PAGE TWO Frosh, Soph Class Candidates Continue Campaign Lion and State Party candidates for freshman and sophomore class offices will continue their campaigns for Thursday’s election over the weekend. Lion Party sophomore candidates will visit Alpha Chi Rho, Alpha Tail Omega, Lamb da Chi Alpha and Beta Sigma Rho at noon today; Simmons and McElwaih dining halls at noon tomorrow; Atherton dining hall tomorrow evening; add Phi Kappa. Tau, Delta Chi, Pi Kappa Phi, and Pi Kappa Alpha, Monday evening. Talks to Open IFC Workshop On Wednesday The first phase of the Interfrat ernity Council workshop will get underway Wednesday night with a series of discussions and dinners designed to create better under standing between fraternities ,and to find solutions to fraternity problems. , Dinners for members of each discussion group will he held in seven fraternities. Each frater nity will send one representative to each discussion group. Houses having the dinners will send their members to other houses for the evening meal. Following the dinners, outstand ing townspeople and faculty mem bers will address each group. A dis.cussion will be held after each talk. At this time members of each group will attempt to un cover and solve problems related to the subject being discussed. Recommendations and findings of each group will then be sub mitted to the IFC for examina tion and consideration. The annual IFC banquet at the Nittany Lion Inn will climax the workshop Friday night. Discus sion chairman will report the findings of their groups at that time. Gionfurco Will Speak On Radio Broadcast Elio Gianturco, associate profes sor of romance languages, will be featured as a radio commentator on the Romance Language depart ment broadcast at 8:30 p.m. Mon day. The program will include an cient Italian dances and airs for the lute in O. Respighi’s orches tral transcription. President To Speak Dr. Buell Gallagher, president of City College of New York', will speak at Chapel services on “The Meaning of Freedom” at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. x As a part of Junior Week, Jesse Arnelle, junior class vice presi dent, and Faith Gallagher, Junior Prom queen, will participate in the service. Juniors will attend Chapel en masse. Dr. Gallagher is on campus this weekend to conduct a three day political and religious col loquy sponsored by the Penn State Christian Association, the Department of Political Science and the junior class. An ordained minister of the Congregational Church, Dr. Gal lagher received his A.B. degree from Carleton College, his B.D. from Union Theological Seminary, Ph.D. from Columbia University and D.D. from Oberlin College. He studied in England at the London School of Economics ■ on a Fogg traveling fellowship. Before coming to City College, Dr. Gallagher served as assistant commissioner of higher education in the United States. He is national vice president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple. An author on the problems of race relations, Dr. Gallagher has written “American Caste and the Negro College,” “Color and Conscience,” “A Search for the Christian Way in Race Relations,” and “Portrait of a Pilgrim.” He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and served as pastor of the First Congregational Church of Passaic, N.J.; instructor at Do ane College, Crete, Neb.; presi dent of Talladega College and professor of Christian Ethics at Pacific School of Religion, Cali fornia. Lion Party freshman candidates will visit Atherton dining hall noon Sunday and Nittany-Pollock dining hall Monday evening. * Virginia Hance, Lion Party freshman class secretary-treas urer candidate, will tour Mac A llister Hall tomorrow night and Atherton Hall Monday night. Shirley Mix, Lion Party soph omore candidate for secretary treasurer, will tour Grange Dorm tomorrow night and Simmons Hall Monday night. James Musser, Lion Party can didate for freshman class presi dent, and Robert Bennett, fresh man vice presidential candidate, will visit the Nittany-Pollock area tomorrow night. They will begin a three-night tour of the West Dorm area Monday. Both parties have announced plans for use of radio in their campaigns. State Party will pre sent a one minute campaign pro gram during “Groovology” on WMAJ tomorrow night. The party will present five minute broad casts Monday and Tuesday nights, Kenneth White, clique chairman, has announced. Lion Party will also sponsor five minute programs, Benjamin Sinclair, Clique chair man, has announced. State Party sophomore __ class candidates will tour fraternities tomorrow and Monday night, White announced. They will visit the houses between 6 and 8 p.m., conversing informally with soph omore members in the fraterni ties. This will allow for a “more personal contact basis” in cam paigning, White said. Freshmen will tour dormitory arear. Hugh Cline is the State Party candidate for sophomore class president; Richard Allison, vice president; and Barbara Stock, secretary-treasurer. Robert McMillan is the sopho more class presidential nominee of the Lion Party. Robert Hard? is the vice presidential candidate. Freshman class candidates of the State Party are Steven Jor dan, president; Joseph Ferko, vice president; and Marilyn Selt zer, secretary-treasurer. CCNY Chapel Chapel Choir, under the direc tion of Mrs. Willa C. Taylor, will sing as introit “Deck Thyself, Mv Soul with Gladness” (Cruger- Bach) and as anthem “Our Fath‘ er” (Gi-ecthaninoff). George Ceiga, College organ ist,' will play as prelude “Second Prelude in G Major” (Mendels sohn), as offertory “Volo Pater” from “Eighth Interludes on An cient Modes” (D’lndy) and as post lude “Second Fugue in G Major” (Mendelssohn). KORNER We have everything Y you need ip to make your House Party a Big Success —but your date— " The Post Office is just opposite us." \ THE DAILY Committee To Judge Party Action The All-College elections co. mittee will decide Thur s d £ whether the State Party \ olated a provision of the electio. code, Edwin Kohn, committe chairman, has announced. The code lists “Failure to read this code