The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 15, 1953, Image 2

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    PALL TWO
Soloists Named
In Choir Recital
Barbara Troxell, soprano, and Mary Alyce Bennett, contralto,
will sing solo parts in the Chapel Choir's presentation of Haydn's
"St. Cecilia Mass" in its sixth annual spring concert at Bp.m.
Wednesday in Schwab Auditorium.
The work is being performed for the second time in the United
States. The Chorus Pro Musica in Boston first presented the mass
Army Riflers
Finish Season
With 132 Wins
Army ROTC Rifle Team com
pleted its 1952-53 season with a
record of 132 wins against 39
losses. The team scored 39 vic
tories and seven defeats in var
sity 'competition and a shoulder
to shoulder match - record of 12
and five.
The team, coached by Maj. H.
D. Kinney and M/Sgt. George W.
McCloskey, compiled the follow
ing record in tournament compe-,
tion; third in the Second Army
Area Hearst trophy match and
10th in the nation, second in the'
Society of American Engineers
national competition, sixth in the
Pennsylvania Gallery state cham
pionships, fourth in the National
Rifle Association sectional match,
and 48th in the National Rifle
Association National Intercolle
giate Championships. The rifle
team competed in the NRA Na
tional Open Championships and
National ROTC Championships.
Results have not yet been pub
lished. Seventeen members were
also awarded medals.
Members of the squad are Wil
liam Beatty, captain, William
Brubaker, Albert Clepper, Dale
Fenstemacher, Richard Foster,
John Goettel, Donald Greth,
James Hager, John If ft, John
Leone, Richard Moorhead, Joel
Peabody, John Pfrommer, Carl
Scheerer, John Scheerer, Lester
Strauch, John Thalimer and
James Walczak.
Military Review
Set Tomorrow
Six bands and over 3000 men
will be in the line of march for
the annual Armed Forces Day
parade through State College at
1:30 p.m. tomorrow.
The parade will be divided in
to six divisions each led by a
band. Included in the parade will
be units of the College Army,
Navy, and Air Force Reserve Of
ficers - Training Corps, Centre
County veterans' organizations,
Boy and Girl Scout troops, and
Civil Defense Units. Participating
bands will include Army, Navy,
and Air Force ROTC bands, Jun
ior American Legion b and of
Bellefonte, State College High
School band, and the Ferguson
Township High School band.
E. K. Hibshman, Burgesg of
State College, will be grand mar
shall of the parade. Hibshman has
called upon State College resi
dents to join in the Armed Forces
Day celebration, and has re
quested business places and
homes to display the American
flag tomorrow.
Fishermen's Paradise
Opens Season Today
Fishermen's Paradise, located
on Spring Creek midway between
State College and Bellefonte, will
open its 20th season at 9 a.m.
today.
Dewey Sorenson, superintend
-ent of the project, said yesterday
the water is in good condition al
though it is slightly cloudy.
A large crowd is expected for
the opening today, and if weather
is good, attendance might top the
record crowd of 2053 on opening
day 1947.
Last year 1832 anglers tried
their luck on opening day, catch
ing a total of 2664 fish. '
Mining Editors Named
Donald Eget and Thomas Fal
kie were named new editors of
Mining Engineering Society
Newsletter.
George Schneider was elected
society president; Albert Tur
chick, vice • president; Ca r 1
Schrock, secretary; and William
Herring, :treasurer.
in this country a• year ago.
Miss Troxell received her B.A.
and M.A. degrees in music educa
tion at the College where she has
appeared with the choir in pre
vious spring programs. She was
awarded a scholarship to study
voice with Elizabeth Schumann
at Curtis Institute in Philadel
phia.
Made Met Debut
She sang under the direction
of Sir Thomas Beecham and
Leonard Bernstein in , operatic
and concert performances in this
country, Mexico, and Canada af
ter completing her work at Curtis.
Since then Miss Troxell has
sung on coast-to-coast broadcasts
and become a recording artist..
During the 1950-51 season she
made her debut at the Metropoli
tan Opera after previous appear
ances as a finalist on the Metro
politan Opera Auditions of the
Air program.
Phillips Gallery Soloist
Miss Bennett has appeared as
a contralto soloist at the Phillips
Gallery and the National Gallery,
Washington, D.C., where she re
cently sang Hindemith's "Das
Marienleben."
She has sung with the Ameri
can University Chamber Music
Society and the Chamber Music
Society of Catholic University
where she was a member of the
Music faculty. She is soloist at the
Mt. Vernon Methodist Church.
Miss Bennett has a 1 s o per
formed solo roles in Bach's "Pas
sion According to St. Matthew"
and "B Minor Mass," Handel's
" The Messiah," Haydn's "The
Creation" and "The Seven Last
Words," and in Mendelssohn's
"Elijah."
Inspectors Watch
AFROTC- Drill
The annual federal inspection
of the Air Force Reserve Officer's
Training Corps unit on campus
was held this week. Classroom
an d administrative procedure
were observed Monday and Tues
day, and the' inspection team
scrutinized the cadet parade dur
ing Tuesday's common ihour.
A new plan of guidance and
help for AFROTC units is being
tested this year iri an attempt to
secure greater standardization
throughout units all over the
country. Under this system sev
eral officers are designated to as
sist detachments - at various cam
puses in administration and train
ing. Assistance by correspondence
is implemented by actual visits
to the campus.
The three-man inspection team
will also inspect the Penn State
Centers which have Air ROTC
units.
Law Honorary Elects
Greenberg Chancellor
Philip Greenberg was recently
elected chancellor of Pi Lambda
Sigma, pre-legal honorary. John
Eller was . named vice chancellor
and John Carpenter keeper of the
rolls.
New initiates are Rudolph Dutz
man, Theodore Struck, Martha
Tait, John Bell, John Collett, Bar
bara- A. Jones, Leslie Handler,
George Greer, Leonard Goodman,
David Dixon, Ellen Carpenter, Su
san Holtzinger, Benjamin Sinclair
and Abraham Bavar.
Ag Club Elects Hodge
Recently elected officers of
General Agriculture Club are
Robert Hodge, president; James
Holter, vice president; Bernard
Fox, secretary-treasurer; John
Thornton, publicity chairman; and
James Holter, Agriculture Stu
dent Council representative.' .
2 Students Withdrdw
Twelve students withdrew from
the College during the past two
months.
Reasons 'given for withdrawal
are personal, three; military serv
ice, five; illness, two; scholastic,
one; and employment, one.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. TMqNSYLVANIA
Whi.,,A Pirate Maid
WILLIAM FREDERICK (right) collects a kiss from Barbara Wake
field last night at the Penn Haven Club-Philotes Spring Carnival
booth. Richard Staples' stands guard over the other pirate maids
who are (1. to r.) Jeanne Keller and Arlene Borneman.
Players' Production
Enters Fifth Week
The Pirandello comedy-mystery, "Right You Are! (If You Think
So)" will enter its fifth week of a six• weekend run tomorrow night
at Center Stage.
Built around ,an incident picked up and enlarged by local
gossips, the play is an example of intriguing suspense by one of • the
world's greatest modern play
wrights.
Dr. Warren S. Smith has direct
ed a play that is very hard for the
audience to forg e t. Everyone
seems to 'have a different view
point as to who is actually the
villain, but, of course, each idea
is correct according to Pirandello,
who preaches the• doctrine of free
thought and reason in this work.
- Al Sarkas, -as Laudisi, the cas
ual philosopher, reflects the
thoughts of the author. Opposing
all the gossips of the town, his,
ideas on the situation are in the
end proved to be rational and not
so silly as the gossips once,
thought.
Two mysterious personalities,
Signor Ponza and Signora Frola,
are played by Clifton Crosbie and
Jolly Oswalt. They _sho w the
audience that one can't take
everything at its face value, but
must investigate the related facts.
Other members of the cast' are
Dominic Landro, Allen Adair,
Alyce Mears, Yvonfie Voigt, Betsy
Jones, Nancy Fortna and Ro
chelle Zinger.
Tickets are on sale for $1 at the
Student Union desk in Old Main
College Orchestra
To Play Sunday
Works of six composers will be
presented at 3 p.m. Sunday at a
concert by the College Symphony
Orchestra in Schwab Auditorium.
The group, conducted by Theo-
dore K. Karhan, associate profes
sor of music, will present Pro
logue, from "Pagliacci" (Leonca
vallo); "Symphony in C" (Bizet),
"Last Spring" (Grieg), Intermez
zo from" Nary Janos Suite" (Ko
daly), "Springtime in Angus"
from "The Three Elizabeths
Suite" (Coates), and Polonaise
from "Christmas Night" (Rimsky-
Korsakov).
It was a geneticist, Francis Gal
ton, who first suggested the use of
fingerprints for the purpose of
identification of criminals.
WRITE
Home, Your Friend,
Relatives, Your Steady!
But, by all means, write on
Penn Sfafe Stationery
55c, 65c box
$5 in Sples, Get $1 FREE •
BX in the TUB
By EDMUND REISS
Conclave to Air
News Barriers
Barriers to legitimate public in
formation, news at local, state and
federal ( ' government levels will be
one of the topics studied today
and tomorrow at the Pennsylvan
ia Press Conference at the Nit
tany Lion Inn.
Three hundred Pennsylvania
editors and publishers and their
wives are expected at the two
day conference, ,sponsored by the
Pennsylvania Society of Newspa
per Editors, Pennsylvania News
p a,p e r Publishers' Association,
Pennsylvania Women's Press "As
sociation, and the Journalism de
partment.
The Sessions will begin at 1:30
p.m. today under the chairman
ship of Melville P. Ferguson, edi
tor of the Philadelphia Evening
Bulletin and president of PSNE.
Dr. Clara E. COckerille; assist
ant superintendent of Armstronef
County !public schools, will speak
at 6:30 tonight at a dinner at the
Inn.
A rattlesnake can strike a dis
tance of 18 inches. ,
3 DIMENSION!!
"HOUSE Of WAX"
Salt
CLIFTON WEBS ' ---
BARBARA STANWYCK
"TITANIC"
• /
MILETLYN MONROE
JOSEPH COTTON
"NIAGARA"
in Warnercolor
FRIDAY, MAY 15, 195
NYU;r'Prof
~TO.-..,:Addres
Art
.Group
':Df:' 'HdWai'd Lane, professor of
child development at New York
University, will 'address the
Spring Conference of the Grad-.
uate Cllib in ' Art Education at
2 p.m. tomorrow in 135 Temporary
Classroom '.Buildings. His topic
will be "Art and Child Develop
ment."
The conference, which begins
today, is organized to provide op
portunity for the exchange of
ideas and experiences in art edu
cation. An open house exhibit in
the Temporary
_Classroom Build
ings will begin the conference.
Derwin W. Edwards, head of
the Departinent of Art Education
at Miami University, Oxford, 0.,
will give the opening address at
2 p:m. today. Five talks on grad
uate.studies in art education will
be , presented by ' students who
have attained doctorates.
An exhibit of work by graduate
students in art education is being
held at Schiow 'Gallery in con
junction with the, conference. The
exhibit, including paintings, cer
amics, textiles, and craft work,
will be open until tomorrow.
The Graduate Club in Art Edu
cation 'is an organization which
promotes the exchange of research
and professional ideas. This is the
first conference held by the pro
fessional group. Approxiinately
200 graduate students in art edu
cation comprise the club.
A dinner tomorrow night and
entertainment by a creative dance
group will conclude the confer
ence.
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