-PAGE EIGHT Cabinet Seats Ail-College Five seats on All-College Cabinet are included in the nine offices which will be at stake when the Lion and State parties lock political horns for the ninth time in the All-College elections. Wednesday and Thursday. Chief interest in the elections will be centered around the race for the offices of All-College, senior, and junior class presidents all three of which are cabinet ; positions. The other two cabinet . 1 A e f* I I positions will go to winners of I Off!I /llH'lOln the races for All-College vice • llwlW president and secretary treasurer. _ q • ■ Also at stake are the positions |Q (jQ iITIDDSCI of vice president and secretary . * r treasurer of the senior and junior f mm • classes . „ x e Of Equipment Parties Hope for Sweeps ■ • Another seat on cabinet will be filled in a non-political part of the elections. The--victor in the contest for the office of presi dent of the Athletic Association will also earn a cabinet position. Also to be elected next week are the vice president and secretary treasurer of the Athletic Asso ciation. The vice president of the AA will be the runner-up for the presidency. The State Party is hoping to repeat last spring’s sweep of all nine offices, while the Lions are striving to win back the prestige they had in the spring of 1949 and 1950 when they made a clean sweep of all nine offices. Lions Sweep Two . The two parties met for the first time in the spring of 1948. The Lions, then a new party formed following the disbandon ment of the defunct Nittany-Inde pendent group, took only one post during the election, and only one again in the fall of that year. The following spring saw a complete switch, however, with the 'Lion group taking all nine offices. The State Party retaliated in the fall of ’49, winning all six offices open, but the Lions came back with another complete sweep in the spring of ’5O. In the fall of that year the State group took four of six offices, with each party seeing a presidential candi date elected, Election Dates Changed Last spring, in a “do or die” effort, the Staters left the Lions in the cold, by taking all nine positions. In the fall, however, the two parties split evenly, with the presidencies of the freshman and sophomore classes going to the Lion candidates. In the eight times the two par ties have opposed each other, the State Party has captured 32 offi ces while the Lion Party took 28 positions. This spring’s elections were originally scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday but were moved back one day by the All-College elections committee at the request of both parties in order to allow more time for political campaign ing. Registration (Continued from page one) course cards, a white one for the registrar and a pink one which will eventually form the instruc tor’s class roll. Minor schedule difficulties may be solved by merely changing sections at the department sta tions. The adviser’s approval on such changes will not be neces sary. Any major schedule difficulties will be handled by a school rep resentative who will also be sta tioned in Rec Hall. This repre sentative will have the authority within the policies and regula tions of the school to modify the schedule signed by the adviser. Telephones will be available at these school stations for calling advisers and other offices. Once the students’ schedule has been arranged satisfactorily he' will complete the schedule on all the official forms and will'write his name and matriculation num ber on the pink cards, but not on the white ones. The student will then go to the other stations where the various forms and cards will be taken from him. Williams emphasized the fact that students who do not attend the first sessions of their classes may lose their priority to enroll in those sections. The vacancies would be filled by other students who specified a desire to take the course, but who could not do so because the section was filled. . at Stake Elections By DAVE PELLNITZ All-American Airways, which in recent years served State Col lege on a temporary basis, an nounced yesterday that all of its equipment at the State College Air Depot will be removed by May 1. The move was in line with the company’s recent announcement that it could no longer serve the area because of the inadequate facilities at the air depot, Colin H. Mclntosh, vice president of operations for the airline, said. The equipment was installed prior to the airline’s first use of the depot in June, 1949. Robert M. Love, president of All-American, recently announced the decision not to serve the area any longer on a temporary basis. All-American served State Col lege for six months, from May to October, last year. Scabbard and Blade Installation of officers and a formal dinner-dance will be held by Scabbard and Blade, Military Science honorary, at the Auto port tonight. CLASSIFIEDS MISCELLANEOUS IF YOUR typewriter needs repairs, just’ call 2492 or brine: machine to 633 W. College Ave. Mr. Beatties* 28 years ex perience is at your service. BROWN GABARDINE overcoat, Alligator make at Corner Room Sat. night of Houseparty Weekend. Phone 4402, ask for Dom. WILL THE person who took the wrong tan overcoat from Theta Xi Saturday of IFC Weekend please call Gordon James, Nittany 26. I have yours. t- WRIST WATCH, man’s Waltham, lost be* tween Pollock Dorm and McElwain. If found, return to Student Union. Reward. PLEASE * RETURN Kirby Stanat’s gray topcoat taken at Delta Tau Delta April 4. I have yours. BLACK HANDBAG containing com pact with initials K.J.R. at Phi Kappa on IFC Weekend. Finder please calb 308 Sim mons. CAR KEYS in small leather case on Wed nesday night downtown. Please call Gla zer, ext. 543 or 4012. HELP WANTED SHORT ORDER cook for weekend eve nings. Needed immediately. Call Bennett Skyview, Phone 6591.' MATURE YOUNG men for positions as counsellors in fine Maine camp. Write: Maury Schreiber, 2609 Fairview Ave., Baltimore 15, Md. SMALL, REASONABLY priced apartment for young grad couple. Summer school and fall semester. Call Shirley Holt, 2593. USED TUX about size 37 or 38. Call Bob Eames ext. 790, BORROW, BUY or rent tails. Size 40-long. Call Pat, 127 Atherton. 1951 MODEL Philco * Portofonic, 3-speed reversible needle phonograph with built in amplifier. Perfect condition. $25. Fran, 414 Simmons. . ’ 1939 PLYMOUTH coupe priced to sell quick. Phone State College 7000. IMPORTED ENGLISH Tweed,sport jacket, size 38, light color. Phone 6814. MUST SELL 25 ft. Chicago streamline trailer with room attached. Has refriger ator, desk and sleeps four. Also half of garage. Phone Andy Crooks 6593 after five. MOVIE OUTFIT. Keystone K-8 camera w/case. Universal Bmm 500 watt pro jector* w/case. Call Guy Warman,- 3972. FORD, 1949 convertible fully equipped with overdrive, white sidewalls, etc. New lacquer paint, new seat covers, top and tires very\ good. This car must be seen to be appreciated. Call Guy Warman, 3972. COMPLETE SET of mechanics auto tools. Call 7958 noon or evenings. 1948 CHEK MOTORCYCLE for sale or trade on early model Ford car. Approxi mate trade value $125.00. Cycle is Indian serviced, economical to operate. . Phone State College 2500 after 7 p.m., ask for Bob. “' THE- DAILY' COLLEGIAN. STATE'COLLECT.' PENNSYLVANIA LOST WANTED FOR SALE Stumping - (Continued from page one) . . during the noon meal today. State Party candidates will be at the party mixer tonight. Lion Party candidates will appear in the Mc- Allister Hall, Atherton Hall, and Thompson Hall' dining halls dur ing the evening meal today. - Lion candidates will visit Sim mons and McElwain dining halls during the evening meal tomor row. - Men * candidates will canr vass the Nittany and Pollock dormitory areas tomorrow night. Women candidates will visit Mc- Elwain Hall, Thompson Hall, Sim mons Hall, and Woman’s Building tomorrow night. State Party All-College and junior class men candidates will visit the West Dorms tomorrow night. Junior class women candi dates will visit Woman’s Building and Grange Dorm- and senior class women candidates will visit Grange , Dorm. Senior men candi dates will visit the Nittany area. 11 m Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests "THEY BAI TO THE WALL. He’s fast—he’s smart—he covers ground—he’s a real varsity outfielder! The ‘quick-trick’ cigarette mildness tests were almost too hot to handle, but he didn’t make an error. He realized that cigarette mildness can’t be judged in slam-bang fashion. x Millions of smokers throughout America know, too, tjiere’s a'fliorough way to judge cigarette mildness! It’s the sensible test.. .the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels on a - day-after-day, pack-after-pack 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... ~ $ m i Camel leads all oilier brands byte/fie ns Poly Sci Club to Meet . The Political Science club will discuss, “Political Science: An Art or a' Science?” at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pi Lambda- Phi house. The meeting is open to the public. / ; Plans are being made to have. John Laubach, State, Party All- College presidential candidate, speak tomorrow, over radio sta tion WMAJ. Th'e party steering committee will meet at -2 p.m. tomorrow at Chi Phi. Political campaigning will be permitted during the All-College elections'Wednesday and Thurs day, Carroll Chapman, chairman of the All-College elections com mittee, has announced. ,-S ta t e Party officials said candidates will campaign until midnight Wednes day. Lion Party campaigning will end at-noon Thursday. -• Men students may also vote for Athletic Association' officers dur ing the elections in the Old Main lobby.. Voting will take place from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on both days. j&juBSKjXMS 39... TH FLYCATCHER After all the Mildness Tests . SATURDAY,’ APRIL 19,-1952 Priestly Series Opens Monday “Nucl .ar Transformations” will be the topic of Dr. Joseph W. Kennedy’s opening lecture df the 26th annual Priestley lecture ser ies at 7:30 p.m. Monday in 119 Osmond. vDr. Kennedy, chairman of the Department of Chemistry at Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., and a former chemist and metallurgy expert at the Los Alamos • atomic laboratory,, will present' the topic as the first of a series of -five lectures about the general" subj e ct “Radioactive Atoms and Isotopic Tracers.” The series will continue-through Fri day. , Dr. W. Conrad Fernelius, pro fessor, and head of the Chemistry department, will be the chairman for the lecture. An orphan car is one that is no longer manufactured. msasßsssmm CJJ OTI ' H
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers