PAGE -EIGHT Church Groups Plan Easter Celebrations Special Easter programs will' be presented by foui> student reli gious organizations—Lutheran Student Association, Wesley Foun dation, Interchurch Fellowship,- and Westminster Foundation—to morrow and Monday. The Lutheran Student Association will present scenes from the play “Family Portrait” at 6:45 p.m. tomorrow in the Little Thea ter. The student choir, featuring Robert Diefenderfer, baritone soloist, will sing. Holy Communion at 6:30 a.m. Monday in the Grace Lutheran Church, followed by breakfast at the Lutheran Student Center, will close the Easter activities. To Have Easter Dinner The play, part of a traditional Palm Sunday program sponsored by LSA, is under the direction of Ruth Devlin, a graduate stu dent in dramatics and speech, and James Broad. Included in the cast are Arlen Borgeson, Mary Kozelnicky, Eleanor Swartz, George Kurtz, Richard Haynes, and Roger Staub. Wesley Foundation’s Easter ob servances this weekend include a Palm Sunday worship service at 9:30 a.m. followed by the three regular classes. An Easter dinner will be served at .5:15 p.m. to morrow followed by a special candlelight worship service at 6:30 p.m. Jane Montgomery, Mary Pielmeier, William Valentine, Charles Gauntt, and Charles Man willer will participate in the ser vice, which has dedication as its theme. This afternoon students' will go to the Woodycrest playground to complete the cleaning and paint ing begun there last week as a Wesley project. To Serve Breakfast Interchurch Student Fellowship will sponsor the annual Palm Sunday sunrise service at 7 a.m. in front of Old Main. The service will be conducted with the par ticipants standing on the steps of Old Main facing Mount Nittany. Special musical selections will be given by members of ICSF, and devotions will be led by the offi cers. Westminster Foundation will have a breakfast at 8 a.m. tomor row following the ICSF sunrise service. The foundation’s student department service will be held at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow. The West minster Fellowship will have a special Palm Sunday service at 6:30 p.m. CLASSIFIEDS FOB SALE SPRING'S HERE. You need • this 1949 Chevrolet coupe. Radio, heater, excellent condition. Call Boalsburg 6534. 1995 CHEVROLET coupe; good mechanical condition, new tires, sound body. Phone 4749. See at 257 E. Beaver Ave. NEW PIERCE Cheonograph'Wrist Watch, $125.00 value. Will sell for $50.00. Call Andy 3950. Never been worn. LOST BLUE GABARDINE topcoat at Paradise Cafe March 22. I have yours. Call 4444. BROWN SUEDE jacket. First floor Sparks, Thursday. Reward $lO.OO. Call 7645 town. Ask for Dave. BROWN LEATHER notebook, Wednesday morning. Information important to owner. Please return to Marvin Kras nansky, Daily Collegian or Student Union desk. Old Main. - • FIELD JACKET with pipe at Engineering A, Wednseday. I have yours. Call Bundy ext. 277 Nittany 42 Km. 10. BROWN —GOLD silk scarf. Pollock road behind Old. Main, Thurs. morning. There until noon. Beverly, ext. 2446 8-5. MISCELLANEOUS LET “HANDY DELIVER" take care of your weekend ice needs. Call 7617 or 4859. We deliver. ‘ IF YOUR typewriter needs repairs, just call 2492 or bring machine to 633 W. College Ave. Mr. Beatties' 28 years .ex perience is at your service. HELP WANTED SCULLERY HELP wanted. Fraternity men preferred. White bucks, gray flannels,, and diagonally-striped, red and black tie necessary. Call 2193. Ask for John. SHORT ORDER cook for weekend eve nings. Needed immediately. Call Bennett Skyview, Phone 6591. FOR RENT DOUBLE ROOM on second floor. Clean and quiet. Available now. 420 S. Pugh St. Call Mrs. Patner 4708. FOUND A KHTNESTONK tenr-drop earring, Mon day night at the Matrix dinner. Call 129 Simmons, Carolyn Barrett. THE' DAILY COLLEGIAN: STATE Cf^- EGE; PSCA Voting ~ (Continued from page two) . C. Allen, and Dr. Harold W. Per kins. Five will be elected. - Board members nominated for one-year terms are Dr. M. K. Gingrich, Dr. John A. Mourant, Mrs. Dorothy C. Jones, John Tru by, Mrs. Lucy Doan, Dr. Henry W. Knerr, Dr. Charles M, Long, and John E. Nicholas. Four will be elected. Three ministers will be selected for board membership from a mong the Rev. Edwerth E. Korte, the Rev. Robert H. Eads, the Rev. Frank Montgomery, the Rev. An drew E. Newcomer, and the Rev. Albert S. Asendorf. Insurance Club Meeting Roy Ring of Etna Group In surance will address the Insur ance Club at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Sigma Nu. He will hold an inter view for seniors after his talk. Fewer words begin with X than any other letter. To ease the stress used by ldly cares i • • worries - a haste— , • ' • Lucky Strike m vfe OA.T.COW Graduate Exams Slated for May 2, 3 .The next graduate record ex aminations will be held at the College May 2 and 3. Informa tive bulletins and. application blanks for the tests are avail able in 207 Buckhout labora tory. Applications must arrive at Educational Testing Service, P.O. Box 592, Princeton, N.J., before April 18. Greek Week - (Continued, from page one) • cloudy. Tonight students wilL be at tending fraternity house parties and open houses. Fraternities will be featuring everything from French apaches, to the western cowboys. - - Dramatic performances today include the third and fourth showings of “A Connecticut Yan kee,” and the final showing of “Hedda Gabler.” Curtain time for the Thespians’ “Yankee” will be at 2 p.m. and at 7:30 tonight in Schwab Auditorium. The Play ers’ “Hedda” will get underway at 8 tonight at Center Stage. A limited number of tickets for all these-performances are still avail able at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Tonight’s fraternity parties and open houses will officially close Greek Week activities. Greek Week was aranged by the IFC and Panhel to improve Greek community relations. Be Happy fiO lucky! AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES (ENNSYLVANIA Upton Close (Continued from page one) dorsed any anti-Semitic views Close may hold. Clayton Schug, committee chairman, could not be reached yesterday for comment on the Hillel action. The Hillel statement lauded the forum series generally as having rendered “substantial” service, but said, “We, as representatives of the Jewish student, body of Penn State and the Jewish com munity of State College, wish to state publicly that \ye disassociate ourselves from the Community Forum sponsorship of Upton Close.” The Hillel representative was one of the three committee mem bers voting against retaining him at the reconsideration meeting. Thirteen were present at that meeting. The speaker has been charged with anti-Semitism by B’nai B’rith and other grpups. He has been removed from the air at least three times,- according to The New York Times and “A Measure of Freedom,” 1950 Anti- Defamation Le'ague report. NBC dropped him in 1944, with the statement that a “balanced pre sentation of news is the obliga tion and responsibility of the net work.” WIBG in Philadelphia, dropped him in 1946, and the Mu tual Broadcasting System in 1948. Close had charged government interference in the NBC dismissal, but a Federal Communications Commission statement ,to the Daily Collegiamsaid, “The termin poi o 'r,d«es -y? u \ In a cigarette, taste makes the difference and Luckies taste better! The difference between “just smoking” and really enjoying your smoke is the taste of a cigarette. You can taste the difference in the smoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of a Lucky .. . for two important reasons. First, L.S./M.F.T.— Lucky Strike means fine tobacco ... fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second, Luckies are made to taste better ... proved best made of all five principal brands. So reach for a Lucky. Enjoy the cigarette that tastes better! Be Happy—Go Lucky! Buy a carton today! IS/M. F.Tr lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco SATURDAY, APRIL' 5;-1952 Republican Club Elects Vincent Yakowicz has been elected president of the Young Republican Club.' George Greer has been named vice president of the organization. Other offi cers elected were Guyla Wood ward, secretary, and Susanne Berleue, treasurer. ation of Mr. Close’s broadcasts was not the result of , any action or rulings by this commission . . . The commission has no power to direct a station to carry or to refrain from carrying any parr ticular program, or t p prescribe the content of any program.” The ADL report charges that “whenever possible (Close) incor porated thinly veiled attacks against Jews, seldom missing an opportunity to inject a defama tory innuendo or a phrase calcu lated to reflect unfavorably upon ‘minority groups.’ ” An ADL analysis of Close’s “Close-Ups” newspaper column states, that he “reiterates-the rac ist theory of communism being primarily a ‘racial’ movement aiming at ‘dictatorship by' racial minorities.’ These minorities are defined as ‘the old_ New Deal Zionist-Communist crowd.’ ” Commenting on Close’s repeat ed denials of anti-Semitism, ADL calls him “the kind of bigot who always finds it necessary to deny his anti-Semitism.” The Delaware Water Gap is the name given to a three mile pass in the Kittatinny Range of the Appalachian .Mountains near Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania.