PAGE ET.GHT NY to Up Engineers' Starting Pay A temporary increase of about $3OO in the recruiting salary for graduate engineering positions at the entrance level, grade ten, will become effective April 1, 1952 J. Earl Kelly, director of classifica tion and compensation in the New York State Department of Civil Service, has announced. The positions affected are those of senior engineering aide, senior draftsman, senior mechanical draftsman, and senior architec tural draftsman, totaling about 600 jobs of which about 435 are now filled. The new recruitment minimum for professional engineers will bring the New York state salary of $3541 close to the average starting salary of $3590 offered by private employers in New York and will exceed the federal hiring rate by about $l3O a year. State salaries for engineering posi tions of higher levels were found to be somewhat higher than fed eral ranges. Last week, the state civil serv ice commission announced that the period during which engineer ing candidates for the annual ex amination for professional and technical assistant may file ap plications has been extended. Applications may be postmarked Dec. 24 or filed in person on Dec. 26. The examination will be Jan. 12: Information is available at Col lege placement offices and at the offices of the State Department of Civil Service in Albany and Buffalo. Klisanin to i Attend NSA Meeting William Klisanin, president of the Pennsylvania region of the National Student Association, will attend the national executive committee meeting of NSA Dec. 26 to 31 at the University of Chi cago. Th e , executive committee IS composed of the• chairmen of the 24 NSA regions in the United States. Klisanin will represent the Pennsylvania region. The agenda will include staff reports, fund- raising activities, regional reports, regional pro grams, student bill of rights and its implementation, World Stu dent Service Fund, committee reports of the international con ference, the dismissal of the edi tor of the University .of Chicago's paper for attending the Berlin youth rally, and intercollegiate athletic committee reports. Council Questions Sally's Food Costs Nittany Council last night authorized its public welfare corn mittee to investigate the prices charged by Sally's for food sold to students at the College. The proposal was recommended because men in the area com plained that Sally's prices were "exhorbitant." It recommended that the food prices either be reduced or that the council get a share of the profits. In other business, the council passed a motion enabling the Barons, social group for the area, to discuss the possibilities of hold ing a series of six dances jointly with West Dorm Council and the Pollock Council. Women's Debate Team Sixteen members of the wom en's debate team met a mixed Juniata College squad here last night in a series of non-decision debates. The topic was, Resolved: That the United States should adopt a permanent program of wage and price control. Penn State's affirmative speak. ers were Peggy Crooks, Lorraine Mondrick, Harriet Garfinkel and Audrey Rothschild, Ethel Brown, Janet Horger, Harriet Rakov and Guyla Woodward. The negative team included Kathleen Peterson, Mar y Yan dow, Sally Lowry, Emilie Tyler, Marian Ungar, Greta Weaver., Ellen Wescott, and Susan Holt zinger. THE DAILY 'COLLEGIAN: STATE"COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA , Weather -- (Continued from page one) fires, and falls on slippery sur faces, the AP said. Local police reported no auto injuries to stu dents resulting from the weather. Classes Canceled In Erie, public school officials canceled classes yesterday " be cause of the. zero temperature, the AP said. Harrisburg had an overnight low s , of zero Sunday, coldest there for this early in the winter in 61 years. Hospital emergency wards were busy treating injuries resulting from falls over the weekend, the AP continued, and phone. an d water service were cut off in parts of the state. Ice-coated firemen stood until dawn yesterday fighting a $lOO,- 000 fire in the- business district of Glassport in which some 25 persons were driven to the street in ze r o temperatures, the AP said. Reports from the Chicago weather bureau yesterday indi cated a toll of at least 117 lives from the cold weather since it struck Friday. Price Controls Needed, Agree Ilel Speakers Some direct price controls are necessary during the present Ko rean emergency, all three speak ers at the Hillel Town Meeting agreed Sunday. Harold P. Zelko, associate pro fessor of public speaking, who re cently worked with the Office of Price Stabilization in Washington, said scare buying and defense production have drawn the nor mal supply of products off the market, thereby necessitating price and wage controls. Zelko said he felt the same as Defense Mobilizer Charles Wil son who said o he hated and des pised price controls but realized they are necessary: Zelko pointed out that while prices have risen ten per cent since the beginning of the Korean emergency in June 1950, one and one-half per cent of the rise has occurred since OPS went into effect in February. Dr. George Brandow, professor of agricultural economics, said a compensating tax on scarce pro ducts would keep demand down and also help balance the budget. Brandow, who worked with the Office of Price Administration during the - World War, said the money supply must be controlled to stop inflation. He added that the government should' cut down on the number of direct controls. The disappearance of durable consumer goods indicates inflation Dr. Arthur Reede, professor of economics said. He added that production and price' controls are both needed so there is no com petition between these goods and war industries for scarce metals. With the present metal shortage the five million, cars produced this year should not have been turned out, Reede said. He pointed out that since We don't - have enough controls, We cannot cut any. Players Set Tryouts For 'Hedda Gabler' Tryouts for "Hedda Gabler," a play by Henrik Ibsen, will be held by Players at 7 p.m. Jan... 3 and 4. Appointments for tryouts • can' be made by signing up in the Schwab Auditoyium . Green Room or by seeing play director Robert Reifsneider. Hog Farm Hit Hard By Plague Swine' herds at the College have received a serious setback as a result of the outbreak of a dis ease which swept through the hog farm. - . "Serious losses" have been caused by the outbreak, Lyman E. Jackson, dean of the School of Agriculture, announced. The out break has reached epidemic pro portions, he said. Pathologists of the College, aided by tests conducted by the State Department of Agriculture's laboratories, indicated a variant hog cholera virus is the disease o'r g a ni s m responSible for the losses. This particular virus was not curbed- by the customary vaccin ation treatments given all hogs at the College farms, Dean Jackson explained. Swine experiments are being discontinued, as a result of the extended losses, and no attempt will - be made to replace the lost herds immediately, he said. Dean Jackson also said that similar outbreaks have been re ported in swine herds elsewhere in Pennsylvania and in the mid west. Breeds included in the College herds were Hampshire, Poland- China, Yorkshire, Duroc, Chester White, Berkshire, and Landrace. New Phone Codes Are Now in Effect New codes for calling repair service and for dialing other par ties on the same line have gone into. effect, J66se Caum, county manager of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, has announced. Subscribers may call re p air service by dialing 114 instead of dialing the operator, he said. • To determine the proper code for calling another, party on the same line, subscribers with two or four- paity service should call the operator. The new codes will start with 119 instead of the pres-1 ent 30. Multi-party subscribers will not be affected by the change in the party line code. Contest. Winners Awarded Prizes Mary Bolich and Patricia Bea han, 20 Thompson, and Richard Rohland and William Hartman, 405 Hamilton, have been named winners of the West Dorm win dow decoration' contest. A $5 cash prize was awarded to the occupants of each of the rooms by West Dorm Council. Harriet Kabo and Carol Krick, 138 Thompson, were giyen a com plimentary, ticket to• the next Players' show as a special second prize. Both first place windows de pi6ted the Nativity scene. The runner-up in. Thompson Hall was- a stained glass window made from cellophane and black paper. The; windows were judged Sat urday afternoon. "I dare not drink for my own sake, I ought not drink for my neighbor's sake."—Cuyler I 4, 4 ctllo , : ICE 7-1 CREAM ARTY. cAKE, (ALL ICE CREAM) $1 • 69 S ER4ES a ANIILA FUDGE sc STMNIBIN-VildillitA Gunner -- (Continued from page two) hand reached out holding a tray with a full course 'meal on it.• So Early tried the same thing, and afterwards his shipmates won dered why he was getting so fat. "I was lucky," Early says.. Sweat and Swore After spending some time over India, Early was sent on his 50th mission, the one which he thought was his last. As his B-25 was fly ing over Casino, Jan. 17, 1944, I.t. was attacked by a host of ,FW 190s. The surprise 'attack was timed perfectly, Early said, and,, as a result, the ship was severely damaged. During the air battle, three of the crew were killed, and Early thought to himself, "I guess this is it." He tried to make him self as small as possible. He then went through the stages of sweating, swearing, pray ing, and freezing, that confront a person who is facing death. All his thoughts were about what he y had done wrong. "It's too bad, you don't get a chance to make up for the things you did wrong," was the sentence that kept racing through his mind. It seemed that this was the longest time he had ever spent in the air, Early said. And only a stroke of luck permitted his ship and crew to return to the base safely. Early flew on more missions, bringing his grand total to 85, a remarkable record. Only,a limited number of airmen are able to boast of such a feat. 'Early was then discharged June 17, 1945. After working for a few years, he decided to come to Penn State. He matriculated 'at the College in 1949, and is majoring in transpor tation. 5 Profs Elected. , Officers of ACS Five faculty members of the College have recently been 'elec ted officers of the central Penn sylvania section of the American Chemical' Society, and one other will continue in his present posi tion:- The elected officers ar e Dr. Theodore S. Polansky, Depart ment of Fuel Technology, chafr man; Dr. Ralph P. Seward, -De parmeht of Chemistry; vice chair man; Dr. Gordon H. Pritham, De partment of Agricultural Bio chemistry, secretary; Dr. Albert H. Holtzinger, Department of Chemistry, treasurer; and Dr. Nollie B. Guerrant, Department of Agri cu 1 tural Biochemistry, councilor. Donald N. Rockwell, professor of chemistry at *Juniata College, wa s elected alternate councilor. Dr. Arthur Rose, Departnient of Chemical Engineering, will continue as councilor, and Lester Kieft, professor of chemistry at Bucknell University, will con tinue as alternate councilor. Mutchler Named To Traffic Group David Mutchler, Tribunal chair map, has been appointed to a committee which will study traf fic problems at the College. The committee was named by Walter Wiegand, head of the phy sical plant. Wiegand, chairman of the com mittee, also said that Lyman Jackson, dean of the School of Agriculture; Thomas Kavanagh, representative from the Presi dent's office, and Calvin Reen, civil engineering department rep resentative, are on the committee. 'WAffi (II ROD CAMERON ADRIAN BOOTH "OH SUSANNA" HAROLD LLOYD FRANCES RAMSDEN "MAD ., -WEDNESDAY" ."UESDAY;' DECEMBER is, 1951 Honorary Initiates 35 At Banquet Approximately 65 persons, in.; eluding President Milton S. Eisen. hower, • attended the Alpha Phi Omega, service honorary, in itiation banqtet Friday night at the State College Hotel.' Guest'speaker was soccer Coach Bill Jeffrey, who spoke on the soccer team's Iranian trip. Thirty-five pledges were in itiated into the fraternity. Those initiated were Gail Bimber, Ralph Breidenthal, George Brown, Stan ley Bushkoff, Robert Cassol, Rod ney. Cobi, James Cornish, Merle Even John Falcone, Clyde. Her rick, Ronald Jochen Arthur Jor dan, Herbeit Kirkwood, ' Gilbert Kasonsky, Conrad Kresge, John: Kriner, John Lauer, Arnold Lei der, Albert Lucidi, Roger Mauch line, Theodore Matlow, Ivan Mc- Gee. Charles Naginey, Alan N e ro man, Frank Nikischer, Thomas Pyle, Robert Rieber, Irwin Saft, David Schwartz, Richard Snyder, Clifford Stewart, Richard Upde-, grafi,. Mark Unger, and - , Martin Wyand. /Melvin Isenberg, retiring chair man of the advisery committee, installed as newly elected offi cers Stanley R app, president; Richard Schuler, vice, president; Lincoln Warrell, recording seare-, tary; William Mikesell, corres ponding secretary; William Bur rows, treasurer; Robert Noel, historian; David Thomas, - alumni chairman; .and John Westhafer, sergeant-at-arms. Charles Hosier was named to the post of advisery - committee chairman. Frank Simes and Ar thur Jaffe were nominated . fac ulty advisors. . . Dr. Gemmell to-Speak On Business Teaching Dr. James Gemmell, head of the Business Education depart ment, will speak on "What Every Young Business Teacher Should Know" at 7:30 tonight in the Ath-. erton lounge. Dr.- Gemmell's talk is being sponsored by the Future Busi ness Leaders .of America. It will be open to the public. CLASSIFIEDS MISCELLANEOUS lh" YOUR Typewriter needs repairs, lust call 2492 or bring machine to 683 College Ave. Mr Beattie? 28 years cr.' . perience is at your service. TYPI G AND mimeographing Secre. tarial Service Room 207 Hotel State College: Phbne 4906. BEWARE! Who is the whip of Sigma Nu? You better get him before he gets you! FOUND BLUE and SILVER Parker Pencil. Owner may have by paying for ad and calling 4908. Tom McCoy. ' LOST RED ZIPPER' Boots outside of 234 Sparks. ' If found please call Peggy, room 332 Thompson 5051-1097. :4:--mav cei :1 ZODIAC case. If found call Joe Omelchuck 7851. HAMILTON - WATCH with gold band in 204 Hort—Thursday morning. Reward. Call Dick Stanley at 3181. . UNIVERSITY OF Scranton Claw "Ring . downtown Sat. night. Call 6679. FOR RENT UNFURNISHED APARTMENT three rooms and bath': stove, refrigerator, heat, water are furnished. Dial 2336 after ,6 p.m. FOR SALE USED. ARMY Laminated Skis with bind .-- ings,• $l2. Call 6793. ' ONE PAIR "men's hockey ice skates, size 8. Phone 2049. Ask !for Charlie. ARMY SKIS-7-foot, 'white: with good bindings, and steel' edges. Excellent con dition. • PhOne 2174. KEEP • YOR trailer snug and warm with , a Coleman'. oil heater, model 666 A. Radi. affirm, ;circulating 81,000 BTU;s' an hour. Fuel-air control saves up to 25% on fuel, low draft burner, oversize heat exchanger, new, . functional air flow design. See it soon at Routs. 0. W. Routs & Son, N. Buckbout, State , College ; 6703. • WANTED RIDE TO Detroit over Christmas vacation. Will:, share expense in' driving., Call Frazier at :White Hall. Leave message. :. RIDE TO Kingston-Wilkes-Barre area Tuesday or Wednesday. Phone Ext. 77, ask for -Mimi. - WORK WANTED FIR • N, experienced,--will take care of fraternity .furnace • averholidays. - ::',`Refo cremes." : Phone 2262. -„ stainless steel