FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1943 Good Releases Frosh Code; Siff, Federal, Corp.,- Allis-Chalmers, Zinc Elections Set For Dec. 15 To Interview Seniors (Continued front page one) other candidate, of votes cast by the clique of which he is a recog nized member. The clique chairman will submit the names of all clique nominees, tabulated on a single petition sign ed by him, to Student Union by noon December 7. Glossy prints of each candidate -must accorhpany the petition. An amdunt, not exceeding $5 May be spent by each •clique . for purpOSes (purchase of sighs, .handbills, cards, public an nouncements). No stickers or other publicity that defaces property May be used. This fund shall be collected by the clique and will not be allocated from any College fund. The ElectiOns . Committee . will print - sufficient official elections posters to notify. and remind stu dents of the voting time and can didates. The committee will meet with candidates in 305 Old Main at 5 • pan: Tuesday, December 14, to an swer any questions and to hear any complaints concerning code violations. They shall meet with candidates again after the closing of the polls and before the count ing of votes December 15, when further eomplaints will be heard. An itemized expense account ,must be turned in to Student Union ,by noon Wednesday, December 15, for the approval of the Elections _Committee. This budget must state the method of collection and the amount originally received, to gether with all clique expendi tures. To be considered valid this budget must be signed, by the clique chairman and secretary. ,The. Elections Committee re serves the right to penalize any :.plique : for overexpenditure or use of the amount for purposes other than those stated above. The candidates receiving a plur of votes cast for the office ; shall be elected. Only clique chairmen may wit ness the vote counting. Penalties may be levied by the 'Elections Committee at a closed session after the hearings. , The. Elections Committee has Student Union Remains Open Through Weekend Student Union will be open heieafter on Saturdays and Sun days, it was announced today..- The plan was.given its first trial last weekend and it proved so .luc cessful that officials immediately .decided to extend the idea indefi nitely. Coeds have volunteered to take charge of the office and, in addi tion to , the usual informational services, will issue • newspapers, magaiines, and 'game equipment to servicemen, students, and their friends. ,The Student Union office will cooperate with the Penn State Christian Association iri the Con duct:of Conferences - and other stu dent activities on Sundays. The new hours will be 1:30 to 5:00 and 7:00 to 11:00 on Satur days, and 1:30 to 5:00 p.m. on Sun days. PRINTING See` Us For • ALL • YOUR PRINTING • NEEDS Nittuny Printing - Publishing Co. 118 S. Frazier St.. Dial 4868 registration cards filed which were • Representatives of four differ filled out during registration. If ent companies will visit the cam any voter has failed to fill out a pus today and during the coming card, he may do so at the polls, week to interview prospective The committee will check his name senior employees, George N. P. with the Registrar's list. Only un- Leetch, director of the College dergraduate students will be eligi- Placement Service, stated today. hie to vote, i.e., those who pay their own fees. Party affiliations of each. candi , mantifacturOs of ball and roller date will be placed upon the babearinga, will interview graduat bat-lots. It is necessary for each candi- ing ehginecrs and metallurgists all date to haVe a patty affiliation. day today. . . . . Typed lists of all- voters will be . A -representative of the .Fed given to clique chairman or cliqUe eral .Telephone and Radio Corp.,. secretary every hour during the East Newark, N. j., will interview : . voting. - . . . interested 7th and Bth semester Penalties of not more than eight engineers Tuesday. • or less than two votes shall be in- Senior inethanical, electrical; flicted uponany clique and can- and mining engineers will be in didates found. guilty of ally. of the terviewed Wednesday by a rep follotving violations.. Final judg- resentative of the New Jersey ment will be made by the Elections tine Company. Committee.. . . ' The Allis-Chalmers Manufac- 1. Electioneering by clique Wring Company, Milwaukee, members in any part of Old Main Wis., will send a man to inter while voting is in progress. view senior electrical, mechanical, 2. Candidates in the Sandwich industrial, metallurgical, and mining engineering students on Shop during voting other than to cast their own ballots. Thursday. He will show two 16 3. Buying of votes. Millimeter films to all interested 4. Destruction or defacing of engineers. For further informa property, such as campaign plat- tion watch the bulletin board in ards etc., and any public or pri- Old Main. vate buildings. Anyone interested in appoint 5. Cars to• transport voters to ments for interviews with any of the, polls. these company representatives may arrange for them, by coming Voters violating voting ethics, such as voting twice, allowing to the College Placement Service votes to be bought, voting under office, 204 Old Main. false pretenses, etc., shall be dealt with by Student Tribunal.. CA Council. Elects Officers Following a xliscussion by G. William Henninger, assistant pro - - Cosmopolitan Club., Meet s .fessor of music, on Dvorak's ."The The Cosmopolitan Club will hold New World Symphony," members its Christmas meeting at, the home of PSCA Men's Council elected of of, Dr. F. D. Kern, 140' W. Fair- *ficersfor the semester. William T. mount avenue, Thursday, Dec.,l6. -Morris is -the new president; Rob- All foreign-born student's are urg- .ert. Barefoot, vice-president; and ed : to attend. , William F. Morton, treasurer. ,„,t,.., . "',.:s-....:.:? :,..,....: c7,6N:r.liZ'-af-.11:':::.':..:i..':'.: :Ve ZN 4;; / :':::11.:.....:1.11....ii.,:t' .c. lips- ) '1.111,,...:(:44.;;,....:z!, ~"' %~® . 1)4"....--.--":"...:. ' '. ). ..."i 9.,• ,..,. ‘,, :..., ; .v.......,,, \,,,,.. leather and Fabrk Purses for Smart Giving PATERSON HOSIERY SHOP CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS Graham's A. C. H, A. Myers, assistant personnel director of SKF Industries, Inc., "We. Nominate . Multkolore.fascinators. for the ASSORTED CANDIES and NUTS . THE COLLEGIAA 'Conventionalities Rule Action In Pre-Victorian Production It's no easy task for coeds and campus sharpies to push contem porary informality into the back- ground and assume the genteel conventionalities of pre-Victorian England, but that's what Players cast has been doing over in the Little Theatre during their re hearsals for "Quality Street" which will come before the foot lights next Friday and Saturday evenings. Players is out to prove that old adage that hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, and thetheme makes even better entertainment dressed up in period costumes than it would in a contemporary setting. Theatre audiences who are all too familiar with the mo dern female's ways to get a man will appreciate the more coquet tish and maidenly methods em ployed in days gone by. • Perhaps Kiss Phoebe, played by Betty Reed, isn't exactly spurned by Valentine Brown, Ray Boyle, but he certainly isn't entertaining thoughts of matrimony when he first meets her, nor during the ten year interval that follows when he is away at the wars. Never-the less, Miss Phoebe has been led to believe that she was on the way to the altar and she deserves cre BEFORE the war Bell Laboratories' scientists put quartz• crystals to work in such a way that twelve conversations are carried on rtco pairs of Long Distance wires a t tone time. Now with strategic in.etals so scarce, .the Bell System im using only' 6,000 tons of new copper a year instead of 90,000. And these tiny crystals are helping to provide more communication for each pound used. They serve on the battle fronts, too. Western. Electric has manufactured some eight million quartz crystals for use in the dependable communications equipment Bell System research is giving the armed forces. In the better days ahead this experience will again be directed toward keeping this country's telephone service the best in the world. "ir oi ye. <-0." BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM War calls keep Long Distance lines busy ... That's why your call may be delayed. dit for lots of stick-to-itivenei;u for seeing that her plans material ize. Her ways and means shock her fellow-dwellers on Quality Street and bring down the ire of that po lite society on her pretty head, bo; in the end she wins out, and that has been the test of a successful woman since time immemorial.. Returned Editor Speaks- The small city daily newspaper editor must now have a federal outlook on thing* Quinton Beauge, city editor of the Williamsport Gazette-Bulletin, told journalism students here. Beauge is an alum nus and former editor of the Penn State Collegian. "War and recruiting campaig have brought back the importane.:, of the community newspaper," he said. "Newspapermen now need to be publicity writers as well as re porters. Many items are Qrowding their way into headlines as ton news in this war period." Is it true that the ladies who act in those radio horror thrill ers must take a scream test? A girl who has curves mni:c keep a level head. PAGE THREM • t , & 41