)FRIDAY, JULY .9, 1943 ' • Schott Releases Rules 1 • i r College Courts The following tennis court \ irules have been released by Dean C. P. Schott, head of the School • of Physical Education. • `How to reserve courts—Call college operator and ask for ten nis courts. The tennis court checker will make reservations. Hours when reservations may be made: r 9:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon-1:30 to 5:00 p.m. daily except Sunday. * 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Sunday. - When courts may be used: Daily except Sunday 8:00 a.m. 00 • p.m. , .Sunday 1: 00 p.m.-8: 00 p.m. Costume: • All players must wear rubber led, heeless shoes. Rules: 'First - consideration is given to ,regular college classes. Aside from - classes, college students and employees have, equal rights. Non-college peo ple are not permitted the use of the courts. Reservations may be made on ly a c:ay in advance and for only one hour. The College has ' too few courts to allow one person to monopolize them for several hours at a time. Si A reservation must be taken up by 15 minutes past the hour, otherwise it is automatically cancelled. Anyone has a right to play on these courts not reserved. Courts are not to be used when wet. d for Physical Care ressed by Illfeneur The infirmary,„ has not been )ty, tho the., term has barely :gun. New freshmen and trans •rs have been, tested for tuber llosis and service men have been .:ulated for 'tet - anus, typhoid, d' small pox. Dr. Ritenour emphasized, the service men as• well asffiffiflb . for physical care among the :vice meri as well as the stud .ts. There should; be no procras tation. "At the first sign of ill- a," Dr. Ritenour stated ? "ser ve men, or students, should re for treatment. It is a pa iotic duty, added Dr. Ritenour, le a soldier in bed is not worth GRAH:I SONS • Candies Newspapers Pipes Code' Courses Wane As 15 Coeds Enroll Codet courses will have to be discontinued if 'the enrollment does not increase within the next few days, Julia A. Brill, voca tional counselor of the School of Liberal Arts, announced after an approximately 15 coeds had reg istered. It will be impossible to release an officer for the military drill periods •if there is ndt .a sufficient number of girls present, Col. Ed -ward Ardery stated. Women who are interested in the Codet Course are urged to contact, Miss Brill immediately., The courses, started more than a year:ago, are !intended to prepare undergraduates for service in the WACs, 'WAVES, SPARs, or Marine Carps. Courses also ,are excellent for. wartime civilian preparedness, Miss Brill added.. A ner,v_.course, Codet 9, will' deal with the fundamental aquatic skills• with useful variations and appli cation of Skills to possible service conditions and situations; personal This course is an extension of the safety, rescue, .and resuscitation. Red Cross course required of all members of VAC. Cadet 1 dealing with the prepa ration for emergencies will include the standard twenty-hour course in first aid, air raid precautions, and defense against gas. Codex 2 explains the theory and practice of calisthenics, formulat ing of fundamental exercises with consideration for physiological im plications, giving of commands, setting up progressive lesson plans, voice control and diction. Cadet 3 will be a course in in formation techniques. It will cover aerial photograph reading, map reading, stereoscopic •vision, air craft recognition and spotting. Cadet 8 is a course in the organi zation, supervision, and • kitchen management of mess. Discussion of record forms, sanitation of mess, care of cocking utensils and equip merit, storage and 'refrigeration of food, management problems _of various rations, and adaptations of the master menu. _ 1 hr. lecture recitation. Prerequisite: HE 440, 408, 426. Parallel or preceding, HE 410. - . Lion Soccer Captain Cited for Bravery Lt. Woodrow W. King, captain of Penn State's 1941 soccer team, has been 'cited for• bravery in ac tion while on duty somewhere in Africa, Lion Soccer Coach Bill Jeffries learned today. The citation was delivered to Lt. King on orders of General Dwight D. Eisenhower, and was presented in a North African Army base hospital by Generals Patton and Allen. The citation'read as follows "Patrolling with an armed ve hicle in a zone' where a group of 10 Germans just debarqued by glider, he contributed with effi ciency by his well-timed interven tion to the capture of this group." Estliblished 1896 JUst that Friendly Little Store -where you meet your buddies and friends. * * * C@ld Drinks Tobacco Ice Cream Magazines Novelties THE COLLEGIAN PS(A Will Sponsor Rural Service Drive The second All-College drive for rural service will be sponsored by the PSCA beginning July 17, if the weather is favorable. By this plan, students volunteer to help farmers within a ten-mile radius of State College in shocking wheat, picking fruit, making hay or truck gardening. Farmers will supply transporta tion for students who volunteer to help. Work will begin every after noon at 1:30 and will be concluded by 5 p.m. Supported and sponsored by CA, interested persons may apply at the office or at SU for further information, according to Kath erine Miller, chairman of the pro ject. Gilbert Requests Plans For Social Calendar H. R. Gilbert, chairman of the College Social Saturday Night Committee, today requested that all campus organizations plan afing entertainment and other so cial activities file information about them in advance at his off ice, 107 Old Main. Gilbert, who will be in charge of assigning zooms, buildingi and other facilities, suggested that his office be notified of events at least two weeks in advance. The objective of :Gilbert's com mittee, he explained today, is to co-ordinate these activities and to attempt to spread them even ly throughout the year. "The job is difficult to do with out advance information which will tell us when and where and at what time such social events are planned," Gilbert said. We often wonder how people can look pleasant when posing for pictures that cost $25 per dozen. I gotta 'fess Up! There's no reason fer my .beM' here—but those' fella's in the Advertising Department knew I'd be enough to stop you! Anyway, there's plenty of reason for you to use the Collegian Classifieds to sell somethin' or find somethin' you've lost—'cause your message will make folks stop and read. You can get all the facts if you'll drop in at Student Union. Hope you're not mad at me! Cabinet Group Fizzles Fair Wage Program (Continued from - Page . One) later, those signs still lie unused in Student Union. And today, throughout State College, student part-time employees are working at wage rates still "unreasonably low." A survey conducted during the last week by two Colfegian re porters uncovered several cases of student help receiving not even the meager and outdated 35-cent minimum proposed last year. Stu dent workers at one local eating establishment were working from 5 until 7:45 p.m. for one meal; one student waitress was receiving between 33 and 34 cents an hour; and student employees at another town business place received 25 cents hourly. Still other local busi nesses are providing a 35-cents per-hour rate only if part or all of the pay is accepted in trade. Time marches on, hour after 'hour—at 35 cents per hour or less —while signs paid for froin stu dent funds lie unused at Student Union. Cialella Announces New Froth Staff Froth staff for this semester, ac cording to, Editor Leon Cialella will be headed by Leonard Eber, business manager; George Gra , - ham, managing editor; and Roz anne Brooks, woman's editor. Horace B. Smith is photographic editor and Ronnie Epstein and Til lie Bronstein' are editorial assis tants. The business board will consist of Lucille Weinstein, advertising manager; James Casey, circulation manager; and Muriel, Lebowitz, promotion manager. Japs report all their forces re turn to their bases in China. Quite proper • after the Pearl Harbor The Collegian PAGE SEVEN Conger Predicts Great Future For Gerry Karver Gerry Karver will be one of the world's best milers a few years hence, in the opinion of Ray Con ger, track coach. Karver's career was temporarily halted this spring when Uncle Sam called him to the colors, but Conger fully expects the Penn State sophomore to resume his sensational running when the war is ended. Conger, whose victory over. Paavo Nurmi was the first chalked up against the great Finn miler, firmly believes that he will some day rank with Nurmi, Cunning ham, Lovelock, Hahn, and Dodds. At Cleveland early this year, 'Kar ver was clocked at 4:14 in a bril liant field that included both In diana's Mitchell and Boston's Dodds. "Gerry possesses the running form of a champion," Conger says, adding—"he trains like a cham pion, too." BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS • fraternity Jewelry Military Jewelry 4) Penn Stale Class Rings BALFOUR JEWELRY OFFICE in ATHLETIC STORE