SATURDAY. DECEMBER 17. 1955 Religion Canterbury Will Clean St. Andrews Today Canterbury Club will clean St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church at 1 p.m. today. After the project is completed the club will meet for dinner in the parish house. An informal dance will be held following the dinner, also in the parish house. Canterbury Club will hold dinner at 5 p.m. tomorrow, and then serve dinner at 6 p.m. to participants in a Christmas pageant at the church. The group will also practice Christ mas carols in preparation for the scheduled caroling Tuesday evening downtown. Roger Williams Fellowship will meet for supper at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the student center. After the supper the fellowship will go caroling and then meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Byron Robinson, 246 E. McCormick avenue. The group will hold a vesper candlelight service at 4:30 p.m. to morrow in the University Bap tist Church. The service will be the pageant “The Child Jesus,” by Clokey and Kirk. Four foreign students will speak on “Christmas in Other Lands” at the meeting of the Lutheran Student Association at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lutheran dent .center. The association will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the center for Christmas caroling. A party will be held after the caroling. Officers of the Hillel Founda tion Freshman Council have an nounced that a mixer for all freshmen will take place at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Foundation. Dancing, refreshments, and en tertainment will be included in the program. Council officers in general charge of the mixer are Robert Parsky, president; Pauline Hoff man, vice president; and Diane Caplan, secretary. • The Hillel folk dance groups will meet tomorrow. General in struction will be held at 2 p.m., and the advanced dance work shop at 3 p.m. The United Student Fellowship of the Faith Evangelical and Re formed Church will participate in a church school Christmas pageant at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow. At 5:30 p.m. a Christmas supper will be held, followed by a carol ing party. . A Christmas program including caroling and refreshments will be held by Westminster Student Fel lowship at 6:20 p.m. tomorrow at Westminster -Foundation. The Young Friends will meet with Emerson Society at 7 p.m. to morrow in the Odd Fellows Hall to discuss “Why a Conscientious Objector Stands Where He Does.” The discussion will be preceded by a supper. Dr. Ruth C. Silva; assistant pro fessor of political science, will present an illustrated lecture On the Holy Land at a meeting of the Student Fellowship of St. John’s Evangelical United Breth ren Church tomorrow. The lec ture will follow a buffet dinner at 5:15 p.m. Wesley Foundation will hold a Christmas supper at 5:15 p.m. to morrow at the foundation. The annual Christmas service will be held at 6:30 p.m. Air Force Yule Party Scheduled for Sunday The officers and personnel of the Air Force detachment will hold a Christmas party for chil dren of military personnel sta tioned at the University at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the armory. Santa Claus will come down a chimney set up front of the infor mation desk in the armory with a sack full of toys. Cartoon movies will be shown. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Art Art Exhibition Tour Wilt Begin Jan. 1 The Centennial art exhibition, “Pennsylvania Painters,” will begin its nationwide tour on Jan. 1 at the Toledo Museum in Art in Toledo, Ohio. The collection, which was displayed at the University Oct. 8 to Nov. 6, was the first major loan exhibition ever brought to the campus and the first ever held on Pennsyl vania painting, During the exhibition, more than 10,000 persons saw the' 48 paintings which represented the work of -16 Pennsylvania artists! The display, valued at more than a quarter million dollars, was obtained from 35 lenders, in* eluding museums and private col lectors ranging geographically from Maine to Missouri. Three of the oictures, “Walt Whitman” by Thomas Eakins, “Shipwreck” by Thomas Birch, and “A Closet Door’' by John F. Peto, were flown to the University from European showings by the United States Information Agency. 'Shipwrecked' Included Of these three, only “Ship wrecked” will be included in the nationwide tour. The others were withdrawn because of the dangers which might occur in traveling. Due to other withdrawals, sub stitutions have been made so that only 26 of the originally exhibited paintings are pn tour. The paintings, which represent the work of Pennsylvania artists from the early 18th to tha early 20th centuries, exclude the work of living artists. Dickson Collected The collection was assembled as a part of the Centennial pro gram at the University by a com mittee headed by Dr. Harold E. Dickson, professor of fine arts, and was selected for a nationwide tour by the Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.C. The booklet, written in con junction with the exhibition and published by the University, will be on sale in the cities where the collection is shown, and is available at the Pattee Library. Price of the booklet is $l. The library will mail it anywhere in the United States postpaid. Faculty Luncheon Club Mrs. Willa C. Taylor, professor of music education, will address the Faculty Luncheon Club _at noon Monday in the Hetzel Union Building. Mrs. Taylor will speak on “Mus ic for Christmas.” ’ To Students Living in the Harrisburg Area! PUN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL PENN STATE INTERCOLLEGIATE BALL Monday, December 26, 1955 West Shore Country Club, Camp Hill, Penna. 9:00 to I:oo—Dress Optional Music by Maynard McKissick and his orchestra Sponsored by Penn State Alumni Club of Greater Harrisburg All alumni and undergraduates of all colleges and their friends are invited Undergraduates—s2.oo per couple Alumni—s3.so per couple Buy your tickets early! For tickets, call or write: Mrs. Norman H. Masurie Mrs. Waller M. Lewis 2848 Croydon RcL, Harrisburg 180 S Walnut SI.. Camp HiQ Phono CE 6-7507 Phone RE 7-5387 Music Two Christmas Songfests Set For Monday Two annual Christmas Sings will be held Monday night. The All-University Carol Sing, which will begin at 9 p.m. on the steps of Old Main, is sponsored jointly by the University Chris ;ian Association, the department of music, and the Chapel Choir. The annual German Christmas Sing, sponsored by the Depart ment of German, will be given at 7:45 p.m. in Schwab. Fishburn to Direct Dr. Hummell Fishburn, head of the department of music, will conduct the All-University Carol Sing, and Willa C. Taylor, direc tor of the chapel choir, will lead the choir. The Rev. Luther H. Harshbar ger, University chaplain, will give a short message of Christmas greeting. Wurfl to Read Ah the German Christmas Sing, George J. Wurfl, professor emeri tus of German, will read the Na tivity in German folowed by a talk in English by Dr. Robert E. Dengler, professor emeritus of Greek. The audience will participate in the singing of three well known German Christmas carols. George E. Ceiga, University organist, will play the prelude and the post lude; also included will be violin and piano selections. Juniors Will Entertain 300 Faculty Children Approximately 300 faculty chil dren will be entertained by the Junior Class from 2 to 5 p.m. today in the Hetzel Union ballroom. The Christmas party will in clude two movies, games, and re freshments. Philip Wein, ventrilo quist. and Robert Little, magician, will perform. Speech Aspaturian Cites Bi-Party Agreement Republicans and Democrats both agree on the basic ele ments of foreign policy, according to Dr. Vernon V. Aspatur ian, professor of political science. In a speech on “Foreign Policy in the 1956 Presidential Election" before the Young Democrats Club Thursday night, Aspaturian said that beyond this basic agreement is a wide range of disagreement. A single abiding interest of all Ameri cans is the destiny of the Ameri ' can nation in the “jungle of for eign politics.” The United States Constitution, emphasized the speaker, gives sole responsibility and power for the conducting of foreign rela tions to the President. Only he can assume responsibility, but he may give some of his powers to a deputy, namely the Secretary of State, Aspaturian added. If ca tastrophies or diplomatic failures arise, however, the President must assume ultimate responsibility. Chinese Calamity Dr. Aspaturian said he believed the triumph of Communism in China to be the greatest diplo matic calamity in the history of the American nation. - “The party in power has the right to defend foreign policy and criticize past policies of previous administrations if the criticism is restrained to incompetence and not misconduct,” Dr. Aspaturian pointed out. He added that it is legitimate for the opposition party to attack i the ability of those who carry out foreign policy. Policy is Unique “Foreign policy, unlike domes tic policy, is unique,” said Dr. Aspaturian. Debate on foreign policy affects three important groups abroad. The groups, as stated by Dr.'As paturian, include our allies, who isten to various candidates on the subject; uncommitted powers, who may make choices on the basis of campaign oratory; and the Russians, our antagonists, who may plan strategy according to acmpaign platforms. Dr. Aspaturian told the group . that all factions in the Demo cratic party, regardless of their differences, are uniform on the , foreign policy issue, and no per ceptible deviation from party policies has arisen. If it were not : for the President, a Republican i fog in regards to foreign policy would result due to the opposi tion or right-wing Republicans who also tried the same tactics ! in the Truman administration, Dr. . Aspaturian said. Outside Constitution Bipartisanship and non-parti sanship, he said, cannot be legal and must be informal, because it isoutside the judicial framework of the Constitution. A non-partisanship program in volves consultation in all stages with leading and prominent fig ures of the opposition party, the speaker said. In speaking of present foreign policy, Dr. Aspaturian judged it to be on an “even keel,” and pointed out that a continued ma jority of both parties were in fa vor of it. By ANNE FRIEDBERG Leonides Theme Song Competition Will End Jan. 6 Applications for the Leonides theme song contest will be avail able from Monday until the con test closes at 5‘30 p.m. Jan. 6. No entries will be accepted after that time. The songs will be judged by a 4-member panel at a special meet ing on Jan. 6. Originality of words, appropriateness of the tune chos en, and the praise given to Leon ides, the University, and the cam pus as a whole will be the prime considerations in selecting the winning composition. Original words may be set to a classical, semi-classical, or popu lar tune, or original words and music may be submitted. A $lO Drize will be awarded for the winning composition. The AIM-Leonides chorus will use the song as their theme. t JJ Crab^eej Uv a. dimai PAGE FIVE iLJLdJ c&t lour/t. fOt Hilt 1 SPIIDIL CATALINA PHOTO-IDENT $l3-50 ~n.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers