SATURDAY. DECEMBER 3. 1955 Rmllgltm Newman Club to Hold TV Party at Center The Newman Club will hold a TV party tonight at the student center. Student Mass will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium, and the daily rosary be recited at 4:15 p.pt. Monday in 209 Hetzel Union. The club will also hold a roll group will meet at 1 p.m. in bacl The Newman Club discussion Miss Betty Hobencamp, direc tor of religious education at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, will speak to the Canterbury Club at 6 p.m. tomorrow. Miss Hobencamp’s topic will be "What is the New Curriculum?” A dinner will precede the meet ing at 5 p.m. The United Student Fellowship will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Faith Evangelical and Re formed Church for a service of worship based on the “Messiah” (Handel). Elton Smith, a member of the Pennsylvania Parole Board, will address the Emerson Society and the Young Friends at a combined meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Friends Meeting House. Smith will speak on “How Successful is Parole?” after the dinner, which will be held at 6 p.m. The Christian Science Monitor Youth Forum will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at 218 E. Prospect ave nue. The meeting will be open to the public. Lloyd Matter, junior in elec trical engineering from State Col lege, will speak on “Do We Have the True Bible?" at a meeting of the Lutheran Student Association at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Lutheran Student Center. Westminster Foundation will hear Jane Dowell speak on “Sum mer Service Projects” at 6:20 p.m. tomorrow. Roger Williams Fellowship will meet for supper at 5:30 p.m. to morrow in the fellowship room of the University Baptist Church. The Rev. Richard E. Gregory, missionary appointee of the Amer ican Baptist Convention, will ad dress the group. Ralph Horn, president of the Student Fellowship of St. John’s Evangelical United Brethren Church, will lead a forum on “Re ligion and Philosophy” at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow. The topic for the Town Meeting at Hillel Foundation at 8 p.m. to morrow will be “Is There a Re vival of Religion in America To day?” The meeting is sponsored by the cultural committee of the Foundation in cooperation with the Nittany Lodge, B’nai B’rith of State College and Bellefonte. Speakers will be the Rev. Lu ther H. Harshbarger, University chaplain; Richard C. Maloney, as sistant dean of the College of the Liberal Arts; Dr. John J. O’Con ner, assistant professor of philoso phy; and Harol Pi Zelko, profes sor of public speaking, who will serve as moderator. The meeting is free, and open to the public. Jerry Miller and his band will present a jazz concert from 9 to midnight in the Hillel auditorium. Admission will be 25 cents per person. An exhibition of original draw ings by Ben Shahn on “The World of Sholom Aleichem" will be on display at the Foundation until Dec. 15. The regular lox and bagel brunch will be held at 11 a.m. to morrow at Hillel. The cost is 25 cents for members and 65 cents for all other persons. The Hillel folk dance group will meet at 2 p.m. tomorrow, and the advanced workshop at 3 p.m. at the foundation. Moran Will Sing On 'Hubzapoppin' John Moran, senior in arts and letters from Scranton, will sing on student radio station WDFM show “Hubzapoppin’ ” to be held from 8:30 to 9 tonight. The Collegians, a combo; audi ence interviews, and a quiz con ducted by Stuart KShan, sopho more in arts and letters from Philadelphia, wiH compose the rest of tne program. This is tne station’s only live audience show. Admission is free. Newman Club Skating The Newman Club will hold a skating party at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Snow Shoe skating rink. Students desiring transporta tion should meet at 1 p.m. be hind Old Main. ler skating party at the Snow Shoe Rink tomorrow afternoon. £ of Old Main. group will meet in the student center at 7 p.m. Monday. Delta Sigma Phi recently ini tiated George Hoffman, John Knaff, William Kiser, James Ca pone, Peter LaPresto, Robert Sto vall, Robert Jack, Jerry Phillips, Matthew Gardner, and Bernard Heubel. New pledges of Delta Sigma Phi are John Light, Robert Sted man, Frank Woodrow; Peter Grant, Michael Lattemer, Harold McAllister, James Chapman, Wil liam Scatchard, Ronald Passmore, and Russell MacNamee. Newly elected officers of Phi Epsilon Pi are Phillip Wein, su perior; Jack Rose, vice superior; Lawrence Wolov, recording secre tary; William Bush, correspond ing secretary; Howard Felt, treas urer; Falk Kantor, chaplain; and Thomas Hollander, quarterly rep resentative. Beaver House has pledged Graduate to Get Chemistry Award Dr. Paul M. Doty, professor of chemistry at Harvard University and a 1941 graduate in chemistry, has been selected for the Ameri can Chemical Society Award in Pure Chemistry. The award, sponsored by Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity, will be pre sented at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society. Dr. Doty, who presented the 1955 series of Priestly lectures at the University on “Biological Polymers,” was selected for the award in recognition of his re search on polymers, which are related to biological chemistry. Soccer Squad Will Meet The Varsity Soccer Squad will meet at 5 p.m., Monday in Recre ation Hall. EUROPE 20 Countries - 7$ Days in Europe June 21-Sept. 3 by air 0109 S Europe for Yount Adult* and CollotUu* MS Sequoia, Paeadena, California THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA do-^ljiitd George Sullivan, William Hart man, Melvin Miller, Harold Dris coll, Kenneth Schick, Walter Jessel, Bede Bender, John Camp bell, William Smith, Fred Doyle, Kenneth Settlemyer, James Ham ilton, arid William Shannon. Sigma Alpha Mu has initiated Elvin Rose, Gary Zinman, Sheldon Bernbaum, George Goldstein, and Lawrence Jacobson. David Crescoff, Bernard Rob bins, Edward Grossman, Donald Herskovitz, and Leslie Alper have been pledged by Sigma Al pha Mu. New officers of Sigma Alpha Mu are Byron Spiller, prior; Stanley Lassoff, exchequer; Carl Saperstein, recorder; Gary Zin man, assistant exchequer; Law rence Jacobson, parliamentarian; Martin Schmookler, historian; and Gary Fox, pledgemaster. Delphi Sets Wednesday As Applications Deadline Letters of applications from second and third semester stu dents for Delphi, sophomore men’s hat society, will be accepted at the Hetzel Union desk until 5 p.m. Wednesday. Letters should be addressed to Robert Steele, president. They should include the students All- University average and a list of his activities. Activities from cen ters will be considered. Leonides to Meet in HUB Leonides, independent women’s organization, will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday in 203 Hetzel Union. CALLING ALL STUDENTS! in STATE COLLEGE Christmas Parties Planned for Children Thirty fraternities and sororities will give Christmas parties for about 400 children from farms and communities in the State College area during the two weeks preceding the holiday. Under the auspicies of the Interfraternity Council, 17 fraternities will open their chapter houses to the children for the parties. Members of 12 sororities and girls living on the first floor of Thomp son Hall are collaborating with the fraternities in the project, “Santa Claus” will be the chief guest at all the parties and will distribute gifts to the children. Games, refreshments, and skits by the fraternity brothers and sor ority sisters will highlight the parties. Mohler is Chairman Richard Mohler, of Cambria Heights, N.Y., a member of Sigma Chi fraternity, is chairman of arrangements for IFC. Selection of the children will be done by the Associated Charities under the direction of Mrs. James H. Moyer. Delta Sigma Lambda is giving a party of its own for nine chil dren on Dec. 11. Schedule for Parties Holiday parties scheduled by IFC are as follows: Dec. 11, Zeta Beta Tau fraternity and Beta Sigma Omicron sorority; Dec. 13, Beta Theta Pi fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity; Dec. 14, Chi Phi fraternity and Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, Alpha Zeta fraternity and Sigma Sigma Sig ma sorority, Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity; Dec. 15, Beta Sigma Rho fraternity and Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority; Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity and Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Dec. 17, Delta Tau Delta frat ernity and Delta Delta Delta sor ority, Dec. 18, Theta Kappa Phi fraternity and Delta Zeta sorority, Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Kap pa Sigma fraternity and Phi Mu sorority, Alpha Phi Delta frater nity and first floor Thompson Hall, Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Chi Omega sorority. Sigma Chi fraternity and Zeta Tau Al pha sorority, Sigma Phi Alpha fraternity, and Dec. 19, Kappa Delta Rho fraternity. Mil Ball Late Hours Granted Women's Student Government Association has granted women late permissions for Military Ball weekend. Upperclasswomen will have two o’clocks Friday night and the usual one o’clock Saturday night. Freshman women will have a 12 o’clock and a one o’clock inter changeably. WSGA also voted to give all women an 11 o’clock permission for caroling Dec. 19. WSGA appropriated $52 from the Senate treasury to add to the $4B given to them for the Chil dren’s Fund. They will use the $lOO to buy Christmas presents for children. Due to constitutional technicalities former plans to solicit extra money were dropped. 3 Delegates Attend IFC Conference O. Edward Pjllock, assistant to the dean of men; Robert Bullock, president of Interfraternity Coun cil; and Donald Ridenbaugh, head of the Fraternity Affairs Office, are representing the University at the National Interfraternity Con ference in St. Louis, Mo., this weekend. The NIC, composed of repre sentatives from universities and colleges throughout the country, is a sounding board for the ex change of ideas on matters of mutual interest to all fraternities. The group does not pass legis lation. Do Yoar Christmas Shopping Now Centennial Group Will Vote Monday On Suggested Gifts The Centennial Committee will vote Monday night on the gift, for which they will spend their re maining funds approximately $lOO. Three suggestions were brought up by committee members last Monday. They are a gift to the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel, a gift to the Pattee Library, and a scholarship for an outstanding freshman. The committee felt that giving a particular item to the library or chapel would be a more last ing reminder of the Centennial Year than giving a donation to an individual to use at his discretion. A scholarship for an outstand ing freshman would be based on academic standing at the end of the first semester and activities. The freshman class was picked by the committee because it is the Centennial class. Harshbarger to Be Chapel Speaker Dr. Luther H. Harshbarger, University chaplain and coordi nator of religious affairs, will speak at Chapel Services at 10:55 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab. His topic will be “Hearts of Stone.” The choir will sing “King of Glory, King of Peace," by War rell, for the anthem. George E. Ceiga, organist, will play “Pre lude—moderato serioso,” by Du bois, as the prelude, apd “Fugue in D Major,” also by Dubois, as the postlude. vlSk Q *) % • toulive pocket Ibiminating taitesl : ’OnBQN “Este*. 1 * .j t..distL 'for discb*. '"This ChrUtraiSy. the luxurious ROm> Its slim lines and elegau finish are everything ever aought in a pocket lighter. Chromium plate, engraved design . . . *B*® With “easy-fiir swivel base. Other RONSON Pocket Lighters from $4.95 PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers