PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY BY THE COLLEGIAN STAFF ] VQLr42^No. ohly Penn State Vets Gan Be Admitted For Next Semester Gamma Sigs ioin National .‘rf Gamma Sigma Phi, first to high light the fraternity world for 1946, : has been granted a charter by Zeta V, Beta Tau. The Senate Committee ' ort Student Welfare .has approved ' the charter and the new national ;...chapter will he known as Alpha r. Psi. I:-i A lo'carfraternity at the College ■ since 1939, Gamma Sigma Phi has y, its own chapter home at 227 E V Nittany avenue Members of a committee of Zeta Beta Tau including officers and . • members of nearby chapters will ' pledge the following students to iV morrow-' . Marvin Breslow, Marvin Demp, ;v Louis Glanztoerg, Jack Kushner, Kushner, Arnold Perloff, S Frank Rose, Marvin Sattler, Alan j .Shu'lman, and Stanley Wirtschaf ter. . \ C;Thg-installation-, of the chapter / will follow at an date, after- P tha. completion of a training, pro gram. A number of recent alumni of Gamma Sigma . Phi will) be in itiated into 'Zeta Beta Tau at the !$ 'fime of. installation. The following : .i? ; pledges of Gamma Sigma, Phi, and.; fviil he pledges'ojttfe v.; Richard Aron s o n, Robert xc Brooks, Arthur Kantor, Robert and Mark Zimmerman. 'V ' Zeta Beta Tau, founded in 1898, ;• has been a senior member of the ;; National Interfratemity Confer ence since 1912. It has chapters at: i C.C.N.Y., -N.Y.U., Columbia, Penn sylv'ania, Cornell, Western . Re -. serve, Tulane, Ohio State, Syra f. cuse, LS.U., Illinois, Michigan, ■McGill, Virginia, Alabama, Mis souri, Chicago, Vanderbilt, U.S.C., Washington & Lee, California, Ne ;; 'braska, Washington (Se,attle), Washington (St. Louis), Arizona, S-r North Carolina, U.C.-L.A., Frank s' lin & Marshall, Duke, Miami LV ; (OJiio), Tennessee, British Colum £;toia, and Kentucky. ' | Club Sponsors IDisc Dance An~informal vie dance sponsored -vby the Saturday Night Club will /. tie held in Rec Hall from 9 to 12 k o’clock tomorrow, .making the k third in a series/ of semi-monthly :'i dances. :V As usual, "the dance will be a ? “stag, hag, or drag” affair. Music ' from big name bands will be pro vided fresh off the platter; but the Club plans to feature some campus • band in the near future, Ray Con ger, sponsor of the Saturday Nighters, says. . Table games Will be provided for . those who do not care to dance all ; evening.' Admission is 30 cents, and the tickets will be sold at the door. . Frank Campagna will be general for the dance. Ruth ■Black, Norman Gordon, and Kay Setter make up the dance com mittee, headed by Angelo Conte. Ticket committee: Curt Gaylord, chairman'; Elizabeth Fleming, " Dorothy Jaun,'and Carlton Wood. ; , The dance is Ibeing held in) Re creation Hall this time rather than white, hall due to the re- La Vie : " ’ ... candidates will meet, in 1 - Armory at 5 p.m. Monday. FRIDAY MORNING, JANUARY 4, 1946—‘STATE COLLEGE, PA. Mortar Board Sets Up Fund A Charlotte E. Ray Scholarship honoring the dean of women is being originated under the spon sorship of the College chapter of Mortar Board. , : Mortar Board has,set a prirriary : goal'-'of. $3.000: J-biitviplans toj con tihue' collecti’ohs over a perfect of years. Only the interest on \the fund will toe used. No scholar ship will exceed $lOO for a com plete school year. At the request of Mortar Board, Miss Ray suggested that the, scholarship winner should be: !l. A woman whose college ed ucation has depended largely upon her own effort. 2. A woman, •who has attained a fair scholastic record in addi tion to showing interest in bel ter college activities. 3. A woman who has come to the attention of faculty and stu dents .toy her_ promise, of future usefulness. The first scholarship will be awarded to a student at the end of her sophomore year. The choice will be made by a commit tee composed of one student member of Mortar Board, one town alumna of Mortar Board and one faculty representative. “The scholarship,” said Mary Falcon, president of Mortar Board, is being named for Miss Ray in recognition of her service and devotion to the College as Dean of Women since 1923, and a s a token of the esteem in which (Continued on page four) PSCA Campaign Leaders Meet To Organize Drive Pointing toward a, successful finance drive, the Penn State Christian Association will hold .’an organization dinner for campaign leaders at the State College Hotel banquet hall- at 5:30 p.m. .on Sunday. ; Dr. Victor Beede; head of the forestry department at the Cpl lege, heads faculty solicitors. Mairy Faloon and Vaughn Stapleton are chairmen of the student campaign. ■Proceeds from the canvass will finance all FSCA student activi ties for the coming year, accord ing to' James' T. Smith, general secretary. Made possible by the incoming, fund are all the Asso ciation’s functional, social and rec reational campus projects. . Out standing among these are Old Main Open House, entertainment for foreign students,, Christmas and. Eastgr. watahservices,, jj the 'sjMept recreattbn'i for übderpriviTeged cnildifeh at Mill brook, and conference work with other college Christina Associa tions) ; Apply But College Has Facilities for Only 800 1500 Vets Only returning veterans who were students' at the College at the time they left for military service can be admitted to the College at the opening of the second semester in March 1946, President Ralph D. Hetzel announced today, and it is feared, he said, that not all of these can be accommodated. With every facility strained to the limit, the College can take care of only about 800 in addition to those now enrolled, the president revealed. These will be selected out of more NROTC Remains Until Summer A $10,000,000 appropriation bill, recently .passed by Congress and signed by President Truman, will permit continuation of the, NROTC until July 1, 1946, on ac tive, duty basis.' -Before the appropriation was made,- the Navy Department an nounced . curtailment of the NROTC at the end of the present semester: By, July, Navy men now study-, ing at, the College will have made a.,choice” of one of the„.fpllpw.ing -fHreeV'dbufses’ idf -'actibhy *'• ' (1)/ Continuation in the NROTC, paying their own tuition jjatf expenses. (2) Enlistment under the Na val Air Corps V-5 program. (3) Transfer to the fleet on active duty in an enlisted status. Those who remain in college will be placed on inactive duty (Continued on page four) Alefheia Goes Phi Sig Sig Phi Sigma Sigma, national sor ority, initiates its Beta Eta chapi ter, formerly Aletheia, a local sorority, at the' Nittany. Lion Inn tonight. [Grand Archon Clarisse Marko witz, Executive Secretary Esther Matter, Bursar Joan Goldman, and other national officers have come down for . the program which includes tonight’s initia tion, formal installation tomorrow afternoon,' and a formal banquet tomorrow evening. There will be an introductory tea Sunday af ternoon. Phi Sigma Sigma was first established at Hunter College, New York City, November 26, 1‘913. There are now thirty-one chapters, on various campuses. Aletheia was founded Decem ber 19, -.1.944, by nineteen girls who wanted to form a sorority to make a fast bond for their friend ship. Today there are twenty eight members in this new chap ter of Phi Sigma Sigma. Officers of the group are June Hendler, Archon; Harriet Sahel, Vice-Archon; Marilyn Lunitz and Ruth Frachtman, Tribunes; Anita Isecovitz, Bursar; and Lorraine Meltzer, Social Chairman. - Members are Julia Arronson, Rosiland Baldinger, Jewel Baron off, Helen Bautman, Sally Bern stein, Norma Brofsky, Edith Brai love, 'Ruth (Frachtman, Faye Grossman, Natalie Grusmark, Mildred Glaser, Avis Goldberg, Edna) • Guttman, 'Elsie Harwitz, June Hendler,' 'Anita Iseqoy.itz, Marilyn Lunitz, Lorraine Meltzer, Deo Portnoy,. Harriet. Ssib.el. Janet Schmidt; Rose Sherman; Frances Sorin, and Blanche ValJ. Pledges are Gertrude Cohen, Ev Levine, and Rita Mittleman. than 2000 who have already applied for admission, with addi tional applications being received daily. Of the total applica tions, more than 1500 are from veterans. “In these circumstances,” said President Hetzel, “the trustees and officers of the College feel that first tion must be given to those who left the College in response Osborne Heads Ajehiteetee Milton S. Osborne, newly ap pointed professor of architecture and head of the department of architecture, has had extensive tice, Dean ’Harry P. 'Hammond said today. The appointment of Osborne, effective May 16, 1946, was ap proved at the recent meeting of the executive committee of the Board of Trustees on Saturday. Until his arrival, a committee, composed of 'E. L. Whitaker, L. A. Richardson, and Dr. H. E. Dickson will continue ’ (to administer the affairs of the department. Since 1909, Professor Osborne has .been director of the depart ment of architecture and fine arts at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. He previously served as assistant professor, as sociate professor, and professor of architecture and also as acting dean of the school of architecture at Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Professor Osborne also has serv ed as city planner and consultant for the Chicago Planning Com mission and for the-Metropolitan Plan of Greater Winnipeg. He has been an architect for the Regional Plan of New York and its envir ons and has practiced architecture with the office of John Russel Pope, of New York; Clarence Stein, of New York; and Otto Darst, of Columbus, Ohio. 'ln 1922, Professor' Osborne re ceived the degree of 'bachelor of architecture from Ohio State Uni versity. He received the degree of master of science in architecture from Columbia University in 1908. 'He is a fellow of the Royal (Continued on page jour) Students Pay Deposit Toward Fees Wednesday All students, graduate, under graduate, special, veterans, and part time, are required to pay a ten dollar deposit in Recreation Hall from 9 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Wednesday, according to Regis trar William S. Hoffman. The fee will be used as evi dence of a student’s intention to return next semester and. will help the College determine in ad vance the number of students which can be admitted. Students will receive credit for the deposit on their fees’ statement..- j. I ,' At Recreation, Hall/Jaspjl cants •will filled a. housjngsjecofd.'form and pay the deposit) at-windows according to matriculation num ber, similar to the payment of fee procedure. PRICE FIVE CENTS to the nation’s call to arms. We promised them opportu nity to return to College and we must keep faith.” “Unfortunately, in order to do this,” the president said, “it will be -impossible to accept civilian freshmen students for the coming semester. This has made necessary the cnacellation of some ;admissio_ns already . granted. The ‘xSShtg'e? ’ ,: d'eeplY''fegretif 'that these limitations must • be set up, but they are made necessary by con ditions beyond its control.” Seven Classifications Admissions will be made on the basis of seven classifications, but available housing capacity will probably be filled, it was an nounced, by veterans who come under these two highest priorities: A. Veterans who left Penn State for military service. B. Disabled veterans under the terms of Public Law 16 who are Pennsylvania residents and admis sible to Penn • State at a level above that of first semester fresh men. The next three highest ratings will be given to veterans who were enrolled in college military train ing programs, on condition that they can be admitted at a level above that of first semester fresh men: C. Veterans who are Pennsyl vania residents, who were enrolled at Penn State in the ASTP, V-12, and AAF programs. D. Veterans who are Pennsyl-. vania residents, who were enrolled (Continued on page four i WSGA Christmas Drive To Reach Goal of $550 Although all contributions have not been received, WSGA will reach its goal of $550 in its 17th annual Christmas Drive, it was announced today by Janet Taylor, chairman of the drive. Dona tions received to date total $520. Contributions from major coed organizations were larger than in former years, the chairman stat ed. The drive was conducted through personal solicitation from December 10 to December 20, and checks have been mailed to the four projects sponsored in the drive. Donations were apportioned among the Mifflin County Chil dren’s Aid Society, American Women’s Hospitals, Mrs. Ralph D. Hetzel’s Emergency Fund, and United China Relief. list of . contributions ha's'nbt fyet beeir'cbmpiled, it wits announced, but will be published at a later date. Miss Pearl O. Weston, assistant to the dean of women, acted as advisor for the drive.