1 p ,..;: - . ~: 4 ( .1, - - . , 'Penn State Weather Forecast: , .. i .... 1 .*..., .' Biyerly to Eittilg -1..„...„4,__ _.. t .., , iitirgttiti Stands Up Cold wicurii - —see page 4 _ ‘ VOL. 62. No. 55 Discriminatory Clauses Vetoed Russia Promises Quick Return Of Downed Belgian Airliner MOSCOW VP)—The SoViet Union promised yesterday the quick release of a downed Belgian airliner but in a pro= test to Belgium it charged that the plane violated Soviet air ;pace. • The Belgian Embassy said that the Soviet . Union claimed the plane was forced down at Grozny —275 miles north of Yerevan, the Soviet border town where the Belgians say Soviet fighters made the airliner land Monday. THE FOREIGN Ministry said there were 18 passengers and 78 Candidates File Petitions for January Elections; Class Presidents, USG Delegates Will Be Chosen Seventy-e ig h t candidates have filed petitions to run for the 32 offices being filled in the Student Government elec tions to be held Jan. 23 through 25. A complete list of the candi dates as compiled by Nancy Wil liams, electithu commission chair man, is as follows: FRESHMAN CLASS PRESI DENT: Burton Neil, Jeffrey Ran dall, Soame Kidorf, Peter Whit ten, Thomas Miller, George Ol son, Robert Dilsheimer and Den nis Piper. SOPHOMORE CLASS PRESI DENT: Ralph Wise, David Was son, 'Bruce De Woo]fsori,. Barry Neilinger and Michael Goldman. JUNIOR CLASS PRESIDENT: Gomer Williams, John "Budd?' Torris and Randolph Carter. IFC: 4; Mark Schwarz, Stuart Gerson, Eugene Kriebel, John Witmer, Lester Amann, Thomas Paton, David Sigman, Sidney Si mon, Fred Good, Andrew Chich ura and Curtis Davis. Jahns Named To MI Position Dr. Richard H. Jahns, chair man of the division of earth sci ences and .professor of' geology, has been named associate dean pf the College of Mineral InduiN- Ctri es. His appointment, approved at Saturday's meeting of the Uni versity Board of Trustees and made public' yesterday, will be come effective Feb. 1. Jahns will assist in the admin istrative' duties of the college, as well as remain in his present Academic capacity, David R. MitChell, dean of the college, said. /A former senior geologist for /the U. S. Geological Survey, Jahns joined the University faculty In HBO. He has also taught at the California Institute of Technol ogY. Jahns holds bachelor of science and doctor of philosophy degrees from the California Institute of Technology, and a master of sci ence degree from Northwestern University. Johnson .Attends Conflab Dr. John C. Johnson, director of the Ordnance Research Lab oratory, attended a conference of military and technical directors on Management Problems of Military Research, Development, Testing and Evaluation in Quantico, Monday and Tuesday. UNIVERSITY PARK.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. JANUARY 10. 1962 eight crew members aboard, all were safe and were staying at a hotel in Grozny. Sabena, the Belgian airline, said the plane car ried 19 passengers, including three Americans. Sabena said an infant was aboard and may not have been counted by the Russians. The Sabena agent in Moscow said plans are being made to bring the passengers to Moscow, from where they will be flown to the West. WHETHER THEY would be brought to Moscow on the Sabena airliner, a French-made Caravelle twin jet, or would fly in a Soviet plane was not clear. Vasily V. Kuznetsov, Soviet first deputy foreign minister, said that .8; Bruce Harrison, Robert Stillman, Bruce Artman, Randal Scheib, William Houck, Kent Ful ler, Harry McHenry, Stuart Liner, Charles, Ebert 111, and Harry Grace, Jr. SOUTH HALLS: 2; Elizabeth Jack, Florence Workman, Allison Woodall, Sharon Hallman, Kath erine Johnson, and Frances Gra bosky. • NORTH HALLS MEN: 2; George Gordon, 'Jon Geiger, Carl Thorn meyer and 'Walter Pilot NORTH HALLS, WOMEN:, l; Anne Morris WEST HALLS MEN: 3; Ste phen- Monheimer, Alan• White, Alan Haberbusch, Richard Hiller and Murray Winderman. WEST HALLS - WOMEN: 1; Ann Tyson and Jacqueline Cros by. EAST HALLS MEN: 1; Robert Fisher and Arthur Davis. EAST HALLS WOMEN: 1; Eleanor ,Space, Sue Odenheimer, Patricia Roumania and Jeanne Alexander. Kenworthy Explains U 'y of the University's annual operating budget The state prod approximately 37 per cant of the budget while slightly over 5 ; cent of the annual expenses are received from grants from tl federal government. Gifts, income from endowments and othi sources make up the rest of the annual budget. A BETTER PENN STATE instructions were sent . to Gro to release the plane as _soon technical arrangements can made.: THE PLANE WAS flying frq Tehran to Istanbul on a cou that carried it close to the Soy frontier. Airport 'sources at Tehran the pilot, Cmdr. Freddy Moure: radioed that four Soviet-built M jet airplanes had trailed him a ordered him to land. He gave landing site as Yerevan. lloviever, unofficial S o v i sources said only one Soviet fig er pursued the airliner, that asked the pilot to land, he afire and there were no incidents. NITTANY: 1; Jon "Nick" ger. ATHERTON: 1; Ellen and Barbara Krauth. POLLOCK MEN: 2; Willi: Lott, Samuel * Gel!is and Ja Clare. k POLLOCK WOMEN: 2; Lilli' n Leis, Judy Buffington, Anne - honey, Sue Gordon Lois Affl k, Grace Ganter anti Tudy Gardn r. SIMMONS - McELWAIN: 2; Toby Wildstein, Lynn Richm , Ruth Falk, Barbara Kip and Bar dra Hampson. M6lotov fails to Arrive VIENNA, Austria (OP) whereabouts of Vyachesla Molotov was a mystery la! night. Not even the Sovi Foreign Ministry seemed know where he was. The ministry announced Mo I day Molotov was resuming post as. permanent Soviet repri 1965 Deadline Set by Senate For Elimination of All Clauses In Active Social Organizations A major step to erase discrimination from campus social organizations was taken yesterday by the University Senate. The Senate - adopted by voice vote an amendment-pro viding that no active organization will be allowed to retain clauses in their constitutions restricting membership accord ing to race, religion or creed after June 30, 1965. The motion, proposed by •Monroe-Newinah, head of the depart ment of economics, states that after that date any organization which has restrictive clauses still uhremoved will be required to become inactive until the clause is removed. The action was_ taken in amending changes in Senate regulations W, Y land Z involving student conduct, activities and social organi zations. , The rune changes were proposed by Laurence H. Lattman, chairman of the Senate Committee on Student Affairs. THE NEW POLICY replaces part of the original. Senate regula tion which stated that "No petitiOning organization with re strictive membership clauses regarding race, religion or creed shall be granted a charter provided that special consideration will be given:to the merits of bona fide religious groups not founded for the of religious discrimination. " purpose The above p9licy has been in effect since 1950 and prevented organizations with restrictive clauses from coming on campus but made : no mention of organizations which had become established on eainius before 1950. . --- ifonorary and professional organizations have been forbidden from having discriminatory clauses since 1953. AFTER THE AMENDMENT was passed, president _Eric A. Walker said that the process of carrying out the policy will be handled by the administration instead of the Senate Committee on Student Affairs. Newman said that he proposed the amendment at this time be. eause'he felt that other members of the Senate were as committed to democratic values as he and if given the opportunity to _express (Continued on page two) sentative to the International' Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna and p}obably ]eft Moscow Satur; day. IF HE LEFT Moscow Saturday, Ever since Premier Khnishchiv he_shquld have arrived here Mon- bitterly denounced Molotov — aild day. *porters and photographers his colleagues of the antiparty meetitig trains and planes for thecgroup at the 22nd Soviet party last two days caught no trace of congress. in Moscow fast OctotT, d him, ihowever. Austrian police' was generally assumed Mo - said there was no chance he tov was on his final skid. iversity Budget Analysis By CAROL KUNKLEMAN ,eci a 324 million appropriation for :rsity ths ear, but Gov. What happens to all that. D the vi Un d 1 a .iv e. Lawrence iy has included money the University receives only a $2O million allowance in his $1 billion annual budget If each year? This is a question funds are not forth students, parents and most, s coming, Walker ha.' said tuition :may again be raised over the hike recently, state legislators—ask 'initiated last year.' each year around this time; Kccording to the chart of the when the question of appropria-'"education dollar," the greatest tions looms before the law-making source of funds is student tuirion body. !and other charges They account To help present the Univers.i ty .,,:fOr 48.9 cents of the University's case, a breakdown of the school's:dollar. The other large souree; is annual budget is prepared and dis 'the state. with a 367 cent contri tributed to state legislators! ac-;button. The federal government !also gives 6.3 cents: other income cording to Wilmer E. Kenworthy, executive assistant to the o rei n.;pccounts for 8.1 cents . dent. ' • : "THE BIGGEST advantage•lot The breakdown, in diagram using a chart to explain the budli form an "education dollar," shows:et is that both sources and' ex the lawmakers just what the•Uni-•penditures are better understood versity spent its money for in the i n terni , o f a dollar rather than past year and where the money millions." Kenworthy said. "It is came from..: a quantity more common. smailler "Expenditures don't change very.and therefore more easily uruler much-over the years," Kenworthyl •stood than a million dollar:." [he said. - "The - size of the funds is added. , such that each area of expendi-i • ture has only slight fluctuatixins,"! The largest expenditure the Uni lversity had in 1961-62 was instrtic tion costs. They accounted for (VI 9 cents of an. "education dollar." Student services were next in lane. 'with a 11.3 cent share. Sttolent aids accounted for 4 8 cents. while operation of the physical paint took 7.1 cents. Administrative and (Continued on page two) -I THE RECENT TREND. he said, is that there is a slight increase in the ,percentage of the "education dollar" paid by the student and a decrease in the percentage paid by the state through University appropriations. - Dr. Eric A. Walker has • request- By SARAIE ORTON in Vienna might have crossed into Austta without their knowledge since. e would have to show a passpntt like anybody else. FIVE CENTS