TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 28. 1956 Pipe Grabber —Ron Walker photo OLD STEAM PIPES are being removed from an under ground tunnel in front of Carnegie Hall in preparation for installing a newer and larger steam pipe system. Physical Plant Workmen Change Mall Steam Pipes Physical Plant workmen are now in the process of changing the size of steam pipes under the west mall sidewalk between Pollock and Pattee Library. Workmen are removing about 650 feet of eight-inch pipe and replacing it with 12-inch pipe. The work, which will be done periodically, is expected to be completed by the fall, a Physical Plant spokesman said yesterday. The new piping is expected to prove the underground steam dis tribution to the buildings on the upper half of the Mall and those on Ag Hill. Most of the University steam heat is distributed from a main plant, located at Burrowes road and W. College avenue, through over three miles of underground piping. Most o.t these pipes are located under walks, thereby serving a double purpose. Besides carrying steam heat to the buildings, they also serve to keep ice and snow off the walks. Removal of Pipes LA, Ed Councils' Election Dates Set For March 21, 22 Election dates for the Liberal Arts Student Council•and the Edu cation Student Council have been set, according to Robert Nurock, liberal arts elections committee chairman, and Charles Witmer, education council president. The council elections will take place March 21 and 22 in con junction with the All-University elections at a central polling place in the Hetzel Union building. In the liberal arts elections eight freshmen are eligible to run for the sophomore offices, 11 soph omores for the junior offices, and seven juniors for the senior of fices. A 2.5 All-University average is required .for candidates. Nominations for education coun cil representatives will be received from March 12 to 16. Council offi cers will be elected at a meeting March 13. . DOVER - PAPERBACKS I.* ~:g.- , . Abro, Rise of the New Physics, Vol. I and II ..ea. 1.95 - i 5 Besicovitch, Almost Periodic Functions 1.75 '.% r, Beyer, Nuclear Physics . , , 1.75 r 4: Boas, Primitive Art 1.85 ile 1 . ~ g Brillovin, Wave Propagation 1.85 fil ti Broglie, Matter and Light " •• - . 1.60 v Burnside, Theory of Groups 2.00 i 4 'l f Dewey, Essays in Experimental Logic 1.85 rt m f..., Jahnke, Tables o Functions ..5.... 1.95 0 Laplace, Essay on Probabilities 1.25 S. N , RI Lorentz, Theory f Electrons 1.80 i i i ,- , Ozenfant ,Foundations of Modern Art 1.95 R ?' Zygmund, Trigonometrical Series 1.85 i The Pennsylvania Book - Shop On the project now in progress, men are working under the side walk in the large steam tunnel to remove the pipes. The pipes are then brought to the surface by a crane. The entrance to the under ground tunnel is located in front of Carnegie Hall, where the crane has been situated. No interruption of heat during the semester is expected in the buildings served by the line, the spokesman said. The Store to Browse - For All Paperbacks 129 West Beaver Ave. THE DAILY COUEGIAW STATE COIIEGE Student Employment Representatives from the following , com panics will interview June and August graduates and undergraduates for summer work. Applicants for interviews may sien up in Iltt Old• Main within the next two weeks. This list will be carried only once by The Daily Collegian. Interviews will be held on dates- mentioned. . . California Texas Oil Co.—Mar. 12— PET.E.. ACCYG. ECON. FIN.. MKTG. GEOL. CH.E, GEOPHYS., 1.E.. M.E. Also M.S. candidate* in above fields. Also for dra. in CHEM, C.E.. and E.E. for summer. Curtiss Wright Corp (Wright Aero. Div.) —Mar. 12—AERO.E.. CH.E.. CE.. E,E., 1.E.. M.E., METAL. Mao M.S. and Ph.D. candidates in Engr. or Physical Metal. Continental Oil Co.—Mar. 12--CH.E.. M.K. CHEM., PET.E. Latrobe Sterl Co.- M . E.. I. E, Atlas Powder—]/u Eastman Kodak—Mar. 12.13—MATH. CH.E., CHEM., F.-E.. 1.E., M.E., MED. TECH.. MET., PHYS. Also M.S. candi dates in same fields. IMMili== Pgh.-Dea Moines Steel—Mar. 12-13 C.E.. M.E. Also same for summer. U.S. Steel (Summer Employment)—Mar. M.E.. E.E. Truscon Steel Div.-- Mar. iS —C.E ARCH.ENCR., M.E. B. P. Goodrich (Research Centerl—Mar. I3—CHEM., PHYS., MATH., CFLE:., and M.E. Alan M.S. and Ph.D. candidate,' in same fields. B. F. Goodrich (Akron Office)—Mar. 13 —CHEM., ENGR., BUS.ADf, L.A. New York Trust Co.- -Mar. 13-1... A BUS.AD. 'Also for summer. West Penn Power Co.—Mar. 13--E.F.. C.E., H.EC., BUS.AD.. M.E„ I.F. ArtnstronK Cork--Mar. 13-It—CHEM.. CH.E., HUS.AD., ECON. L.A.. LE., PHYS., MATH., ACCTG.. M.E.. E.E.. 1.E.. C.E., ARCH.E., AERO.E., L.M.R. Also M.S. candidates in CHEM. and CH.E. Theater Group To Give Play Five O'clock Theater will pre sent "The Matchstick Cathedral" by Walter Vail, graduate student in dramatics from Upper Darby, at 5 p.m. today in the Little Theater in the basement of Old Main. Kathryn Kelleher, junior in arts and letters from Vanding, will direct the play. Stage man ager will be Sylvia Brown, senior in arts and letters from Wilkes- Barre. Members of the cast are Wayne Zarr, sophomore in arts and let ters from Levittown; John Pe tane, sophomore in arts and let ters from Swedesboro, N.J.; Leo nard Richards, junior in business administration from Way ne; Carol Miller, sophomore in edu cation from Johnstown; and Rich ard Swire, freshman in arts and letters from Philadelphia. Brunhilda Announces 00000 Spring 1956 brings not only a fever of the same name, Brun die's annual cold, news from baseball training camps, tradi tional showers for May flowers, but also, a brand new trend in fashions for feet. Mannequin's have designed the model shoe, the shoe that's high style at a convenient price. Fresh is the keyword—a fresh ness in design, color,, patterns, prints, textures, surfaces, heels, and toes: The collection typi fies fashion's continental influ ence on shoes. . As sleek as .a new Italian sports car the "kick-a-pleat" pump emphasizes the continu ing importance of fashion tap ered and five detailed toe. Not to 'be outdone is the pleated toe of another model. It slowly uses It slowly rises on a needle-thin heel that gives the ladies' legs that slim appearance. Both come in quads to B's -r -41/2 to 9. And wait until you see the color. From the name you would 4eel like a' stroll under the Eine'' . o w er—"French Bread!" liumm—good! w •-•& 109 S. Allen St. -Mar. 12--METAL 12- -CtiEhi Mannequins Spring Collection 1 16a aa l m Judge Recommends Constitution Change The State Constitution of Pennsylvania has become a thing of "rags and tatters," declared the Hon. W. Walter Braham of New Castle, chairman of the Pennsylvania Bar Association's Committee on Revision of the Constitution. Speaking before a meeting of the State College League of Women Voters Thursday, Judge Braham said the constitu tion, like other human institutions, 1 has grown old, and is far too out-,the state to create a public debt moded. It has been, set 1()(1 million. Now, the au court decisions and ' set aside by common con.-1! horities have wiped out this leg lislation because of such things as sent too many times to effectively communities borrowing from the serve the people of Pennsylvania!state to build new schools. Braham he said. Isaid. The state constitution, which! Constitutional Changes was adopted in 1874, compares; The Supreme Court lists three with the Federalconstitution , :methods of changing the constitu- Braham stated, but is three tunes tion. Braham continued. The me as long. It provides for such out- thod of amendment is the easiest dated legislation as prohibition land most complicated in the long against dueling, the election of a irun, he said. Or else, the people surveying official, and prohibits kiln call a constitutional conven women from becoming school,tion, or if that fails, they can form teachers and superintendents. + a revolution. Relief Payments Under the existing constitution, is intended to prevent such a rove- Braham said, the state shall pay ilutionary movement, Braharn con relief only to blind persons and ieluded. and thus, in the interests dependent mothers. Today, he of good government, a convention went on, everyone is on the publiclshould be called and the constitu dole. The constitution also forbids I tion rewritten. MISS SHIRLEY BUTLER If you can't quite "place" Shirley, it's probably be- cause she doesn't exactly wear this type of attire behind the cash register in the Corner Room. bill coleman's lion studio The constitutional convention 136 E. College Ave. PAGE FIVE al: doe?