in its entirety to the whole clique at the meeting on Oct. 25, 1953,” as' one of nine vi olations for which Article XI pro vides penalties of ho more than. 100 or less than ten votes. The elections code was not read to the State Party clique Oct. 25. Kenneth White, clique chairmhn, said the reading was omitted be cause he believed a member of the elections committee would read the code, as in previous years. White said no member of the committee was prfesent at the Oct. 25 meeting. The clique chairman added that he asked an elections committee member at the clique meeting Sunday if the code - should be read,- and was told “not to both er.” Ernest Famous, the committee member to whom White referred, said he had been under the im pression the code had been read previously when he answered White, White said the matter was a misunderstanding, and that an in tentional violation had not been committed. The code was read to All-College and class clique offi cers of the party and to the chair men of the party committees, he said. The elections committee will consider the matter, along with complaints made by clique chair men or committee members after the polls close in the freshman and sophomore elections Thurs day, Kohn said. Athletics Barred In WD Quadrangle Participation in athletics is for bidden in ,the West Dormitory quadrangle between Hamilton and Thompson Halls, James Dean, assistant to the dean of men in charge of independent affairs, has announced. Likewise, he said, College rules do not permit the playing of ball games in the immediate vicinity of the Nittany and Pollock dormi tories. Ball fields have been pro vided in these two areas, he added. The rules were effected, Dean said, to prevent die breaking of windows in the dormitory areas and other damage to property. Although paper was used in China at a very early date, it be jcame available to Europe about •the eighth century. r, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA ;E ■>ne of her former shows read by daughter Nancie Dee Coulter, liss Mears plays the role of the aging ex-sweetheart of the theater 'Orld in Players' production of Noel Coward's "Hay Fever;" Ann rank, as the maid, tries to get a better look at the paper by peer ag over Miss Coulter's shoulder. The final performance of_ the English comedy will be held at 8 tonight in Schwab Auditorium. Tickets cost $1 and are on sale at the Student Union desk in Old Main. Thomas Political One of the twentieth century’s more colorful political figures, Norman Thomas—author, minister and six-time Socialist party can didate for the presidency— is here today, along with three other distinguished Americans, to participate in the annual colloquy on politics and.religon Thomas will speak three times during the weekend program. He will discuss this year’s topic, “Freedom—Can We Risk It?” in a symposium at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow with William Block, joint owner and publisher of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Buell Gallagher, president of the City College of New York; and Mrs. Genevieve Blatt, director of the Intercol legiate conference on government. The elder pol'itiean will talk to students interested in political science at 10 a.m. Monday''in the Little Theatre in Old Main. After speaking on “Reflections on My Six Tries for the Presidency,” Thomas will turn the program over to discussion and questions from the floor. His address on “Freedom: Yes terday and Today” will conclude the colloquy at 8 p.m. Monday in Schwab Auditorium. The first event of the three-day program will -be Mrs. Blatt’s speech on “Faculty and Student Freedom” at the faculty dinner at 7 tonight at the Autoport. ■ Dr. Gallagher will speak on “The Meaning of Freedom” at Chapel services at 11 a.m. tomor row m Schwab Auditorium, and a, tea for the prominent guests will be held from 3 to 5 in Mc- Elwain Lounge. Thomas became an ordained minister in 1911 after receiving degrees from Princeton Univer sity and Union Theological Sem inary. Life and work in a poor labor district of New .York City drew him toward socialism, and he joined the party during World War I. Rush those pictures down % now of the game and weekend for that fast service Pictures developed in 8 hours Films in by 10 a.m. Done by 5 p.m. Centre Co. Film Lab W. College Ave. (Between the movies) TniiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiHiiiiiiimiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuuuiii? SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1953 Off to Address CofSoquy By BETTY KOSTER Long before Sen: McCarthy even dreamed of waging war against communism and at a period when important government leaders were praising Stalin, Thomas con tinually attempted to Warn Amer icans against the dangers of this “new religion of the mass and the. machine.” He believes that Russian com munism “has been a . socialist be trayal. It has substituted for the socialist commonwealth the most absolute state in history.” Thomas has lived to see many of his social reforms adopted eveh though his party has failed to achieve general popularity. He feels this has been caused to some extent by immigration limitations, the electoral system of giving the bloc of a state’s votes to one party and discrepancies in state consti tutions which allow. many states to completely omit minor parties from the ballot. - He has constantly opposed war saying ' that. “the only hope of social salvation is learning to co operate.” Feeling that the United States has the material basis for an abundant life, Thomas has been very concerned about need less waste of food and the dwind ling supply of natural resources. •Although his belief in “public ownership and management for the common good of the names of production and distribution” has been widely criticized, seldom has anyone questioned the integrity of this friendly critic of American politics, who has continually strived for a socialistic but also democratic America-. [luimimiimmiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiimu: 122 W. Beaver Ave. - or - Candy Cane