The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 16, 1957, Image 5

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    Army General to Inspect
ROTC Detachment Today
Maj. Gen. Philip F. Lindeman,
chief of the Army Reserve and
Reserve Officers Training Corps
affairs, will visit the University
today to inspect the ROTC de
'tachment and to confer with Pres
ident Eric A. Walker.
A general inspection board of
six Army officers from other col
leges and universities . will also
review the ROTC and its presi
dent will meet with Dr. Walker.
Maj. Gen. Lindeman will pre
sent awards to outstanding cadets
of the Army ROTC at ceremonies
Role of Religion-
(Continued from page two) I
As for religious institutions. Archbishop Temple once summed
up their obligation by saying it was “the business of Lambeth (the
Archbishop's Palace) to remind Westminster (Parliament) of its:
responsibility to God.” .
If the Judeo-Christian religions can be true, it is a part of that
truth that they will not fully win out in the world'until the end of
time. Meanwhile, religious thought and institutions share the im-|
perfections and take part in the struggles as we see them. •
- The religious mind is tradtionally more at home in the realm
of brotherhood, a new sense of life’s frailty and death’s shape, suf-;
fering and pride than with the calculations of military command or
government.*
- While there is, happily, no official institution in the United,
States to remind Congress of its responsibilities to God, the religious '
minds.of our country, at their wisest, well prepared for the tragedy!
sure to come, are nevertheless disposed to exert more influence in
the “secular order” than they have in the past.
'Jim Dandy' Will End
The‘final performances of “Jim
Dandy” will be- presented at 8
p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at
Center Stage.
Tickets are on sale for $1 at the
Hetzel Union desk and Center
Stage. - -
LANTERN
On So
BULLE
CORI
WE
Com pie
Original Pa
at 2:10 p.m. today in front of Old
Main.
He is scheduled for a 30-minute
conference with Dr. Walker at
3:30.
The president of the inspection'
board, Col. Grubbs of the Uni-j
versity of Kentucky, is scheduled
to meet with’Dr. Walker for 20
minutes at 4.
Maj. Gen. Lindeman and the
members of the board will visit i
military classes and will confer
with University ROTC official?
throughout the day.
German Class Dramas
Two one-act plays will be pre
sented by the German 12 class at;
8 p.m. tomorrow in the Lutheran
Student Center on West College
Ave.
The meeting is open to the
public. . j
le TODAY
--AT
HUB,
TIN BOARD,
>IER ROOM,
»T DORMS
25c
itely Different
inting in each copy!
:OLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA
Coed Drivers
Will Perform
On Tractors
Coeds will have a chance to
disprove claims that women are
a menace behind the wheel at
the annual tractor driving con
test beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday
in the parking lot next to the
Forestry Building.
Today is the deadline for enter
ing the contest, which is spon
sored by the Agricultural Engi
neering Club. Entries may be
turned in at the Hetzel Union
desk with a 50-cent entrance fee.
There will be separate divi
sions for men and women) with
the winner of each receiving a
trophy.. Coeds need only pilot
their tractors in one direction
while the males will also be
required to back through the
course.
The course winds like a snake’
between barrels spaced 20 feet;
apart and between two barnyard!
fences. It also includes a rect
angular obstacle area. !
The men’s contest will begin at!
lp.m. and the coed division willj
start about 3 p.m. All contestants
are required to be at the parking!
lot at 1 p.m. when rules and trac- 1
tors will be furnished. I
Members of the Department ]
of Agricultural En g i neering 1
will judge contestants on their 1
ability and safe conduct. Time i
will be used to break a tie. |
No experience is necessarv toi
enter the contest which has been
held annually for several years.
- RECORD SALE -
STOCK CLEARANCE
Everything in Store Marked Down (Few Exceptions)
$3.98
$4.98
$5.98
★ SEVERAL RECORD PLAYERS ON SALE *
$1.98 SAMPLERS
$1.49 SAMPLERS
98c SAMPLERS
COLUMBIA SHOWS 1 ea. 3.98
PORGY 81 BESS org. 14.98 ; 10.00
MILLER - vol. I (45rpm) . 5.99
SWAN LAKE org. 22.50 17.98
SLEEPING BEAUTY org. 22.50 17.98
COLUMBIA STARTIME ! 2.98
MORTON GOULD WALTZES 1.00
CONCERTA org. 7.98 5.98
BACH SUITES org. 7.96 5.98
CARMEN 5.98
TONE POEM org. 11.95 9.95
10" L.P/a ea. .98
SPECIAL GROUP OF SINGLES 5 for 1.00
n, UNIVERSITY RECORD
Across from Atherton Hall
Gallery Furnishings
Suggested for Gift
Third, of a Series
Furnishings for an art gallery or theatre to “serve the
entire University community” are among five suggestions for
the §lO,OOO senior class gift.
Dr. Albert Christ-Janer, director of the School of the Arts,
yesterday said that the projected §3 million School of the
Arts building, which would include the gallery and theatre,
is high on the University’s prior
ity list of new buildings.
According to Dr. Christ-Janer
the appropriation may not include
furnishings for the building.
He said:
“If we are lucky enough that!
the seniors vote to aid the school,!
the $lO,OOO would be used to help'
furnish the art gallery or theatre 1
as a permanent memorial.
Would Serve All Students
“I wouldn’t want to suggest aj
project specifically for arts stu-i
i dents—we want to serve all stu-!
[dents,” Dr. Christ-Janer said.:
“Throughout the School of the!
I Arts building we want, to speak!
|to the whole campus and com-!
jmunity.” ]
Furnishings for the art gallery
: could include lights, panels, furn
iture, display cases or shutters
for light control.
! The gallery would house work
[by students and professionals and
serve ‘‘not only as a vault for the
preservation of valuable objects,
!but a!s6 as a constantly changing!
theatre of display,” Dr. Christ-,
[ Janer said.
Furnishings for the theatre.
LP's
LP's
LP's
Specially Priced Items at Larger Reductions
The deadline for Freshman
.Customs Board applications is
!noon today at the Hetzel Union
desk.
Now
Now
Now
ALSO
planned to house an audience of
400, could include seating, cur
tains or lighting.
Others Have Art Centers
At piesent, Dr. Christ-Janer
'said, there are 15 university art
[centers throughout the country:
iThese art centers, as will -the
'University’s, serve as a part of
■ the total-education of all students,
ihe said.
Plans for the building were ap
proved last January by the Board
[of Trustees and sent to the Gen
eral State Authority in Harris
burg. Construction will be started
jas soon as the authority, approves
!the appropriation.
j Tentative plans for the build
ing provide that it be a brick and
glass structure of modem design.
A complex of buildings will
house a theatre, art gallery, stu
dios for art, architecture and
music and classrooms.
Freshman Customs Board
$2-98
$3.98
$4-98
$1.49
98c
79c
Open Till 9:00
PAGE FIVE