I PA.GE TrOTYR :.S:oireir Appoints WSGA Committee Considler Constitution Revision Senate Cancels Annual Freshman Banquet 1 n view of. the recent elections' rliflic:iiities concerning constitu tional, technicalities: Ruth M. Storer '44, WSGA president, ap pointed committee last night to iwp.-!stigate possibilities of revising e:‘rtain sections of the WSGA con titutien to meet wartime needs problems. '..`om.mittee. members who will . work with the staff of the dean of women's office are Dorothy L. :Tones '44, chairman, Patricia Hall -I),.rg '46, and Helen L. Martin '46. group will decide whether ( 4 .mdidatis for WSGA offices must vocet the second-semester require- P.te.n t- despite •confusion caused by 41,, , accelerated program. In ad committee will consider a revision stating specifically Which Senate members will serve on the naniinating committee. This ii.x!sv•ision ..may...replace• the- -present ....irt)cle which - simply says "all ce.»ior 'Senate members." Cannel] !Freshman Banquet • 73ecause the increased number of freshman women makes it in cidvisablt.‘ to hold the annual !sii.man • banquet, Miss Storer appointed - a committee to cooper ;tic! with the PSCA in arranging a twogram •to -take the place of the dinner." Mrs. Curtis Bach. :Stephens Col lc,ife„pry.fessor, originally schedul ed to speak at the freshman ban quet, . will probably talk at the 4:tibstitute - affair, tentatively set for. Monday,. December 7. Mrs. Curtis will speak at qhapel serv 4roi: • Sunday, -December 6. Com-• lifiii.tee to work with PSCA in- Jeanne B. Ogden '45, Jane t.).s'e '46, and Gloria 'McKinley '46. Plan .. elltristralas Dinner Continuing plans for the annual Christmas dinner, Miss Storer ap pwin.ted, :1. committee. to assist Miss Jd - i Parent, supervisor of Dining Clmmons, and Co-chairmen Pris cilia McClellan '44 and Carol M. Kane '45 H. Anne Carruthers '44 committee chafrman, -with . - Pa -41-icia Hallberg '46 as her assistant. Potitions will be sent - to all dor of4i tories• so-that. coeds interested 'helping with the Christmas din ►nv may.•sign- up, Miss Storer re voaled. Renate moved to continue spons pring the WSGA• dance and an- P.r.lunced-Saturday, ••January 30 as year's date. A poll will be conducted in campus dining rooms wild downtown dormitories before Tuesday so that coeds may decide *whether the dance is to be-formal ,or informal. Grace L. Judge '44 w i elected chairman. thill If Go Ifivoigh 'Seville Ilapanese • Recent communication from a correspondence s t u den, t to Dr. 31an.:; H. Neuberger, head of the department of meteorology, states •Ibut, despite the efforts of Japan .foi:4 submarines, mail from the united. States .to Honolulu .has lwen getting through with little Walter E. Olson, a correspon olonce student in Geophysics 12-C Find a member of the United States Weather Bureau in Honolulu until liis transfer to Medford, 0., says in letter, "1 received all of the fir st ten corrected lessons in spite 4)f Japanese submarines and such " (wens to blithe Laws Members of a committee to re vi;;ti the By Laws or Cwens, s, iimmore wornert's honorary, ii.clude Marjorie H. Schultz, chairman., R. Christine. Yohe, and Ylizabeth. L. McGee. Cwens who will Sell stamps at 1110 Student Union Stamp Dance h'imiday include Barbara C. Paint ( r, Carolyn limerick. and Julia H. )k^ •l'arland. ?AL she Women Are Coeds WAACy Or Whacky? We wonder if Penn State coeds are WAACy. Although College women an swered enthusiaStically the call for pre-army training, there has been quite a let-down and coeds are showing that they don't think so much of Army life after all. At a meeting of the Tuesday CODET class this week, 55 of an enrolled 100 were there to "about face" and drill. If dancing, playing bridge, going to movies, and primping are to be preferred .to marking time, march ing by the left flank, and dressing right, CODETS might as well be a thing -of the past. Remember, whacks will never make WAACs. Atherton • coeds• are once • more locking doors, hiding money and putting away valuables. . Each year, things in the dorms start "'mysteriously disappearing" and each year culprits are never found; therefore, never punished. Since reports show that this is the case again, dormitory hostesses urge women to• "use those keys." If punishments have to be elim inated, at least temptations can •be avoided. A locked door is the best security. PROBLEM: A surgical dressing quota. of 20,000. GIVEN: Two workrooms; all needed materials; a large list of .volunteers. TO PROVE: That Penn State Women really want to help. A consistent, hard-working crew has been out to roll bandages and cut surgical dressing for army hos pitals each week. They've done well and are making a step toward fulfilling the ,quota. But there are just too few of them. They need recruits—not merely "signer-uppers." F 0 'crow • i 4 • 3, BUY ;., UNITED STATES • i DEI CUM A ~,yI3ONDS i ~ IM s e r• (~' A M AWS ` .7"-- Read Cale °an Classifieds • Seniors interested in joining the CLASSIFIED SECTION Rides. Wanted— AAUW may contact Miss Evelyn • Hensel, chairman; Miss WANTED—Brass, reed, and bass men for new campus dance band. .RW—To Phila. or Trenton. Leave Pauline Locklin, -Miss Jane Dear- Tryouts Thursday, Nov. 12, 8:30 Friday. Round trip. Call Stine or ing, Mrs. Glenn Herbolsheimer, Ivory, 3141. 3tchlo,ll,l2SS • Miss Helen Horton, Mr. H. W. p. m. 117 Carnegie Hall. 3tpd10,11,12 RW—To Scranton or vicinity. Lv. Conrad Link, Mrs. J. 0. Keller, Friday noon. Return anytime. Mrs. W. S. Beach, Miss Elsie M. WANTED—Brass, reed. and bass• Call Milt, 3446, or Collegian office. Kresge, and •Miss Alice Tomlinson men for new campus dance band. 3tc,10,11,12M8D Tryouts Thursday, November 12, 8:30 p. m. Carnegie Hall, WANTED—Used log log decitrig RW—To 'Wilkes-Barre or virinity. slide rule. Call 3369. Ask for Tom. ltpd 12PS Leave Friday, night. Return Sun. Call 3251. Ask for,Duke. 2tpdJM FOR SALE—K &E duplex poly phase slide rule, $6. Call Bill, RW—To Pittsburgh, Sharon or vi -890. ltpdSß einity. Lv. Fri., Ret. Sun. Call 330 Ath. ltchREM LOST—Pair shelf-rimmed i glasses in black leather case, between Electrical Engineering and Jordan Hall. Reward! Call Roz; 2nd floor Jotdan. 3tch12,13,145R LOST—Tan pigskin •gloves in or near 12t Sparks, Tuesday about 8 p.m. Please return to Student Union or Dr. Krug at Dispensary. IteRTK LOST —Hampden wrist wale h, brown strap. Finder call Lew, 3[69 r'ewird. I tcompLf THE DAILY cou,F.GIAN War Efforts Are fen! Coeds March With Men, Direct Bombs, Omit Meat Who said , Penn State coeds were versatile? Here are a few "extra curricular" •activities we haven't tried yet... At .the University of California— Sdrorities have agreed to observe a meatless Tuesday. (Potatoless and breadless days at Penn State might be a vital necessity with a dual purpose!) At the University of: Utah—Co eds will judge the length of Engi neers' beards at the annual Oyster At 'the University •of Maryland— Coed marching units will partici pate as' companies in ROTC pa rades. ('Jest like we said, men!) At Cornell—" War widows" are urged to giVe lonely weekends to bandage rolling. Nine thousand surgical dressings have already been made. An air raid precaution course which teaches the reaction and composition of high explosive bombs and elementary camouflage is also offered to coeds. At the University of Indiana--1, Jan Valtin, author of "Out of the Night," will speak at Theta Sigma Phi's Matrix table. (A match for Mrs. Tufty?) • Reilly First :Woman Informal soccer practice was conducted last night in place of To Be Navy Engineer the scheduled junior-sophomore g The first woman ever to be of- game which will be played on Holmes Field at - 4 o'clock today . if fered employment by the Phila full teams are present and weather delphia Navy Yard as an engineer is Virginia S. Reilly '43. Miss Heil- Permits. ly, who will graduate as an archi- textural engineer in December, Sixteen coeds attended WRA will probably begin work January Bridge Club meeting in White in Philadelphia in the Structural Hall Playroom last night, accord- Engineering Division as a junior ing to Elizabeth J. McKinley '45, naval architect. WRA Club activities chairman. Miss Reilly, whose home is in This number is larger than usual, Easton, is a member of the Delta Miss McKinley stated. Duplicate Gamma fraternity. bridge was played. Olive Wyatt will serve as president of Wra Bridge Club until spring elections. ,:, e, $. Beatrice L. White '44 was chosen Dispensary Treats 2003 Cases in October A total of 2003 new cases were WRA Badminton Club president treated at till dispensary for the to succeed Martha G. Duffman month of October, Dr. Joseph P. '43. At the first club business Ritenour, head of the College meeting, arrangements will be Health Service, has announced. made for a badminton tournament. This is an increase over the c or- Practices are now scheduled ac responding month last year when cording to a new system recently 1785 cases were treated. adopted. An increase was also shown in the infirmary report. This October WRA Fencing Club selected 137 patients were treated for a Frances Angle '44 to act Es presi total of 498 bed days as•compared dent while Winifred Spahr '43 is with 78 patients-for 200 beds days student-teaching. Florence Roth, during October of last year. man '44 will head WRA . Archery Club in place of Kathryn Thomas '43. ,Scranton or, vicinity. Lv Sat. Return Sunday. Call 855 after 6 p.m. 4tpd,11,12,13,14REM 3tpd10,11,12 (2)-To , -Altoona Friday after noon betwee.lo2.and 1. Call Bob Waltenbaugh 2161. • ltcomp W—To Hanis\:;ep or vicinity. Lv Sat. Call 3337: Ask for Cook. RW—To Pittsburgh or Washing ton, Pa. Leave Friday noon. Ret. Sun. Call Sally -Paxton, 171 Ather ton Hall. 2tpdJM PW—Five to go to Philadelphia. Leave Friday at 4., Cali 4641. Ask for Renault. ltehl2Rß PSCA Commission Plans New Program Fifty members of Commission 111 of the PSCA will meet in the Hugh Beaver Room, 4:15 today, to evaluate the Fall's work and make plans for the rest of :the semester. Robert R. Dickey '44, and Virginia M. Krauss '44, will act as chair men. • Evaluation of the Fall program of the Religious Commission will be made by Grace Gray '45 and James E. Hawkins '43, chairmen of study groups; Charles. Walker '46, workshop chairman; Elizabeth •Funkhouser '46, chairman of. reli gious resources; Robert A. Freder ickson '45, chairman of reading promotion; Galen S. Alexander '44, chairman of philosophy group; and Ralph W. Harris '45, chairman of worship programs. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Women In Sports By JOAN E. PIOLLET 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Tentative plans for a dance pro duction to be presented this sem ester have been drawn up by WRA Dance Club, . aceOrding . to Marion A. Hora .'43, Club presi dent. Further announcement will be made in The Daily Collegian when arrangements are complet ed. AAUW Invites Seniors 2tpdl2,l3PS 1".:=1:=111 F2== 1:1==31 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1942 White Hall Staff Bows To Navy d•I `Anything . went" on Ho 1 m e.s Field last night when women's physical education faculty took to the great out-doors to practice what .they preached, only_ to lose a hockey game, 4-1, to the chant pion Navy team. Played on the spur of the mo ment, the game found ren White Hall women ironing out stiffness and stretching unused muscles in 'a weird struggle against ten strong, conditioned hockey champions. Playing ,no particular • positions, and minus goalies,. both teams raced over the field hysterical attempts to score, Navy's Mottle Haverstick tallied 2 goals, and Bet: sy McGee and Mildred CoOkerlY came through with . the other 2. Only faculty member able to shove the ball into the cage was "Gabby" Reichenbach, graduate assistant =in physical education. . Ten:ininute halves were all Ref . - eree Eleanor Wills, frosh, dared a110w,.. as there were no:available substitutes. Mrs. Ivalclare Sprow Howland, assistant professor of physical.edu cation, easily outshone Other play ; ers with her.battle equipment; if* eluding oue pair of dungarees; an old sweatshirt, a: baseball 'chest protector, " a bathing cap, and a towel. . Superb defensive players: • were Miss Marie Haidt, associate .pro 4 lessor.. of physical education; and Miss Jean Swenson, instructor, in physical education, who missed more shots than. their luckier teammates. Playing for Navy were • cham pions • Mildred Cookerly, Martha Haverstick, Betsy McGee, Mary . Weldy, Marge Lyons, Velma Elder, Anna Radle, Grace Judge, Alice Burwell, and Ann Sheffield. Representing. White Hall faculty Were Miss Bernice Frazier, Mrs, Dot Pierce Alderfer, Miss Barbara Bradshaw,.Miss Dot Jacobson; Miss. Beatrice. Lowe, 'Miss , Reichenbach; Miss Mildred A:Lucey, Miss Haidt Miss Swenson, and Mrs, tHowland, 4th .Party Formed. (Continued from Page. Onel • of the clique. Called to ordei' goy Price in usual fashion, it proceed 4 ed quietly .through a :recitation. of minutes• and . committee • reports: The call for "old business" • went unanswered- and the. request :for• new business followed. It was then that Price,` speaking as though he were reading a re port, announced ' that he would bolt the .party and hack the new grdup. After handling, the: selection.; - of Robert Kaiser as new Campus . '45 head, Price and his followers 'left the meeting; the•majority remain ed to carry on the..fight: WARNER BROTHERS AIM sTATE 888 IBUT WAR SONDS AND STAMPS•HERS, Shows at 1:30; 3:00, 6:45, .8:45 TODAY = FRI. - SAT.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers