PAG* TWO Late Reg istra nts To Pay $lO Fee Students not registering for the spring semester at the proper time will be charged a $lO late registrations fee, H. A. Sperber, assistant scheduling officer, has announced. Students will register in Recreation Hall Jan. 28 to 31 .according to an alphabetical schedule printed on the official registration envelope, obtainable from faculty 'advisers, Sperber said. Seniors and juniors will reg 'ister Jan. 28. Sophomores and freshmen will register Jan. 29 ■and 30. Special students and Col lege employees will register be fore noon Jan. 31. Graduate stu dents may register anytime be tween 8 a.m. Jan. 28 and noon Jan. 31 Report to Advisers Seniors Bes to Bra will register at 10:30 a.m. Jan. 28, Sperber said. Bes to. Bla is listed erron eously on the Registration en velope. Students should report to their advisers at least 24 hours before they are scheduled to go to Rec reation Hall, Sperber said. Stu dents in the Division of Inter mediate Registration should re port to their advisers 48 hours before they are scheduled to'reg ister. Two-year agriculture students will register according to the al phabetical listing for sophomores and freshmen, Sperber said. Necessary forms for registra tion by special students and Col lege employees may be obtained at 4 Willard, he said. Students registering late, after noon Jan. 31, must present their approved official registration form at the offices of depart ments in which they are schedul ing courses in order to receive proper course cards, Sperber said. Students who must change courses after they have been ad mitted to Rec Hall must go to the dean’s representatives in the mid dle of the floor. No students will be allowed to leave Rec Hall until registration has been com pleted. Matric Card Needed In case of inclement or cold weather, space will be provided inside Rec Hall for students to wait until they are scheduled to be admitted. Matriculation cards must be presented before stu dents are admitted to, registra tion. Veterans Told To Re-Register For Benefits In order to continue receiving benefits, veterans currently en rolled as beneficiaries of the Vet erans Administration under pro visions of P.L. 346 and 16 must re-register with the Veterans Ad ministration at the completion of academic registration in Recrea tion Hall, according to Richard H. Baker, coordinator of veterans’ affairs. Failure to complete Veterans Administration registration will result in personally having to pay for fees and books and the dis continuance of subsistence bene fits effective Jan. 27. Veterans currently enrolled un der the provisions of P.L,. 550 will complete their monthly train ing certificate Feb. 2 in 4-G Wil lard. Only those P.L. 550 veterans withdrawing from school at the end of the semester will be per mitted to complete their certi ficate prior to Feb. 2. Students Must Report Draft Number, Address Students who have not yet re ported their Selective Service numbers and draft board ad dresses to the Recorder’s office, 4 Willard, should. do so imme diately, Robert M. Koser, assistant to the Registrar, said yesterday. The information will' be used in mailing form SSS 109 to Selective Service boards. Campus Chest Cards Campus Chest solicitors should return all International Business Machine cards to 304 Old Main today, whether or not the students have been reached, according to Joseph Haines, acting chairman. Bulls to Figure In Dairy Research Clinton County’s identical twin bulls, purchased by the College from Wilbur McClellan, Lock Ha ven insurance dealer, will play an role in research at the College. The Holstein calves will be used by the Dairy Cattle Re search Laboratory- in studies of the effect of nutritional and man agement factors upon the growth and reproductive capacity of bulls. Since the twins have iden tical genetical backgrounds, their use will greatly reduce the num ber of bulls needed for the study, Dr. Robert J. Flipse, associate professor of dairy husbandry, has announced. Mammoth Cave, in southwest ern Kentucky, is the' largest un derground cavern in the world. It contains about 100 miles of explored passages. Maximum Pledging Advised by Perkins Fraternities are encouraged to pledge as many students as pos sible in order to cope with drops due to the expected, tightening of draft deferments. Assistant Dean of Men Haro] rushing chairmen that, accordini Selective Service Bulletin by Di rector Louis B. Hershey, the combined effect of the decrease in deferments and the Korean bill of rights should increase the number of male students in col leges. The net effect on fraternities will be that more men will be available for pledging and that an increased number of brothers and pledges will be sub ject to the draft. Rosfeld Suggests Annexes Perkins suggested fraternities pledge more men than they need so that houses will be full in September. Arthur Rosfeld, Interfraternity Council president, suggested that fraternities consider setting up an annex, members who live outside the house because of a lack of sleeping space. He pointed out that an annex would serve to keep house membership at full strength in the event of an un usually large number of drops caused by the draft or other rea sons. Perkins said there will be very few transfer students next Sep tember and suggested that frat ernities pledge their full capacity, or more, before the end of the THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA BeaVer Ave. Traffic Jam Ending-Juba After a t w o-d a y experience with traffic changes on Beaver Avenue, Chief of Police John R. Juba stated yesterday that the newly-instituted regulations are “definitely” ending the avenue traffic jam. Parking was eliminated on the south side of Beaver avenue from S. Pugh street to Atherton street, effective Wednesday. Chief Juba reported a few cars still parking in the forbidden area, but the number is rapidly decreasing to practically zero. “We’re giving out warnings now,” he said, “but we’ll have to start levying fines for violations at any time.” Chief Juba commended the changes recommended by a spe cial traffic study committee form ed by Burgess E. K. Hibshman. The no parking regulations were established to “simplify travel ing” and to minimize dangers. Borough employees, in the meantime, began installing park ing meters along the west sides of S. Frazier and S. Allen streets. Under new regulations, parking meters will be provided along these streets from Beaver to Fos ter - avenues as a substitute for the space lost with the Beaver avenue elimination. id W. Perkins told a meeting of g to an article written for the year. He told the rushing chair men it was their job to keep the fraternity system strong by see ing that all houses have enough men to function properly. 1.0 Average Required The fact that the fraternity system is in good financial con dition this year was attributed to the fact that most of the pledg ing was done in the spring sem ester, and very few vacancies were left in the fall. Freshmen completing their first semester on campus may be oledged after 8 a.m. Feb. 14 if they have the required 1.0 aver age. Upperclassmen may be pledged anytime during the school year if they have the nec essary average, either a 1.0 All- College or a 1.0 average for the previous semester. Informal bids may be extended to rushees at any time, but these informal bids will not be binding until the official pledge date and issuance of pledge pins. Pledge cards and the $2 per pledge fee for all students pledged to Feb. 18 must be turned into the Student Union desk in Old Main by Feb. 18. Pledge cards are available at the Student Un ion desk. NCAA Ends Trend, Preserves Fbothall The recent NCAA decision to outlaw the two-platoon, system, in football has ended a trend in the grid sport that could only have led to the complete bewilderment of that intelligent biped, the football fan. Can you imagine a future game of football with unlimited sub stitution and a high degree of spe cialization? Let us say that State is playing Michigan State, the team that had six platoons way back in 1952, a day of rugged in dividualism. The Spartans are in punt formation, and the wind is blowing from the southwest. ; Experts Foiled Of course, the Spartans have brought in their left-footed kick er, a specialist on southwest kick ing, to boot to State’s waiting re ceiver, who turns out to be a horticulture major and an expert on returning kicks on Michigan blue, grass. State, after the run back of zero yards, throws in its eighth offensive platoon, which has played very well midway through the first five minutes of a previous third quarter of the West Virginia game. ' By this time a “brain,” a fan who keeps charts on the game, has been led off the field by his keepers. Finally at the' end of the game, after each side has run through several hundred substi- / Get MORE money for your used books You can sell all your used text books currently in use at the Used Book Agency in the TUB. You can also sell any other hooks you think students might want. You set your own price Name the price you want for your books. We just sell them for you. We will sell your books In the large, self-service ball room of the TUB. we have utilized 3.000 sq. ft. of space to aid students in selecting and buying books. You have a better chance of selling your books. Bring your books to the BX in the TUB starting Monday, the 26th. The BX will take books all that and the following week. We will be open for sales on Wednesday, the 28ih. Get those books you won't be needing or aren't saving. You can save some one money that might be spent for new hooks. mn STATE BOOK EXCHANGE Non-Profit Student-Operated School Supply Store FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1953 By BYRON, FIELDING tutions, the score is all tied up. With so many experts around, who could come to any kind of a decision? NCAA Saves America ■- You know what you have when nobody wins and everybody is confused. You have communism. Football would be branded sub versive by some later day Mc- Carthy, and college alumni would not have anywhere to go on Saturday afternoons. Besides, there wouldn’t be -any room in the stadium for paying customers af ter all of the players had ' been seated. Of course, someone , might propose that about three hundred seats be saved for a few interest ed students. However, the NCAA has saved the good old American game, no affront to you English soccer fans, of’ football for the fans. No long er will the acrobatic specialists with five syllable names cavort on and off the field of "battle to beleagure the mind of hard think ing football fans.