WEATHER Partly . Cloudy. Little" change in temperature. VOL. 45—No. 24 to AP News... 7 Courtesy Radio Station WM4tt_i MOSCOW—The first indicatiOri; that the Moscow Conference nipx: reach a compromise on Germariy came last night. Secretary •of State George Marshall and Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov agree.li that the four powers might ,be. : able to reconcile their positions.-:, Authoritative sources think: France soon will try _to break the: deadlock on Ger - many by propoSY ing an 8,000,000-ton steel capacity, also a compromise on the repard'-' tions-export program clash 6e: tween Russia arid the western' powers. PALESTINE—One British Po' r . liceman was killed , in the Holt Land last night when a bomb ex ploded among a group of Britons . returning from a motion picture. Five other Britons were injured. The incident occurred betW'een Haifa and Tel Aviv. SALONIKA—A Greek govern ment representative says fiat: today will see the launching of . full-scale military operatiOrig' against guerrillas. He says the activity will get under way near the Albanian frontier in the Mount- Gremmos area. ASUNCION—From the South American Republic of 'Paiagint come unconfirmed peace reports: Rumor has it that negotiations aimed at preventing fur t h e,r. bloodshed ,in the 13-day-old civil war .are under way between gov 7. ernment forces and the insur gents who control the. northeast ern part.of Paraguay. LAKE :SUCCESS—The ',United Nations Atomic Energy Commis sion turned the whole problem of atomic energy control over to committees. The action was unan, (Continued on page two) ..c . : oemjsfs.poo: -. :;,. :tiii.:':slii:4o-,ntAW.,'..-. To stimulate interest in the for- metion cif a student branch,. the American Chemical, Society will sponsor, talks by three Penn State chemists 'at an open meeting in 119 New. Physics at 7:30 Aonight. Dean Frank .C. Whitmire, of the School •of Chemistry and Physics; Dr. R. Adams Dutc'her, head of the department 'of agri cultural and, biological eherr.istry; and Dr. A. W. Gauger, director of •Mineral Industries ResearCh;'.tivill diScuss "What- I Would- DOE.--rf ,Were a Young Chemist." - :": .!. Dr: Dutcher presents the•;:agri cultural and biological - askasT.of chemistry.- Ceramics, - ; fuel -& - tech- . nolOgy, and metallurgy Will: , be 'emphasized by Dr. Gangerj;D6a . n .Whitinore t cover - the; fieldS:of inorganic, an3ly ical, organica d physical . cheinistry. • - • •In extending, an s invitation"to the !Public, Dr. C. R. Kinney, pro fessor of fuel technology and sec retary of- the Central Pennsylva nia Section cof the said that the wide scope • of the dis : , .cussions should -help chemistry students decide in Which' field 'to specialize. Drama Laboratory Airs Steele Play on WMAJ "Luck" by W ilbur Daniel Steele will be presented by the Drama Laboratory over WlVllekg 2:30 Sunday afternoon in the fourth of a weekly series. Port man Paget will direct the show. Twenty-five members of Mr. Kelly Yeaton's Drama 480 class work in the Drama Laboratory. Winfield Clearwater, Richard Frontman, Irving Feldsott. Mar garet ifleagy, and Frank Palmer have parts in this week's produc_ tion. Because of technical difficulties encountered during the first three prognFms, !Mr. Yeaton expressed an urgent need for any student with experience as a sound ef fects man. Also desired, he added, are radio scripts of local prOblems ---"as long as they are not too dull." Mr. Yeaton has been using Kozlenko's collection of "100 Non- Royalty Radio Plays" to find suit- Obl e scripts for the show. , „.,,,, : .. . _ - ~,, ~,'•:-....;,', . .'• ' ' '''.. .. "4. GIVE TO - THE • , . . . . '• 1 • . . 4 , .., . , ... RED ~ • • fittrgititti , ~• ~ CROSS .. . .. ... 4°414111611P WRA Head; Names Primary - Victors Ann Baker, president of WEA, has announced the balloting re from Tuesday' s primary elections. ATlCbaire Parks and Lee Anti Wagner ar e finalists for the o. Tice of lA h rz .s t... tur . president. 'tk: TClaire Lee and Delores Piecone are leading nominees for the office IttVice-president. i !rt`Pauline Gichish and Nancy Romig are competing for intramural 4 , 4 , 4' VIVRA President • ANN• BAKER Women To Submit Entries For La Vie's Belles Section ' Entries for the Belles Section af the first post-war La Vie may be sufbmltted by all women's organizationi, according to Stepherb Sini dhalci••pthotcgrarihic editor. • The contest is glen. to all senior Women . studepts. •A 5x7 or larger . photograiiii-_-,olt-the-ear-ant.4ol4l4.l:grOtted-.:to..**;nt: - -tirdoro/91! lateT . fhari. next Wednesday, Ma iah 26: . . • Senior meinlbers'of tlie Vde Staff will, choose six women from the conteStants for the Belles Se'c tion•. News Briefs Forestry Society .Ogden Samler was recently elected president .of the Penn State Forestry Society. Other „officers elected were Francis Ken 'nedy, ' vice-president; Robert ,Berkholder, tr e asur er; Edwin • Btoig, corresponding secretary; Bertram Herstine, recording -sec retary; Kary Thompson, athletic, manager; and Edward Plank, Donald Benson, and Larry Walk.. er, Ag Student Council repre sentatives. • • • Home .Ec Drive • The Home Economics Club is holding its yearly drive for .cloth ing, food :and other 'articles for its family in Holland. All contri butions should (be brought to the Home Economics Reading Room, in the th e Ho m e Economics building, 'today, tomorrow, and Saturday. Sigma Gamma Epsilon Sigma !Gamma Epsilon, mineral industries honor a r y, recently pledged Xl3 men according to Fred Nicholas, president. They include Jerome Behrmann, Harold Davis, Leo A. Fiedorek, John W. ,Harri son, Charles :Hosier, 'Thomas King, F. Ross Lorenz', Edward Lorenzi, Donald Mitchell, Donald Riordan, George Sanderson, John Schanz, land William Waag. Ini tiation ceremonies will be held Wednesday., Anti-Franco Meeting .Tiokets for 'the AntiZ'ranco Meeting in Schwabl Auditorium., 8 o'clock Wednesday, are on sale .at Student Union, at 40 cents each. Wesley Foundation The Wesley Foundation will hold an open house at '7:30 to morrow to 'which e veryone is wel_ come. • Prof. C. R. Carpenter of the psy chology department will speak. on "The Church .snd International Affairs" to the students at the Foundation 7:3.0 Sunday. THURSDAY 'MORNING, MAR CH 1947-STATE COLLEGE, PENNA chairman of WRA. The positions of secretary_ treasurer, assistant intramural Chairman and two sophomore rep resentatives cannot be filled until next .falll du e to the absence of freshman women last fall. WRA. and WSGA final elections will be held in the women's dor mitories and at SU from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. A total Of 902 coeds voted in the .WSGA.:WRA primarie q this yea,. as compared to a total of 500 women voting in the primaries and 800 in the final eledbions last year. ,WRA Executive Board proposed the new systern of voting in the donmitories. and at SU, in place, of the oust= of holding the polls in Old Main, in the hope that mare coeds would turn out for the vot ing. Elections Committee New appointees to the All- College Elections Committee, at the recent meeting Of Cabinet, were .Robert Britton, Robert Evans, and Ted Rubin. Those women selected will have special photographs taken in eve_ ning gowns by the Penn State Photo "Shop at a later date. - . • Winners= will be announced' - th the Daily Collegian. Appointments for photographs to be taken will be mailed to the winners. The Belles Section has been a major feature of the annual pub lication of La Vie, although this section was omitted, in the war issue. PA Films .Picture Democracy al Work The workings of American democracy will be shoWn in two Public. Affairs films today. The two films; "You the People" and "The Gallup Poll" will Ibe shown in .10 Spanks at 10, 2:20 and 4:20. o'clock. "You, the People" is from the MGM "Crim e Does Not Pay" ser ies. It dramatically portrays the fight of one city for an honest election. I this movie one gets is warn ing of the many ways that may be used by — unscrupulous politi cians to "fix" elections. The idea is also put across that every citi zen can do something to fight crooked politics. Seven Pre-Med Seniors Enter Medical Schools Seven pre-medical seniors 'have been accepted for Septembe r ad mission into four different medical schools. a'doording to Dr. James H, Olewine, pre_medical advisor. Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia seems to The first choice of th e 'students, with four resuming their studies there. They are William W. Mcßride, James IVlCClowry, Roibert McLaughlin, and James Thompson. Also' studying in Philadelphia will be Miss Eleanor Aurand at University of Pennsylvania School cif Medicine and James Sommer feld at Halinemann Medi c a l Sdhcol. Elifrem Fieldman was ac-. cePted by Long Island College cif Medicine. Lectures Tonight DR. ALFRED G. PUNDT Trouble Again Stalks Lounge-Lizard 'Car; Catches on Fire The evil spirit that seems to be locked in the hood of Carl Tendler's Crossley, making it do things entirely out of character for an automobile, got loose again Tuesday. Damage estimated at $3OO re sulted when fire ibroke out in Tendler's abbreviated motor ve hicle, parked in the 200 block of W. College avenue. When last seen by the Collegian the Crossley was furniture in the lounge of Dorm 4, Pollock Circle. How it got there Was never sat_ isfactorily determined. 'How it got out is another mystery. Possibility that a short circuit the wiring2„systent-had..causecl 'the" ibldie :Was advariced Tend ler, but it seems more likely that the fire• was actually judgement day catching up with a non conformist automdbile. Free Movies Common Sense Club will sponsor free movies- at Schwab Auditorium beginning at 7 p.m. Saturday. More than two hours of films have been scheduled for the program. "The Thirty-Nine Steps" and "The Spanish - Earth," the latter a documentary film on the Spanish Civil War, will be shown. Casts Chosen for Players' Shows; Davis, Baum Head First Production • Casts have been selected for the two Players shows, "The Barretts of Wimpole Street," to be given April. 24, 2'5, and 26, and "1 Remember Mama," scheduled for Mother's Day weekend, May 8,9, and 10. Barbara Ann Davis as Elizabeth Barrett and Martin Baum as Robert Browning have the leading roles in, "The Barretts of Wimpole Street." They are supported by Harry Natsdhke as Mr. Browning. The rest of the cast includes Anne Marie .Condrin, Gerald Gilman, Laura Johnston, Raymond Kelly, James Latiz, James McCoy, Jerome Sit kin, William Bruce Sloan•, Jane Stalls; and Frederidc. Vogel. The show is under the direction of Kelly Yeaton, instrueor in dra matics. AsSistants to the director are Henrietta Campitel and Gerald Gilman. The leading parts in "I Remem ber Mama" will b e played by Claire Cohen as Katrin, Nancy Granger as Mama, and Harold Chidnoff as Uncle Chris. The rest of the cast consists of James Ambandos, Trudi Bowman, Farina Brown, Shirlianne Bush, Sara Jane Ciherashore, Ruttlye Cohen, and Barbara Ccoper. Irving Feldsott, Louis Glickman, Lois Hartswick, Mary Alice Hodg son, Omar Lerman, Frank Burton Palmer, Portman Paget, Helen Jo Peoples, and Claire Robinson. Anita Rosen, John Serif, and Frederick Vogel. The show is being directed by Robert Reifsneider, instructor in dramatics. Assistant director i g Rita Patterson. Ruthye Cohen is bookholder. College Orators 'Meet; Open State Convention Students from 1.8 colleges and universities will convene at the College for the Twelfth Annual Pennsylvania State Debators Convention ton.orow and Satur day, according to Joseph F. O'_ Brien, professor of speech and coach of the Men's Debate team, who has arranged the program. General topics that the dele gates will deib.Fte will include: "What is the best solution to labor strife in America?" and "What is th e best solution to the prdblem of medical care in the United States?" Each college will 'probably send six delegates to the convention, said Fred M. Kecker, convention manager. The department of speech will be host to the gathering. PRICE FIVE CENTS Pundt Speaks At LA Series Dr. Alfred G. Pundt, associate professor of history at the Col lege, 'will speak on "Gernamy's Academic Goose-Step" at the sec ond of the Liberal Arts lecture series to be held in 121 Sparks, 8 o'clock tonight. Dr. Pundt, who has travelled in Europe, was in France when World War II started in Septem ber, 1939. Entering the Army in 1942, he was assigned to Military Intelligence Service and worked with the German Order of Beattie. He later was trangfered . to European Civil Affairs Division and became chief of the Educa tional and Religious Affairs Branch for Bavaria. His work, which continued un til he was relieved from active duty in the grade of major in June, 1946, was concerned with the de-Nazification and reopen ing of schools in Bavaria. A native of lowa, Dr._Pundt re ceived his bachelor's degree from. the State University of; lowa. He received his advanced* degrees from Columbia. University and has been on the faculty at the College . since 1931. 250 Receive Sketch Requests Requests for biographical: sketdhes to appear in. "Who's Who in the News" have been sent to 250 students, according to Stephen Sinicfhak, editor. Student' s to be included in. Penn State's Who's Who had been chosen by a Selections Committee last week. Those selected will have until April .3 to return the biographical infiontnation t requested, Sinichak. "Tife book will give much.need ed recognition to those students who have been doing such a wor thy jcb on campus. I wish the publishers of 'Who's Who in the News' success in their initial ven ture," said Hobert T. Foote, AIL College President. The book. Which is being pub lished by Sigma Delta Ohi, Na tional Jcurnalisni Fraternity, and Theta Sigma Phi, National Wom.. en's Journalism Honorary, will be come a permanent annual publi cation. It will feature • Ole stuldenits prominent in the new s . limelight at the College. 'Publication is ex pected early in , May. -Meryl Brown was selected as assistant editor.