PAGE TWO Names Production for 'Tartuffe' Smith Crew Warren S. Smith, director of Players' presentation 'of "Tartuffe," has released the names of the production staff for the Moliere cos tume comedy which opens Friday night at Center Stage. Tickets for the play, which Players will perform Friday and Saturday evenings for the next eight weekends, are on sale at the Student Union desk in Old Main. The costume designing is done by Charles Schulte. Mesrop Kesdekian is the tech nical director and designer and Michael Forgacs serves as stage manager in addition to his role of the Officer in the play. Eleanor Pupo is manager of the property crew, which consists of Mary Kormanik, Phyllis Su kenik and Ruth Fine. House manager Don Barton is assisted by Bill Nudorf, Roland Johnson, Joe Marko, Ann Moore, Evalyn Horwin, Sally Johnson, Mary Ann Kitzmiller and Dpris Hartranft. Ruth Harding is costume man ager. Her crew is made up of Ruth Ann Tranter, Ann Walker, Pat Jenkins, Ray Witherow, Wil ma Jones and Ruth Springman. Sound manager Robert Durr is assisted by Jo Palmer, Tom Als ton and Roberta Reiss.. Adele Gillespie is ma k e-u p manager with a crew of Jane Os man, Barbara Silberman, Myron Cole, Leeanne Golden and John Price. Pollock Council To Investigate Phone Facilities A motion was made before the Pollock Council at last night's meeting to have the council check telephone facilities for the area. Various complaints have been reecived concerning the time it takes to make a call. The Public Welfare Committee is to investi gate and report its findings at next week's meeting. The arrival of the holidays has brought the usual parties and dances. The east dorm area is having three social events in the next two weeks. On Dec. 10 the annual Splinter ville Revue will be given. No ad mission will be charged.' Th e Windcrest Children's Christmas party will be held on the after noon of Dec. 14 and the same night there will be a square dance at the TUB. Ag Constitution Changes Made The Agriculture Student Coun cil amended its constitution by a 30 to 2 vote last night. The first amendment stated that the number of representatives shall be one for each fifty under graduate students enrolled in a department with no department having less than one representa tive. The second stated that the staff of each department not rep resented in the council by an or ganization will appoint to the Council the number of representa tives required. Walter Trainer, custodian of Hort Woods, brought before the council a plan for a parking lot on the west side of the area oppo site Beaver Field. The plan was approved by trustees but not au thorized by President EisenhoWer. It was defeated by the Council 7-25. The Council proposed a new plan be made at the discretion of Trainer. This plan and others must go through the Council be fore any work is done on the project. Wengert, Allison To Attend Confab Stan Wengert, Interfraternity Council president, and John Alli son, IFC secretary-treasurer, will represent the Penn State frater nities at this year's National In terfraternity Conference. The conference, which will be held Friday and Saturday at Old Point Comfort, Va., is designed to discuss fraternity problems. It is merely an advisory group, however. Charles E. Pledger, of Wash ington, D.C., has succeeded the late Arthur R. Warnock, Dean of Men emeritus, as chairman of the NIC. Marin to Give Paper On Research Study Dr. Joseph Marin, professor of engineering mechanics, will pre sent a paper concerning creep properties, of materials written by himself and Yoh-Han Pao, re search assistant at the engineer ing experimental station, to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers this week in Atlantic City. The .p ap e r represents a re search study of properties which are of importance in industrial and military equipment operat ing at high temperatures. Funds for the research were furnished by the Research Corp. and the Office of Naval Research. THE DATLY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE- prvngYLVANTA Yvonne Badwey ser v e s as bookholder as well as playing Flipote in the play; Nancy May is in charge of wigs;' and George Jason is the one-man crew of light manager Frank Baxter. The advertising crew headed by Fran Dektor consists of Ruth McSparran, Sally Johnson, Lu ella Martin, Doris Golub, Mary Ann Kitzmiller, Estelle Sklar, Ted Mallow, Howard Boleky, Tom Owens, John Hernick, Bill Nudorf, Bill Raymond, Faith Galr lagher, Mary Beth Bommer, Hal Walz and Frank Kelly. Borough Approves Video Operation Plans for a system of televi sion operation in this area have been approved in principle by the State College Borough Coun cil. The Television Cable Co. was given permission to proceed with its own plans of organization and start securing equipment and ma terials. A reception tower set up on one of the higher places in the community to pull in the signals to be transmitted to sets in homes will probably be used. Adjustments on the license fee, insurance, and the performance board will have to be approved before operation may start. Grad Assigned to Duty • Pvt. William F. Craig, a grad uate of the College with a degree in agriculture, has been assigned to duty with the 101st Airborne Division. Lt. Keller, '5O Grad, Gets : ronze Star First Lt. Robert S. Keller, a graduate of the class of 1950, has been awarded the Bronze Star for outstanding heroism in Korea. Lt. Keller suffered an arm in jury last April 17, his fourth day in action as a tank platoon leader. After his injury, Lt. Keller was taken to Tokyo where he under went an operation. Late in May he was transferred to another hospital and when examined hur riedly by a physician was per mitted to check out and return to Korea. He rejoined his group north of Seoul June 1, and remained at the front until Sept. 30 when he was ordered home for additional treatment for his injured arm. After another operation at Fort Campbell, Ky., Lt. Keller was sent home on 30-day furlough. In explaining his examination in Tokyo which permitted him to return to Korea, Lt. Keller ex plained, "Since the doctor didn't ask to see my arm, I failed to show it." lurie Lecturer. Dr. Gladys Emerson Food Specialist Will Address Chem Society Dr. Gladys Emerson, head of the Department of Animal Nutri tion at the , Merck Institute for Therapeutic Research, will pre sent the annual Marie Curie lec ture at 8 p.m. tomorrow in 119 Osmond. The Marie Curie lecture is spon sored by the Palladium chapter of lota Sigma Pi, women's national honorary chemistry society. The lecture is open to the public. In her lecture Dr. Emerson will discuss some aspects of vitamin B-12 research conducted at Merck Institute. She will include their studies with stress (thyrotoxi cosis), pregnancy and lactation. Preceding the lecture, lota Sig ma Pi will hold an initiation ban quet at the• State College Hotel. Those to be initiated are Eve lyn Black, senior, medical tech nology; Helen Brown, seni o r, chemistry; Monica Hearns, sen ior, bacteriology; Zelda Hurwitz, senior, pre-med. Rosalind Lynn, graduate, home economics; June odz a, senior, medical technology; Doro t h y Pfahler, junior, chemistry; Susan Stormer, senior, pre-med; Phyllis Szolack, senior, pre-med. Mrs. Norma Gruver, president of Palladium chapter, said that the society's annual scholarship award will be announced at the lecture. The award is given to an ,out standing senior woman who has a minimum of twenty credits in chemistry and a chemistry and all-College average of 2.0 or above who gives evidence of promise in her field. Inkling Deadline Today is the deadline for material for Inkling, campus literary magazine. Contribu tions of prose, fiction, or poetry may be turned in at the Stu dent Union desk in Old Main. Awarded Medal ~^: ~; r~~,` ~ ~- ~.:':• ' ',:f4;-• ! ...::;;:;;;k„..>:-.S.':-:,'' '.; ,; , i ."- : :',, ,,, '. 1'.- i7 : :‘,- , ••‘, ,, ; ',,*: :: ' , -- - ,i,-, , ,!:,, - : , / • ‘..,•-,,,,,,,,- ' • - .;-:-••••,,,, :,:-.. ; ; i .;., i First Lt. Robert S. Keller Iwo Groups Plan $BOOO In Awards More than $BOOO in scholar ships, available to both under graduate and graduate students, has been offered to college stu dents by two groups. The James F. Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation is holding a contest for undergraduate engi neers "to encourage them to use imagination and ingenuity i n developing an engineering project in their own field." Awards total ing $6750 will be made to con testants submitting the best pa pers on design of machines or structures. Rule booklets may be obtained by writing to the James F. Lincoln Arc Welding Founda tion, Cleveland 17. Ohio. Ten awards to college graduates •in the middle Atlantic states will be among the 132 financial aid awards to be offered this year by the Harvard Business School. The awards will provide a max imum of $2600 to married stu dents and $2OOO to single students who show "promise of develop ing business leadership." Application forms may be re ceived by writing to the Director of Student Financial Aid, Har vard Business School, Boston 63, Mas. The deadline for applica tion is May 1, 1952. U.S. Civil* Service To Accept Forms in Five Fields Applications foi U.S. Civil Ser vice examinations in the fields of chemistry, physics, mathematics, metallurgy, and engineering for student ai d (trainee) positions will be accepted in the commis sions' Washington of f ice until Dec. 4, 1951. The student ai d trainee pro gram with positions p a yin g yearly salaries of $2650 and $2875 offers sophomore and junior col lege students in these fields the opportunity to participate in var ious federal agency training .pro grams while they ar e still in school. Examination qualifications re quire applicants to pass a written test and to have received one- half of the total credits for'a bach elors' degree in their specialized field for jobs paying $2650. Jobs paying $2875 .require three fourths of the total credits for a bachelor's degree in the special 7 ized field in addition to a written test. Age limits, except for vet erans, are from 18 to 35. More detailed information can be obtained fr o m the college placement service. Stanford Offers Journ Stipends Applications for graduate schol arships in journalism for the 1952- 53 academic year are now being received by the Institute of Jour nalistic Studies, Stanford Uni versity announced yesterday. Requests for additional infor mation should be addressed to the Director, Institute for Journalistic Stud i e s. Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. The awards, in memory of for- Imer students at Stanford, are the Charles Samuel Jackson, Jr. Fel lowship, the Melville Jacoby Fel lowship (awarded to • a student' preparing to work in the Orient), and the Stanley Stemmer Beau baire Scholarship. Former Student :~`~ " i N~Ty~A. y ~ i 3 ...K~ . i4;~r` Assigned Overseas • - First Lt. Lorna I. Zettle, a for mer student at the College, has been alerted for overseas ship ment, probably to Salzburg, Aus tria, in February,. At present, Lieutenant Zettle, Women's Army Corps, is . the duty officer of the Communications Center, Signal Section, at Fifth Army Headquarters, Chicago. After graduation from Lock Haven State Teachers College in 1941, Miss Zettle completed grad tiate courses in education at the College. WEDNESDAY, Zlh 1951 Arts and Crafts. Exhibit to Open Display articles donated by friends of the late Amy Gardner, former head of the Home Art department, will be featured in the arts and crafts exhibit held in 220 Home Economics . tomor row through Saturday. Paintings, metal work in silver' and copper, examples of weav ing, ceramics, and fabric designs will be included in the exhibit. The contributions, in addition to Christmas greens and cookies, will be on sale during the three day exhibit for the benefit of the Amy Gardner Memorial Gar den fund. • The garden, dedicated to the memory of Miss Gardner - who died in the summer of 1950, will feature long-leaf evergreens. Ten \ Students In Accounting Sign Contracts Under th e accounting intern ship program, ten accounting stu dents at the College have re cently signed employment con tracts to work for the first half of the i r eighth semester with public accounting firms. Students who will work are Fred Brahler, Michael Chaffier, Ralph Cosgrove, Julian Gordon, Elmer Loisch, Phil Lurie, Ber nard •Pollack, Jo an Puchalski, Donald Reese, and Charles Schutte. The salary for internship - jobs is approximately $250 a month. This is slightly less than the pay that a college graduate starting in accounting receives, Kenneth Nelson, accounting professor in charge of the program, said. • New York, Philadelphia, Pitts burgh, and Chicago are the cities in which Students are signed to wo r k. The accounting internship pro gram, set up at the College last year, was one of the first such programs •in the country. "No college had such a program in operation before last year to our knowledge," Nelson said. This project was' started so that students might have an oppor tunity to apply their theoretical knowledge to actual accounting practice. CPA firms are enthu siastic about hiring students from the program, Nelson said. The winter internship program is largely confined to public ac counting jobs, while the summer program is primarily for indus trial and governmental jobs. Fourteen students participated in last year's winter and summer internship programs. Students desiring to participate in this program fill out applica tions at the time of pre-registra tion for the second semester of their junior year or /before. Ad vance planning of course sche dules is-necessary to get into this program, for no normal gradua tion requirements are waived to permit the acceptance of an in ternship job. Firms desiring to employ stu dents through this program inter,- view students at the College. 11 Frosh Women Remain in Lounges Only 11 freshman women are still living in dormitory lounges, according to Cordelia L. Hibbs, assistant to the Dean of Women in charge of housing. At the beginning of the sem ester there was a total of 69 wo men living in th e lounges of Grange, Atherton, Simmons: and McElwain Halls. • That number was reduced gradually to - 20 by the middle of October. • Women were placed in rooms vacated by student withdrawals and by stu dents practice teaching. Of -the remaining. 11, six are in McElwain, three in Atherton, and two in Simmons. These wo men will be placed as soon as rooms are available, - Mrs. Hibbs said. German 'Club to: Meet The German Club will meet at 7.tonight in the ,McElwain study lounge. - After a short business session, two German exchange students will speak to ;the group.