'ftJDAY,' NOVEMBER 8, 1846 VSGA Grants wo 0 clocks Coeds will receive 2 o’clock per. fissions tonight, according: to WTafy Lou Waygood, president of .wiSQA, The usual 1 o’clock will fjrevail for Saturday night. : Itl'Miss Waygood stressed' the fact , ( hat all coeds mulst- be in the dorms ;s3night and Saturday night. No’ permissions will be gr-a filed. for ibeds to stay ,at -th e fraternity louses since the houses have been ji’pencd to imports' only. • INo Career Women? • > ! Comic Strips Tell All Disapproval by women of the [lorification of bachelorhood and i constant but ineffective pursuit pf the male by the female is prob ably indicated by the disinterest .Soliege coeds show in the comic Strip “Lil’ Abner.” I In a recent survey conducted on She campus, two hundred students and faculty members were inter viewed to. determine which comic Strips they preferred. Five were favored consistently by more than j)ne percent of the groups under Consideration. Both married men and women selected “Blondie,” thus indicating their preference for the parodies of domestic life. Graduates Favor "Lil' Abner" V Among the classes it was found Shat freshmen and sophomores flave very little interest in ‘‘Lil’ Vbner,” but the strip rates first ,yith graduate students. ‘‘Terry s>nd the Pirates,” on the other liand, is favored by the under graduates while the faculty and graduate students rate it at the bottom. I As for comic strip preference by schools, there seems to be no sig nificant differences _ among them pther than the Ag school which ffavors" Dick Tracy.” That is, the technical students don’t necessar ily prefer comic strips dealing with science, etc. | The greater percentage of non |omic strip readers was found in the older age groups such as facul ty and graduate students. ‘Common Sense Forum Includes L A. Officers Ernest Nagy and Fred Keeker, president and vice-president of the Liberal Arts Student Council, {will. tak.e part in the forum spon sored by Common Sense Club on {Liberal Arts Revisions Tuesday, [November 12. at 7:30 p.m. in 121 Sparks. g. Two plans will be presented— | the student plan and the faculty apian—which represent two differ |ent, controversial points- of view jawhiCh should interest every stu fcent; according to Leo Troy, exe cutive chairman of Common Sense IClub. B Dr. H. Wallace Brewster will ygive the background of these Iplans. Nagy and Keeker both Rsei’ve on the Post-War Planning y Committee which was responsible (for drafting the student* plan. Approximately. 20,000 fans fill-' ed' New Beaiver Field to overflow ing for the Penn State-Michigani State football game, producing the first sell-out since the Nittany Lions played Notre Dame before an estimated 22,000 customers in T92 ; 5. 'Jr. Miss' Nylons ® Beautifully Styled # 45 Gauge .. $1.20 pr. Wool Gloves $1.65 handbags $3 and 1 up Sweaters and Skirts MERIVALESHOP ■ S. Allen St. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Pied Typer A coed can’t prove her popular ity by producing a collection of Hat-men derbies, fraternity chartm bracelets and frat pins anymore. She has to show her “Hooper rat ing” too! Invented’ by a town fraternity, exactly what a- Hooper rating .is-goes something like this 1 :, Phone: call '.... ••...; .•..... 1 pbint: Afternoon, date .......... 1- pdint- Evening date .;;.: 2 pojiTtk Two dates in one week ... 'Spoinits-. Seven-dates in one week 12 points Meeting anctHd’f fellow 'While oh. a 1 date and saying hello T. . . 1 point Trip- to Whipples 15' points < It gdes on- and on. Circulatin' • Alpha Chi Omega was enter tained by the Kappa Sigs at a spa ghetti 'supper recently and by'the Sigma-, Chi’s Sunday .afternoon. The Kappa’s had the SAIE’s to ! a “Hillbilly party” last night, and will b e hostesses to -the Theta’s Monday night.. Alpha Omicr-on Pi entertained her brother fraternity,- Delta - Sigma Phi, Wednesday night. iSDT's held open house in an Atherton lounge Sunday. Gamma Phi Beta’s and their dates were to a sk-i lodge p'arty Friday night. The Lambda phi’s entertained the Chi O’s at a tea dance Sunday, and Phi Mu was hostess.to Phi Kappa Sigma at a dessert party Sunday. Kappa Al pha Theta will entertain the Phi Kappa Sig’s Monday night. Alpha Chi Omega held a tea last night in honor of Mrs. Millicen-t Doner, hostess of Women’s Build ing, and Miss Jeanne Stile, former Theta on campus, who is a new assistant to the dean of Women. Gamma Phi Beta will entertain thei r province director, Mrs. Ralph Harlow, as guest of hon'or at a tea Monday afternoon-. The Gamma Phi’s will also celeibraite Sunday night at a Founder’s Day dinner at the Home of Mrs. Rex Green. Police and the Damsels Atherton women living over the court watched two state police men stalking outside and then en ter the. building Tuesday night. And rumors flew. For six wor ried Atherton women, however, th e appearance of these uniforms was a godsend. . Seems the women were, ha ving difficulty explaining to hostesses how they came in 15 minutes-late. Their story of a car o n fire east of town blocking traffic w'asn’t too convincing. Six dreams about the “big week-end” were beginning to cloud with thought of going before judicial when the considerate state ■ police arrived to verify the story. .. On the Records A Delta 'Sigma Phi brother cam be chalked up for one of the re marks of the times. Entering aj campus sofority house the other day he said: “God’s greatest practical joke was when he made woman.” ’ THE” Weekend The TKE’s have an original ‘Garden of Eden” party planned 1 for Saturday night’while right in the lead with something different, the Triangle has -sent invitations to a “'Hay, Rake', Hoe Dance” which will be led off’ by. a hay ride. Phi Kappa Psi will entertain at a ‘‘Football Frolic,” the SAB’S at a ,“Despatch Frolic.” Plans, for a “.Scandal Scamper” with a- sur-> prise entertainment are under way May We Serve You? Whether it be MUMS for the game or that dewy-fresh corsage for SopK Hop . ... . remember to say -it with flowers Woodring's Floral Garden 117 E. Beaver Aye Phone 2045 Picture to Honor Mrs, Atherton WSGA has contributed $lOO to ward a picture of. Frances Wash burn Atherton to be hung in the lob by..of. Atherton Hall, The late Mrsl'.Atherton was -the wife of one of the College presidents and the first woman, on this campus to en courage . the. coed to strive for equal student rights. Plans for the .picture have been w'orked. out .by a committee which President Ralph D. Hetzel apv pointed. nearly, a year’ago. Mrs. Ahne B, Seadle. heads the commit tee .which. . includes Miss. Julia Brill, Mrs. R.. E., Galbraith, and Mr. H. W.. Loman. . The WSGA contribution has been - added to .by. State College alumni who gave $25. No definite date has been selected for the pre sentation and hanging. Angel Street- (Continued, from paae one) ready at the proper place at the ’exact time. We walked upstairs and onto the stage to watch Rita Patterson and her assistants locate lamps, books, pillows, fireplace accessories, pic tures, table covers, matches, pa pers—all in their accurate places. The light crew manager, Eddie Ed'dins, Caught ou r attention next an'd we stood to regard -him and- his fellow technicians as they made final adjustments in the precise shades of red, yellow, blue, orange, and multi-colored spotlights used to illuminate the set. Perhaps if we had remained long enough, we should have -heard some electrician yell, “Give me a purple behind,” as did a certain character in H. Allen -Smith’s book, “Low Man on a Totem Pole.” Ther e was a girl with a brush and a bucket of paint—a member of the p'ain-t crew, strange enouigh —tilting her head from side to .sid R as she splattered- paint on a piece of Scenery. When she finished, she stepped back, admired 1 her handi work, and- then went on to other tasks. We noticed D. J. Smart testing the sound apparatus and phono graphl records Gordon Fiske, stage crew manager of long ex perience,hustling all over the area back stage, lending a hand here and there to anyone who needed assistance Warren Smith, tech nical director, and_M-rs. Dorothy Stott, another faculty technical as sistant, conferring with crew heads and members we noticed and watched every 'one of those half hundred unseen people who have given of their time and earnest ness, in exchange for invaluable experience, to make “Angel Street” a hit. at the' Alpha Chi -Rho house. The Beta Sig’s announcer! a •‘Carni val Dance” and the. Theta Xi’s a “Fall Festival.” With practically every frater nity house planning some sort of entertainmeint Saturday night, some of "the informal dances in clude those given by Delta Chi and Lambda Chi ait the former’s house. Alpha Chi Sigma, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Kappa Pi ami Alpha Sigma Phi at the latter’s house. 1 ; Imports Move In Coeds Mourn Arrival Suitcases; boxes, trunks, the Post House is jammed, the Corner is mobbed—move over, room mate, Jiere comes another import. It’s Houseparty weekend and in not one fraternity a coed is stir ring—just. imports. All week the hopeful .lodgers in Ath Hall and Mac and other dorms eagerly have waited for. their phones to ring, to hear that one wonderful question: “Will.you.go .to"the Soph Hop with me?’.’ But . alas, it’s Friday, that man is. standing at the Corner, suitcase on one arm, importer! the other The climax comes when he finally, calls .and in an apologetic voice pleads for a bed for “Janie” or “Mary’’—oh, who cares? With no other alternative you must cheerfully reply that you’ll be glad to give up your bed—you’d love to sleep with your roommate in her SINGLE bed. It’s Houseparty weekend. No date, no man and to make things worse an import in your room. Imports, imports—anyone need a fourth for bridge tonight? Captain Yount to Head Rifle Team Organization Captain H. W.Yount, adjutant of the military department, re quests that all students interested in joining the Varsity Rifle Team report to the Armory, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday. Any students unable to attend this first meeting may leave their name at Captain Yount’s Office, 101 Carnegie Hall. This is the first year the sport has been activated since 1941 when “Hal’’ Yount and Bill Le- Worthy co-oaptained the team to a successful season of 22 avins and three losses. Also that year these co-captains were elected to the All-American Intercollegiate Team and receivd gold ibullet awards. The Rifle Team has planned a full schedule with other schools, and varsity letters will be award ed to successful csndidates. Penn State's winter sports teams are chafing at the toit. In response to insistent demands from' the candidates themselves, Cage Coach John Lawther and Mat Coach Charlie Speidel plan to start ear ly pre-season drills. jiM^lLbadL 'islk&butst «- yOHQo'to **U head l J %%ggf i f, EGOLFS PAGE THREE Panhel Acts On Rush Code Free association with girls who have less than a one average will be' permitted in rushing, Panhel lenic Council decided last night, but these girls may not be bicl until they have the requisite aver age. Rushing parties this semester will be strictly informal with no planned entertainment or written invitations. Alumni may also rush under the same regulations as un dergraduates, and bids will begin going into the Dean of Women's office on Nov. 21. Carol Wilbur, Panhellenic re presentative to the Coed Coor dinating) Committee, reported on. that group’s activities and an nounced that plans are being drawn up for a convocation to be held 'during th e spring semester celebrating the 75th year of wo men’s activities on campus. Nominations for Panhellenic ad visors were made by the various sorority represents tives, and the final slate of candidates will be submitted to City Panhellenic who will select advisors for the group at their next meeting. One advisor will serve for one year; the other, for two years. SHOP EARLY for CHRISTMAS You'll find JEWELRY of QUALITY CRABTREES Tihis Wilshire Lapin (bunny l'ur) Set looks and' feels like a 100 % leopard, and youHl be a 100'% hit w'hen you wear it! HEADBANDS . . . MITTS . . . X.'ii