WEDNESDAY. OCTOBE I ndepe Adopt Leonides Council incorporated into th basis -for the Leonid, The five provisio eral policy report p Keeler Na Interim He Of AIM J Bruce Keeler, junior tional education from B has been - appointed inte man - of the Association pendent Men Judicial • Review, according to A dent John Morgan. Keeler replaces Samo 1 senior •in arts and let i Philadelphia, who resi week. He will serve until Board of Governors ca his appointmeut and tho' JBR members on Oct. 1 JBR will meet at 7 t. night- in 201 Willard for an orga izational meeting. The board will discuss a list of revisions for the AIM constitution concerning 413 R. - Harold W. Perkins, , assistant dean - of men, will address the new board on its duties and operating _procedure.. $7600 Granted For Research The University has received a grant of $7600 from the Petroleum Research Fund of the American Chemical Society: The grant will support a basic study on the nuclear magnetic resonance of certain hydrocarbon molecules. Dr. Joseph. A. Dixon, associate professor of chemistry and direc tor of the project, said the study is planned to provide some insight Into relationships betwEen the mechanism of moleEular flow and structure and the influence of intramolecular spatial factors on the electronic distribution within the molecule. Grad, Prof Present Paper at ME Conclave John T. Frasier. graduate assis tant in the department of engi neering mechanics, add Dr. Leif Rongved, formerly of the same de partment, presented a paper at the fall meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in Hartford, Conn. - The paper was entitled "Force in the Plane of Two Joined Semi- Infinite Plates." , JOIN THE J • ZZ CLUB Tonight t*Aceting "Exclusive" Records Entertainment of Past Concerts Wi!! Be On Sale Provided 2. 1957 dent Women Provisions last night adopted five provisions to be new point system which will be the organization effective this year. s supplement and elaborate on the gen ssed last Spring. The new provisions are: •The number or points neces sary to earn a Leonides pin shall be 21. •All officers and members, ex cept the president, shall be eli gible to work for points. ed • d R •Bonus points shall be given at the discretion of the president and the point system chairman. •The point system chairman shall be required to give a per iodic report of her activities in, this capacity. 01A1 omen who have already earned points shall be encouraged to continue doing so. The policy report provides that Leonides pins must be earned by acquiring points: five points shall be given to committee chairmen, four to co-chairmen, three for ac- I tive participation on a committee, two for serving on a committee with some participation and one ;for being on a committee. n recrea •thlehem, im chair of Inde- Board of M presi- 1 Alfonsi, ers from ..ned last the AIM approve e of new An evaluation and filing sys tem also will be used and the woman with the most points at the end of the year will be given an award. The 'purpose of the reorganiza tion is to further unify the group by separating the active members from the non-active. "Being aide to wear a pin that has been ,earned will give independent wo men more initiative to participate actively in Leonides." said Lor raine Jablonski, the president. Professor Elected To Speech Cotincil Dr. Robert T. Oliver, head of the Department of Speech, has been elected to the administration council of the Speech Association of America. Oliver has recently returned from a 3-month tour of Australia, where he served as consultant to the State Department of Educa tion on the-development of speech p,rograms in the primary, second ary and collegiate levels of the school system. Small Fire in Osmond Caused by Short Circuit A short circuit was the cause of a small fire in 303 Osmond Sat urday. No one was hurt, according to authorities. Campus Patrol declined to give further information. Grange To Sponsor Dance The Grange will sponsor a square dance and open meeting at 7:15 tonight in 100 Weaver. in 10 SPARKS 7:30 P.M. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PE EASTERN Standstill Time? Old Main Clock Sits With Time On Its Hands • New students .on campus may! be interested in knowing that the! chimes atop Old Main used to; ring every 15 minutes in times! gone by and that the clock usual ly showed the correct time. However, not only have the ] chimes stopped tolling, but the [ clock shows an incorrect time. It ,has read 8:25 for the last several 'days. What seems even worse than 'this is that no one seems to be doing anything to correct the sit uation. R. W. Knouse, utilities project engineer in charge of the system, is out of town now but last week said that something may be wrong with the clock's mechan ism or maybe someone turned it ; off and it wasn't turned back on. IHe was referring to the electrical 'system that operates the time piece. The clock is turned off when ever a program is being held in I Schwab Auditorium. lEsso Sponsors 4-H Scholarship A S2O) scholarship for freshman men who are 4-H club members is being sponsored by the Esso Standard Oil Company. To be eligible for the scholar ship the applicant must be en rolled in a course related to agri culture, must have done at least three years of 4-H work and must have been graduated in the upper half of his high school. class. Need, merit and ability will be considered. Applicants may r e port to 5 Dairy to fill out the 4-H stan dard report form. Interviews will Ibe held tomorrow and Friday in '5 Dairy. —Photo by flurry Forminger NSYIVANIA University Completes Network Calculator A large variety of electric power systems can be simu lated on the University's new network calculator which has just been completed. The network calculator, built at a cost of about $250,000, 'will enable students and researchers to solve quickly and 'accurately a great variety of the problems concerning electric pow-1 er systems that would be ex- 41,622 Given tremely difficult, if not impos-;$ sable, to solve by hand calcula bons. -;. r o bons. Un iversity The calculator has a wide range: i of problem capability in the engi-: neering field. , The University has received , three It is the latest addition to the ?the grants totaling 341.622 from Univorsity's computer labora- United States Public Health tory in the Electrical Engineer 'Service for a 1-year period to sup ing Building. Already in oper- ; Port the teacher training and gen- ation are a $20.000 analog com- !oral training program in clinical puter. built largely through ;Psychology. alumni contributions. and a i The grants are supervised by $300,000 digital computer, fi. , (Dr. William U. Snyder. professor nanced by industrial and Uni- t ot psychologyand director of the versity sources. !Psychological Clinic. More than $lOO,OOO of the cost s The largest of the grants, $lB.- of the network calculator was do- : ,800. is being used to finance seven nated by the Pennsylvania Elec-qraineeships in clinical psychol tric Association, composed of thetogy. They range from $2OOO to electric power companies of the , 52800 a year. State. Other Pennsylvania indus-1 The second grant. $15,802, aids trial firms also contributed funds.!th e teaching and research facili. The calculator was built by !ties of the Psychological Clinic. [ the Westinghouse Electric Corp. ; The third grant, $7020, continues at East Pittsburgh and was de.' signed by Westinghouse engi. its support of the training of Dr. . neers and Paul E. Shields. as. , Hugh B Urban, who was given sociate professor of electrical ,a post-doctoral appointment for engineering at the University. ;teacher training in clinical psy- The calculator will be used ex- ;etiology last year. tensively in undergraduate and graduate courses in electrical en gineering as well as in other engineering and scientific fields. It is designed for both instruc tional and research purposes. 5 Students Fined By Traffic Court Traffic Court Monday night levied a total of $lO in fines against five students. Four other students who failed to appear before the court were automatically fined $ll. A breakdown of the fines in-' eludes $l6 for parking violations: and S 3 for failing to have cars, registered. Two students had a total of $lO in fines suspended and four cases with possible fines totaling $9 were dismissed. Riding Club to See Film A film, "The Breaking and Training of Thoroughbreds," will be shown at a meeting of the Riding Club at 7 tonight in 217 Willard. Artist Materials 0 • vO6 For The Only COMPLETE selection of artist materials, shops at Keelers. Whether .your needs are for the class room or your own hobby. Keelers stocks the best in quality • with such brand names as GRUMBACHER, WINSOR - NEWTON, PRANG and WEBER. 11:44014ilq The University Book Store Slavic Club Will Meet Allen Rodgers, associate protes 'sor of geography, will speak and show slides on "Soviet Central ;Asia Today" at the Slavic Club :at 7:45 tonight in 317 Willard. - - PARDON US . . . If you're an engineer Douglas wants you—but FROTH doesn't. What w• do want are people who carry their brains inside their heads, not hanging from their belt; people who know that pie is something you buy at the Corner Room, not some thing that equals 3.14159265. If you are on• of the former and not one of the latter, and desire to see your name in print for all the world to see and envy, then come to the FROTH Editorial Staff candi- dates' meeting, tinight at 1 o'clock at the-FROTH office in the basement (naturally) of the HUB. Remembar, if you road it in the Collegian, you read it somewhere else first. FROTH RAG! IVI