afa - - • • • `,;) • Jr 'lsl • Ttiltrg tt t tt aD • FOR A BETTER PENN STATE • • ihoppin Days 'HI Christma VOL. 59. No. 66 Tick ts for Lecture s. Roosevelt Distributed By M To B Tickets for ti 8 p.m. Wednesdai tributed to stu • Monday, Jan. 5. 1 e Eleanor Roosevelt lecture, scheduled for , Jan. 7, in Schwab Auditorium, will be dis ents and non-students beginning at 9 a.m. A total of 10 have been allot IQ student tickets and 136 non-student tickets . ted for distribution. Tickets, which will be Zepp t investigation Of Infirmary By AMY ROSENTHAL Donald Zepp, president of the Chemistry-Physics Student Conn ell, has been bound by the council to ask All-University Cabinet to investigate the University Health Service. - The motion for the investiga tion was brought up by Joseph Synkonis. Irving Kline also made a motion that the council send a letter to health service officials' asking thein 'to publish a set of instructions on what to do in case of illness. Kline's motion was passed unanimously. The council felt that "some thing should be done abut the lax" ambulance service and about securing a staff to - be on hand at noon and at night to treat emergencies. Irving Kline, Walton Davis and Joseph Synkonis quoted instances when it seemed to them that am bulance service was "lax." They agreed that service should be quicker. Zepp recommended that a per son should be on hand to take care of emergencies at noon and after 6 p.m. He added that now there was a doctor on call at home to take care of night patients. Steve Brown suggested that there be one doctor at the in• firmary to handle night emer gencies and more than one in the afternoon. Ronald Glatt stated that stu dents should at least be notified where to go in case of emergency. Joseph Synkonis said - a "gen eral shakeup" of the hospital staff was needed. President Zepp asked the coun cil members to investigate stories of the people who have complaints against the health se vice. "My on ly contact with the ealth service was during the tim - when there was no flu epide ic," he said. "I .wouldn't know f the claims against the hospita are true or not," he said. • - , Greek A trophy will to the fraternity group actumulatii est number of pc the annual Greek ties to be held,Ar Committee chairm bers for both the I and Panhellenic Co tees, co-sponsors o were ,also announce Leonard Julius and - Nash, co-chairmen. Another change i this year's program' will be a mallet Sing contest to be held i conjunction , with the IFC-Panhe Sing finals. The two winning gr ups will en tertain during the si g finals and, at the IFC-Panhel b quet,•April , . 14. ; • FIrrNTTr! admission free to everyone, may be obtained at the Hetzel Union desk. They will be limited to one person and distribution will continue until the supply is gone. Mrs, Roosevelt will be the first speaker in the new Uni versity Lecture Series which was set up to bring "name speakers" to the campus. She will speak on "R ussi a—The Country and the People as I Saw Them," basing her remarks on her trip through Russia last year. Ask She will be introduced by Jay Feldstein, All - University presi dent. In her talk she will cover a comparison of (1) home life in America and Russia; (2) the gen eral development of education in the two countries; and (3) health services in both countries. Mrs. Roosevelt will be met on her arrival by Feldstein, Mary Jane Wyland, professor emeritus of education, and Sherry Parkin, junior in education and a mem ber of • the Lecture Series com mittee which arranged the pro gram. She will stay at the Nittany Lion•lnn. A reception and a press conference for members of The Daily Collegian, The Centre Daily Times, WDFM and WMAJ, will probably accompany her lecture. The funds for the Lecture Ser ies, which will also bring Cle ment Attlee, former Prime Min ister of England, to the campus on Feb. 23, will come from a special contingency fund ad= ministered by President Eric A. Walker. According to Lecture Series committee members, stu dent fees will not be increased in order to cover the costs of future lectures. Speakers being considered for future invitations to the campus as part of the new series are Vice President Richard M. Nixon, former President Herbert C. Hoo ver,. Sr., former President Harry S. Truman, Sen. John S. Ken nedy and Walter Reuther, presi dent of the United Auto Workers. 200 Unreserved Tickets Remain for Gym Meet 200 extra', unreserved tickets for the Finnish Gym meet will go on sale at 8 a.m. t oda y. The tickets cost $l. 500 reserved seats still remain at $2 apiece. eek Winner to Get Trophy .e awarded ,sorority ig the high- . Lints during fee will be charged for the sing finals with the proceeds going • to the Larry Sharp Fund. The , finals will •be held Saturday, ' April 11 in Schwab Auditorium and the- preliminaries will be held Thursday. April 9 and Fri day. April 10. The Greek Week activities will open with Sunday worship serv ices on 'April 5.- The fraternity sorority exchange dinners will be held Monday and the bridge tour nament is scheduled for Tuesday, April 7. eek activi . rd. 5 to 11. 