PAGE EIGHT Three Frosh Pranksters Get Deferred Suspension The Senate Subcommittee on Discipline yesterday gave three freshmen from Jordan Hall deferred suspension until June for making and exploding firecrackers in violation of University firearm regulations. A business administration student and two electrical engi neering students face immediate suspension for any further violations of University regula tions. They admitted knowing University regulations on fire crackers. Weigand Tells Of Parking Lot Disadvantage Construction of another en trance to the parking lot south of Grange Dormitory would cre ate a hazard to students walking acres the area, according to Wal ter A. Wiegand, director of the Department of Physical Plant. A second entrance to relieve traffic congestion was recom mended by the Association of In dependent Men and referred to a committee, which talked with Wiegand. Any new entrance would have to be constructed at the north end of the lot. Wiegand said. Such an entrance would interfere with an extension to the lot added last summer to provide students with a walking area. Recommending a second en 'trance, AIM cited the congested traffic conditions existing at 1 p.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. Wiegand said a second entrance might relieve some congestion but would be too great a hazard to students walking across the lot Luncheon Group Elects Committee One member of the staff and four faculty members have been elected to the Faculty Luncheon Club steering committee for the spring semester. • They are Dr. C. R. Carpenter. professor and head of the Depart ment of Psychology; Dr. William H. Gray, professor of Latin-Amer ican history; Valeta R. Hershber ger, assistant professor of physi cal education; Dr. Dorothy Quig ,gle, research professor of chemis try and chemical engineering: and Dr. Luther H. Harshbarger. University chaplain. The Nittany Lion Shrine was sculptured by Heinz Warneke to resemble the cougar that formerly roamed and stalked in this area. CLASSIFIEDS ADS MUST BE IN BY 11:00 a.sa. THE PRECEDING DAY RATES—I 7 ...vends or lrom: 00.50 One insertion $0.75 T. insertions $l.Ol Three insertions Additional words 3 for .05 for each doe of insertion. FOR SALE Shan) OFF original price on 1956 /l-fort 2 bedroom trailer. large bath. end kitehen. Owner will finance. Call EL 6-2972. TRAILEIZ. $l6OO. Floor plan out,tan.ling• inundition excellent and nitalern, 2X-feet Ileichbora priceleaa. flower Trailer Part. AD 1":71:77. roll Bill Shannon AD 7-7e51. DM Vit.:DALE Mobile Home. 21% ft. awn ing included. Set up in nice lucotioo See at Wm - Amish. Park. Phone AD 1:4•010 or AD S-61,7G. FOR RENT ONE. BALE double room for male 114 K. Beaver Ave. Call AD T-4147. ONE HALF double THOM. Atailable im mediately or next etemr,ter. Call N. Tici lor. AD :-4a1.0. rAIR OF reaitinn nlainets in the ♦iiinitt of Anriculture LtbrarY. Cunning ham inside allinatorcaae. Call AD 7-4Y,Yt. SORORITY YIN and Fraternity Fin, Alpha Chi Omega and Kappa Delta Rho. Call Grange A9G. Kathy Stroup. PASSENGERS WANTED ;Jai OR tau passemzers. wanted fur Soutiomm Orlaware by wa) of Witroinr t...n. L•Na• jag I 4.m. Sat Call FA after 6 T.M. at AD a-10.40. MISCELLANEOUS FOR PRUMPI and expert nttho and phono• graph semee stop at State College T V 232 South Allen Street IS YOUR typewriter Ewing' you trouble if en fall AD 1 -2482 or bricks siae►ise THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA According -to the sentence, the students, if guilty of further vio lations, will be suspended by the dean of men's office without ben efit of another hearing before the subcommittee on discipline. Depends on Conduct The academic progress and con duct of the students will be ob served until June, and if im provement is shown, the suspen hion will not be invoked, said Harold W. Perkins, assistant dean of men. The students were found guilty of twice exploding and once at tempting to explode firecrackers in their dormitory unit The students made the fire crackers from materials brought from their homes. One of the fire ,crackers blew a small hole in the floor. Discovered in Wastebasket The remains of the firecrackers were discovered in one of the student's wastebaskets by a coun selor. The dean of men's office also relieved the president of the dormitory unit of his office for failing to report the students i while being aware that they had the firecrackers.. Players to Exhibit Production Photos Photographs of several Players' productions have been entered in the American Educational Theatre Association Photographic Exhibit to be held Dec. 27 to 30 in Chicago. Included in the exhibit are pic tures taken during the perform ances of "The Lady's Not for Burning." "The Alchemist," "Me dea," "Mikado," and "The Inspec tor Calls." The - exhibit will be shown as part of the Speech and Theatre Conference at the Conrad Hilton Hotel. Walter Walters, assistant pro fessor of theatre arts and head of the Department of Theatre Arts, and Warren Smith, associate professor of theatre arts, will at tend. Students Unhurt In Auto Crash Two students escaped uninjured yesterday in an accident involv ing five cars on Rt. 545 near the Houserville intersection. Robert Jodon, freshman in met eorology from Bellefonte, and Kenneth McMullen, freshman in physical education from Belle fonte, were driving two of four cars stopped for a school bus at the time of the crash. A fifth car, driven by Paul W. Krape of Aaronsburg, hit the rear car and knocked the four cars to gether, police said. No injuries resulted. Damage was estimated at $5O to the Jodon car and $lOO to the other cars. Marketing Group To Hear Babione Dr. Francis A. Babione, associ ate professor of marketing, will speak at the annual meeting of the American Marketing Association next week in Cleveland, Ohio. His topic will be 'lmproving Teaching Efficiency." Dr. Babione is a member of the subcommittee on the teaching of general marketing that will conduct a special program on the "Problems of the Future Supply of Marketing Teachers." Rec Area— (Continued from page one) includes weatherizing the exist ing buildings which will adjoin the lake. While swimming, boating, and' fishing are the immediate objec tives, advocates of the project also foresee opportunity for ex cellent hunt i n g, skiing, and toboganning in the area. Research and instruction would continue uninterruptedly, and completion of the lake would also encourage hydrographic study, previously limited by the lack of water. The dam itself would be in the vicinity of the civil engineering camp, but the lake would come within walking distance of all three camps. Details Need Work Exact recreational facilities, alumni use of the area, and park ing facilities are only a few of the details yet to be ironed out. Maurice K. Goddard, director of the school of forestry now on leave serving as State Secretary of Forests and Waters, said the state would only require that the dam meet specified requirements to become eligible for a construe-, tion permit from the state Water and Power Resources Board. He saw no reason for withholding this permission. Grad Student Meets Nehru In Capital Work on her doctorate disseration took Agnes Doody, graduate student in speech from N. Bradford, Conn., to the Indian Embassy in Washington _where she met and spoke with Premier Jawaharlal Nehru and other diplomats from India. The occasion was a reception at the Embassy on Tuesday in honor of Premier Nehru's visit to this country for his talks with Prehident Dwight D. Eisenhower. Miss Doody was invited to the reception by Ambassador Mataj of India. She has been corres ponding with the Ambassador in connection with her thesis work. Indian Neutralism The dissertation will be con cerned with Premier Nehru's po sition as spokesman for Indian neutralism)] "The meeting with Nehru was very thrilling," said Miss Doody, "but the short talk I had with him was confined to the passing of a few sociable comments." "The Indian Ambassador has been impressed with my work," Miss Doody explained, "and has been quite helpful in many ways." Information Supplied The Embassy has supplied Miss Doody with requested informa tion and has offered her the use of its library. Premier Nehru is here for a Iseries of talks with the President I ELECTRICITY MAY BE THE DRIVER. One day your car may speed along an electric super•highway, its speed and steering automatically controlled by electronic devices embedded in the road. Highways will be made safe—by electricity! No traffic jams ... no collisions ...no driver fatigue. Power companies build for your new electric living Your air conditioner, television and other appliances are just the beginning of a new electric age. Your food.will cook in seconds instead of hours. Lamps will cut on and off automatically to fit the lighting needs in your rooms. Television "screens" will hang on the walls. An electric heat pump will use outside air to cool your house in summer, beat it in winter. You will need and have much more electricity than you have today. Right now America's' more than 400 independent electric light and power companies are planning and building to have twice as much electricity for you by 1965. These companies can have this power ready when you need it because they don't have to wait for an act of Congress—or for a cent of tax money—to build the plants. The same experience, imagination arid enterprise that elec trified the nation in a single lifetime are at work shaping your electric future. That's why in the years to come, as in the past, you will benefit most when you are served by independent companies like this one. ---'-'----. t** WEST PENN POWER --,,,,-- ,„,.... m........ -.4 'c.f. FRIDAY,• DECEMBER• 21. 1956 and other people in the govern ment. The President was seeing Vice president Richard M. Nixon off at the time and was not at the reception. Members of the State Department, however, were at the Embassy. 2 New Fellowships Established in MI Two fellowships have been es tablished in the College of Mineral Industries with grants from in dustry. The Shell Oil Company has established a grant of $2OOO in paleontology in the Department of Geology. The Lithium Corporation with a fellowship grant of $2,600 will support research in the Depart ment of Ceramic Technology on phase equilibria and_ physical property measurements in lithium oxide systems.