The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 19, 1960, Image 1

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    Weather Forecast I
Aartly Cloudy,
coot
VOL. 61, No. 48
USSR, Cuba, China
Hit U.S. Movements
In Central America
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cuba and its big Communist friends, the Soviet Union
and Red China, denounced as a menace to world peace yes
terday the U.S. warship shield thrown up to protect Guate
,
mala and Nicaragua,
Cuban newspapers said the deployment of U.S. warships
SGA Hears
Impeaching
Amendment
SGA. Assembly approved
Thursday night the first read
ing of a constitutional amend
ment concerning impeach
ment. The amendment stipu
lates that the rules on im
peachment which refer to
SGA officers would also refer
to SGA Assemblymen.
The SGA Constitution, aS it
stands.now, does not include any
procedures which could be fol
lowed to impeach Assemblymen.
However, it does have a special
section which discusses the im
peachment of officers. -
The section states that SGA of
ficers may be removed on the
grounds of embezzlement, mal
feasance in office or actions con
trary or in violation of the con
stitution.
Removal proceedings, the sec
tion states, may be instituted by
a majority vote of the Assem
bly upon a motion to this effect
by any Assemblyman.
In an impeachment trial, the
Assembly would sit as a tri
bunal with the SGA Supreme
Court Chairman presiding. Full
hearing would be given to the
accuser and the defendant with
the defendant having right to
counsel.
Actual removal of an officer
would be effected by a three
fourth .vote of the constitutional
membership of the Assembly.
The amendment to make the
above proceedings applicable to
Assemblymen as well as officers
was introduced by Duane Alex
ander, chairman of the Reorgan
ization and Evaluation Commit
tee.
The amendment, in order to be
officially added to the constitu
tion, must be read twice more
and at the final reading must be
approved by a two-thirds major
ity.
The formation of a group called the "Thoughtful Ob-.
•
nlo lies to Blue servers of the Contemporary Scene" came about after profes
p p '
sois had received a letter, written Oct. 1 and signed by Presi
•
Du Re Ban d Attac k - I
'dent Eric A. Walker, introducing a statement of the new
anyone." He thought the attack •
arose from misunderstandings i n :four-term plan.
the Athletic Department. He said This letter caused some professors to start commenting
he called Toretti yesterday morn-'
ing and the two had "cleared LI p,, i n order to preserve "a campus, -----
ftl' observers
of the contemporary
the misunderstandings. atmosphere of scholarship and a, scene
;scene have been disturbed by a
If the pep rallies could be Ipace of operation sufficiently un-
tragic anachronism in American
held on Friday nights next sea- :hurried to allow adequate timehigher education: a horse-and
son, the director said, the Blue for reflection and/or meditation' buggy calendar' in a jet-age
Band would play for all of lon the pait of both faculty and'world. Colleges and universities,
them. But as long as they are ;students," as Edwin R. Fitzger-:w,ith but few exceptions, have
scheduled for week nights, laid, TOCS membt.T in the De-;contemplated their rendevous
there will probably always be ipartment of Physics, stated in : with the Seventies from a blue
lime conflicts with evening !his letter to the Collegian on'print for an "academic year" out
classes.
iNov. 8. idated since the Thirties. At the
Also commenting on Toretti'si TOCS now has 350 members moment in history when the
blast was Carl Sipe, band presi-lwearing white and blue buttons,'pace, intensity, and quality of
dent. . l a TOCS member reported, andAJ.S. higher education are so es
" Our spirit is not a-reflection of Iseveral students have also become'sential to the survival of free
the football players' attitude," he , members. i institutions everywhere, our edit
declared. "The Band is purely Here are the first two para- cational establishment has con
voluntary; we don't get paid for graphs from the letter that led tinued to operate at a tempo
lour participation, nor do we re- to the formation of TOCS: reminiscent of a halycon era—
(Continued on page eight) i "For some time now, thought- (Continued on page five)
By CAROL KUNKLEMAN
The Penn State Blue Band
did not play for the "Pound
Pitt" pep rally Thursday
night because most of the
members were attending Uni
versity classes for credit in
choir and symphony orches
tra, band director James W.
Dunlop, said yesterday.
Retalliating the attack made by
Penn State offensive line coach
Steve• "Tor" Toretti, Dunlop said
he didn't thing the Blue Band was
Penn State's "answer" to the
spirit problem.
"If 16,000 students can't show
their spirit by attending pep
rallies, then the Blue Band cer
tainly can't compensate for
•
Tilr Bat
.•
4P
rgt
STATE COLLEGE. PA.. SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 19, 1960
in nearby waters could open the
way for an attack on Cuba, "thus
shattering the peace of the
world."
Radio Moscow said the move
ment of U.S. warships into the
turbulent Caribbean is "fraught
with the danger of a military con
flict."
Premier Chou En-Lai of Red
China said the United States was
threatening Cuba "by force of
arms" and promised continued
support for Prime Minister Fidel
Castro's regime.
The clamor from Cuba and
the world's two largest Com
munist powers was brushed
aside by the United States. The
Navy in Washington reiterated
that the carrier Shangri La and
'four destroyers are in position
fo help repel any invasion of
the Iwo little Central American
nations.
The State Department in Wash
ington spiked a report published
in London that the warships
might halt suspected ships on the
high seas. Washington said ships
would be stopped only in the two
nations' territorial waters, and
then only on the request of Nica
ragua and Guatemala.
Presidential Press Secretary
James C. Hagerty said in Au
gusta, Ga., the Moscow broad
sides were "Communist-type re
action" and added: "There's a
very similar reaction the
words are almost the same
from Cuba."
President Eisenhower ordered
the warships into the Caribbean
at the request of Guatemala and
Nicaragua after both nations
stamped out uprisings th e y
charged had support from Cas
tro's Cuba.
In Havana, the semiofficial
newspaper Revolucion called
the U.S. action "Yankee mili
tary occupation of Central
America," and asserted it was
designed to intimidate Cuba.
"Guantanamo or Guatemala,
the place for the self-provoked
aggression is immaterial," said
Revolucion.
The Daily Collegian will
publish its last issue before
Thanksgiving recess on Mon
day, Nov. 21, Normal publi
cation will be resumed on
Tuesday, Nov. 29.
them," he said.
Dunlop said that the band has
always met the team after away
games, led victory parades, and,
as after the Maryland game two
weeks ago, led the students on
impromptu victory marches.
The director said he cannot re
call anytime in the past three
years when the band played for
a pep rally because of class con
flict schedules.
He said members have ap:
peared in small groups as "pep"
bands.
"We never appear fore any
performance unless all 108 of
our members are present and
we can be billed as the 'Penn
State Blue Band'," he said, "just
as the football team would not
play a game with just ten play
ers:
Dunlop said
,he iNvasn't mad at
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
Bowl Official Eyes
Lion-PantherGame
. •
By SANDY PADVIE
•
Sports Editor
PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 18 Pitt and-Penn State clash for the 60th time at 1:30
tomorrow afternoon in Pitt Stadium and one of the most interested spectatorS will be Bud
Dudley, the president of the Liberty Bowl Association.
Dudley informed Pitt officials yesterday that he wou .
tonight's Miami-Syracuse game in the Orange Bowl.
Both Miami and Syracuse are high on Dudley's list
—Collegian Photo by Jim Doutt
JUST ONE OF MANY students who left yesterday afternoon for
the annual pilgrimage to Pittsburgh for the Panther-Lion football
game. Joan Mozino, senior in arts and letters from Havertown,
clearly indicates who she is rooting for as she waits for her ride.
Men's Debate
Wins sth Place
ing periods of cloudiness to this
Penn State placed sth among area at intervals of 48 hours.
16 universities and colleges MI Today should be partly cloudy
the men's debate invitational,and cool with a maximum after
tournament held this week a t noon temperature reading of 50
Wayne State University in De- ;degrees.
troit, Mich.! Clear and chilly weather is pre-
The national debate topic for !dieted for tonight. The mercury
this year is "Resolved that t h ewill fall close to 28 degrees.
United States should have corn-I Some cloudiness and mild
pulsory medical insurance for all weather is forecast for tomorrow.
its citizens." !
William Swisshelm, junior in
arts and letters from Pittsburgh,,
and Ronald Watzman,senior in
arts and letters from Carnegie,l
debated on the affirmative team.l . a lk er
William Stout, junior in engi-1
neering science from Pittsburgh, • i t•
and David Goodhart, junior in ni votes
counseling from Rutherford, N.J.,! .
debated on the negative team.
Sunny, Cool Weather
Will Continue Today
A series of rapidly moving, but
weak, storm systems are bring-
SGA to Get
Complaints
--Sec Page' 4
d fly to Pittsbtggh following
or the second. annual Liberty
Bowl game which will be played
in Philadelphia Stadium Dec. 17.
Penn State . also is a strong 'pos
sibility because the Lions are the
defending champs and they have
shown marked improvement in
their last three wins over West
Virginia, Maryland and Holy
Cross.
Dudley said that Pitt is in con
tention, too, but the Panthers an-
Syracuse stopped a Miami
drive on the Orange 8 yard line
with 30 seconds left in the game
to defeat the Hurricanes ,21-14,
before a crowd of 50,000 in Mi
ami last night.
nounced that they probably won't
be able to participate because the
game falls during their final ex
amination period.
Nevertheless, bowl tal It
makes any game more interest
ing even a Pitt-Penn State
game which never lacks excite
ment.
Tomorrow's meeting between
the two arch rivals promises to
be one of the best in years be
cause both teams have plenty to
settle.
The Lions (5-3) would like
nothing better than to wallop the
Panthers in retaliation for last
year's 22-7 upset,
Pitt, on the other hand, is
still burning over . Rip Engle's
statement that the Panthers'
record (4-2-3) isn't much to
shout about.
Panther coach Johnny Michelo
sen, who just received what
amounts to a lifetime contract at
Pitt, refuses to be drawn into the
argument.
"All I know," Michelosen said,
"is that when Pitt and Penn State
play, it's a good game."
Engle, usually quite appre
hensive the night before any
game, was in unusually high
spirits when questioned about
the 1960 finale.
"I don't know what will -hap
pen." he said. "but we're sharp."
Such a confession from Engle is
(Continued on page six)
Letter
TOCS
FIVE CENTS