PAGE TWO Chapel Choir to Offer Mozart 'Mass' Tonight Mozart's "Great Mass in C Minor" will be presented at 8 tonight in Schwab Auditorium by the Chapel Choir and Sym phony Orchestra. For the benefit of students and others who may not be able to get seats in Schwab auditorium, arrangements have been made to broadcast the concert over the amplifying sys tem in the Hetzel Union Building and over campus radio station WDFM. Eng Dean To Address Honors Day Dr. Eric A. Walker, dean of thel College of Engineering and Archi tecture, will speak at the third annual Engineering College Hon- 1 ors Day at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 110 Electrical Engineering. Earl B. Stavely, assistant dean of the college, and the depart ment heads will participate in the program which is being spon sored jointly by the College of Engineering and Architecture and the Engineering Student Council. Engineering Newsletter Copies of the Engineering News letter, published in a souvenir edi- I tion, will be distributed at the function. The newsletter will be in the form of a booklet and will contain the names of the award winners and the names of the of ficers and members of the en gineering and architecture honor ary societies. A total of 10 fellowships for graduate study at the University and other institutions will be awarded. Twelve awards for fur ther undergraduate study at the University will be awar d e d through the Senate Committee on Scholarships and Awards. 35 Industrial Scholarships Approximately 35 scholarships granted by industrial groups will be presented. These scholarships , range from $125 to $750. Awards will be presented by the engineering and architecture societies to outstanding students.: Recognition will also be given to! students who submitted prize winning papers in competition sponsored by national engineer mg societies. Stavely said that the honors day program was created to give campus recognition to engineer ing students who have excelled in academic studies at the Univer sity. The program is open to the public. Armstrong Elected Chimes President Judith Armstrong, sophomore in arts and lettters from Grove City, has been elected president of Chimes, junior women's hat society. Other new officers are Barbara Billing. sophomore in education from Philadelphia, vice president; Roseanne Fortunato, sophomore in education from Wilmington, Del., secretary; Joan Chase, soph omore in business administration from Arlington, Va., treasurer; Barbara Budnick, sophomore in journalism from Schenectady, N.Y., national editor; Marlene Bishoff, junior in education from Easton, senior adviser. Sun Oil Co. Creates Teachers' Scholarships The Sun Oil Co. of Marcus. Hook has made available three scholar ships for teachers planning to en roll in the Summer Institute for High School Teachers of Science. Each scholarship consists of $3OO to cover actual expenses and an additional $5OO for family al lowances and cost of living ad justments. g Bresidast ogormigir Brunei Lunch • Coffee-break Dowd (I' ANT PARTY THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Doors to the Auditorium will open at 8 p.m. No admission will be charged for the concert, but an offering to help defray expen ses will be taken during the in termission. This voluntary offering will be used for concert expenses that are not covered by the University'sub sidy allotted to the Choir. No reserve seats are available except for families and special guests of members of the choir. The concert, honoring the Mo zart bicentennial, is the ninth of the yearly concerts sponsored jointly by the University Chapel Choir and the department of music. The Chapel Choir, composed of 'lO2 members directed by Willa C. Taylor, professor of music educa tion, will be assisted by 35 mem bers of the Symphony Orchestra which is directed by Theodore Karhan, associate professor of music and music education. Soloists appearing with the Uni versity groups are Sylvia Stahl man, soprano; Jean Sanders, mez zo-soprno: Richard Casilly. tenor; and Raymond Brown, baritone. Brown, assistant profesor of music, was the baritone soloist at two previous Spring concerts. Miss Sanders, who sang in the 1954 performance of Mendels sohn's "Elijah," is currently a member of the solo quartette at ISt Bartholomew's in New York City. Her experiences include en igagements with many of the sum mer musical theaters, Radio City Music Hall, and top-rating televi sion programs. Cassilly, a member of the New York City Opera Company, sang the leading tenor role in Menotti's "The Saint of Bleeker Street" both in its Broadway and Nation al Broadcasting Company Tele vision Opera productions. This is his first appearance at the Uni versity. Recently returned from Europe, Miss Stahlman was engaged for the past two seasons as the lead ing coloratura at the Theatre Roy al de la Monnaie in Brussels, Bel gium. She sang 12 leading roles with this company including those of Lucia, Violetta, Juliette, and Gilda. This will be her first en gagement with a University group. The production details for the concert were handled by the Choir officers of the current year and the newly elected officers for next year. TEACHERS WANTED Satire West, Southwest and Alaska 1303 Central NE Albuquerque, N.M. Free EurolNkest The First National Bank of State College Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Federal Reserve System Pan hei Vote Admits New Local Group Panhellenic Council voted unanimously to admit Trion, a new local sorority, to co ut ell membership Tuesday night. As a member of the Council, Trion can now participate in the fall and spring rushing programs. After the regulation year of pro bation and if Trion has 25 mem bers, they expect to petition Sig ma Kappa, national sorority, for admittance as a local chapter. Fpur of the sisters were affili ated with Sigma Kappa at West minster College. Appointments Made Barbara Nicholls, Panhel presi dent, appointed Helena Moraio, junior in arts and letters from Riverside, Conn. an d Suzanne Loux, junior in education from Drexel Hill, co-chairmen of a committee to investigate the pos sibility of setting up a memorial to Anne Elder, recently killed in an automobile ac ci den t. Miss Nicholls suggested that the com mittee discuss the memorial with other women's groups on campus. NSA Delegate The Council voted unanimous ly to send Miss Nicholls as a dele gate to the National Student As sociation convention this summer. The following committee chair man appointments were an nounced: Mary Tassia, junior in arts and letters from York, and Mary Dorman, junior in journal ism from Rockport, Mass., cul ture committee; Virginia Mac donald, junior in education from Bloomsbury, N.J., Panhel chair man of the Starlight Dance of Orientation Week; and Zelda Rappaport, junior in arts and let ters, projects committee. Martz Elected Thespian Head Robert •Martz, junior in hotel administration from Altoona, has been elected president of the Board of Dramatics and Forensics and president of Thespians, musi cal-comedy group. The two groups also elected other officers. Thespian officers are Mary Tas sia, junior in arts and letters from York, vice president; Barbara Kinnier, sophomore in education from Dansboro, secretary; Tru man Burch, junior in the division i of intermediate registration from' North Charleroi, treasurer; and Robert .1. Bishop, junior in science from Paxinos, member-at-large. Marcia Ripper, sophomore in home economics from Butler, was chosen vice president of the Board of Dramatics and Forensics. The secretary-treasurer election will be held next semester. PENN STATE CLASS RING Better Hurry! L. G. Balfour Co. Prize-Winning Photo THE WALLS CAME t_ Jwn, taken by Lt. B. , Ken nedy, Philadelphia fireman, on Oct. 27 and has been judged the top news photo of the year in the 13th annual Photo Competition sponsored by the University of Missouri. The photo will be on display this weekend at the University for the Pennsylvania Press Conference. Wood to Head Bu Donald Woods, junior in busi ness administration from Wilkes- Barre, has been elected president of the Society for the Advance ment of Management. The society has also elected Nicholas Holman, sophomore in POLLOCK COUNCIL presents the GRADUATION . BALL In Honor of the Class of '56 Music by the A 1 M BAND with selections by the Independent Mixed Chorus HUB BALLROOM 9 -12 p.m. FRIDAY, MAY 18 Couples Only ... Informal Free Admission Prizes THURSDAY. MAY 17, 1956 iness Society hotel administration from Hazle ton, vice president; James Corri gan, junior in business administra tion from Hazleton, secretary; and James Cramer, junior in business administration from Freeport,, treasurer.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers