' PAGE FOUR. ATo old First Summer Co-Rec Swim Sponsored by the WRA Outing Club, a co-rec swimming party to Whipple's Dam is scheduled from 7 to 5 p. m. Sunday. With a 25 cent charge, the first 35 students •to sign up at Student Union. will be permitted to go, according to Loi:4 C;Lohrke '45, Outing Club president. Participants Ma meet at the parking lot opposite White Hall and go to the darn by truck. This the first swimming party spon sored by WRA. Chauncey P. Lang, associate professor of agricultural exten sicin, will act as caller at the square dancing, a part of WRA Co-Rec night next Friday, F. Dor i:: Stevenson '44, WRA publicity chairman, announced last night. Starting at 6:30 p. m. the program will include badminton, volley hail, fist ball, archery, • softball, uuquet, and ping pong. 'With a bonfire in Jordan Fer tility Plots, grottp singing will be led by Harold W. Freeman '43. Square dancing and social danc ing will be held on the parking lot with recordg providing the In response to favorable hiking interest reports, there will be a WRA-sponsored All-College hike to Mt. Nittany leaving White Hall at 1:30 p. m. Saturday, July 25. Anderson To Head Freshman Council Barbara Anderson' '46 was elected sub-chairman of Fresh man Council at the Council meet ing last night. With her election to this office she automatically 'becomes a member of WSGA Judi cial, Patricia Diener '45, WSGA sophomore senator, announced. A second freshman judicial member will be elected in the Fall. llVlargaret Stahlnecker '46 was elected secretary of Freshman Council at its last meeting. Because of the accelerated pro gram, (Miss Diener revealed that the annual 'Big-Little Sister tea would be cancelled. Both June and September freshmen and their big sisters will attend a tea to be held in the Fall. The next meeting of Freshman Council will be in 220 McAllister Hall at 5 p. in. Thursday. Miss Diener announced. Army Air Corps (Continued from Page One) triplicate, three letters of 'recom mendation, letter of good standing from the College, a draft board . re lease, two minor's releases signed and notarized, and a birth cer tificate or similar record. Those who have qualified for enlistment to date are Thomas R. Amkrin '45, Benjamin M. Bailey '44, William Calvert '44, Fred E. Clever '44, John R. Charles '45, Charles E. Fairchild '44, John C. Berlin '46, Robert L. Galley '44, Harold H. Benjamin '45, Walter G. Murfit '44, W. Fowler Bounds '44, Harry C. Funston '44, John W. Galt '46, 'Charles 'B. Scarbor ough '44, John H. Walton '45. Robert S. Watson '45, Robert E. Pennell '43, David Dubin, George L. Petigant, Claude J. Watson, Charles C. Dawson, Ralph M. Horst, Robert L. Howard, Walter :D. Reiss, and Paul Baird. RESIDES Taxi Service Dial 3421 For A Satisfactory Service PENN STATE LAUNDRY 320 W. Beaver Ave. CURFEW CRIER Marjorie L. Sykes '43, WSGA Judicial Com mittee chairman, reminds coeds that they may take three o'clock permissions for Soph Hop tonight and regular one o'clocks tomor row. Expert Promises Continued Quality In War Cosmetics 'With saving demanded for ev ery non-essential thing nowadays, coeds are wondering about cos metics, and according to Bernice Peck, cosmetic expert, they need not. Although they won't be as plen tiful, Miss Peck reassures users that cosmetics will be just as good, if not better, than before, and that it is not at all unpatriotic to go on buying things that make one pretty, cheerful, and self-con fident. The ten per cent luxury tax goes directly to the government war fund, and as long as this is paid, coeds should feel free to' buy any of these commodities. Science goes marching on, war times or not, and every day, al though ingredients of perfumes and powders are changed, their odors lend more beauty. Shortages have produced new tricks in make-up, according to Miss Peck. Nylons have come to take first place in the minds of their wear ers. However, scientists show that they are merely a chanced upon combination of air, gas, coal, and water. Following wartime suggestions, making one thing do the work of two, coeds find that hand lotion, besides making for many a smooth hand shake, will erase bumps on the arms, prevent skin infection, and take away chapped spaces. Putting small portions of eau de cologne on hair roots or around the face on those decorative curls, is _a new and "magnifi-scent" idea. Soaps should be used in drawers as wartime sachets. Miss Peck states, that by sal vaging the salvage, one should not do without, but should make a little go a long way. She sug gests that bottles, jars, and even lipstick cases .may, in the near fu ture, be demanded for refills. Let ting soap dunk is fast washing away some that might not be so readily obtained later. CLASSIFIED SECTION LOST—One metal snare drum rod, near (or in) Carnegie Hall. Phone 4373, ask for Gloria. 2tpd 10, 11 C. WANTED—Two private furnish ed bedrooms'for a man and wo- man. Quiet, minimum roomers Call 4477, evening. 3tpd 9, 10, 11 S LOST---Alpha Chi Omega soror ity pin between archery targets and Ath 'Hall. Call Mary Jo Nla . c- Dougall, 216 Atherton. Phone 3261 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN VI le, ....7he Women A Date For Defettse Fights For Freedom It has been encouraging to see the rush of students to buy de fense stamp corsages for Soph Hop even before President Roose velt said he would like to see wo men wearing them today. But the corsages being worn to day have all been bought by men students, and it has been ever more encouraging to watch the Mortar Board sales of defense stamps grow. Most.boeds are not oversupplied with money, and to see women students putting part of their allowance. into national de fense, without it being a part of some recreational activity like Soph Hop, is a pleasant sight to us. Women on campus have a chance to help national defense in many ways. Here are three: get a defense corsage before you gb to Soph Hop, even if you have to put stamps on a corsage of real flowers; put your dimes toward defense when Mortar Board mem bers come around with defense stamps; help keep some student in school by getting a date now for Draftee Drag on July 17. Women will find the Latin-Am erican textiles and artcrafts in Room 3, Carnegie ,Hall, well worth a' visit, espe.cially from home ec majors. The brightly colored exhibit will be gone after today. • • Board To List Activities In an attempt to equalize coed activity points, WSGA Junior Service Board will contact any co eds without points and display a list of campus• activities which are suitable to their individual in terests, it was decided at a meet ing of the board yesterday. Face powder should be' gently rubbed on instead of patting it on the face, during which process much is wasted through sifting. Women Fight For Rights Women have come a long way since the time they first 'fought for equal suffrage, according to statistics revealed in United States Women's Bureau Bulletin. With more and more women going into war industries, great er interest is being shown in wo men's trade unions and in the his tory of women who started out working for legislation, and econ omic and political improvement. In 1939 about 173,000, or prac tically one-fifth of all the workers in the Federal service were. wo men. Clerical occupations, such as •typist, stenographer, or sta tistical cleric, were in the major ity. Next to stenographers nurses account for more women in the Government service than any other 'occupation. Specialized knowledge or ex perience, such as that of statisti cians, accountants, librarians, economists, social welfare work ers, teachers, writers or editors, research workers in many fields, scientists, and laboratory techni cians, is demanded for women's work. In proportion to size of income, single women seem to carry as heavy financial responsibilities for dependents as do- married wo men. According to "The Women Graduates of a Collegiate School of Business," the attitude toward women .in business positions is summarized as "this is not a man made World, but a - mis-made world, and the fault is not entirely that of men. Women themselves have carried the spirit of service almost to the point• of subserv iency." -B. IVi. W The old idea that the business woman is "a bundle of nerves" can be' abolished by training. and adequate preparation, followed by hard work and alertness, as stated in this pamphlet. TENNIS DRESSES You'll Find It Wise To Patronize The SMART SHOP FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1942 Stamp Sale Nets $ll.BO Making a total of $l l l.BO in the second Summer defense stamp sale, Mortar Board, national sen ior women's honor society, raised total-sales to $22.05, Pauline Gross man '43, president, announced. Sales will be conducted each Thursday at 6:20 outside Atherton. Hall dining rooms and in McAl lister Hall lobby.' [CATHAumI Shows At 1:30, 3:00,7:00, 9:00 TODAY - SAT - MON. Fascinate Your Date in one of our• PLAY SUITS BATHING SUITS SLACK SUITS SHORTS 'n' SHIRTS S. Allen St.