PAGE EIGHT Ohio Dean to Address Graduate School Today Dr. Paul Hudson, dean of the Graduate School at Ohio State, will address faculty and students of the Graduate School at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, ih Schwab Auditorium. His subject will be “The Essentials of Graduate Education.” Dr. Hudson studied at James Transportation Group Plans ticket Sales A ticket agency sponsored and staffed by Delta Nu Alpha, pro fessional transportation fraternity will soon be set up in the West Dorm lobby, to supply the bus ticket needs of students. Prof. Charles E. Woodring, as sistant professor of transporta tion economics and adviser of the group, said the group now has the agency for the Edward’s Lakes to Sea Lines and is waiting for final approval from the Greyhound Bus lanes. The fraternity, he said, has been given a room off the West Dorm Lobby and will begin sales as soon as the Greyhound sanc tion is received. • Dr. R. Hadly Waters, professor of transportation economics, stat ed the agency would handle regu lar and charter service and also be available to arrange transpor tation for field trips. The bus companies’ paid commissions will go into the fraternity’s treasury. Waters said the work would give transportation students exper ience in traffic sales and hand ling. Ambassador Tour Set for Tonight The Ambassador Tour of the School of Home Economics will begin at 7:30 tonight with a speech by Dr. Grace M. Henderson, dean of the school in the home eco nomics living center. . Following the speech, small groups will be conducted through the departments of the school. Each department head will give a brief talk on the work of her department. Following the tour refreshments will be served. -The Ambassador Tours are sponsored by Penn State alumni to give residents of the commun ity an opportunity to visit the different schools and learn more about them. . If the number 999 were printed on a card and reflected upside down in a mirror, 666 would not appear. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE 1939 BUICK— R &H. To see, Is to ap preciate this ear. For a spectacular buy, call Charlie —2941 after S Mon. thru Thurs. 1948 CROSLEY convertible, radio, heater, two new tires and .top. Good condition. Call 6075 after 5 p.m. , VERY GOOD Shick Colonel razor. Any reasonable offer accepted. Call ext. 792. Ask for Vernon. TUX, excellent condition, size 35, first reasonable offer; set Drilling: Instruments only $l2. Room 112 Hamilton. WIRE, RECORDER suitable for speech or language. Original price $l5O. Rea sonable. Call Don 4669 between 6-7. WHITE LAB coats $5.50; tan lab coats $5.75. Also lab aprons at room 19 Frear. FOR RENT DOUBLE ROOM—with refrigerator for 2 students. $lO per week. Inquire at 133 N. Patterson or phone 4676. BOARD 'and ROOM at Marilyn, Hall, 317 E. Beaver avenue. Ask for Mrs. Elleard. Attractive weekly rates with or without meals over weekends. One vacancy at pres ent; two more soon. D.pUBLE ROOM for male student. Phone "State College 4137. 719 S. Garner street. SINGLE ROOM for rent. Man or woman. floor. 427 W. Beaver. Call 7715. RENT A TRUCK. Move it yourself. Any *.:time any place. Hertz Drive-Ur-Self System, LIC., 1020 Green Ave., Altoona, Penna. Phone 2-3200. DOUBLE AND single centrally located grooms. Available to women graduate students. No cooking facilities. Phone 6773 during office hours. ONE ROOM with refrigerator for students, islo per week. Inquire 133 N. Patterson street. , LARGE PLEASANT room for two boys -third floor. Centrally located.' Reasonably priced. Telephone 2577. DOUBLE FOR male student, private en . trance, bath and phone, five blocks from ’MHTtr Those 4187* Millikin University, received his Ph.D. from the University of Chi cago, studied medicine at Rush Medical College and earned a M.D. at Harvard. He has served as assistant path ologist at Boston City Hospital and field director of the interna tional health division, Rockefeller Foundation. He has. also con ducted research on yellow fever in Africa. In 1933, Dean Hudson became professor' of bacteriology at the University of Chicago and in 1935; head of the department of bac teriology at Ohio State. He be came graduate dean in 1946. Following the meeting, the Graduate Student Council will present a resume of the organi zation’s objectives and a brief en tertainment program. Included in the program will be a quartet composed of George Davey, Jack Kapitanoff, James Hess, and Richard Wrentmore; , a ventrilo quist, Phillip Wein; a piano solo by Joseph Rosenthal; and a jugg ling exhibition by Oliver Helm rich. Gene Love will act as mas ter of ceremonies. The meeting of the Graduate School faculty, scheduled for Thursday afternoon, has been canceled. Quartet Contest Plans Revealed An all-College barber- shop quartet contest, sponsored by the sophomore class, has been set for early in March. Both men and women students interested in trying out may reg ister Feb. 23-27 at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Tryouts will be held in the TUB March 9-15. Final competition will be March 18 in Schwab Auditorium. Contestants are to sing two songs and wear appropriate dress in both tryouts. The contest, the first of its kind to be held at the College, will be judged by members of the Music department. Three. prizes for men and three for women will be awarded. Talent Show Tickets General admission tickets for the 13th annual all-College Talent Show, to be held at 8 p.m. Friday in Schwab Auditorium, are on sale at the Student Union desk in Old Main for 85 cents. MISCELLANEOUS BOWLERS: ANY dorm men interested in entering a team in dorm' bowling league please call secretary Don Lewis. 5051 ext. 291, Room 23 or Perry Gentzel 3948. CHARLIE BROWN—If you don’t take me to the All College Talent Show in Schwab 8 p.m. Friday, I’ll never speak to you again. Little Lucy. - THIS WEEKEND—Last chance to see Major Barbara at Center Stage. Tickets $1 at S.U. or at the door. MEALS BY the week at 622 -S. Allen St., for students. Phone 4147. IF YOU typewriter needs repairing just dial 2492 or bring machine to. 633 W. College Ave. But call first. WANTED “WANTED: MORE PEOPLE to’improve, fewer to disapprove.” Write Christopher, Inc., 18 E. 48th Street, New York 17, N.Y. for information, on the “Christopher Move ment.” WANTED: *RIDE to Washington, D.C. Friday afternoon Feb. 20. 'Call George Bairey 3938. START YOUR merchandise club with ten You get your choice of hun- dreds of nationally advertised products. You buy nothing. They merchandise and pay you on weekly basis. Write for details— Nora Norton Company, 91 Pointer St., Newark, N.J. . WANTED TICKET to the Mil Ball. Willing to pay reasonable asking price. Call Don at 3872. LOST RED WALLET: initials on outside BSG; lost downtown. Call Bessie, 125 Atherton. TWO ECON. 14 books. Monday, Old Main lounge. Please return to Student Union., No questions 1 asked. Reward. - FOR BEST RESULTS USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE-COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Assignments Accepted by Four Profs Four members of the School of Agriculture faculty have accepted special assignments in foreign na tions. A. H. Imhof, assistant professor of agricultural journalism, was granted a year’s leave of absence to accept an assignment with the Food and Agriculture Organiza tion of the United Nations. He will spend the year in Cey lon aiding the ministry of agri culture in developing an agricul tural information program. This includes training personnel in ag ricultural news, radio, bulletins, and other media aimed at increas ing food production. Dr. Willi’am C. Paddock, assist ant professor of plant pathology, has resigned his position to go to Guatemala where he joined lowa State College scientists studying maize corn in its original enviro ment. Numerous lines of the so called “Indian corn” are being in vestigated for specific charac teristics which may improve corn hybrids in the United States. ' Dr. George E. Brandow, profes sor of agricultural economics,' ac cepted a one-year assignment with the Mutual Security Admin istration to serve as agricutural and price policy adviser to the government of Turkey. He is using his sabbatical year for the assign ment. Dr. Hubert W. Frings, associate professor of entomology, will leave for France April 1. He will spend three months with French scientists and lecture in the Uni versities of France, Italy, and Ger many. Locklin to Talk Tonight A. Pauline Locklin, associate professor of English literature, will address the Belles Lettres Club on “Warbling Seagulls” and other literary lapses at 7 tonight in the northeast lounge of Ather ton Hall. RILW Panel ~ (Continued from page one) by the New York Times as a sen sitive analysis of the Jewish in tellectual today. A panel discussion of “The Stu dent and the World Struggle” will be held in Hamilton Hall lounge 4 to 5 p.m. today. The panel will be composed of Professor Wayne Glick of Juniata College and the Rev. Harmon Gehr. Fireside discussions will be con tinued in fraternities and dormi tories from 5 to 7:30 tonight. Leading the discussions will be Betty Boyd at Simmons Hall, Pro fessor Wayne Glick at Zeta Beta Tau, A. Burns Chalmers at Alpha Tau Omega, the Rev. Paul W. Lingle at Phi Kappa Sigma, Miss Jimmie Woodward at Sigma Nu, the Rev. Robert Eads at Acacia, Professor H. W. Frings at Delta Theta Sigma, Professor Robert Mickey at Kappa Delta Rho, Pro fessor Harold Yeagley at Tau Phi Delta, Professor Mark Ebersole at Beta Sigma Rho, Professor E. H. Freund at Kappa Sigma, and Pro fessor Warren S.- Smith at Delta Chi. Any group of 20 or more per sons wanting a fireside leader for Thursday or Friday nights may still contract one by calling ex tension 547 and stating the place, time, and person in charge of the meeting and the topic desired for discussion. Personal interviews . with the speakers may be arranged by call ing Extension 547. “Student interest in' RILW has this yqar reached its greatest peak in the last 10 years,” William Griffith, chairman, stated. “Coop eration on all sides has far ex ceeded expectations,” he said. Home Ec Club to Hold Silver Demonstration A silver demonstration will be featured at the Home Economics Club meeting, 6:30 tonight in the Home Economics Living Center. S. F. Crabtree, of Crabtree’s Jewelry Store, will show silver patterns and silver pieces. The meeting is, open to the public. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17,1953 Pre-Vets Plan Speech Series Dr. S. F. Scheidy, president of the Pennsylvania Veterinary Med •ical Association, will be the first of a series of speakers at Pre- Vet Club meetings. He will speak at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 105 Ag riculture. Dr. Scheidy is-veterinary medi cal director for the Sharp arid Dohme pharmaceutical firm in West Point, Pa., and a member of the veterinary faculty at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. Dr. Mark Allen, dean of, the School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of r Pennsylvania, will speak in. March. Dr. T. Y. Tanabe, research worker at the Dairy Cattle Breeding Research Center, is scheduled to speak at the April meeting.^ Froth Girl Photos Available at SU Students who have submitted photographs for Froth “Girl of the Month” may pick up the pho tographs at. the Student Union desk in Old Main, according to Richard Neuweiler,. editor. Neuweiler said there is an ac cumulation of photographs of Froth girl candidates which stu dents may obtain by asking for them by name. If a student is un able to obtain her photograph at the Student Union desk, she should leave a riote to that effect in the Froth box addressed to Neuweiler, he said.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers