PAGE EIGHT Career Day Panelists Picked Two leaders in industrial management and an economic analyst will take part in Career Day panel discussions spon sored by the College of Business Administration on Nov. 4. The men are Charles D. Reeder, economic analyst for the Armstrong Cork Co., Lancaster; William C- Decker, president of the Corning Glass Works, Corning, N.Y.; and George D. Lobingier, manager of Westing house Electrical Corp., East Pitts _ burgh. Reeder will take part in the panel on economics in 218 Wil lard; Decker and Lobingier will speak in the panel on manage ment in 121 Sparks: Other panels will be on market ing, accounting, finance and in surance, labor management and - - trade, and trans lation. An evening ses m will have ilph J. Bunche the United vtions as speak . Bunch will ieak at 8 p.m. Schwab Audi .•ium. Reeder was ■aduated from xio State Uni .arvard Gradu- iness Adminis tration in 1947 and received a doctor of philosophy degree in 1951 from Ohio State. Reeder was an instructor at Ohio State from 1950 to 1951 and has served as a research econo mist to the Farm Bureau Insur ance Co. Decker is a Penn State alum, graduating in 1922. He was award ed his masters at Harvard Busi ness School and an honorary doc tor of law' from Alfred Univer sity. He joined the Corning Glass works in 1930 and became mana ger of the industrial sales depart ment. In 1934 he was transferred to the treasury department and became treasurer 1 in 1936, a posi tion he held un til 1939 when he became control ler and assistant to the president. Reeder was elec ted president of I the Corning Glass works in 1946. He is a member of the finance committee of the Committee for Ecu develop ment, the University Club of New York, and the Electrical Manufac turers Club. He was elected a di rector of the Empire State Cham ber of Commerce Inc. in 1953. Lobingier was graduated from Layfayette in 1926 and received his masters from Penn State in 1936. He started with Westing house Electric Corp. in 1945 and is now manager of the educational department and directs the com pany’s recruitment program of col lege graduates and the continued educational programs for the com pany. Lobingier has served with the Penn State' General Extension program and been in the invest ment banking and brokerage business in Pittsburgh and New York. Lonergan (Continued from page one) funds amounting to $187.94, credited to payment for stockings, was never reimbursed. According to Lonergan, a firm in the stocking industry offered a lot of stockings to the union members at a wholesale price. Lonergan said union members paid a price for the stockings which gave the union a ten per cent profit. He said the money was redeposited in the account of Local 67. He added that the money had been entered in the books simply as “dues and fees.” Hellz also reported that pay ments of $135 to certain officers of the union during September over and above their regular com pensation were never properly accounted for. He said that $lOO had been giv en George Dixon, former pres ident of Local 67 and now pres ident of Local 417. Dixon said the $lOO was voted to him by the executive board for service and work he had done. He reported several trips to Harrisburg and Bellefonte. At Friday’s meeting, Dixon re turned the $lOO as a.donation to Local 417. “I am returning it to you because it is your money, and does not belong to Local 67,” he said. Dairy Prof— (Continued from page one) ment, became alarmed when Hall did not appear for a 9 o’clock class this morning. He phoned the Hall home several times, but no one answerd. He finally called Mrs. Dean Williams who lives in Pleasant Gap. She, in turn, called Mrs. Neil McNall, a next door neighbor of the Halls. Mrs. McNall found a bedroom window of the one-story house open, and saw Mrs. Hall lying on the floor. She summoned neigh bors for help. Hall was found in the bathroom and the son was found in another bedroom. Williams said last night that one of the Hall’s two other sons is on his way to State College. He is stationed with the Army at Fort Jackson, S.C. Williams said that efforts are being made to locate the other son, who is stationed with the Air Force at Lorring Air Force Base, Limestone, Me. At last report he was on leave visit ing his wife in Texas. Local Center Offers Commercial Courses Typing and shorthand classes will start tonight in 1 Sparks, T. Reed Ferguson, administrative head of General Extension’s State College Center, has announced. . Classes will mee' each Tuesday and Thursday night for approxi mately 15 weeks. Typing is sched uled from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and short hand from 8 to 9:30 p.m. Women's Debate Team Six members of the women’s varsity debate team will take part in a practice debate at 7 tonight in 2 Sparks. The topic will be the national intercollegiate debate topic for the year, “Resolved: That the United States should extend diplomatic recognition to the Communist government of China.” P"~ ———* l qoOD FOOD HOME DELIVERY REASONABLE PRICES gS ™ISF 11 Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner I JL Jm A SEAFOOD OVESfi HOT I Scallops Oysters Shrimp BIIMS CAU aii 7 2280 S CAMPUS RESTAURANT RT, 829 S. AD 7 2280 g 142 E. College Ave. (Opp. Old Main) Penn Holiday— (Continued from, page one) policy which was adopted by the University Senate in 1953 but didn’t go into effect until this se mester. Student conduct was sharply criticized after last year’s game in Philadelphia. Letters received by Philadelphia citizens described the • conduct as . . : “pure mob rowdyism.” Damage was reported by officials of Bellevue-Stratford hotel, where approximately 1700 students stayed. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Experiment Rids Millheim Of Starlings Thousands of starlings, chased out of Millheim last summer, were driven from the town again this summer as a part of an ex periment at the University. According to Dr. Hubert W. Frings, professor of zoology at the University, the starlings “scared out of town” during the third week of August have not returned during the past two months and have now probably migrated to warmer climates. Millheim was chosen as a site for the starling last summer because it was within easy driv ing distance of State College, was small enough that it could be cov ered with the equipment avail able, and the terrain made it pos sible to easily observe the move ment of the birds. Since the com munity had a starling problem for many years, the residents were exremely cooperative in working on the project. The experiments last year were conducted between Aug. 3l and Sept. 2 and the birds did not re turn after this treatment. Last July, however, the starlings again began to assemble on the town, and on Aug. 17 Joseph F. Jumber, a graduate student who worked with Dr. Frings, again applied the treatment, once more removing the birds. As a result of the research con ducted in Millheim, State College, and elsewhere, a machine known as the “Bird-E-Vict” has been de veloped and patented. It is now produced and distributed by Mo hawk Business Machines Corpo ration, Brooklyn, N.Y., and ' dur ing the past year many communi ties have used the device to fight their starling problem. Professor to Address Mi Colloquium Today E. Willard Miller, professor of geography, will speak at the sec ond of a series of Mineral Indus tries Colloquims at 4:15 p.m. to day in the Mineral Industries Auditorium in Mineral Industries. Miller will speak on “An An alysis of the Southern Anthracite Region—A Problem Mineral Area.” Future Mineral Industries Col loquiums will be held Nov. 5 and 19, Dec. 3 and 17. Court Holds 2 For Hit-Run Two students have been held for action by County Court after they were involved in a hit-run accident Friday night at Locust Lane and E. Fairmount avenue. The driver, Glenn Hoffman, third semester student, was found guilty Saturday by Guy O. Mills, justice of the peace for failing to stop at the scene of the accident, and was ordered to pay a fine of $25 plus costs. Hoffman failed to stop after the car he was driv ing hit a parked car. William Bradstock, first semes ter electrical engineering major, was ordered to appear in court on charges of permitting Hoff man to drive his car while intoxi cated, and Hoffman was ordered held on charges of driving while under the influence of intoxicat ing beverages. • Both were freed on $2OO bail. Oliver to Discuss Geneves Conclave Robert Oliver, head of the de partment of speech, will address the International Relations Club meeting at 7:30 tonight in the main lounge of McElwain. Dr. Oli ver’s topic will be “Highlights of the Geneva Conference.” Oliver- attended the Geneva Conference last summer as an ad viser to the delegation from the Republic of South Korea. He will bring a first-hand report of the meeting with him. A question and answer period will follow Oliver’s talk. Lion Party— (Continued from, page two) tary, Joetta Hall; treasurer, Lou ise Glud. Junior class: chairman, David Friedenberg; vice chairman for men, Robert Kurtz; vice chair man for women, Peggy Davis; secretary, Jeanne Maxwell; treas urer, Peter Bond. Sophomore class: chairman, Robert Howe; vice chairman for men, Richard Jamieson; vice chairman for women, Beatrice MacDonald; secretary, Barbara Hendel; treasurer, Margaret Por ter. Freshman class: chairman, Ed ward - Long; vice chairman for men, Jacob Shook; vice chairman for women, Barbara Will; secre tary, Patricia Schoonmaker; treas urer, Michael Walker. rtJESDAY. -OCTOBER 26. 1954 4 Colleges Enact Bari On Debates Student debate on recognition of Communist China > has been banned by four Nebraska state supported teachers colleges, the.t, United Press has reported. “Resolved: That the United States should extend diplomatic recognition to the Communist government of China” is the na tional intercollegiate debate topic for the school year.- The choice of the Speech Association of Amer ica,- the topic will be used in most intercollegiate debates and tourn aments throughout the nation. University of Omaha After the colleges at Kearney, Wayne, Peru, and Chardon an nounced the ban, the president of the University of Omaha said his school would take similar action. Herbert L. Cushing, president of Kearney College, said he op posed debaters spending “half their time arguing the Communist side.” In debate, the affirmative speak ers must show reasons why it is necessary, desirable and practical for the U.S. to recognize the Com munist regime. Defends Topic Glen Mills, associate professor of public speaking and director of forensics at Northwestern Uni versity, said, “It is a ridiculous assumption to feel that students will b'e hurt by examining the af firmative side of the question. “To prevent a student from reading about Red China is to hold a naive hope that people can be saved through ignorance . . . The more the kids learn about Communists the more they will' be against them,” Mills said. CLASSIFIEDS f6r sale 1948 STUDEBAKER 4-dr. Champion, heater, undercoated. Original owner, must sell. A buy at $3OO. Call Parkinson, ext. 2238 or AD 7-2684. FIFTY THREE Underwood. Used only one semester; list $105.68* will sell for $75. Call Rm. 18 AD 8-9035. ONES ENGLISH bicycle. Very good con dition, reasonable price. Call- Colonel. Phone AD 7-4928. 1937 BUICK Special 4-dr.sdn. Good' clean body, excellent mechanical condition. '4B motor. $65. Phone AD 8-6569. ENGLISH 'SETTER Puppies, three months old. Good hunting stock; only three left. Cheap. Call AD 7-3052. 1952 PLYMOUTH Club Coupe. Excellent ■ condition, equipped, 33,000 miles. $925. Call Edward Emery, Woodsdale Trailer Park. AD 8-9095. 1951 FORD Deluxe 6 2-dr. sdn., radio & heater, perfect condition. $695. Will take trade-in or finance. AD 8-8961. 1950 NASH 4-dr., bed, radio, heater, overV drive, turn signals, back-up lights etc; FOR RENT BOARD AND Room available now for one person at Marilyn Hall, 317 E. Beaver. Ask for Mrs. Elleard. LOST LARGE SIAMESE Cat. Answers to. name “Pyewacket.” Return to' Players* BELL, BOOK AND CANDLE. TUB, Friday , nights. WILL BOY who borrowed black Schaeffer Mech. Pencil in 121 Sparks Sunday eve ning at Lion Party meeting please call Ted Simon ext. 283. HAVE NOT found Androcles hat, but ■would like to thank all my friends who have kindly inquired. Phil Wein. FOUND ONE PAIR horn rimmed glasses in brown case. Call AD 7-7609. WANTED ONE MALE student to share apartment with another student. % block from campus. Phone Phil AD 8-8370. RIDE WANTED WILL PAY for ride to Stroudsburg Fri. afternoon or Sat. morning. Phone AD 7-7160 during evenings. RIDE TO Brooklyn. I want to leave Friday afternoon. Call Pat at 220 Simmons. NOTICE WE ARE a bit out of town but we can assure you prompt pick-up and delivery of your car. Let us serve you for all your car needs, be it engine, body allignment or just routine service. Weiser Motor Co. One mile east of State College. AD 7-4171. MISCELLANEOUS TENNIS FANS: It*s Hassinger for racket stringing the No-Awl way. Prompt serv ice. Guaranteed work. Longer lift to strings and racket. R. T. Hassinger, White Hall or 514 Beaver Avenue after 5 p.m. FRATERNITIES', SORORITIES, Organiza tions: Let us save you hours of work. We have complete automatic equipment for plate making, addressing, multilithing and mailing. Colleg Sconce Publishers, 352 E. College Ave. Phone AD 8-8910. JOHN HALE Quartet bookings now. Avail able Fox Trot, Jazz, Latin American. Phone Frank Telesca AD 8-5051 ext. 792^1; HAVE YOUR typing done by ,an ex perienced secretary. CaU AD-S-87d6.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers