PAGE TWO THE DAILY COLLEGIAN "For A Better Penn• Stte" ElytahUsher! 1940. Successor to thte Penn State Collegian. established 1904, and the Free Lance. established 1887. Published daily except Sunday and Monday during the regular College year by the students, of The Pennsylvania State College. Entered as second-class matter July 5. 1934 int the Post-office at State College. Pa.. under the art of March 8. 1879. Editor, Bus. and Adv. Mgr. Gordon Coy '43 Leonard E. Bach '43 Editorial and, Buidnese Office . Downtown Office Carnegie Hall 119-121 South Fratiei 'St. Phone 711 . Phone 4272 , • :Editorial .Staff—Women's Editor—LouiseFuois '43 Managing Editor—Herbert J. Zukauskaa '43 ; Sports Editor— Donald W. Davis • '43 ; Assistant Managing Editor—Dominick- L. Golab ,',43; Feature Editor David Samuels '43.; News. Edi tor-James D. Olkein .'43 ; Assistant News Editor—Robert E. Ochooley '4B ; Assistant Sports Editor—Richard St Stebbins '48.; Assistant Women's Editor—Kathryn M. Popp '4B; .Ansistant ' Women's Editor—Edith L. Smith '43; Women's Feature Editor—Emily L. Funk '43. • Business . Staf f —Credit Manager--Phillp Jaffe • '43'; ~ ,C.inag• .7ation, Manager—Robert E. Edgerly . '43 ; ClasSifled , Adv,ertis ing Manager—Roy E. Barclay . '43 ; Promotion Managerr- Jnek E. MoCool '43 ; Senior Seeretary—Pranees A.. Leiby..'o: Women's Advertising. Manager--Sara. L. Miller 'Aii ;Assist.. ant Women's Advertising Manager—Marjorie L. Sykes '43. Junior Editorial Board--Benjamin M. Bailey, Fred E. Clever, Maiton Bolinger, LarrY T. Chervenak, Robert M. Faloon, Robert T. Kimmel, Robert E. .Kinter.. Richard. B. Naul, Richard D. Smyaer, Donald L. Webb, Paul L Wood. land, Sally L. Hirshberg, Helen R. Keetauver, Jane H. Mur• phy, Mary Janet Winter. Managing Editor This Issue Robert M. Faloon News Editor This Issue . Robert E. Kinter Assistant 'Managing Editor Stephen Sinichuk Assistant' News Editor This Issue Mickey Blatz Women's Editor This Issue Sally L. Hirshberg Graduate Counselor Louis H. Hell Tuesday, June 30, 1942 Another Life-Saver Announcethent that the War Departifient has authorized. Penn State to fill a quota of Army Enlisted Reserves places Nittany students in 'a much more favorable position in regard to future :army life. Draft-despondent intellectuals have still, another life-line on which . to. hang in addi tion to the Navy V . prOgram - andthe Army Air Corps unit. There are feWer chances of worthy oollege men being buried in the ranks. At the same time . the army is taking the first :step to solving a vital problem. For some time Tl.:bere has , been increasing anxiety in the question "Where are the officers to come front?" Offi cer's training schools have been able to solVe the problein only partially. To those sincere students who have sacrificed !perSonal PleaSures and interests to continue their leclulical and cultural training the proposed set iS tore than an adequate reward. It is well Ito note that scholastic ability will be considered in filling the unit quota. So with a brighter outlook on the army frOnt i.:l,ere is more incentive for Penn State students Ito "buckle down," hit the books, and keep phYsi cally fit. This, is the opportunity they have been waiting for—a chance •to finish college and a definite place in America's victory-bound war ;machine. `We Are Coming - - - Another day, another draft! • But is it just another draft? Perhaps to the "veterans" who already boaSt about having their draft 'card it is, but to the "kids" who register to day it is something worth remembering and cher- IMI . . AlthoUgh the more than 2,000 students who '‘V . 41.1 pledge their services to Uncle Sam .are regis •tcring 'for "selective military service," it is high )y improbable that they will see action for some time to come. Government einphasis is turpirig linore and more towards letting college stud nts complete their education first. With the decline in college enrollment begin ning to be felt over the country—the total , college • population is less than one Million—the ,govern ment's move is a smart one. Coming back to the draft then, we feel that college students who to ,day become aware of "Local Draft Board No . .." 'ave nothing to fear for some time yet. In short, to call on the Civil War—"We are Com ng, Father Abraham, 2,000 students strong." NYA Passes Away So they finally killed NYA. It was dying a :lingering death anyway. So they put it out of its misery. Now what happens to the students who werre dependent upon NYA income to remain in col lege? How about the promise made last semes 'ter by the College that financial assistance would be given to those who needed it? NYA workers don't want loans or some other excuse for financial assistance. All they want is a chance to ev.rn money by doing a useful job. But NYA is no more. What to do? Danger—Spy At Large Saboteur and spy excitement has been running high over the weekend, and the local agents have been oh their toes. Over in Altoona they were kinda hep, because they nabbed a suspicious loOking charncter who was asking suspicious duetions.. ' It seems the character—and we do mean Char acter—was asking housewives about pro'dnctiOn figures of Bethlehem r , Steel and several other Wa plants, when one alert woman telephoned the Well, the suspect was nipped in the bud and questioned first by . the police sergeant, then the captain, and 'Worked all the way up to an FBI agent in a hot two-hour session in the Alt Oona jail. Finally he was released, after explaining he Was merely conducting a psychological survey. The suspected spy?—Leon Rabinowitz, chair man of Penn State's Victory Weekend. Weekend Maneuvers Weekend activity slowed up perceptibly as the local lads—not lassies—prepared to welcome the first of—the Summer session women . . . Alpha Chi H. G. Hall drifted in to , visit the old Alnia Mater and Pete Buten over the weekend . . . Ed Wagner and Lew Corbin, BMOCs of bygone days, are up. Wagner was seen shaking his head at the fraternity drinking setup and . Corbin doing ditto as lie watched the frosh in customs traPse by ... Bunny Bundick reports all present and ac counted for after a SUndaY phone call front Tom my Allison in North Carolina. Attention Someone Boirs will be boys and stuff, but the PIKAs are complaining about unfair methods of competition. It seems that there's a certain Pi Phi who's initials are Bob Hauser, who is trying to get started with Midge Johnson. The snag is that Midge is pin ned to Ben Slocum, PiKA, now doing his bit for 'Uncle S'arnniy, and his Greek brothers don't par ticularly like the subversive activities of the Pi Phi. CaMpy has it that the woman in the tri angle is no longer wearing Slocum's jewelry. Let's Have Another One Proving that coeds will do anything for money —er, that is, almost anything—Theta Ada Lord and some kats paraded into the cram Saturday and slipped into a booth. Ada ordered a peanut butter fudge sundae, devoured it, ordered an other, sank same, and so forth until she reached the sixth massive portion of ice cream. It was then that our heroine stalled, just missing her goal of six, which her sorority Sisters bet she could not reach. Oh well, Mateer is happy. . -=H - J. Z Summer Session Students M. D -D. S THE DAILY COLLEGIAN • . The .. „: :, . . . . •: '..(•••• s. Campuseer ..: \\;: r‘ Subscribe Now To The Daily Collegian Special Summer Rate S 1 .00 Lions Shape Noticeable Shrike The Lion Shrine is no longer only a model arid a hinge oblong shaped block of limestone. It is beginning to take on some of the contours of the . Nitt . any Lion, to kink more like a r6tinded Mass tlian a square one. The 'rounding out, is the result of the handiwork of Joseph Gar atti, stone clitter . hir'ad by Mr. *arneke to do the roughing out work on the shrine. Mr. Garatti reported iesteti:l4r that more stu dents are going up each day to watch the p'rOgiess and ask ques tions about the work and how it is progressing. He said Mr. Warrieke would re turn Within a feW weeks to con tinue the final carving after the roughing out is finished. He said his part of the work, this . rough ing out, Will take at least two more weeks. The work is all being done by hand as yet and possibly will all be done that way. Mr. Garatti said, however, that they may use some mechanical cutting mater ials a little later. The hand work makes progress seem slow. The work will take approxi mately six months, according to Mr. Warneke. ite m't;de fhis statement when he was here to supervise beginning of the Work Several iXreekS ago,. Friday Deadline Set For LaVie' Photos Seniors arid . juniors Who have riot had pictrireS taken for LaVie and who expect to graduate in August or December must ,report to the . Photo Shop some . time this week before 4 p. m. Friday to get their pictures taken, Martin H. Duff '43, editOr, announced last night. Cards have been sent to all sen iors, and may be used as class ex cuses for the time scheduled. All those who haven't received cards will be reached by phone. Those whohave already had their photo graphs taken should stop at the Shop and pick up the proofs. Registration --CAMPY (Continued Pa6i3 One) dents wha are ill or other Wise prevented from coming to the Ar mory todaly should contact the draft committee and a registrar will be sent out to register thein. In cases where a class is schedul ed during the designated regis tration time, registrants will be automatically excused from the class. Failure to sign up carries with it a penalty of five years in jail or a $10,060 fine or both, under federal law. • Since the one 'address to Ve . list 7 01 On (Yoter niine:s the local‘ diAit b'Opi'd• to which the respective student's re dOidS wiltbe sent :it ISViar44lyi - t 4 , i46ANrit ,that te The two otl4r ad'dresse's 're uested will be tie registrant's'ad dress Ana the OClAress of some one who will kWayS know. the A4is trant's WherehhOuts. Victdiry \Veittekiti (Continneil finni Page One) , the half-irdy {nark for 'a brief rest period. Daring the period for recuperation,. The Daily Colle gian *ill stage a, half-hour stop the-presses prograim of "NeWS the Collegian 'Counldn't Print." Robert L. MalArhinney '43 was named head of the committee ar ranging for "Dantz-a-poppin." Herbert J. Zukauskas '43, Colle gian's managing editor, has been appointed by Mawhinney to di rect the newpaper's expose. CATHAUM "They All Kissed The Bride" STATE: BUY DEFENSE STAMPS "Private Buckaroo" TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1942 CAMPUS.GALENA Tob~~ Theta Sigma Phi meeting for actives and pledges in Alpha Chi Offiega'suite at 5 p. m. There Will be a cofriptiliolir Meeting of all freshnian WoMeri in 110 Home Economics at 6:30 to night for the election of freshman senator and WRA representative, announced Patricia, Diener •'45, WSGA sol)hoinOre senator. Fifth R-Day in the Armory froth 8 'to 6 p. ioMonnoti Froh basketlpallaki and varsity arid frOffi W i rg'stleks .are 144usted to rOixi'rt to Stec Hall, Wednesday Freshman men and wolnen can dldafes for FrOth business staff report to the second floor lounge, Old Main, at 7 p. tn. 12 Elected To LA Cotiricil TwelVe of the 25 Liberal Arts students filing petitions last week Were chosen to LA Counbil yes terday, Donald W. Davis '43, Council president, announced last night. Four sophomores and eight jun iors were &Wed to' the Council's roles by vote of Liberal Arts Cduncil members elected during past terms. New junior representativeS to LA Council are George M4lll - H. Adams,. Milton °Olinger, Robert AL Faloori, AiVin Fleischman, EdWard C. Kalser, George Walko, arid join,. Ritta vizia. Newly-elected koliorhbre ineiri herS are Clifford M. St. Clair, Charles Hall, Michael A. Blitz, and Walter C. Price. Courses Start In Drafting First class session for the spe cial defense course .in Ship Con struction and Hull Drafting wilt be held in, 107 ' Main. Engineering Building, Thursday ,at .7 p. Prof. Royal M. Gerhardt, in ch6rge of the class, announced to day. At that time a permanent schedule for future meetings of the class will be decided upon. A total of 26 students have- en rolled for tire course, designed to train persons for defense jobs in the ship industry. The class, Will meet eight ' hours weekly for- 26 weeks. Lectures will occupy the first part, of each 'period, with much of the time devoted to ac tual drafting work. A large quantity of equipment will be supplied through the U. S. Ciffice of Education which is spon soring_the course under its tui tion-free ESMDT program. Meanwhile, Prof. B. K. John stone, architecture department, w'mopnced that students may still enroll for A.hilplane Drafting be fore the 4101 hie, fredneday at 7 P. M. hi Ilooin 301 gaiii Engin eering Building. • Stater Covers Egypt Nuys Reat Afinther Penn State graduate apparently is making gocid in the field of journalism when it was announced yesterday by the de partment that George Palmer '37 had arrived in Alexandria, Egypt, Sunday morning as the represen tative of the Harrisburg division of the United Press. Palmer was active in campus affairs while at State and played on Coach Joe Bedenk's varsity baseball squad. At The Movies
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