SATURDAY. MARCH 10. 1956 Religion Fellowships Dinrier, Discussion The Roger Williams Fellowship will be host to the Evangelical United Brethren Stu dent Fellowship for dinner at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Fellowship room of the church. A discussion will .follow concerning the basic beliefs of the Evangelical United Brethren and the Baptist Churches. Chaplan Edwerth Korte, Lutheran Student Association Sunday Colgate 'Prof Will Delver Chapel Speech Dr. William H. Hamilton, assist ant professor of theology at the Colgate Rochester Divinity School since 1953, will speak at the Chap el Services at 10:55 a.m. tomor row in Schwab Auditorium. His subject will be: "The Good ness of the Body." The Chapel Choir, directed by Willa• C. Taylor, will sing as the anthem, "Christ, Be Thine the Glory" by Schuetz. Barry S. Brinsmaid, organist, will play as the prelude, "0 Lamb of God, Pure, Spotless" by J. S. Bach, and as the postlude, "Toc cata" by Buxtehude. Prior to his appointment at Col gate Rochester Divinity School, Dr. Hamilton was dean of the chapel and served on the depart ment of religion faculty at Hamil ton College, Clinton, N.Y. An undergraduate at Oberlin College from 1940 to 1943, Dr. Hamilton received his bachelor of arts degree after a three year in terruption for service in the Navy. He continued his education at the Union Theological Seminary where he wa s conferred the bachelor of divinity degree. Dr. Hamilton did his graduate work at Princeton University and St. Mary's College of the Univer sity of St. Andrews, Scotland, where he received his doctor of philosophy degree. He is a member of the National Council for Religion in Higher Education and of Christian Ac tion. ZBT's and Dates Will Be Married For Tonight Only Zeta Beta Tau fraternity will hold its annual marriage party tonight. The ZBT's have given the party for the part two years and in clude in it everything from the certificate to the ring. The evening is planned So that following the evening meal the brothers and guests form a pro cession to the women's dormitor ies, throwing rice. The dates are called for, and the brothers and their "temporary brides-to-be" re turn to the chapter house. The evening reception is in celebration of the recent "mar riages" but at 1:00 a.m. the brides must return to spinsterhood for another year. Sophomores to Be On 'Htibzapoppint Sophomore weekend will be the theme of "Hubzapoppin'," to be broadcast from 7:30 to 8 tonight by station WDFM in the Hetzel Union assembly room. Six sophomore men and wom en will compete against each oth er in the weekly quiz, with ques tions written by different profes sors. The Association of Indepen dent .Men Band, directed by Eu gene Magill, will present musical entertainment. Three tickets to the current Players' production, "Thirteen Clocks," will be given away through a drawing. Doors of the assembly room will open at 7:20 p.m. for the audi ence warm-up. "Hubzapoppin' " is directed by Robert Zimmerman; technical ad viser, ' David • Ellis; production managers, Richard Christian and Robert Bingaman. Alpha. Delta Sigma to Meet Alpha Delta . Sigma, honorary advertisng society, will meet at 7:30 tomorrow at Phi Kappa. chaplan at Gettysburg College, will speak at a•meeting of the at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lutheran Student Center. The Young Friends will leave at 1 p.m. today from Atherton lounge to go to a foster home in Bellefonte to help the girls in the home. Anyone wishing to join the project may make arrange ments with William Swartly, AD 8-6080. The Emerson Society will have a dinner meeting' at 5:30 p.m. to morrow in the Terrace Room of the Hetzel Union Building. The topic of their discussion will be civil rights. There will be a breakfast-semi nar and a continuance of discus sion on "The Christian Student and the University," led by Rev. John Duley at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Fireside Room of the Presby terian Student Center. The Westminster Fellowship will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the social hall for a covered dish supper and a talk on the Gold Coast by Miss Janet Asari. The annual United Jewish Ap peal Campaign for overseas relief sponsored . by the Hillel Founda tion will begin tomorrow and con tinue until March 18. The cam pagin will get under way tomor row morning with a lox-and bagel brunch. United Jewish Ap peal workers will attend. Awards will be given to the fraternity, sorority, or independent groups which raise the most money per capita. The third session in the Hillel Foundation's series on "Ideas of Good and Evil in Great Litera ture." will be given at 8 p.m. to morrow in the Hillel auditorium. Thomas D. Bowman, professor of English literature, will speak on Macbeth. The meeting is open to the public. Mademoiselle To Make Study Of Grad Students Women graduate students who are candidates for advanced de grees are eligible to be inter viewed by Mademoiselle maga zine for a study of the "Young American Graduate Student." The article will be particularly written for college readers who are considering graduate school. To be eligible, women must be under 30, and studying an aca demic subject (not business, journalism, merchandis in g, or teaching). Mademoiselle is also interested in 'women who have recently lef t graduate school, either with or without a degree. Graduate students who wish to be considered for the magazine article should send a postcard or letter with name and address to Mademoiselle, 575 Madison Ave nue, New York 22, N.Y. Cover Girl Contest Entry Deadline Set Monday is the deadline for un dergraduate women to enter the Campus Cover Girt Contest, spon sored by the Roto Magazine sec tion of the Pittsburgh Press. So far only one entry has been aceived. Caddidates must submit a pho tograph of any size by 5 p.m. Monday to the Hetze: Union desk. Names and addresses must be written on the back of the photo graph. LAST PERFORMANCE TONIGHT James Thurber's the THIRTEEN CLOCKS Schwab Auditorium 8:00 P.M. Tickets are $l.OO On Sale at HUB and at Door THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Have Student Employment Representatives from the following com panies will interview June and August graduates and undergraduates for summer work. Applicants for interviews may sign up in 112 Old Main within the next two weeks. This list will be carried only once by The Daily Collegian. Interviews will be held on dates mentioned. Ingersoll Rand—Mar. 26 —ME, 1E- McGraw-Hill Pub.. Co.—Mar. 26—ME AERO.E. EE, CE. lE, ARCH.E, BUS ADM, ADV. Belt Telephone—Mar. 26-27 BUS.ADM LA. Carter Oil Co.--Mar. 24i --P.N.C., E. FUEL TECH. EE, CH.E, 6EOI-, GEO PHYS. RS and MS candidates. Also sum mer employment for emcrs. only. 1.8. M. (Financial Div. Mar. 26 ACCTG. HUS.ADM. (18 hrs. of accts.) Lincoln National Life Ins. Co.—Mar. 26 LA. BUR.ADM. ED. GEOD. RFX.ED. HEALTH ED, L.M.R., PHYS.ED, PRE MED. PSY. Also stu dents in the same fields for summer emp. Dow Chemical—Mar. 26-27 —BICLCHEM. CHEM. FUEL T. ME, PET.E, TEXTILE CHEM, ENGR.MECH. CH.E, LE, MET, PHYS„CE; SF.C.SCI: BS, MS. Ph.D. can didates. Must receive degree by Sept. 1956. Ingersoll Rand Co.—Mar. 26-27-ME. lE. MNG.E, EE, CE; RS, MS, Ph.D. can didateo den only. Procter and Callable Co.—Mar. 26-27 CH.E. ME, EE. IE, CE, ENGR.SCI. CHEM. Completing Jr. year or doing grad work. Home Ec Council Holds Nominations For New Officers Preliminary nominations of of ficers were made by the Home Economics Student this week. Candidates for president are Susan Hill, junior in home eco nomics from Old Greenwich, Conn., and Suzanne Scholl, jun ior in home economics from Glen shaw. Candidates for secretary-treas urer are Beau Barnes, sophomore in home economics from Arling ton, Va., and Leslie Shultz, soph omore in home economics from State College. -The runner-up for the presi dency will automatically become vice president. Final elections will be held Tuesday at 8 p.m. in 14 Home Economics. Further nominations may be made at that time from the floor, John Sea stone, council president, said. FMA Nominations Sought by Four Four students have applied for nominations for the board of di rectors of the Fraternity Market ing Association. They are Glen Thierwechter, Theta Xi; Thomas Boyd, Alpha Gamma Rho; Frederick Longen ecker, Triangle; and Matthew Gardner, Delta Sigma Phi. Elections to the board will be held at the annual meeting in April. Also to be elected are three alumni as trustees and a mem ber-at-large who is not a student. Nominations to the board will be accepted from the floor at the meeting. _ • Breakfast 0 411114611" r I ,••S Brands I Lands C eiffat-brealc w. i Dessert "Or ' / ft • ANT PARTY ' - ' , mom Pleas* ardor r 1 day *bead ~.. BO" " II AD 11-4111 • Olson to Speak on Children In Graduate School Series Dr. Willard C. Olson, dean of the School of Education at the University of Michigan, will speak on - How Children Grow, Achieve, Feel, and Behave" at 8 p.m. Monday in 121 Sparks His lecture is one of the Graduate School Series and is co-sponsored by the College .of Education. It is open to the public. Dr. Olson has been at the Uni versity of Michigan since 1929 when he was appointed director of research in child development in the University Elementary School. Prior to going to Michigan, Dr. Olson served 10 years on the fac ulty of the University of Minne sota. He also had experience as a principal and superintendent of high schools in Minnesota. Born in Annandale, Minnesota, Dean Olson received his 8.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Minnesota. He was a post-doctoral fellow of the Board of Fellowships in the bio logical sciences of the National Research Council at Minnesota from 1926 to 1927. . Among the honors received by Dean Olson are the outstanding achievement award presented in 1951 by the regents of the Uni versity of Minnesota, and the ap pointment in 1935 by the U.S. State Department as representa tive to the Royal Hungarian Uni versity in Budapest. In 1952, Dean Olson represented North America at a UNESCO-sponsored confer ence on the Mental Health and Education of Children of Europe. English Prof To Give Talk Thomas D. Bowman, professor of English literature, will be the third speaker in the "Ideas of Good and Evil in Great Litera ture" series. It will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Hillel auditorium. The series, sponsored by the Cultural Committee of the Hillel Foundation, will be open to the public. Bowman will speak on "Mac beth" and the consequences of evil which are demonstrated in the Shakespearian play. He got his bachelor of arts de gree from Brown University, Providence, R. 1., and his master of arts degree from the Univer sity. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic honor ary society. Caldwell Will. Address Faculty Luncheon Club James W. Caldwell, associate professor of industrial engineer ing, will speak on "Europe Needs Good Industrial Management," at the Faculty Luncheon Club at noon Monday in the Hetzel Union Building. Caldwell has recently returned from a year in Denmark where he was a Fulbright lecturer at the Technical University of Den mark. ZETA BETA TAU presents MARRIAGE PARTY March 10—Open 9-? Music by Mary Trimas Quartet I E= 11 Finalists To Compete In Tryouts Final tryouts for representing the University in the Pennsyl vania Inter-Collegiate Reading Festival will be held at 7 p.m. Monday in McElwain Lounge. Three out of the 11 finalists will be chosen to read in the Fes tival, which will be held here April 26-27, and one wilt be chos en to read in the Eastern Poetry Reading Festival. The finalists, chosen out of 30 participants, are: Betty Lou Adel son, sophomore in arts and let ters from Kittanning; Gerald Denisof, junior in arts and let ters from Philadelphia; Patricia Doll, junior in arts and letters from York; Phoebe Felk, sopho more in arts and letters fr o Ambridge; Karl Held, senior in arts and letters from Neshanic, N.J. Janet Klinghoffer, sophomore in education from Passaic, N.J.; Joanne Montgomery, senior in arts and letters from State Col lege; John Muntone, junior in education from Shenandoah; John Olsen, sophomore in business ad ministration from Philadelphia; Penelope Robey, freshman in arts and letters from Smethport; and Jon Wilder, freshman in arts and letters from Scranton. Morton Slakoff, graduate stu dent in arts and letters, from Philadelphia, will act as chairman for the tryouts. The finalists will read their own selections. Mem bers of the speech department will act as judges. The tryouts are open to the public. Spring Week Committee Spring Week Committee will meet at 2 p.m. tomorrow in 217 Hetzel Union to discuss more de tails concerning the Spring Week carnival. Daniel VanDuyne, carnival chairman, will present a plan for the arrangement of booths at the carnival to the committee mem bers. C. V. TUMMER SAYS "USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS" PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers