FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1945 Sorority Short. 4 Alpha Chi Omega Mrs. Perrin Smith, national pub licity chairman, will visit the chap ter next week. A tea will be given hi her honOr on Wednesday: A sing was held' Monday . night to wel , . . 'come 26 new pledges. Alpha Epsilon Phi . • NeW officers were installed last night, with 23 pledges present for the ceremony. Those elected were: 'dean, Laurette Schwartz; sub dean, Ina . Shillin; scribe, Lois Mor rig; registrar, • Bernice Greenes; treasurer; Phyllis Berney. Instal latioh was' followed by a dessert party. . • . . • Alpha Omicron Pi 'The 'actiVes greeted 16 new pledges. with an inforMal party Sunday .night. - Plans are being made for a party in the future for the graduating seniors. Chi Omega • • The president, Nancy Jean Yant, and rushing chairman of Chi `Omega's chapter at Pittsburgh will be here for the weekend. Actives have been entertaining their 12 pledges every night this week at dinner in the dining • commons. 'Gamma Phi Beta • • • • Gamma Phi Beta will hold a ,cozy hour honor of its pledges Saturday. There will be entertain ment, and refreshments will be served. Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Alpha Thet4 will cele brate its 25th anniversary on cam -pus- at . a luncheon Salurday. This be - ftillocired - by special serv . .ices. k .ja 'Phi Mu A tea for Mrs. W. Calver Moore, :visiting district president of Phi Mu, was held at the Beta Mu chap ,te:r house Tuesday,.President Lila Lehman announced. Pledges, active members, and -alumnae attended. Lila Lehman, president of Beta Mu; -Jean . 1-Inver, 'treasurer, and .Mrs. - John Walker, hostess, will visit the campus of Gettysburg ,College, tomorrow where a new `chapter of 'Phi Mu will be in :stalled. • Beta Mu pledged 18 coeds Wed.. 'ne.tday,, Lila Lehman, president, . officiating. • ~,,,NRIT, _ • ~ \ 4 . ' .i / . • `'.!'. ( tt )1 \ if, Ni t „ 6 WRA Sweetheart Dance Follows Valentin Theme; Tickets Go on Sale. Plaid and polka dotted hearts in red, black, and white will be featured as decorations for the third annual Sweetheart Dance at White Hall, 9 a. m.•• to midnight, February 10, in keeping with St. Valentine's Day. Bud Wills and his Campus Owls will play for dancing at the semi-formal a,f fair. sponsored by the Women's Recreation Association.. Tickets go on , sale today and may.' be purchased from . WRA club presidents 'and members, Ex,- ecutive Board members, dormi tory and sorority, representatives, and at Student Union. Admission is .$4.20, tax ;Included, per couple. Marilyn Globish, . vice presi dent of the Executive Board of WRA is chairman of the dance and will be • assisted by the fol-• lowing committees: Decorations—Louise Zimmerer, chairman, and Betty Schenk; in vitations—Alice Hooper, chair -man, and Marilyn Globisch; tick ets, Mary Ann Jennings, chairman Jane Schlosser, Doris Handwerk, and, Becky Walker; and publicity —Fay Young; chairman, and Betty Pike. • Dean Requests Coeds Report To Dispensary "Any coed returning to College from .a home in which illness is present must report to the Health Service immediately upon her re turn to campus," stated Charlotte E. Ray, dean of women, today. "This precaution," warned Dean Ray, "is necessary in order to pro tect not only the student' herself but also her associates, all of whom may •be endangered if she has - come from a home in which there was a communicable dis ease." Dean Ray also added •that any student called home suddenly to a house in which there is known to be a communicable disease •should notify .the Health Service before leaving. Freshman Registration , Freshmen registrations has been changed from 8 a. m. February 28 to 7 p.m. Mar. 1, William S. Hof fman, College registrar, announced today. Since •the entering class is so small a shortened freshmen week program has been planned. Upperclass registration will take place on March 2 and 3, as origi nally scheduled. The spring se mester will start Monday, March 5. Ann,oun.cing SWEETHEART DANCE FEBRUARY 10 WHITE HALL Dancing 9 -12 THE CA ' M'PUS OWLS Attention, Frosh Removal of customs and Move-up Day for first and sec ond semester freshman women will go into Wed today, accord ing to Elizabeth Robinson, Judi cial head. First semester women may remove their green. bows and name cards. Second semester women are now granted sophomore privi leges. These include one o'clocks on Friday and Saturday nights, dating on week nights until ten o'clock, and one ,eleven o'clock per month: We 7he Women. To boost our self-esteem. we like to recall the remarks of numbers of visitors at Penn State who have admired the comely appearance and careful grooming of the co eds. Recently, however, information has been received at the Dean of Women's office that some coedp have been attired, shall we say sloppily, when they go on bus or train journeys. This certainly doesn't reflect well on Penn State's name, or for that matter on Penn State coeds. With' travel conditions as they are today, coeds are not expected to travel in the very latest style from Schiow's, but they are ex pected to 'travel neatly and to be well groomed, and thereby prove that the human element of the College equals the beautiful sur_ roundings. Junior Service Board Elects Bollinger Prexy Junior Service Board elected the following new officers Wed nesday: Ruth- Bollinger, president; Helen Miller, vice-president; and Betty Hosterman, secretary-treas urer, according to Betty Wolfram, former •acting president. This was the first meeting for the_nine new Junior Service Board members. . Organized under WSGA, the Board helps with transfer student orientation. At the beginning of a semester its sponsors exchange dinners. Honorary to Tutor Active members of Alpha Lam bda Delta, women's honorary, are offering to tutor freshmen women. The names, addresses and cur ricula of members will be posted in all freshmen dormitories. THIRD ANNUAL Semi-Formal Music by THE COLLEGIAN Sophomore Honorary Awards Scholarships To Fitzgerald, Million Two Cwens scholarships of $5O each will be awarded to Elizabeth Fitzgerald and Mary McMillion, it was announced Wednesday by Joan Huber, president of Cwens. The sophomore women's honorary gives a scholarship each year, but was able to award two this year. Coeds receiving the Cwens scholarships are chosen by the sophomore women's honorary and its advisors, attention being given to activities, scholastic standing, and need. Proceeds from the Cwens-Mor tar Board sponsored "Spinsters' Skip" December 9, 1944, supple mented the scholarship fund for the fall semester. • Frosh Coeds Sponsor 'Big-Little Sister' Tea Freshman coeds are sponsoring their annual "Big-Little Sister Tea" in the southwest lounge of Atherton Hall ? 3 to 5 p.m. Febru ary 4. Each freshman invites and. takes her own "big sister" to the affair. Arloa Betts, WSGA freshman senator, is general chairman for the tea. Assisting her are six com mittee chairmen and their individ ual committees. Other committee heads include Gloria McCurdy, decorations; Eva Winter, invita tions; Claire Parks, refreshments; Pat Meily, hostesses; Elaine Mit tleman, • music; and Jane Grey, clean-up. College Placement Plan's Interviews Four employment interviewers will visit the campus next week according to the College Place ment Bureau. All those interested should make arrangements at 204 Old Main as soon as possible. G. P. Vest of the General Elec tric Company will interview on Monday, interested prospects in seventh and eighth semester from the following curricula: electrical engineering, mechanical engineer ing, industrial engineering, chemi cal engineering, chemistry, phys ics, metallurgy, and. mathematics. On Tuesday, R. K. Mains of the Moraine Products Division of Gen eral Motors Corporation will talk to seventh and eighth semester stu dents in mechanical engineering and metallurgy. • J. E. Smith and George Kit teridge of the Armstrong Cork' Company, will be on campus Fri, day, February 2, to interview Feb ruary graduates. This company is interested Particularly in chemists, physicists, industrial engineers, mechanical engineers, and wom en with secreterial skills, though there are other opportunities available. FIGHT, 11 HINT! LE PARALYSIS JAN. 14.31 STARTING TOMORROW AT THE CATHAUM Spencer Tracy, as Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle, gives a last-minut, briefing in this scene from "30 Seconds Over Tokyo," a foam PAGE THICET Women in -__Cporia With the continuation or the cold weather and the repeated snow storms, skiing has become one of the most popular winter sports for coeds. Sponsored by the Outing Club of the Women's Recreation Asso,. elation., skiing is slated daily for 4 p.m. Any undergraduate woman student interested should renort to the ski room at this time or ,a 3 soon as possible thereafter where she will receive full equipment in cluding skiis, poles, shoes, and liar ness. Instruction Available At present skiiers are using the Holmes Field slope but one el Pennsylvania's best ski trails: iu located at Boalsburg and is open to any interested students. MisL: Mildred Lucey will give instruc tions to all beginners at 4 p.m. daily. Outing Club will meet in the second floor lounge of Ath Hall, 7 p.m. Thursday. Cage Results As the intramural basketball tournament nears its finish, a Women's Building five swamped Van Tries, 52-9. Ann Baker star— red for the winners, scoring 32 points. Beaman's trounced Mac Hail, 37-9, and .Ath East defeated AChiO, 39_22. Thetas defaulted to the AOPi's. Becky Walker, cage manager, announced yesterday that no ex cuses for postponement will be.ac , cepted except that of formal sor ority pledging. Swimmers Compeie Eastern Intercollegiate Tele • graphic swimming meets will ) be held about the middle of Februay, according to Betty Wolfram, pres-i -dent of. Swimming Club. Anyone interested in participating in the meets or acting as timekeeper, manager, and pacer should reOrt to White Hall pool, 7:30 p.m. WO nesday. "Thirty Seconds " Authentic to the Very Last Detail Down to the smallest exciting detail, .`.`Thirty Seconds Over Tok yo" is not only a true story, but the most accurate motion picture ever filmed. Its authenticity \Vat; assured by three young heroes of the Tokyo raid. They are Major Ted W. Lawson, author with Rob ert Considine of the absorbing best-seller account of the raid from which the picture was adapt. ed; Major Dean Davenport, hi;: co-pilot of their B-25 bomber, tht) Ruptured Duck, and Lieutenant H. Allen Fairbanks, Navy fighter pi lot who on the raid, was assigned to the famed aircraft carrier Hor net. The Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer film, with Van Johnson, Robert Walker and Phyllis Thaxter, end with Spencer Tracy as Lieutenant; Colonel (now Lieutenant General) James H. Doolittle, opens at thu Cathaum Theatre. A dv.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers