1 .6.11 g FOUR VI IRA Annual Co-Rec Day Set for Aturday; Supper Hike, Sunday Open to All Students, Cadettes, Air*Corps WRA Co-Rec Day, planned by WRA club president's board, will be held in front of White )fall from 2 to 5 p. m. Saturday, ) obby McKinley, chairman of the I , (lard, announced. All students are urged to lit -I.(:).id and special invitations have I , f-en sent to the Air Corps Cadets ;0 id the Curtiss-Wright Cadettes. Volleyball, softball, archery and rquare dancing, will highlight the afternoon. A. P. Clark, "The Red ).' tided Texan," will call for the f;iluare dancing. Fistball, ping pong, table games and badminton will also be featured, and refresh wents will be sold. In previous years, tennis, golf, and archery were the only at tractions, but this year Co-Rec Day - was designed especially to ),(Ari the Air Corps men become blitter acquainted with the stu dent body. A Co-Rec supper hike to the 'WRA cabin will take place Sun day. Students and Cadets who at t(.md will leave White Hall at 2 m. and will return at 7:30 p. )n. Tickets for the hike will be sold for twenty-five cents to cover the charge of the supper. They may )+e obtained at Student Union, the ,geSrvice Center, or from the fol 'lowing club presidents: Florence ossman, archery; Bea White, liadminton; Mottie Harverstick, howling; Joan Baker, bridge; Hat tie Van Riper, dance; Winifred •:..pahr, golf; Phyllis Watkins, ;:wimming; Nancy Hodgson, ten »is, and Carolyn Crooks, outing club. Students may also buy tickets r;:Aturclay at'Co-Rec Day, but they 1):e. urged by Adele Levin, WRA )wesident, to but them early. Both Co. Rec. Day and the sup )l(:r hike will be concelled in the event of rain. Al Bail- (Continued from Page One) the arrangements committee; and Lieutenant Colonel John Gerth, eliairrnan of the decorations com mittee. Senior officers may wear cadet uniforms or formal attire, and l'asic men may wear ,basic ROTC uniforms or formal attire, Glock, entertainment. committee _head, Pershing Rifles, basic ROTC honorary, will take care of check ing free of charge, and the impres nive pinning ceremony, a peculiar characteristic of all Military Balls, will take place as usual, committee lembers stated. At 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, the biggest ROTC parade in the history of the College will take place. This parade will commemo rate all Penn State men who have been killed in the war. .All Signal Corps, Engineers, and Infantrymen will participate. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN "For A Better Penn State" Established 1940. Successor to the Penn late Collegian, established 1904, and the free Lance, established 1887, Published daily except Sunday and Monday during tie reggular College year 1,1 , the students of The Pennsylvania Vtnte College. Entered as second-class o,,fetter July 3, 1934 at the Post Office !1.3.t.f, College, Pa., under the act of MumILI 1 579. awl PAUL I. WOODLAND, Editor-in-Chief RICHARD D. SMYSER, Managing Editor PHILIP P. MITCHELL, Business Manager RICHARD E. MARSH. Advertising Manager k I iitovial and Business Office,- Carnegie Hall —Phone 711 Downtown Office -- 119 South Frazier St., Phone 4872 1-4,tiutgitig Editor IJ,•ws Fditor ) eslinutt,l Assistants Karnie L)onahue•, Gloria AV.lwel A: .4istant. Advertising !Manager - Priscilla Schantz Thursday, April 15, t 943 Unbeaten Delta this Face Beta Theta Pi In Showdown Match Crucial mater of the fraternity bowling league will be rolled off at 9 p.m. today, when Delta Chi's pace-setting squad attempts to protect its league lead and unde feated record against second-place Beta Theta Pi. Only an 8-0 shutout by the Betas can dethrone the high-riding Delta Chi machine, which has won 14 consecutive matches without a single match loss. In the last complete round of league matches yesterday, the con stantly improving Theta Chi squad maintained its third place slot with a 6-2 win against AGR, Theta Xi racked up its second straight 8.0 shutout to "nail down the fourth place position, while Sigma Phi Epsilon • climbed into a fifth-place tie with the slipping Lambda Chi Alphas. Following are the league stand ings as the top two teams line up for tonight's showdown match: Team W. L. Pct. Delta Chi 102 10 .911 Beta Theta Pi 98 14 .875 Theta Chi 80 40 .667 Theta Xi • 80 48 .625 Lambda Chi Alpha.. 74 46 .616 Sigma Phi Epsilon .. 74 46 .616 Alpha Gamma Rho .. 38 82 .317 Beta Sigma Rho .... 32 88 .317 Tau Kappa Epsilon . 32 88 .267 Delta Upsilon 30 98 .234 Coeds Urged to Register As Big Sisters to frosh Upperclass women who wish to be big sisters to incoming fresh man women are urged to sign up this week by obtaining blanks from the House of Representatives or Miss Edith J. Melville, assist ant dean of women, 105 Old Main. Girls may register with Eliza beth Furst, town senator. A meeting for interested coeds will be held in 121 Sparks at 5 p. m. Tuesday. Miss Charlotte E. Ray, dean of women, will speak to the group. Track Meet Cancelled The intramural track meet, scheduled for this afternoon, has been cancelled because of lack of sufficient entries, it was rnade known yesterday. All team entries who have paid the entry fee may get their refund at Gene Bischoff's office in Rec Hall. Junior Service Board will meet n Miss Bentley's apartment at 5 m. today CLASSIFIED SECTION ORDERS TAKEN—For standard class rings—sl7.so. Call Bordo, 4076. LOST—Horn-rimmed glasses, dou ble strand pearl necklace, gal's pigskin gloves. Finder of any of these devious articles please call or visit ROWE, Room 204, second floor Irvin. 2t-29-comp—LTC COAT, light gray, picked up by mistake at Autoport Sunday night. Other coat in my possession. Call Sam 2036. 2t-29-pd—RLF LOST Two French textbooks, Bascon and Mercier, somewhere between Collegian office, Carnegie Hall, and Centre Daily Times of fice. Finder please call Alice, 55 Ath Hall, or Collegian office. Lee H. Learner _... Art Miller. Penn State Fraternity Rings L. G. Balcour Co,. 1O) S.. Allen St. in Charles Fellow Shop THE DAILY COT .EG lAN 51te Women. What Are Your . Summer Intentions? Corning back to school for the Summer term is one step toward doing a bit for national defense btit that isn't enough. What's done while students are here, what pro jects are undertaken and accom plished, what courses are studied are important. measures of what the college attitude will be. Therefore, before schedules are made out this next semester, be fore students outline their work for the Summer, it is hoped that they will look over the catalogue and list of emergency courses and jump on at least one of these victory band wagons. There's room for one in every schedule. Although the especially - pro vided CODET courses should re ceive the attention and active in terest of every woman, technical and scientific foundation courses must not be forgotten. Although they do not directly prepare the student for - a particular wartime position, they do start a necessary basis for work that women might be forced to do as the conflict con tinues. They include such suggestions as mathematics, chemistry, biology, meteorology, agricultural studies, and the like. Many of them are not advanced courses as is the gen eral feeling of students, but will be suitable to any coed from another curriculum interested in making herself a little more war-fit. Coeds sanctioned the courses of fered last semester, but pointed out that they were not informed of them in advance. Granting this, officials offer a period for fair con sideration this time. Tasteful or distasteful as the courses may look, if women will sample this training they will prove they can consider something aside from themselves First. • Lacrosse- (Continued from Page Three) his fourth point of the afternoon to make the score 11-1 and Deeley added the finishing touch with a tally just before the third period whistle. Penn State kept the ball moving a good part of the last period but was unable to whittle down the Hopkins lead. The worm turned in the encoun ter with the Middies as sparkling defensive play and well-timed of fensive thrusts were the rule. Navy came through on the long end of a 4-2 score. In the first period Navy took a 2-0 lead as Bonwit and Williams hit. the cords, but the Thielmen got them •back on• tallies by Bill Piper and Tom Mitchell. Piper's marker came with nine minutes gone as he whipped a .backhand shot into the net on a pass from Sammy Flenner. Flenner racked up another assist as Mitchell scor ed Penn State's second goal in 'l4 minutes. • Close checking and general good offensive play featured the second stanza, only! Navy's Montgomery getting away for a tally. The scoreboard read , 3-2 at halftime. Middle . Ken Gumrhersan made the last goal of the . game in the. third period.'Gummerson, inciden. tally, played freshrinan lacrosse un der Thiel, transferring after his freshman year to Annapolis. Jim Gotwals, Tom Mitchell, Larry Faries and "Wild Bill" Hol lenbach were outstanding for Penn State, while Bonwit and Ochen rider helped Gummerson to make much trouble for the home team. Hollenbach was credited with 18 saves in the tight contest. BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS The CAMPUSEER 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 This is the last of Catnpuseer for this semester, and who knows what the next one will bring . . . We don't have so much to say on the light side today, but there are some thoughts that have been chasing round in our head, and we think it's time we spoke them . . .in the weeks just past some of us who have spoken as we thought have been 'labeled with the "radical" tag, mostly by ma licous inuendo, with no chance to reply. Let us here giteOte Lowell, as supplied by the erstwhile Cas sius of the Lean and Hungry L00k... "I honor the man who is willing to sink Half of his present repute for the freedom to think, And when he has thought,' be his cause strong or weak, Will risk the other half for the freedom to speak." Far be it from us to go out on a limb as a crusader or .-anything like that, but we, as the motto of one of our more modern t newspa per puts it, Hee to see people pushed around, and when we do, we want to say so . . . don't get us wrong, we're not against stu dent government, for we think the system here is one of the best, but it does have its miscarriages, which we sometimes are permit ted to point out in the hope that they .may not happen again . . . if that be radical, and reprehen sible, so be it.. . VALE, VALE, VALE The Maniac, Bob Kinter,. and Cassius Dolinger, the two graduat ing columnists, have asked us to make their fondest farewells, for they will not have the opportuni ty to do it themselves, since this week concludes Collegian's publi cation schedule . . . . Kinter is going into the ArMy Air Corps and Milt is in the Army Enlisted Reserve.. . HEARTS AND FLOWERS The above catch line seems to have caught on with the subscrib ers for we have been getting mail addressed to it . . . one letter was from Essie Campbell, who is now in Cleveland with her husband, Chuck Scarborough, who is with the Army Air Forces . . . they were married Jan. 3 Ilah Dennis is wearing a dia -mond from Lt. Boyd Thompson, MOTHERS DAY Sunday, May 9 SEND HER A CARD We Have A Complete Selection LAST CALL , GRADUATION CALLING. CARDS $1.20 per 100 Best Quality I{oief Printing KEELERS • Open Evenings THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1943. By 808 KIMMEL lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt U. S. M. C. R. '42, and Doris Dun.. kle is wearing one, too . . . . her intended's name is not known to us . . . GREEN GRASS But not for you and us, for no doubt you have already seen the bad news on the spot where we usually appear . . . It'll be cram and cram, and then cram some more . . . but before you begin, take time out to go see the joint operations, on the golf course to- morrow when the combined ROTC outfits parade . •. . . so long. —Campy—B. F. ) New under-arm 0 Cream Deodorant safely Stows Perspiration 1. Does not rot dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Prevents odor. 4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 5. Awarded Approval Seal of American Institute of Launder. for being 1?-- - des. -- AR IR D Can Be Purchased at REA St.DERICK. INC. ALLEN STREET Next to the Bank Cluck _N_
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers