The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 05, 1942, Image 1

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    ROT C Department May Obtain Signal Corps Unit
Administration Council
Approves Suggestion;
'Chance Good'—Ardery
Better than average possibili
ties that Penn State’s ROTC de
partment may tie expanded with
the addition of a Signal Corps
Unit next semester were revealed
( last night by Col. Edward D. Ar
>' dery, head of the department of
military science and tactics.
Colonel Ardery received a sug
• gestion from the War Department
. Saturday that the College investi
gate the chances of setting-up sig
' nal corps training. The Council of
• Administration approved the pro
posal at their meeting yesterday
morning. Colonel Ardery hais no
tified the War Department of this
action and expects to have defi- War made itself felt on the campus with the announcement that
nite word from them before the (g ee Editorial, Page 2) all students, men and women, including seniors, who are 18 years of
end of the week. . age or over must register for War Ration Books in the Armory to-
If the unit is established it Following up their visit to the morrow and Thursday,
would affect students in the campus last week, Army Air All persons whose last names begin with initials from Ato K,
electrical engineering and physics Corps-examiners will arrive here inclusive, are scheduled to register anytime from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.
S f, y -’ W 1 a. 3 S , tomorrow morning to conduct tomorrow, and those with last name initials from Lto Z, inclusive,
' engineering mptmmlZv C examinations for students apply- from 9a.m.t05 p. m. Thursday. Matriculation cards must blfe pre
engineering, meteorology, alnd ing for enlistment in the Air J , , . . ,
geophysifcs also being trained in Corps Enlisted Reserve Prof ! sented at registi ation.
this division. - Robert E. Galbraith, faculty ad- tollemail Candidates fVI A!t 9 h ° Ugh onl y the first four of
Colonel Ardery stated that the visor announced last night. lUllCgiflll lallUIUCIIC) the 28 numbered stamps, which
proposed unit would begin train- ... .. j |> w__i will be tncluded in each book, are
ing present freshmen in those , 'Professor Galbraith stated that |q Meet IOIHOITOW for sugar, the War Ration Book
courses when the Summer semes- ke wouk * be m hls office, 248 , may later be used for some other
cuLuses wneii uie summer semes- ,q na ii-ks Building all dav todav to Freshman men candidates for , , ,
ter begins Mav 18 Under a enn- ■ a P alKb r»uuaing, an aay tuuay tu product which may have to be
iB - unclel a coa answer any questions students . the editorial and business staffs ; n , , . ti th
certed program they would be mak : ne application might have . _ of The Daily Collegian must at- ’ , . f ~
credited with a two-vear basic maKlr *g application migiu nave ASSIGNS RATION BOOKS —Ed- , , „ • person may need stamps for those
, rfu concerning their applications or warH K xr ih , htT , an -, p „ rptarv nf tend a compulsory nrteeting in £ . •
Signal Corps course at the • con- w+ ers 0 f recommendation ~ .. ‘. . .’. , y . Room 7, Carnegie Hall, at 7:30 b ‘ ~ .
elusion of their sophomore year. letters 01 recommendation. the Alumni Association, who is in tomorrow Gordon Cov ed Edward K. Hibshman, -Alumni
Freshmen entering June 8, tak- H e said that 220 students had charge of registration for War ‘ f D ’ rnll p Siar ; ’ an Association secretary, who is in
ing the Signal Corps course, would taken application blanks and that Ration Books in the Armory. Stu- ■ d veste rdav ’ charge of the registration, em
iform the first full-fledged class in ke ex P ecte d nearly 200 to return dents A.-K will register tomorrow J y ' phasized the necessity for the stu
•this unit. As yet there are no in- tbe * r papers in order, ready for while those L-Z sign, up Thursday. Phns for the Summer semester, dent to keep his book safely, since
dications that enrolling in the examination by Wednesday. The : concerning new frosh beats and the war ration books may be used
Signal Corps will be compulsory P a P ers are to be taken to the ex- the subscription campaign, will only by or for the person named
for students in any of these aminin g r 00 ? 11 when students go flgljfc |AllOflO i? e f xplame d b y members ot the and described in the book, and it
: courses. It will be, up to both the there for their tests. v #l€llv vUllvljv ' Senior Board, he added. j s difficult to obtain another from
students and the ROTC depart- 'The room in which the tests . : the local Ration Board which is
-i■ ■ i'lMi sbes lhe b ? oks - For future refer :
v’Kdents. will be:enrolled. 305 Old MaihT ; Prdfessor : GalbraiW rS OlOJtf'"1“BVlW2’«r '■ " Hf lilgf'ff Wllff ence, the student should make
.(Continued on Page Two) ' . „ . .
morning. fic problemS) residents of State Hllp-Arf PI3V Tltlfi bo^ 011 B ° ar<l
Required for eligibility to take College still favor the retention of "t! « I Illv as indicated in his book
examinations are a birth certifi- the parking meters. . „ , , „ A P ei ® on 1S entitled to a War
cate, three letters of reebmmenda- The foregoing fact was revealed . 1 iam ann lg C °° ’ ‘ ar ’ Ration Book despite the fact that
tion, and regulation application in a special survey conducted by risburg, walked away with the he may eat all his meals at a
forms filled out in triplicate. As Prof. L. P. Guest, instructor in best play award for the second' restaurant, boarding house, or
many students as desire and have education and psychology at the consecutive year in the division of siarular Place, and has no present
papers in order will be examined. College, as reported to borough dramatics’ seventh annual high lntan h° n °f bu ymg any sugar.
The 'board will remain as long iis council last night. school one-act play tournament Students a,t the College who
necessary. The survey was carried out at held on campus the past weekend. residents of State College,
Professor Galbraith stressed lhe request of council as a result Directed by Joseph F. Reuwer,
the need for students to have all a petition favoring the reduc- further honors went to the cast of h inpinHpH in then- w Q i rlmii
their required papers ready when tion in nu hiber of the local park- “Smokescreen” when Portman . . .. Th y
they apply for examination to ln S meters, recently presented by Page t received the best actor l ! nl . t eg t , T f a^ mory
io, or . h,.board, H. .»»d - G.oon A 2^l^
doubt about a the°re e quTrement a s S see As in only able Lentiom' r6SS ’ The
P er cent of people interviewed . 0 „ -u-i* *u i (Coniinuea on Page Two)
him sometime today. actually favored the abolition of M S f a ™ e , Howe ’ phll ‘Pshurgh
Capt. Carl R. Russell, United the parking mete rs, whereas 41 Hlgh S t chook won the judge s de-
States Army Air Corps, who was per cent signified that they want- f S10 " tor tbe outstanding acti-ess
here to explain .the plan to stu- e d the meters retained. Sixteen f° r her ™- e . a f, tka ” otl l er m
dents at the mass meeting last per cent expressed no preference Geoigie-Poigie. The best play
week will head' the examining and 8 oer cent professed no kno\yl- was awaided a plaque, and the in
board. edge of the question. dividual stars were given yearly
subscriptions to “Theatre Arts
Monthly.”
Leyden Crowned King
Of The Hof Dogs
“King Hot Dog of the Class of
1942” was the title bestowed on
James A. Leyden at the senior hot
dog roast Sunday afternoon. He
was crowned with a ring of ba
loney as the “smoothest man
about-town in the senior class.”
Winners of the two-dollar cash
awards for the best Lion Coats
were William F. Collins and Ar
lene K. v Smith.
Students Support
Speed-up Program.
In U. S. Colleges
- By Associated Collegiate Press
Almost half the high school stu
dents in the United States favor
an eccelerated college program
■that will enable them to complete
their educations more quickly, as
called for by present emergency.
This was revealed today when
results of a survey conducted by
Northwestern University among
9,354 high school students
throughout the country were an
nounced.
Forty-eight per cent of the stu
dents queried said they preferred
one of three types of accelerated
programs to the traditional four
year course with annual summer
vacations. Percentages ranged
from 35 per cent on Chicago’s
North Shore to 54 per cent in the
western states.
Fifty per cent of the men and 45
per cent of the girls favored accel
eration, but indications were that
many men voted against speed-ups
because they must work during
Summer vacations.
Most popular of three suggest
ed faster programs was one call
ing for three regular years and
two Summer quarters, averaging
16 or 17 hours, with graduation
coming in June of the third year.
This was selected by 20.6 per cent
of those voting, or 43.5 per cent
of those favoring acceleration.
(Uk iatlg 0 mitmn M
VOL. 38—No. 144
Students To Get Ration Books
Air Corps Board
To Start Tests
Players Bring- Back Murder Comedy
- two more students as recipients
Annual l r\rv%i*%r> *%*•**!*%, D|. of honorable mention awards. Mit- National League
A\S /annual V-Ommcnccment rlay zi Archer, State College High Chicago 6, Great Lakes T.S. 3
Murder will again hit the campus and “The Taming of the Shrew.” School and Richard Langdon, Cincinnati 15, New York 4
this weekend when the * Penn Recent stars of the Mother’s Huntingdon High School, were Pittsburgh 2, Boston 1
State Players revive as their ah- Day show, “The Beautiful Peo- granted these. WASHINGTON Fiscal offi
nual Commencement play, the pie,” Bob Herrman ’44 and James Under the supervision of Frank cials disclosed today that the
corpses in "Mr. and Mrs. North,” Ambandos ’43 play the respective S.' Neusbaum, assistant professor United States already has paid out
which they murdered way back parts of Detective Wiegand and of dramatics, the seven high in cash for this war as much as it
on March 20 and 21,.in their first his assistant, Mullins, who “knock schools entered presented a varied spent during World War I.
presentation 'of the hilarious themselves out” trying to unravel program of one-act plays. The beri IN P ni-ii
crime comedy. the mystery of who killed who judges were Raymond W. Tyson, and submarines have sl ,n k a To!-
Students who witnessed the and why. mstructoi of public speaking, nnn . R ,. m „ h A ’
“whodunit” thriller axe urged not Other members of the large John Miller, graduate in drama- f . 0 Th = „
to divulge the name of the mur- cast who participate in the mur- tics and Mason Whitmore, Yale ing a convoy w hi c h was bound for
derer, one of seven suspects, in der comedy and confuse the police University. Russia. The Germans also claim
the plot revolving aiound a are Buono, Jerry Haimsohn 42; to have damaged an aircraft car-
Greenwich Village writer and his Claire Brent, Jean Hershberger pfjTf hpnncifC Availahlp Her and several destroyers in the
hair-tlrained wife. ’43; Louis Berex, Scotty Keck '42; HVulluUlC attack. There has been no con
• Played by Don Taylor ’42 and Jane Wilson, Jorjine Palmer" 43; *1 D, ircar .' c Thnrc/Jaw firmation of this action from Al-
Sis Herrman ’42, the title roles Ben Wilson, Bill Reimer’4s; Clin- “* DUIJUi J lIIUIMIdy lied sources,
offer these stars of previous ton Edwards, Sol Jat'fe ’42. ,i Dr , Tr , ... , ~ , .... „„„ „, ,
Players’ shows their last oppor- Cooper, Harold Chidnoff ’45; avaSe aTS'offte°of^ S 1 „ be WASHINGTON - The State
A/r v, i r. . t >./ available at the office or the bur- Department has just announced
°f A ' Mrs. Brooks, Doris Lav.ne ’44; sar beginning Thursday,” it was the occupation of the island of
stage of Schwab Auditonum. Mi. Biooks, Leon Flook 43, Ti- announced yesterday by Bursar Madagascar by British troops.
Tayior and Herrman have appear- mothy Barnes, Milton Dolinger Russell E, Clark. This has not been confirmed in
ed as leads togethei in last yeai s 44, Medical Exammgr, Bill Bay- Towel and lock deposits may be London. . The State Department
The Streets ot New York, and er 44; Fuller Brush Man, Harold collected by students, who have said that the Allies would keep
Goodbye Again. This year they Raab 42, and Inspector OMalley, turned in their equipment, any Madagascar in trust for France
have been in “The Male Animal,” Hugh Ridall ’45. time during the week. until after the war.
OF,THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE
TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 5, STATE COLLEGE, PA
Men, Women A-K To Register 9-5
Tomorrow, L-Z Thursday, In Armory
PRICE THREE CENTS
Late News
BASEBALL SCORES
American League
New York 6, Chicago 1
Detroit 6, Athletics 4
Boston 11, Cleveland 8
Washington, St. Louis—Rain
Weather