PAGE EIGHT AIM Board Will Review 'Week' Plans The Association of Independent Men's Board of Governors will hear the report of a joint commit tee of AIM and Leonides offi cers on plans of the groups for Spring Week, at 7 tonight in Room 203 lletzel Union. The executive committee will also set the date of the AIM- Leonides Spring banquet. Appointments will be made to the constitional committee, the projects committee, and the AIM Judicial Board of Review. The latter appointments will be made from last Sunday's interviews. A report will be made on the National Independent Student Association's conference held here last December, and plans will be discussed for the NISA conven tion to be held at the University this Spring. A delegate to this convention will be appointed. A recommendation w ill be made that the Office of the Dean of Men provide for a stenograph er for the Association's Judicial Board of Review. The social committee will re port on all social functions of the past semester which have not al ready been reported. Prexy Lauds— (Continued from page one) able to all the people of the Corn men wealth, "Students, faculty, alumni, fel low trustees, and friends of Penn State are deeply grieved by his passing. They have lost a great friend." CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE ROY AL PORTABLE quiet deluxe type- riter, hardly used. Cost sll2—will let go fur $75. Call AD 7-7362. 194 k BLACK 2-door Chevrolet isetlan Heater, radio. 300 S. Durrowea. Cal AD 7-7983 ask for Dill. PURE, GOLDEN, home-made honey straight from the beets. Available jars or comb. Call Queenle AD 7-4702 CIMITZEIREEI 3-speed phonograph-radio combination M. Call FAI Jacobs AD 7-4318, 7-10 p.m 1114111 GRADE banjo mandolin and case Exceptional value. Room 6, Pond Lab after 6 p.m. PHOTOFANE COMPLETE developing set. Compact; includes printer—a real buy. Write 208 8 3rd_ Ave. Burnham, Pa. 8 CYLINDER PACK ARD Coupe. 1941 model with radio, heater, and good tires. Motor recently overhauled. Reasonable. AD 8-8014. FRATERNITY•SORORITY sweat shirte and T-shirts, tine quality. low price. Call Jerry Epstein AD 7-4953 FOR PROMPT and expert radio and phono graph service. stop at State College TV. 232 S. Allen. FOR RENT SINM.E Itoo* male student, quiet pri rate home. Separate student bathroom. prit ate entrance. phone. f 6.00. Phone Al) 5.6667. SINGLE FIRST floor room _ Near campus. Call AD 7-2665. DOUBLE ROOM. Reasonable rates. 420 S. Pugh St. DOUBLE ROOM. Call AD 7-33.62 e Aar. NEWREMODELED rates. $6 ter week. 110 S. Barnard St. Nice double rooms, see them. Call AD F-8353. LARGE DOUBLE room in quiet home Rent reasonable. Twin beds, two desks. Phone AD 7-7E52. TWO DOUBLE rooms, one single room— not fraternity material. Two blocks from campus. Call AD 7-3498. WORK WANTED TYPING WANTED. Neat. accurate. fast Call Al) 7-2495 before noon or ELgin S-3191. EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires typing theset, etc. Fast. accurate pert ice. Reastmable rates. Phone ADams ri-6943. LOST E&E SLIDE RULE in vicinity Eng "C" Call Tim eat. 286. Reward. sLiDF, RULE. lost between Dorms and Willard on Wed. Call Frank e)t. 969. SLIDERULE WITH name John Carpenter, near Eng. IS Feb. 8. Reward. Call AD E-6318. DAINTY (101. D and pearl bracelet in Rec Hall Saturday night. Sentimental value. Call Roseann, 347 Simmons. .INSTRUCTION PIANO INSTRUCTION by experienced teacher. Beginners and advanced chil dren and adults. Call AD 8-8693 between 6-8 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS WHEN TOUR typewriter needs aerviee just dial AD 7-2492 or bring machine to 633 W. College Ave. HIGH FIDELITY is obtainable in State College at wholesale (net) prices at Skaldic Associates, 2.4 E. College Ave. Mi Pi component seta, FM, tape retarders. Milholland-- (Continued from page one) member of the law firm of Alter, Wright, and Barron. He served from 1942 to 1944 as Judge of the Orphans Court of Allegheny County. A year earlier he had been president of the Alle gheny County Bar Association. In addition to his active legal career, Judge Milholland has been a director of the Heppenstall Company and a director and vice president of Capper, Harman, and Slocum, an organization Which publishes three widely-read agri cultural journals: The Pennsyl vania Farmer, The Michigan Farmer, and The Ohio Farmer. Engineering Jobs Open for Students Applications are being accepted for student engineering positions in the Bureau of Reclamation lo cated in the Western states and in Alaska, the United States Civil Se r vice Commission has an nounced. The entrance salaries range from $2960 to $3415 a year. Infor mation about the requirements and the training program may be obtained from the U.S, Civil Ser vice Commission, Washington 25, D.C., or from the placement of fice. Chess Club to Meet The Penn State Chess Club will meet at 7:10 tonight in 7 Sparks. beside bath Reasonable PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA INTERVIEWS ... with visiting engineering representatives of Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Wednesday, February 22 MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS • Any B.A. or B.S. degree. • Mathebatics through differential calculus. • One year of college physics (additional courses in chemistry or related sciences desirable). • A good scholastic standing in undergraduate work, particularly in math and science courses. • Desire to pursue a career in engineering. EAST HARTFORD 8, CONNECTICUT Student Free On $2OO Bond Thomas Emerick, 25, junior in business administration from Da vidsville, is free on $2OO bond after being arraigned before Justice of the Peace Guy G. Mills yesterday morning on charges of drunken driving and failing to stop at two stop signs. He is scheduled to appear in Centre County Court, police said. Arresting officer Patrolman Ralph M. Farmer, in his report, charged that Emerick failed to stop at two stop signs on Calder alley at 12:25 a.m. yesterday. The report also charged that Emerick's vehicle, a 1950 Nash, was "weaving from side to side in the alley" while traveling west. He was stopped by police at the intersection of Calder alley and Gill street. The case will be referred to Tribunal for hearing after Emer ick has his trial before the Centre County Court, Dean of Men Frank J. Simes said yesterday. Chemical Society Harry L. Hovis of the Hamilton Watch Co., Lancaster, will address the Central Pennsylvania section of the American Chemical So ciety on the subject "Chemistry in the Watch Industry" at 8 p.m. Thursday in 119 Osmond. Cabinet Agenda The All-University Cabinet agenda may be picked up at the Hetzel Union desk today ,e9e . "1. , EARN... WHILE YOU LEARN DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATION Play Program- (Continued from page one) ing results. The W.A.L. Society, which pro duced the play, was a literary so-, ciety organized on March 4, 1859, 1 ten days after the college opened. Members of this society had leads in "The Merchant of Venice," so it has safely been concluded that the Thespian Corps of the W.A.L. Society was the first dramatic group on Penn State's campus. Honorary members of th e" W.A.L. society include Abraham Lincoln, whose letter of accept ance may be seen in the Penn I State room, James Buchanan, and Stephen Douglas. The W.A.L. So ciety was the leading social and; literary group on campus for, many years. By checking the W.A.L. cata logue, published in 1860, it has been found that all participants that were mentioned in "The Merchant of Venice" program were members of the first three graduating classes of Penn State. As Old Main was the only build ing on campus at the time, the play was probably produced there, on the fifth floor where IW.A.L. had its headquarters. • The program, with a small crest in the corner bearing the words, "Southworths Superfine," is remarkably well preserved for its age. The printing is on the crude side and there are several brown stains on one side, In one corner of the paper the words, "To the Misses Everhart and Miss Barr," are written in fading black ink. The first drama production at ring education for ed B.A. or B.S. graduates PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT, one of America's greatest engineering organizations, is offering a com prehensive engineering course to qualified B.A. or B.S. graduates. Throughout the training period, those enrolled in this program will be paid a liberal salary with increases as scholastic progress is shown. The educational program itself will be conducted, at ,our expense, by one of the nation's foremost en gineering colleges. Graduates of this 30-week course will be assigned to our engineering department. Here, they will be given the opportunity to do creative engineering work on the world's finest aircraft engines. integral Such an unusual opportunity should be fully investi gated by B.A. or B.S. graduates with engineering interest. Further information and literature can be obtained from the College Placement Office ap pointments for interviews can also be made. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1954 Bridges Defends-- (Continued from page five) the most vital years to this coon. try and the free world. "We're the last core of exist ence of freedom in the world. If we go down the free world goes with us, and . . , if we get in trouble there is no other free nation in the world that we can turn to." Sen. Bridges was introduced by Rep. James E. Van Zandt, Con. gressman from the 20th Congres. sional District of Pennsylvania. Sen. Bridges and Rep. Van Zandt, along with officials of the Atomic Energy Commission and the Association of American Rail. roaders, toured the •new Curtiss. Wright site near Clearfield yes terday afternoon. Before arriving at the dinner, they also toured the University's nuclear reactor. - Also present was State Repub lican Chairman Miles R. Horst. 3 Faculty Members To Attend Conference Three members of the adver tising faculty of The School of Journalism will attend the 1956 Display Advertising Conference on Feb. 17 and 18 in Harrisburg. Faculty members are Donald W. Davis, professor and head of the department of advertising; Richard 0. Byers and Dr. Roland 'L. Hicks. Penn State in 1861 must have en tailed quite a bit of work and excitement, but probably not near as much as when one 'of . its pro grams was discovered ninety-five years later! IM:=!I