PAM! SIX Ilittany-Independent (COTIVInueO troln paltit une • and their activities. with those existing here at Penn State may be achieved. (4) To bolster a more unified Penn State spirit through the non partisan participation of bath in dependent and fraternity students in all College activities. (5) In lieu of existing condi tions. we will investigate the pre sent regulations governing the women students for the possibility of making any constructive re visions. (6) We advocate the expansion of student parking facilities. both on otannus. and in the Pollock Circle. Nittany Dormitory area, to keep in line with the general growth of the College and in creased enrollment. (?) Since it is impossible to essioar the heretofore futilely sought Sunday movies, the Nit- Purr Independent Party wishes to promote some reasonable form of low-cost Sunday recreational activities for the students. Penn State Club Names Talent Show Committees Committees for the Penn State Club's All College Talent Show were named Monday by Michael Zartecosky. social chairman. The show. to be given in Schwab Auditorium on December 5. will be coma °°d of acts by students of the C ze. The cLi.. ,Attees and their mean hers are as follows: Tickets. Ed Bandon chairman. James Baloe. James Rostoskv. Donald Tanner. and James York: Stage hands, Ed mund Walacavage chairman, min Van liguseu shirts AU the right people want to go places with you and your Van Heusen Shirt. You'll like the smart sewmanship, the low-set collar models, the action-tailoring, the figure-fit. Sanforized la-rics, laboratory-tested 1500 times a month. Cat your money's worth ilways say Van Heusen Shirts. $3.25, $3.95, $4.50. POILUPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Exclusive Agency for Van Heusen Shirts (Continues trom ixtge one) dent ROvernment associations. 7. Religious and racial dis crimination have no place in our wav of life and the State Party will do everything rKossillyle to eliminate these evils in State College. The above are listed as solutions to some of the problems of today which we feel we can help to cor rect. As other important issues arise. the same open and direct procedures will be followed. The State Party will always be ready to work for those things which will benefit the student body• such as a sidewalk alone Short lidge road and securing a vote on All-College Cabinet for Pollock Circle and the borough of Wind crest. Also in line with this thought we will keep the issue of a Student Union alive and be fore the proper authorities. AVC Meets There will be a meeting of the local chapter of AVC in 417 Old Main at 7:30 o'clock tonight, an nounced Leo Troy, chairman. At the meeting a report of the convention held in Reading last weekend will be given and busi ness of the chapter will be dis cussed. After the business meet ing Dr. Pundt, of the College history department. will lead a discussion of the Marshall Plan. Richard Howe. William Schiele. and James Sentz: Program. Wil liam Betler chairman. Bob Chris toff. William Manus. James Rich ards. Ernie Sladics. and Edward Switart: Publicity. Fred Peruzzi chairman. Robert Bensing. Jo seph Dolan. William Manus. and James Sentz. kAma II II AIMS 1110 L 411104 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Stale Dr. Harold P. Alderfer, execu tive secretary of the Institute of Local Government at the College was elected national vice-presi dent of the American Municipal Association at its convention, held in New Orleans, La. Dr. Alderfer, who also is a professor of political science at the College, is director of the Bureau of Municipal Affairs, se cretary of the Pennsylvania State Association of Boroughs, and a field agent in Pennsylvania for the American Municipal Associa tion. Boolers Win 6-4 (Continued from page five) the second half, the Jeffrey de fense, led by fullback Chuck Mar golf and halfbacks Jack Campbell, Dean Hartman, and Ralph Hos terman, erected a tight barrier against the Syracuse attack and held the Orangemen scoreless throughout the period. With five minutes remaining in the third Oanza, the hard driving Lions knotted the count at 3-3 on Dean Witmer's second goal of the game. Fullback Frank Taucher, sustaining a sprained ankle on a goal line tussle, was removed from the game later in the quar ter. The fourth quarter spelled CATHAIUM MAIL ORDERS NOW Checks payable to Cathaum Theatre should be accom panied by a salt-addressed and stamped envelope. College Meteorology Scientists Produce Artificial Snow in Lab Santa can now enlist the help of science in finding the secret to a white Christmas. At the College, for the first time, scientists have produced snow crystals in the laboratory by a process imitating their natural produc tion in the clouds. The snow crystals were produced , toy J. Ross Heverly In the Col- lege meteorological laboratories under the direction of Dr. Hans Neuberger. chief of the division of meteorology. They then were preserved for leisurely room temperature study. While other scientists have suc ceeded in producing rain or snow by scattering dry .ice into clouds, Mr. Heverly in his experiments found the conditions necessary in nature to produce snow crystals. Ordinary air, saturated with water vapor, was cooled in a chamber to 15 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. It then was expanded to 150 per cent of its original volume in close imitation of the changes that occur in a natural cloud being formed in rising air currents. Snow crysals, five-thousandths of an inch across, were pulled out of this air into a formvar solu tion, which, on evaporation, left perfect formvar replicas of the ice crystals• The 15 degrees below zero Fah_ renheit temperature was the highest temperature at which the direct change from water, in the form of a gas to water in a solid form, snow, occurred. At 30 de grees below zero, the snow cry State from the beginning as the Lion offense opened up on the Syracuse net. Although removed from the game in the third period for a leg rubdown, Dean Witmer returned to the drenched field i n the last stanza and contributed goal number four to the Lion cause. Center forward Fred Kretzer scored the fifth Lion tally a few minutes later, and Jack Campbell, making good use of a penalty kick, salted away the fifth Lion win of the season with the final State goal. Flowers say • • • . "Thank you for a perfect weekend." Flowers telegraphed anywhere BILL McMULLEN, Florist 130 S. Allen 4755 Wed" 1100. 19 .Y 5 o~yY 20 "Best picture of the agapeNi Nm WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1041 stals were three-thousandths of an inch in diameter and at 40 be low, they were only two thous andths of an inch. Along with the snow crystals there were numerous supercooled droplets of water. They varied in size from three ten-thousandths of an inch at minus 15 degrees to one ten-thousandth of an inch at minus 40 degrees. At lower tern peratures it was found the size and number of droplets was much Student Co-op- Continued from page three five dollars each. Capital consists of cooperative shares of present members, accumulated shares left as the gift of alumni members, and the property which they pur chase. No interest is paid on the minimum number of capital shar e s, but additional shares which may bear interest may be issued by the society. Students Decide Fees Fees for board and room are decided by the cabinet in accord ance with price fluctuations and are approved by three-fourths of the active membership. At the end of each semester, after pro viding for the reserve fund, the overcharge may be used col lectively or may be divided among the members according to patronage. Rates at the co-op for Novem ber, minus holidays, will be $4O total for room and board for women students, and $3O for board for men students. Considering that women pay $9O for a double room and $99 for a single room in campus dormi tories, the co-op women save an estimated $5O on room rent alone for this semester. Rochdale Principles The College Cooperative Soci ety operates according to the Rochdale principles of consumer cooperation. These principles are open membership regardless of race, creed, or color; democratic control, with one vote per mem ber, regardless of monetary in vestment per individual; limited interest on capital; savings re turned according to patronage; business for cash at prevailing market prices; neutrality in re ligion and politics; constant edu cation; and continuous expansion. The co-op cites its purposes as ". . . to provide a democratic so cial organization for men and women, and lower cost housing for women."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers