1 ALOE TWO West Parking As Spring Carnival Site The West parking area, which lies directly behind Sigma Chi and Sigma Nu, will be the site of this year's spring carnival, James Geffert, Spring Week committee chairman, announced yesterday. The carnival will be held May 15. Geffert said the area will accommodate at least 100 booths. :ered in last year's carnival, which was held on the Osmond parking lot. The Osmond area was not available this year because of construction work. All Penn State student organ izations are eligible to sponsor booths in the carnival, as long as they are of an entertaining ',na ture. Booth applications are due by noon, April 19. A $2O deposit is required with each application. Grand Prize Winner ; Approximately 55 booths were en Frosh Council Recommended Alterations Four recommendations for changes in the Women's Student Government Association consti tution pertaining to Freshman Council were made at a meeting of the council Monday night. These are: • 1. Presidents an d vice presi dents of freshman living units will be voting members and the two freshman senators will be ex-offi cio members of the coupcil. The constitution states that only pres idents shall be members. 2. Three officers will be elected in each living unit—president, vice president, an d secretary treasurer. 3. If the elected president be comes ineligible, the vice presi dent will take her place and a new vice president will be elected. 4. Council meetings will be open to freshman women. Students May Apply, For Vacation Work " Students who will be in State College during Easter vacation and desire jobs should report when they will be available to the Student Employment office, 112 Old Main, John J. Huber, supervisor of part-time student employment, said yes terday. Huber also said that stu. dents who registered for em ployment an d who haven't filled out registration forms with their new schedules should do this immediately. Week Greek Civic, Religious This is the second in the ser ies of articles explaining the Greek Week pr ogr a m. The Week starts this Saturday and will be concluded April 5 with the IFC-Panhel Ball. Religion plays an important role in every fraternal organiza tion. With this in mind the frater nities and sororities have chosen as the theme for the week, "Civic Responsibility," and emphasis is being placed on the observance of the principles and concepts of brotherhood that have .b een achieved in college. The committee is encouraging better fraternity and s or or it y church attendance. Each Greek president has been asked to list the members of his group who will be attending Church March 30 and the name of the church they will be attending. A member of the church at tendance .committee stated yester day that over 500 fraternity men and about 380 sorority women have signed , the list to attend church. He said further that the ministers were very enthusiastic about the idea and felt it was an excellent step in the right direc tion. Special recognition for the visiting students will be made in the services. Egli to Talk Today To Quarterback Club The Penn State Quarterback club will meet at 11:45 a.m. to day at the Hotel State College. John Egli, assistant basketball coach„ will talk on the NCAA basketball playoffs held at Ral eigh, N.C., and Ed Sulkowski, boxing coach, will narrate movies on intercollegiate boxing. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Area Set Proceeds of the carnival are turned over to some charity, Geffert said. Over $2600 was grossed by the carnival last year. Geffert said that expenditures for booth construction and prizes up to $2O could be deducted from the gross profits of a booth. The booth turning over the greatest net amount after the carnival will be the grand prize *winner. Prizes have not yet been an nounced. Other features of Spring Week include the crowning of Miss Penn State and the All-College He-Man. The latter will reign as king of the ensuing Spring Week activities. Further information on the Miss Penn State and He- Man contests will be released soon, Geffert said. Spring Week Committee Besides Geffert, the Spring Week committee consists of Mil ton Bernstein and Clair George, business co-chairmen; John Al lison, booth chairman; Franklin Kelly, assistant booth chairman; John Stoudt, arrangements man ager; Paul Asplundh, assistant arrangements manager; David Bischoff, parade chairman; Janet Herd, coronation director; Jules Lippert and Marion A. Morgan, special events co-chairman; Car roll Chapman, publicity chairman; James Schulte, assistant . public ity chairman; Jane Steiber, hat day director; and Mary Coy, as sistant hat day director. • Stress Activities ROTC Names 16 to Honorary The names of 16 junior pledges to Pi Tau Pi Sigma, ROTC Signal Corps honorary, were announced yesterday by Vaughn Lang, com mander. The first pledge class of the new ly-formed unit will be accepted as pledges until the next meet ing, April 7. Formal acceptance is contingent upon the, acceptance by the unit of a paper related to a phase of Signal Corps activi ties, Lang said. Named to the unit, were Wil liam Beatty, Richard Biddle, Wil liam Crawford, John Goettel, Au gust Greyhosky, Harry Hadley, David Hallenbeck, James Harp ster, William Leonard, Peter Man del, Donald Michelsen, Paul Mil ler, David Odiorne, James Schulte, Burton Suder, and Eugene Svir bley. Nominations -- (Continued from page one) Gwynn are finalists for WRA 'sec retary-treasurer and Patricia Col gan and Virginia Hinner, for in tramural chairman. Whiner of the title of Quill Girl will be announced at the Matrix Table dinner next Monday. Candidates for WRA president who will compete in the finals tomorrow are Mabel Marple and Meredith Williamson. Beate Maron and Marie Wag ner - are candidates for assistant intramural chairman and Virginia Breneman and Barbara Dennis ton, for town senator. 