PAGE EIGHT USNSA Will Meet In Brazil The United States National Student Association will repre sent American students at the Inter-American Student Congress from Nov. 3 to 10 in Rio de Jan eiro, Brazil. The decision to send an Amer ican delegation to the Congress was made at the College this weekend at a meeting of the national interim committee of USNSA which checks the group’s policies. Members- of the committee in clude Robert ■ Murphy, chairman, William Dewey, Robert Ferguson, James Murphy, Leonard Wilcox, and William Dentzer. Sponsored by the Uniao Na tional Dos Estudantes (National Union of Students of Brazil), the Congress is for the unions of students of all the American countries. Four Delegates The USNSA is a national fed eration of college and university student governments which serves as American students’ voice in national and international affairs. Included in the United States delegation are Dentzer, USNSA president from Rochester, Pa.; Avrea Ingram, USNSA vice pres ident of international affairs, and Helen Rogers, past executive sec retary of USNSA. Another dele gate. is yet to be chosen. The Brazilian conference will be the first international student congress held in this hemisphere. To facilitate the growth of mu tual understanding among stu dents and ideas will be the aim of the congress. Five Commissions All of the unions in the West ern Hemisphere have been in vited to the Congress, and the USNSA expects most to accept. The President of the Republic of Brazil and other national leaders will visit the meeting. The five commissions wiU dis cuss student social conditions, economic condtions, improvement of courses and teaching, exchange of students and ideas, and- the common role of all students in preserving democracy and inde pendence. Knipe to Show Film Fred Knipe, agricultural engi neer with the Rockefeller Foun dation, will show a film, “Mos quito Eradication in Sardinia,” at the Bioforum meeting at 4:15 to day in 214 Frear Laboratory. THE DAILY" CO" 300 Attend IE Conference The fourth Conference of In dustrial Education attracted ap proximately 300 delegates to its session at the College Saturday. The theme this year was “The Place of Industrial Education in Meeting the Needs of the 60 Per Cent Group.” Dr. Lewis S. Land, head of the Vocational Education department at the College, was chairman of the conference. Dr. Land ex plained that of all high school graduates, 20 per cent go to col lege, 20 per cent go to vocational schools, and 60 per cent do, not get any training after high school. Dr. Land said that “keen inter est was displayed by those attend ing to work towards changes in the secondary school curriculum to meet the needs of youth.” Marion Trabue, dean of the School of Education, addressed the opening session Saturday morning. The general meeting was followed by two s ectional meetings, devoted to the needs of industrial arts teachers and voca tional industrial directors and teachers. Summaries of the sectional meetings were given at the lunch eon at -the First Presbyterian Church. WSGA, WRA - (Continued, from page one) Malloy, Beverly Morfan and Margaret Troutman are candi dates for WRA sophomore repre sentative. In the primaries last spring, 79 percent of the total enroll ment of women students' voted, with 100 percent voting in Wom an’s Building, Mac Allister, and the three home management houses. Satchell to Speak Dr. Donald P. Satchell, assist ant professor of agronomy, will speak to the Clover Club at 7:15 tonight in 111 Plant Industries, about his work with radioactive isotopes in plant raising. Refresh ments will be served. CLASSIFIEDS MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATION PHOTOS negatives you best results. 20 for $1.20. Mail to Photos, 131 South Miles Street, State Col lege. IF YOUR Typewriter needs repairs, just call 2492 or brine: machine to 633 W. College Ave. Mr. Beatties' 2S years ex perience is at your service. TO MAKE your party a success, order refreshments. Special party cookies, warm and cold horsd'oeuvres, coffee cakes, decorated birthday cakes, all kind of pas tries from Frida Stern. Special wishes concerning color and shape will be re spected. Moderate prices. 122 East Irvin Ave. Phone 4818 State College. FOR SALE SET OF prewar trap durms, cymbals, accessories complete. A bargain at 3125. Call after 5 p.m. 611 W. Beaver. NEW MODEL Remington Foresome Elec tric Shaver only $ll.OO. Person to call first will .make sale. Call Roddy 3918. 1940 FORD tudor —radio and heater. Ex cellent condition. 1951 Nash Rambler bard-top convertible with overdrive, new. Weiser Motor Co., 217 S. Atherton, State College 4171. 1940 NASH Lafayette 4-door. Fully equip ped. A-l shape. Call Fred 2252, 123 S. Gill St. afternoons only. 1048 PLYMOUTH Convertible. Perfect condition: $llOO.OO. Call Norm Nelson, 1194 after eight. PIZZA PIES, Spaghetti and Hoagies made by real Italian epicurian. State College representative L.S.L. catering. P.O. Box 741. Phone 6854 evenings. LOST SILDE RUIjE with ,G. C. Hurlbert on it. In E.E. Building. Phone Jim Moran 2760. SINGLE STRAND of Pearls between Sim mons and Metzgers, M o n.d a y night Please call Betty Jean Merrick, 2 Simmons. A GREY-Brown top coat missing from Pollock 6, Room 35. Information or re turn will result in a reward. No questions asked. FOUND THE ANSEWER to a perfect Homecoming weekend. Thespians' Musical Revue "Bot toms Up". Get your tickets now at Stu dent Union. WANTED WASHINGS and IRONINGS. Pick up and delivery. Two Day Service. Call Mrs. Coder, State College 7470. .. FOUR PIECE Combo for Sat. night, Oct. 20. Call Tom Barrett, 7683. FOR RENT ROOM FOR one male graduate student or faculty member. Phone 4318* iLEGIAN. STATE PENNSYLVANIA' ' 16 New Members Join Debate Team The sixteen .upperclasswomen selected yesterday from 45 de bate squad candidates will meet with the team at 7 tonight in 2 Sparks. The new members are Mari lyn Cohn, Barbara Cole, Harriet Garfinkel, Susan -Holtzinger, Mar jorie Kahn" Mary Jane Kelley, Sally Lowry, Lorraine Mondrick, Nancy Nelson, Agnes Porter, Sihrley Restau, Margaret Trout man, Emilie Tyler, Marian- Venz lauskas, Ellen Wescott, and Caro lyn Zimmerman. The women’s team now num bers about 50, according to Lois Pulver, manager. This includes the freshman squad, which will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in 2 Sparks. No more places will be open on the squad until next semester. » «»■. t ■’V*. - ’* .N.w. X V. 1 1 Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No. 25 THE SEA HORSE i.i S o a 1:1 : >s ,« This little gee-gee was all at sea. It was " enough to upset his equine-imity. He’d bepn reading about those rush-rush cigarette tests —die quick sniff, the fast puff. “Hardly the scientific approach,” he said in his confusion. But then he realized that one test is an equine . of a different pigmentation—a thorough, conclusive test of cigarette mildness. y r; s | It’s the sensible test... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke—on a day-after-day basis. No snap judgments! Once you’ve tried Camels for 30 days in your “T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste), you’ll see why... , <£ ■i l' ■<"* n Camel leads all after bmndsJfy r £f/Jfbtnr - JL 1 College , Inquirer Co-Sponsor Show , An exhibit demonstrating atom ic energy from the basic -concept of radioactivity down to the ef fects of an atomic explosion wiU open at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia on Oct. 31 under the sponsorship of the Philadelphia Inquirer and the College. The exhibit, created by the American Museum of Atomic En ergy at Oak Ridge, Tenn., is made available through the National University Extension Associa tion. > Answers to such questions as how uranium 235, the -basic bomb material is extracted, how plu tonium is made and extracted, what an isotope is, and how it is manufactured and used in medi cine, industry, and agriculture will be provided by the exhibit. The exhibit wilFcontinue un til Nov. 7. V * .r-fv w '“*•% -w V.' v 'x\ o 'O After all the Mildness Tests, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16,- I9SI Research Club to Hold First Meeting Tonight The Graduate Faculty Research Club, a new organization at the College, will hold its first meet ing at 8 tonight in the Home Economics Living Center. Dr. H. K. Schilling; dean of the Grad uate school,- will preside at the meeting.' Dr. P. F. English, professor of wildlife management and acting head, of the Department of Zoo logy and Entomology, w.ill ad dress the group on “The History and of Wildlife Management.” The program will also, include the election of offi cers,-a discussion period, and re freshments. ... V Dr. F. R. Matson, professor of ceramics, who made the ar rangements for the meeting, said that all members of the Gradu ate school faculty are invited to join the club. Dues will be $1 per semester. ' v ' 's \ ft' \ s ’ fe>S-y.a M -1 1 §! pj ; i' is pi tm PI pi p| §lt pll jte