Weather Forecast: Partly Cloudy, Mild VOL 61. No. 81 Walker's Budget Request Backed by Liberal Party In State-Wide Campaign (See related story on page 5) • Liberal party is beginning a state-wide campaign to stir up support for the full University appropriation from the state as requested by President Walker. Letters requesting support been sent to newspapers in 10 Language Credit Value To Change The Liberal Arts faCulty yesterday passed a proposal to change the credit value of the first three courses in the Ro mance languages from three to four. The new system would allow two practicum hours per week for each language as compared to the present lack of scheduled lab oratory work. A proposal that suggested lan guage courses with numbers 4 and 40 be dropped was also passed. This was done because students will be able to complete their 12 credit liberal arts language re quirement with only three courses under the new credit system. This system would go into effect progressively beginning with the fall 1961 term. That is, 4-credit French 1 would be started in the fall term, 4-credit French 2 in the winter term. etc. A report was given by the com mittee on study abroad which advocated an elective program whereby students with little or no language background as well as advanced students would be able to study at a foreign uni-, versity. The beginners would attend classes conducted in English by a foreign professor. They would also be given the opportunity to, study the language of the coun-' try in which they were staying. The faculty approved corn mittee•recommendations that in vestigation be continued on the foreign study program. in other business, Dale H. Huse: molter, assistant professor of mathematics, was named research scholar. He will be given free time this semester in order to conduct research. Collegian Candidates All candidates for the Collegian News Staff will meet at 7 tonight in 9 Carnegie. '56 Cabinet Shelved Bookstore Fifth of a Series By MEG TEICHHOLTZ In 1955-56, All-University Cabinet chased the bookstore problem in and out of several meetings, offices and reports and then killed it because it was "unfeasible:" The establishment of a store that would sell new texts ' had been in the minds of students for a long time, but in September, 1955, Stud ent Encampment agreed that it was not needed. The encampment report stat ed that prOblems in purchasing books could be helped "provided the faculty makes a stronger ef fort to put out more accurate book lists .. . and the bookstores .it 'l . . :.. . ;j 1) - ' A i . • . ~ • 0 ~ -,•. . . STATE COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 15. 1961 for. the full appropriation have Pennsylvania cities, according to Dale Harris, campaign chair man. The' letter urged , the residents to influence their legislators in Harrisburg to support the full ap propriation. Miss Harris, who wrote and sent the letters, said she plans to write to at least 30 newspapers in all areas of the state, in hopes that the letters will be published. Liberal Party will also circu• late a petition on campus to gel student support for the cam paign. Party members will begin to campaign on campus tomorrow when they distribute tags reading "Help Cut the Budget Cut Write Your Legislator." Students will be given the tags after sign ling the petition which willte cir culated in the Hetzet Union, Miss Harris said .that after the cam paign has begun in the HUB, par ty workers will begin to canvass dormitories in an effort to get as many student signatures as pos sible. The petition reads "We the undersigned, realizing that the University, in order to fulfill its services to the commonwealtn urgently needs the full budget appropriation as asked for by Dr. Walker, request that all members of the state govern ment iri Harrisburg support the University in This matter." Miss Harris said that the peti tions will be sent to Harrisburg before the appropriations bill comes up. before the state legis lature. "Liberal Party feels that this is one of the most important issues facing students today," Miss Har ris said in explaining why the par , ty took up the campaign. The appropriation bill is ex pected to come up before the leg islature late in March or early in April. Walker's request called for $23 million. Governor David L. Lawrence has frozen the appro priation at $l7 million pending the report of his Special Commit tee on Education. Parking Lot Clearing The University traffic court has asked all vehicles be removed from student parking lot 53 adja cent to the women's recreation field by 7:30 a.m. Friday so that the physical plant can clear it of 'ice and snow. cooperate more fully in ordering books and supplies. Cabinet accepted this report early in the year. In December, however, it approved the forma tion of a committee to make a factual study of the problems involved in selling up this store. A Cabinet spokesman said "we want to get facts concerning a bookstore which no one who has talked about such things has up to now." At this time the University was conferring with downtown bookstores in an effort to alle viate some of the problems stu dents had when trying to buy books. The Cabinet report was due in February of 1956, out didn't reach that body until May 17, 1956, the last meeting of the year. In essence it found that the BX (then„ as now the BX dealt FOR A BETTER PENN•STATEc USSR to Refuse Recognition to Dag MOSCOW .(fP)—ln fiery reaction to Patrice Lumumba's • death the 'Soviet Union de manded yesterday that all foreign troops quit the Congo and asserted it will no longer rec ognize Dag Hammarskjold as U.N. secretary-general. • The Soviets called for recognition of Antoine Gizenga, Lumumba's fanatic lieutenant who heads a Stanleyville regime, as the Congo's premier and offered him - every help. Performers Engaged For Jazz Festival George Sheaiing and hiS Orchestra and Eli's Chosen Six are two of. the orchestras which will appear at the IFC- Panhel Jazz Festival, April 13, Sandra Baker, co-chairman of the jazz feStival committee, announced last night. Miss Baker said at a meet that in addition to these two groups, Frieda Lee will also ap pear to represent local talent. The local orchestra which will ac company Lee has not yet been determined. Tickets for the festival, which i will be held in Recreation Hall. ,will go on sale March 17 and will be distributed to fraternities and sororities at this time. Each soror ity woman and each fraternity man will be responsible for one ticket which will cost $l, Miss Baker said. The Jazz Festival is expected to be a greater success than the IFC-Panhel Ball Which had been held in the past, Miss . Baker added. In other business, the council passed a recommendation which 'will change the method by which rushees fill out preferential cards on the night of March 2. Under the new system, explained by 'Marcia Hamm, Panhellenic Rush IChairman. rushees living in Pol lock Halls will fill out their preferential cards in Pollock 1, those living in South Halls will e go to Lyong Hall and those living in Atherton. Simmons, McElwain and West Halls will go to the !Hetzel Union Building. It had been planned that all rushees would go to the HUB aft er the second coffee hour with 'their guides to fill out the•cards. Miss Hamm said that the new system will make it easier for rushees to indicate their prefer ences between 9:30 p.m., when the second coffee hour ends. and 11:30 p.m. when they must be back in their residence halls. Under this system, sorority' women will escort rushees living in Pollock or South Halls back to their rooms. Rushees living in, Atherton. Simmons, McElwain or! ,West Halls may be escorted either) to their rooms or to the door of the. HUB. Town girls will be escorted to the HUB. in supplies) did not have the lo cation or the capital to 'handle new books. In corresponding with other schools who had student run stores, the committee said these schools sold their books at retail price and advised the committee lgainst such a store. The report treated the thought of a student "co.op" store in the same negative man ner. They said "students would. n't patronize it unless it was in the main shopping area," and added that "it is almost impos sible to obtain and operate an other bookstore in State College due to zoning laws." The report alsci said that "books would - have to be sold at list price, thus requiring a refund program. This would require pay ing much additional help. . ng of the Panhellenic Council Colder Weather Should Return To Local Area Yesterday was the mildest day in more than a month, The mer cury -touched 45 degrees during mid-afternoon at the University weather station. These mild afternoon tempera tuns combined with sunny skies to clear snow from side streets and sidewalks. Colder air from central Canada 'should overspread Pennsylvania this evening bringing a return of snow flurries and sub-freezing IteMperatures tonight. Today should be partly cloudy, 'breezy and mild with a high tem perature of 43 degrees. Cloudy Ai nd colder weather is predicted for tonight. There may . be a period of light snow early tonight and snow flurries arel likely late tonight, but no appre-' ciable accumulations are ex-. pe.cted. . Toriight's low reading should be near 25 degrees. Partly cloudy and cold weath er is forecast for tomorrow. Friday should be cloudy and cool with light rain or snow likely. 1 4,4 PEOPLE DIG DEEP into their pockets to aid the heart drive with the sisters of Phi Sigma Sigma who sold lollipops all over campus to collect money for the fund. Obviously referring to the UN Command—now totaling about 18,000 men—and a Jew score white mercenaries in the armed forces of secessionist Katanga Province, the Soviet government demanded that they clear out within a month. The' broadside followed a five hour mob attack on the Belgian Embassy, led by foleign students of the . expenses-paid People's Friendship University who 'called Lumumba a martyr of imperial ism. Hammarskjold, Belgium and two Congolese leaders Ka tanga's President lvloise Tshom be and the Congo national army chief, Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu • —were denounced in a govern ment statement issued through the government paper Izvestia and Soviet news agency Tass. The statement called for dis missal of Hammarskjold "as an accessory to and organizer of the ,murder of the leading statesman of the Congo," UN censure of 'Belgium, ouster of all Belgians in the former Belgian colony, arrest of Tshombe and Mobutu as colo nialist agents in the killing, and disarmament of Katanga and Con- Igo government soldiers, The Soviet program would leave Congolese soldiers in the Stanleyville regime of Gizenga, a fantastic leftist and potential I political heir of Lumumba, as the only effective military force in the 900,000 square miles of the 8-month-old African na - lion. The Soviets have been gunning for liammarskjold since his neu trality policy became firmly evi dent last summer in the conduct . l of the UN Congo Command. Pre -Imier Khrushchev demanded in a speech before the UN General Assembly last Sept. 23 that the secretary-general be replaced by a three-man directorate repre senting East, West and neutral spheres. The attack on the Belgian Em lba,zsy, which wrecked. the front of the building, was a riotous demonstration of an ostensibly spontaneous type that occurs in Moscow only by police tolerance. MEd , ,•rz.„ Where Are They Now? -See Page 4 FIVE CENT;; 2,y