1 •n and meni terfraternity ncil commit i • the event, today by Mary Alice The outstanding pledge ban quet will be held = Wednesday, April 8 , and qiartet sing contest .prelindnaries • will" be' held Thursday, April S. The com munity work projects, Will be het:l.sll6lMay, April - 11. The closing banquet and presen. STATE COLLEGE. PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 17.1958 Mao Will Quit Post As Red hina Chief WARSAW, Pciand (11 3 )—Mao Tze-tung, Communist China's political, economic and gov ernmental boss, is quitting as .chief of state next month. Peiping confirmed it yesterday but emphasized that Mao will remain at the helm of Red China as boss of the Chinese Communist party, said diplomatic advices reaching Warsaw. Foreign Minister Chen Yi notified foreign diplomats in Peiping that the 65-year-old David W. Russell, professor of education, played Santa Claus to his 25 freshnian women advisees last night. Russell, who said he is quite proud of his advisee group and the hard work they had been do ing all semester, decided to end his series of weekly advisee meetings with a special event. He called his friends Oral R. Swigart and J. Campbell Lester, both associate professors in me chanical engineering, and ar ranged to have 25 freshman engi neering students go to the Uni versity skating rink. Then he told his advisees they, too, could go to the rink. Result: Christmas .ice skating party! Russell said the patty was the first he had arranged for any of his advisee group. "We decided if it worked out well, we might try it again in the Spring before the rink closes," he said. Some Relief Seen From Cold Wave The cold wave that has held temperatures belo w 25 degrees for 11 consecutive days will break somewhat today with the after noon temp era ture rising close 1 4 1 1- 44 r..r. ..7.1 4 1 4 to the 30 degree •0, mark. Cfel fc Today's fore- • , \i. cast is cloudy • with a chance of occasional - light - t i snow. The - high will be 30 de- , grees, getting clearer and cold- ~ er towards night with a low of 16 degrees. Cold weather should continue for several' more days but the temperatures will not be as low as they have been for the past 11 days. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with an expected high of 34 de grees. . The forecast of the weather for the forthcoming holiday weekend will appear in tomorrow's Daily Collegian. tation of awards will be held Tues day, April 14. The purpose of Greek Week is to promote good will and better understanding between the fra ternity and sororities and the stu dent body, faculty, and towns people. Committee chairmen and mem bers are: IFC-Panhel Sing—Stewart Bailey and Dorothy Williams, co-chairmen Francis Levendo sky, Lonis Troutman n, Ronal Roth, Neal Rhoads, Mary Helms, Joan M aar, Patricia Frank, and Marjorie - Brew ster. Poster—Robert Wayne and Kay Noonan, co-chairmen; Alvin Kamis, Robert Bellas, Stuart Medwin, Krland Stevens. Judy Col beck, Barbara Simmons, Virginia Fitz martin and Mary Weeks. ExchangeDinner—Wally Caplan and Barbara Clark, co-chairmen: Richard Mc- Mahon, Kenneth Louis, Theodore Stein man, Richard Pae, Jape Kleinfeld, Judy Bentz, Gail Thompson and Gretchen Grimm. Greek Sunday—Charles McCreary and; Margaret gePherson, co-chairmen Robert Ed Prof Plays 'Santa Claus' For Advisees (Continued ini page eight) father of the Red Chinese revo lution though keeping his big job as party chairman—will re tire from the presidency upon the expiration of his term in Jan uary "to conserve himself to still more important tasks." Though the retirement was pictured by the Chinese as strictly voluntary, Western en voys in this Polish Communist capital expressed belief that So -1 viet Premier Nikita Khrush chev might have had a hand in it. , They said that - if Khrushchev did not precipitate Mao's- stepdown, they were certain he was pleased with it. They believed the retire ment was discuved at Monday's meeting of the Soviet Communist party Central Committee in Mos cow. The Soviet Union, they said, had been worried about two things in relation with its - biggest Com munist neighbor: •The possibility of adverse ef fects from Mao's drastic com mune policy, which masses work ers and their families into labor battalions for Red China's cam 4:laign in agriculture and industry *Fear of an adventurist foreign policy in the Far East at a time when Soviet attention centers on Berlin and the Middle East. Chen emphasized the voluntary aspect of the retirement at a brief ing of ambassadors, minister. and charges d'affaires. Fraternities to Hold Open Houses Tonight The first of two general fra ternity open houses will, be held from 7 to 10 p.m. tonight at 55 fraternities. After four sessions of Sun day afternoon open houses, all the fraternities will be open to freshmen tonight. Another general open house will be held Jan. 11 by the Interfraternity Council. --Colteeian Photo by Bob Thompoon IN THE HOLIDAY MOOD ... Members ofthe music department, Paul Wendhold, Charlotte Stump, and Bob Stephenson, clown in a take-off on popular operatic works at the department's annual Christmas Party. Irvin Coed Abducted Near Tavern A fifth semester coed from Irvin Hall has recovered from a state of shock which followed her ab duction by an unidentified man in the vicinity of The Tavern on College Avenue Sunday night. James Coogan, director of pub lic information, said the girl told police she had gone to a social in the basement of Grace Evan gelical Church on College Ave nue and left about 9:15 p.m. for Irvin Hall. As she was walking past the Tavern, however, she said she realized some one was walking behind her He told her to keep quiet and not scream. She said he took her left glove off, took her hand and led her into the car which she later said she thought was a dark Ford. She said she could no remem- ber anything 'after that. "I blacked out, I think." she told police. She regained conscious- ness once, she said, and found they were driving around..He told her to keep Quiet The next time she was_ con scious, she said she was sitting on - the Library steps and she heard Old Main ring 9:45 p.m. She walked to Irvin Hall and told her roommate the, story. Her room mate, who saw she was very up set, went to the hostess at about 2 a.m. and reported the happen ing. The hostess had the girl taken to the infirmary where she re mained until yesterday. She was too upset to talk to any one un til yesterday, including police. Dr. Helz of the infirmary said she was not harmed in any way` She (Cont?nueil on page four) Shopping Days 'til Christmas FIVE CENTS