PAGE SIX WSGA Announces Coed Mass Meeting; Gives Frosh Dorm Dating Privileges WSGA, in regular session Wed nesday night, scheduled a mass meeting, compulsory for all coeds, for Thursday, May 18. The rally will precede the nominations meeting which is set for Tuesday, May 23. Primary purpose of the get together will be to stress the im portance of women's elections, but several other features are being planned, according to WSGA Chairman Patricia • Diener. Miss Diener appointed Patricia Halberg, Ann Louise Decker, Kay Hib bard, Gloria McKinley, and Mary Margaret Dunlap to a committee which will plan for and publicize the rally. Senate also passed a resolution allowing freshman coeds to have men callers in their dormitories every day between noon and 5:30 p.m., their regular dating hours. Announcement was made at College World War II Casualties Amount To 100 Dead Or Missing World War II casualties of graduates and former students of the College who have been killed in action, have died while in the service, or have been listed miss ing in action, according to the Alumni Association, totals 100. The roll of honor is as follows: Class of 1913 Col. Joseph A. Stuart Class of 1918 Col. Ralph C. Love • Class of • 1927 Major George F. Fisher T/C Walter M Hollis Class of 1928 William S. Nichols Class of 1931 George C. Flannigan • Lt. Joseph . F. Miller Class of 1933 Capt. George D. Ferrell Lt. Charles Reiter Capt. Harbld S. Smith Class of 1934 Burton N. Jost' Class of 1936 Lt. Aaron Decker F/o RiChard W. Flenniken Robert C. Simpson Lt. (sg) David•K. Sloan* Class of 1937 Lt. (jg) Harry W. Claybaugh Ji Lt. George Ellstkom Ensign John •H. Fassett Lt. •Philip P. Reece Class of 1938 Capt. John W Baish Jr. Ensign. Henry J. Cartin Lt. Richard C. Gee Lt. George Harkess Pvt. Roger E. Smily Pvt. David W. Springer Lt, (jg) W. Garfield Thomas Jr • Class of 1939 Pfc. John J. Broderick Lt. Kennith Byrd A/C George L. Craft Jr. Lt. Martin B. Enos Jr. Major Edwin R. Harper Lt William Hehderson Lt. Joseph C. Huntsinger Capt. John R. Jordan, USMC Pvt. Adam B. Kalmanowice Ensign John S. McCurdy Lt. Henry E. °berg"' Lt. Charles E. Schanck Lt Roy J. Snider Lt. Samuel J. Todd Lt. Stephen L. White Class of 1940 Lt. Thomas P. Cameron Lt. Paul E. Dean Lt. Delmare A. Decker Lt. Aime L Dierkens Lt. Warren Elliott A/C Robert B. Gundel Lt. Justin J. Hower* Lt. William Malasky Pvt. James R. Rizzolo Lt. Paul 0. Staller* Lt. Walter Sypherd Capt. William J. Williams Lt. Charle s Yagel Class of 1941 Capt. Robert C. Brogan* Lt. William E. Charles Alpheus B. Clark Lt. Richard R. Cuthbert Senate meeting that Miss Sarah Blanding, dean of home economics at Cornell University, will be on campus on May 16 to discuss the place of women in the post-war world. The importance of having a representative coed attendance at Miss Blanding's discussion was stressed. Miss Blanding was for merly dean of women at Kentucky University and president of the National Association of Deans of Women. Other details considered by Sen ate included the breakfast line at Atherton, which is supposed to start on the east side of the dormi tory, according to Patricia Hal berg; and the WSGA bulletin board which has been posted in Atherton lobby for the purpose of publicizing announcements which were formerly made in Dining Commons. Ensign Coswell E. Mayo Cpl. William R. Morgan Lt. George W. Oughton Ensign Scovel Swan Class of 1942 Lt. Fred E. Blaney Lt. Roland D. Bowman Lt Charles S. Brachb.ill Lt. Paul L. Davies Ensign Emmett H. Fletcher Lt. S. Edward Gardner Jr. Sgt. William S. Heath Lt. John T. Hoffer* Lt. Gerald T Kearns Lt. Henry I. Levy* Lt. Edward C. Martin Lt, Donald Megrail Ensign Paul G. Mohney* Ensign James G. Sturgis Lt. Richard R. Vogel* Ensign Frances H. Wallace Jr.* Ensign Ernest E. Watkins Benjamin O. Wilmer, Merchant Marine* Class of 1943 Lt. William L.. Blomergren • Pvt. Harry A. 'Conger Lt. Morris S. Friedman Lt. Henry I. Lipsky* Lt Alan W. LoWe* Lt. James A. Marshall* Lt. Paul D: McGowan . Ensign William E. Nicciden Lt. •John P. Stief Lt. Harry R. 'Stengle Lt. Edward E. Stevens Class of •1944 Lt Walter .T. Chase P' t. Nicholas J. Dejoseph* A/C Robert L. Galley Pfc. Alexander M. Mitchell 'Jr Ensign, Leonard C. Urqhart* Class. of 1945 Lt. John T: Keely Jr. Lt. Lloyd O. Tircuit Missing International Film Club pre sents "Eternal Mask" in 121 Sparks, 7 and 9 p.m. THE COLLEGIAN 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Waltlett /70!'16 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Bowling highlights the current sports scene for athletic Penn State women, with 18 games already played in the double-elimination tournament now under way. Groups still in competition are Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Atherton East, Atherton West, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha-Theta, Kappa Delta, Phi Mu, Theta Phi Alpha, Zeta Tau Alpha, and Watts ball. In the intercollegiate bowling tournament, the scores for which were telegraphed, Penn State women's scores failed to place them in the top ranks of those • competing last . Wednesday and. Thilrsday. Those who bowled in the tour ney were Anna Buganich, Betty Develing, Mary Gundel, Betty Henning, Eunice Hurlburt, Ann-. ette Keefer, Shal Kronstad, Mary Jane Lewis, Janet Newell, and E.s. ther Spence. The University of Wisconsin led the bowling tens, with Duke, Miami University, Vassar, and Penn State following. Louis Fischer to Lecture On Scheduled Topic "Dawn of Victory,".Louis Fisch er's lecture originally scheduled for April 20, will be presented in Schwab auditorium, 8 p.m. Thurs day. Characterized by a Record col umnist as the "Horatio Alger of Philadelphia," Fischer, born above a fish store in that city, has risen to prominence among the .nation's military and political authorities on European affairs. The lecturer first went abroad in 1921 as a correspondent for the New York Evening Post, and has spent most of the past 19 years in Europe. He is at present contrib uting editor of The Nation. Fischer has traveled in Egypt, Palestine, and Iraq; has studied many years in Russia; covered the Spanish war, and was in France when the present war _began. He spent a week with Mahatma Ghandi just before the Indian 'statesman's arrest by the British. In his lecture Thursday, he will analyze the entire pattern.df World War IL Them will be special 'em phasis upon Russia, England's war role, and "the latest military and political developments. Freshmen will be . granted o'clock permission. All attending., the lecture are urged by the pro gram committee to come with pre pared questions. Tickets purchased for the April 20 lecture will be valid, and will also be sold at the door for 25 cents, including tax. Jake Hunter, Ex-Thespian, Writes From Fort Benning Memories of pre-war Thespian shows and former Thespians sneaked up on us as we came upon this letter from J. D. "Jake" Hunter, '43, prominent member of Thespians and one of the famous "Three Stooges.". Jake, who wrote the letter while he was in Infantry Officers' Candidate School at Fort Benning, Georgia, addressed i 1 to Sock Kennedy '26 and the Thes pian gang. The letter follows.: Dear Sock and the Thespian Gang: The cream of the American fighting men, Candidate Hunter, J. D., decides that the home front needs a little morale building, so he takes up his G.I. typewriter— a Schaeffer Special—and sends a few words of encouragement to those hapless individuals who are . compelled to live in the abject horror and hellish nightmares of beer parties and dances in State College, Pa. God, what nerve it must take to stand the strain. Nothing, day in and day out but• the torture of eight hours a week and a . hangover every morning. Sometimes I feel guilty when I sit down in a foxhole, light a ciga rette, loosen my 27-pound pack, take off .my steel helmet, squeeze the water from my shoes, wipe the mud,from my face, brush the sand from my delicious appetizing meal of cold beans and soggy bread and realize that those folks up at State never let down or rest like I'm doing at the moment. They have to keep going, grinding away, plodding at getting a musical com edy out in the next few months. They never get a chance to sprawl in gooey mud and really relax! I feel like such a heel! Think of it! Poor Sock Kennedy sweating and straining for hours under those hot Klieg lights,'fight ing the terror that there •won't be a show . . . lylim Zartman, bless . her heart, pounding away night after night on the stage; dancing her lovely• legs until they ache,- only to realize that nothing lies' ahead but a steak sandwich at. Doggie's after it's all over . . .• Jimmy Burden, living on ciga rettes, beer, and sheer nerve while he goes through the weeks of ten-: sign that . are so much ' a part writing a musical score . : . Good, old Pat Lamade • pounding the piano until she is ready to: drop, : only to hear the, hoarse cry . to "Shape up, kids, we're taking it. , again!" Oh, Lord, thanks for such noble, Steel-nerved, courageous„ -never-quitting people such as thes e that I have left behind to guard' my treasures. Hiya, gang! D'ya miss , me? Boy, •oh, boy, if you could only see the- FRIDAY, APRIL 28,1944 Stooge now! You'd never know him. His fingertip, draped sport coat is now a field jacket; his plaid-lined raincoat is now a ten pound G.I. overcoat; his dirty sad dle shoes are now dirty field shoes and leggins; his pork-pie hat• is now a keel helmet; now, instead of carrying his perionaltelongings in a Metzger notebOok, he carries them in a full field pack; his beer supply is now close to him in- a tin 'canteen that dangles on his tail assembly. Now, instead of dodging the perils of College avenue traffic and the Saturday night rush to the Eatland, he merely has to crawl throtigh barbed wire, with ma chine guri bullets shortening his G.I. haircut, land mines throwing mud into his teeth, and listen 'to officers chew him up and dov;in because he doesn't laugh like hell about it. : The Army? I love it! Now par ,don me while I get up again—l didn't mean to kick myself so hard for saying that! This Officer Candidate School is really the berries. We get up in the morning and have been in the field for hours before the sun de cides to look up through the scrub pines. We run our legs off all over the State of Georgia, shooting things, blowing things up, stabbing people—just raising particular hell like a Penn State houseparty. One day's take here would give Cecil B. DeMille all the war or battle scenes he'd need for the next hun dred years. Then we come back into garrison in the early evening (say about 8 or 9 o'clock), study the next day's assignments, and then we have a whole ten or fif teen minutes to loaf at the PX guzzling milk and things. Then we get into lied nice and early shortly after midnight and relax for three whole hours. A cinch! I want to wish 'you. luck on your next show .and want to tell yOu how much I'd like to be in on ,it. But someone's gOt to fight this war, and I underitand the real reason behind Hitler's new peace feelers is now in. When Hunter fixes his bayonet, readies. his' grenades, loosens his helmet Straps; loads his takes another swig, and divo :in, 'Hitler knows 'the -jig, is Un; You mix the 'drinks, 'ging; I'll do The fighting? - • Hunter's letter Was' reprodUCed in the March issue of the Perin 'State Alumni News. Jake recently transferred 'to 'the Army Air Corps and is taking officer training :'et the Army-Air neld, San Antonio, TexaS.