Successor To The Free Lance, Established lSB‘f ' ______ P§ Sty? Ba% 0 (EoUpguut W OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE VOL: * l—Ntyey"' C Graduation Plans Begin as Faloon Sets Committees 23 Students Win Places On ’Commencement Wheels began to turn for moved up graduation plans in the class of ’44 last night, when Robert E. Faloon, class president, named 23 students to commencement com mittees, and appointed three chair men as heads of the groups. Wallace Murfit, president of Skull and Bones and of Delta Up silon fraternity, heads ; the. Caps and. Qo'.yns committee, which be gins plans on the. near, future for the May 12- commencement.- Editor.in-Chief of LaVie,-Harry C. Coleman, was chosen chairman of the Invitations, Programs, and Announcements, while Harold Bucher, president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, will supervise the sale of Lion Cpats through his-committee of nine members. . Murfit’s Cap and Gown group consists of J. Robert Hicks, Trib unal president; James ,Loughran, Harold Pickel, Donald Kulp, Vir ginia Carter, and Harry Coleman. Faloon has named seven men on Coleman’s, committee, including Paul I. Woodland, Robert Davis, varsity footballer; Wallace Murfit; Gloria Durst; Harry Kern, senior class vice-president; Richard Smy ser, arid J. Robert Hicks. ,lLjoh;,.Gp.at . named by the senior president are Jane H. Murphy, Walter Gerson, • Jere Heisler, William Fulton, Richard E. Marsh, James Lough rari, ,A 1 Letzler, Ted Maier,; 165- pound boxer, and Shirley Tetley,, former junior class secretary. Authorities List Vantage Done by Fraternities In Weekend Brawl , State College town authorities last night announced that Satur day night’s rampage destroyed or •damaged 40 parking meters, 9 •street signs, and 21 street lights, all’' made of materials with high priorities. , Police Chief Juba stated that the- borough can no longer buy metal street signs' and the West Penn Power Company pointed out that they could not replace stu dent breakage under pri orities. Burgess Yougel announced yes terday, that he was turning the names-of all known violators over to the College and. military au tliorities. As most of the male Col ■ lege • students care in Reserve Corps or’on deferments from their draft boards, the most likely ...punish ment for the violators will be the cancelling of their deferred status and .immediate induction into the Army. Damage in addition to that of public property included the fol lowing to private homes: tourist sign tom down, furniture, rain spouting, . door screen, window glass, window screens, arbors, and door screens. In addition considerable damage was done to several of the frater nity houses that are to be evacu ated. • . Word was issued last night from College officials that Hie four fraternities- rumored in yesterday's Collegian to have received word to evacuate have been added to the orig inal list of 19. New houses (Continued On Page Four) WEDNESDAY, MORNING MARCH 17, 1943, STATE COLLEGE, PA. President Abraham Lincoln Hite, well known impersonator of the Civil War president, is shown above, selling President Ralph D. Hetzel War Savings Bond. Mr, Hite, who is employed by Grounds and Buildings for the College, is living up to his patriotic name by traveling through the County school district, selling stamps to school children. ROIC Honorary Initiates 17 Men Pershing Rifles, basic ROTC honorary, initiated 27 men last night. Initiates are Howard O, BeayenJr., Richard,E. Black, Her bert E. Blaicher, Robert C. Boe decker, Bruce F. Chandler, Rich ard A. Collins, Robert C. Coutts, Floyd S. Eberts Jr., Morton J. G'ollub. James A. Gustafson, Donald G. Hamme, Eugene B. Herman, Ar thur E. Lenox Jr., John R. Lesko, Gordon L. Morgret, Alex J. Nagy Jr., Paul L.‘ Robert L. Pomerene, Theodore M-. Pozelsky, Donald Sands, Robert R. Saxe, Matthias J. Schleifer, Harry G. Starrett, Urban V. Turner, Eugene S. Wheeler, George R> Wisser, and Dale E. Wommert. Rudolph Bloom, captain, has been preparing the men for in duction into the Army by present ing lectures and films on gas at tacks, and teaching map reading, scouting, and use of a compass. Before the semester ends, there will probably be a short hike to acquaint them with terrain fea tures, according to Captain Bloom. At a banquet to be held May 3, medals will be awarded to three members for- various accomplish ments. Candidates for Players; Special Ads Tryouts Candidates for. specialty acts to Ibe • utilized between acts of the Players’ melodrama are urged to apply at the dramatics office, | Schwab Auditorium this week, | according to Lawrence E. Tucker, instructor in dramatics and direc ! tor of the play. I Specialty song numbers and I persons to collaborate with the can-can chorus and the comic male quartet are needed, Tucker explained. ■ “Father, ■ Dear Father Come Home,’’ “Fallen By The-Wayside,” “The Man Who Broke The Bank At Monte Carlo,” “Heaven Will Protect The Working G ! rl” ahd other songs will highlight the show which is parallel to “Streets of New York,” given by Players in 1940. ells Bond To President 3 One-Ad Plays Given Tonight, Friday By 5 Dramatics (lasses Three one-act plays, one of them an original farce by a Penn State coed, will be presented in the Lit tle Theatre,'•'Old Main, at 7:30 to-', night. Admission is free, but tick ets should be obtained at the dra matics office, Schwab Auditorium, any time today. Under the direction of Frank Neusbaum and Lawrence Tucker, professors of dramatics, and through the combined efforts of the classes ,in . acting, . directing, staging, lighting, make-up, and stage management, the plays will also be given Friday night as part of' the Red Cross Drive in con junction with Old Main Open House. “Thin as a Fiddle and Ready,” the original play, was written by Mildred Greenberger ’42 for Pro fessor Neusbaum’s playwriting class, and will have its world -pre miere tonight. The play is under the direction of Grace O. Clayton, graduate. Fifty -Curtiss-Wright' co eds will be guests at -the plays to night. Portfolio Features "Art In Penn State" Third issue of Portfolio to come out this semester will be on the stands this afternoon, according to Rosalind B. Schnitzer, editor. Special feature this month is an article by Harold E. Dickson, as sociate professor of fine arts, on “Art in Penn State." Information concerning a $5O prize contest sponsored by the magazine, “New Directions,” will also be found in this issue. IFG Considers Housing An important meeting of In terfratemity Council will be held at Beta Theta Pi at 7:30 tomorrow night, according to IFC President Henry Keller. Members of the council will attempt to find a solution to the pressing housing, situation which arose when the Army and Air Force took over a great number of fraternity houses for uife as barracks. Harvest Ball Decorations Announced; Balloting For Queen Begins Tomorrow Rec Hall will be transformed into a hayloft when Harvest Bail ers sponsor their annual informal dance Saturday night. Corn shalks and bales of hay will contrast! with the plaid shirts of the dan cers, according to Harry J. Hof. meister, chairman. Voting to choose the Harvest Ball Queen from the three coeds nominated in balloting in the dor mitories will begin tomorrow when ballot boxes will be placed in the Comer Room and Student Union. The winner will receive a cup during intermission at the dance. The three women nominated are Jane Vernon, Elizabeth J. Bratton, and Margaret L. Good. Jane Vernon, president of the Curtiss-Wright Cadettes, was edu cated at Knox College,'Galesburg, 111., not far from her hometown of Rock Island. At Knox she was president of her Pi Beta Phi social sorority and also of Mortar Board, women’s" honorary. Miss Vernon taught swimming at Knox and had time left over to participate in women’s student government, journalism, and to make Delta Sigma Rho, national debate honorary. She is five feet I six inches tall and has blonde hair. Betty Bratton, of Clearfield, is a sophomore in Education at the College and is treasurer of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. She is five feet seven inches tall and is a bru nette. P6ggy Good, sophomore journal ism'.student, is-a'member of the Collegian Junior Board and of the Liberal Arts Student Council. She belongs to Alpha Chi Omega, wo men’s fraternity, and is active on the Executive Board of WRA. She is five feet four inches tall with light brown hair. The Campus Owls will play’ at the dance. Senior Honoraries Tapidive Men Skull and Bones' senior activi. ties honorary, collaborated with Parmi Nous in spring tapping when the organizations extended invitations to seven new members Monday evening, according to Wallace Murfltt, Skull and Bones president. Newly-elected hatmen include A 1 Bollinger, wrestling manager; Bob Galley, spccer manager;- Bob Morgan, heavyweight wrestler; Glenn Hawthorne, boxing; Ben Bailey, Collegian sports editor; Oggie Martella, football and box ing; and Frank ' McKain, head cheerleader. Formal tapping took place in Old Main at noon yesterday. Panel Group Highlights Consumers Conference Consumers'Problems Conference has been under way since Monday with Dr. Clarence Schettler, Col lege and University Specialist of OP A, and Dr. Benjamin Andrews, Columbia University, as speakers. This evening’s panel discussion in 121 Sparks is the highlight of the conference, featuring all the speakers of the conference, Dr. Schettler, Dr. Andrews, ' Lomea Barber, regional nutritionist; Du. ane Ramsey, field representative, FHA; and Mrs. Conway Zirkle, chairman of the Advisory Com mittee on Consumers Interests. “Rationed Living—How Will It Atfect You?” will be discussed. PRICE: THREE CENT! Army Begins Plan For College Men Not Yet Enlisted Qualifiers Will Return To School For Study Men who pass the Navy exami nation April 2 will be able to ask for service under the new Army training program, or the Navy V -12 plan for continued college work, Robert E. Galbraith, FAWS heqd, said hast night. ; If students ask for Army train ing, they will first 'be required to take the basic 13 weeks training at one of the Army camps, and then be transferred back to a col lege of their preference, providing the choice meets with official ap proval. Students who qualify for this new program will be able to plan their own curricula, but, like the Navy plan, several courses will .be required, and all must be recom mended by the Army. Identification cards must be pre sented by each student who de sires to take the examination, but only those men not enlisted in any branch of the service will be elig_ ible. Galbraith will announce the date for students to receive the cards in the next few days. Simultaneous with this an nouncement came a bulletin from Washington clarifying student de ferment chances for the next few semesters.- Under present plans, men studying in the following fields, who will graduate before July 1, 1945, may apply for defer ment: Aeronautical engineering, auto motive engineering, bacteriology, chemical engineering, chemistry, civil engineering, electrical engi neering, geophysics, .marine engi neering, mathematics, mechanical engineering, meteorology, mining and metallurgical engineering. Mineral technology, naval archi. tects, petroleum engineering, physics, astronomy, radio engi neering, safety engineering, sani tary engineering, and transporta tion engineering. Deferments will be given to men enrolled in college as agriculture, forestry, pharmacy, or optometry students, providing they have com pleted at least one-half of their undergraduate work. Bolton Informs Freshman Council Chief Petty Officer William Bol ton, instructor of • naval physical education, will speak before the PSCA Freshman Council in the Hugh Beaver room, Old Main, 7 o’clock tonight on the subject of “The Navy at Penn State,” Mal colm Fox, publicity chairman, an nounced. Bolton, former director of phys_ ical education in the Naval train ing program at Dartmouth, will tell of the widely varied training his men receive in swimming, box ing, and other sports. Bolton entered the service in April 1942 after training at Nor folk, Virginia, for nine weeks. He came to Penn State last semester arid acts as instructor to the men who train primarily on their own initiative. Following this council meeting, the PSCA's two freshman organi zations, the council and the co-ed. forum, will unite for the rest of the semester and hold joint meet, ings each week. -_J