PAGE TWO Life Suits Reds; Lonsdale Says The Russian people are content with their government at pres ent, are steadily raising their standard of living, and want peace so that they may continue to raise it, Kathleen Lonsdale, English Friend who visited Russia, said Sunday night to a State College audience. Speaking to approximately 125 persons who packed the small Toured Russia Kathleen Lonsdale Grad Student Will Present 'Rosmersholmi Richard Andersen, a graduate student in dramatics, will pre sent Henrik Ibsen's "R osm e r shalm" tod a y, tomorrow, and Thursday as his master's thesis production. Free tickets for , the play are available in the dramatics office, Schwab Auditorium. Cur tain time is 7:30 p.m. in the Little Theater, basement of Old Main. "Rosmersholm,"• an example of Ibsen's character studies, is the story of a former minister who gave up the church as he assumed radical views. It portrays the con flict between conservatism and radicalism. Included in the cast are Betty Lou Morgan as Rebecca; Myron Cole, Rosmer; Jay Broad, Rector Kroll; Charles Schulte, Brendel; Pete Farrell, Mortensgard, and Yvonne Voigt, Madame Helseth. Marcia Yoffe is stage manager. Crew heads are Prim Diefender fer, makeup; Lynn Meyer, cos tumes; Farrell, sound; Donald Colbert, lights, and Bill Nudorf, construction. Simes Ratifies WD Date Cade Dr. Frank Simes, director of resident counselors, has approved the West Dorm Council dating code, Richard Mills, council presi dent, announced last night. The dating code must have final approval by the Senate commit tee on student welfare before it can go into effect. The code, if approved, will permit unchap eroned dating in the small lounges and game rooms of Hamilton, Irvin, and McKee' Halls. Charles Brewer, West. Dor m social chairman, said a sports film would be shown in the main lounge in Hamilton Hall at 6:30 tomorrow night. He said he hoped the films could be scheduled every week. - Mills appointed Herbert Hol lister chairman of the West Dorm Spring Week committee. The com mittee will make arrangements to sponsor a booth at the Spring Car nival, Mills said. The council voted to postpone next Monday's meeting until the first Monday after the Easter va cation. Handbook Ad Staff - An important meeting of the advertising staff of the Student Handbook will be held at 7:30 tonight in 9 Carnegie Hall. Staff ers must hand in all contracts at this time, Phyllis Kalson, adver tising manager, has announced. By LAVONNE ALTHOUSE Friends Meeting House on S. Ath erton street, the tiny grey,-Haired physicist described a trip which she and si x other English Friends made to Moscow last summer. MisiLonsdale said that the Rus sians were content with their gov ernment for two reasons. In the first place, she said, some of them can remember what life was like under the Czars, and the 'present government's program, which is rehousing them and raising their standard of living generally, is much better than the former one. Housing Projects In the second place, most of the population is now so young that it cannot remember any other form of government and is not allowed to travel abroad to com pare its government with any other, Miss Lonsdale said. To il lustrate her point, she added that in 1939 one-half of the population was under 22 years of age. Miss Lonsdale described the ex tensive rehousing program in pro gress in Moscow, Kiev and Lenin grad. Blocks of skyscrapers and districts of new apartments are being built, she said. Yet she esti mated that in Moscow it would take 25 to 30 years to rehouse properly and remove the vast areas of slums which Moscow has now. Prison labor is paid at the same rate as ordinary labor with pris oners and laborers often working side by side in the same factories, Miss_ Lonsdale said. Forced labor is uSed in political prison camps and to punish laborers who come to work drunk or habitually late, she said. The Russian standard of living is lower than that of Great Brit ain, Miss Lonsdale said, but it is climbing. Food is more expensive in Russia than in her country, she continued, but the people value food more than clothing. They seem adequately fed, she said, an d adequately, but not fashionably clothed. Miss Lonsdale was surprised, she said, at the freedom the seven Friends had had. Miss Lonsdale also remarked at the heavy at tendance at church services. In a Baptist church she attended which was built to hold 1500 people, up to 1800 people regularly crowded into each of its five weekly serv ices, she said. Other Bapt i s t churches and Russian Orthodox churches had equally high attend ances, she added, and said that three hundred were confirmed laSt year by one Baptist church. People Fear War The Communists are no longer persecuting organized religion, Miss Lonsdale said, but ate for bidding them to instruct young people in religious teachings. In this way, they hop e which they regard as a bourgeois prejudibe, will die out naturally, she said. The Russian people fear war and want peace desperately, Miss Lonsdale 'continued. At the same time, she said, they are taught to believe that the West may at tack them at any' time. ' News, Views ' Named; Mayberry Head Peggy Mayberry has been named new editor of News and Views, home economics magazine, Mrs, Mary E. Reuf, faculty ad visor of the publication, announc ed yesterday. Other new staff members in clude Kennetta Peters, managing editor; Grace Anderson, buSiness manager; Nancy Gemmill and Patience Ungethuem, associate editors; Loiraine Mondrick, fea ture editor. Irene Taylor, national advertis ing manager; Margaret Goodwin and Shirley Habecker, local ad vertising managers; Vera Danko, circulation manager; Mary Petit gout, promotion director; Nancy Kern, art editor; Ona Kay Lee, secretary; and Janet Fietsam, treasurer. TOM 'DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE ebiZEGE. PENNSYLVANIA oodsmen, Spare That Tree —Photo by McWillie HOWARD WRIGHT (loft) and Kenneth Kiel, - both of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, do their bit for the Greek Week community cleanup program by clearing' trees and underbrush from Fair mount Park along South Atherton' street Saturday. Greek Week will continue throughout ,this week. Community Project Begins Greek 'Week The Greek Week program started Saturday with over 1100 fra ternity and sorority members participating in community project day. As part of a week long program of activities designed to strengthen Greek-community relations, the project day consisted of the cleaning and clearing of playgrounds, seeding grass, and the spreading of cinders on parking lots, "Townspeople had high praises World Accord Theme of 1952 Ag Conference "Understanding Our W . o r 1 d Neighbors" was the theme of this year's tri-state agricultural con ference held over the weekend at Pocono Manor Inn. The Tri-State Conference for Young Men and Women is an an nual event and participants are representatives of groups that are sponsored by the agriculture ex tension service of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Twelve students from the Col lege were among the 307 students attending. Fr o m Pennsylvania there were 163 representatives. General chairman of the confer ence was Chauncey P. Lang, pro fessor of agriculture extension at the College, and assistant state extension club leader. The Penn State delegation was in charge of the Sunday morning worship service. The main address was a talk, "Understanding Peoples from Other Lands," by Dr. Charles Y. Hu, a native of China and now professor of geography at the Uni versity of• Maryland. Lewis S. Nichols, head of the nternational farm youth exchange program for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, conducted a panel discussion on the exchange pro gram in past years. Young people who had been in the exchange and have spent a summer work ing on farms in Europe partici pated. Among them was William Lefes, a graduate student at the College who was a delegate to Switzerland in 1949. No '5 O'clock' Today There will be no Five O'clock Theater performance today. "A Love Affair," by John Pakkanen, will be presented next Tuesday. Softball Meeting Called There will be a meeting of all captains of teams entered in the Nittany-Pollock Softball League at 10 p.m. tomorrow in the Dorm 20 council room. The schedule" for the first three nights of league play is now posted on the bulletin in Dorm •20. 16r, the student accomplishments," Jerome Gibson, co-chairman of the. week said. Burgess E. K. Hibshman said the fraternities and sorority mem bers did "a splendid job and I've alreidy heard numerous residents praise the work the students handled during the day." John Dittmar, recreation direc tor, said the results at all the recreation centers of the borough were "wonderful."' The co-chairmen of the project, Gibson and Particia .Acosta, said that the work done on Saturday wa s "very successful" and "it proved that the sorority and fra ternity members are really in- terested in the town." Although- the .weather slowed down the work, much was accom plished by the three groups of fraternity and sorority members. he work was supervised by Harry Dickle, Arthur Smith, Wil liam Richards, David Bischoff, Donald Kurt; Jonathan Craw ford, John Roberts, and Walter Redel. Gibson was enthused about the turnout. He said that in the first two hours, from 10 a.m. to noon (Continued on page eight) = 3 iiiiiihmimmilimmlllllllllllllllllllmulimmitimmmummilimmimic This Spring... We've Sprung The Biggest Easter Savings 204 W. College Ave. Across From Engineering 814 Two Profs Promoted By Trustees Two professors have been• re cently appointed to. higher posi tions in their schools by the exec utive committee of the tio.strd of Trustees. Dr. Elburt F. Osborn, professor of geochemistry and head of the Department of Earth Sciences at the College, has been named a'ss'o ciate dean of the School of Min eral Industries, effective imme-, diately. Dr. John M. Anderson, professor of philosophy, has been appointed head of the Depart ment of Philosophy for a three year term. • In announcing Dr. Osborn 's ap pointment, President Milton S. Eisenhower explained that Dr. Osborn would continue to serve ,as professor of geochemistry and head of the Depart m ent of Earth Sciences. President Eisenhower said that, ,in accordance- with a policy established in 1949, Dr., Anderson's term as head of the Department of Philasophy would run three years. Dr. Anderson succeeds Dr. John A. Mourant. Dr. Osborn was appointed to his present position . at the College in 1946. He received his doctor of philosophy degree at the thliver sity of. California and was named to th e Philosophy department staff in that year. Campus Chest To Get $292.47 From Contest Income in this year's Ugly Man Contest -totaled $292.47, William Slepin, contest chairman, said yes terday. The name of Penn, State's - Ugly Man, however, will not be revealed until the IFC-Parihel Ball Friday in Recreation Hall. The Campus Chest, which will get the proceeds from this year's contest, will not receive the total, amount, Slepin said, because ex penses have not yet, been met. He said there are still three bills to be paid. The amount the Chest will receive will be announced Friday, Slepin said. Of the total income, $274.97 came from student contributions and $17.50 from entry fees. Each contestant paid a 50 cent entry fee. The' Ugly Man Contest, spon sored annually by Alpha Phi Om ega, national service fraternity, was held from Wednesday to Fri day, last week. Students voted for their favorite uglies at a booth located on the Mall at Pollock road. Stidents cast votes by placing money in designated containers. The , con testant with the most Money ._votes will be crowned Ugly Man. ,Your Eager Suit, Sir-- GABARDINE Up To $45.00 Values $ 29 50 t0 $31 5 0 50 With 2 Pair Of Trousers SHARKSKINS The prices are low because the suits are shipped factory direct: These suits were tailored by experts . . . highgrade cloth insures you of a suit that looks smart, hangs well, and will wear 'a long, long time. TVEs ] .?4Y , .e'4ETM 1, 1452