1 3 .6A1E FOUR /4 Sororities Plan Entertainment For Air Corps Cadets Will Feature Novelty Acts And Refreshments 'in compliance with the request that sororities and women's groups chtertain and welcome the air Gidets, parties have been planned through the dean of women's office. Members of l 4 women's sorori ties as well as Philotes, indepen dent women's organization, and VA will greet cadets in their re vpective meeting units from 3:30 *lc. 5 o'clock today. Delta Gamma will have dancing aitd entertainment to welcome 30 eddets. Alpha Omicron Pi will entertain 2,5 cadets and 36 members will be 7,resent. Fifty-eight Chi Omegas plan to ).teet with 30 cadets; 20 cadets have 1 teen invited to the Theta Phi .Al- Itha house which thad•2o members. Kappa Kappa Gamma and Alpha Chi Omega with 72 and 63 mem l lets respectively will accommodate P,O at each house. Gamma Phi Beta with 51 coeds accordingly will receive 20 cadets IA their suite. The Phi Mu's 30 ac iives will entertain 25 Army men. Alpha Z. Delta and Alpha Ep- Uon Phi have combined to have a ),arty in Atherton Hall at which they will serve soft drinks, dance play cards. The former with 2,7 participating will welcome 20 :rad the later with 60 will-greet 40. Kappa Alpha Theta has planned ) , ovetly acts and will entertain 25. There are 60 members in the so- • Thirty Sigma Delta Tau's will ::erve refreshments followed by a uorgram featuring singing and dancing as a salutation to 30 cadets. IWA will entertain 50 cadets. One hundred forty .independents will join in the party which is to be a carnival scene. Philotes will also entertain 20 Air Corp students. • Kappa Delta and Zeta Tau Al pha, each with 20 active members, ill entertain 60 Army guests in Atherton lounges. Sslimners Should Report All men who were out for the swimming team this, season hsould heport to the Pohto Shop at 5 p. m. Monday night if they want their picture in this year's La Vie, John Jackson, manager of the tank squad, said last night. CLASSIFIED SECTION WANTED—Used typewriter, regu lar or portable. Good condition. Cal . ( 4850, ask for C. R. 3t-13-pd—REM LOST—Brown leather wallet with important cards and credentials. Reward. Call Allison 3331. 3t116-comp—RDS LOST —A brown leather billfold somewhere in Home Economics building, or vicinity. Reward of fered. Call Edith Bane, 28 Atherton WANTED Garage to rent until end of semester. Call Davies, 2tcompl7,2oßDS -iir•gr-mr We. Calling H o s tesses to Welconie Air Crew Soldiers Tonight A hostess bar will be featured at, the Dry Dock program t.) wel come air crew cadets tonight. But without hostesses it loser, its pur pose. First feature of the USO type to be given on the camp:ts, this variety show is the first official opportunity for women to wel come and meet the cadets. Con sider it, then, not as a du`y. but as a privilege to act as a hostess at Dry Dock tonight. According to program chairmen, the bar will be stationed just in side the door to greet the men and to introduce them to other coeds who will be scattered about. The idea is .to change partners after each dance in an effort to help the "crewers" to me& many persons. Chief hostess recruiters are Shirley Tetley, who can be called at the Kappa house, and Betty Eshleman, AOPi house. Interested persons should call either of these women immediately to sign up for active duty tonight. One of the coeds' chic!. objec tions to this sort of thing is that some women will be there with dates and hostesses will he stags and loop cheap. But this is war and Vie situa tion tonight will be a diJerent one. This is no job and yet it's something' that women should do and should be glad to do. Dry Dock Finale Welcomes Mr Cadets (Continued from Page One) ies, - will sing "Anatole of Paris" as he introduces his "Victory Eas ter Parade" number from the Thespian show, "Khaki Waac-y." Special dance numbers will be given by Anna Radle and the Can Can Chorus from "Love Rides the Rails" and the WAAC Danc ing Chorus from Khaki Waac-y." The Army Air Crew students who come to the program stag will be greeted at the door by a large number of coeds, serving as hostesses, recruited by Masquer ettes and PSCA. Masquerettes will also be in charge of the special Blue and White refreshment stand, built especially for Dry Dcck by the Coco-Cola Co. Cokes and sand wiches will be served at the bar. Tickets may be purchased at Student Union or• at the door for 75 cents including checking. Air 