PAGE FOUR ,WSGA Outlines Final Plans For Freshman Coeds Exam Senate of Women's Student Government Association Wednes day night made ,final plans for the bluebook on campus knowledge which is to be administered to all freshman women this week. In addition to the !bluebook discus sion members received a report on the results of unit elections. Coeds elected in these dormitory divi sions will serve either on House of Representatives or on Freshmen Council. The "Frosh Bluebook" in 110 Home Economics at 7 o'clock 3/lon day night is compulsory. This an • nouncement was made today by Ruth Moon, Senate member in charge of the bluebook commit tee. Each freshman woman must (bring a 1116-page :bluclbook with her when she comes to the test. Those coeds who are unable to attend because of some valid ex cuse must leave slips of papers with their names and the reasons for their absences in the Judicial box in Women's Building, stated Mary Haines, Judicial chairman. Coeds are advised by members of WSGA to study the Student Handbook and the All-College Con stitution. Senior sponsors will aid their groups by stressing certain sections in these. Included in the questions will be such points as locations of buildings, names of schools and their deans, positions in All-Col lege Cabinet, campus terms and initials, customs and dormitory regulations, and words of songs and cheers. Most of the questions will be of the essay type, but a few true and false have also been in eluded. I lVlary Margaret Dunlap, presi dent of Senate, reminds freshman women that the general class showing on this test twill influence the length and strictness of regu lations for all freshman .coeds. Praetors for the examination, in addition to Miss Moon, are: Anna Atkins, Rita Grossman, Constance Miceli, and Patricia Reiff. Also announced at the Senate meeting were the names of the 10 memlbers of House of Representa tives and the 'l2 coeds who are to serve on Freshman Council. All these women were elected to also Bluebook Blues? Follow These Hints Do you worry about bluebooks? To those of you who do, partic ularl ythe uninformed freshmen, these little hints are offered which are guaranteed to pull you thfough the worst Of exams. !Because you're so busy you won't get around to studying till the day before at the earliest. You should rest up for the coming event however, so when not at tending Corner Room 200, relax in the sun or catch up on your Esquire and True Romances read ing. Be sure and answer all let ters so they won't be hanging over your head. Take a little nap be fore dinner. Then when evening comes you're all set. During the course of the eve ning,a good idea is to call up the prof and ask what questions he's going to give. This will make him think you're ambitious and you won't waste time studying non essentials. • No one can study howeverl, when in an unhappy frame of mind, so to forestall this, accept that date, or participate in a game of brldge. Don't get worried as the hours slip by—it's not as late as you think. Whatever you do, stock up on food, and eat heartily as a fortifi cation against exhaustion. This will also draw all your fellow students to the room and you can be certain to settle postwar prob lems, and the question of Penn State men. By 2 a.m. the bull session should be over and you'll be just in the mood for good, earnest study, so so get out your notes and start to look over them. Are your eyes droopy? Go to bed as I should have done before I wrote this. ' yE4 4 1 0 , • iet plAvill.l 1..6.^ fill the posts of unit presidents or vice-presidents. New delegates to the House of Representatives include: Jewel .e.aronotf, Joanne Campbell, Jane Dye, Ruth Freed, Bernice Greenes, 'Maria Hanzlick, Betty Herring, Virginia Ladd, Carolyn Manville, and Shirley McMullen. Freshman Counicil merribers are: Ann Achenbach, Joan Berchtold, Joanne Castleberry, IVlary Ann Fritz, Helen Kuehner, Alice Mil ler, Nancy Parde, 'Madge Rohr oach, Eleanor Romanyshun, Jo anne Smith, Frances Walker, and Shirley Welshans. Experiment Station Now Preserves Food By Freezing Four housewives have recently been introduced into a new meth od of preserving food. Participat ing in experiments carried out •by the Agricultural Experiment Sta tion, they prove that freezing is the, most acceptable method of preserving food, since it allows the food to remain nearest to its naturai state. , The four housewives, who were included as collaborators and ;crit ics in these experiments, were in structed in methods of handling, wrapping, and processing foods for "reezing. They prepared the home grown foods in the same careful manner as for