TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1956 B rot h er h oo d B anquet H osts .L e l yve idcoundi Names iGlennland to Hold !Adult Swimming Elections Date , Monday evening swim sessions at the Glemiland Pool will be open Election of new officers on the' Chemistry and Physics Student.to adult residents of the area. Council will be held March 14,1 Ernest B. McCoy, dean of the according to Bill Childs, council College of Physical Education president. t and Athletics, said the sessions, Nominations of officers will be which were originated for faculty made at the council's next meet- s i t y. l and staff members of the Univer 'ing on Feb. 29. will now be open to adults who wish to buy a season ticket. Sheldon Amsel, junior in pre-' Tickets for the semester. priced medicine from Simpson; David i at $1.50. are available at the but - old, Griswold, sophomore in chemis saes office in Willard Hall. Swon.- try from Philadelphia; and Daniel. ;F rid a y, freshman in pre-med from Houtzdale, are members of Monday Illlevenings.nglntrsart 7 to 9*30 ______________ the nominating committee. ___ Nominations not made by the Belle Lettres to Meet committee may be brought before , Belies Lettres will meet at 7 the council by council members tonight in northeast Athe: ton at the next meeting. !lounge Warns Against Social, Civil Downgrading By TED SERRILL Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld warned against the winding down of social and civil values into a "brotherhood of medi ocrity" Sunday at the third annual Brotherhood Banquet. The national director of the B'nai B'rith and Billet Founda tions and chairman• of the Board of Trustees of the World Univer sity Service was introduced to a gathering of approximately 340 persons by President Milton S. Eisenhower, honorary chairman of National Brotherhood Week at the University. 'lnterfaith Activity' Rabbi Lelyveld said he had seen much of the machinery of broth erhood which has not come to grips with the values of the Amer ican society. He calls this ."inter fake activity" when it doesn't come into contact with the "deep, rich associations of each faith group." Interfaith activity, the opposite of interfake activity, has a genu ine basis, he said, in the under standing of each group and re spect for each group. The word "respe,ct, ' Rabbi Lely veld claimed, is the answer to an honest brotherhood of man. Too often, people gloss over the ideas of brotherhood by claiming that they like their fellow men, thus leaving the concept of a true bro therhood between faiths unful filled. Not True Brotherhood Brotherhood is not true when one says, in effect, "I like you be cause you're so much like me," he said. The Rabbi said that the world has come to recognize its fellow men and now should go' a step further and respect them. Not only should various ideological differ ences between men be recognized and respected but these differen ces should be encouraged to keep them from backing down the scale of a theological oneness. He cited the Soviet Union of to day as the major example of what could happen if a single ideologi cal pressure were to develop and crush out all differences of faith. There is an American threat of withdrawing into a world of being governed by what others think and do. Rabbi Lelyveld calls it "a mediocrity." "The greatest single threat to ~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, - 4A)w, —Ron Walker photo RABBI ARTHUR J. LELYVELD, left, and President Mil ton S. Eisenhower at Sunday's Brotherhood Banquet. freedom we face is the uniformity creeping up on us. There is no possibility of uniform freedom of religion and the press if every one thinks alike." It is the variety of human ex periences that makes brotherhood rich, he said. "The existence of faith—of strong faiths in the plur al—is needed." He provided an example of citi zen? attempts for ideological and civil liberties in the racial segre gation issue that boiled up at the University of Alabama two weeks ago. A great majority of the stu dents, townspeople and authori ties stood behind Miss Autherine Lucy in her fight to attend classes at the university, he stated. Rabbi Lelyveld ended, as he be gan, with a plea for emphasis on the integrity of faith and a dis , tinctfulness in religion. l 'Alchemist' Opens Friday Tickets for "T h e Alchemist" went on sale at noon yesterday and will remain on sale from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for five weeks at the Hetzel Union desk. The show will open Friday and run for five weeks at Cent e r i Stage. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE- PENNSYLVANIA Arnold Air Society to Meet Arnold Aii Society will meet at 7:30 tonight at Delta Upsilon. Class "A" uniform should be worn. "the trumpet player's trumpet player" IFC-PANHEL BALL Friday, March 23 0 Semi-Formal klhat ?tat, &plea ? Tow best move to make next the outstanding opportunities a very par ticular engineering senior is sure to find at the Radio Corporation of America. world leader in electronic& An KGA engineering management represen tative will be on campus— Monday and Tuesday, March 5 & 6 See 1/0117 placement officer now tot yotn appointment Ask him, too, for literature with the down-tootartb facts about RCA meets -:-- , - P ' ‘ RADIO CORPORATION se AMERICA .r o Featuring LES ELGART at the • $5.00 per couple 0 Dancing from 9 to 1 PAGE FIVE . to to cheek
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers