SATURDAY. MAY 21. 1 Seyda t At Prot Rev. Arthur R. S liver the sermon at a.m. tomorrow in the Rev. Seyda wills German Bis Will Presen Chapel Ser Bishop Johannes L theran bishop of Han West Germany, will the Chapel services a.m. tomorrow in Auditorium Both the Universit Chapel Choirs, under the dir•ction of Willa Taylor, and the Medita tion Chapel Choirs, under the di rection of James W. Beach, will provide the music for the services. Tomorrow will be the first time the two groups will participate jointly in the service. The Meditation Chapel Choirs will sing the Introit, "I to the Hills Will Lift Mine Eyes" from the Ravenscroft's Psalter, 1621, and the Gloria Patri by George Ceiga. They will participate with the congregation and the Univer sity Chapel Choi• in the singing of Vaughan Williams' setting of the "Old Hundredth." The University Chapel Choir will sing "Die Mit Tranen Saen" by Hermann Schein as the morn ing anthem. The University organist, George Ceiga, will play three composi tions by Mendelssohn. "Prelude in C minor" will be followed by "Adagio in A flat" as offertory, and "Fugue in C minor" as post /tide. Bishop Lilje is the president of the United Luthern Church in Germany and a member of the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches. While he is in this country, he is the Harry Emerson Fosdick visiting profes sor at Union Theological Semin ary. Block 'S' Club Increases Flashcard Section to 165 The flashcard section of the Block "S" Club now has 165 members. These students pur chased their membership badges for 75 cents at an or ganizational meeting of the flashcard section Thursday night. The flashcard section will oc cupy approximately 700 stadium seats on the 20 to 35 yard line in the lower section of Beaver Stadium at the football games next year. It will participate in all home games with and stunts and routines coordinat d with the halftime show. The Block "S" Clus another call for mem Orientation Week in Interested students wi, an opportunity to pure at the flashcard sec which will be set up, the Hetzel Union Bui entation Week. ' COEDS she Give Sermon Services staid l vda, Lutheran campus pastor, will de e Protestant services of worship at 9 elen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel a eak on `Doing the Impossible Takes a Little Longer." Music kir the service will be provided by Meditation Chapel !Choirs, under the direction of James Beach. They will sing the choral anthem, "The Heavens are Telling" by Haydn. The organist for the service will be Larry Handwerk. lon 1 lje, Lu , I lover in peak at at 10:55 Schwab Rev. Seyda is a graduate of ; Muhlenberg College. He received his bachelor of divinity degree) from the Lutheran Seminary in Philadelphia. The Newman Club will hold its annual spring picnic at 2 p.m. to morrow at Holmes-Foster Park in State College. Father Ream will, hold a discussion group at 7 p.m.' Monday in the small lounge of the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. The Wesley Foundation will hold discussion classes at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at the foundation. Dr. Elwoo'd Olver will lead the dis cussion "Religion as Creative Insecurity." Miss A. Pauline Lock lin, professor of English, will speak at a banquet at 12:30 p.m at the foundation. The Lutheran Student Associa tion will hold a senior banquet at 6 p.m. tonight at the student cen ter. Rev. Arthur Ruths, former Lutheran campus pastor, will be the speaker. There will be a din ner meeting at 5 p.m. tomorrow, at 445 E. McCormick St. for old and new student association offi cers. The Young Friends of the Wit: Liam Penn Foundation will spend the weekend at a tree farm in Seven Stars. The group will meet at 3 p.m. today at 124 S. McAllis ter St. Westminster Fellowship will have a senior picnic tomorrow at Whipples Dam. Students will meet at 4:30 p.m. at the student center. The Baptist Student Movement will conduct a Bible study in Jeremiah at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow at the student center. Church serv ices will be held at 9:30 and 10:50 a.m. There will be a picnic at 5 p.m. at 246 E. McCormick Ave. The 75 cents badge fee will be used by the club to pay for flash cards, advertising and miscellane ous items. Lanny Dey, president of Black "S", said there is a possibility that the flashcard section will be able to travel in a group to away games to act as a cheering section for the team. The Block "S" Club was organ ized to serve student body by promoting spirit at all athletic events, pep rallies and team re ceptions. It consists of an execu tive committee and three stand ing committees. We Beg To Call Your Attention To The Fact That . . . will issue ers during .eptember. The nime of Yvonne Umbe wust was deleted from the Froth advertising staff list in both the April and May issues. —Frothy apologizes. also have ase badges ion booth • ossibly in ding, Ori- Don't Miss Your Chance ... We have a limited tion of Town & Country roes, size 4B in high, 1-heel, flat and wedgie les. Only $5.95 - $7.95 duel Room. len Street Store Only THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA 'Requiem' To Be Sung At Concert "The Requiem" by Giuseppe Verdi will be presented at 8:30 tonight in Schwab auditorium by th e University Chapel Choir and the Symphony Or chestra in their 13th annual spinrg concert. Dr. Hugo Weisgall, distin guished visiting professor of mu sic, will be guest conductor for the production. Soloists who will join the stu dent groups are: Ellen Faull. so prano; Margery Mayer, mezzo soprano; Vince.nzo Siviero, tenor, and Raymond Brown, associate professor of music, baritone. For the first time the Univer sity Chapel Choir, under the di rection of Willa Taylor, will be an all-faith choir. It will consist of representatives from the Medi tation Chapel Choirs and the Ro man Catholic and Jewish groups, A total of 213 students will be participating in the concert. Willa Taylor, co-ordinator for the concert, has been assisted in its preparation by James Beach, director of the Meditation Chapel Choirs, and Theodore Karhan, regular conductor of the Univer sity Symphony Orchestra. The concert is sponsored by the (University Chapel, the depart ment of music, and the Commit 'tee on Inter-Religious Affairs. t nce there is no admission charge, d voluntary contribution will be taken at the close of the program. Greek Week Committee Applications Available Applications for Greek Week Committees for next fall are avail able at the Hetzel Union desk Chairman as well as committee members will be chosen from these applications. Looking Glass Twenty days until gradua tion . . . can you believe it? Well, I can, it seems that every day there is a shower for a pro spective bride. June is the sea son of showers and wedding gifts, so why don't you display your good taste and select a gift from Ethel Meserve's? ETHEL BRINGS BACK THE "CAT'S MEOW" Yes, Ethel has brought it back, not alive, but on paper. It's the rage (for cat lovers), it's Sophisticat writing paper & wall prints. Four poses are available. Sophisticats are only one dollar a box. (There is a surprise inside the card.) TAKE THE CONTINENTAL LOOK TO WHIPPLES Select a pair of handsome sunglasses from Ethers. Espe cially imported from Italy these sunglasses are now sell ing for only $2.98. IN THE MARKET FOR SHOWER OR WEDDING GIFTS? Then Ethel's is the only place for you. We have a wide selec tion of appropriate gifts in all price ranges. See our fine place mats, linens, towels, glas - sware, and household items. See our collection of West Bend kitchen stainless steel and aluminum kitchen ware . . . electric fryers, cassarole pans, and canister sets. Ask our sales representatives to help you select a gift. See you around campus, Gabbi g , e Through the with Gabbi Alumni to Participate In 'College' Sessions Alumni College, the agency through which a program of continuing education is offered to the alumni, will be held in the summer on campus for two weeks and 41so in the fall in Europe for three weeks. The summer Alumni College will be held from August 1 to 5 and 8 to 12 and will offer such courses as "Modern Paint- will visit the East Berlin sector ing." "Modem Fiction" and "Poll- and a refugee camp. , During the summer prior to tics: - 1960," for the alumni The the trip the 20 alumni will re tirst-week session will be a study-, ceive a study kit as prepara- lion for their tour abroad. The discussion program, while the second-week session is intended kit will include language rec to train the participants to act as cords, maps, and background 'discussion leaders. material on the political and The fall Alumni College will cultural history and the cur be held from Oct. Ito 24 and rent affairs of each country to will be open to a limited group be visited. of 20 alumni who have attended ' previous sessions of the college. Prior to departure they will m In connection with the theme of meet September 9 and 10 on cam the seminar "The Varieties of pus to hear lectures• see films and Western Democracy" the alumni discuss the tour in detail. Robert Iverson, f I will visit England, Germany, assistant director of Con- Switzerland and France, more tinuing Liberal Education, and particularly, London, Berl i n, Kent Forester, professor of Euro- Bonn, Berne, Geneva and Paris.pean history, will be the discus sion leaders and will also go with In London, the group will visit the alumni on the trip. the Speakers' Corner in Hyde The fall Alumni College is the Park and the Houses of Pailia ment. Visits to Versailles, the' 'first college to be held abroad. :The Center of Continuing Liberal headquarters of NATO a n d lEducation is planning one for the SHAPE, the Louvre and a lecturel spring of 1961 which will tour by a member of the French For e Europe under the theme "Varie- ign Office is included in the :ties of Western Art " program for their five-day stop in Paris. In Geneva, visits to the Inter national Labor Organization, and the College of Political Sciences' are included in the itinerary. Bonn, the group will meet with , representatives of the West Ger-I man parties, and in Berlin they Our new sportswear LaShions are cordial invitations to take it easy this summer. Designed to keep you cool and comfortable, they wash in a jiffy and need little ironing. Such a convenience for those of you attending sum mer school! blouses from 2.98 Bermudas from 4.98 slacks from 4.98 Smart Shop A 123 S. Allen St. LOBSTER HOUSE Sunday Dinners 12-8 TAXI RETURN GRATIS Get Set for a Carefree Summer 4 , , 1 •; iti k 1.4, pfk wii , • v n i34 lot PAGE FIVE