PAGE TWO Whitaker Fills Vacant Post A committee of: three, headed by Professor Eliot L. Whitaker,, will administer the affairs of the arch itecture department pending sel ection of a new head, College pf ficiah; announced today. Profess or Kenneth Johnstone, present head, assumed his new position at Carnegie Tech Thursday. Assisting Professor Whitaker on the committee whl be Professor J. Burn Holme and. Proiessor Louis A. Richardson. The mem bership of the committee was rec ommended to President Hetzel by Jbean Harry P. Hammond of the School of Engineering. A leave of absence has also •been granted Dr. Clarence O. Wil liams, in charge of teacher placement in the School Of Edu cation, to do special research work at the University of Miami. Jos eph K. Thornton, associate pro fessor of farm crops, also has been granted a leave from Oct ober 20 to December 20 to study at tiie University of Wisconsin. Two promotions advance Maude M. Drumm from assistant exten sion representative to extension representative in home economics extension, and establish Mrs. Mar garet. Spang.er as assistant librar ian, in charge of reader service. The following have resigned: ’ Raymond E. Murphy, professor of geography, to accept a position at the University of Hawaii; Rob ert R. Thompson, ■ professor of engineering research in the Ord inance Research. Laboratory, to re iturn to his former position with Ithe Humble Oil and Refining Company; and Harry A. Soren sen, associate professor of mech anical engineering, to accept a position with Pratt and Whitney Division of United Aircraft Cor poration. Audio-Visual Aids Offers Sound Projector Course Audio-Visual Aids Library at the College will give a five-weeks course on the use of the sound projector* Directed by Philip Mannino, film technician, the course will include five hours of supervised instruction and five hours of practice. The .class is limited to eight students. Staff members are given preference over townspeople. • Instruction will be given with out charge for staff members, but other students will be charged $5. The first meeting will be in 5 Main Library at 7:30 p. m. Mon day. Professor Broyles Retires From Ag Ed Department William Anderson Broyles has retired as professor emeritus of agricultural education at the Col lege, but hi s teachings still re sound in classrooms all over Pennsylvania. During the quarter century he has been at the College, Dr. Broy les has had in class practically every agriculture instructor in Pennsylvania’s 305 vocational schools of agriculture. Dr. Broyles’ teaching career be gan at the age of 19, before he even completed college perpara tory work, when he got a job teaching “everything” in the rural schools of Delaware County, In diana. That was in 1899. Between then and 1920, when he became a professor of agricul tural education at the College, Dr. Broyles taught at several schools in Indiana, North Dakota and Texas. Probably his best-known pupil was Wendell Wilkie, who learned botany and zoology from Profes sor Broyles in Ehvood High School, Indiana. “As a matter of fact,” Professor Broyles says, “he lived across the street from us and we knew the whole family. It’s a good ex ample of how you never know Hitler's Car Appears On College Avenue The crowds milling about Co- Op Corner Sunday noon were try ing to catch a glimpse of Adolph Hitler’s favorite automobile, not waiting for a booth in the Corner Room. ' The car, a Mercedes-Benz convertible model, was captured by the 101st’ Airborne Division near Berchtesgaden and was ac companied here' by four of the Division’s personnel.. The auto mobile was brought here in con nection with the Victory Bond drive. The royal blue car was lavishly splashed with chrome and- built | extremely low. One of its unique features was the inch-thick wind-1 shield. From the mobs jammed about it, one would have thought Hitler himself was driving the 1 car PHONE GET ACQUAINTED! Text Books Student Supplies and Art Materials tLS? mm i 15 Cathaum HfcELERS r,r a WOODRING'S FLORAL GARDENS For All College Courses THE COLLEGIAN where political greatness is going to spring from.” Dr. Broyles will be remembered, however, as more than the teach er of ■ someone else. He is the in ventor of the'National Computing Fan ... a device, shaped like a fan and based on a little known mathematical formula, which is used to compute scores of contes tants in judging contests. Professor Broyles earned a bachelor of science degree from Tri-State College 1905; a bachelor of arts degree from Tndiaha Uni versity, .1908; a master of arts degree from the University of Wisconsin, 1914; and a doctorate from the University of Illinois in 1925. He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa, Gamma Sigma Delta, American. Association of University Professors, the Amer ican Vocational Association; and the Masons. Dr. and Mrs. Broyles will con tinue to live in State College, al though Dr. (Broyles plans to visit colleges through the south this, winter demonstrating methods of teaching. . ; Library Staff Offers Fraiernify Information Freshman men and women and transfers'interested in fraternities or sororities are urged by the li brary staff to take< advantage of the infomation offered them. • In the open shelfrcom opposite the newsroom the National Inter fraternity Conference Yearbook may be found. Fraternity peri iodicals and pamphlets can be found in the newsroom. laVie CalJs Candidates Candidates for LaVie will meet in 3 Armory, 7 p. m. tonight, it was announced by Ruth Bollinger, editor. . Candidates must .be reg istered ‘in. fifth' or sixth semester, and men students are especially urged to attend the meeting; Basketball Tryouts All men interested in trying for a position on the basketball team or for a position, as assistant man ager are requested to report to John Lawther at Rec 'Hall any week n'ght after 7 p.‘ m. BEAVER AVE. New and Used Home Ec Cafeteria, Maple Room Open The Home 'Economics Cafeteria and Maple Room are reopening this semester under the operation of the Institution Administration junior and senior students. Service begins in the Home Economics Cafeteria from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. today and will remain open each week, Tuesday through Fri day. The Maple Room opens 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., November 13, Tuesday through Thursday. Reservations for the Thanksgiving Dinner at 5:30 p.m., November 22, may be gfiftgp f •* ' Rea & Derick TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1945 Former Naval Officer Returns To Teach Soc After an absence of four years, Dr. Seth W. Russell, assistant pro cessor of sociology, has returned, to his teaching position at the College. At the time of h‘s dis-' charge, Professor Russell was a lieutenant commander in the Chaplains’ Corps of the U.S.NJt. Professor Russell’s service in-‘ eluded one year at the Naval Op? crating Base, Norfolk,, two years aboard the light cruiser Sante Fe,. and one year at Marine Corps Base, San D.'ego, Cal. . ■ made through phoning College Ex tension 156. ' ' ' ' ;" | —your Up* and fingertips so tempting i ~ m Revlon's new i'dare-yov red. j lii! SI fill too, "Fatal 'wc/er. iwrse! jfBt|gg§ j % >t* ' sU .*«,«/>oo*