SATURDAY. MA CH 7. 1959 6 Fro vh Given Office Pro For Dormitory Incidents Six freshmen have been placed on office probation by the dean of men's office—four for "hazing incidents" and two for disregard of authority. Three of the men involved in the hazing were accused of making "dirty remarks" about the family and the religion of another occupant of the same dormitory. The student who was the object of the hazing was put on probation because "he was a contributing influence to the sit uation," according to Harold W. Perkins, associate dean of men. The "constant hazing" included the following incident, as reported at the hearing: The student who was hazed threw a snowball into a dormi tory room. The three who made the remarks about him retaliated Lecture Series Hopes to Bring Senators Here Negotiations are under way with United States Senators Hu bert H. Humphrey and John Sherman Cooper to appear as part of the University Lecture Series. According to Dr. Kent Forster, chairman of the lecture commit tee, no affirmative replies have been received from either man as yet. However, Forster said, the com mittee hasn't been turned down, He said the committee hopes to hold one lecture in April and one in May. No dates have been set. Humphrey is the Democratic senator from Minnesota. He is a former mayor of Minneapolis and is considered an expert on inter national and agricultural affairs. He has just completed a trip to Russia, where he met with Soviet' Premier Khrushchev. Cooper, former American am bassador to India, is the Demo cratic senator from Kentucky. He also has served as a U.S. delegate to the United Nations General Assembly. The University Lecture Series, organized this year, has brought Eleanor Roosevelt and Clement Attlee to campus this semester. Repairs Car Radios Television Phonographs Radios television service • center at State College TV 232 S. Allen St. WEEKEND SPECIAL with a trick to lure him out of his room and into a snowball fight. They set fire to a bottle cap filled with sulphur and a magnesium ribbon and slipped it under the door of his room. In other testimony at the hearing it was reported that fist fights and damage to the furni ture and personal property of the hazed student had been oc curring throughout the fall se mester. The other two freshmen pla,ed on office probation are room mates. They had been brought before the Association of Inde pendent Men Judicial Board of Review on charges of disregard ing University rules and reject :ing authority. As a "practical joke" they dis assembled their beds and slept on their mattresses on the floor. A , janitor then complained because he couldn't clean their room. The two also refused to re move pictures taped to the wall and to return a -table taken from another room. In an earlier prank they deco rated a dormitory lounge with a long string of neckties. At the hearing they admitted gambling and using alcoholic beverages in their room. Their counselor had not reported these offenses to the hoard. David B. Perrin AND OTHER REPRESENTATIVES OF DUQUESNE LIGHT COMPANY WILL VISIT YOUR CAMPUS March 10 To interview Shutouts Interested In A Position With This Progressive Pinsinngh Electric Utility Company ANOTHER ONE LARGE GROUP of famous brand sport coats, regularly priced to now going for $2O ur's i i it tug -04 up Across from Old Main THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Big Snowstorm Hits Midwest; Schools Close A huge storm dumped more snow in the Midwest yesterday and roared into the Northeast. Falls that ranged up to 22 inches —and higher in drifts—closed , hundreds of schools, shut factories , and trapped buses and cars. Deaths blamed on the wild weather numbered 10 in lowa and 3 in Wisconsin. Michigan reeled under a cornH bination punch of wind and snow as the storm center passed through the state yesterday. The blow was described as the rough est of a rugged winter. A squall that resembled a small tornado smashed a 60-foot section of a wall in the Ford Motor Co. plant in Monroe, Mich., but the 250 workers on duty escaped in jury. Two Greyhound buses were stranded for a time—one near Cheboygan and another on State Rt. 68 between Indian River and Alanson. Rescuers reached both buses. $35.00 By The Associated Press Scoring big with slick ideas like the Electivnic Secretary answering unit, product of America:s• second l• rest tele 'hone s. G:NiltA) agra SYSIIIIII OFIVERAL TELEPHONE Khrushchev Says War Is Not Imminent LItIPZIG, East Germany (IP)—Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev told a group of foreign businessmen yesterday: "I believe there will be no war and then the possibilities of peaceful 'expansion of trade will be still greater." While Khrushchev was putting the accent on peace on his third day at the Leipzig Trade Fair, another official indicated a high-level meeting of Communist leaders will be held in East Ber lin in a few days. East German Premier Otto Grolewohl said it is "very pos sible" that Polish Communist boss Wladyslaw Gomulka and Czechoslovak Pr es i dent and party boss Antonin Novotny will meet there with Grotewohl and Khrushchev. Grotewohl did not say what such talks would be about but there was little doubt they would concern a Soviet proposal that Poland and Czechoslovakia be !represented at a foreign ministers' conference on the German ques tion. Khrushchev in his trade and peace comments praised a Brit ish exhibitor at the Leipzig fair for making blue plastic bath tubs instead of rockets. Your phone is always "tended" when an Electronic Secretary unit is on your "line." For it answers calls in your absence and takes messages as well! Here's how it works. When your phone rings, a recorded voice informs the caller that you are out—and invites him to leave his name, number and any information he wishes you to have. When you return—or when you phone in—all calls are repeated to you word for word. Result: no more "missed" messages, no more lost business, no more worrying about leaving the phone unattended an hour of the day or ni !ht. This is just one of many ways Gen Tel is adding new dimensions to telephone communication. We know - that, in an America which is expanding fast on all fronts, it is imperative to expand both telephone service and tele 'hone versati lit . And we're meeting the challenge by developing new products and better methods for bringing more and more people together. PAGE THREE Senate Probe Counsel Receives Bribe Offer MILWAUKEE (in—Robert E. Kennedy, chief counsel of the Senate Labor-Management Com mittee, said yesterday that sev eral offers had been made to him of political help if he would ILy off parties summoned by the committee. He "never paid any attention" to the offers, he said. and did not report them to Committee Chair man John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), although he did discuss the offers with his brother, Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass ). For Expert Tailoring See C. W. HARDY, Tailor 222 W. Beaver Avenue
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