PAGE SIX Out-of-Door Activities Fill IRA Field Day Co-Rec Night Planned As Second Rally • Chalking up coming calendar events of fun and entertainment for regular and special students and service men, WRA will hold its first Field Day on Holmes Field at 2 p.m. Saturday, July 17, fol lowed the next week by Co-Rec Night, according to Adele J. Levin, president. Indefinite plans are un der way for a formal dance and intramural sports. Featuring games, relay races, softball, and novelty races, the complete schedule of Field Day ac tivities will take place out of doors. Winners of the novelty races will receive prizes. Refreshments will be sold to round out the program. In case of rain, the program will be cancelled. Followed by Co-Rec Night, also outdoors, this second Tally will be Saturday, July 24, at 7:30 p.m., also for students, service men, Curtis-Wright Cadettes, and Ham ilton Propeller girls. The activities starting the program, archery, vol leyball, softball, badminton, table tennis, and bridge, will be supple mented by square dancing on the Atherton Hall parking lot at 8:30.. In charge of the selling of re freshments are Penny Embury and Viviark Martin. Elizabeth. McKin ley, club activities chairman, has charge of the event. The first coed group to sponsor a formal dance this summer, WRA will hold its at 9 p.m. July 31. 'Music for the dance, at which girls will play escorts, will be provided by a campus orchestra, and special features will vary the, program. Tickets will sell for $l.lO. Softball practice turned down its . last stretch this week,. and games will begin next week on 'Holmes Field from 4:15 to 7:15 p.m. Teams will be selected from candidates. Curtiss-Wright Cadettes Plan Formal Dance Curtiss - Wright Cadettes are uniting . with Hamilton Propeller women students in sponsoring a :formal dance in White Hall from 8 to 12 . p.m. tomorrow, according to Jane Vernon, Curtiss-Wright president. .Tack Meyer and his band com posed of State College boys will play and refreshments will be served, General Chairman Carolyn Collins will be assisted by Jean Bella, Nancy Blanche, Nancy Car penter, Frances Chandler, Leola Freeman, Jean Hilt, Jane Sch Wing, and Patricia Young, all Curtiss- Wright Cadettes. Cadettes planned the woman ask-man affair, and invited the Hamilton Propeller students to be guests. • A four-day vacation, their only time off until DeceMber 15, will be given the Curtiss-Wright Ca dettes from July 15 to 20. Summer Session Plans War Film Series The summer session of the School of Education will present a series of films concerning aero nautics in Room 316, Sparks build ing, at 8 p.m. Tuesday, according to Dean Marion L. Trabue of the School of Education, The program includes "Theory of Flight," "Airscrew," "Modern Weather," and "Construction of a Light Airplane." The second part of the program will feature a film in conjunction with actual war conditions photographing the use of airplanes in English warfare entitled "Target for Tonight." Townspeople, students, and serv ice men are invited. --t-rrWiFW College, Student Groups Purchase War Bonds War bonds totalling $220,545.50 have been bought by student or ganization's of they College and by the College itself, officials an nounced last week. Student government groups vo ted to put funds from the four undergraduate classes into $32,- 400 worth of bonds. From its trust fund the College purchased $174,720.50 worth. Six other groups who also have bought bonds include Class of 1942, $7,325; Estelle H. Hetzel Loan Fund, $2000; Class of 1937, $2000; Women's Recreation As sociation, $1400; Penn State Play ers, $500; and the Penn State Club, $2OO. Blatz Heads Cheerleaders Michael Blatz has been appoint ed head cheerleader for the Sum mer semester, according to an an nouncement made this week. Twelve of the squad have left for the armed forces within the last semester and Blatz will make the thirteenth when he enters the Navy Air Corps in August. BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS r" , ( .~~ ~ sy ~~>: 1 ~ i ,~;~ ~`~.. REIMI Dance Musicians THE ARISTOCRATS ORCHESTRA IS NOW REORGANIZING Brass, Rhythm, or Sax Men Should Contact Les Stine 435 W. Foster Dial 2409 I 28 Answer Collegian Call foi Candidates Twenty-eight persons answered Collegian's call for editorial candi dates Wednesday. Students who were not able to attend that meet ing may still come out for the staff if they attend the next meeting in the Collegian office, Carnegie Hall, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Persons who were at last week's meeting are. Bernice Alpert, Nancy Carastro, James Dannenberg, Phil lip Dans, Victor Danilov, Ruth Dantsker, Edith Fuller, Richard Glickman, Robert Himle, Irene Kelirty Claire Kohn, Roger Levin, Harold Mehr, Betsy Merkle, Ger son Miller, Harriet Miller, Peter Palmer, Seymour Parker, Arthur Peck, Ilaine Qiunt, Ted Rubin, Marjorie Rubinow, Lucille Rosen blum, Irwin Shis h k o, Ruth Sprague, Patricia Tuck, Shirlee Wenger, and Samuel Youngman, Manufacturers of ice cream are encountering difficulties in carry ing out plans of the Department of Agriculture to have them go into the frozen fruit and vegetable business on a big scale. Equipment shortages and transportation prob lems indicate that the program will not get under way in real earnest until next year. =SIM Td . \ . THE COLLEGIAN =RE MIME Decker Erected (wens President Newly elected officers of Cwens, national sophomore women's hon orary society, include Ann Louise Decker, president; Alene Babbitt, vice-president; Helen Martin, sec retary; and Helen Hatton, trea surer, according to Mary Grace Longenecker, retiring president. Other members include Jean Butts, Lois Lunn, Peggy Susanin, Betty Shenk, Gloria McKinley, Jane Dye, Mary Ann Jennings, Jeanne Weaver,, Cynthia Geffin, Marilyn Globisch, Betty Jane Drouse, Peggy Lou Johnson, Pat Hallberg, Florence Port, Ruth Pielmeier, Gertrude Rosen, Phyl lis deMauriac, Rose Devecka, Bar bara Anderson, N rjorie Brink man, and Jeanne Richards, advi sor. The members of this organiza tion are chosen for excelling in leadership, scholarship and activi ties. Reading Clinic Course To Banish Gremlins That Slow Study Students at the College can wave goodbye to these gremlins which make it hard to read and study. A new course to help college stu dents read, spell, and study bet ter is being offered in the Reading Clinic in the Summer semester. No longer will the reading grem lins slow down a student's rate of reading, or keep him from under standing what he has read. No longer will spelling gremlins en joy mixing up "a's" and "e's" and twisting "ie" and •"ei," or the study gremlins make it take twice as long to learn a lesson. The course is differentiat ed in terms of the students' needs, Dr. Betts, director of the Reading Clinic, explained. Groupings are made within a class to care for individual needs. .One teacher su pervises a group of students, each of whom is working to correct his own deficiency. This individualiz ed method of instruction has been used in the grades but is novel at the college level. . . "What's the trouble, mister— Indian Underwear'?" If you're a victim of underwear that creeps up on you, get next to some well-behaved Arrow shorts with the specially constructed seamless crotch. They're full cut from durable fabrics. Sanforized labeled for 'permanent fit (fabric shrinkage less than 1%). Whites and fancy, 75c up. Tops, 60c up. Your Arrow dealer to the rescue! ARROW . r SHIRTS • TIES • HANKDERCHIEFS •,UNDERWEAR.• SPORT• SHIRTS * BUY ,WAR' BONDS AND STAMPS * FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1943 Upperclasswomen Schedule Sunday For Pop-in Night Hall Election Dates Set by WSGA Senate Sunday night between 8 and 9 p.m. has been set aside for the. an- , nual upperclasswomen Pop-in Night on freshmen, it was decided in WSGA Senate meeting Wednes day night. Frosh will pop in on upperclasswomen Sunday, July 18. WSGA freshman senator will be elected during the regular WRA. elections this semester, Ruth Storer, WSGA president, stated. Nominations for officers in upper class dormitories will be made next week while freshman hall nominations and elections will be Monday, July 19, in charge of Helen Martin, Freshman Council chairman. Eleven o'clocks for slimmer ses sion students were established per manently at Wednesday's meet ing. Chairmen for dormitory table arrangements, as announced. by Miss Storer, are Jane Cromis, Ath erton west, first shift; Joan Somers and Marcella Chervenak, Atherton east, first shift; Vivian Martin and Dorothy Jennings, Atherton west, second shift; Miss Martha Chubb; McAllister Hall hostess, Atherton. east, second shift. S.- - • Curtiss-Wright '':and Hamilton propeller presidents and• vice presidents will ''be' guests at next week's WSGA Senate meeting. Elizabeth Furst was _ appointed to coordinate WSGA Senate serv ice entertainment programs with those of the town Community Service Center. Farm Employmen; . Drops • -The total number otpersons em ployed on farms in the 'United States, as of May - Ist, was 10,482, 000, according to. a recent report of the Department of Agriculture: , This is a decrease•of' about 304,000 since May, 1942.