PAGE FOUR. WRA Plans Co-Rec Hike, EPlaynight, Swim Meet Red Cross Rally Date Set for March 17 Club Presidents’ Board of WRA ■will sponsor a co-rec hike Sunday afternoon, according to Elizabeth J. McKinley, club activities presi dent, and F. Doris Stevenson, Ex ecutive Board publicity chairman. Those interested in attending mould meet in front of White Hall at 2 p.m. Sunday. Hikers are asked to take along 25 cents for supper which will be served at the WRA cabin. Joan Miller and Margaret Ra il ialey are in charge of the hike v.dth Winifred E. Spahr and Phyl )js R. Watkins the committee in c) large of the food. Mary A. Jennings, Adele J. Devin, Miss McKinley and Miss Miller will leave State College be f' U-e the group to prepare the cabin fov the hikers. The Curtiss-Wright Cadettes are invited'to the hike, Miss Steven stated. Y\»'RA Plans Playnighi White Hall Playnight will be held Saturday from 7 until 10 p.m. All gym facilities, including bowl ing alleys, rifle ranges, and swim ming pool, are open to those who attend. F wimming Meel Sixty schools throughout the country will compete in the Na tional Intercollegiate Telegraphic .swimming meet .which begins March 1. Coeds who tried out for the swimming team were timed by hie guards at the White Hall pool. Competing coeds will swim five lours a week during plunge hours which are posted on White Hall bulletin board, according to Phyl lis R. Watkins, Swimming Club president. )itod Cross Rally Plans for a Red Cross rally were made at the WRA Executive Board meeting last night. The tentative date is March 17 from 7 to 10 p.m. in the White Hall gym. This project corresponds to the surgical dressing classes, except that sewing and knitting will take the place of meeting surgical dressings. Small articles that can be completed in one night will he made and submitted to the local Red Cross. Outing Club Elects • Carolyn Crooks, former vice -3 >resident of the Outing Club, re placed Priscilla Cobb, who left school to take the Curtiss-Wright course. At the Outing Club meet ing last night Louise Zimmers was elected to replace Miss Crooks. The Outing Club is planning a trip to ..the ski trail Sunday after noon. Coeds who are interested should sign up in the White Hall locker room before Saturday, Miss SUBSCRIBE -JSroWI—FOR TOUR DAILY COLLEGIAN. NOW ... Senior Picture PENN STATE PIQTB SHOP 212 E. College Ave* •ft Soph Cage Team Trips J»Sr. Squad An undefeated sophomore inter class basketball squad tripped up a no-win junior-senior sextet, 24 to 20, in what proved to be the most highly competitive, hard fought game of the series. Sophomore individual scores were split between Peggy North rup, Emily Northrup, Mary K. Hoppel, Estelle Brown, and Betsy McGee, who scored 12, 4,4, 2, and 2 points respectively. Sophomore guards were Marjorie Lyons, Dor cas Newcomer, and Eleanor Wills. Mary G. Longnecker led the junior-senior cagers with a 10- point score followed by Charlotte Spangler with 6 and Janet Tower with 4. Junior-senior guards were Adele Levin, Motty Haverstick, Mary Weldy, and Pat Aloe. The following schedule for next week was released by Mary G. Longnecker, intramural chairman: Tuesday, 7 p.m.—Frosh vs. Jun ior-Senior team. Wednesday. 7 p.m.—Sophomores vs. Frosh. Bowling Matches Postponed The Ath East-Alpha Omicron Pi bowling tilt, formerly scheduled for yesterday afternoon, has been set for Monday at 4 p.m., Miss Longnecker stated. Three bowling matches have been set for next week. Next week’s team participants depend upon Monday’s winner. Women's Journalism Honorary to Initiate Four Theta Sigma Phi, national wo men’s journalism honorary, will hold initiation at the Kappa Alpha Theta house at 1 o’clock tomorrow for Jane H. Murphy, Elaine J. Cox, Helen E. Dodd, and Barbara A. Mennies. There will be a meeting of ac tive members and pledges at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Tues day at 5 p.m. Mrs. Barbara E. Murdoch/ fea ture editor of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, will be guest speaker at a .tea for women jour nalism majors sponsored by Theta Sigma Phi in the northeast lounge Atherton Hall Sunday, March 14. Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity entertained members of Chi Omega sorority Wednesday eve ning for dinner and dancing. Crooks stated. The trip will begin at 10 a.m. and the coeds will re turn at 8:30 p.m. Miss Barbara Bradshaw, graduate assistant in physical education, will lead the hike. SEND HOME your HE Faculty Members Attend Conference Ai West Virginia Four members of the home eco nomics faculty will leave today to attend a three-day home econom ics conference in. Martinsburg, West Virginia, according to Miss Marion L. Carr, instructor of home economics. Dr. Laura W. Drummond, direc tor of home economics; Miss Gilma Alson, assistant professor of home economics; Miss Vivian U. Crow, professor of home econom ics; and Miss Ruth E. Grahm, pro fessor of home economics, will represent the College at the con ference to be held Saturday, Sun day, and Monday. The puFpose of the discussion is to formulate a program for the improvement of home economics instruction appropriate to the in stitutions to be represented. Members of the faculty from the University of Maryland, Delaware University, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, University of West Vir ginia, and Penn State will he pres ent, Miss Carr added. . IWA Shifts Dance Date fo Tomorrow The date of the IWA recording dance has been changed from to night to tomorrow night after the basketball game and will he held in Grange playroom, according to Norma R. Stern, chairman. The raffling of one dollar’s worth of defense stamps will high light the dance, to which everyone is invited. Admission is 10 cents per person and the latest records will be played, Miss Stern stated. Co-chairmen of the dance are Norma R. Stern and Sydney H. Rivenberg, assisted by Barbara Kayser, Betty J. Luchtemeyer, and Phyllis H. Wolfgang. Curtiss-Wright Cadettes are es pecially invited, MiSs Stern added: Newman Glub Hike Newman Club members will leave the rectory at'2:oo p.m. Sat urday for a hike to the Justine Lodge near Boalsburg. Refresh ments will be served and enter tainment presented before hikers return for dinner. Janet Gillespie, social chairman, has charge of the affair. Club members will attend Com munion in the local church at 10:00 mass Sunday morning, an nounced Eileen M. Mclntyre ’45, publicity chairman. Delta Gamma held an informal party for Kappa Delta . Rho last night. CLASSIFIED SECTION. WANTED—AII State wolves to leave my. third floor. Ir.vin girl alone for the duration. Thank you. A U. S. Army Phi Kappa Sigma 3t 16 chg PPM FOR RENT—Sunny single and , double rooms close to' campus. Call Kimmel, phone 3332, 243 S. Pugh St. 5t 12 comp Person who took grey covert top coat from Pond Lab was seen by a grad student and can be identi fied. If not returned to S. U„ dras tic action will be taken. No ques tions asked if returned. ROOMS—“There’s no place like home”—unless it’s living at" the “300” Club. Call 4304. It 19 comp EDD WANTED—Boy for part time jan itor work in return for meals. Apply at the Post House. 3t 19 ch REM LOST—An Alpha Chi Omega pin between Benedict House, Mac Hall, and the Alpha. Chi Suite. Call 2018. 3t 19 comp JHM APTS. FOR RENT—Sublet: Fur- nished, two rooms, private bath, kitchenette, two-four adults. Sin gle room same. 428 W. College. Phone 4183, Campbell. (Janitor wanted.> 2-19, 23, 26 Dial 2345 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN It T 9 pd MKH IAJe, lAJomen Make Your 'Bed . Then Lie In It There’s a time and place lor everything. Sure, it’s a vei - y old saying, .but it’s one of those things that’s been trite and true. Today it applies to sleep . . . that stuff that everyone wants but what nobody tries to get. According to all decent clocks, there are 24 hours, and that’s all, in each day. Under the plan of the gods, we work by day and sleep by night. Is it our idea, then, to defy them? Coeds seem to Jleel that sleep should be done only when there is nothing unimportant to do. A game of bridge, a bull session, any dull movie, all have wondrous powers to interrupt or just dismiss any ideas of sleeping; but dreams take precedent in any class or dur ing the time that a class is sched uled. All of .this is private business and is something that should be left entirely to the individual . . . when it effects only the individual. But as the nights in a coed’s life get shorter, WSGA agrees that wo men set the “time to retire” ahead a little. . Differing from other student government requests which have been made in the past, this one is for the good of just “you.” Sure, 'being told to get sleep is a big joke ... it always will be, but how about making your beds, (by noon) and then lying in them at the appointed time . . . not the next morning -when hygienists say you don’t get -the best quality of sleep anyway. - • ■ Penn State Fraternity Rings ■' Lv G, "Balfour Co, MB S. Allen Si. in Charles Fellow Skqp NOW PLAYING Jsvg& .WALT.I MONDAY—"NOEL- COWARD'S—"IN WHICH WE SERVE" - h WARNER BROS. Picturg w.tn JACK CARSON • GLADYS GEORGEO vk FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1043. Alpha Lambda Delta To Tutor Freshitten A plan for tutoring freshman coeds in all subjects was formu-' la ted at a meeting of .Alpha/ Lambda Delta', women’s freshman'; honorary, Wednesday. Miss Edith J. Melville, assistant dean in charge of freshman wo men, announced to coeds at a. meeting of .Freshman Council yes terday that the tutoring will be 3lB Old Main from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m: Tuesday. All frestmiari coeds Who are in need of help in their stpdie# are invited to attend. • JobiiEi Piollet 145;'president of Alpha Lambda Delta, is in charge of the plan for tutoring. ; Davis Lectures on Advertising Leadership Donald W. Davis, , assistant pro-,, fessor of. journalism, addressed the members of Alpha Delta Sig ma,, advertising honorary, at the T. K.E. house at 7:30 p. m. yes* terday, announced Richard E. Marsh’ ’44, secretary. Pointing out the types of . ad vertising U’ead-by the public, Pro fessor Davis illustrated his ad dress on Advertising . Readership with slides. The information' pre sented was the result o fa: survey. A dicussion by members of the or ganisation followed. Jit 5L Wows CATHAUM— “The Hard Way”' STATE— . . . . “Barnbi” _ NITTANY— “Mexican Spitfire’s Elephant” STATE THE A TRE § fjtVl S' -1 3tlj' _s i?p f .S ' -i M W' i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers