PAGE TWO RILW Program 3s Announced The final program for Religion in Life Week, Friday to Monday, has been released by the planning committee. David Petegorsky will open the program at 8 a.m. Friday at the Hiiiel Inter-Faith Service at the Hillel Foundation, 224 Locust Lane. Tliree guest speakers will lead informal discussions on student All-University Talent Show Judges Chosen Judges for the 14th annual All-| University Talent Show, spon sored by the Penn State Club, have been chosen, president Frank Hitchcock announced yes terday. The show will be present ed at 8 p.m. Friday in Schwab. Juiiges will be Frank J. Simes, dean of men; Robert D. Reif sneider, professor of dramatics; Robert Koser, assistant to the reg istrar; Lou Bell, director of pub lic information; and Ross Leh man, assistant executive secretary of the Penn State Alumni Asso ciation. Three winners will be chosen by audience applause following the selection of five finalists by the judges. Cash prizes will be awarded the winners. First orize is $25, second, $l5, and third, $lO The ten acts include “The Four Frosh” quartet; Jeanne Lippy, so prano; John Moran, tenor; Ronald Spangenberger, baritone; Frances Spatafore, song stylist. Accordionist Dean Presnall, pi anist Barry Keiser, comedian Richard Mohler, novelty baton twirler Mary Ann Lewis, and “The Four Taus,” a barbershop quartet. Members of the quartets are, “The Four Frosh”—Thomas Mon ito, Thomas Zimmerman, Ig Ho kov, and Joseph Smayda, and “The Four Taus” Richard Mercer, Bruce Coble, Robert Yoder, and Donald Vaughn. Last year’s winner, Michael Belgio, tenor, will make a guest appearance. Seymour “Cy” Lazurus, eighth semester education major, will be master of ceremonies. The Lee Gairbrick Trio and ac companist Gene Palacer will pro vide music for the performers. Tickets for the show, priced at 85 cents, are on sale at the Stu dent Union desk in Old Main un til 5 p.m. Friday. Graduate Student Coffee Hour Set The first graduate student cof fee hour of the spring semester, will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Feb. 24, in the Hugh Beaver room, third floor Old Main. Graduate Student Council voted last week to help support the cof fee hours, which are sponsored by the Penn State Christian Asso ciation. University Service Committee Will Foster Education Program A World University Service committee, to be composed of stu dent and faculty representatives, is in the process of organization at the University. An international education pro gram based on mutual assistance among the world university com munity is sponsored by the WUS. Richard Gibbs, coordinator of the committee, said the establish ment of a WUS group .on campus will mark the first attempt in the Middle Atlantic district to distrib ute control of the program be tween the WUS district office and a 'university campus. Funds Given to WUS The University this year gave 20 per cent of undesignated funds from Campus Chest to the WUS, in addition to money designated to the organization by contribu tors. Students and professors of all religions participate in the WUS. It has no political purposes or ac tivities. Its function is to help needy students and faculty mem bers at universities abroad, indi problems from 3 to 5 p.m. Satur day. Petegorsky will be in Ather ton lounge, Theodore Greene in Hamilton lounge, and George Shuster at Phi Kappa. At 7 p.m. Saturday, Shuster will be guest speaker at a faculty din ner in the Nittan.v Lion Inn. Pres ident Milton S. Eisenhower will introduce Shuster, who w.\ll dis cuss “Christianity and Culture.” Richard C. Maloney, assistant dear, of the College of the Liberal Arts, will be toastmaster. Three programs have been planned for Sunday morning serv ice. From 8 a.m. until noon Ro man Catholic Masses are sched uled. at 10:45 a.m. Petegorsky will speak at St. Paul’s Methodist Church, and at 10:55 a.m. Greene will speak at the Chapel service in Schwab Auditorium. From 3 to 5 p.m. Petegorsky will attend the Dean’s tea in Sim mons lounge. The tea will be open to the public. Greene will' speak to the Inter- Church Student Fellowship'at 6:30 p.m. at the Evangelical and Re formed Church. A panel discussion on the ques tion “What is the role of religion in the emerging international com munity?” will take place at 8 p.m. in McElwain lounge. All three guest speakers will take part in the discussion. Greene will speak at the Fac ulty Luncheon Club at noon Mon day at the Hotel State College. A brotherhood banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. at the Nittany Lion Inn. Shuster will be guest speaker. Tickets cost $1.50 per person. Dinner reservations may be made at the Religion office. Grads to Ask Cabinet Seat Graduate Student Council will petition for a seat on All-College Cabinet, but not a vote, Moylan Mills, editor of the Graduate Stu dent Newsletter and member of the council, said yesterday. Council voted last week to pe tition for cabinet representatives. Gene Love, council president, said the petition had been sug gested to him by All-College President Richard Lemyre. Le myre, Love said, believed the council should have an ex-officio seat on cabinet. DIR Student Obtains Dean's List Average Charles Crawford, third semes ter student, was the only student in the Division of Intermediate Registration to obtain dean’s list in the fall semester, H. K. Wilson, director, has announced. Crawford obtained a 2.68 average. vidually and through projects which benefit the particular uni versity community. Work Is Universal The organization works in North America, Western Europe, the Middle East, South Asia, and in countries of the Far East. It is developing contacts with Africa and South America. Gibbs said members of the WUS committee at the University will come from the National Student Associaiton, Hillel Foundation, Penn State Christian Association, Newman Club, Cosmopolitan Club, International Relations Club, Interfraternity and Panhel lenic Councils, Leonides, the As sociation of Independent Men, and the faculty. Will Mainly Advise The committee at the Universi ty will be mainly an administra tive and advisory group, Gibbs said. Under All-College Cabinet recognition which will be asked Thursday night, he said, it will report to other student organiza tions on WUS work throughout THE DAILY COLLEGIAN COU.EGE t’ENI'-Trv.VAniA Wealiier Favors 8U Building *>* 4 ' GOOD'WEATHER is good" news waiting for the new Student Union building to progress." The building is expected to be opened be completed. Because the weather has been by the beginning of the fall semester, 1954. The generally good, Walter H. Wiegand, director west wing, shown in the photograph, will house of the physical plant, said recently, workmen a lecture hall. _ . Indian To Be The first Indian college debate team to tour the United States will debate the question of In dian foreign policy against two University students at 8 p.m. tonight in Schwab Auditorium. “Resolved: that Indian foreign policy offers the only hope for the establishment of world peace, will be the topic,of discussion at the annual international debate. Mrigendra K. Chaturvedi, 22, of Maharaja College, Jaipur, and Rameshchandra P. Sirkar, 21, of Elphinstone College, Bombay, will assume the affirmative position against Richard Kirschner and Stolen Goods Are Recovered By Fraternity Delta Sigma Phi reported yes terday they have recovered most of the clothing and personal pos sessions stolen from their house during a party Saturday night. Fraternity members picked up the stolen items at the home pf one of the three men arrested in connection with the robbery. Three sweaters, $l9 in cash, and a beer mug is still missing. Thieves took $536 worth of possessions from the house. One thousand dollars bail was set and posted for the three men and they have been released from jail justice of the Peace Guy G. Mills said that the three men, James Williams, 20, Rodger Gar ner, 18, and Garry Willison, 17, all of Saxton, were under the in fluence of alcoholic beverages when they took the items. Judge Ivan Walker of Centre County court, indicated Monday that the case will come before the court at the May session. the world, obtain speakers on in ternational problems for interest ed groups, and sponsor clothing and book drives. Gibbs said the main purpose of the committee will be to associate the student body with the foreign students at the University. It .will help these students to take part in campus activities and encour age them to inform their fellow students of the life in their home lands, Gibbs said. The committee will be divorced from all other campus organiza tions, he said, but will work for the benefit of all those who wish to make use of its facilities. WITH, FsTopf\ 'and MEET THE PEOPLE of* JAPAN ANDTHE STOP TOURS; ’Berkeley; Call!; \ ."r Foreign Policy Question Debated at 8 Tonight Benjamin Sinclair of the men’s debate team. The international debate is part of the debate exchange program sponsored by the Institute of In ternational Education in coopera tion with the Speech Association of America and the Indian gov ernment. The program started at Fordham University last week, where the Indian team debated that Indian neutrality is necessary for an understanding between East and West. Joseph F. O’Brien, professor of public speaking, re ported that the Fordham program was well-received by the student body. To Discuss Gandhism Chaturvedi and Sirkar will dis cuss affirmatively Gandhism as an alternative to war and the Fakir as mightier than the man of ac tion. Both will oppose the motions that equality is essential for de mocracy and that plenty is more dangerous than poverty. Chaturvedi has been president of the University Law College Union, captain of the tennis team, and member of the cricket team. He is independent in politics. Sir kar, 21, whose student activities include debate, dramatics, and chess, adheres to an “entirely theoretical” political position. Former Clique Chairman Kirschner, eighth semester ar.ts and letters major, is former clique chairman of the Lion party, pres ident of the Liberal Arts Student Council, and president of the For ensic Council: His name appears -in “Who’j Who in American Col leges and Universities.” Sinclair, sixth semester arts and letters major, serves as clique Get Your Tickets—Bsc j Now on Sale J At Student Union j For 14th Annual j TALENT SHOW To Be Held At 8:00 P.M. Friday Night February 19th In Schwab Auditorium WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 17. 1954 Service Exam Request Blanks Now Available Applicants for the Selective Service college qualification test may pick up applications in 109 Old Main. Applications for the April 22 test must be postmarked no later than midnight March 8. To be eligible to take the test, an applicant, on the testing data he selects, (1) Must be a Selective Service registrant who intends to request occupational deferment as a student; (2) Must -be satisfac torily pursuing a fulltime course, undergraduate or graduate, lead ing to a degree (the applicant need not be in. a 4-year college, but his entire course of'study must be satisfactory for transfer of credits to a degree-granting insti tution); (3) Must not have pre viously taken the test. ciairman for the Lion Party, men’s debate manager, arid a member of the Liberal Arts Student Coun cil. Sinclair’s stand on the ques tion is practical, while Kirschner s is theoretical. . This is the first year m which debate teams have been ex changed between the United States and India. Two American debaters from the University of Illinois and Ohio State University left recently for a three-month de bate tour of India.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers