MmiiMiimimiiiHiiiiiiiiiuiniiiiHiiiiuiiiinimiiiiiiiiiiii WOMEN IN SPOiIS ■*i;iiiiiiituiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiminiiiiiiiiiiiiHHiniiiiiiiumui The first of the series of Army-1 j j ivy basketball games concluded with a coordinated Army sextet ji >,;ing out the Navy cagers in a cluse, hard fight, 28-20. Becky Walker, lanky Army for •i'.' ird, walked raff with scoring troiors by chalking up 19 points i )-r the Army squad. Alice Bur wilt sank two baskets for four a iditional points, Estelle Brown <;l;ed cut, another three, and Helen >oper scored the remaining two. Mottie Haverstick, Dorcas New comer, Peggy Quick, Adele Levin, and Gloria MacKinley were Army guards and Elizabeth McGee play ed in the forward position. Gloria McKinley played a nice, well timed offensive game followed by .Adele Levin who emerged from il jo fray sans two fingernails. Navy points were a little more! equalized and spread out among] forwards. Olive Hooper led scor- ! oj r, with a net point score of eight followed by Mary A. Jennings who scored six points. Charlotte .Spangler tallied four and Harriet '.if.ichards followed up with the re maining two. Betty Wolfram, Dorothy Huck, Eleanor Wills, and Fran Angle ) >laying in guard positions com plete the team together with For ward Mary K. Hoppel. Betty Wolfram played a rather .smart game in her guard position followed by Eleanor Wills who played an unusually good offens ive game. The next Army-Navy game has 1, -en scheduled for Monday at 4 p m., according to Mary G. Long pecker, WRA Intramural chair - man. Five games will be played. T.M. Table Tennis Gamma Phi Beta bowed to Chi | Omega as Alice Burwell downed Barbara Wells, 21-12, 21-10, and Bran Angle nosed out Mary Bow man 21-10, 21-7. In the doubles, Chi Omega defeated Gamma Phi Beta, 21-8, 21-15. Jordan Hall’s Mary Gundel beat Marcella Chervinak, Irvin Hall, >.n two straight games, 21-18, 21-11, Evelyn Gins, Jordan Hall, dropped the next two games to Irvin Hall’s ♦Sara. Wills, 21-17, 21-16. With one on each side, the winner of the match was decided when Jordan came out over Irvin in the doubles, #3-21 21-16. The other Jordan Htell team barely nosed out a strong Theta duo when Becky- Walker defeated Theta Vivian Martin in two games, 21-8, 21-16, although Martin cop ped the first game, 22-20. Theta {Getty Shenk dropped two games •i.o Marjorie Chon, 21-16, 21-14, and •won one game, 21-15. The Thetas defeated Jordan Hallers in the doubles, 22-20, 21-19. Carolyn Crooks, Atb West, tal lied for the dorm unit by winning out over AOPi Mary Fransen in two straight games, 21-16, 21-17. Clara Roberts added to this defeat by knocking AOPi Mary K. Hop . pel in two out of three games, 21- J!i, 21-9. Hoppel won the second ilirne, 21-15. Ath West succeeded further in, humbling the AOPi FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation iiiiiiiiimiiiinmiiiinnmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ,, iii ,|,, i ,l, ii ,||, n squad by climaxing the singles’ defeats with a double’s win, 21-15, 21-11. Grange won toy a default from Delta Gamma, and Delta Gamma won by the same from Alpha ChiO. IM Schedule The following schedule has been issued for Monday and Tuesday of next week by WRA Intramural Chairman Mary G. Longnecker: Monday 4 p. m.—Ath West B Team vs. Ath East B Team. Kappa Delta B Team vs. Ath West A Team. Wo-Mac A Team vs. Theta Phi Alpha. Alpha Chi Omega A Team vs. Phi Mu. Tuesday. 4 p. m.—Zela Tau Al pha A Team vs. Alpha Xi Delta. Kappa Kappa Gamma B Team vs. Alpha Omicron Pi B Team. Chi Omega B Team vs. Zeta Tau Alpha B Team. Kappa Delta B. Team vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma A Team. Playnight Tonight WRA Playnight will be held from 7 until 10 o’clock this even ing. Mary A. Jennings, WRA Ex ecutive Board representative, and Helen McKee, WRA Rifle Club president, are in charge. At this time all White Hall facilities including bowling alleys, table tennis games, swimming pool, and rifle range will be open to coeds to attend. Veteran Wafers Cast Presents NeMrama (Continued from Page One) Dirk Sneath, the accomplice vil “Love Rides the Rails or Will the Mail Train Run Tonight?” is a harrowing tale of the trials and tribulations of a happy little, rail road town and the misfortunes cast upon this group by the dastardly villains who try to spread evil where happiness bloomed. Included in the melodrama is a cabaret scene in which a can-can chomis and specialty numbers will participate and add to the at mosphere of the turn of the cen tury story. Contrary to custom, the heroine rescues the hero as the plot un folds. Collegian Sports-- (Continued from Page Three) and Sol Small win turn actors, as they put on a tumbling exhibition for the Dry Dock crowd next Sat urday. By the way, the National Intercollegiates have been official ly cancelled, it was made known today. In the NCAA tourney, to be held this year out at 'the home of the Wisconsin Badgers, the State forces are rated as one of the top three entering teams. Chances seem bright for ‘both Jacks —Grey and Tighe, Glenn Hawthorne, and Cap tain Billy "Richards to place well The Member of THE DAILY COLHEGIAN IA/e. ZJhe Women Coeds May Guard ‘Heaven’s Streets Letters, phone calls, and pow erful oaths have issued forth from the Atherton “Hang on to your seats” campaign, but in a time when Red Cross drives, bandage rollings, and auxiliary service or ganizations are staring coeds in the face, those petty things hardly deserve a nod of recognition, we thinks. Government officials have set up and described such organiza tions as the WAACs, and SPARs for interested College women. Just yesterday, the paper carried a story concerning a recent Wag en listee. Yet little has been mentioned about the Marine Reserves ... a worthy women’s group, minus a glamorous title but right in the limelight as far as working ca pacity is concerned. To fill |positions vacated in Marine administrational offices, women, at least 20 years old, may apply. Their work will parallel the jobs of other alphabetical or ganizations in another scope of the service. They will don green service outfits. In order that interested coeds may obtain further information concerning the .newly-created group, representatives of the gov ernmental aide will arrive Monday to interview and examine College persons. Actual swearing-in of those meeting qualifications will take place also, officials announced in an advance letter. Coeds eager to investigate ac tual working opportunities offered by this fourth of the service or ganizations will find it valuable to visit the temporary headquarters in Old Main Monday. It has been promised that when other service men “arrive at Heav en’s scenes, they’ll find the streets are guarded by the U. S. Marines.” Nice work if you could aid in it.. .and you can if you appear at those interviews next week. up in the running. Favored above the Lions in the competition are Wisconsin and Syracuse. Dave Homstein, Penn State’s rangy center, was named on West Virginia’s all-opponent basketball five recently. The first-string pivot man scored 15 points against the Mountaineers in their tiff here at State College. Only other State man to be cited was forward Larry Gent, who re ceived honorable mention from the down-South pickers. YOU MAY NEED THE RED CROSS—GIVE GENEROUSLY SSjf ■ fjfa'- t | <t~ :E## f s■*, Schoolboy 6rapplerc Begin Semi-Finals (Continued from Page Three) schoolboy grapplers enter the semi-final round of the two-day tournament, when 44 boys battle for spots in the semi-finals slated for this afternoon at 2 p. m. The lineup for the morning bouts in -95-pound class—Naugle, Cone maugh, vs. Thompson, Clearfield; Mourey, Mount Carmel, vs. At well, Grove City. 103-pound class Spory Bos well, vs. Hilt, Muncy; Gault, Ty rone, vs. Patterson, Waynesburg. 112-pound class—Beers, Clear field, vs. Wojchick, Mount Car mel; Brown, West York, vs.. Dud zik, Canonsburg. 120-pound class —Halas, Haver ford, vs. DeAugustine, Grove City; Conklin, Waynesburg, vs. Horoshak, Shamokin. 127-pound class—Gusic, Way nesburg, vs. Armstrong, Kingston; Homer, Boswell, vs. Dannaway, Tyrone. 133-pound class —George, Can nonsburg, vs. Johnson, Tyrone; Willard, Mount Carmel, vs. Hersh ey, Manheim. 138-pound class—Seibert, Forty Fort, vs. Krupper, Boswell; Cor win, Waynesburg, vs. Thevenet, Bethlehem. 145-pound class —Fuller, Way nesburg, vs. Ceccoli, Forty Fort; Jordan, Clearfield, vs. Williams, Greenville. 154-pound class—Garrison, For ty Fort, vs. Fisher, Boswell; Riss, Dußois, vs. Mathison, Grove City. 165-pound class Puntureri, Grove City, vs. Moore, Waynes- Mend Daily Collegian Classifieds FRATERNITY EVACUEES— PASSENGERS WANTED —To You’re welcome to use our game Beliefonte and return, Saturday room for chapter meetings. Just after lunch. Call Rex 4769 call and tell us when. Call Phi 2tpdl9HVH Sigma Kappa, 3331. Ask for Jack Germain, WARNING!— I The person who took $25.00 Wednesday was seen and can de identified. Return to Ed Keller, D.T.S.—No questions asked. lt-pd. WILL PERSON who took Camel hair overcoat from Sparks last Eriday morning please return to Jonoski —Telephone 2012. lt-pd-19—FEC FOR RENT—Large double room, only block and a half from campus. Board if desired. Call 3332, or Kimmel, 243 S. ,Pugh St. 3t-comp ,'a snaue that will go with axle grease 1 3tc0mp18,19,22,RDS vf '' n| ' m ' Oa.-'k • SATURDAY, MARCH 20, 19*3. Bio-Chem Rats Act As Barometers, Dig Nests In Bad Weather _Rats have no need for govern-- mbttt weather forecasts, according to Dr. N. B. Guerrant, biochemist at the College. Even the pamper ed strains kept in laboratories for experimental purposes are aware of the approach of storms, he and riiany other scientists have observ ed. “Right here in our cages, old' mamma rats having 60 genera tions Of ancestors which lived their entire lives in confinement still scratch nests of litter around their little ones when bad weather threatens,” Dr. Guerrant com mented. These rats are kept in completely air-conditioned sur roundings, they have no view of the outdoors although the labora tory is brightly lighted during the daytime, and most of them never have experienced any other en vironment. “We do not have to watch'them so' closely now 1 ,” he continued, “but in the old laboratory where we depended on natural ventila tion," we always closed the windows in winter when the rats began making beds. Farmers and ware housemen often wonder what be comes of these .animals during periods of sub-zero weather. No doubt jats seek warm, dry quar ters a day or two before humans begin to look for galoshes and mittens.” burg;- Chiavaroli, Shaniokin, vs. Rogers, Clearfield. 185-pound class—Crone, Sha mokin, vs.. Sutliff, Forty Fort; Barr, Clearfield, vs. DeCapua, Far rell. FOR SALE —Combination Radio and victrola, Majestic floor model, 32 inches high. Also set of boxing gloves. Dial 2538 and ask for Paul. It- LOST—Parmi Nous hat, first floor Sparks, Friday afternoon 3 to 4. Please call 873, ask for Lfike. : / 1 t-comp. LOST—Small black, gold-trimmed purse, probably in 5 and 10. Contained $3l. Money needed bad ly. Call Marie, 2324. lt-comp. ANYONE interested in buying two tickets for the Artist Course contact 170 Atherton. 2t-19-comp-LKL. STATED Shows At 1:30. 3:00. 6:45. 8:45 of the Ai LAST TIMES TODAY | HARVEST,I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers