PAGE TWO Freshmen Must Enroll Penn State, like every land grant college, must set up, under authority of Congress, a Reserved Officers Training Corps program to provide capable leaders for times of national emergency. Penn State offers three branches of ROTC, the Army, Air Force, and Navy, to incoming students. Every physically fit male student, with certain exceptions, must serve in one branch of ROTC for-at Frosh May Attend MI Meeting The Mineral Industries Student Council will hold an open meet ing Tuesday night to which all freshmen enrolled in the School of Mineral Industries are invited, David Fleming, president, has an nounced. The meeting will be part of the Orientation Week functions car ried on in an attempt to acquaint the new students with their sur roundings. At the gathering the officers of and the representatives to_ the council will be introduced and their duties will be explained. The purpose of the group will be explained and the methods of electing representatives will be described. Students who should attend the meeting, according to Fleming, are those enrolled in the Mineral Industries departments of geol ogy, mineralogy, geophysics and geochemistry, meterology, geo graphy, mineral economics, min ing, mineral preparation, petrol eum and natural ,gas, fuel tech nology, etallurgy, and ceramics. Fleming also stated that the student council plans to publish a special edition of the MI News letter, its monthly bulletin, some time during the week to explain the workings of the council in further detail. Besides Fleming, a seventh semester student in ceramics, oth er, officers of the organization in clude Robert Decker, vice presi dent and a seventh semester stu dent in mineral preparation; and Norman -Bowne, secretary-treas urer and a seventh semester met eorologist. Two freshmen representatives to the student council will be elected sometime in November. Fleming said. They hold the post for all-four years of their college career unless they fail to main tain a 1.0 All-College average. They also forfeit it if they ad Welcome to Penn State TEX in ROTC least two years. The length of time that a student must serve is the biggest difference between Army or Air Force ROTC and Navy ROTC. Army or Air Force cadets must serve two years basic training. Two years of advanced training are optional to students found, acceptable. The Navy, on the oth er hand, has a four year advanced program which a student must finish once he starts. To get into Naval ROTC a stu dent must either take a national test before he arrives on campus, in which case he becomes a reg ular cadet, or he must apply for admission to the program no later than the third day of Orientation Week, in which case the student receives a contract status. A con tract cadet may be promoted to regular cadet by examination af ter the program gets underway. Naval contract cadets, like Army and Air Force cadets, re ceive 90 cents subsistence pay per day for every day of their junior and senior years, plus extra pay for summer duty. Naval regular students, however, receive $52 per month plus tuition and books for all four years of College. All Naval cadets must ta k e three summer cruises before they may be graduated. Army and Air Force cadets must take a four to eight week training period be tweeen their junior and senior years. Upon graduation, Naval regu lars become ensigns in the U.S. Navy, while the contract men be come ensigns in the Naval Re serve. Army and Air Force ad vanced cadets become second lieu tenants, upon graduation, in their reserve organizations. vance ahead of their class through attending summer school or some other means. Each year after the first, the class elects two more represen tatives. Thus there are four soph omores, six juniors, and eight seniors. These members of the council annually elect officers from their own ranks at a special meeting. The only qualification is that the presidential candidates be sixth semester students at the time of election. Also attending the meetings of and kEELER'S for ALL Your * K S . . . GIFT COVERS FOR ALL TEXTS. OT E 800K5... FOR ALL COURSES ' ' Cathaum Theatre Building - I i'''''' ''''.. ' • since 1926 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA PAPERS and SUPPLIES Frosh Men Represented By AIM The Association of Independent Men represents all male students living in the dormitories and in town in student goverriment on campus. Since freshmen are required, through College regulations, to live in the dormitories during their first year, they automati cally become members. Besides representing indepen dent men in student government, AIM sets up a social calendar during the year. Plans are under way now for a variety show, the "Dink Debut," to be held Satur day night for freshmen. Units Elect , The major governing body of the association, the AIM Board of Governors, is made up of rep resentatives from the four men's living areas—Nittany Dorms, Pol lock Circle Dorms, the West Dorms, and the town area. In the Nittany and Pollock Dorms, each unit elects one rep resentative to its respective coun cil. The liVing 'units in the West Dorms are the floor levels, with a representative from each level. The downtown area has been divided into wards, with students living in the wards electing their representative to Town Council. Shifflet AIM President The Board of Governors is made up of the council officers and representatives-at-large. The "at-large" members are elected to the board in proportion to the number of residents of each liv ing area. The AIM president, who has a seat on All-College Cabinet, is elected by the board. William Shifflet was elected president last spring. According to an AIM spokes man, the association is going ,to attempt this year to plan joint social activities with Leonides, the independent women's organ ization. Another major activity under consideration is an inde pendent weekend, he said. the council are the presidents of the various societies and honor ,aries in the Mineral Industries school and Dr. Edward Steidle, dean of the school. These repre sentatives bring matters to the at tention of the group and partici pate in debate on the . subjects, but have no voting power. The council is open to any rea sonable suggestions and requests them from the students it serves. College Maintains Employment Agency The student employment office, a branch of the College Place ment Service, is designed to help students find part-time employ ment during - the school year. The services of the student employment office, 112 Old Main, are available to all students who are in need of financial assistance while-attending the College. The office acts as a clearing house, re ferring students to part-time jobs on the campus, in town, and the surrounding territory. Contact Office Frequently Begun in 1947, the office was established as a permanent or ganization maintained by the Col lege The majority of the campus and local jobs come to the attention of the student employment office a day or two before the vacancy exists. Students are advised to keep in contact with the office by personal visits or phone calls at frequent intervals. It is difficult to predict what type of work a student may en gage in as his class schedule, study program, and specific skills are the determining factors in job references. Numerous Jobs for Men All students seeking part-time jobs should register with th e office at the beginning of each semester in order that their class schedules be kept accurate and other personal data be brought up to date. Positions most frequently avail able for men include washing windows, waxing floors, garden ing, waiting on tables, manual la bor, and a variety of jobs requir ing specific skills. Maintains Resort Division Jobs for women are more limit ed due to the restrictions of the places in town where women are employed. Work for women in cludes housework, baby sitting, work in the libraries, clerking, and general office jobs. In addition to the part-time job service, the student employment office maintains a camp and .re sort division which is set up to help students secure summer em ployment. Many students earn enough dpring the summer to pay for most of their college expenses during the fall term. The office also takes care of placing waiters in College dining commons, boarding houses, and fraternities, and arranges for stu dents to work in private homes in exchange for room and board. Register Early Some job opportunities are also available in the student-managed news, magazine, floral; dry clean ing, and service agencies. The flor al agency, started two years ago, (Continued on page Sixteen) MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1952 Registration For Freshmen On Thursday all semester • registration for all undergraduates will be held Wednesday through Saturday in Recreation Hall, based on an al phabetical listing released last spring by the office of the regis trar. Graduate students, under the same setup, may register at any time regardless of listings. Upperclassmen must register according to the alphabetical listing. Freshmen, however, -may register any time after 1 p.m. Thursday regardless of their alphabetical designation, provided registration will not conflict with the regular Orien tation Week schedule. Seniors and juniors will regis ter by the listing all day Wednes day and Thursday morning. Soph omores will register according to the listing Thursday afternoon and all day Friday. Special students will register the week of Sept. 14. Two year agriculture students may register any time after .1 Thursday. There will be strict adherence to the alphabetical designations for undergraduates, the College has announced. Students will not be admitted to classes for which they are not registered, according to the Col lege catalog. Students who have attended other colleges must first see the Dean of Admissions and have their admission status 'de termined by him before being eli gible to register, the catalog states. The . College reserves the right to impose a penalty - upon students who fail to register upon appointed . days. Prexy Receives Degree - President Milton S. Eisenhower has been awarded his tenth hon orary degree. The University - of Maine presented him with- a doc tor of laws degree this summer, the seventh he has received since his appointment as College Pres ident.