FRWA Y, MAY 18, 1945 Deans- (COntinued from page one) 1945, when Dr. Harold Kirby Wil son, new head of the department, will report for duty. Retirement of five other fac ulty members was made known: F: M. &Mont, professor of rom ance languages and head of the department, to be retired with the rank of professor emeritus of romance languages; G. J. Wurfl, professor of Ger man, to be retired with the rank of profesior emeritus of Ger man; D. F. McFarland, professor of metallurgy and head of the de partment, to be retired with the rank of professor emeritus of met allurgy; Benkert, assistant pro fessor of civil engineering; and Belle H. Lindsay, secretary to the dean of the • School of Engineering. :New appointees approved were C.' 0. Jensen, professor of phyto chemistry; G. A. Rohlich, associ ate professor of sanitary engineer ing; Vikitor Lowenfeld, associate professor of art education and home economies; and Willis Wiss ler, associate professor of econo mics in arts and science exten sion. :Professor Wissler began his duties May 1, Professor Rohlich will begin June 1, and Professors Jensen and Lowenfeld, July 1. •The resignation of two mem,- bers of the College staff were ac cepted. Frank W. Edwards, asso ciate professor of civil engineer ing, resigned, effective May 31, to accept federal employment, and George D. Lobingier, area super visor, Central Extension, resign- There are many more • Long Distance calls than before the war and more are in a hurry. But service keeps -on being good for most people, most of the'time. Some lines, however, are carrying an extra heavy load and sometimes all lights are lit on a switchboard. Then the operator , wild ask your help by saying -- "Please limit your. call to 5. minutes." '' 1411411 , 'S EU, TELIEPHO NE , CID#APAN Y ;.:•'•: .•, •- • , • , -•- .'i'.''W'‘'..!; ' l. -' l .- . .t . i'.?..440 , .# 1 , 014415*tA1Attik - •',..,----':'" CLASSIFIED SECTION REPAlRS—Strange music coming from your piano? Don't blame your playing: All pianos need a tuning and general check-up not less than once per year. Por ap pointment, write Richard L. Eis enhower, member of the National Association of Piano Tuners; Phone 621, Jersey ; Shore or write Box 172, State College, Pa. Give detailed directions with rural ad dresses. LOST—A college algebra book. Lf ifound please return to Thom as Butkiewicz 238 East Fairmount St. or Phone 2914. 1 tpd LOST—Ladies diamond platinum wrist watch Swiss made. Lost Saturday alfternoon. Reward! Con tact Jeanne 3dr floor Jordan. ,ltp LOST—Large silk headscarf on Pollock Road. Call Jean 4435. 1 tcomp LOST—iSappa key. I found please call 2622. Cigarette re ward. lt-compPW WANTED Used typewriter. Call 2340. Lynn Lehman. lt-pd—JCB The more than 253,000 volumes in the College library, ranging from rare first editions to the lat est best sellers, are valued at $634,150. ed, effective April 23,,1945, to ac cept a position with the Westing house Electric and Manufacturing Co. ,:d l liE COLLEGIAN Standings- (Continued from page six) LEAGUE C Alpha Chi Sigma .. 3 0 Sigma Pi 2 0 Phi Kappa Psi .... 1 Sigma Chi 1, 2 Delta Tau Delta ... 1 2 Chi 'Phi 0 3 ASTP LEAGUE COMPANY B Team Won 'Lost Barracks 17 •7 3 Barracks 28 5 3 Barracks 12 3 5 Barracks 7 2 6 Don't Worry Servicemen Needlessly, Says Prof Enlist the help of soldier boy correspondents with probleMs on- 7 ly if they are in position to help, a College psychologist advised 'today. "The wisest plan," Dr. Clifford R. Adams, associate professor of education and psychology, said, "is to relate your troubles only after they have been solved. "It won't do any harm," he added, "to tell them the house burned down, provided you have already found new quarters." Differentiating between solved and unsolved problems, Dr. Ad ams warned homecoming will be an awful shock if a serviceman is led to believe civilian life is 100 per cent perfect. A serviceman, he acivis ed, should be spared any problem which would serve only to worry him and with which•he is helpless to cope. For example, he urged wives not to seek divorces while their husbands are in service. "Several months after the hus band's return will be time enough tc discuss divorce," the psycholo gist concluded. IL S. Steel Shows Photos Art exhibit of 60 photographs, depicting "Steel at War," will be displayed in the Mineral Indus tries art gallery from Monday, May 21 to Monday, June 4. The exhibit will be loaned by the United States Steel Corpora tion. Gallery hours are from 8 to 12 a.m. and from 1:30 to 5 p.m. The College is one of the in stitutions of the nation invited to share in a new research pro gram to encourage studies and experiments in magnesium metal and its alloys, according to an announcement issued yesterday by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in Washington. Allies Exchange Data Approximately 30 different 'for eign delegations have visited the. College since the war's start to in spect new technological and edu cational developments. Greetings, brother... Have a Coca-Cola . or initiating a .new subject of Neptune Everybody enjoys a moment of good-natured friendliness. Such a moment begins at the words Have a Coke. That's why a pause for ice-cold Coca-Cola is greeted with a smile in so many places, on the seas and overseas, just as it is in your home. It's a happy symbol among people who understand the pleasant ways of friendship. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Coca-Cola Bottling •Company of Altoona Mineral Industries Dinner To . Honor Dr. McFarland DAVID F. McFARLAND Cabinet— (Continued from page one) were re-established. They are to be filled each semester by candi dates from the senior class who will be elected by the entire student body. They will perform the duties of All-College Cabinet chairman and Interclass Finance Board chairman. The five groups that were given ex-officio representation on Cab inet are Student Tribunal, Ju dicial .Committee, Women's Stu dent Government Association, Women's Recreation Association, and Penn State Christian Assoc iation. Tribunal and WSGA for merly had voting positions on Cabinet. In the future All-College and semester elections will be held on the second Tuesday and Wed nesday of every semester, except in the case of first semester fresh men who will have elections on the sixth Wednesday of the se mester. All meetings of 'Cabinet were made compulsory fox the voting memlbers. Unexcused absences will bind the representatives. ov er to the judicial bodies for pun ishment. The Penn State Players was added to the Dramatics and For ensics Board in one of the smaller changes in the constitution. Hicks Visits Sigma Chi Dr. William "r 2.. Hicks. national grand tribune of Sigma Chi, vis ited the chapter this week. Leon Erdman, Charles Duke, A/S. James Jones, Harry McMillan, and A/S Donald Riebe are newly initiated members of the frater nity. Recently pledged were A/S James Cutter, Thorlief lolster, A/S William McKim, John Sider sky, and Jack Strange. IMIZIMiI PAGE SEVEN Dr. David F. McFarland, retiring head of the department of metal lurgy, will be the guest of honor at the seventh annual Mineral In dustries Banquet at the State Col lege Hotel torhorrow. Speaker at the banquet will be George Starr '23, secretary of the American Iron and Steel In stitute in New York City. His ad dress, "Metallurgy Looks For ward," will deal .with productive, technical, and economic phases a the industry. He will compare the tools with which metallurgy had to work 20 years ago with the con ditions today,. and will describe the magnitude of the steel indus try and its prospects for new plants and new products. • Dr. McFarland, who will be hon ored at the dinner, has been et the College since 1920. He is a memlber of the American Chemical Society and the American Society for Met als, and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He also belongs to Sig- ma Gamma Bpsilon,'Sigma• Xi, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Alpha Tau Ome ga, and Alpha Chi Sigma. The dinner is sponsored by the local chapters of the American So ciety for Metals and the Mineral Industries Society. Frank Marold, a student at the College, is chair man of the committee. Harry . B. Northrup, president of the Penn State chapter, American Society for Metals, will be master •cuf cere monies. Players- (6'ontinued from page cne) sential. But there t.§ none obtain , - able at present. !The Players con struction 'crew is nciw fat work on ersatz bamboo and the current story is that any time of day or night you happen into the Players' loft you are accosted by a paint begrimed apparition with a south ern accent who inquires of you whether the thing site is Waving in front of your face is a reasonable facsimile of the Malay reed. Then too, Tommy (Jerry ISitkin) has provided this share of the prob;. lems. Because of his obesity the cot upon .which he has been hos , - pitalized during rehearsal is sag ging around its middle, and a new one will have to be provided. These are a few things that are going on behind the curtains of - The Hasty ;Heart" a week before production. Yet, if the student cast does as well by its script as the Broadway cast of the same show is doing at present, Players will.have scored another success. Agriculturalist Lectures T. Swann Harding, information specialist of the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, will give an trated lecture on "Agricultural Scientists and Their Achieve ments" in 109 Agriculture Build ing, at 4:20 p.m. IVlonday. ,63