siatTRDAY, SEPTEMBER - 26, 1953 Czech DP Student Describes Family's Escape From Reds To friends who want ,her to feel more at home in the United States, Helen Charvat, Czech 'DP,, isn't a displaced person but a "delayed - pilgrim" who the Mayflower and got here 331 Years late. „Actually. it took her. three ye'ars to reach this country after her escape from Cominunist Czechoslovakia in 194,8. h. Compared to many DP's her life hasn't been a hard one. She refers to her escape as a Weekend trip as we at Penn State would take, when we visit our parents. .Helen, is the daughter of a Prague ceramics and building material manufacturer. They had r. tennis :in city and a 50a.cre farm 20 miles from Prague. As a child she .studied ballet and played •on the Charvat's own courts. • When the Gestapo' took over the country, their life was changed. The Nazis took complete -Sorority Gals No Hurrying; Rushees Relax The most "rushing" part of rushing is over for rushees who attended their final' coke dateS last night. No more attempts to find 'Afternoon hours that aren't there!. From now on the schedule lists at homes, parties and coffee hours —all weekend or evening' func tions. Now it's the sorority wom en's turn to seek elusive free hours:•There will be last-minute rehearsals for skits and decorat ing worries before parties. Refreshments have to be pre pared .and cigarette boxes filled. Lighters are running dry an d matches becoming scarce. Names are more firmly fixed by . now, however, and conversation less stilted' - as friendships' ripen. All this should make at homes froin 2 to 5 p.m. tomorrow more fun and less hectic than were their counterparts, open houses, last Sunday. Rushees. will pick up invita tions to parties at 11 a.m. Mon day. They will accept or regret invitations - (accepting, a maxi mum of three), leave the date lines blank and return invitations to the Panhellenic post office in Atherton Hall by 1 p.m. Monday. At 5 p.m. they will return to the post , office to pick up party times. Cwens to Hold Dungaree Drag The Dungaree Drag, an annual dance sponsored by Cwens, soph omore women's hat society, will be hpld from 9 to 12 p.m. Oct. 10 in 'Recreation Hall. -Lynn Chris ty's Campuseers will play for the dance. As in previous years, the dance will feature the vegetable corsage contest, and prizes will be given for the most outstanding creation. A new attraction this year will be the selection\ of a DaiSy Mae and Li'l Abner to reign over the dance in keeping with its Dog patch theme. Tickets will go on sale next' week at $1.50 per couple. Mem bers of Cwens will see tickets at several booths on campus. Five Posts Open In WRA, WSGA Nomination blanks for fresh men and sophomore offices in Women's Student Government Association and Women's Recre ation Association will be avail able Monday in the Dean of Woin en's office. Positions open are two fresh man senators on WSGA Senate and two. freshman representatives and one sophomore representa tive in WRA. Freshman' and soph omore women may nominate themselves for office. Candidates may contact Elea nor Gwynn, 37 McElwain, for answers to questions concerning nominations. Primary elections Will be held Oct. 13 - and final elections • will follow on Oct. 15. Friends Sponsor Dance Young Friend's will hold a re ception at 6 tonight at the Friend7s Meeting House, 318 S. Atherton street. The dinner. will be followed by a square dance at 7:30 p.m. By ,MARY -BOLICH control, dictating everything the people could say, think, or do. Those who disobeyed the Nazi rule just disappeared. They were continually under watch by the Gestapo. Almost everything they did was illegal and- the punishment was death. Many 'of her friends were sent to Germany under forced labor. The whole educational system was changed by the Germans. Text books were revised. History was changed according to Nazi doctrines, then finally eliminated and the geography of Europe was completely remade. The children were taught Hitler was god and Germany was the greatest nation in the world. Must Return After Germany surrendered there were two years of relative „peace, but when the country re fused' Marshall Plan aid it was unable to hold its own, and the communist revolution broke out. The- Charvat f amily was well known. for its unflattering feeling and opinion towards the Corn munists and . the" revolution ended her 'father's fight . , against 'com munism. / When Helen's father went to Moscow on a business trip, he received a letter from the Red government saying he must re turn or his family would be ar rested. It was then that her father decided to get his family out of Czechoslovakia. Plans for the escape began in March, 1948. Six times :the •three Charvat's Helen's brother was at Leeds University, London— tried to flee the country. Five times the escape- failed. -Walk to Freedom They - came closest to getting caught on their sixth attempt. The day before their scheduled departure their escape leader was arrested: - At - d a w n an under ground courier came and told them arrangements had been Made and they left that after- A taxicab took them to a town near the border where they re mained ,hiding in- a house over night. The next day they walked to the border into Germany and" freedom. • Their money wasn't any good to them in Germany but the un derground, provided them with several - bottles of whiskey which they sold to get information. Insurance Clerk They went through Germany in three days and made their way to Antwerp, Belgium. They im mediately registered for a visa to America, but it took three years for them to get it. Meanwhile, Helen went to school where she learned to speak English. In May of 1951 they arrived in New York City where an apartment was ready for them. Helen got a job as a clerk in an insurance office and then came a scholarship from the Masaryk In stitute. She enrolled as a fresh man at the Manhattanville Col lege of the Sacred Heart where she remained for a year before coming to Penn State. Helen's life, like that of any other coed, centers around school. She is majoring in electrical en gineering and plans to go into atomic energy research after graduation. She handles the Eng lish langudge very well and is also a master of five other lan guages. Although Helen had a great de sire to go to Great Britain, she, thinks the United States is won derful. She likes the informality of Americans and thinks they are easy to live with. "There's just something about America you have to like," she says, THE DAILY , COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, P ihomas to Talk To Grad School Graduate students and mem bers of the faculty, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Schwab Auditorium for the annual Grad uate School Convocation. D. Woods Thom a s, graduate student and president of th e Graduate Student Association, will serve as chairman for the convocation, which will be fol lowed by a social program at Temporary Union Building. Adrian 0. Morse, College pro vost, will welcome graduate stu dents. Dr. Harold K. Schilling, dean of the Graduate' SCEOoI, will speak on "You're in the Grad School Now." The program will include a talk by _Gene M. Love, a graduate stu dent, and, the invocation by the Rev. Luther H. Harshbarger, Col lege chaplain. Beginning at• 7:15 p.m.; George E. •Ceiga, assistant professor of music, ,will play selections on the organ. the social program at Tempor ary Union Building will include a mixer and a dance with music by the Campuseers. Walker Lab Gets Summer Paint Job Walker. Laboratory, one of the oldest buildings on campus, this week .is getting the finishing touches to its summer-long paint job. A trim .of gold paint is being applied to the 63-year-old brick building completed in 1889. The job, a "sparetime undertaking," was started during the summer and is expected to be completed this week. Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Phi ,0 mega, national service fraternity will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in. 12 Sparks to plan semester activities, according to Gail Bimber, president. Dreams May "I'll See You in My Dreams," the words go, but the author wasn't being analytic. Among other things, psychologists are telling us inhibition-bound crea tures of the modern world, that dreams reveal our inner secrets. For instance, nightmares ar e just penalties for an uneasy con science. Actually the spector isn't an unopened textbook alive, and it won't envelope you in its depths. And if you don't face it, you'll be beset by frustrating dreams, like the treadmill. Of course, real ity can be consoling after facing a gaping monster• a green one with nervous purple stripes all night. _ Besides making good conversa tion your • dreams, they 'tell us, are keys to your problems. Un derstanding them will help you understand yourself better and aid in solving your difficulties. Those of the tea leaf cult, take note! 'Listen carefully to,persons who have continued dreams. The first of the serial starts like this: Cin derswella is plodding along Pol lock Road. Suddenly Sir Valiant's fuschia steed skids to a stop at the mall, losing a shoe. It's set with emeralds and fits the barefooted damsel perfectly. But Sir Valiant By JANET NOLL Dreams Are Memai =alsmlll Male Gives Rebuttal To 'Wolf' Column This column is intended for men only, especially those who read the "wolfess's" column in yesterday's Collegian. It is about Penn State women, most of whom, apparently, have a low opinion of Penn State "wolves." It seems the average Penn State male is a low-down ,heel of the love-'em-and-leave-'em type, according to the gals. The people who hold this 9p women aren't so perfect either. Maybe that's why some of them are dropped from the average male's telephone list after one or two dates. Women, too, can be classified into types, the most common of which is the gold-digger. This is the female who doesn't care who she' dates; as long as he can take her to see "South Pacific" fol lowed by •an evening of dining and dancing at the Stork Club, when "Limelight" and the Penn State Diner would do just as well. Bull-sessions Too Naturally, this coed isn't going to be very popular when her date .gets home to find himself sitting on a flat wallet. A second cousin to this variety is the 'femme fatale' type. She imagines her-, self irresistable 'to anything that wears a pair of trousers. Confi dently she turns down one date after another, feeling safe in her belief that someone better will ring -her phone. This seldom hap pens. Men have bull-sessions also, and the word gets around. Our irre sistable siren suddenly finds her self studying on Saturday night. Can't Do Without Them Then there is the girl who is so particular that she is waiting for one guy, and one guy alone, to_ ask her out. She forgets this guy may have other fish to fry, and complains bitterly. when she is left darning her white argyles on the night of the big dance. Naturally, all women will not fit into these three types, but the list goes on ad infinitum or ad nauseum. But the women are lucky in one respect. We don't like• to do with 'em but we can't do without 'em. They're defi nitely here to stay, at any rate. Changes in Hours Set For Sunday Masses Hours for Sunday masses were recently changed. New hours are 7:30, 8:30; 9:30, 10:30, and 11:30 a.m at Our Lady of Victory Church. Mass will be held at 9 a.m. Sunday in Schwab Auditorium. 'Farmer' Candidates Students interested in working on the Penn State Farmer, For ester and Scientist and regular staff members will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in 109 Agriculture. Reveal °lnner You' is torn between charity and love for his horse as the alarm clock jangles. Watch for coming attrac tions. Your dreams are memos to yourself, by yourself, about your self. This means if you have a paper and pencil memory, grab 40 winks. Also you dream most w hen you're between the ages of 20 and 25, and continue at a. healthy clip until you reach what psychia trists call the psychological mid point of your life, the late 30's or early 40's. So you have plenty of time to develop this nocturnal en tertainment into 3-D and techni color. You dream most when you're in the 20's. Because, those wh o know say, "unless you're excep tional you haven't yet made peace With yourself." Love and Hate Then the old childhood angle enters, with four heads. You are torn between, (1), your desire to return to the dependence of child hood and your drive to be an in dependent, self-sustaining adult; (2), between your bad impulses and your conscience. Furthermore, making it more complicated, you are torn between love and hate—there's a thin line there—and most frequent of all, over your role in the old human triangle. The psychologists then explain triangles, and unless one is a 3 By DON SHOEMAKER nion should remember one fact— Churches To Expand Programs Churches all over the nation are preparing to emphasize the importance of Sunday Schools for children in answer to • the challenge that approximately. 27,- 000,000 American youngsters • are getting almost no church school training. The theme of Christian Educa tion Week, to be observed 'tomor row through Oct. 4, will be 'Fos All Children, Faith in God." The special week, sponsored by National Council of the Church es of Christ in the U.S., has 40 denominations participating in : its activities. Plans have been made to focus attention on the fact that of the 1,000,000 children• wh o have trouble with the law each year, the majority, has no • record of regular religious instruction. The number of children under 10 years of age has increased '39 per cent since 1940, and the Sun day School enrollments have bit an all time high of 32;000,000, but this is still only a few milliOn more than the number of - chil dren who never see the inside .of a church. At the same time,' howeyer, many church schools are over crowded and handicapped by laek of qu6lified teachers, making it "a twofold problem. Thus, the goal of the week is not only to achieve a higher enrollment' in Sunday Schools, but to recruit and train teachers ;in new methods and approaches.' Korean Policy— (Continued from page four) Reds who had , previously with drawn. The Allies will have to be sat isfied with what were, after ,a/I, the major objectives of demon strating the effectiveness of the Eastern world's collective secur ity system and the saving of South Korea, first nation estab lished under the aegis of United 'Nations. student in geometry, this becomes involved. They talk about relics from childhood. Another psychiatrist says we dream every single night. But he adds, "dreams fade quickly, some times within a few seconds after you wake up." Remember your ideal who was falling off tl cliff with you last night? Sometimes after that stout yeo man, the sandman takes over, our naughty—this is where- we -came in—impulses come out. They say all of us are kleptomaniacs, sa dists and pyromaniacs at heart. Naturally, we're taught to sup press these desires. But in our creams the bad impulses are op posed by the voice of conscience which is often represented by a policeman, parents, soldiers or- a king. If you have a single room, thiS isn't for you. But the unintelligi ble rumblings of your roommate may reveal a stimulating charac ter, when he (or she) is under - the hypnosis of the subconscious. Conversely, however, if y. co u dream with a sound track, room mate may begin to know your. true character. So you' psychoan alyze each other. And if you're still dreaming in black and white, become an es : - capist and discover how fascinat: ing a dream sequence can be. Per haps you too can tune in for , to-' morrow's thrilling installment Sweet dreams! PAGE. Fry