PAGE EIGHT Graduates For Thesis Graduate students expecting to receive an advance de gree in June must pay for the binding and microfilming of their theses by noon March 2 at tl.e bursar's office. Students applying for graduation after the deadline will be asked to reapply for the next graduation. Graduate students expecting to receive a doctorate are required a pay a fee of $42.501 which covers the cost of micro- i filming, printing abstracts and binding three copies of the thesis. Master degree candidates are re- 1 <mired to pat 57.50 which covers The costs of binding the three of ficial thesis copies. Previously these fees were pay able at the library during the month before graduation. Students who pay thesis fees but are unable to complete their work in time for graduation will be asked to fill out another di ploma card, but mar retain their old fee receipt for use during the following semester or session Students who abandon plans for gaduation may have their thesis fee refunded upon recom- Pledging-- (Continued front page two) previously ineligible to rush be cause of their averages. It also gave students on campus who rushed previously and who had not joined a fraternity a chance to look at other houses. Two open houses were spon sored during the fall semester. The third open house in the spring semester was an innova tion. *The Nittany Lion has been used as an emblem of the University teams since '1907. It was sculp bored to resemble the cougar that formerly roamed this area. CLASSIFIEDS ADS MUST RE IN BY 11:00 a.m THE PRECEDING DAY GATES-17 words or less: $0.50 One insertion $0.75 Two insertions $l.OO Three insertions Additional words 3 for .C 5 for earn day of Insertion. FOR SALE CARTER ROTARY CONVERTER. Mode Alo/oCW4. 6 volts D.C. input. 115 volts 60 c.p.s. A.C., 330 watts output. AD 7 1056. igb Font) Fairlane V-ti 4-door Fordomatic power steeling, white sidewalls, 12000 miles. Must sell. Can be financed. May be seen at McClellan Cbevrolet. FOB RENT NEW THREE BEDROOM ranch-type apart. menL Television. %cachet-. and dryer outs tem provided. Available immediately. $llO ,per mouth. Call AD 7-7750 or AD S-602E. ONE SINGLE room t 5 per week: one large single room $6 per week. Avail able immediately. Call AD 8.9195. ONE LARGE single comfortable quiet room. Immediate occupation at 340 E. Pros pect. Call AD 7-71412. EYE GLASSES Wednesday. Leather Cftee. cloth inside. name Dr. Alexander. Phone Walt ext 295. Reward. SHEAFFER SNORKEL—black. 212 Sparks Reward. Call ext. 962. Lost Monday. KDR FRATERNITY Pin between HUB and Schwab. Initials D.L.S. en back. Call Dick Muller AD 7-2337. RAND KNIT. red scarf with white string% at Skating Rir.k lounge on Monday Feb -11. Reward. Call Jim AD 7-222 e. WANTED WANTED: GUITAR teacher for young boy. Call Mrs. Howell AD S-6462. CAMP COUNSELORS—Men. Long estab- fished Penna. camp. Experienced golf, tennis. basketball. dramatic. Excellent op portunities, W. Kaplan. 1909 Spruce St., Phila. S, Pa. CAMP COUNSELORS—Women. Outstand- ing Penne co-ed camp. Experience only. Sport, pioneering. dramatics. Excellent facilities. Good salaries. Camp Saginaw. 1909 Spruce St., Phila. 3, Pa. FOR HIRE •"THE PAUL SERRINS Quartet" Fox-Trot .Latina. Special afternoon rates. Still available March 2 and 9. After 5 p.m. call AD $4370. 'THE PAUL SERRINS QUARTET" Fox- Trot Latina. Special afternoon rates. Still available March £ & 16 after 5 p.m. Call AD ti -£370. CAMP RONDACK interviewing for women counsellors Sat_ Feb. 23. interested stu dents apply Student Employment Service, Room 112 Old Main Positions available in all fields. FOR PROMPT and expert radio and pbono graph service stop at State Cohere r V 232 South Allen Street. IS YOUR typewriter giving you trouble? if go roll AD 7-2492 or bring machine to 4'33 W. College Ava THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Must Pay Town House License Lifted Bindings mendation of the dean of the Graduate School. The tentative graduation list will be compiled from the diplo ma cards filled out during regis tration and will be made up at the end of the first four weeks of classes. To be included on this .list a student must have filled out a diploma card and have paid , his thesis fees to the bursar. JET ENGINE FRONTIER *tMEI'4, s, 40ABLEt , • 6 PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT The State Liquor Control Board has placed a 10-day license sus pension on the Town House for making sales to minors. The date for the suspension has not yet been announced. The action followed a case in which Patrick W. Dowling, fresh man in electrical engineering from Kingston, a minor, was fined for purchasing beer there. The employee of the Town House who sold him the beer was also fined. He is Hale 0. Lichten walner, senior in business admin istration from Tatamy. Justice of the Peace Guy G. Mills said State College police called in the State Liquor Con trol Board after they had arrested Dowling. Dowling was arrested on the Istreet by police after he had pur chased the beer. What's doing Pratt &-Whitrieest'AiTift New "high-road" to Heralding important things to come, work was begun in late summer, 1956, on a wide access road in a remote section of Palm Beach County, Florida. At the end of that road, Situated northwest of West Palm Beach, a 500,000-square-foot plant destined to be the newest addition to Pratt & Whit ney Aircraft engineering facilities is already well under construction. Here, engineers and scientists will soon be hard at work dealing with new and in creasingly complex problems relating to ad vanced jet aircraft engines. Working in close coordination with men at other P & W A establishments particularly the com pany's multi-million-dollar Andrew Will goos Turbine Laboratory in Connecticut World's foremost designer and builder of aircraft engines DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATION • EAST HARTFORD 8, CONNECTICUT Group to Examine Closed Circuit TV A group of seven Air Force officers and civilians will make a three-day visit to the campus to study the University's closed-cir cuit television system. The group will obtain informa tion on -6cperience in the use of such equipment for training pur poses. Colonel Daniel F. Riva, profes sor of air science, is project offi cer for the visit. Thaden Will Address AUSA on 'New Look' The bi-monthly meeting of the First Student Company, Associa tion of the United States Army, will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 1 and 2 Carnegie. Dr. Edward C. Thaden, assis tant professor of history, will speak on the effect of the "new look" in Russia's military pro gram. in Florida this newest section of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft team will face a challenging assign- ment. They, too, will be concerned with design, testing and development of highly advanced, extremely powerful jet engines which will join a family Already including J-57 and J-75 turbojets, currently playing important roles in the growing military and commercial air power of the United States. The engineering graduate who begins his career at this Florida facility will have the rare opportunity of keeping pace with Its anticipated growth. In an organization re nowned for development engineering su periority, he will gain invaluable experience working on vital, long-range projects that are a challenge to the imagination. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 23. 1957 Oliver Says--- (Continued from page four) nese Conference in 1951. Dr. Oliver has written four books on Korea, two of them having been on the New York Times list of best non-fiction books. These two books were "Why War Came in Korea," written in 1950, and "Syngman Rhee," a biography written in 1954. Another of his books, "Speech for Democratic Living," is be ing translated into Korean and will be used for the teaching of speech in South , Korean schools. Several of his books have been translated into Indian. Pakistanese. Chinese. Korean and Japanese. Dr. Oliver has reecntly been asked by the State Department to go to Australia to help or ganize speech instruction pro grams in that country. ' , ~• -- 'c', ,, ,,- . 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers