PA GP TWO and State Parties Select Candidates Lion Will The candidates for All-College, and senior and junior class offi cers will be selected by the Lion and State parties at clique meetings scheduled for 7 p.m., Sunday. The State group will meet in 119 Osmond, the Lion Party in 10 Sparks. Students must have attended one previous party meeting in order to be eligible for admission to the Sunday meetings. This is a ruling of the All-College elections code. Nominations for the off ices were opened last Sunday and will be continued this Sunday. Voting will be held following the closing of nominations. Nominations for All-College of fices made at the last State Party meeting were John Laubach for president, Howard Wright and Theodore Kimmel for vice presi dent, and William Griffith for secretary treasurer. State Party senior clas' nomi nations were made for James Phyler and Margaret Hepler for president and secretary treasurer, respectively. Richard Gibbs, Warren Haffner, and Richard Lemyre were nomi nated by the State group for the office of junior class president. Lemyre declined the presidential nomination lollowing his nomina tion for th vice presidency. Wil liam Wagner also was nominated for the position of vice president. Ann Quigley was nominated for the junior class secretary treas urer post. Although the Lion Party opened nominations for the same offices, no nominations were made. The Lion group will also close nominations for sophomore and fres h m an class clique posts. Thomas Umholtz was the only nomine for the sophomore clique chairmanship, while Norman Lev in was the sole nominee for the freshman clique chairman posi tion, Nominating speeches are also on the agenda for the State Party meeting. PSCA Project Calls for 100 Sales Workers Sales personnel for the Penn ,State Christian Association's Col lege Sportswear project will still be recruited today and tomorrow, Doris Price, personnel chairman, said yesterday. In all, appproximately 100 peo ple will be needed to work as clerks in the store during some of their free hours. Miss Price said. The PSCA is taking over Col lege Sportswear, Inc., corner of S. Allen street and E. Beaver av enue, next week to raise money for the PSCA treasury. Students volunteering their service will replace the regular sales person nel. This is the second year PSCA has undertaken this project. Students may volunteer their services by signing one of the lists in the TUB, Student Union, or PSCA office, 304 Old Main and indicating the hours duting which they will be able to work. A work schedule, showing the hours when volunteers will work, will be posted at the SU Sunday, Miss Price said. Schedules will also be placed in the PSCA office and at College Sportswear. Reese Named To Group Office Frank Reese was elected vice president of the' Town Council last night. William Shifflet was elect ed secretary treasurer of the group. Four men were elected to the AIM board of governors as repre sentatives at large. They were Walter. Supina, John Chappell, Howard Mason and Carl F. Wag ner. Thomas Taylor was appointed as social chairman of the council. Other committee appointments were publicity, Mason; publica tions, Robert Young; constitution, Mason, The council alloted $lO to AIM for delegates to the National In dependent Student 'Association convention at Oklahoma A&M April 10. A temporary committee was appointed to study housing condi tions pertaining to safety precau tions. Reese was appointed chair man of the committee. Player's Production Begins Fifth Weekend "Hedda Gabler," Players' In ternational Theater Month pro duction, begins its fifth week end at Center Stage, S. Allen street and Hamilton avenue, at 8 tonight. Tickets for the Ibsen drama, which bares :the motives and actions of a cold woman, are on sale at the Student Union desk in Old Main. They are 90 cents for. tonight's and $1.25 "for tomorrow night's perfor mance. PROVE MARINES PREFER KIWI 38io 1 • Covers Scuff Marks! • Gives Shoes Richer Color! KIVVI Shoe Polish (Keie.Ws•) BLACK • TAN • BROWN • BLUE • DARK TAN • MID.TAN OXBLOOD • MAHOGANY • CORDOVAN • NEUTRAL League to Hold Music, Speech Contests Today The d i s tr i c t contests of the Pennsylvania Music and Forensic League, a statewide organization of high schools which sponsor contests in music and speaking, will be held today at the College. Joseph F. O'Brien, professor of public speaking, is chairman' of the advisory . committee for the district speech contests. Harold J. O'Brien, speech instructor., and Edward Gilkey, graduate student in speech, are also members of the committee. Judges for the speech division will be drawn from the men's de bate squad, women's debate squad, classes in oral interpreta tion, and classes in radio. Head quarters for the speech contests will be 309 Sparks. Woodwind Concert! Postponed Until May The Philadelphia Wood wind Quintet concert, sponsored by the State College Choral , Society, and scheduled for Monday has been postponed, Mrs. E. C. Henry, con cert chairman, announced yester day. The quintet will appear instead at 8 p.m. May 12 in the kigh school auditorium. The grape was first used by the Egyptians, and then by the Lake Dwellers of the Bronze Age in Italy. It was first taken into China in 120 BC: Ripta icirv. ". 71Tiv " ...: ....,..:... !5 " ~,, WC, .k....X.W.-. fHE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Democrats Choose Six Organizers Six co-ordinators for living. dis tricts were chosen by' the Young Democrats Tuesday night at their first meeting. Other co=ordinators and offiL cers will be chosen at the next meeting which will be held before Easter, according to Joseph Stra tos and Kenneth Doverspike, tem porary chairmen. The co-ordinators are David Kresge and John Moore, fraterni ties; Paul Hoffman and Lewis Shatz, Nittany-Pollock; and Nor man Duffy and Ronald Spangler, West DOrms. Stratos, said the major aims of the group, which is affiliated with state and national Young Demo crats organizations, is to get stu dents interested in politics. The group plans to sponsor po litical rallies. Stratos said there was a possibility of having Sena tor Estes Kefauver of Tennessee as a speaker. The ~Young Demo crats will join with townspeople in sponsoring Richardson Dil worth, Philadelphia district attor ney, as speaker for a Jackson- Jefferson Day dinner early in, May. Princeton ,Man to Speak Fred Keefe, a student at the Princeton Theological Seminary, will speak at 7:30 tonight in 405 Old Main at the meeting of the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow ship. His topic will be "The Gib raltor of the Christian Faith." Chapel to Hear Prexy *n 'Spiritual Security' President Milton S. Eisenhower will speak on "Spirituel Security" in Chapel at 10:55 a.m. Sunday in Schwab Auditorium. The service is a part of the Greek Week program, and will be attended by groups of frat ernity men and sorority women. Stanley Wengert, president of Interfraternity Council, will read the Old Testament lesson for the service. The Chapel choir, under the di rection of Mrs. Willa Taylor, will sing "Herzliebster Jesu" (Cruger); "0 Heart Subdued with Grieving" (Brahms), and "Cast Thy Burden Upon the Lord" (Mendelssohn). Organ music by George Ceiga will include "Hear, Oh God the Holy Ghost" (Bach) as prelude, "In Peace and Joy I Now Depart" (Bach) as offertory, and "We All Believe in One God, The Creator" (Bach) as postlude. United Jewish Appeal! Collection Totals $2600 Approximately $2600 in pled ges and cash has been received to date by the United Jewish Ap peal fund, Sara Bassel, co-chair man, said yesterday. Miss Bassel said money may be turned into captains or at the Hil lel Foundation any time. The goal on campus this year is $4200. CLASS OF '52 ENGINEERS AT LINK AVIATION! Engineering major's—there's a line career for you at LINK AVIATION. Excellent wages, liberal health and life insurance coverage, bonus and vacation plans. Moderately priced on-the-job meals, attractive homes and new apartmentsvithin minutes o(fhe LINK plant. 1 • , ~ , Mr. Robert Coyner •,_.\ -' - of Link Aylotion will be on your campu s on APRIL Bth Ask ony Serviceman LINK AVIATIO WELL-PAID JOBS FOR BINGHAMTON, N.Y. Vegetation Coated, With. Oil Spray To Kill,lnsects A mixture 'of oil and water is being sprayed on the 582 . 8 trees, 17,258 'shrubs, 14;350' linear feet of hedges, and one and one-third acres of ground cover plants on the campus, according to Walter W. Trainer, supervisor of land scape construction and mainten ance. • One part •of a commercial oil is used to 25 parts of water in the spray, Tr ain e r said. The liquid, when sprayed on trees and shrubs, serves the two-fold pur pose of killing both insect eggs and dormant scale insects. The eggs and scales are destroyed by a burning caused by the acid like. residue left when the water evaporates. College to Host ¶BLA Group The 'first annual state conven tion of the Future Business Lead ers of America will be held Sat urday at the College with repre sentatives from 17 high school chapters expected to attend. Registration for the delegates will be at 9 a.m. Saturday in 405 Old Main where the first general session will be held. F.13.L.A. state; officers will be elected at this time. Following the general session a luncheon will be held at 1 p.m. at the Allencrest Tearoom. Th e F.t.L.A. delegates will then be taken on a tour of the campus. Chapel Speaker Milton S. Eisenhower Services Your Bank Offers You FIRST NATIONAL BANK Federal Deposit Insurance Corpbration State College , - Pennsylvania • _ . MACH 28,1952 wo ROT Cadets Visit West' Point Raymond Johnson and Edward Hartnett, senior,Army ROTC ca dets at . the College, left last night' for West Point N.Y. where, they wilt represent Penn State/ in a special- program which is part of the 150th anniversary of West Point. The two will join 112' other ROTC students from other 'cal leges and universities in the Unit ed States, and will live as cadets in cadet barracks while at West Point. Each ROTC student 'will have a cadet as an escort. The escorts will take their gdests_ to classes and meals. This is one of several visits which will be made by over 400 ROTC students to the academy on various weekends. The program is designed to • promote mutual understanding of civilian and reg ular officer training programs in coordination with the anniversary observance. Johnson, a cadet lieutenant colonel, and Hartnett, cadet col onel and student regiment com mander, were chosen by President Milton S. Eisenhower and Colonel Lucien E. Bolduc ( professor of Military Science, and Tactics. Johnson was recently named as the outstanding Army ROTC cadet student in the United States to be recommended for a regular U.S. Army commission. Twelve Named To Community Concert Group Twelve new members, repre senting the College faculty, staff and the, community, have been elected to the Board of Directors of the State College Community Concert Association. The regulations adopted by the present Board of Directors specify that six directors will be chosen each year for a two-year term. Six 'of the 12 chosen this year, however, will serve for one year. They will all take office May 1. Those el ect e d for two-year terms. are Leland Rhodes, Hum mel Fishburn; Dr.- Frederick Mat son, Mrs. Willa Taylor, Mrs. J. C. Hess,. and Mrs. Lyman Jackson. The new directors for one-year terms' are Dr. Henry Brunner, Dean of Women Pearl 0. Weston, Dr. Henry Yeagley, Dr. Robert Weber, Mrs. Elizabeth Reynolds, and Mrs.- - E. S. Roscoe. Dr. Matson was re-elected' as president of the association,-while Rhodes was named vice presi dent. Other elected officers are Wilm e r Kenworthy, secretary; George Donovan, treasurer; and Woodrow Bierly, publicity direc tor. Checking accounts , Savings accounts Safe deposit vault Trust department Member