V>AGE FOUR March Of Dimes Lacks $25 Oi Goal The March of Dimes campaign ir- within $25 ot the $2OO goal, with ■one day remaining to complete the drive, according to Mildred B. Ru bin '4O, chairman ot the campaign. ■The $175 total has been set largely by students and town mer chants who have contributed at the downtown booth. A corps ol sixty coeds has served as collectors since the drive began January 1. Sororities and fraternities have yet to report their individual contribu tions, Miss Rubin said. The drive for State College sup port is in conjunction with the na tional campaign which is assisted annually by more than 2,000 com munity chapters. A non-profit / membership corporation, the ‘Na tional Foundation for Infantile paralysis is concerned with financ ing research and preventative measures for combating poliomye litis. The money collected in counties is divided between local hospitals •and research projects. Only seven per cent of the total amount raised 'has been needed for collection ■costs. Aristocrats, Campus Owls May at Collegian Dance (Continued from page one) "Rockin’ Chair” done in the style of the popular Benny Goodman sextet. The whole band joins in on such ■original arrangements as “Joshua Fit the Battle of Jerico,” “Hodge Podge,” “Blue .Moon,” and an or iginal jump tune entitled the “Penn State Blues,” written by a former member of the band, sax man Eddie Purdue. The “Owls” enjoy a reputation as one of the top campus dance orchestras in the east. They have played on many other college cam puses such as Cornell, Syracuse, Bucknell and Ohio State. The “Campus Owls” have been a feature of most Collegian dances in the past and have always prov ed very popular. For the past sev eral semesters the band has been under the leadership ,of George Washko, he of the “hot-lips” Washko fame. George and his trumpet are a featured part of the combo. Admission has been set as 55 cents for Collegian subscribers and $l.lO to all others. Entire pro ceeds will be spent to send copies of the Daily Collegian to Penn' .State men in service, wherever they may be stationed. Marine Reserves— (Continued from Page One) will enter the Navy as Apprentice Seamen, be placed on active duty with pay, and assigned to desig nated colleges and universities to follow courses of study specified by the Navy Department. CLASSIFIED WANT-ADS FOR SALE—Artist Course Tickets. Phone 2838. lt-comp. 30 MALE FRATERNITY COOK— Desires new position. Has had ten years' experience. Excellent references. For interview, write in care of Collegian, Box 261. 2tchg.B-1-29 FELLOWS—Make that dale to night for the ‘•Lincoln's Birth day Ball" on Friday, February 12. lt-comp 30 FOR RENT—One double and one single room in private home. Pre ferred graduate student or stenog rapher. Inquire 232 S. Burrowes. Phone 2596, State College. GIRLS—Give that boy friend a hint that you want to go to "Lincoln’s Birthday Ball.” Lone woman student to graduate from the College's School of Engineering in December, Virginia F. Reilly ’42, immediately moved into a job at the Philadelphia Navy Yard as a jurior naval architect. She was the first woman employed in the design section of the indus trial department. The Easton, Pa., girl brought to her job with the Navy the additional training provided by a special 150-hour course in ship construction and hull drafting, as presented on the campus under the ESMWT program Dormitories To fieri IWA Representatives Dormitories where there are ten or more independent women and where the former representa tives to IWA have graduated, will elect IWA representatives Febru ary 1 and 2. Marjorie A. Magargel ’44, president of IWA, stated yes terday. Atherton Hall units, and the “laws MBTHDAT BUT 2teh-30 Navy Girl Anchorage will elect representa tives Monday, other dormitories will, hold'"Selections Tuesday. A committee d&four, Harriet Block ’44, Marjorie A. Magargle ’44, Norma R. Stern ’44, and Ruth Wachs ’44, will visit Atherton units at 6:20 p. m. and the An chorage at 9:45 p. m. to conduct elections. CAMPUS OWLS “The Collegian---Campus to Camp ” THE DAILY COLLEGIAN BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS George Washko’s will play for February 12, 1943 Entire net proceeds to buy subscriptions for Penn State men in the Armed Forces iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiniMiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiumminiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiing WOMEN IN SPORTS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii By LEE H. LEARNER Coeds who limp about campus in a completely muscle-bound con dition after their weekly phys ed period will have a chance to get into good condition beginning Mon day. Trained student leaders will be on hand in all the dorms to carry out WRA’s new physical fitness program which involves a fifteen minute exercise period every evening, Mondays, through Thurs days. Anyone who is really inter ested in ironing out those stubborn kinks can certainly spare the time, especially if it means a breathing space between cram sessions. New Frosh Granted Dating Permissions First semester freshmen have been granted the following dating privileges', according to Marion C. Dougherty ’44, judicial chairman. Weekend dating will begin at 5:30 Friday and extend until 5:30 Sunday. Coeds - will not be per mitted to date at all Sunday nights. Permissions will be granted for coeds to have one 1 o’clock and. one 10 o’clock each weekend, There, will be no dating during the week off campus, dating on campus will extend until 5:30 p. m. Monday through Friday. Thetas To Entertain Kappa Alpha Theta will enter tain the new class of ensigns at a Coffee Hour at the sorority house at 4:00 p. m. Saturday, according to Ann H. Carruthers, ’44, presi dent. .In celebration of National Founders Day, the sorority mem bers will attend Chapel as a group Sunday morning.. SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1943. The workout period will be held from 9:05 to 9:20 p. m. in frosh dorms, and from 10:10 to 10:25 p. m.’ for upperclasswomen. The program is purely voluntary, of course, but that should offer an even greater incentive for coeds to prove to themselves that they can have streamlining without tears. Having the campus buried un der nine inches of snow may pre sent a few minor difficulties like wet feet and sore derrieres, but .it also brings up the more pleasant prospect of skiing. The outing club is giving skiing instruction to coeds on Holmes Field at 4 o’clock every afternoon, and from 2 to 4 p. m. on Saturdays. The club is also sponsoring a skiing jaunt at the Centre Hills Country Club tomor row afternoon. All coeds interest ed will meet in the WRA equip ment room at 2 p. m., to hike, out! to the Country Club. 0 # Practice has begun for intra mural swimming meets, which will be held February 9, 11, and 13. Instruction in racing turns will be given at swimming club meet ing at 8 p. m. next Thursday even ing- Coeds who wish to .participate in the meets may sign up oh dor mitory and sorority teams, . arid ■must have three and a half hours of practice before the meets be gin. A physical. permit must be presented in order to be eligible for the competition. *|r • :;« >1: Badminton intramurals, which began last week, are still going, strong. In Thursday’s matches Al pha Omicron Pi defeated Kappa Alpha Theta and Zeta Tau Alpha" lost to Kappa Delta. The * Irvin team defaulted to Chi Omega. , Final matches are. scheduled, for next week.'
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