Wnim Find Good Excuse to Meet Amy Lads—Begin A Dating Bureau I Coeds Dominate [ As Boys Leave By SIGN-YOUR-CHECK Have all you pre-pre-flight 1' iys got your green ribbons and Mack bow ties yet? Well, if you < ndn’t, you’d better do so right .tway, because the women are j'onna take over from now on. They say they’re gonna be iiugh, and you practically gotta wear customs because you are new here and still don’t know all m e here to stay, and the coeds are going to see to it that all the newcomers obey them or else. If you Army lads don’t follow their orders, just remember that the ratio was 214 to 1 in favor of the men last January, but now it Mis dropped down to about 1% and still going lower. The femmes are getting bigger and bigger and the boys are leaving here faster than Army’s coming in. Looking back on enrollment fig ures we find that an average of .10 women were in school some thirty years ago, but take a look now. The men are almost swamp ed, the gals are still coming in. Now that you soldiers are hep as to who’s boss around here, the gals are gonna give you a chance to get acquainted with them, so that come April 10, you’ll be ready for the shindig that the co eds are putting on. But first, a dating bureau is go ing to be organized so that the boys and girls can get together. ■Teannie Weaver is "’chairman of this thing and along with about eight other gals she’s going to ■send application blanks to all the Army lads. Such dope as height, weight, color of hair, likes and dislikes, and all that kind of stuff will be asked for so that they can tell what two people acn cut the rug together. Then each barrack will be un der the charge of a committee member (the wimmen- like this part), and dates will be arranged through the gal assigned for each barrack. All the boys will have to do is call .up their Barrack Girl and ask her to fix up a date. Easy, huh? The gals have got the ball roll in.’, so how about you boys co operatin’ when the time comes? A HEAVENLY CREATION with jierience. Will some smooth male )'lease call Madame Spit, Woma n’s Building, 2nd West. ltcomp-JHM )'■ W.—To Wellsboro, Mansfield, and vicinity. Leave Saturday noon. Call Johnson 819. LOST One gray Schaeffer Fountain Pen in Prof. Gal braith’s office —243 L. A. Owner lent pen to student and forgot to get it back. Please return to Les Trout, 254 E. Nittany ave., ?.<519. ltl-GJC FOR RENT—Large sunny double room. Call 3332. 24 South Pugh st. LOST—GoId ring, diamond and rubies at Dry Dock or vicinity fJaturday. Reward. Call Mickey, 5051, Ext. 180. 2t-4-1,2. FOR RENT—Two large double rooms and one half double. All twin beds. 236 Bast Foster. 3t-30-pd—KRV •FOR SALE Wardrobe trunk, good condition, $lO. 217 West Park avenue. Call 3126. 3t-30-chg—KRV WANTED—Boy for part time jan itor job in exchange for meals. Call 4181. 3t-30-chg—BAM fITCJDENT WANTED Help in kitchen of small coffee shop in j '-turn for meals. Call Bob Boe •■t'v.’ker, 761. 2t-31-chg—RWM Surgical Dressing Class Faces Housing Problem By ROBERTA BOGER Campus sororities have just gone hog wild over the surgical dressing program and the quota of 183 million bandages for the Red Cross has almost been filled in the first few weeks of rolling as Penn State’s serious minded coeds have at last gotten their chance to participate in war work. Since most Collegian subscribers read only the first part of an ar ticle, that paragraph will serve to save face for the lazy coed. Here is the dope on what she is doing to help the Red Cross, which in turn helps our boys in the serv ice. There are eighteen hundred (1800) coeds enrolled in a class that meets each Thursday night in 110 Home Ec. It seems silly to try to cram all these women into one small room—so here’s the plan they devised. An earnest appeal was published in Collegian urging the coeds to stop attending these meetings in such large numbers. Thirty-six was set as the maximum number of selected coeds to be admitted. The very next week, however, 120 angry girls stormed in. Now really don’t you think such a lack of co operation is hindering the war ef fort? I uiiiiiiiimmimiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiuiiiiiiiiiimiiiuimiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiiumimmimmiiiiimimmim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii (Note: Ten percent of this col-| umn js dedicated to all Sports women wherever they may be, an other ten percent is dedicated to Collegian’s Untouchables the Proof & Copy Readers, twenty percent goes to the Campus Red Cross Drive, forty percent, of course, goes to the landlady, and the remainder is dedicated to all those lads who owe the writer, money but who found it incon venient to make payment before his departure.) First of all, we’d like to re-plug the White Hall Red Cross (Blue) Rally (we couldn’t resist thumping that third color in there). This rally (noun) was held in the White Hall gymnasium from 7 until 10 p.m. last night—according to Rita M. Belfonti in Women in Sports in last Saturday’s Collegian, page three, column four. Admission consisted of coat hangers; yarns, tin cans, ear wax, whale bones, hat pins, ball bats and other articles which can be used in some way for defense pur poses. Food procurement at the Refreshment Booth was free, and there was no shoving, pushing, scratching, or hogging in general. We’d like to believe that. ltpd-RLT That off our chest, let’s review the week’s sporting results. The Coke Contest between Kappa Kappa Boom and Tappa Tappa Sigh ended in a moral victory for the sisters from Kappa Kappa Boom after three exciting hours of consumption. The sisters from Tappa Tappa Sigh took on the most cokes but the sisters from Kappa Kappa Boom went to their classes next day. Monday night's foot-race be tween second-floor Ath and third floor Ath ended in a fight when the girls from the second floor learned that the girls from the third floor had been previously tipped off that the Air Corps lads were coming in on the Bellefonte Central. There was quite a bit of fight ing observed during the run, and several girls dropped out with se vere shin-splints near the freight station. Several contestants had their coiffures ripped off and were forced to forego classes in the morning. Early results of tire long dis- WOMEN IN SPORTS By BENITA BAILEY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuuiiiii tance carrier pigeon swimming meet among coeds of Eastern col leges show Penn State coeds en trenched in a tie for top honors. However, several pigeons from outlying schools have not come home to roost yet, and may change the aspect of the final picture. Deadline for pigeon returns has been set for supper-time tomor row, and those coming in after that time will be disqualified. It is believed in some quarters that sev eral of the pigeons have been shot enroute by starving citizens in and around Philadelphia, and special dispensation will be made for col leges in that area. Ag coeds defeated the keglers from the engineering bunch by de fault. Sorority sisters defeated inde pendent sisters in saddle-shoe cleaning by default. The Home Eccers took the Phys Edders in archery by default. The Phys Edders claimed the wind was blowing too hard. WRA will han dle the protest. IFrofh Bubbles Soon; College Awaits Big Day A month from now, .the Frothy Staff will treat what remains of the foi*mer population of Penn State to a stupendous parody issue which no' doubt will be even more of a slam to various publications in this vicinity than previous is sues. Personalities on the campus will also be mimicked. This monthly hunk of paper and print should prove swell ’cause half the Collegian staff is helping to write the thing. Frosh Debaters Debate Freshman debaters made a trip to Lewistown for nothing Tuesday night. A heated discussion with the high school students there on the topic, “Federal Union,” was pronounced a non-decision debate. Too bad, too, because it was their last debatte of the season. Xi Sigma Pi, national forestry honorary, met last night to talk about new members. Cats! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN HE Nursery School Holds Great Charms For Domestic Expert By SISTER BLATZ Food and Baby Expert After duly surveying the home economics school, at the request of the Women’s Editor, it is my opinion that home ec majors spe cialize in two things: children and cooking. At this particular point in my life, the latter holds greater inter ests, so most of the time was spent looking over the food department. One of the questions many readers have asked is, “Is the Home Ec School Here to Stay?” Certainly, it is . . . one look at all the food being cooked up and any red-blooded male would vote for increasing the yearly appro priation to the home ec school. Throw in a few more stoves, more tables, triple the size of the Maple Room, and the Col lege will be able to compete with the outrageous food prices charged for meals in downtown beaneries. As for the children . . . well the Nursery School is prospering. I don’t recommend expansions in this department because many unforeseen factors become in volved. Instead of giving so much milk to these tots, maybe they ought to give some to the girls in the dorms. No, on second thought that would be taking milk from babies. YOU MAY NEED THE RED CROSS—GIVE GENEROUSLY By KARNIE DONAHUE Knitting, Plink-Plunk Tourney Feature Sexy WRA Program By A. PATSY MILLfeR Girls could stay out until 10 o’clock and they did for the gala Red Cross rally in White Hall last night. Even Adele Levin and Lizzy McKinley were sitting around the special, non-collapsible card tables knitting and stitching. Also seen behind piles of half-finished af ghans and animal stuffing was Dean Charlotte E. Ray, ably assist ed by popular Mrs. Grace Hall, one of the guardians of the Ath Hall monastery; Miss Mildred Lucey, girls' muscle manipulator, and Miss Jean Swenson, who helps the girls absorb some of the chlor ine in the White Hall pool. A new idea in rhythm-knitting was in evidence to the Collegian’s roving reporters as they entered the inner recesses of the forbidden SOCIETY By REMONA and BENITA Fashion Experts It is not often that two alleged sports writers get a chan'ce to talk about women, let alone the clothes they wear, but ye editor Woodsaw loosened up and told us to go home and dream about coeds, and then come back and write what we thought they were wearing. First oC all, might we say this is a very pleasing subject. For months we have been standing in a puddle of water up in the Rec Hall dressing rooms, trying to wrangle a story out of exhausted athletes. That is all changed for today. Why, yesterday we did not write one sports story—left it all up to Collegian coeds. (That will be obvious when you turn to page three.) Following Mr. Paul Woodsaw’s advice to get a dream on for the night, we went down to Doggie’s, but he didn’t believe we were 37; so we had to get a coed-nightmare via the Corner Room. Two burgers, with cheese, tomatoes, pickles, onions, relish, garlic, salami, whip ped cream, and side covers of bread proved the right subscrip tion. About 3:59 a.m. in the morning the visions began to drift slowly, . creepily, into our minds. Mixed drinking regulations forbid any' further advance. Cadettes were seen in .their pink . taffeta gowns, strolling leisurely to their riveting machines . . . Kappa Kappa Gams, with their Petty Girl legs, were bringing their weight down to a slim 220 in White Hall, with dainty instruct ress Articia Warnock leading them through a weird conga line calis thenics . drill . .' . the girls were wearing those little pink things, but Miss Hades gave us the go sign before we could get an elab orate description for our male readers . . . with little or no luck yet in getting some fashion news, ■we meandered towards the crowd ed dormitories, and O boy . . . after pushing Mickey Blatz and Rube Faioon aside, we got a close up look at the ferns who boast to be the toast of campus ... be tween the wee of us, we take Penn I State Bessie. Sorority coeds were having house meetings last night frying to decide the . appropriate “height above knees length” for their sum, mer frocks, and again we were out of place . . . the hell with it, we are going up to Beaver Field and talk to Joe Bedenk about baseball. SS33GA - for Gibbs Secretaries during the past year t Many employers specified college girla for important positions in a wide variety of interesting fields. Courses exclusively for college women begin July 6 and Sept. 21, Personal place* ment in Boston, New York, and Prov idence. Send for booklet, “Glttua AT W(«Lt£." JRutrftJiMAjLiiie.. || ‘SIECIftIETARHAIL (/ I BOSTON —40 iVUm.iiOHutMK sr, NEW YORK—;.*UO Mmm Avuuijh THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1943, hall. Just like a line-up of auto matons, Penn State coeds were dropping a stitch and adding an other to the melodic tunes of “Flat' Foot Floogie” and “Beat Me Mammy Eight to the Bar.” (Poor “Pappy” isn’t allowed in White Hall—Ed.) In - some of the most thrilling, breath-taking matches played on the White Hall- floor in years (At least that’s what the janitor .said! Say, what was he doing there any way?) the gals from Kappa Alpha Theta finally won a game or two when the “B” squad took two out of three hotly contested games, from Ath Westites Carrie Crooks and Katie Roberts. Lizzy Shenh:’ and Viv Martin outlasted the bar rage for the Thetas. Oh yes, the scores: 17-21, 24-22, and 21-15. Liz Shenk won tout Katie Rob erts played fair as the campus sister blasted her way through one of the singles matches, 21-11 and 21-18. In another knock-’em-down drag-’em-out singles tiff Viv Mar tin beat Carrie Crooks to a pulp, 21-17 and 21-17. The Theta “A” team took the floor to show us some real pong ping playing. They lost - two matches to AEPhis Daisee Kranich and Eddie Bobnoff. Who were the Thetas? Oh yeah, Gin-ny Seltzer and Poiky McClellan. The humili ating scores were 21-14, 12-21, and 21-14 in the Kranich-Seltzer set to, and 21-17 and 21-17 all oyer again in the Dobnoff-McClellan battle. One of the stitch-droppers over at Mr. White's Gym asked us to tell all hardy women hikers to get their duffle bags ready for the hep overnight hike, leaving White Hall at 2 p.m. Saturday or whenever Marty Haverstick gets there to coL lect the required $.40. No. kidding, girls, let's all get out. and enjoj the great out-of-doors!- ~. r- The women can have this beat back unless, provision is made for me to cover the swimming part of their athletic program. Bye.