'PAGE FOUR Sororities Will Launch Intensive Rushing Campaign At Noon Custom Forum Seeks Faculty, Student Opinions The gentlemen who used Col legian’s letters column to call each other names will get to gether in a panel forum tomor row night. Bernard A. Setlow ’43 whose letter called freshman customs “a stupid practice” and Morton A. Rosenfeld ’44 who claimed Set low “undermined all the disci pline upperclassmen have at tempted to instill in freshmen,” will have their cases aired in a PSCA round table in Room 121, Liberal Arts at 7:30 p.m. tomor row. Opinions from representative students will also be heard from W. Lewis Corbin ’4l, Tribunal chairman, Robert D. Baird ’42, William E. Harkins ’42, PSCA Forum chairman, Raymond' F. Leffler ’42, Tribunal, Jeanne C. Stiles ’42, WSGA Judicial, Walter Gerson ’44, Dudley A. Snyder ’44, and Phyllis R. Watkins ’44. Faculty reactions will be ex pressed by Harold P. Zelko, in structor in speech, chairman; William J. Gaskill, instructor in English composition, and Dr. George E. Simpson, professor of sociology. Under debate will be questions •considering present men and women’s freshman customs, so cial implications of freshman customs, and how they are prac ticed at other schools. The panel will also consider campus political leaders’ ideas, opinions of high scholarship stu dents about freshman customs, the possibility of making customs optional to each freshman class, methods of enforcing customs, whether customs help freshmen and upperclassmen, and whether customs could be effective with no enforcement agency. Following the round table, the floor will be opened for audience participation. Questions, com ments, and argument may be directed at panel members. Head The Collegian Classifieds WILL YOU BE MY VALENTINE ? The Easiest Way To Say This Is To Ask Him To The W. R. A. Dance The First Chance This Year For A Girl- To Show The Boy A Good Time. February 13, 1941 White Halt $l.OO Per Couple We, The Women— She Has 12 Friends From Which To Choose Patty Atkins has just moved into the strange new town of Panhellenicville. She has met many people whom she likes and who like her, but there are 12 girls who have especially at tracted her attention. Among these 12 there are two or three who live in fine houses with beautiful furniture and car pets. Patty likes to sit in their soft chairs and talk amidst these pleasant surroundings. Several of the others have in vited her to teas and luncheons and she has been impressed by the delicious food and pretty dishes which they serve. One of the girls has a shiny new car which Patty loves to ride in sometimes, but she has two other friends who .take her horseback riding and on long hikes on foot. She enjoys them, too. She double dates with one of the girls and has had no end of' fun when they all go to the mov ies or dancing. The two remaining girls are in all her high school classes; ‘she worked on the school. play with one and the other helps her with her homework when ever she gets stuck. These 13 friends are planning to go to college next year and each one of the 12 has asked Patty to be her roommate for their four years away at school. She must decide in two weeks and choose one, or she may tell them she prefers a single room and refuse them all. Her mother has. advised her to think it over very carefully be fore expressing herself, and to weigh the pros and cons of each one as her decision will affect her whole college life. Although a single room will be cheaper for her family, they have told her that she may pick a room mate if she is sure she will be satisfied. She has been counseled and recounseled. She has been given two weeks in which to make up her mind, and she is on her own from here. A.M.M. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Parties, Dating Feature 10 Days Sororities will launch a 10-day intensive rushing program this noon after a strict silent period of almost two and a half weeks. Five informal parties by each' house plus seven and a half days •of free association when sorori ties may entertain rushees at their houses and rooms, in eating places, at movies, and sports events will feature the cam paign. Invitations for this week’s round of parties are due at Stu dent Union this morning and will be issued through the Pan hellenic Post Office this after noon. Panhellenic members will distribute them to campus dor mitories, but town women will be asked to call at Student Union for theirs. Acceptances or refusals to all invitations should be made im mediately by telephone as a courtesy to sorority women who cannot complete final party plans without the number--of guests. Two strict silent periods will provide a breathing spell during the 10 days. The first begins at 5 p.m. Saturday and lasts until noon Monday and the second ex tends from 9 p.m. Thursday, Feb ruary 13, until 5 p.m. the follow •ing Saturday. All expenses entailed in en tertaining rushees in eating places or movies or for gasoline plus those for the five informal parties must not exceed the $2O; limit established in the Panhel lenic Rushing Code. Daily ex-' pense sheets must be submitted to Panhellenic Rushing Chair man Jean H. Krauser ’42 by each house. Visiting in freshman rooms is permitted and freshmen may be invited to sorority houses and suites at any time but they may not stay overnight. Have A Cold! Consult A Doctor So you have a. cold! Your head feels stuffy, your throat is raw, and ’still there seems to be nothing that you can do about it. If you should ask the first five people you meet in the street you would undoubtedly get five dif ferent “sure cures” for your cold, even' though it is well known that all medical science cannot prevent or cure a cold. If by increasing your resist ance by additional rest your cold is not cured in three or four days, and if you develop sym toms other than moderate dis comfort, malaise, and a freely running nose, see your, doctor at once, because your cold has now become complicated aind you have become a. good candidate for streptococcic sore throat, si nusitis, abscessed ears, mastoid itis, bronchitis, and pneumonia. Should you take a laxative for your cold? No, if your digestive tract is working at its usual well regulated capacity. Should you use nose drops? Allow your doctor to decide this question. Strong irritating nose drops or drops containing oil are often harmful. Oil drops may cause pneumonia, and many oth er kinds of drops have an ad verse effect on nature’s mechan ism for removing the infectious agents and may cause sinusitis or abscessed ears. Should you use greases? No, unless you wish to be malodor ous. If you badly need counter irritation, you badly need the services of a physician. Should you visit the free Col lege Health Service when you feel sick? Yes, if you are a col lege student who wishes to stay healthy and save money. • •Head .The.> Collegian.Classifieds' Rushing Schedule TODAY Noon. Invitations for informal parties must be at Student Union. Free association begins. TOMORROW AND FRIDAY Free association. SATURDAY 5 p.m. silent period begins. FEBRUARY 10 Noon. Invitations for informal parties must be at Student Union. Second week of free association begins. FEBRUARY 11-12 Free association. FEBRUARY 13 9 p.m. Silent period begins. In vitations for formal parties is sued. FEBRUARY 14 1-5 p.m. Reply to invitations. 5 p.m. Rushing chairmen re ceive replies. FEBRUARY 15 5 p.m. Silent period ends. 5:30-7 p.m. First formal party. 7:30-9 p. m. Second formal party. 9 p.m. Silent period begins, FEBRUARY 16 10 a.m. Rushees receive ballots. 3 p.m. Ballots must be return ed. 4 p.m. Rushees notified which houses have accepted their pre ferences. 4-6 p.m. Rushees report to their houses. Of the 149 women who pledg ed last year, 99 were freshmen, 41 sophomores, 8 juniors, and 1 a faculty member. “YOU CAN GET IT AT WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, '1941- Freshmen and Transfers Urged To Submit Grades Freshmen and transfers are urged by Panhellenic Council- to submit their semester • avera’ges to Miss Ruth H. Zang’s office".in McAllister Hall or to drop them in the box in the office of the dean of women as soon.as,.pos sible. Those averages which . have been turned in may be ob tained by sorority rushing chair men from Harriet .Singer ’4l, Panhellenic president, at. the meeting of the rushing commit tee in the third floor east lounge' of Atherton Hall at 10 a. m. to day. Robin Chirps Merrily Despite The Groundhog The old groundhog has a rival weather prophet in the Nittahy mountains. A robin was seen in the trees in front of Pond Lab yesterday chirping derisively upon the old fellow who saw his shadow Sunday and went back into the ground for six more weeks. Either the groundhog was see ing things Sunday or the robin is a little hasty this year. The of ficial weatherman refuses com ment. Read The Collegian Classifieds METZGERS"