SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1959 Braun At Cha "Sinners on a Rooftop" will be the sermon of the Rev. Theodore Braun, Un ted Church of Christ Chaplain to the University, at the P otestant Service of Worship at 9 a.m tomorrow in the He en Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. Music for the service will be provided by the Meditation Chapel Choir, under the direction of Jame 3 Beach, instructor in music and assistant director of the Chapel Choir. The organist for the service will be William Mastrocola. The Wesley Foundation will at tend the Sanctuary Services at 8:30 and 10:45 a.m. at St. Paul'sl Church. The Wesley morning wor ship will be at 9:15 a.m. with. Wesley discussion seminars at , 9:45 a.m. The Fireside Forum will be at 6:30 p.m, The Baptist Student Movement will sponsor a Bible study at 8:30 a.m. in the University Baptist Church. Services will be held at 9:30 and 10:50 a.m. Members of the movement will meet for din ner •at 5:30 p.m. at the church. Following the dinner at 6:30 p.m. the Rev. Richard Nutt, Methodist minister, will speak on "The Life and Mission of the Church." The United Student Fellowship, will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Faith United Church of Christ. The program, -the begin ning of a new series, will be en-, titled "An Introduction to Prayer." Masses - for Roman Catholics, will be said at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m.' and 4:30 p.m. at Our Lady of Victory Church and at 9 a m. in Schwab Auditorium. The Lutheran Student Associa tion will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomor row at the center. Father Hovanic, Roman Catholic priest, will speak on "How the Lutherans and the Reformation Look From Where I Sit!" The Evangelical United Breth ren Student Fellowship will have a dinner meeting at 5 p.m. to morrow. Angelo Vespa will speak on "Roman Catholicism." THE ELOQUENT OVAL Every scintillating facet of this dramatic new cut bespeaks elegance and modern styling. This truly unique diamond, full of fire and-brilliance appears much larger than conventionally, cut stones of the same weight. Here is the hrst, new diamond shape in generations. It can be yours on budget terms TODAY. Sag It at Your MASTER JEWELER'S Now! lisayegiduant.Awnard.9l44 ill Speak pei Service Napier to Give Sermon Sunday Dr. B. Davie Napier, Holmes professor of Hebrew literature at Yale University, will speak at the University Chapel service of wor ship at 10:55 a.m. tomorrow in Schwab Auditorium. The theme of Napier's sermon will be "Prophetic Protestan tism." The Chapel Choir, under the direction of Willa Taylor, will sing "How Lovely Are Thy Dwellings Fair" from Psalm 84 as choral introit, and a setting of Psalm 28 by Horhaness as an them. George E. Ceiga, University or ganist, will play "Preludio Sine Nomine" by Howells as prelude. "Adagio Fifth Sonata" and "Fugue—Fifth Sonata" by Guil mant will be the offertory and postlude. Napier, born in China of mis sionary parents, received his earli er education in American schools in Nanking, Shanghai and at the Canadian Academy in Japan. He received his bachelor of arts de gree from Howard College in Ala bama. Have a WORLD of FUN! -- J- -- stt ,Orient SEE MO RE S 43-65 Devi fi t:. ... t S? OD l ' lj. ' l i 4 .+..' i Nom $998 t Man s rows include caw "odd 27th Yew MI Yew traria Ag•nl SIVAIN toctelttet Mtn Nes That it, WORLD TRAVEL Ca'l7.l. EIES Saab Ceibti . PO. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Also low•cott trips to Mexico 3169 up, South Amwica 3699 up, Hawaii Study Tow $393 up and Around thu World $1196 up New Suit in Sight For Nittany Lion "When the football team moves to the new stadium next fall, the Nittany Lion should have his new suit," James O'Conner, president, l of the Varsity "S" Club said re-, cently. I According to O'Conner approxi mately $350 is needed before the Lion can shed his present cos tume. Money is being raised pri marily through the showing of the football games on film. "If we still don't have enough !money by the end of this season, 'we'll figure something else out," O'Conner added. So the Lion need not fear— somebody really does care!! Junior Advisory Board The Junior Class Advisory Board will meet at 2:30 p.m. to morrow in 217 HUB. The board will discuss final plans for the Junior Prom, the col lection of pledges for the class gift, and class project. Do Kw Think knburself? (THROW THESE QUESTIONS INTO THE POT AND SEE If your studies led you to believe you could strike oil by drilling a hole right in the middle of the campus, would you (A) keep still about it so people wouldn't think you were nuts? (B) sell stock in the proposition to all your friends? (C) get an oil man interested in the idea, even if you had to give him most of the profits? •-f-5...At .. .. i.z _ r i o a ...,., i I s 8 • •'' ..---- o p .11,41 1 1 t Next time you light up, take a moment to think about what you really want in your filter cigarette. Most men and women who think for themielves choose VICEROY. The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows - ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN'S FILTER. A SMOKING MAN'S TASTE! Sigma Delta Chi 50th Anniversary Sigma Delta Chi, men's pro fessional journalistic frater nity, will celebrate the 50th ,anniversary of its national founding at a banquet at 6:30 o.m. tomorrow in the Nittany Lion Inn. Dr Edward W. Barrett. dean of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, will be the „uest speaker at the banquet. His subject will be "The Challenges to Mass Communications." Initiation of undergraduates and professional members of the Uni versity's chapter of SDX will be held at 4:30 p.m in the Penn State Room of the Inn. Members of Theta Sigma Phi, women's professional journal ism fraternity will attend as well as University officials. Professional members to be ini- "A watched pot never boils" means (A) the man who made such a statement never watched a pot; (B) It you don't want the stew to boil over—watch it!. (C) you can't hurry things by worrying about them.. A 0 13 0 CD If you saw a girl perched up in a tree reading a book, would you say, (A) "Tim ber!" (B) "Is the light better up there?" (C) "Will that branch hold two?" AD BO CD Assuming cigarettes could talk, would you listen to (A) a filter cigarette that talks only about its taste? (B) a weak-tasting ciga rette that talks about its filter? (C) a filter cigarette that lets its advanced filter design and full taste speak for themselves? AO BO CO tiated are Harold V. Cohen, drama critic of the Pittsburgh Post-Ga zette; Rembrandt B. Rickard, edi tor of the Philipsburg Daily Journal; Williarri B. Hastings, news editor of the Indiana Eve ning Gazette; and Al N. Elmer reporter for the Williamsport Sun-Gazette. Undergraduate initiates will be Robert J. Tacelosky, iunior from Mahanoy City: Thomas I. Myers, graduate student from Wilkes- Barre: Irwin A Hirschamann, graduate student from Baltimore, Md, and lan E. McNett, junior from Columbia Cross Roads. Ridge Riley, executive secre tary of the Alumni Association, will describe the founding of the local chapter in 1932. Robert Root, SDX vice presi dent for undergraduate affairs and professor of journalism at Syra cuse 'University, will represent the national offices. WHAT COOKS*) BO CO the cigarette with the most advanced filter design of them all . . . the one cigarette with a thinking man's filter and a smoking man's taste. qf you checked (Z 3) in three out of four of these questions, you're a pretty smart cooky —but if you checked (C), you think for !Ourself! ..i14 , .. ~,,, e c....., , SP , g 0 11 ', ‘IIC W ' C i i r a i l Ot t 0 10 to i i ',, • 0- 64 L os WIMP, Thorn & Williamson Thema Cat,. PAGE FIVE to Hold Banquet - Familiar pack Or crush-proat boa.