PAGE TW') ollege Symphony Performs Sunday Prof. Fishburn Conducts Orchestra for 15th Year, Ending a series of two con certs, the College Symphony 'Orchestra will present its annual concert in Schwab Auditorium, 3:30. p.m. Sunday. Prof. Hummel Fishburn, head of the , department of music, will ton, duct. the orchestra. This will .be ' the' fifteenth year that. the College Symphony has been under . his leadership. 'The program• will consist of "The Rosemunde . Overture by Schubert; "Symphony Number *5 in C. Minor" by; Beethoven; ."}ltin garlaw.Dances" (Numbers 5 and , 6) , by Brahms; "The• March.. of the. Knights of the Holy Grail".' from. `-`Parsifar' by Wagner; and the. 'waltz from. "Eugene. , Onegin" by. Tschaikovsky. Of the 70 persons comprising, the. College Symphony. Orchestra, theA.great• majority, are- students, but approximately 15. are' , towns, peoplei.facultrrnembers, and , high school. students: -Among.the• faculty. members whd Will. be :performing are: Dr: Henry; Bruriner, .head of the department of agricultural education, • whO will be , condert.; meister; and. Miss Annie Haigh, instructor in .music, Who . will play the viola. Officers of the organizatiOm in clude, Earl Roberts,. president; Harold Geiger, vice-- president; Naomi Woolever; • secretary;- and. Fred Swingle,. librariari.-. .• • Richards: Announces Sorority EnrollMent , Sorority enrollment figures .were released recently by Jeanne Rich ards, advisor to Panhellenic Coun- They include both actives and pledges as of. February, 1944.. Alpha: Chi, Omega; 55;- Alpha Epsilon Phi, 65; Alpha. Omicron Pi, 66; Alpha Xi Delta ; : 24;- Chi Omega,, 62; Delta Gamma,.. 61; 'Gamma Phi Beta,- 59; *Kappa , Al-. pha Theta,, 61; Kappa, Delta, 29; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 50; Phi Mu,,. 35; Sigma, Delta Tau, 52.; Theta Phi Alpha, .29;' Zeta Tau Alpha, 40. . Most Traveled Penn)Sivie ,Student Tells Of Journeys By SEYMOUR :BARA;SR• if William Horen. isn't the Col lege's most traveled student, he will give anyone on - campus' a close race for•the honors. - • ,- •• Among..the nations the freshman visited l in his. journeys- are.-Spain, France, Cuba, and Argentina:yetel as his iobinmates dtibbed him, left New- York .for Cuba when. he-was but a few months old. Since then the black-haired- lad. has been on the go. practically . all the When civil- war struck Spain in 1936,.the-Horeri family was strand ed in ,Earcelona. • They .Im:wed .to neutral-France..four.daYs .after the start of war: Papa Horen' . had to stay in Europe. to conduct his movie' business: Even • with' war raging. along .the roads of -Spain, Pete's father crossed and re crossed the border for. business ; sake. • Traveling across the Atlantic, Pete landed at New York in 19 - 87, the, city where he• first saw the darkness of night. HoweVer; the Horens didnet remairrni S: Long. This- time they were Moving to Argentina; • . . _ Pete returned to tne - States unaccompanied: His parents and younger brother - are - yet - in Argentina.• • • ' •" - •.: . • "I - don't-know :how,' really ;found out about Penn State," --Horen recollected, -"Somehow : heard that -the, College• was among,:/the. best agriculture sebools . , , in , the'. United States. And here "camel WSGA OKs Frosh 2 New Privileges A revision of WSGA rules has granted second semester freshman women two new privileges, according to Pa tricia Diener, WSGA president. Second semester women may now date off campus during the 'week until 5:30 p.m. They may take one 10 o'clock permission, .either Wednesday, Friday, or Saturday nights, and their one o'clock Friday or Saturday. Miss Diener stressed that ; Move-Up Day will still be de termined by obedience to all WSGA rules: ' FurtherWageincrease Would 4 ProdOccSerious' Effect, Says Dr. Waters. Additional wage increases in the Stat&s. manufacturingy industries were termed ,unnecessary.rtoday.by Dr: - H, Waters,: assistant profes sor of economics. at the- College who expressed - the- fear that.;fur ther increases might-produce-seri-. ous inflationary, effects. Pointing,, out that : the : average total pay of workers has doubled since the start of the :War while , cost of living.has,rlSen only, 25 per cent, Dr. Waters said his study in dicated ,that _industrial.- wages. in Pennsylvania. -are t meeting.. higher living,.costsr"very satisfactorily." The • group„hardest -hit by. war time' liVing..costs i according. to the Penn. State economist, . are .the Collared" - and salaried workers . whoe wages. have been frozen for. the duration. Agricul tural- workerS' 'incomes, - he—said; have- kept- pace with living costs "fairly well." An additional increase in- indus trial wakes, he• continued, would aggravate . still more the unequal distribution of war sacrifices upon the. various classes of society, "in cluding- those- servicemen . and women whose , salaries • remained fixed - through- more• . serious dan gers than , -higher living costs!' - Waters.- said , ' another wage boast in industry might - well- prove to , 'be. the. "last.;:straw"—makifig-- it virtuallY. impossible•to control: the heavy .PurcliaSing-powerL pressure price's: Payrolls, he •added.; have continued to .increase while:-livirig aosts t 'during; , :thespast