4 ' TWO. ENGINEERING STUDENTS, Robert'.Oiler (left) and William Noyes (center) pour molten aluminum into a floor mold with the assistance of Harry ,lioutz, the shop technician. The picture was takdn in the Foundry, which is located between Engi neering E and the Mechanical iEngramering building. It is here that mechanical and industrial engineering students get actual experience in foundry operation. Engineers Operate Foundry on Cqmpus Just for the record, there is a real honest-to-goodness foundry for melting iron and aluminum alloys and giving mechanical and industrial engineering students experience in foundry operation. The Foundry, as a building and a classroom, is located between Kngineering E and, the Mechanical Engineering building. And Tribunal Fines Dozen Parkers For Violations Twelve students were sentenced last night by Tribunal for park ing violatoins. Four were sus pended and one was referred to the Dean of Men's office. The student whose sentence was referred to the Dean of Men's office had previously pleaded guilty to six parking violations, and was charged with four new violations. David Mutchler, chair man of Tribunal, said that Tribu nal would make recommendations on the student's driving privi ledges. He was also asked to pay a back fine. In another case, a stud e n t whose home is in State College and whose mother is an employee of the College, received a fine and part suspension for seven vio lations after his mother's parking permit had been removed from the car. A third student was charged with six. violations for parking on Burrowes Road while his car was disabled. He paid a three dollar fine. Five other violators each paid fines of one dollar. 13th Gridiron Banquet To Be Held Tonight The thirteenth annual Grid iron Banquet will be held at 6:30 tonight at the Nittany Lion Inn. About 100 College and town personalities will be roasted in satirical skits by members of Sigma Delta Chi, national pro fessional journalistic fraternity, at the lampoon dinner. Guests of honor will be President Mil ton S. Eisenhower and Louis H. Bell, director of public infor mation. Camp Assignments Given to ROTC Assignments for Army ROTC summer camp were announced Monday by Col. Lucien E. Bol duc; professor of Military Science and' Tactics.' The Infantry cadets will be sent to Fort Meade, Md., where Col. Bolduc will be camp com mander; the Signal Corps cadets will go to Camp Gordon, Ga.; and Engineer students will be assigned to Fort Bolivar, Va., Col. Bolduc said. By 808 LANDIS strange to say, it is called the Foundry. It will become more conspicious after April 3 when the students begin melting and casting iron. If the wind is right, there will be lots of black smoke to ease any doubts of its exis tence. The Foundry consists of al 1 / 2 -ton cupola (stack furnace), an alumi num and brass crucible furnace, a core oven, a two-ton crane, ladles, and bench, floor, and machine molds. It is equipped to make castings of iron, aluminum and brass. The biggest, hottest, smokiest thing in the place is the cupola— a green, cylindrical-shaped fur -1 nace for melting iron. It can melt iron at the rate of four tons an hour. It takes from .1 1 / 2 to two hours to get it fired; EaCh pouring is called a heat. The students cast three basic shapes—two cylinders with dif ferent altitudes and a cube—and turn them over to the machine tool laboratory for students learn ing machine operation. The most' interesting develop ment in the' Foundry is the ex periments in "C" processing done by Walter Yahn, an industrial engineering senior. He is experi menting independently on a Foun dry Education Foundation schol arship. Yahn's work has caught the attention of Gordon White, the personnel director of the Gen eral Motors foundry diVlsion. The so-called "C" process that Yahn is working on is the latest development in foundry casting ind promises to revolutionize the field. The "C" process is a new pro ceSs for making sand molds and cores suitable for the production of precision casting in a wide variety of metals. (Continued on page eight) wEpNpqr)At,- MARCH 26, °195, AIM. Board Favors Ag Assessment The Board of Governors of the Assobiation of Independent Men last night voted in favor of the 25 cent assessment to aid in sup port of the College judging teams pr6posed by Marilyn Levitt on All-College Cabinet. William Griffith of the , Agri culture Student Council spoke to the group and presented a mimeo graphed compilation of statistics on the learns and the costs in olved. The motion received a 14 to 2 vote. in favor of the assess ment. In other action taken, the board passed a motion appropriating $3ll for the delegation of inde pendents 'going to the National Independent Student Association convention in Oklahoma. To help ease the tight budget restrictions on the trip, $lO each was pledged by representatives of the Town, West Dorm, and Pol lock Councils. Griffith explained that as the situation now exists members - of the judging teams must pay their own expenses for food and insur ance while traveling during'com petition and all, their expenses on practice. judging trips. • With an assessment of all the students, he said, only the costs of practice judging blips would Still be paid from the perstifial 'funds of team members. ' Ag Fee Vetoed By Eng Council Engineering Student . Council last night voted in a straw- vote against the 25 cent student fee requested by the , Agricultural Student Council to support their judging teams. . , The vote came after much dis cussion in which - members ex pressed the feelings that the judging took the form of an elec tive that was in direct support of their 'studies and that if: the judging teams were to be fi nanced, the en g ineering f i d trips should be also. The committee in charge of the Engineering Open House to , be held May 10 announced that the Garfield Thomas Water Tunnel would be open for public inspec tion at that time. Front License Tag is Illegal in 1952 Motorists are warned that it is illegal under the Motor Vehicle Code to use, one of last year's license plates as a replacement for the plate that will be missing frorri the front of Pennsylvania cars during 1952-53, according to George F. Bohn, president of the Centre County Motor. Club. - Bohn said that the single tag will be displayed on the rear -of the vehicle. He also warned motor ists that the deadline for obtain ing the new license is midnight Monday. From the factory to you means Ipwest possible prices on MILITARY INSIGNIA Balfour's at the "A" Store TUXEDO RENTALS Bur's MEN'S SHOP Opposite Old Main