FRIDAY. JANUARY 6. 1956 Lecture Rabbi Silver to Present Final Centennial Lecture The final lectui will be given by Dr Cleveland, Ohio, atj will be “Man's Ho) The Centennial sored by the Com* Concert 14 Musi< To App< In Serie The Virtuosi di Roma, a group of 14 musicians organized and di rected by Renato Fi sano, will be the second program in the Com munity Concert series at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Schwab Auditorium. The ensemble is composed of six violins, two violas, two cellos, a contrabass, a flute, and a piano. To bring the group together, Fas ano searched all over Italy for the perfect talents which would combine into a chamber orchestra and still be soloist calibre. He found men in Venice, Rome, Na ples, Turin, and other Italian cities. In Europe, the Virtuosi di Roma is known as the Collegium Musi cum, a latin name given to groups of musical amateurs in the 17th and 18th centuries in Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland. These groups sang the concerted music of the time, when modern con certs were unknown. For its fourth United States tour since 1950, the group has adopted the name Virtuosi di Ro ma. Fasano, the youngest director of a national conservatory, was born in Naples, and attended the Na tional Conservatory San Pietro of Majella. He is internationally known as a conductor, pianist, and composer. Between 1944 and 1947 he was directo.r of the National Academy of St. Cecilia in Rome and of the Augusteo Concerts. Engagements EUis-Calkins Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W. Calkins of Uniontown announce the en gagement of their daughter Shir ley to Mr. Marvin Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Ellis of Sa vannah, Ga. Miss Calkins is a senior in arts and letters. She is copy editor of LaVie and a member of Scrolls, senior women’s hat society, and the Daily Collegian staff. Mr. Ellis was graduated from Georgia Institute of Technology in September and is now a grad uate student in chemical engi neering at the University. He is a member of Beta "Theta Pi. Maass - Freehaier Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Free hafer of Reading announce the engagement of their daughter Sarajane to Mr. Richard Maass, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Maass of Drexel Hill. -Miss Freehafer is a senior in elementary education. Mr. Maass is a senior in chemi cal engineering and a member of Theta Delta Chi. Sherman-Reiiz Mr, and Mrs. Victor Reitz of Blue Ridge Summit announce the engagement of their daughter Joan to Mr. Howard Sherman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl H. Sher man of Smiths Ferry. Miss Reitz is a junior in home economics education and a mem ber of Phi Mu. Mr. Sherman is a senior in fuel technology. Shoyei-HUbeig Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn F. Hilberg of Phoenixville announce the en gagement of their daughter Fay to Mr. Frederick Shoyer, son of Judge and Mrs. Kendall H. Shoyer of Philadelphia Miss' Hilberg Kappa Delta ai ness administr ;l is a member of ijd a senior in busi ition. | a member of Phi and a senior in istration. Mr. ShOyer i: Kappa Sigma business admi: The weddi: May 19. g will be held :’e of the Centennial Series on Religion . Abba Hillel Silver, Rabbi of the Temple, 8 p.m. Monday in 121 Sparks. His subject be in the Atomic Age." : Series during the past year was spon nittee of 13. a group representing the three major religious traditions. The Committee also serves as a con sulting committee to the Univer sity chaplain and coordinator of religious affairs on the inter-reli-' gious affairs. Dr. Silver is a graduate of the Hebrew Union College, and was ordained in 1915. He holds honor ary degrees from many American universities. He received the an nual National Service Award of Phi Epsilon Rho, the Cardoza Me morial Award, the Award of Merit of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States, and the An nual Award of the Zeta Beta Tau. ians Dr. Silver has for more than 35 years been the spiritual leader of| the Temple in Cleveland, the largest'Jewish congregation in the | United States, and is regarded as I the foremost, spokesman of Zion ism. He represented the move ment before the Assembly of the United Nations, and is one of the leaders who is responsible for the establishment of the state of Is rael. Recently, Dr. Silver was hon ored in' Life magazine as one of the twelve leading preachers in the United States. Writes on History, Religion He is author of several volumes on history and religion, notably his work on “Religion in a Chang ing World" and "The World Crisis and Jewish Survival.” His latest book, “Vision and Victory,” is a collection of his major addresses during the years prior to the es tablishment of the State of Israel. John Gunther, author of “Inside U.5.A.," speaks of Dr. Silver as "The first citizen of Cleveland.” Dr. Silver was televised on Ed ward R. Murrow’s program “Per son to Person" during last season. Kahn fo Speak Tonight At Sabbath Eve Rites Rabbi Benjamin M, Kahn, di rector of the. Hillel Foundation, will speak at Sabbath Eve Ser vices at 8 tonight in the founda tion. Phi Sigma Sigma sorority will serve as host for the services. Guests will be education students. The State Student Baptist Plan ning Commission will meet tomor row at Roger Williams Student Center to discuss plans for a Spring conference. The Rev. Allan Macrea, of Faith Theological Seminary, will speak to Inter-varsity Christian Fellow ship at 7:30 tonight in 405 Old Main. iELLEFONTB Adnll.: SSt Child; 25c rlAfc fl STARTS TODAY II | Frank Sinatra - Debbie Reynold* *1 I 'Tender Trap' Cinema Scope ■ONITE & SATURDAY BELLEFON' —Randolph Scott— LAWLESS STREET - color! I]j with Angela Lansbury 1 t> *CATHAUM NOW: 2:96, 4:00, 5:54, 7:48, 8:42 "THE SPOILERS" Ann« Baxter - Jeff Chandler Rory Calhoun • COMING SUNDAY • Gary Cooper in "The Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell" * HITT ANY Tonight - 6:00 - 7:49 - 9:38 Gina Lollobrjgida "TIMES GONE BY" SATURDAY - ALL DAY "Seminole Uprising" George Montgomery THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Leader in Temple STAT Serenaders To Ploy At HUB Dance The University Park Promena ders will sponsor a Round and Square Dance from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. tomorrow, in the Hetzel Union ballroom. The Country Dance Serenaders, a four-piece student orchestra, !will furnish the music. Albert j Carey, senior in agricultural edu cation from Latrobe, on the elec j trie guitar, and Jay Crouse, fresh man in animal husbandry from Gettysburg, on the banjo, will carry out the rhythm for the four tunesters. In the melody depart ment, Daniel Karg, junior in education from Seneca, plays the violin, and Harry Carey, fresh man in agricultural education from Latrobe, plays the accordian. Richard Cole, graduate student in agronomy from Maine, will be the caller. Dick, who “called” his way through college, has been calling dances for many years. The New England Festival, the Massachusetts Country Dance Fes tival, and the Vermont Country i Dance Festival are among the 'places where he has “called” i dances. Tickets, at 50 cents per person, can be obtained at the Hetzel Union desk, the Corner Room, the door, and from individual members. Awards to Give Financial Aid Two scholarships designed to help students with limited finan cial resources have been estab lished by General Motors Corp. The program began in Septem ber of 1955. Recipients may hold awards for four years if they maintain the required scholastic standards. The basic amount is $2OO, but it may reach $2OOO per year. A student nominated for an amount larger than the basic award must present statements of personal and family finances to determine the additional amount to be granted. n u ii issr. ClNemaScopE £ tv® swgin dancin' saga- OP those KANSAS DAYS !f »^ Sa iSECOH • ' i?6a-zu.tx'-z-: -JiAN N E CSAIN nGEDROE fJADER'- Kinr KAUEN • BERr LftHR-v jfflp VAN DOfiEN • KEITH AHDfS ft--A. A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURI | Approved JiSOflQ COllt6St Fifty-three fraternities have F I f\C£kC TrtnflV been approved by the dean of V,IWaC3 IWVIUy men’s office to entertain women* Entnes for the Leonides theme , . , . • » , tsong contest are due at the AlM tonight ana tomorrow night. (Leonides office in the Hetzel The Hju>ro\ed fraternities Eire: Acacia.! Union Building by 5:30 p.lll. tO A’pha Chi Kho. Al|>hu Chi Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Gamma Rho. Alpha Phi; ... *..i .. [Delta, Alpha Rho Chi. Alpha Sigma Phi,l At & special tonight. Alpha Tau Omega a n «l Alpha Zeta. the SOngS Will be judged by Ruth [ Reaver Houbo. Beta Theta Pi Beta Siijma Kaplan, SCttlOr in education from Uho, Chi Plu. Delta Chi. Delta Sigma a nu.,..* tLambda. Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Tuu Delta,! AlulTlOlC, Camella BIOUDt, sOpho- Detta Theta si«mn. Delta Up«»iion. Kappa more in education from Home- SDeUa Rha, Kappa Sigma and Lambda Chij s t eac J : Shelia TeplltZ, Sophomore r! **' T , k . _ home economics from Verona; S Epsiion a pi. phi Gamma Delta 1 , phf Kappa! i an( * Georgians Eckroth, senior in ; Phi Kappa psi, phi Kappa signm. Phi arts and letters from Tyrone. ■K n . ppa «T® u c.- Phi De )J** , «^ phi A $lO prize will be awarded for |anrt' , i> i ! Kap, , rT-hK"'"' a - Pl Ka, ’ ,,a A,Pha i the winning composition. Origi- IPi Lambda phi. Pi sigma upsitoii, i riHlily of woids, appropriateness |ma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu. Sig- Of the tune chosen, and the pmise Ch L Nu '* s!h: ”». £ hi Alpha.* given to Leonides, the University, , Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Pi, Tau Kappa'rV. t L.„ „ .. u ..-t, Epsilon and Tnu Phi Delta. l anc * Campus a whole Will Theta Chi. Theta Delta Chi. Theta Kappa'°, e ttlßlll points in selecting Phi. Theta Xi, Triangle and Zeta Beta Tau. I the Winning tune. On Campus VIVE LE POPCORN! The other day as I was walking down the street picking up tinfoil (Philip Morris, incidentally, has the hest tinfoil, which is not surprising when you consider that they have the best cigarettes, which is not surprising when you consider that they buy the best tobaccos iSd the best paper and put them together with skill and loving care and rush them to your tobacco counter, fresh and firm and loaded with gentle smoking pleasure to lull the palate and beguile the senses and shoo the blues) the other day, I say, as I was walking down the street picking up tinfoil (I have, incidentally, the second largest ball of tinfoil in our family. My brother Eleanor’s is bigger-more than four miles in diameter—but, of course, he is taller than I.) the other day, as I was saying, while walking down the street picking up tinfoil, I passed a campus and right beside it, a movie theatre which specialized in showing foreign films. “Hmmmm,” I said to my self, “I wonder how come so many theatres which specialize in showing foreign films are located near campuses?” And the answer came right back to me: “Because foreign films are full of culture, art, and esoterica, and where is culture more rife, art more rampant, and esoterica more endemic than on a campus? Nowhere, that’s where!” I hope that all of you have been taking advantage of the foreign film theatre near your campus. Here you will find no simple-minded Hollywood products full of treacly sentiment and machine-made bravura. Here you will find life itself —life in all its grimness, its poverty, its naked, raw passion! Have you, for instance, seen the recent French import, Le Jardin de Ma Tante (“The Kneecap”), a savage and uncom promising story of a man named Claude Parfum, whose con suming ambition is to get a job as a meter reader with the Paris water department? But he is unable, alas, to afford the flashlight one needs for this position. His wife, Bon-Bon, sells her hair to a wigmaker and buys him a flashlight. Then, alas, Claude discovers that one also requires a leatherette bow tie. This time his two young daughters, Caramel and Nougat, sell their hair to the wigmaker. So Claude has his leatherette bow-tie, but now, alas, his flashlight battery is burned out and the whole family, alas, is bald. Or have you seen the latest Italian masterpiece. La Donna E Mobile (“I Ache All Over”), a heart shattering tale of a boy and his dog? Malvolio, a Venetian lad of nine, loves his little dog with every fibre of his being. He has one great dream: to enter the dog in the annual dog show at the Doge's palace. But that, alas, requires an entrance fee, and Malvolio, alas, is penniless. However, he saves and scrimps and steals and finally gets enough together to enter the dog in the show. The dog, alas, comes in twenty-third. Malvolio sells him to a vivisectionist. Or have you seen the new Japanese triumph, Kibutzi-San (“The Radish”), a pulse-stirring historical romance about Yamoto, a poor farmer, and his daughter Ethel who are accosted by a warlord on their way to market one morning? The warlord cuts Yamoto in half with his samurai sword and runs off with Ethel. When Yamoto recovers, he seeks out Ethel's fiance, Chutzpah, and together they find the warlord and kill him. But) alas, the warlord was also a sorcerer and he has whimsically turned Ethel into a whooping crane. But loyal Chutzpah takes her home where he feeds her fish heads for twenty years and keeps hoping she'll turn back into a woman. She never does. Alas. SKn Shuloun. The makers of Philip Morris, mho bring you this column, hope that if there’s smoking in the Anleony of your campus theatre, it will be today's new, gentle Philip Morris you'll be smoking. PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers