PAGE EIGHT initial Case Heard by AIM Judicial Board . The recently organized Associ ation of Independent Men judi cial board of review heard its first case Tuesday night and placed a student charged with disorderly conduct on board pro bation. The charge resulted when the student created a disturbance in one of the campus fraternities and climaxed it .by breaking a window. The offender was re ported to the Campus Patrol, who referred the case to the Dean of Men’s office. The dean’s office in turn pass ed the case, on to the judicial board, which handles disciplinary action involving independent men, and the group ordered the student to pay for the replace ment of the window and placed him on board probation. When on board probation, the offender must report in person to the next two board meetings and is under serveillance by the board for the rest of the semester. Any further charges against the stu dent during his probationary per iod will result in his being placed on probation- in the Dean of Men’s office or a recommendation to the dean for his suspension. Prize Room Plans Are on Exhibition Prize-winning room arrange ments from the “Better Homes for Better Living Competition for 1953” of the Chicago Tribune, are displayed on the third floor of the Main Engineering Building. The exhibit will continue through March 15. Pi Gamma Alpha, fine arts hon orary, arranged the exhibit, which includes various room designs done in color. M. Robert DesMa rais, assistant professor of archi tecture, was responsible for bring ing the exhibit to the College. Poultry Club to Meet The Penn State Poultry Club will meet at 7 tonight in 108 Plant Industries. Robert R. Murphy, the club’s new adviser, will be pres ent (ujmjrli WHAT A BEAUTIFUL voice! “ JUST LIKE a bird! Mora People Smote Camels Ikramullah - (Continued from page one) tion of. five million Moslems from India to the new state. One. out of every eight people of Pakis tan’s 96 million people is a refu gee, she said. “One of the greatest problems the nation faces is that the North east and Northwest provinces are separated by 1200 miles,” she said. “West Pakistan is largely a country of deserts where re clamation projects are underway to bring the land under - cultiva tion. East Pakistan is a land of swamps. Here the water is being drained to make way for agri culture and new industries,” the begum'said. Although Pakistan is chiefly an agricultural country, she must in dustrialize to provide employ ment for her people, she said. In the last five years textile and jute mills' have been set up to export cotton goods and jute to the United States. The government has taken a hand in feeding the refugees. Each family is - granted twelve acres, a small 'house, and oxen. Their ground is plowed by the government and they can borrow government owned tractors to farm. , ' ' “At present there is no Com munism in Pakistan, but there is inflammable material' that could fall easy prey to Communist propaganda,” she said. Pakistan could become an important na tion of the East because of her free Parliamentarian government. But Kashmir must be settled if Pakistan is to hold her frustrated people together, she said. Miller to Speak Tonight Dr. Leonard F. Miller, profes sor of farm management, will speak to the Dairy Science Club on the Mutual Security Adminis tration at 7:30 tonight in 117 Dairy. Dr. Miller recently re turned from France where he worked 2% years under the MSA. ME Group to Hear Prof Dr. ML Elmer Denson, assistant professor of geophysics, will speak to the Mineral Economics Sem inar at 4 p.m. today in 225 Min eral Industries on “Geophysical Prospecting for Iron Ores.” ~i , „ ~,,7 .-., THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, P! No Communism _ d a. , Senate - (Continued from page one) ice to remain in bed for a day or two. This problem was presented during the wave of. grippe that hit the campus last - month, over crowding the Infirmary and re sulting in many students being sent to bed in their rooms. The committee has studied that prob lem and will make a recommen dation for Senate consideration. Changes in Curriculum The Senate committee on courses of study has approved sev eral suggestions for course and curriculum changes and will pre sent them to the Senate in its committee report. These include changes in re quirements in the civil engineer ing and sanitary engineering cur riculums, dropping of the Amer ican civilization curriculum, and the addition of two new courses relating to radio and television in the Journalism department. The committee on rules includes in its report several changes in the College’s undergraduate reg ulations.. Most are of an adminis trative nature. One provides that the grade of “W” be issued with a grade indicative of the student’s work to date in parenthesis after the “W” on a grade card when he withdraws from the College. IFC-~ ' (Continued from page one) levels, particularly when frater nity cases are being presented. Arthur ' Rosfeld, president of IFC, formally announced the opening of nominations for next year’s IFC officers. They must be submitted in a letter addressed to Rosfeld and left at the Student Union desk in Old Main before 5 p.m. March 18, he said. Elections, he said,- would be held at the March 25 IFC meeting, and each house will have one bal lot. Defeated candidates may not become candidates for any subse quent offices, he added. Rosfeld also announced that in the near future, he, William Hirsch, IFC vice-president, Tho mas Fleming, IFC secretary-treas urer, and Glenn Wiggins, chair man of the IFC Board of Control, would conduct a study of the various pledge training programs employed by fraternities at the College. r WHAT? SELL INSURANCE WITH A VOICE V LIKETHAT? ( SHE'LL EE AW V OPERA star! jVAOTA' Poll Shows -- (Continued from page one) day, would you as a student be willing to stay on cam pu s Thanksgiving day? Only 30 indicated they would stay if a special event were scheduled; 77 students checked the “no” answer. 3. Do you believe cutting would be excessive on the day after Thanksgiving if (1) no sports event were on campus? (2) there were a sports-event? Answers to this question indi cate that students believe cutting would be excessive. To the first half of the question, 101 an swered “yes” and 6 “no.” In the second part, there were 72 “yes” answers and 34 “no’s.” 4. Could you devise a more fa vorable calendar plan and pre serve 15 full class .weeks for each course? If so, students were asked to indicate their plan on the re verse side of the questionable. To this question, 32 answered “yes” and 65 “no.” Laubach siid that answers to this question showed that the stu dents polled did not have an idea of how much work is involved CLASSIFIEDS WANTED ONE OR two Community Concert' tickets for March 6. Will pay. Call Audrey, 287 Simmons'. FOR BETTER grades let me type your term * papers, reports, etc. Call Betty Cole 6545 before 9 p.m. “WANTED: More people to improve, fewer to disapprove/* Write CHRISTOPHERS, INC., BOX 1635 McKEE, CAMPUS, , for •information on they “Christopher Move ment.** WILL MAN who wore wrong: coat from Presbyterian Church on Feb. .15 please return it to church .and pick up his own. WATCH MECHANISM for ladies Elgin wristwatch with gold back. Please call 5051/75. Ask for Pat. Reward. , ; ONE TAN leather suitcase, on Shortlidge • Road near Atherton Hall. Reward. Con tact_JackConnerton^ext! 298^1iittany38. STATE JACKET. Reward offered for, re turn to Student Union or Lawrence Gold en, Hamilton Hall, taken from Sparks. WILL STUDENT who picked up slide rule in Hamilton dining room Wednesday please return to 258 Hamilton. FOR RENT ONE SINGLE room near campus. Call 2919. HOW CAN THE/TELL I SO SOON? EVEN A FISH CAN COME UP WITH A FEW GOOD SCALES] I / - ' t Bjjks '7 LOST I Onfy time will tell aboufa promising singer! And onh time wilf fell about a cigareft % your time... CAMELS for 30 clays •for MILDNESS and FLAVOR 1 THERE MUST BE A REASON WHY Camel is America’s most popular cigarette— leading all other brands by billions! Camels have the two things smokers want most—rich, frill flavor and cool, cool mildness. after pack! Try Camels for 30 days and see how mild, how flavorful, how thoroughly en joy able they are as your steady smoke! THURSDAY,'' MARCH'S,- 1953 in making a \ schedule. He also pointed out that the students sub mitting schedules made one for next year and did not indicate a calendar plan. Actually, he explained, the com mittee on calendar has. set up a calendar policy which can be used year after year. This was done so that the schedule would be known years in advance in order to schedule meetings. Many of these are scheduled several years ahead of the meeting date. Laubach said he will present the following suggestion to the student affairs committee: ■ Start orientation week on the Wednesday following Labor Day and start classes the following Thursday. Registration could be held Saturday- and Monday through Wednesday of Orienta tion Week. Hat Society to Show Pitt-State Grid Films Blue Key, junior men’s hat so ciety, will sponsor the showing of films of the last Pitt-Penn State football game at 7:30 tonight in 119 Osmond. Admission charge is 25 cents a person. Proceeds from the show-, ing will go to the Campus Chest. FOR RENT LARGE SINGLE room five minutes from campus on S. Allen street. Excellent landlord. Call Ken 2392. RENT A TRUCK. Save money on that moving job. Local or out of state. - Herz- Drive-Ur-Self System, LIC., 1020 Green Ave., Altoona, Penna. Phone 2-3200. FOR SALE 300 HOUSEPARTY favors. Novel and nice. Save 30%. Contact Lenny Kreiger. Phone 4409. Representative L&L Houseparty Fa vors. ONE PAIR shoe roller skates. Size 5. Good condition. Call Eve at 2505 after 5 p.m. ONE PAIR 6 foot skiis and ski boots. Size 6. Have never been used. Call 45 ,Mc- Elwain. MISCELLANEOUS HELP TO offer in Physics 235 by student with experience in tutoring. Call Bob Russo, 7051. ■ SEE ARIA da Capo and A Phoenix Too Frequent at Center Stage this weekend. Tickets $1 at S.U. or at the door. I'M- SORRY Sam but I won't split my ticket’ for 1.F.C.-Panhel Ball. I want to dance all night to Johnny Long's orchestra. IF YOUR typewriter needs repairing: Just dial 2492 or bring: machine to 633 W, College Ave. But call first. lest B.J. Reynold! Tob. Co., . Wlnsto»> Salem* M.Q.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers