The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 03, 1943, Image 6

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    PA GE SIX
WSGA Names Coeds
Eligible For Offices
Dorothy L. Jones, chairman of
the WSGA Nominations Commit
tee which is 'composed of the senior
Senate members, has released the
names of 19 coeds Senate deems
eligible for WSGA offices. Nomina
tions from the floor may be made
at the nominations mass meeting
which will be held in 3 White Hall
at 7:15 Thursday.
President of the association must
shave a 1.5 All-College average and
must have had at least one year of
experience on the Senate. Candi
dates for all other offices must
have a 1.5 All-College average,
Ruth M. Storer, WSGA president,
stated.
Jeanne Ward, chairman of the
Elections Committee, stated that
primary elections will be held in
the first floor lounge, Old Main,
from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday,
September 13. Finals will be held
in the same room at the same time,
Thursday, Septerriber 16.
WSGA selections include: presi
dent, Patricia Diener and Kathleen
M. Osgood; vice-president, Doris
M. Funk, Patricia G. Hallberg, and
Genevieve Weder; treasu r e r,
Nancy I. Bartch, Helen C. Miller,
and Gertrude G. Rosen.
Senior senator, Elizabeth H.
Furst, Mary L. Hefty, and Jean B.
Ogden; junior senator, Jane D. ,Cro
mis, Betty J. Drouse, and Helen J.
Martin; sophomore senator, Mar
jorie J. Blackwood, Gloria J. Mc-
Kinle u , and Joanne E. Nye; and
town senator, 'Elizabeth R. Merkle
and 'Ann L. Decker.
Independent Senator
Nominations for the independent
senator will be made by the in
dependent women's associations
and the nominees will be intro
duced at the mass meeting with
the above candidates. Their names
will be published in the Collegian
next week.
Special Coeds Receive 11 O'clocks
Curtiss - Wright and Hamilton
Standard ,Propeller coeds have
been granted four 11 o'clock per
missions per month on the 'basis
of the fine scholastic records they
lave maintained. The 11 o'clocks
'will continue until December when
most of the groups will finish their
training. If the plan is successful,
it will be continued; if not, Senate,
Dean Hammond, head of the
School of Engineering, and group
presidents will decide on a new
course of action, Miss Storer
stated.
Saturday Night Plans
WSGA Senate is planning Sat
urday night entertainment in the
first floor Sandwich Shop. As yet,
plans are in the embryonic stage,
but committees have been formed
and ideas are moving ahead for
some sort of civilian and service
men's entertainment. Whether the
Sandwich Shop will be procured
is not as yet definite, but chances
are, Miss Storer said, that Mr.
Ebert, supervisor of grounds and
buildings, will agree to the plan.
Judicial Reminds
Marian Dougherty, Judicial
chairman, reminds coeds that they
are required to sign out every
night unon leaving dormitories and
sorority houses, whether they plan
to stay out before or after 10
o'clock. This will facilitate the
work of hostesses and checkers.
Van Riper Announces
Servicemen's Open House
All sororities and eormitories
will be open to servicemen from
3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, according to
Harriet Van Riper, chairman of
the Coed Coordinating committee.
This committee was organized
three weeks .ago by Charlotte E.
Ray, Dean of Women. It is com
posed of the leaders from all the
women's societies represented on
campus.
Servicemen will not be assigned
. to special houses as before, but
may take their choice. Refresh
ments will be supplied by the in
dividual houses and units,
Dorothy L. • Jones, chairman of
the WSGA Senate Nominations
Committee and Senate secretary,
released names approved by Sen
ate for 'WSGA offices.
Panhellenic Plans
Sorority Songfest
Panhellenic Council will present
its annual "Sorority Sing" at the
front of Old Main, 3:30 p.m. 'Sun
day, September 19, for the benefit
of servicemen, civilians, and
townspeople, Betsy Merkle, chair
man, announced last night.
The songfest, formerly a com
petitive affair, will thiiryear have
no judges but the audience, which
will gather around the steps of
Old Main where the sorority
groups will be seated.
Each sorority will present one
song. Following these will be
group singing by the audience and
girls, featuring service songs of
each branch represented on cam
pus, Penn State favorites, and
other popular melodies.
At the close of the "sing," serv
icemen and students will be in
vited to visit the sorority of their
choice to meet some of the girls
they have just heard.
In case of rain, the program will
be presented in Schwab Auditor
ium, if groups training here have
not scheduled it for the afternoon.
Stale College' Drum
Corps To Entertain
When the State College Amer
ican Legion and Auxiliary Junior
Drum and Bugle Corps appears in
a community entertainment pro
gram Saturday, the proceeds from
the ticket sale and donations will
go to the State College Service
Center.
The State College corps won the
state championship five times, in
1936, 1937, 1938, 1939, and 1940.
and in '1941 became national cham
pions. This year the group has a
membership of 22 girls and 26 boys.
Saturday's entertainment will take
place at the
. State College High
School stadium at 7 p.m.
NEW STORE HOURS
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
(Including Wednesday)
SATURDAY: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
CHARLES SHOP
THE COLLEGIAN
Coeds Boost Surgical
Dressings Attendance
To 72 This Week
Attendance at this week's sur
gical dressings class increased from
32 to 72. This group completed 894
dressings, which was a definite
increase over last week's number,
according to Mrs. Henry K. Brun
ner, chairman.
The first figure in the following
list represents this week's attend
ance, the last represents last
month's number, showing the in
crease or possible decrease accord
ing to various fraternity and serv
ice groups.
Alpha Omicron Pi 10 0
Hamilton Propeller 5 1
Curtiss-Wright . ;
Alpha Chi Omega 4 18
Kappa Kappa Gamma .. 4 16
Kappa Alpha Theia
Kappa Delia
Delta Gamma
Chi Omega .
,p ,:~
-:,<_~
Alpha Epsilon Phi 0
Gamma Phi Beta
Phi Mu
Sigma Delta Tau
Zeta Tau Alpha 0 0
These figures prove that the re
maining number, 35, was made up
of independent groups. It also
shows that a number of coeds who
were trained to roll bandages last
month have not returned to the
Wednesday night classes.
Busy Bee Goes To War
By Producing Beeswax
For Plane Motors
The busy little bee has been
drafted for war.
Working on a buzzing swing
shift, bees are producing wax for
airplane motors, shell manufactur-.
ing, and electrical insulation, ac
cording to Professor E. J. Ander
son, bee specialist at the Pennsyl
vania State College.
"Beeswax is finer and more im
pervious to water than paraffin,"
he stated. "For this reason it is
highly prized to protect airplane
motors against the action of sea
water, to protect and lubricate
sholls, and for electrical cables."
Other uses of beeswax are in
glass manufacturing, polishes,
dentistry (where it is used in mak
ing molds), in pattern-making,
tree-grafting, and in making a wa
ter-proof and chemical-proof paint
for containers holding photogra
phic solutions.
"We need much more wax thin
the bees can produce," Professor
Andersbn said in urging beekeep
ers to salvage all the wax they
can. Only about two-thirds of a
pound of wax is produced by a
bee colony each season, he point
ed out. Important ways to get
more wax include saving scraps,
culling combs, killing the wax
moth, and collecting wax from hiv
es which are no longer used.
Alpha Chi Omega Elects
Alpha Chi Omega recently elect
ed the following officers: Margaret
Good, president; Patricia Hallberg,
vice-president; Suzanne Sickler,
recording secretary; Julia McFar
land, corresponding seer et a r y;
Nora Catherine Clouser, treasurer;
and Jane Gleichert, historian.
Exam Cancelled
There will not be an Air
Corps examination this Friday,
according to Robert E. Gal
braith, FAWS. The next mental
exam has been scheduled to
take place on September 10.
Those men who have passed
previous examinations are re
minded by Galbraith to report
to Middletown as soon as possi
ble to take their physical ex
aminations.
Assistant Dean
Comes Tomorrow
Miss Pearl 0. Weston will ar
rive in State College tomorrow to
replace Miss Nina M. Bentley as
assistant to the dean of women,
according to an announcement
made by Dean of Women Char
lotte E. Ray.
Miss Weston graduated from the
College in 1929 with a B. A. in
Arts and Letters. She received her
M. A. at Duquesne University in
1931 and a Ph.D from Duquesne
in 1935.
0 3
0 1
6 24
3 10
4 20
0 5
0 10
Her employnient record is as
folloWs: she taught in Carnegie
and Pittsburgh, for the last twelve
years having been employed by
the Fifth A . venue High School in
Pittsburgh: Miss Weston has serv
ed as Director of recreation in
several summer camps and clubs.
This summer she was manager of
the Iron City Fishing Club at
Manitou, Ontario.
Miss Weston is a member of
many professional organizations,
the Carnegie Civic Club and is
president_ of the Carnegie College
Club. She has recently been elec
ted president of the Penn State Al
umnae Club of Pittsburgh. Miss
Weston is now a member of the
Advisory Council of fifteen teach
ers working under the Superin
tendent of Pittsburgh schools.
Student Soldiers Show
Variety Of Reading Tastes
Student soldiers at the College
already have demonstrated that
they possess a wide - variety of
reading tastes.
Since the coming of the mili
tary; attendants at the 'College
library have filled requests for:
1. Current issues of philosophy
periodicals.
.2. Recent books on marriage.
3. Critical articles on symphonic
music.
4. Complete .works of authors
like Thomas Wolfe, James Joyce,.
and E. E. Cummings, and
5. A copy (of "The Wild Party,"
Joseph Moncure :March's poetic!
treatment of the roaring twenties.‘'
One apparently unhappy soldier
asked for a book on Pennsylvan
ia's divorce laws, while another
sought information on the Library
of Congress—and then Aflabber
gasted the attendant . by saying
that he once worked there.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1943
Hallberg Reminds
Coeds To Purchase
Injun Stomp Tickets
Injun Stomp, the dance sponsor-.
ed by Cwens, sophomore activity
honorary, will be coming off in
White Hall next Saturday night,..'
according to Pat Hallberg,
asks
chairman. Miss' Hallberg" asks co- s
eds to buy their tickets early. *3
Tickets tray be bought at - Stu
dent Union for $l.lO or from - aiiy
Cwen including Ann Louise Deck-
Allene Babbitt, Helen Martin,
Helen Hatton, Barbara Anderson,
Jean But; Rose Devecka, Bette
Jane Drouse, Mary Ann Jenpings, •
Pat Hallberg, Peggy Lou Johnson,
Lois Lunn, Gloria McKinley, Ruth
Prelemeur, Gertrude Rosen, Betty'
Shenk, and Peggy Susanin. Cwens
will wear -their red-trimmed grey
jackets next week in order to be
easily recognized.
As customary coeds will take -
over the inviting. The dance is to
be•' very informal and - "saddles" •
will be in order, according to Miss
Hallberg.
Jimmy Burden's orchestra will
provide the rhythm for the dan
cers. Decorations will be in ac
cordance with the Injun scheme.
The receipts from the dance will
be given as a scholarship to softie
worthy coed, Miss Jeanne Rich %
arts, Cwen adviser, added.
Collegian Candidates
All candidates for the Col
legian editorial staff must at-
tend the meeting in. the. Col
legian office: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Beats will be reassigned.
Sall's
Open until 1 a. m.
•
Friday, Saturday
and Sunday. --
2 a. m.
•