabilitY of our lives. . Perhaps out of this mass of pro phesies, antis, and anti-anties there is an ism which our-generation can cling to. It isn't mentioned often these days but if we boost it we can accomplish more than the cur rent prophets have been able to with their political crystal balls. Perhaps a little more of this ism could tonic our generation which, after all, bears the burden of the outcome. Wanted! An optimist. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111' Women In Sports By HEP GORDON 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Junior mayors overwhelmed freshman majors 50-18 in a fast moving basketball game in White Hall last night, with V. Dorothy Radcliffe '42 tallying 30 points and Ethel M. Patton '42 converting 17. Helen F. Hooper '44 acounted for 12 of her team's points. Sophomore majors took the same team into camp the night be fore, 37-14, when Doris J. Laderer '43 rang up 14 points, and M. Pauline Rugh '43, 17. In the fresh man college squad's 38-12 victory over the sophomore six, Mary Lo bach '44 garnered 18 points, and Ruth H. Moore '43 sank all her team's baskets In bowling intramurals DG ek ed• out a 487-486 victory over TPA, and ZTA. turnea back Phi Mu 544- 445. Competition- over the ping pong tables resulted in an AOPi win from Chi 0, a Chi 0 triumph over DG, and a TPA shellacking over DG. all by 3-0 counts, while ZTA won 2-0 from Locust Lane on 'a default. Varsity Men, Managers_ - May Be - Cut From • = With a possi e.- .re ping the entire intrdniiiiil scoringy tern in the nearlatifficifie mural Board trienalf night cussion of forinulßting steps - -to:• - ; sound out studeriVeibiniWon suchk, a change. A questionnaire, asking frater-', nities-opinion on the mattey, will; be presented.' to :.In'tchlternity: Council at its meeting next, Wed.: nesday by Intramiiri - Director% Eugene C. Bischoff and. Charles L.. Albright '4l, chairinati - Of - the' . Board. Especially under fire at: the.: meeting last night, was the.rfortion:- of the system which graiirs pbints to groups for having:varSity let-: termen and manage•fs- in their Membership: Under the present system it is poisible for- atizorgan: ization, - with a high number of let termen, managers, and numeral -- winners, to take the; intramural: - trophy without winning a major-' ity of the IM,tournaments:' • If it is found that Orange desired by the fraternities, beim used as a sounding board for stu- - ; dent opinion, the Board : Will-talre; steps in devising a 'new. Scoring System, in a manner - satisfactory to the-majority Also discussed at • the meeting . was the erection of a score board • for IM sports which would show the standing . of-41 fraternitlii - .ln the trophy race for the year- Members attending the-Mitig were Charles L. Allartiglit= - '4l_. (chairman), H. Edward Wagner-'4l Elbur C. Purnell '4l, Jack W. 'Brand 241, Leo P. Russell,-Adam A. Smyser '4l, James A. Ritchie •,'4l, and E. C. Bischoff; College Begins Defense Program Although six Naval Reserve Of ficers have yet to arrive to com plete the quota- in the Diesel en gineering course, the College de fense program has made a com mendable start, according to Harry P. Hammond; dean of the Engineering School. / The quota of 30 in production engineering is complete and the arrival of Reserve Officers from Manila and Alaska will fill the va canies in the Diesel course. Norman R.. Sparks, associate professor of mechanical engineer ing, has been . called into active naval service !and will serve as lieutenant in charge of naval routine here at the College. - WASHINGTON, D.. C.— (ACP) --::The federal security agency has announced that 64 engineering colleges (Perin State among them) are prepared to offer 250 short training courses for national de fense jobs. The office of education esi-iThat ed that 25,000 students could be enrolled. Congress has appropri ated $9,000,000 to pay the tuition of the students elected for the courses. - Among schools approved are: Colorado State College of Agri culture and Mechanical Arts; Un iversity of Colorado, University of Denver, Bradley Polytechnic In stitute, Illinois' Institute of Teeli 'nology, Purdue University, Rose Polyteclinic Institute, University of Notre Dame lowa State College, Kansas State College, University of Kan sa-s, University of Louisville, Michigan College of Mining and Technology, University of Detroit, University of Michigan, Univer sity of Minnesota, University of Nevada. Newark College of Engineering, Rutgers University,. New MeXico College of Agricultural and Me chanical Arts, University of North Dakota. Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, Univer sity of Oklahoma, Case Schuol of Applied Science, University of Cincinnati. Bucknell University, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Drexel Institute of Technology, Grove City College, Pennsylvania State College, Southern Methodist Un iversity, Texas College of Arts and Industries, University of Texas. University of Utah, State Col lege of Washington, Marquette University, and the University of Wyoming. CLASSIFIED SECTION TYPEWRITERS—AII mak4s ex pertly repaired. Portable and office machines for sale or rent. Dial 2342. Harry F. Mann, 127 W. Beaver avenue. lyr-CRS-ch LOST—Wallet, Rec Hall, Friday, Dec. 20, contains valuable cards. $5.00 reward for return, no ques tions. Ed J. Maslow 4146.. 206 E. College. 3tpdl-9-41E FOR RENT—Room and board sec ond semester. Three men stu dents. Approved home. All con veniences. Fairmont Hall, 212 W. Fairmont. - 2tpdl-10,17-41E GLAMOROUS girls and gallant guys in a collegiate atmosphere with the.best bands in the-country playing tunes yitm can't hear on the radio. Drop in.4t. the Drydock•Sat urdaSr, Januarkf_lB. 3tchl4l-41E . :. ~....-lranted.... 1. Offered . . e- . . P.W. Every v k rgekehd to and from Phila. Leave pfione i number. Call Andy 4102.. - ._ _ THURSDAY,. JANUARY, 9i Class Financial Reports (Continued from Page Oinie) Figures in th,ifieihinan class re port reveal an income of $3,967.12: with . $3,225 coming' from class dues. In the total" freshmn caps netted $732.43. IVlajbi expen 7 ' ditures were: Blue ,Band $342 - .81, All-College Cabinet :and "TribUnal $151.75, and freshman caps $735.29. Total expenditures were $1;766.44. A final balance shows $2,200.68 - in the treasury, with $1,675 :.in _the LaVie savings fund. Fred Astaire, Tops in. Taps, and Whirling Dervish of :the Dance In His Latest. DANSATIONAL HIT Cathaum Theatre N° l " P'a?inf TALK OF THE TOWN- SALE - ; . : Our Stock Is Still. Prentitull;.' . To Choose From . :-' Formerly' $25 16:535 , FLORSHEIM SHOES Groups from $6.95 t9:35. $1.65 Tp :$2.110 - • Shirts now . sl;39s---: , $l.OO To $1:50 • • I Ties now:l9t.'s: opp-ositecning.iiia-,:suite:collego