Today's Fc Warm and Clt reeasts VOL. 59. No. 70 High May Bring rozen To F ;s may have a chance to thaw during a slight pping cold wave. ■es are expected to rise today to a high of 24 Frozen nosi relief in the gri Temperatu: degrees, of the present cold air mass is expected to The center move off the C, rolina this er no permanent icted because of air still covering n of the country, mperalures yes* he Western part a Weather Bur at the mercury rees below zero 8 below at low at Philips w at Brookvillo afternoon, howev ■warmup is pred a blanket of cold the eastern sectk The lowest ie lerday were in 1 of the state. Th eau reported lli reached 12 deg: in Snow Shoe. Blairsville, 2 hi burg and 1 beli and Somerset. Temperatures reached zero de grees at Pittsburgh, Butler, Un ionville and Kane. The University weather station recorded a high of 18 degrees yesterday in State College. The Associated Press reported that the season's coldest wea ther and strong winds spread across the Appalachians to the Atlantic coast. Stormy weather has lessened in the far west where strdng winds, rain and snow plagued the Pacific states Monday. Even the southern states were not spared as freezing weather spread as far south as northern Florida. The weather bureau had pre dicted record-shattering low tem peratures for Pennsylvania but warm air moved in from the West more rapidly than expected and temperatures are slightly higher than predicted. The freezing cold wave that spread across the eastern two thirds of the nation resulted in at least 44 deaths in 14 states. In Now York Cily yesterday a floating barge, moved by gusts of wind up to 75 miles an hour, struck the ferryboat Tom kinsville and injured 16 passen gers. Elsewhere in the city the. cold winds interrupted subway ser vice and traffic and made landing ©f planes difficult. The weather report for tomor row indicates an expected low of }9 degrees in State College. Light pnow is predicted for Thursday With a high of 27 degrees expect ed in the afternoon. Sub-freezing temperautres will continue Fri day. 7 AF Students Die in Flames At Syracuse SYRACUSE, N.Y. (fP) Seven Air Force students perished in their sleep yesterday and 13 oth ers were injured in a wild scram ble to flee wind-twhipped flames that made an inferno of a bar racks dormitory at Syracuse Uni versity. Twenty-five a: without injuries mostly by jumpii dows of the on« Firemen, battli weather at 6 a.m., from spreading barracks of a un development atop in" the city. The 45 men, ir their teens, had ji to the university i course in Russia quarters is Wrigl Force Base, Dayt they are attached tute of Technolog Fire officials sj parently started j steam .boiler in t 22-room building,! fabricated of me tion board. rmen escaped of consequence, ig through win -story. building, ig in near zero kept the flames o the 14 other iversity housing a hill overlook- any of them in st been assigned or a nine-month n. Their head it-Patterson Air m, Ohio, where to the Air Insti- aid the fire ap from an oil-fed ; ie center of the , which was pre t|al and composi- (Hljr Satly 24 Degrees Thaw Students PROGRESS WAS FROZEN SOLID by the recent cold wave. These four hardy excavation crew members have been alone on the Hammond Engineering construction site. General workmen, who have an option of working or not, have not been on the job yet in 1959. New Facutty Column To Appear Weekly A new regular feature, beginning tomorrow, will bring to The Daily Collegian writings by some of the most literate and well-informed members of the University faculty. To be known as “The Lee' be written each time by a di: Our guests will not be asked to write on a specific subject, nor will they be asked to write about “tin ir field.” Tie kind of faculty members we hope to present in ‘‘The Lec tern” will have no “field” as such. They will be men and women able to write on many things. University Plans TV 'Bull Session' “Bull Sessions,” a new bi weekly television series which will be sponsored by the Uni versity’s public information department, will deal with integration, labor corruption and communism. The first program of the series will be telecast at 12:30 p.m. Sun day over WFBG-TV, Channel 10, Altoona. Gilbert S. Aberg, who is pro ducing “Bull Session,” says the main objective is “to promote and encourage student participation in and discussion of some of the day's more challenging problems.” Aberg said Dr. William G. Ma ther, professor and head of the department of sociology and an thropology, would “sit in" on the FOR A BETTER PENN STATE STATE COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. JANUARY 7. 1959 Republicans Eject Martin for Halleck WASHINGTON (TP) —House Republicans ejected their veteran leader, Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Massachusetts, Tuesday on the eve of a new congressional session. A rebellion pointed toward giving the party high command a more aggressive, vigorous look shifted the leadership mantle to Rep. Charles A. Halleck of Indiana. By DAVE FINEMAN Collegian City Editor tern,” the weekly column will fferent guest faculty member. Their subjects will be of their own choosing. Tomorrow’s guest will -be Dr. J. Mitchell Morse, assistant pro fessor of English. Dr. Morse's column deals, in part, with inielleciualism ver (Continued on page five) opening program. “There’ll be a different faculty member for each program,” Aberg explained, “and his role will be to guide the dis cussion rather than to lead it. This is primarily a student pro gram and that’s the way faculty members want to keep it.” Among the subjects to be dis cussed in the series are the pre sent-day trend toward conform ity, the two-party political sys tem, corruption in labor, the spread of communism, and the movement of society away from rather than toward agriculture as a way of life. Faculty members already en rolled for the series are Dr. Brice Harris, professor of English liter ature; Dr. M. Nelson McGeary, professor and head of the political science department; Edwin W. Zoller, professor of art; Dr. Roy C. Buck, - associate professor of pgiatt The changeover provided a dramatic, spectacular prelude for a similar showdown with in Senate Republican ranks and for the opening of the heavily Democratic 86th Con gress at noon Wednesday. For their part. Democrats were free of leadership feuds. They picked another veteran, Sam Ray burn of Texas, for a ninth term as speaker of the House. Ray burn, 77 Tuesday, already has held the post longer than any other man. Senate Democrats will go along Wednesday by giving the nod to another Texan, Lyndon B. John son, to stay on as majority leader. Democrats were fussing, though, about the ancient issue of the filibuster—an issue that begins coming to a head on the Senate floor Wednesday. Sen ate Republicans were in on the filibuster dispute, too. Johnson was reported to be working on a new compromise proposal in hopes of avoiding a fight which would shatter Dem ocratic unity. A thin, four-vote margin was the' difference between success and failure in the revolt against the House GOP leadership—the first succesful one in ?8 years. The outcome may leave dam aging scars on the depleted ranks of Republican congressmen. Halleck said he is “absolutely certain that the White House did not intervene” in the leadership contest. Marlin pinned part of the re sponsibility far his defeat on aides of President Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon. Marlin said he thought some While House aides "though I was a little more independent than I should be—of them." “I don’t think the President did anything against me,” he told newsmen. But he said some White House aides conferred with Hal leck about a month ago and they may have had a little bit to do with his ouster. White House press secretary James C. Hagerty said Eisenhower took no part in the fight. Asked if Nixon was instrumen tal in his defeat, Martin replied: “All I know is that all his people were against me—actively against Ime.” rural sociology; Dr. Lean Gorlow. associate professor of psychology, and Dr. Kent Forster, professor of European history. Participating in the first pro gram witlwAc. Mather will he undergradHHt Charles S. Flet cher, Jr„ Edwin A. Ambusltfllra. South Easton, Mass.; Janet E. Stakel, Batavia, N.Y.; Suzanne R. Day, West Chester; and graduate students Jewell Curd well, Fountain Spring, Tenn., and Nolverl Scott, Washington, D.C. During the summer months the University’s public information department sponsored ‘Headline’, a panel-type program devoted to current events. Currently the de partment is sponsoring a 10-min ute program, “Penn State —lt’s Men and Ideas,” which is con cerned with the emerging educa tional crisis. State of the Parties See Page 4 [Auto Mishap Kills Student On Vacation Christopher Kopernik, freshman in chemistry from Hamburg, died Dec. 28 as the result of an auto mobile accident near Shickshinny. State police at the Shickshinny barracks said that Kopernik was the only person in his 1958 sports car, when it ran off the road on U.S. Route 239, seven miles west of Shickshinny at Huntington Mills. Police said the driver ap parently lost control of the ve hicle when it ran off the north side of the highway and climbed an embankment. It struck a large rock and plumetted back toward the road on its left side, throwing the victim onto the highway, turned upright and continued 80 feet down the highway where it was demolished when it struck a tree, police said. Kopernik was taken to Nanti coke State Hospital in the Shick shinny ambulance where he died nine hours later of a fractured skull, according to police. A friend of Kopernik said that he was chairman of quiet hours in his residence hall unit, Hamil ton 3, and that he had to leave school shortly before the Christ mas vacation because of illness. Kopernik is survived by his par ents, Dr. and Mrs. Francis Koper nik, both of whom are staff physi cians at Charles Minor Hospital, Hamburg, where they reside. Sharp Sends Yule Wishes To University A cheery card addressed to “Students, Faculty and Staff of the Pennsylvania State Univer sity” arrived from Drexel Hill, Pa., the day before Christmas. Larry Sharp, the freshman who was almost totally paralyzed when he fell on his neck while exercising on a trampoline in Rec reation Building a year ago last October, sent the best wishes of the season to each of us. Happy to be home with his family for the holidays and in good spirits, Larry is doing “very well.” He spent last Christmas in the New York University Reha bilitation Center from which he was recently discharged. He re turns to the hospital at intervals for physical check-ups. Nearly $3OOO was collected for Larry at the football game this fall; this will be added to other funds collected in his behalf dur ing recent months and forwarded to him early this year. Student leaders are currently engaged in planning a “Larry Sharp Week” this spring to al leviate still further the heavy fi nancial burden imposed on Sharp’s family by the accident. Eleanor Roosevelt will speak at 8 tonight in Schwab Audi torium on "Russia —The Coun try and the People as I Saw Them-" No tickets remain for the lecture. FIVE CENTS