5,1 'he Women Dancing will be planned for a greater part of the evening. but the floor show, other games, and soft-drinking will offer a varied program for women to dirrTt. Five hundred men and no coeds would make a sorrowful nicture, and recognizing this, we imagine that women will turn out !n large numbers for the welcoming. Here's the coeds' chance to say thanks to their early morning serenaders and to give the Col lege's visitors that famoils "Hello Spirit." Our last word is short but im portant: Monday is the day that Miss Julia G. Brill will tell in terested persons about post-war plans during her Liberal Arts lec ture in 316 Sparks from 4:10 to 5 p. m. These tips, having come straight from a recent Washing ton convention, should help coeds to catch up a little on their global news. Students To Speak In Women's Dorms The World Student Serviie Fund .committee has begun a ser ies of evening talks in women's dormitories to speed up contribu tions to their drive. Two men will visit each dormitory, and the co eds will be given special envelopes in which to put their contribu tions It was orgimally planned that the women would be asked to give up one meal, but dormitory regulations make it impossible to use the money saved this way. The dormitory speakers are . Pa lmer Sharpless, chairman, John C. Burford, Howard Carlson, Robert C. Dickey, Henry V. Harmon, Ralph W. Harris, Philip Hempe, Reagan Houston, Robert G. Kin ligh, Robert S. MacNabb, Clifford M. Painter, Robert T. Kraemer, Clifford M. St. Clair, and ~James V. Ziegler. At a recent meeting of the PSCA Cabinet, committees were appointed to carry out a wartime service plan for the college and the Air Corps men. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Crew students will be admitted 40 cents. Dry Dock is being produced and designed by Bill Cissel in coop eration with Betty Christman and Sue Clausser. The floor show is directed by Martin Skapik. College Art (lasses Begin Display Of Work The annual exhibition of work done. by Fenn State students in drawing and design courses of fered by the Division of Fine Arts of the Department or Architecture will be held this year in the pe riod from April 18 to May 2 on the ;vain floor of the Mineral In dustries building, according to J. Burn Heline, Professor of Fine Arts. Because the College Art Gallery is being used as it has been dur ing the last two semesters, for courses in ship drafting, the De partment Exhibition this year will take place in the Mineral Indus tries Art Gallery, with the per mission of Dean Edward Steidle. The exhibited material will con sist of drawing, painting, design, and costume design done during the past two semesters by the several hundred students. who have been taking this work. Fur ther details with the names of participating students will be p iblished in the near future. The committee in charge of hanging the exhibition is under the chair manship of Mr. John Y. Roy; As sistant professor of Fine Arts. A Stamp today? A Bond this week? Talk it over—not with the woman next door—but with your self. #.\\ lit e ; 11 loveity Plush et, t 4 ,1 ' t 4 1 \ k i Ester Toys 1,..;' SOUTH ALLEN STREET-NEXT TO "THE BANK CLOCK SATURDAY, APRIL 17:1943. (wens Tap Coeds Al Early Breakfast Cwens, national sophomore- women's honorary, tapped.,Seorid semester freshmen and first se.. mester sophomores at its annual breakfast in Mac Hall at 7:15 this morning. This year's Cwen members knocked on doors in freshman dormitories at 6:45 to waken. coeds for breakfast. All freshmen. and first semester sophomores were invited to attend. The new Cwens were chosen. for their leadership, scholarship, and activities during their fresh man year. After the breakfast, they gathered in the center of the dining room to receive their red and gray blazers from the outgo ing members. • Cwens who greeted the new Members are Ruth Clyde, Jane Cromis, Patricia Diener, Alice Drumm, Ruth Embery, Carl Brick, Margaret L. Good, Mary Grace Longnecker, Vivian Martin, Judy McFarland, Betsy McGee, Joan Miller, Jean Ogden, Florinne Olson, Kathleen Osgood, Barbara Painter, Marjorie Schultz, Wini fred, Singer, Ruth Steiner, Gloria Whyel, Christine Yohe, and Mir iam Zartman. Miss Jean Richards. assistant to the dean of women. is the Cwens advisor. The smaller children will welcome these soft, fluffy Easter pets with open arms! ' Variety of sizes •
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