;'AGE FOU)t• t'orty Coeds. Enron n/ 1) el Courses; Penalty Dismissed Women Drivers Sub For Lowry Field Men )forty women have enrolled in 1 1K: six Codet courses, according to Miss Julia G. Brill, vocational e)unsellor for women in defense. More than half of that number );is been added since 'the an nouncement was made Thursday i:)at there would be no fee requir c3 to add a Codet course. Women who add a Codet course will be exempt from paying a fee provided they have the signature of Miss Brill, according to Adrian C.) Morse, assistant to the presi dent. Permissions may be obtain ed during the following hours in n4O Sparks! Monday 9-12, 2-4, 'Puesday 9-4, and Wednesday 9-12, •Collet 5: Operation and Main i(l3ance of Motor Vehicles has 15 Coeds, the highest number enroll ed. Former school teachers, fash io». • experts, and -stenographers Lave taken over the wheel as truck, staff car and jeep drivers at Lowry Field. Col., sending men 1 1 , 1 ck 'to military class rooms and airplane shop lines. These women drivers, trained under conditions similar to those which will be offered in Codet 5, were hired through Federal Civil r;ctrvice, at $llO a month under a War Department policy of putting women in all army post jobs not directly concerned with miltiary action.. Coeds with this driving back eround under emergency condi tions may someday serve as chauf feurs for officers, drivers of troop convoys, and supplies. All Codet courses have been of fered with practical objectives in view. Code! I is a standard course in first aid. and air raid emerg e' leicts,- Codet; 2 includes-the theory and practice of• calesthentics de signed-for wartime fitness, Collet. 4. studies. the- selection of military food and sanitation:. as. . well •aS t)Nnblems.• in .record. -keeping and military correspondence.. • . • COdet'•s, Operation • an& Main tenance of Motor Vehicles, is-pre viously described: Code! '6; Mess Food control •and Record Keeping consists -of - the-- study and . use of various forms - -used in garrison. rfition. • as•-well - as- seleetion• - and vreparation- of mess. - for .military, travel.. Codet - y.' Advanced Baking and Cooking, is. designed to study 'trends in food preparation and the discussion. of problems in cooking and baking for mess. I)TTTANY- "Riding Down The Canyon" STATE— "Seven Days Leave" . C,A.THAUM— ' "Reunion In France" BUY WAR 'BONDS- , AND STAMPS CNIESTIAN ISTIAN•. SCIENCE ` ORGANIZATION PENNSYLVANIA. Stilt COLLEGE . . . . . Announces A Lecture. on CHRISTIAN SCIENCE • Entitled . Chri.stlanSeience: Its Power to thrift Mankind By - JAMES G. ROWELL, C. S. B. of Kansas City, Missouri 1V16,111e.r. of the Board of Lectureship •of • The Mother • Church, Thc• rirst Church of Christ, Scientist, hi. •Boston, Massachusetts, JANUARY 19, 1943 at 7:30 • 121 Sparks Building The Public is Cordially Invited. IWA Dance Marjorie A. Marargel '44, IWA president, urges all stu dents to attend IWA's third record dance in Atherton Hall playroom, from 10 p. m. un til midnight tonight. A ping-pong table and two card tables will be left in the playroom so that students who desire to play tennis or cards may do so. The dance is scheduled to begin after the boxing matches, and the price of admission is ten cents. We, Lae Women 3ig Happy Family Needs A Job . . Now is the time of year for all coeds (who can't get late permis sions and who don't want black marks) to come to their dormitory lounges and elect officers. In nine out of ten cases, the "one big happy family," which is supposed to emerge from the well planned, brief meetings, is a sad failure. Coeds hide from dues-collectors for weeks;. they go down for co coa and ONE donut once a month; they exchange silly, ten-cent Christmas presents; they say, "That's that." It could be more. Dormitory hall groups could do jobs that suffer from lack of en rollees and enlistees. • For a number of weeks„ surgi cal dressing classes were almost at the breaking point because they needed personnel. They re quire no more than averahe skill and enthusiasm. Leaders ask only steady attendance. Various WSGA charity drives, British and Russian War Relief societies request money from time to time. It is used, divided between loan funds and the like, arid appreciated. But organiza tions of this type find their growth thwarted because •outputs in their directions are never 100 per cent. complete. The CODET program whose status is shaky because Women "don't . 'have • time," might find . a few draftees.. who manage to squeeze in an hour for useless, hall meetings. Time wasted here in discussion of how•many hours you can spend and how, many men you can en tertain in the lounge at. one time could be-more . •profitably spent in training, working, slepin, or even studying. Univers!tic Women Meet The American Association of. University Women met in the au ditorium of Hillel Foundation, 133 West Beaver Ave., yesterday. Harry P. Hammond, clean of the School of Engineering spoke on "Emer gency Education." Skiing Instructions OPPORTUNITIES open for - stu- Girls interested in skiing are dents to distr i b u t e COL asked to report to White Hall at LEGIANS. Good pay, short hours, healthful conditions. Must be able 2 p. m. today. They will receive equipment there and . : then taken to respond to alarm clock. Call to the golf course for instruction: Bailey at Collegian office or phone 4186. 3t comp 13 B ' . THE DAIS, ~ COLLEGIAN Presidential Candidates for Women's Dorms Announced By Diener Patricia 'Diener '45, WSGA vice president, released the names of candidates for president of the two upper-class dormitories, Atherton Hall and Grange, last night. Miss Diener stated that elections will be held Monday and that specific hours for different 'unit meetings will be determined by dormitory and unit hostesses. Candidates for presidents in the northeast unit of Atherton Hall are Fannette Brill '43, Ruth M. Miller '43, Patricia R. Aloe '44, and Anna C. Nicholson '44; Lois M.• Gardner '43, Suzanne •M. Clouser '44, and Vivian I. Martin '45 are candidates in the northwest unit: Candidates in the southeast unit are Audrey Best '43, Mary M. Hamman '43, Reta J. 'Jenkins '44, and Jean L. Miller '45. Southwest candidates are Kathryn M. Hib_ bare '45, and Elizabeth Sherholtz '43. Grange Dormitory candidates are Mary L. Casanave '45, and Ann Sheffield '45. Diener '45, Kathleen M. Osgood Coeds were nominated at dormi- '45,. G. Patricia Hallberg '46, and tory unit house meetings Thursday Helen J. Martin '46. night. WSGA members who con- Dormitory presidents must have ducted the unit nominations were a 1.5 average, and other officers are Drothy K. Brunner '44, Patricia required to have an average of 1.2. WOMEN IN SPORTS 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11 1 1 1 1 11 11111111111111111 1 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111611111111111111111111 By LEE H. LEARNER strain on the 'budget. In order to .Tonight's White Hall Open House, the first 'of the semester, would offer a good opportunity for coeds to carry out their NeW Year:s Resolutions. A majority of women on campus promised them selves that they would swim down thin year, and certainly most of them have broken that resolution alreadY. Since all gym facilities will be open for use this evening, everyone should .be able to find some sport that can come- under the heading of exercise and still not he too hard on muscles,' unaccustomed as they are to work. Coeds and their dates can put this afternoon's skating party on their weekend agenda without any CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR'. 'RENT Attractive apart ' mentette. - Clean, comfort able: Only 68.: seconds • away from Corner Unusual,: 69 seconds frOin Main. Gate. .Call 4353.. . • LOST--Ronson: • lighter; initials • RWB, between . Old Main and Phi. Psi. Reward: Finder please re turnto Bab•Briice, Phi:Kappa Psi, or Collegian-office, 3t pd 14 LOST- 7 -One pair light shell rim glasses. Call 3126.• Reward. 2t 15 comp AB WANTED. , --Three students.two. or three. hours evening two. • eye flings a week: pial 2373 from noon: • 3t 15 . chg PPM ROOMATE Who, doesn't snore, wanted. Swell location. Call Mickey, 2740. 2t.p.-1716 WANTED—Boy to work for room at • 117 E. Beaver Ave. Call in person; 2t.chg-l-16 FOUND-12 dollar. door ' prize. Call .in person. at ASM . Party, 405 Old Main, 7:30 p. m. tomor_ row. - ltpd-1-16 • LOST—A white, gaberdine..jacket, and glovek in Main Engineering, Friday morning. Return to Stu dent Union. ltpdl-16 Rides Wanted— RW---2—Altoona. Leave any time after noon Saturday, return Sun day evening. Call Archer 4935. Releases Nominations Candidates for dormitory presi dents were released by Patricia Diener '45, WSGA vice-president, last night. Coeds were elected at hall meetings Thursday night, and will be voted on Monday. pl•ovide refreshments for all those who show up at the Duck Pond, WRA .is asking each skater to 'bring a fee of ten cents. Extra-cUrricular courses in both senior life saving and advanded aquatics inStruotion.Will be given by Miss H. Jean SWenson, instruc tor in physical education. The life saving course, which requires three practice hours a week, is open to any undergraduate.wom an. Interest - 6'd' &ie , & should :report to the pool office in White, Hall- at 4:10 p. m. to arrange for practice hours. Coeds who enroll in the aqua tics instruction class must be sen ior life savers, and on completion of 'the .course will receive an American . ..Red Cross certificate .which 'will qualify them =to teach swimming at summer _resorts . and camps. Those ' wishing to enroll Should meet at the, pool at 7:15 p, m. Tuesday, to schedule -three weekly practice hours. - 3t 15 crop 198 Froth on Sale sues of this: semester's hye• is sues of . Froth will, be on the stands, at, the Corner Room and Student . Ulan . Tuesday, 'according to 'Ger-. ald B. Maxwell Stein, newly.-;elect— ed business manager. Subscription.. campaign for. the semester is now under way, and single. copies .of • the magazine will continue to sell for 15. cents ; - despite increased publication costs.. • • • SUBSCRIBE •NOWI-•--FOR •:YOUR ' • DAILY COLLEGIAN.. - Fiigt Ndtiottd.....Rdhk State: college Member of • Federal De . positionsurance'Corporation SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1943. Awarth -- ...Offerat :c.''.:: . For Welding Ideas A program offering $5,000 in student awards and $1,750 in scholarshipe_for the departments of the institutions in which the award-winning students are regis tered has been announced by the James F. Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation of. Cleveland. The awards will :be made fOr papers describing the conversion from other methods to arc welded construction of parts of machines, complete machines, trusses, gir ders, or structural parts. The sub ject may be something which the student has 'observed in school shops, magazines, books, or else. where or may conceive• of some thing which has never been built but could be built by arc welding. The method of construction or the design_must be described in the paper. A paper maybe submitted by any group of students but no one student or group shall participate in the writing of more than one paper. If the paper covers a pro_ ject, the project may have been started before December 1, 1942, but it must have been completed within the period December 1, 1942 to April 1, 1943. Any resident engindering un dergraduate student is eligible to submit a paper. The jury of award will be drawn from various institutions of engineering edu cation by Dr. E. E. Dreese, head of the department of - electrical engineering of Ohio State • Uni versity. .Further details of the Award and Scholarishp Program may be obtained by writing The James F.' Lincoln Arc Welding Toundation, P. 0. ,Box 5728, Cleveland, Ohio. (AA .tri3ining--- (Continued from Page One) near State College, the CAA is •training more than 250 Navy 'men at the -present time. There are five steps in the flying program: Elementary flying, sec.. ondary flying, cross-country' flight; Link: instrument training, and-sec-. ondary Instructor - work: • All men taking the course of study - wouldbe -in the. Army on an' inactive 'status' and - are . not subject to• call as ferry Command pilots and the : like: unti) -they have completed. secondary •flight training,. .••• _ . All meals,- housing .and - training costs-are paid by the-CAA. - :gen.; who fail -to. keep up with,: , the required course: of study are.- "wavhed• out". .and sent. into 1,13. e Army -as privates. - - • , , alight-mow the-State College air- . port .has .facilities : for' trainMg O. -,. men :but Penny sel,d . that , facilitiea could•be expanded to take care of •- several .hundred at• a time.' • - . Whether or not- Such s - project can, be • initiated will also depend .. upon-the turn-out and response tcs the meeting 'called for. 'lr:o'clock this. 'Morning, Penny said, and,, he - urged all men - interested. flyinc. to contact . 'Galbraith arid' let. him knoi.V. that . they are interested. The