I'AGE EIGHT CLASSIFIED SECTION LOST: Diamond ring in gold. sett ing. Will finder please call - re ference dept. at Main Library or Blom MI Sentimental valve. Re ward. IJOST: Black compact with. two 'silver (bars across it at U. club twio weeks ago. Call Hoot nea. WAINTED: Ride to Tyrone or Al toona late Saturday afternoon. Tiellp pay expenses. Call 30 Ath. N.I(TIAINTED: Ride to Elhiladeliphia Monday afternoon or Tuesday morning. Cal Nina, 345 Ath. IN'OTICE: For all types of secre- tarial Work, call E. C. Daniels Secretarial Service. , Boon n 205 State College Hotel. We do term papers, theses, take shorthand, dictallion, etc. Dial 4906 or 21590. :r.4OST: shell rim glasses. Sat eve between PTA, DSP, TKE, and Greystone Hall, please call Andy. 3976. Brown snakeskin purse lost between Sparks and the Post Office on Friday, needed !badly. Call Lynn 4109. Reward. VitAINITDD: Boarders for the imtruner session. Frazier Hall, 139 South Frazier street. Tele phone 4821. V. C. invites you to a buffet lunch and vic-dance Satur day, from 8:30-12:00 at Wood man( Hall. 85c per couple. ..1100M and board for women and married couples for the summer session. Marilyn Hall, 317 East Beaver Ave. Dial 3935 or 2904. DELTA Tau Delta will be open all summer. Rooms for rent. House privileges. Call Ed, 4979. DOST: girl's light blue sweater with white buttons Monday June 1,7. Plea - e call Evelyn 3960. :31/OST: Ronson lighter lost Fri- day between Corner Room and Sparks. Gotta have it please! Call Campbell Chi Phi 4332. )OST: greyish-green suit jacket left in College woods, day of Ag picnic. Lf found please call 2AM. LOST: Girl's gold identification bracelet with Mildred inscrib ed on it. Sentimental value. Please call Mildren 4645. Reward. LOST: Black Schaeffer pen in !Hort Woods. Phone 4812, ask for Ferd. WANTED: ride to Philly, Tren ton, New York or vicinity end of final week. Call 2610, ask for Jean. AVC To Sponsor Dance, Supper at Woodman Hail The American Veterans' Com mittee will sponsor a vic dance and buffet supper at Woodman Hall, 8:30 o'clock tomorrow night, to conclude the semester's activi ties. 'Entertainment will be Furnished during the evening, and the affair is open to the public. Admission per couple is 70 cents plus 15 cents tax. The next AVC meeting will be n 305 Old Main, 7:30 p.m. July • AK:RICAN VETERANS COMMITTEE INVITES YOU TO REAX BETWEEN FINALS AT THE BUFFET LUNCH and VIC DANCE SAT., JUNE 22 WOODMAN NALL (W. Hamilton and S. Allen) 8:30 b IMO $.85 per couple, tax included TICKETS AT STUDENT UNION' AND FROM A.V.O. It EWERS Class Day— (Continued from page one) 'class gifit, a , contuibution toward the completion of the Henry Vaunum Poor Mural. The gilt will be accepted by President Ralph D. Hetzel. All-College Cabinet has an nounced that 20 graduating seniors will receive certificates for out standing contributions to the Col lege. In addition to these twenty, a special (Cabinet certificate will be awarded posthumously to Paul Smith, member of the graduating class and .former boxing captain and black star. The students in;g All - Cabinet certificates are Cln at. Les Appleman, Jeannette Bosch, Ario Brennan, Stanley Chadwin, June First, Dorothea Pis Cher, Marilyn Gldbhich, Rita Grossman, Theodore Harmatz, Wilitam Mouton, MiChael Kerns, C. Jackson Reid, Jr., Audrey Ry back, Joan Schearrer, Barbara Smith, Doris Stack, Priscilla Wag ner, Rdbedca Walker, Jeanne Weaver, and Stanley ROTC Program To Add New Branches In• Fall ' Next Fall, the present interim ROTC course is to be greatly ex panded and will be absorbed into the post-war program recently approved by the War Department. In addition to Infantry, Engin eer, and Signal Corps, several new branches are expedted to be activated here. In an &Tont to make the pro gram more attractive, appropri ations are underway to. grant 66 cents per day to all !basic cadets. In addition to the ration allow ance of 66 cents now being grant ed to advanced course students, a pay of $11.25 per day is to be granted. In order, to receive a reserve , commission, advanced course ca dets will ibe required to attend a summer camp of bight weeks duration. The government will grant travel pay to and from this camp, which will be in this corps area. Five • hours per week class time is also required, and the course , grants three elective credits per semester. Thespians Tap— (Continued from voge one) Grove, Walter Klinikowki, Fuz zy Lamady, James Milholland, James Mitchell, Virgil Neilly, Portman Paget, Frank Perna, CM ries leegor and Robert Wickus. Pat Rife, custodian of Schwab auditorium z.nd a friend of the club for many years, was pre sented with an honorary mem benzhip in Thespians by me club at Friday night's performance. A banquet at the State College Hotel ac 7 p.m. Sunday will honor those tapped and will be attended by the show cast and committees, Bud Mellott, .president, announ ced last night. THE COLLEGIAN CAMPUS CALENDAR TODAY Collegian Staff meertlinig, 9 Car negie Hail, at 4:11.5 Classes end, .5:10 p.m. TOMORROW Finals begin, 8 sm. SUNDAY Thespian Banquet, State Col lege Hotel, 7 p.m. Blue Key Initiation and Ban quet, State College Hotel, 12:31) MONDAY Cliass Day meeting, '8 Carnegie Hall, 7 p.m, THURSDAY Class Day, Schwab Aud , itorktm, 110:30 aim. Graduation, Rec Hall, 2 p.m. Ray Scholarship- (Continued from page one) tar Board at the suggestion of Miss Ray are: , (1) A woman who has attained a fair scholastic record in addi tion to showing an interest in bet ter college activities. , (2.) A woman who has come to. the attention of faculty and stu dents by her Promise of future usefulness. (3) A woman whose college ed ucation has depended largely up on her own effort. The first scholarship will be awarded to a student at the end of her sophomore year. The choice will be made by a committee composed o£ one student member of Mortar Board, one town alum nae of :Mortar Board and•one fac ulty representative. The scholarship, according to the 'members of Mortar Board, has been named in honor of Miss Ray in recognition of her service and devotion to the College. Delta Sigma Rho Taps 1; Names Hay President In a candlelit ceremony Thurs day, Delta Sigma Rho, •national debating honorary tapped seven students. 'Marian Bryan, Jean Dalton, I q2o7rm Go ICJ te in , IK en n 'et h Hiarshbarger, Jeanne Hirt, Ann. Hay, and Rutih Tishenman (were initiated. Chief requirements for the honorary are that the person maintain at least a 2 all-(college average and represent his univer sity in several intercollegiate de bates. • Professor JOhn Frizzell, sponsor of Delta Sigma Rho since 1904, gave the alter-dinner speech fol lowing a banquet for the new members. Officers elected for next semes ter were Ann Hay, president; and Jean Dalton, secretary. Ag Studeni Council . . . 'bills , ontstanding, .should be presented. by Wednesday annotm ced James Todd, treasurer. He also announced that council meet ings would continue during the summer. A l 5 .'l*(lolf66W 1 5 I 5 eldit'S V° . WV AgifiA ; ovot"edif, 0/10A Pio, 5' ID e s , 40 044 'Offers A Course the College' In Pennsylvania Dutch Next Fall • • "Kannscht du Deitsch schwetze?" Students at the College next semester will have a chance to learn to speak Pennsylvania "Dutch" since a course in Elementary Penn sylvania German has been added to the program of the German de partment. Another unique course that will be offered next semester is Life and Culture of the Pennsylvania Germans. rt deals with the his tory, language, literature., religi on, folklore, art, architecture, economy, and agriculture of the Pennsylvania Germans. German Spoken "According to the. best estimates, Pennsylvania German is still spo ken by some 300,000 people and understood by about 400,000 over an area of about 17,500 square miles, or, considerably more. than twice the area of Massachusetts," Dr. Albert F. Buffington, of the department of German, says. He pointed out that the langu age' course, which ,is intended to give students an elementary speaking and reading knowledge of the language, should be of great value to graduates, particularly those who become teachers, law yers, and physicians and settle in Pennsylvania German sections of the State, Blue Band Splits To Form Football, Concert Bands Blue Band will resume its pre war status in the Fall when two separate unilts will be chosen, one for the football season and the other for concerts, announced Hummel Fishburn, head of the department of music, today. One unit will be an all-male marching unit and the oiler will be a concert band in whkh girls will be allowed to play, he said. The marching band will entertain at all of the home 'football games and as in the past will play lat some of the away games. This unit will be an 80,piece group and will include a drum major. This action will pult the band back to its former basis as one of the outstanding features of the fooball season, Professor Fishburn concluded. W r 4 E THE ..5 •:..: STATE PRLDAY, JUNE 21,1940- Famine Drive Tops Goal; Students Donate $2,584 The State College Emergency Famine Drive has gone over its goal of $7500, according to RUS sell E. Clark, chairman di the drive. Total receipts and pledges. for the College portion' of the .driVe . amounted to $2584.84. Thistotal not include fraternitie4 which have not yet turned ,in, their reports. The • town driVe netted nearly $5OOO. " Sororities have turned in pledges for the foster parent plan, amounting to $1440. They haive, also made donations of $106.50 for the purchase of a heifer. Dormitory donations amounted to $444.58. and money collected through solicitation b y coin boxes totaled $263.84. Sigma Phi Sigma . . . initiated the following 'at recent ceremony: Guy (Bogartl James Clank, Gerald Cook, Dale• Dennison, Vernon " Evans, Van - Hoagland, Raymond Raymond MaKinley, Amasa Marks, Joseph Predzinkowski, Dale Rein-. ard, Theodore -Rozellslzr, sTahn Schwartz, Eugene Schultz, " mid" Bruce Sutume.ns. H wards , .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers