PAGE • EIGHT Oliver Asks Contributions For Korea. War Orphans Are you getting a cashmere sweater for Christmas? Or perhaps that grey flannel suit you've been hinting about? Or maybe the wool jersey dress that you've been dying to get because it's "just made for you?" Let's hope you get all of orphans don't have anything Dorm Food Committee Organized An All-College Cabinet dormi tory foods committee, which will handle students' food complaints and suggestions and plan menus for dormitory dining halls is now in operation, according to William Griffith, chairman of the dormi tory food service committee of Mt. Alto Student Encampment. Two members of the committee met for the first time Thursday afternoon with Mildred Baker, supervisor of the College food service, to approve menus for the week following Christmas vaca tion. Two members will meet every week with Miss Baker. Dining Halls Represented Expecting to become an official All-College. Cabinet committee at the next cabinet meeting, the committee will meet every Wed nesday afternoon to discuss com plaints and suggestions of resi dents of the dormitories. Members of the group are chair man, Gail Green, Laßue Stelene, Robert Clancy, Ruth Israel, Eva lyn Horwin, Lewis Goslin, Joyce Johnson, and Sara Jane McKnight. Each dining area is represented. Complaints to Be Handled Forms are being prepared with which students can send their complaints and suggestions to members of the committee. These will soon be distributed. Blanks on the forms call for the name, address, complaint, and suggestion of •the student. It is important that suggestions as well as com plaints be made, Griffith said. If complaints received by the group deal with an area problem they will be taken up with area food supervisors. Otherwise they will be handled by the committee as a whole, working with Miss Baker. Most members of the committee are the chairmen of the food com mittees of the various living area student government organizations. The committee will present a report at the next meeting of cab inet. Students Plan -- (Continued from page two) days. Hundreds of thousands of Americans wi 11 involuntarily spend Christmas in his native land Korea. A veteran at celebrating Christ mas in the United States is Ngy yen Ban from Vietnam, junior in agricultural engineering; and the only Vietnamese in Pennsylvania. He's been in the United States two years, has spent a typical American Christmas with an American family, and this year NOW ON SALE! 01!r• The Daily Collegian offers to you for only $2.00 a semester's subscription for those on your Christmas gift list. It will be on sale in the Collegian of fice in Carnegie Hall. Stop in and have a GIFT CERTIFICATE sent to that friend and solve your Christmas gift problem. these and more, but the Korean War like this to look forward to. In fact, there are quite a few things they don't want to "look forward to." Seoul Orphans Starving Dr. Robert T. Oliver, head of the Speech department, has been an adviser to Syngman Rhee, president of the Republic of Ko rea,. and to the Korean delegation to the United Nations. Recently returned from Korea, Dr. Oliver has this comment: "Visiting orphanages in Seoul, I saw children of four and five years of age so starved that their ankles were no lar g e r than thumbs. Over 70,000 of Seoul's million inhabitants have no roofs over their he ads in this cold winter. Warm clothing and con centrated foods such as powdered eggs and milk, peanut butter, and vitamin tablets will save a great many lives." Dr. Oliver expressed the hope that students and faculty alike would contribute unsparingly to the clothing drive being sponsored by the Women's Student Govern ment Association to help these people. Old Main is Collection Point The WSGA drive will last from Jan. 8 to 15, thus giving students a chance to look in the backs of closets over Christmas vacation for old clothing that hasn't been discarded. Collection boxes will be placed in women's dormitories and in the lobby of Old Main. The clothing 'will be turned over to the Friends' Society, where it will be mended and sent to Korea. Speech Prof To Be on Air Dr. Bruce M. Sigenthaler, as sistant professor of clinical speech and supervisor of the adult speech therapy program, will be inter viewed by Sidney Archer at 9:30 tonight on the WMAJ program, "Spotlight on State." Archer will also interview two patients from the speech and hearing program, William Jeglenski and Catherine Caporuscio. The seventh in the Radio _Guild series, "Call Card," will be pre sented at 9:45 tonight over WMAJ. Patricia Hathaway will re a d Charles Tazwell's Christmas story, "The Littlest Stork." Other mem bers of the cast are Madeline Sharp, Sally Lowry, Jay Murphy, Emily Snyder, Frank Hutchinson, and Robert Zimmerman. Vet Certifications Veterans training under public law 550 must turn in their com pleted monthly certifications by Saturday at G 4 Willard instead of 6 Old Main. is going to New York with friends for the holidays. "After all the hard work and running around they do all year," said Ban, "Americans deserve the vacation Christmas gives them." Batty Totirgiatt THE DAILY COLLEGIAN: STATE• COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA IFC to Set Pledge Date For Frosh Second semester freshmen may not be pledged by a fraternity un til a date to be set after the Christmas recess by the Interfra ternity Council. This date will be sometime after averages from last semester have been released. Anyone pledged by a fraternity must have a 1.0 average for• the previous semester, the IFC rush ing code specifies. Arthur Rosfeld, president of the IFC, said yester= day that the 1.0 average rule will definitely be enforced. The aver ages of all pledges will be check ed with a master list in the Dean of Men's office. First semester freshmen ma y not be pledged until sometime in their second semester. This date is decided upon by the IFC and is a date after the issuing of first semester grades. A' rushing list of students who have expreSsed a desire to affili ate with a fraternity has been mailed to all houses by the Dean of Men's. office. The 16-page list was the result of a joint survey by the office and the IFC general rushing" committee and contains names, addresSes, curriculum, and other information of students in terested in fraternities. An additional list of students who indicated a preference for a particular house during the sur vey has also been prepared by the Dean of Men's office and is available in 109 Old Main. Lab Papers Are Published Two papers by members of the lonosphere Research Laboratory have been published in national scientific journals. "A Method of Solving the Wave Equation in a Region of Rapidly Varying Complex Refractive In dex," by John Gibbons Jr., pro fessor of physics, and •R o b e r t Schrag, instructor in electrical en gineering, appeared in the October issue of the Journal of Applied Physics. "Theoretical Group Heights of 150 Ke/s Radio Waves Vertically Incident on the lonosphere," by Dr. Norman Davis, associate pro fessor of engineering mechanics, appeared in the Journal of Atmo spheric and Terrestrical Physics. George Washington's estate was valued at over $5,000,000 when he died. PROGRAMS COMMERCIAL PRINTING Pugh . & Beaver . State College o Cokon Is a rogisteriscl track-mark. Student Fined For Misconduct Charles L. Brobeil, first semes ter commerce major, was fined $61.90 by Justice of the Peace Guy G. Mills yesterday for dis orderly conduct. Brobeil, who, police say, had altered his matriculation card, was arrested on S. Pugh street at 1:30 a.m. yesterday. Police said Brobeil was creating a disturbance on the street and in jail after his arrest. During the hearing, it was discovered that he had altered his matriculation card 'to make it appear that he was 21. Cabinet Council NaMes Projects Orientation Week evaluation, a survey of student rooms in State College, and study of a National Student Association travel bur eau were selected for immediate consideration by Cabinet Projects Council Tuesday night. Committees for each project were organized at the meeting. The committees will meet early in January. Irvin White, council president, announced that the board of directors will meet Jan. 8. A census of airplanes by the Civil Aeronautics administration reveals there 'are more single engine planes in use than any other type. CLASSIFIEDS RIDES AND PASSENGERS WANTED RIDE TO Philadelphia Friday Dec. 19. Call Atherton 46. RIDE FOR 2 to Pittsburgh on Friday Dec 19 after noon. Ext. 77 Connie or Barbara RIDE TO Nutley, N.J. or vicinity anytime after 11 a.m. Friday. Call Dave at 3411. RIDER WHO will help with driving to Columbus, Ohio or Indianapolis afternoon of Dec. 20. Call 7113. RIDE FOR two to Pittsburgh Friday. Dec 19. Call Weber ext. 275. RIDE WANTED from N.Y.C. to S.C. to return by Jan. 6 at about midnight. Call 412 McElwain. RIDE WANTED to N.Y.C. Saturday. Call Barry 6789 or 4850, Room 40. RIDE FOR two to Philadelphia Dec. 20 and return Jan. 5 or 6. Call Jessie 3372. GIRL'S CLASS Ring, '53, at or near Osmond Lab Tuesday p.m. Initials L.S. Reward. Call ext. 2027 between 8-12, 1-5. Ask for Pete. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY book, left in 220 Sparks last Friday morning. Please re turn to S.U. PARKER 51 Pen—green with silver top— between Simmons and Buckout. Call Evelyn 407 Simmons. 1952 VANDERGRIFT High School class ring. Initials G.E.S. inside. Reward! Phone Don Pisarcik 5051-286. SLIDE RULE Log-Log Deeitrig in black leather case Friday morning between College Avenue, Osmond. Call Red, 4937. PICKETT SLIDE Rule, metal; before Thanksgiving near Osmond lab. Call Don Wadsworth, 2594. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Altoona THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, -1952 LOST u sThere's fun-filled confusion 0 .1952. THE COCA•COIA COMPM Electronic Club Offers Course in Radio, Code The Volunteer Naval Reserve Electronic Platoon 4-3, which is open to men and women who are eligible to join the naval reserve, conducts classes in radio theory, transmitter procedure, and morse code. Many veterans of World War II and the Korean War belong to the club. Meetings are held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. every Monday in 300 Engineering E. Because members belong to the reserves, they may be called to active duty. However, the chance of this is very slim, ac cording to Lt. Francis H. yonker, of the electronic division of en gineering at the College. No physical . examination is re quired in order to join, and the organization is in no way con nected, with the NROTC unit on campus, Lt. Yonker said. The club uses two radio sta tions: K3NRI, licensed by th e Federal Communications Commis sion and N4GAC, an amateur sta tion. The operation of these sta tions is the main purpose of the club. All-College Cabinet There will be no All-College Cabinet meeting tonight. Cab inet will meet again after va cation. LOST MAROON AND Silver Parker 'sl' Pen between Carnegie and Hamilton Hall Wednesday. Reward. Call Faye, ext. 1097. FOR SALE FOR YOUR "HARD TO PLEASE LIST"- give a gift of Time, Life, or Fortune. Student Magazine Agency, 112 Old Main. Ext. 2049. DARK BLUE, pin stripe, double breasted suit, 39 long. $15.00. Call Tom 4827. BENRUS CALENDAR watch—brand new; 17 jewels 10 karat gold, 5 year guitri..ntee. Large discount. Bob Rothouse 5051' ext. 287. 20 GAUGE Shot Gun, 3 shot clip, bolt action, adjustable choke, shells, cleaning kit and hand trap. $20.00. Godfrey 6969. WANTED TYPING TO do over Christmas holidays. Come to 512 W. Foster Ave. or phone 2598. TO BUY Portable Typewriter in good con dition. Call 4850 or 7792, ask for C.R. STirDENT TO fire furnace, care for house Dec. 23-28 in return for room during vacation. Call 3156 evenings. FOR RENT EFFICIENCY ROOM with cooking , per mission for next semester. Married couple or students. Call 2887. MISCELLANEOUS MERRY CHRISTMAS and Happy New Year to everyone from Pi Kappa Phi. Albert and Woody. Have a nice vacation ! when the campus empties into cars, trains and planes as Christmas holidays begin. Heading for good times? Pause for a Coke and go refreshed.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers