SATURDAY. MARCH 7. CDFR Pr To Addr Fellowshi Dr. Joseph Britton, a professor of child devel and family relation speak at the Pres.', University Fellowship p.m. tomorrow. There will be a discu "Love arid Family Relat . focusing on the relation• lege students with their The United Student ship will hear Dr. Andre professor of art, speak man Catholicism" at :1 tomorrow. This will be the third i of five discussions on th theme, "The Religions kind." The University Christi: n Asso ciation Protestant service of wor ship at 9a.m. tomorrow in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel will hear a sermon by the Rev. John Whitney of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Members of the Baptist Stu dent Movement will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Uni aersity Baptist Church for sup per. Following the dinner, Robert Laßar. president of the Agricul ture Student Council. will sneak to the group on "Campus Politics." The Episcopal Student Group will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Episcopal Church for an even ing prayer, followed by a supper at the parish house. Dr. Robert E Dengler, professor „ emeritus of Greek, will discuss "Lent in Per spective" at a 6 p.m. meeting after the dinner. The Wesley Foundation will meet for a Fireside Forum at 6:39 p.m. tomorrow at the foun dation, 256 E. College Ave. "Is lam" will be the topic for dis cussion. The B'nai B`rith Hillel Founda lion will sponsor a brunch at noon tomorrow for the United Jewish Appeal. Masses for Roman Catholic Students will be said at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m. at the Our Lady of Victory Church and at 9 a.m. In Schwab .Auditorium. Visiting Bishop Will Deliver Chapel Sermon Bishop Fred Pierce Corson will speak on "Jesus Found It In the Church" at the University Chapel service of worship at 10:55 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. Bishop Corson is the resident bishop of the Methodist church in the Philadelphia area. The University Chapel Choir, directed by Willa Taylor, will sing as the choral introit, "Deck Thyself, My Soul, with laciness" by Johann Cruger ana as the anthem, "Seek Ye the i ord" by Arthur Bliss. . George E. Ceiga, Uni ersity or ganist, assisted' by Ella i inninger, senior in home econo ics from Connellsville, will pla, as the prelude, "Jesu,' Prieel,'ss , Tres-' sure" by J. S. Bach; as the offer tory, "Hear Our Solem Litany" by Healey Willan; and as the postlude, "Fugue in E Minor" by J. S. Bach. Bishop Corson was !graduated from Dickinson College!and Drew Theological -Seminary. He holds many honorary degrees from such Pennsylvania colleges as Tempi e, Dickinson, Allegheny, Franklin and Marshall, Gettys burg and the University of Penn sylvania. Bishop Corson served as presi dent of the Council of Bishops from 1952-1953. He is! currently the vice president of he Metho dist World Conferenc: and was a delegate to the Wold Council of Churches' Evansto meeting frt 1954. Gemmill Wins Title At Debate Congress "What is a woman?" - That was the question posed by Mary Ann Gemmill, Gavel Girl of the 34th Annual Joseph F. O'Brien Debate Congress. Miss Gemmill, senior in secondary education from New Cumberland, was awarded the,title and a silver gavel pendant for her views on the question, satiate I pment i .l will yterlan at 6:20 "Resolved: That the Further Im- 1 mergence of Women from the Home Should Be Prohibited by Universal Agreement." She was selected by the "con-' gressmen" at a dinner banquet in the Hetzel Union dining room last night and "crowned" by Marshall Jacobson,• manager of men's debate team. sion on • nships" of col parents. "Being a woman," Miss Gem mill said, "I can draw a com pletely illogical conclusion and say that since men are opposed to women in business, we must keep the women in the home." Women, she said, have been outstanding throughout the ages, and men have developed an in feriority complex. Case, n "Ro -30 p.m. a series general if Man- She offered a solution to this with the theory that if women were restricted to the home the population would increase and there would not be enough food for everyone. Therefore, she theor- • „.• ~. • „ . . • •.• •.•• •••,. , . .„ ~• . • • •-•• _ . . •• • ••••.• . • .•• , :•.• • - . . ••• •.• MAKE *23 Start talking our language—we've got hundreds of checks just itching to go! We're paying $25 each for the Thinklish words judged best! Thinklish is easy: it's new words from two words—like those on this page. Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, 1%1. Y.'Enclose your name, address; college and class. Get the genuine article English: SEASICK MAYFLOWER PASSENGER English: LOUO-M°UTHED A • „:•• 9. TOOWEY, LOYOLA COLLEGE 04. r, cow THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE: PENNSYLVANIA By BOBBY LEVINE English: DRIVE-IN MOVIE ON 4 RAINY NIGHT Get the honest taste of a LUCKY STRIKE ized, men would have to find a scientific way of producing the food. This would reduce their in feriority complexes. She pointed out that "foreign policy" would also be solved by keeping women in the home. "Just think," Miss Gemmill said, "no need ford summit con ference to determine hemlines; no need for a foreign minister's 1 conference to determine the color of the year." She also pointed to the end of the two weapons capable of an nihilating the human race—the pointed toe and the steel heel. Miss Donovan, who argued against women remaining in the home, referred to women as "our trapped natural resource." Miss Walborn, in defending the resolution, warned of an all-out war between the sexes if women were to continue going into the business world. .•' • . ' . • . • • ••-• . • . • • . • . . Thinklish translation: This drive-in's main feature: pictures matched to the weather. In January, it's Snow White; in July, Hot Spell. When it pours, of course, the program is all wet: Singing-in the Rain, Hatful of Rain and Rain tree County. On such nights, the only (Thinklish) word for this place is damphitheal turn on your wind, light up a Lucky, t honest taste of • Then It's Always ; - ; P, University Delegates Attend ICG Regional Convention Delegates from the University chapter of the Intercollegiate Conference on Government are attending a regional convention today at Millersville State Teach ers College. Twenty-three students from the University are participating in the conference according to Lee E. Corter, assistant professor of political science, the group's faculty advisor. The convention is being held in the form of a model state legislature. Corter said bills !passed by the ICG legislature will be sent to the Pennsylvania A Book of Verses underneath the Bough A bottle of root beer; a illorrelts bugle and Thou Beside me :1%714 in the wilderness —Omar Khayyam Visit Morrell's The eating place of the poets for carry-out service call AD 8.8381 open till 12 p.m. • MORRELL'S 112 S. FRAZIER CIGARETTES EILAEM . ON, JIM LEWIS, Y. OF N. CARPLIN4 . exxxfrem e a r "se • P ro duct of ( Zine,sig.cm c i , weir u our middle name, Genersl Assembly for its consid eration. University delegates carried at least 10 bills to the convention with them. The bills cover such diverse areas as state finances, labor and industry, local govern ment and the judiciary. Delegations from other colleges and junior colleges attending the convention of the Central Region, 'one of the state's five regions. Inc from Bucknell University. Franklin and Marshall, Hershey, Elizabethtown, Lebanon Valley Dickinson and Millersville col leges. English: 1400 P FACVORY . Thinklish : SPINSTITUTION CHARLES HOSTED, U. OF COLORADO English: SODA-FOUNTAIN BOSS .. Thinklish : SCOOPERVISOft 808 HURLEY. HO ATH EAS TERN English: OOZING WRAITH , • :4APPAIt klAot:t E. BRUCE IiERCRANT:U• O r VChICAGO PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers