____ _ _ Photo by Mart? Schtrr PICTURE TAKER HAVING his picture taken taking pictures Is C. I. Noll, Professor of Chemistry from State College, The HUB exhibit, called Natural History, is by Kurt Seligman. Garland Helps Pull Nittany Out of Mud A Nittany Halls president yesterday brought a solution to the mud problem caused in and around the Nittany area by dump trucks. The trucks, which are employed at a residence halls con struction project at the corner of Pollock and Entrance Roads $4OOO Grant Allotted for Milk Studies The University is giving Car nation’s “contented cows” a help ing hand by trying to preserve the fresh flavor of regular milk in concentrated milk products. The Carnation Milk Co. has giv en the Dairy Science Department a two-year $4OOO grant to study the chemical nature of fresh milk flavor. The research workers hope to preserve the fresh milk flavor in concentrated milk products by finding out the chemical com pounds responsible for the flavor. Ten compounds have been iso lated from fresh milk and are now being analyzed. Working on the project is Noble Wong, candidate for a doctor of philosoDhv degree from Balti more, Md. He is a graduate of the University of Maryland. The effects of light on flavor changes in milk are being studied by Ernst-Gunnar Samuelson, of the dairy department of Alnarp Institute, Alnarp, Sweden. Sam uelson, who is visiting the Uni versity during the spring semes ter, is analyzing comoounds and studying how they effect changes in the flavor of milk exposed to light for long periods. His re search is supported by the Experi ment Station of the College of Agriculture. Angel Flight Applications Applications for Angel Flight will be available at the Hetzel Union desk until Tuesday. Second through sixth semester coeds with a 2.3 All-University av erage are eligible. pillllllll 1 iiiiimtiKiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiimiiiitiiimmiiiiiiiiiimimnmmmiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiuiumiiiutH Girls, enjoy your summer vacation ( at a coot ( New jersey Seashore Resort j working in one of: § The Original ( KOHR r S FROZEN CUSTARD STORES ( 5 on the Boardwalk. Ideal working eondtions, excellent hours, §j g good wages. Split schedule so you get lots of time for the {§ §j Beach: Write for application . i . § Tot KOHR'S FROZEN CUSTARD 1 1508 E. Market Street = York, Penna. . 1 SuuiiuiuiuiuimumumimmiiluummuuuujmuimuiuimiiuKfiuuiHHiiuimumtiitmiiumumimimmiiiiH By GAR KEARNEY near the Nittany area, have been dropping dirt and mud. Late yesterday afternoon, work was undertaken on a temporary truck lane, fronting on Entrance Road, to be used by the trucks until a permanent lane is estab lished. This was done at the suggestion of David Garland, president of Nittany 38 and representative of Nittany residents in the mud mat ter.. He conferred for a half-hour with AI Diehl, foreman in charge of excavating, and asked that a new truck lane be con* | slructed fronting on Entrance Road to avoid using the cur rent lane fronting on Pollock Road and thereby stop strewing mud all over the street and sidewalk. The sidewalks are the main thoroughfare for Nit lanians on their way to classes. Diehl' agreed that Nittany resi dents had a big problem to con tend with and also claimed that be* reaTy next week . One happy student clamored, jdp' «->. r\ “That new road is coming at a if good time. If you think the place 4f< —=r* is a mudhole now. wait until you '(£ gm .» . _ m gets at the warm weath6r l Awoiffltg yom AwuvwL Prior to yesterday, feelings on Clean, comfortable and reasonable accommodations the mud matter ran high among for male students, clubs, teams, administrators and residents of Nittany. .groups in the heart of midtown New York, close »o : ]N Typical of the altitude is a J ? 11 transportation and nearby Empire State BuiUi- Nfflgj: statement of Ronald Koot 0 ing. All conveniences, cafeteria, coffee shop, tailor, |*3ff|tn| freshman in busfness JLtaH «f barber shop, TV room, tours, etc. Booklet C. 11 traiion from" Windber, He said, Rates: Single Rooms 52.20-J2.30; Double Rooms 53.20-s3.fio ffljtl "Nittany residents are regarded ij WILLIAM SLOANE HOUSE Y.M.C.A. as slobs now by a good portion |if 356 West 34th St., New York, N. Y. Oxford 5-5133 (nr. Penn Sta.) A of the student body, and when we have to go to classes with mud splattered all over our pants and shoes it only sub ' stantiaies those beliefs." Another resident chimed in, “It wouldn’t be so bad if it was just plain mud, but the stuff is like cement when it dries. You need a wire brush to get it off your shoes." HATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Prof es To Office S. Brunner, profes ler head of the De vgriculture and Edu :come an agriculture in the U.S. Office Washington, D.C. as professor emeri icultural education, :rred on him by the Committee of the tstees. member since 1933, named head of the Education Depart ment in 1937. He is a University alumnus and holds a master of science degree from here also. He received a doo tor of philosophy degree from Ohio State University. Brunner made a 2-month tour of German universities and public schools in 1950 under an appoint ment of the U.S. Department of State as consultant in the Food and Agriculture Division of the Economic Recovery Commission. In 1955, he spent three months there as a specialist in agricul tural education. He is chairman of the North Atlantic Regional Commission on Teacher Education and Research, chairman of the American Voca tional Association committee on research and agricultural educa tion and a special editor for the National Agricultural Editors ; magazine. Coeds May Apply For WRA Offices WRA applications for positions as officers are available until Tuesday at 103 White and the Hetzel Union desk. Seniors are eligible for the of fices of president, juniors for vice president and intramural chair man, and sophomores for secre tary-treasurer, ass i s tant intra mural chairman and sophomore representative. All applicants must have a 2.5 All-University average and no major judicial record. Applicants for president must have had one year of experience on the execu tive board. Elections will' be held March 10 and 12. ■ft l | /? | Kjamtna Si 9 mu IS* Sunday, Feb. 22 | McElwain Lounge ALL 2-7 SEMESTER WOMEN I k i* h I 1 You must attend to pledge this semester. | 1 Compulsory .for sisters! 'Little International' Planned for April 25 By GRETCHEN HARRISON “Plans for the 42nd Little International livestock show are well underway," said Will year’s show. Harding, senior in anima' ; reported that some commits December to make this year’s i show a success. It will be held! April 25 in the stock pavilion, j “We try every year to make! Little International better than the last one,” Harding said. ; The Little International is mod-j eled after the Big International] held annually in Chicago, The] mid-western show is the largest of its kind in the world. Students who are interested in showing an animal will be assigned beef cattle, swine, sheep or horses during the March 5 meeting of the Block and Bridle Club. The club spon sors the livestock show. Stu- I dents may groom their animals from then until the show. The animals actually belong to the University, but students are permitted to use them. Entrants will be divided into 16 to 17 different categories. Three judges will make the final decis ions on all livestock, basing their judgments on showmanship andi grooming. A parade with wagons of live stock. horses and hitchwagons will ha held the night before fhe show. j Harding will be master of cere monies at the show and coordi nator of the dinner to be held'in the HUB following the contest. Assistant show manager, Louis Colvin, will be in charge of pre senting award trophies at the din ner. Each year the Little Inter national Show is dedicated to a graduate student who was active jin the Block and Bridle Club while at the University. The dedi cation has not ye t been an nounced. Psych Prof Will Speak Dr. Jean Britton, assistant pro fessor of psychology, will speak at the eighth annual meeting of the Louisville Conference on Children under Six to be held Wednesday and Thursday in Louisville, Ky. Her subjects will be, “What is Education for Children under Six” and “You Who Dare to Teach.” Pledge Tea ARE INVITED A >/ •Siffma 2-4 P.M. iam Harding, manager of this L husbandry from Brookville, ;es have been working since Two Educators To Study Here Two Formosan educators have arrived at the University for ad vanced training in industrial edu- They are Yung Chung Liao and Jung-Tsung Wu, both on the fac ulty of Taiwan Normal Univer sity. Established in 1953 by the Uni versity and the International Co operation Administration on Tai wan, the program of industrial and home economics education has trained 40 men and .women from Taiwan at Penn State. Seven students from Taiwan have been brought to Penn State on this program, i Florence L. Adolph of Burling ton, lowa, has been appointed home economics consultant for the Taiwan program. She will work with Dr. Jean D. Amber son, on leave as professor of home (economics at the University and who is in charge of the home economics section of the program on Taiwan. | { j Honestly Evaluated ] I USED CARS ! i i : (Report Cards on Side Window) : :49 Buick Super 4 Dr. ... $250 - :49 MG-TC (Cont. Classic) $1195 j •51 Mercury Coupe $295; :51 Ford 2 Dr. V-8 $270: 1151 Dodge 4Dr $260: 151 Dodge 2Dr $250! •52 Stude Commander .... $275 • | overdrive [ 153 Plymouth 4Dr $510; :53 Ford Victoria $635: •56 Hillman Dlx Minx ... .$1085; •56 Metropolitan $1095: :57 SKODA $1095 ; 1 57 Renault Dauphine ..$1265! ]5B Renault Dauphine ...$1650: • | jWEISER Imported CARS] I P.o. Box 703 : I State College, Pa. | j 3 mi. N. Hi. 322 f • ADams 7-4171 § I i See Russia by mot or coach! 18 day tours departing Helsinki ■or Warsaw every week May 21 through September 3, includes rural Russia and cities, $519. MAUPINTOUR Luxury Sailings. 9 departures aboard the' Queen Mary and Elizabeth, April through September, from $2105. maupintour Student-Teacher Economy Tour *. 72 days, visit ing 12 countries, departures: June 14, 21, 28, $1697 complete,. ■imu 'Am University Travel Bureau, Inc. 100 W. College Ave. State College Hotel AD 8-6779 •Louetta Keusbaum •Josephine Gettltf •Elizabeth Harned PAGE FIVE