PAGE FOUR Senate Sets `Hop' Hours :Freshman, as well as upperclass, women will be granted three eclock permission for Sop'h Hop, July 10, and a one o'clock for the 'allowing night, as a result of Ny';iGA Senate decision last night. These hours will be granted to ..fre':iiman women in addition to flieir regular two monthly one o'clocks, said Margaret K. Sher pion '43, WSGA president. Re- Inaining weekend permissions will be 11 o'clocks while week day cur ;Sew will ring at 10,p. m. !Following a lengthy discussion on the present system of WSGA Judicial committee appointments, f- - ;,Lnate decided last night that with the exception of the method of second appointment from the freshman class, there would be no .cl)ange. Senate decided that Judicial rembers should continue to serve for four years instead of the pro r-334.?•3 plan for annual appoint *lents. According to Marjorie L. : Sykes '43, Judiciaj Committee Chairman, experience insures ef f i ciency. "New members need at least a year's 'experience on the commit tee before they can • efficiently 4)andle cases," said Miss Sykes. Under the former setup the ,freshman elected sub-chairman of Freshman Council, automatically Yepresented her class on Judicial. A second member was appointed by Senate. To make the system more dem ocratic and to give the freshman class entering in the Fall represen tation, the second member will be elected in . the Fall. Jean B. Ogden '45 was appoint ed •by Senate to serve on PSCA Penn State in China committee. Mock' Incidents Test Blackout (Continued from Page One) in the test, with refrigerator gas escaping. Another incident to test the de fe..nse set up had a fire in the Pi -Kappa Alpha House, caused by another incendiary. Air Raid Warden Rutherford eported a test incident of an en cmy bomber down on the golf course, with the crew inside alive. Five minutes later,. Captain Den pis of the Campus Patrol reported 1.0 the control center in Old Main that the bomber had been "blown to thunder, the , crew all killed, and nothing but some gasoline floating on the water." Also on the campus, one post re ported in a test case that fire and nrnoke were seen pouring from the second floor . windows of the Wo men's Building. An incendiary Tomb was supposed to have hit the cast wing. The brooder house on west campus was also hit. When the siren sounded the all clear signal at two minutes after ten, street lights went on and traf- fie began to move as usual, but uearly all of the business places remained dark. No lights could be seen in any house windows, either. Start Planning For ARMY-NAVY RELIEF 'l\ I EEKEI uly Service Committee Calm. Coeds Carry On As Usual Will Plan Program During First All-Night Dimout For Summer Term Although midnight feasts began hit the northeast corner of the To plan a program for the re mainder of the Summer, PSCA Community Service Committee will meet in the Philotes Room in Old Main at 7 o'clock tonight. All coeds interested in participating in the committee's activities are urged by Rosalind M. Nelson '43, chairman, to attend the meeting. The committee functioned as a philanthropic organization last year. Weekly visits were made by several members to Laurelton State Village, institution for men tality deficient women. Physical education majors worked out progressive recreation programs, while other coeds in structed inmates in arts and crafts, led singing, and read. Directing recreation and sing ing, telling stories, and teaching elementary drawing were includ ed in the committee's program for Patton Township scho)ls which co eds visited twice a wq.ek. Halloween and Valentine par ties were given by the group for underprivileged children of Woodycrest, community for low income families This year, the committee is planning to sponsor a children's play camp on campus and to assist in directing playground recreation in town Rubber Drive Yields Heels The result of Tuesday's rubber salvage campaign was a truck load of 50 pounds of scrap rubber ranging from tires and old heels to two' discarded girdles. Twenty-five stop's were made in all, according to David H. Gold smith '43, salvage committee mem ber, who supervised the collecting. The truck, provided by the State College salvage committee, picked up the largest amount of rubber at the Phi Delta Theta house, one of the TFC units for the campaign. "Tires, old shoes, and old heels were the most common donations," said Mr. Goldsmith, "although we did manage 'to collect two rubber -girdles, one from the Alpha Chi Omega suite, Panhellenic head quarters for unit one." The rubber was taken to the Clark Motor Co. on Pugh street where it will be sold for a penny a-pound, proceeds of ,which swill be turned over to the Army-Navy Relief Fund. The campaign was conducted by $5 REWAERD for return of Wal the State College salvage corn- them wrist watch, .valued chief mittee with the cooperation of ly as a- Rotary award. Lost on All-College Cabinet. Campus campus. Thursday, June 11. Call leaders in chafge of the drive were at SU for reward. 2tch 23, 24 M. Seniors Pauline E. Keller, Pan hellenic president; Richard S. LOST—One Kay, imperative for next math bluebook. Liberal Kurtz, independent men's repre r sentative; M. Williams Lundelius, reward. Call Bob, 205 Watts Hall. ITC head; and Muriel I. Taylor, LOST—Wooden Barbier clarinet independent women's representa- Substantial reward , offered for tive. information leading to its recov- Students who still have rubber ery. Call David Skillman, 2610. to donate should contact the Clark ltpd 25 R. Motor Co. which will send a truck to collect it, stressed Mr. Gold- , WARNING—We warn you. You'll smith. be sorry if you don't enter in the big Alpha Fire Co. parade on the' Fourth of July. Call Byers, 2357. $3OO in prizes. 3I- ugust 1 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN at 9 p. m. coeds carried on as usual New Physics Building. despite the premature blackout. They explained that announce- Only noticeable change was that ment of mock events had been giv the usual clatter of typewriters, en to messengers in sealed en squeals of laughter, droning of velopes, to be opened at a specified vies and mutters from bull ses- time. sions were concentrated .in cen- A frosh messenger at Atherton tral rooms with darkened win- Hall reported that the most excit dows. ing event of his evening was Shortly after the last coed hur- watching a coed stumble down ,vied home to beat the 9 o'clock steps during the drill. A gradu a curfew, the siren, announcing the ate assistant said that she spent surprise "surprise" blackout, has- the half-hour working in the tern tened pedestrians to shelter. perature room in Frear Lab, while During the blackout, off-key the wife of a . College employee singing from down town apart- stood guard at the first aid station . ments added a convivial tone to in Burrowes Building. IMingling with the dimowt lonely streets. In several rest cials and campus patrolmen in offi aurants, there was conversation "as usual" over cokes. Old Main were three coeds who Officials at the Col.ege' control skipped the bull sessions and group singing to take an active station first t.oor, Oil Main, re- part in proceedings. ported that anti-air craft guns had Marion K. Powers '44 stood shot down an enemy plane on the guard at the , water tower. while golf course and that a bomb had Geraldine M.- Hackett '44 watch- We, She Women Look 'Em Over— Frosh Rushees Now is your chance, rushees, to look over each Greek group in its own little temple! After holding up under a week's barrage of incessant phone calls, confusing names, and never-end ing dates, you can now do the shopping. Every sorority on campus will throw open its doors for interest ed freshman and transfer coeds from 4 until 5:30 p. m. today. This is your opportunity to connect faces with pins and houses. If you have been rushed by more than one or two houses, budget your time in order to visit them all. Because of a small freshman class and an increased number of national sororities on campus, .competition is keen. Many houses are rushing the same coed, thus making the rushee's choice diffi cult. Open houses are designed to help make this decision. They were planned by Panhell enic. i Council to give freshmen a chance to meet sorority members as a group. Also, open houses are used by sororities as an instrument to measure rushees' interest. So, prospective Greek-lettered gals, show up at open houses this after noon. CLASSIFIED SECTION LOST—Slide rule in front of Old Main last Wednesday. Around one. Finder please return to Stu 'dent Union. lteomp S. Rides Wanted Reoistration RW----New York City. Leave Wed nesday night, Thursday or Fri- - (Continued from Page One) day. Return Sunday. Call Jack, or advanced ROTC, already sworn 4939. 3tcomp 23, 24, 25 0. in, will riot be required to regis- RW—But-ler or vicinity and re- ter. turn. Call Ressler, 492. Special care should be taken by RW (2)—York. Leave Friday at 4. registrants when listing their Return 'Sunday. Call Al, 2700. home address. This address de 2tcomp 25, 26 termines the local draft board to RW---Essex County, N. J., Leave which the respective registration Thursday or Friday p. m., July cards will be sent: 2. or 3. Return Sunday p. m. Call Reports. from the government '5051, Women's Building, second state that this new group of regis east. Ask for Florence. trants will be classified according 2tpd 25, 26 to ages rather than by a lottery. ed the front power plant. The only authorized police women in Centre County, both coeds, com pleted the College-sponsored aux iliary police 'training course last semester. They shared their distinction with Bernadette L. Kohler '44; the only woman assistant air raid war den in State College. Having had previous., experience at Haileton, Miss . Kohler was unabashed at ordering pedestrians to safety and stopping cars. Although an all-night dimout was a new experience for most co eds, to Ruth L. Littman '43, it was an old story. Miss Littman had lived through approximately 30 such - nights in Prague,. Czechoslo vakia. She said that the chief differ ence between this dimout and the European ones , was , the •:flying dis tance •from Berlin. • Frosh Coeds May Not Attend Folk Dancing In accordance with the WSGA ruling that freshman women may not date after 5:30 p. m. during the week, [Margaret K. Sherman '43, WSGA president, announced last night that freshman coeds may not attend the folk dancing scheduled for Rec Hall from 7 to 10 o'cloCk tonight. Miss Sherman emphasized• that the new coeds could not handle too many activities with their con centrated semester. --;:E. L. F "Upperclass women are urged to attend the affair which is open to all students and townspeople," stated Ann Drives '43, IVRA pres ident. 14 Sororities To Hold First Open Houses Four teen sororities will, hold Open houses from 4 to 5:30 this afternoon to break the three weeks silent period which began Tues day. • No personal invitations have been issued, and all freshmen and transfers are urged by Panhellen ic Council to attend as many open houses as possible, in order to be come better acquainted with sor ority women in each house. . Sororities are not peimitted to give away favors, as specified in Panhellenic rushing code. THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1942 Owls To Play For Honoraf3.7. To the hootings of George Wash ko's Campus Owls, coeds and guests will swing and sway at the annual Cwen dance in White Hall from 9 p. m. to midnight Sattu' l • day. "We urge freshman women to use their one o'clocks for our "ask your-man" dance," Mary Grace Longenecker '45, president of. Cwens, national sophomore worn- en's honorary, announced. ~ First semi-formal dance of the Summer semester, the dance will be set in a medieval ;background, according to Patricia Diener '45, 'decoration committee chairman. • Tickets, priced at $l.lO, will be sold by members in dormitory lobbies after lunch today and - ,in I MdAllister• Hall• lobby . Sattiiday noon. • In an effort to save on corsages and as a defense' measure, money collected from a sale of carnations at the door will go to the World Student Service: . Fiend,-Miss Long; enecker stated.. The Fund, es pecially. provides for students af fected by the war. Proceeds of the affair will go toward the Cwens' scholarship fund. fifty dollar awards • are given to deserving members of the sophomore class. 'Four coeds re. ceived them last year. 22 . Students Enroll Although 22 students have sigh ed up for the defense course iri airplane. drafting, those who wish to•schedule: . the 'course Within the next few days may do so in 301. Main Engineering, stated Mr. Ar thur L. Tobias, associate profess sor of engineering drawing.. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS
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