PAGE SIX Buses Provide New Service Nittany Transit Company an nounces a new schedule of buses to accommodate students of the College. This is the first time service has been provided on campus. Throughout the day buses will run at 40 and 30 minute intervals. Beginning at 6:45 p.m. hourly service will be provided. Buses will leave Holmes and Curtin every 40 minutes from 7:30 a.m. until 6:40 p.m. This route will include Curtin and Burrowes, and Burrowes and College to Allen. Leaving from College and Allen at 7:35 a.m., another route will cover Allen and Beaver, Beaver and Bur rowes, Pollock, and Shortlidge. From Pollock and Shortlidge, buses will leave beginning at 7:40 a.m. This route will include Curtin and Holmes, Holmes and Park, Hartswick and Adams. An other bus will travel from Pol lock and Burrowes at 7:25 a.m. on the half hour until 6:55 p.m. This route will include Curtin and East Drive, East Drive and Pollock, Pollock and Burrowes. Officials of the transit company announce that several runs daily are planned for East College ave. upon completion of the College's new faculty housing project. CLASSIFIED SECTION All classified ad' ertisements must be in by 4:30 p.m day preceding issue. Prices are: 40c for one insertion; $l.OO, three insertions; 17 words or less. Call Collegian, 711. FOR SALE FOR SALE—One Philco 1940 6-tube auto radio with all at tachments. Price $2O. Jim Mur phy, 108 New Physics. FRATERNITIES and boarding houses! Canned fruits and veg etables. Get them while you can at bargains. Phone 2877. FOR SALE—U s e d Underwood typewriter, standard model. Call 711, Ext. 25. FOR SALE—N ew 1 y recondi tioned Remington portable typewriter. Call 5051, 35 Ath. FOR SALE Double-breasted tuxedo suit with shirt and col lar; size 36 short; very good con dition. Call 2888. WANTED WANTED—Two riders round trip to Pitt game. Leave Friday afternoon, return Sunday eve ning. Call Krear, 3359. WANTED—W aiters for Pete's 6kMimill-m-m ~.. • Smell 4 4 7 - That .s4rorna ~._- _ . . . AND IT TASTES EVEN BETTER ! That's what you'll say about the food at the Allencrest. Fur it is food meticulously pre pored by experienced cooks in a spotless kitchen to please the most demanding palate. It is food served piping hot in most generous portions. phere . . low prices Won't you juin us fur dinner? THE TF.fi FkOOMI Film Gains A motion picture on Pennsyl vania local government in action, written and directed by Frank S. Neusbaum, professor of dra matics, has become a guide for war-scarred nations and an im mortal record in the nation's per manent movie archives. The state's Bureau of Internal Affairs in July 1945 requested the College's Motion Picture and Re cording Studio, headed by Mr. Neusbaum, to document on cel luloid the daily operation of the municipal level of government. Called in as advisor on politi cal technicalities was Dr. Harold F. Alderfer, director of the In stitute of Local Government at the College and director of the Place, Sunday 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Meals, tips, wages, transportation provided. Call 6691 after 7 p.m. LOST—Tan gabardine zipper jacket early last week; Dußois label. Address Miller, Nittany Dorm 30, Room 6. LOST, strayed or stolen—Nov. 1, 4 p.m., near College Fruit Farm, large male English Beagle, black and white, little brown; an swers to Jack. Call 4240. Reward. LOST—Phi Sigma Delta frater nity pin in New Beaver Field; initials R.G.M. on back. Finder call 4409. BRACELET, at Ree Hall Friday night. Great sentimental value. Reward. Call Lorraine De-Jo seph, 3rd floor Jordan. LOST—Four keys on dog tag chain, front Old Main. Finder please call 6914, McConnell, Rm. 16. INDIVIDUAL tutoring in chem istry and allied subjects by graduate scholar. Call Lou Ull man, 2090, after 8 p.m. Yuu'll like the refined tea roam a4rnos and wonder at the still amazingly THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Frank S. Neuabaum LOST AND FOUND MISCELLANEOUS Top National Honor Bureau of Municipal Affairs in Harrisburg. Film in Production Cameras and film equipment were carted to big towns, boros, and burgs. Mr. Neusbaum and his troupe would pull into a town at midnight, grind away all next day, and again be on the move by midnight. Scenes were shot in Scranton or in Reading or sanitation offi cers or tax collectors planning, investigating, or interviewing. The cameras took pictures of housing projects and camps for underprivileged children in Phil adelphia, and scenes of firemen, police, and street cleaners guard ing the health and safety of Pittsburgh residents. Delmer Duvall handled the camera, and Paul 'Leitzinger the sound. The film was edited and sounded in Mr. Neusbaum's stu dio in the Cathaum building. William S. Livefigood Jr., secre tary of the Department of Inter nal Agairs, narrated the script. Film Sent Abroad Several months ago the Civil Affairs Secretary of the War De partment selected the film from many such educational sound tracts to be distributed in Ger many, Austria, Japan, and Korea. After the American commander of each occupied zone approved the picture, the negative and script were translated into the four foreign tongues to show peoples formerly ruled by totali tarianism how local government works in the United States. On October 1 the Library o Congress authorized Mr. Neus Harold F. Alderfar baum to forward "Pennsylvania Local Government in Action" to its permanent movie files for preservation, an honor rarely granted to films because of the 'ack of space. . His bullet Prailll 30 miles away! Zing! . . and the damage is done. A bullet ...intended for game...pierces an exposed telephone cable. Instantly, hundreds of wires are open to the ruinous effects of moisture. Instantly, too, nitrogen gas ... stored in the cable under ,pressure ... begins its slow escape, keeping dangerous moisture out. And, as the gas pressure falls, a small con tact closes and an alarm is sounded in a Bell Telephone testroom many miles away. Through mathematical plotting the break is readily located and, within minutes, arc emergency crew is on its way. Repairs are frequently made before telephone service is interrupted. This alarm system is but one of countless expedients all of which reflect the initiative and ingenuity of Bell System personnel ...; men who find highly interesting and re warding careers in an ever growing business. :1 IP IS V DI 1100 DE3IF4 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1447 Telephone Exper To Explain Rada "Radar and Microwaves" is th z subject of the demonstration be ing held in Schwab Auditorium 8 p.m., Thursday. Dr. J. 0. Perrine, assistant vice-4 president of the American Tele phone and Telegraph Co., will, conduct the program, a demon stration of wave phenomena a encountered in the field of elec trical communication. Beginning with visible me 1 chanical waves in a rope, he wil develop the basic concepts o wave motion and then exten.• these ideas to electrical wire syij , tems where the waves can 14 ) rendered visible by suitable fluorescent and neon tubes. 1 The demonstration will sho ', the production of microwaves the type used in radar, inclu ' A their physical properties and the I use in the transmission of speec and music over a beam of sue waves. Dr. Perrine's visit is bein sponsored by the campus chap ters of the Sigma Pi Sigma an. Sigma Xi fraternities and th, American Institute of Electric: , Engineers,, and is free to all wish ing to attend. s a be 11...