PAGE SIX Whit Hall To Open *Vifitors Tonight; Juniors Win In Hockey • White Hall will be open to alum ni and parents. as well as coeds, from 7 to 10 p. m. tonight, for the fifth in a series of Playnights ar yo_nged by WRA Executive Board . and tly.2 physical education depart ment, F. Doris Stevenson '44, WRA publicity chairman, State d last night. Results of last night's inter class hockey game were also re leased by Miss Stevenson. OPFAT HOUSE , BRlminton, bridge, ping pong, swimming. and bowling facilities will be available tonight at White Hall, Elizabeth J. McKinley '45, WRA Bridge Club president, in charge of Open House, stated. Re freshments will be served. Beatrice M. Lowe '4O, graduate assistant in physical education, Will represent the department at the Play - night. Miss Lowe, during leer last undergraduate, year at Penn State - , was named the out standing senior woman in physical education. • }JOCKEY .• ." . Playing in - regulation six-man hockey teams, in place of the usual 1 : 1-man teams; the juniors defeated • the • sophorhOres on Holmes • Field last • •night 5-3. For the juniors, Mottle Haverstick and Fran Angle each scored twice and Helen Hoop er., collected the, other goal. •Betty. Robinson with two tallies and Vee Martixr. with one accounted for the sophomore scores. etilee;Hour:Planned , : • f - tlrMome - Ec Alumnae A coffee . hour for home eco 110MiCS., alumnae be. -held in the lobby of the Home .Econom icE-builling from 10 until 11 a. m. today. Faculty members will serve as hostesses, while Dean of Women_ Charlotte E. Ray, Mrs. Marian R. Trabue. and Mrs. Phillips will pour. Given as a part of the Alumni- I.)ad's Day Weekend program, the . coffee .hour is an annual affair. Alumnae are invited by the host f3sses:.to bring their friends. Special and commercial shows at a minimum rate of eight hours radio,tirne daily have been pur chised • by the OWI for trans kniss•ion to the American• troops stationed in. remote Alaskan Rea & Derick Next to the Bank- Clock • . . . • • IWA Invites College Frosh Urged To Ask Greek Open Rushing Begins Monday I . . . i To Vic Dance Tonight Big Sisters, Parents, Panhel Council Postpones Elections Fraternity and indepenc en; To Tomorrow r s Teas . • ' men and women are invited to ~ attend an informal vic dance Reminding all first semester , divulged. The winner will be sponsored by IWA in Grange freshman coeds to invite their announced within a few weeks, playroom from 8 o'clock to mid- Big Sisters to the teas scheduled Frances M. Brown '44 was re- night tonight, according to Hazel for Irvin Hall and Women's Climaxing a two week silent cipient of the award last. year. E. Gassmann '43, president. Building from 3tosp: m. tomor- . )eriod. following formal rushing All houses are urged to turn in Only couples wil be admitted row, Helen J. Martin, WSGA , ~ ason. an open rushing period expense sheets from formal rush- to the affair. Admission will be freshman senator and cci-chair as been declared by Panhellenic 'rid` season open houses, parties, 20 cents per couple. Headed by man of the teas, announced last 2ouncil to begin at 8 a. m. Mon- and coffee hours to Miss White Norma R. Stern '43, the dance night that freshmen are also urg- - Jay. Sororities may begin to at the Phi Mu house immediately. committee consists of Mildred L. ed to bring their parents. pledge again after that 'time, ac- Miss Keller announced that the C!ookerly '44 and Gertrude Cohen WSGA Freshman Connell mem 'ording to Pauline E. Keller '43, Panhellenie scholarship cup has ' 46 . , bers and all first semester fresh- Panhellenic Council president. been located after several se- M i•s s Gassmann announced man hall officers will act as hos- Nomination and election of mester's searct. It will he turn- that IWA Council will meet in tesses at the teas. Jeanne Weaver, n,.inor Council officers has beer. ed over to Alpha Xi Delta who second floor lounge, Old Main, chairman of the hostess coMmit . nostponed to Tuesday, November won it last Winter and later to at 7 p. m. Tuesday. tees in Irvin Hall, announced that 3. Miss Keller stated last night. Kappa Kappa Gamma, 1a s t The reception for independent the shifts will be from 2:45 to 4' Date for the installation tea will Spring's winner. Scholarship women, previously announced for P. m. 'and from 3:45 to sp. m. be set at the elections meeting. champion for the Summer se- Tuesday afternoon, has been Ruth Bollinger, Eileen Bragt, According to the Panhellenic mester has not yet been an- postponed until November, Miss June First, Sally Howard, Nancy, ,- Code, the vice-president, who is flounced. Gassmann stated. Lenker, Gloria McKinley, and now Beatrice M. White '44, will . , automatically become Council • shift.. Second shift hostesses will . president. The vice-president War Brings Double Trouble be Nancy Gareh, Cynthia ,piffen, , Ann Henry, Phyllis :die. Mauri.ac, also serves as rushing chairman. . Incoming vice-president will, be Shirley Mills, Betty Ann Mc,in VVith - a Delta Gamma, according to a i Alurrt-Dad Combination nis, and Betty, ,Shenk.., ... , ~ system of rotation based on the Virginia Sykes, chairman 'of ... ~. dates of establishment of the 14 Shades of pre-war merriment! what may prove to be the last the hostess committees in Wom-,.. rational chapters on campus. The "Big" football game; dances: big alumni weekend for some en's. Building, announced that the new president, who wilt'be in- parties; •a host of minor sports; time, they will probably deplore shifts would he from '3 to A -p. iii:. stalled at the tea, is n Phi Mu, Players; and many other forms their own lack of real college; and: from 4 .to 5 p. m; First .shift' while Miss Keller is an Alpha of celebration 'better nct men- spirit. hostesses wilthe Allene tßabbitt• !, Omicron Pi. timed here. "Tall" tales and wild stories of Jean ...Butz; 'Martha Davis, . Mar.,: Suzanne M. • Hay '43 was deie- All this has been under way the time he was in Penn State guerite 'Quick, and ,Shirley! gated by Miss Keller to secure since yesterday when every form will' be the main stock in trade of Thompson,. and Marjorie 131aek 2 ,. "rom the dean of womer's office - of passenger conveyance able to Joe Alumnus. Yarns of the womb, Rosemary Carroll, Sorija the names . andqualifications of limp into the Nittany Malley horse in Old. Main's tower,' •fra- Freedman,,.Carolyn - - I. Worthy,: coeds eligible to receive the 350 disgorged - its load of weary pil- ternity frolics and other misdeeds' Laurene Newbolrved, 'an the secondd Joan scholarship to be awarded by grims to the shrine of their alma that mace him notorious in the Shearrer will se on Panhel near the end of this se-: mater. Meaning—alumni, alumna columns of what would now cor- shift. rnester. and even future alumnuses. All respond to The Daily Collegian R imi•••---- . Council members will vote on this and Dad's Day too! will pile up all around. ' qualifications of the selected girls. By an odd coincidence, the But when all the "good cheer" Names of candidates will not be Aiumni will meet on the scene has cleared away, and State. Col of their collegiate escapades at lege once more assumes its usual Arms, Industry Absorb • Country's Manpower the same - time the fathers—the apathy, it will have been discov guy who foots the bills to make ered that a "good time was had more alumni—foregather to see by all." how the "chip off the old block" • . . ls doing in Collitch. Theta Xi Dinner Dance By STEPHEN SINICHAK , Normally, - such a contiguMs Theta Xi fraternity will hold its With the cries of a second front .. meeting would be a happy one annual dinner-dance this-evening, being echoed throughout the for all concerned. In the "goodßobert E. ' Kaval . '44, 'social •chair world, the resources of mannow- or days," father. would come up man, announced yesterday. Les er within the United States have here alone, telling Mother: Stein's Aristocrats will provide been drastically drained in 'an "Now, Mother, you had your the music; dress will be formal. effort to create a' fighting force chance on your day, and now its sufficiently large and strong my turn to see how our Will is enough to conduct an offensive doing without you being along drive on the European continent.• to keep him on his best be- Industries, homes, universities, havior." and other institutions have been Yes, but today with transpor forced to give their men to the tation at a premium, Dad_ is more enlarged defense• industries and likely. to bring Mother and the ever-increasing branches of ser rest of .the family along for a .re vice: ' ' ' ' *- • spite from• war worries—and - , The college_ has been no ex- ' Optian ,to . this all-out program, that s - where the fun starts. . -fOr during' : the past year, roughly For everybody knows how the froin ,;.,, alumni act once they revert to •74 • 'facility members":..- .' a group of song-singing senti schools have 'transferred their ,•.. . • • mentalists 'at College• get-togeth cervides to war industries ankh - :forces;; accordin to a The Daily ers. 'And with parents parading iiirveY g- COnduCted , fightiqg all over the once peaceful land-. _by Collegian. scape, imagine the predicaments Replacements for these men that could arise! If students who have never had have been" extremely difficult and on many occasions impossi- the privilege of seeing the type of spirit that prevails when the hle. "old grads" get together take in Heading the list of losses of in structors is the MI school where 20 such persOns have been grant ed leaves of absence for the dura tion. Although two-thirds of 'hese men have been replaced, he other positions remain vacant. Successful military campaigns • equire the knowledge of tech -iicians, and the present conflict has thus far proved this state ment. At the College, enroll ment -in the School of Chemistry and Physics has greatly increased during the last year, necessitating an increase in instructors. In regard to the drafting of in structors into the war program, Dean Frank C. Whitmore states. "The teaching staffs in chemis try and chemical engineering have suffered little loss on ac count of the war, but the research group has lost about ten men to various •war industries. "Because there are only about one-sixth as many physicists in the country as there are chemists and chemical engineers, and be cause the methods of physics are (Continued on page-.seven) , , Rushing Head Seeks All Expense Sheets THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Welcome Alumni Guests ( \ C_~..-- --=- Miss Laura W. Drummond, di tector and professor of hOme economics, will attend a meeting of the Association of. Land Grant College and Universities in Chi cago, 111. from October 25 to November 1. • • _i" - r '_ , I 'co7E E 41111111 54;„ .P ~2. ..,.. 1 ' )1 STATE COLLEGE, PA .- . . TEY'R Fine Ma Le PENN STATI 219 East Ac4E // • .• ;* 7 - - , _ - SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1.942 • 2 49 • •N • ) WITH: rill' . • itUORS • , will • benefit from...yoAr subscription. Po r ever y .. .. th r e e $l.OO subscrip4ons sold - this 'weekend we•- . Will send a free subscription' to' a -Penn State.soldier..Help the move from the "Campus .to the Camps." . - • • • The Daily -Collegian 1.. niesnWOOD PiiliOes ibiut Cases ottncing— BREAKFAST LUNCH e DINNER Coffee Shop _.~ ~ i fir 210. W. College Ave.