table use. The fruits were tout up in syrup or sugar, de pending on each family's taste. The vegetables were blanched from three to four minutes in boiling water, cooled, packed, and sealed. Asparagus, rhubaib, peas, corn, string beans, lima 'beans, cauli flower, strawberries, raspberries, cherries, and peaches were the foods involved in the • experiment. The departments of • agricultural engineering, home economics, bacteriology, and biochemistry col laborated to study the rates of freezing. They now offer proof to show that the quicker the product freezes, the higher is its quality and the longer it can be stored in a frozen state. According to, research agricul turist John E. Nicholas, professor of agricultural engineering, recent experiments indicate three phases in freezing foods, namely, pre cooling, when the food is placed in the freezer compartment to cool from its original temperature to that of freezing; freezing, when the package remains in the freezer so that all its contents will be thoroughly frozen; and suib-cool ing, when the 'product cools from the temperature at which it froze to the freezer environment. "The time it takes for a pack age •of food to freeze depends up on several factors, particularly the nature of the food, the size and shape of the package, the wrap ping material, and the number of layers of wrapping material," de clared Professor Nicholas. "Thus the interval may be as short as two minutes when the food is un packaged and placed in one layer, or it may be as long as two hours." Products may be "quick" or "sharp" frozen, depending on the time the juices within the food solidify, Professor Nicholas went on to say. If the interval is 30 minutes or less, it is called "quick" freezing. Products frozen longer than 30 minutes, some of them requiring 'as long as 18 hours, are said to be "sharp" frozen. Coming I GUEST IN THE HOUSE A MYER'S SHOW AUGUST 3 & 4 SCHWAB AUDITORIUM .Admission 50c—Plus Tax THE COLLEGIAN Sorority Shorts ALPHA EPSILON PHI: The girls of the A]pha :Epsilon Phi sor ority were entertained at a tea on Sunday by the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity. ALETHEIA: Officers elected for the summer by the Alethia soror che summer by the Aletheia soror. Helen Bautman, secretary; Blanche Vail, treasurer. The following offi cers were elected for the fall se mester: June Hendler, president; Harriet Sabel,. vice-president; Mar ilyn, Lunitz, recording secretary; Ruth Frachtman, corresponding secretary; and Anita Isecavitz, treasurer. Aletheia's Pan-Hellencic representatives are Rita Mittleman and Gertrude Cohen. ALPHA XI DELTA: The mem bers of the Alpha Xi Delta soror ity are planning a trip to the WRA cabin this weekend. Mrs. Harriet , NeEibit, adviser, will chaperone. Schug Selects 23 Frosh Coeds For Debating Team Twenty-three freshman coeds were recently added to the Wo men's Debate squad, following competitive try-outs. Selections were made by Prof. Clayton H. Schug, coach, and upperclass member of the team. The new members include: Bea trice Berez, Doris Brenner, Mary A. Conahan, Martha Conley, Vera Eby, Elaine Elpern, Helen Finder, Lois Hagne, Martha Ann Koons, Jane Lee, Reva Levy, Ilona McLaughlin, Nancy Pardee, Madeline Millet, Lois Puharich, Kaylee Raffel, Shirley Joan Rhod es, Katherine Snider, Rosemarie. Wagner, Beatrice B. Weiner, Joyce E. Partridge, Florence Mc- Waide. Upperclass members of the Wo men's debate team who returned for, the summer .semester are Jean Barrinot, Betty Coplan, Ruth Eis ler, Ruth Freed, and Andrinna Winning. The group plans to participate in an inter-squad tournament lat er in the semester. Hillcrest Host At Tea Students at the Hillcrest Home Economics Practice House are •giv ing an at-home tea from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday. Approximately 60 faculty members and townspeople have been invited. Pouring for the tea are Miss Evelyn Benjamin, advisor of Bene dict House; Miss Ruth Graham, professor of home economics; Mrs. Frank Odgers, advisor of Beecher House; and Miss Charlotte E. Ray, dean of women. Treble Singers Get Keys Keys ordered by the Treble Singers are !beginning to arrive through the mails to individual members, announced Betty Herr ing, secretary-treasurer. Haines Warns Jokers Mary Haines, head of Judi cial, warns coeds who have been calling other College women and impersonating Judicial memlbers, that unless such calls are discontinued immediately, an investigation, will be made and the impersonators will be •unished. 'What 'Happens To WSGA Prexies?' They Say Do' With the present shortage of eligible males on campus, the girl with the brighest future today is probably Mary Margaret Dunlap, president of WSGA. For Miss Dunlap will be a can didate for the list furnished by the Dean Of Women's office head ed "What Happens to WSGA Presidents?" The answer? They get married. Gertrude G. Rosen, '45 is the only president in the last ten years who is not married. Miss Rosen has evidently decided to try a career before taking the fa tal step which will immortalize her in the Dean of Women's files, for she is now working for ,the National Broadcasting Company in New York City. The surprising succession of marital undertakings began in 1935 with Lucy J. Erdman, who is now Mrs. Robert W. Brown. She was followed by Frances Turner, '36, who is married to John N. Shaffer, and Genevra .C. Ziegler, M. D. '37, now Mrs. Richard H. Driscoll. The list goes on with Amy F. McClellend, '3B, now Mrs. Paul McCormick; Doris Blakemore, '39 who married John Duain Moore; Jane A. Romig, !40, nqw the wife Of Harold Wilson; Elinor Weaver, '4l, now Mrs. Harry Pearce; Jean Babcock, who graduated in May of 1942 and is now Mrs. Robert A. Hasek; Margaret Sherman, December '42 graduate, now the wife of W. F. Shollenberger; Ruth Storer, '43, now Mrs. George R. Pittenger; and Pat Diener, '44, now Mrs. Carroll S. Barton. GSO Re-Elects Haines President Mary Haines was recently re elected president of the Girls' Service Organization. Other offi cers chosen were Betty Thnikel, vice president; Mary Bitner, cor responding secretary; Vicky Ro sen, recording secretary; Mary McMillen, treasurer; and Mary Clouser historian. GSO is now conducting a date bureau. Any serviceman wishing to use this service may call Miss Dunkel, at' 4306. The hours she may be contacted at the Service Center will be announced later. Any coed or town girl wishing to become a member of GSO should sign at'the Service Center before Monday. A new training program will start soon, accord ing to Miss Haines. The new senior sponsor for the organization will be announced soon. • Prof. Padgett To Speak Prof. Ina Padgett, associate pro feessor of home economics, will speak on' "Something of the Pres ent Nutrition Picture" in 110 Home Economics at 3:30 Wednes day. Meeting the Itemand for Loveliness v 00 D ING'S Floral Arrangements Phone 2045 117 E. Beaver FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1945 Women in .ports The intramural softball tourna ment goes on. On July 19 the Mac Hall Frosh stopped Ath West 19- 14. The lineups were: Ath West: Ruth Anderson, Lor raine Carrara, Jeanne Covert, Irish Craig, Elizabeth Griffith, Louise Grossman, Mary Gundel, Peggy Langdon, Lois McClelland, Barth Smith. Mac Hall: Betsy Adams, Gin ger Higgins, Oily Kayden, Lois Larson, Snooks Lennarcl, Nannie Ludwick, Donna McLaughlin, Mimi Pimerene, Shirley Welsh ans, Eva May White. Ath East overpowered At h West Tuesday night, 27-3.. Ath East got 6 runs in the third inn ing, 16 runs in the fourth, and five in the fifth to beat the Ath Westers by an overwhelming score. Jane Hause, pitcher for Ath East, pitched the entire game, holding her opponents to only 3 runs. The lineups were: Ath East; Ann Baker (lb), Mar gie Dunmyer (L. F.), Bert Ed-. lund (C. F.), Mary Fransen (R. F.), June Hause (P), Harriet Richards (2b), Verna Rothermel. (Sib), Evelyn Shuster (S. S.), Mary Beth- Thresher (C), Wil laaine Woodruff (S. S.). Ath West: Ruth Anderson (C), Jeanne Covert (L. F.) „ Irish Craig (P), Elizabeth Griffith (R.- F.) Louise Grossman (S.S.),Hinda Kohn (S. S.), Katy Kovalanko (3b), Bobby Kroll (C. F.), Peggy Langdon (24b), Bath Smith (ib). :Hannie Ludwig umpired the game. Mildred Chestnutt was appoint ed president of the archery club by the WRA executive board,' Tuesday night. Points for the intramural cup start with summer sports. Any team desiring to enter tourna-' ments should call Ann Baker, 353 Atherton. Teams signed up for the intra mural tennis tournament are: Al pha X Delt, Millie Chestnutt,. Mary Gundel; AOPI, Alice Hooph , er, Jane:Wolbarst; Ath East, June-' Hause, Harriet Richards, Mary • Thresher, Jackie Zivic; Ath West, /labs ,Collins, Louise Grossman;• Chio. Ruth Anderson, Banb Smith; Gamma Phi Beta, Marge Dunmyer, Dommie Out ma n; Grange, H. B. Orange; Mac Hall, Ginger Higgins, Hannie Ludwick; SDT, Betty Berman, Edie Edlis; Theta, Libby Doyle, Betty Shenk; Theta Phi Alpha, Connie Miceli, 'Kitty Redlinger; Zeta, Cathy Jones, Amy Kaliney. The archery tournament will run for three weeks. Winners in -- the first week were the Mac Hall•• Trosh, whose team, made up of 011 y Kayden and Eva Mae White, netted a total of 669 •points. Run ner up is Alpha Xi Delta with 650 points, arched by Ann Baker an