Gmgress Will Discuss WDFM„ ROTC, Text Tax At Tonight's Meeting Receiving WDFM in the, dOrmAinies. the 4 per cent sales tax on textbooloh: yoluntary, , ROTC and• dispiminatory clausei will bi the main topics for di;cussion - at thelirst Undergraduate Student Government ` :Congress meeting ' at 1130 tonight in 203 Hetsel Union Building. Earlier in the week. Dennis Foianini. student body , president. .proposed . 4 'plan 'in which USG would loan money to the indi= 'victual residence councils so they could have transformers' built Jo change the FM signal from .WDFM to a signal which could be picked up on any regular AM receiver. , - The Congress would have, to lapprove such a plan. Poianini. in announcing the agenda for tonight's meeting, said he ho r ped Penn Stale could take th e \ lead among Pennsyl vania,colleges and universities in , attempting to get the state legislature to eliminate the 4 per cent salelc-tax on textbooks. FOIANINI SAID the Congress would- have to approve a conimittee . which would contact other schools ins.tirnit for possible action while this session of the le.gislattire is *tilting. A.,prtipcital to appoint ei committee of students\ls work with the Liberal;Arts faculty committee in their attempts In eliminate compulsory; ROTC for liberal arts students will be considered at tonight's! session. • The legislative body :will also discuss the recent \ Senat• ruling wh4h bans student,• organisations with discriminikory clauses-- from campus after June 30. 1965. THE CONGRESS will elect its Iwo chief officers. The presi. dent pro ternpore, the presididg Officer in the absence of the vice president, and the rules committee chairman will be e chosen from among the Congressmen. The aisles committee is in charge oi l placing proposed legis lation on 'the agendii. . Tolerant said that 'the USG budget will be presented to the Congress ;tonight The budget will be tvio-fold, he said, in that it will inehide an accounting I=2 money already spent this year and the proposed Oxpliti for the remainder of the school year.' Congressmen are ramimied that 'they- may pick up . topies of the agenda for tonight's meeting at the HUB desk. Snow Should Continue; 2 to 4 Inches Expected The snow': that overspread Pennsylvania last night is ex pected 'to continue this morn ing, and an accumulation 4:4'2 to possibly 4 inches is likely by early afternoon. • The snow is k being produced by a fast-moving storm system that was in southwestern Canada late Tuesday and in Illinois last night. Cloudiness running well ahead of the storm moved into the Com monwealth yeSterday • afternoon and snow advanced rapidly from the -northwestern to southeastern sections of the state during tile evening. The Storm center was predicted to take an easterly path from Dlinois and should reach Delaware this afternoon. AFTER THE PASSAGE cif the storm early • this afternoon - the snow should diminish to snow flurries. But winds will increase, causing considerable blowing and drifting snow. I • A new arctic air mass is followA ing the storm and the mercury is expected to reach zero tonight. .The strong arctic air mass that Invaded, Pennsylvania with great vigor-Tuesday morning weakened considerably yesterday, but not before temperatures across .the state fell to very cold levels. LoW temperatureS yesterday morning ranged from 10 below zero in northern counties to 10 above in' i the extreme southeast. Alnini.mstm of 3 degrees was reg- Queen Deadline, Candidates for ;the-Penn State competition of the, Pittsburgh, Press Roto Queen Contest ,have ) only two'days left to submit their, pictures taltthe Collegian of fi ce in; the basement of Sackett. Pic- 1 iures c mtist be sx' or Bxlo inches! 'glossy or mat finish. No pictures', will be accepted after 8 p.m. rnorow. . The, Penn State I )frin . ner will, receive a trip to Fittsbw-gh where; she will , compete winners! from, other colleges At.' the right; to apepar 'on the coiner ot- the Press Rom magazine - later thisi ; istered by the therOmeter at the University weather station. , TODAY. SHOULD BE cloudy and cold with snow, possibly heavy at times• this morrtin,,,c , diminishing to fl urries during the afternoon. A high, temperature ofs 25 degrees is expected. Clearing, breezy and very cold weather is predicted , for tonight, and a low of one below zero is likely. Tomoirow should be mostly sunny -with v a rying amounts of cloudiness during the day. Very .cold weather,will continue and a rhigh of 20 degrees is expected. PENN STATE FIGURE SKATING CLUB members Elisabeth Thompson and Henry Hartman demonstrate akills during the ' Uaiied Sta#l Figure Skating Association dance test. The tint two; tests. In a standard series of six were given to members of the 'skating dub Sunday at the University Zee Rink. (See related ,stor?! . on page 3.) ~~P VOL. 62. No. 70 UNIVERSITI PARK. PA.; THURSDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 1.1962 FIVE CENTS OAS Adopts Act Denouncing Cuba 1 1 PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay 4'441--U.S. Secretary of State Dean Musk told the inter-Americarl for eign ministers, yesterday he! sees , Cuba •eventually released from Vrits nightmare and returned to the family of American states." I Prime Minister Fidel Castro's delegation left the 10-day old con ference in a huff, boycotting two general sessions that formalized an indictment of communism's in trusions in the Western Hemi- I Sphere. All the foreign ministers in the pAs except the Cuban last night signed the inter-American con , erence's final act condemning e Castro regime. Uruguay's Foreign Minister Homero Marti nez Montero then adjourned the two-week conference. {`RUSK SPOKE at a plenary !i-asion which adopted a final re on a series of resolutions, including the hotly debated de- Cision 'calling for expulsion of the Castro re gime by the OAS from Councils lof the inter-American I family. with Cuba absent, the. vote was 20-Q. 'We have had some difficulty pn only one pbint; how to give effect to the sun - Me fact that we ;all recognize, namely that the of ficial character and`policies of the present government bf Cuba are ncompatible with the. presence :nd participation of thiit \ govern-I ent in the principtil business of, the Organization •of American , States," Rusk said.' - \ The crucial vote for booting the Castro regime from the OAS came An a committee session that be- SDT AZ Take Top Honor's Sigma Delta Tau sorority took top honors in overall campus and sorority scholarship f9r the fall,term, 1961, with an averag6 of 3.154. Alpha Zeta led the fraternities -with a 3.147 average. The All-University average was computed to be 2.430 while the average for all-Universi y women was 2.614 and for all-University men, 2.337. The combined sorority women's average was 2.826; the non-sorority women's avera 2.555; the fraternity men's average, 2.368; and the non-fraternity men's averao. 2.329. FOR: A UTTER PENN SIMI ROMULO BETANCOURT • Vettenterait President gall - Tuesday night and laird long past midnight. The vote was 14-1, with six abstentions. CUBA CAST the negative vote. The t abstainers, . whose govern ments represent more than two thirds of Latin America's people, were 'Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia,l Chile; Ecuador and Mexico. Lined up with the United States 'for the resolution were Colombia, Costa' Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,. Haiti, Honduras, 'Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela. - Fraternity men and sorority women attained a combined av• ierage, of 2.527 and the combined (independent average was 2.404, Fraternities and sororiti es franked as follows: Sluts Delta Tam, 3.154: Alpha Kpollan 171414:130: Kappa Atoka Meta, 3.0/13; Alpha Zola, 3.027: Alpha Phi. 2.974: Epsilon, 2.1120: Kappa Kappa Gam !ma, 2.500: Dolts Zeta.- 2.891; P•h• Data 2.113. Alpha Nits Pi. 2.942 ; Pi Ihta Phi, 2.1116 Imo Delta. 2.8501 Phi Slime • Algae. 2)04 ; Gomm' Phi Beta. 2.794 , I Alpha Pia trios Pi. 2.790 ; Phi Ma. 2.779; ;Z•ta Tile Alpha, 2.773; Bata releay, 2.772. Dalt& Gamma, 2.770. AlpMa Ckl Omega, 2.756; Alpha Gamins insita, 2.713: gigot Slims Minis. 2.7141; fAlpht Xl Dolts, 2.02; Alpha Chi 111111aa, :2.666; Chi Onogii 2.632; Phi Nita Thirts, '2.63R; Theis Phi Alpha 2.402; Aesels, ! Atoka CM Rho. 2.56 A Mats diets. TA.PIAv 2.1.5 Z: Alpha Colony. 2342 Tri lling'', 2.547; Beta Slims Ouer.n. 2 E. 43 •PM *itAkis 'Zappe. 2.014 Pitt Gamma tD.lu, 2.477: Alpha (;smuts Rho. 2.456. PM Kitmos Pal. 2.466: Pf Kappa Phf, T 446. i Delia CM. 2.444; PM M• Dolls. 2.417 DMA ; note Mims, 2.421: Aldo Ta■ 104144.11. 2.40; CM Phi. 2.405 ; Maas PM , Coed Returns Tuesday !After 2-Day Absence I Lynne Loeffler, sophomore In ,arts • and letters from Kennett ,Square, was reported missing from, Simmons hall Sunday. Local l and state police and the girl's iparents were notified of her dis appearance at the time. State College police said that the midising - - - report was withdrawn Tuesday, when Miss Loeffler re turned to campus. Mrs_ Hat Leiper, community coordinator for the McElwain-Simmons resi dence area, had no comment on the :matter when contacted yes terday. Toltrgian DEAN RUSK . U. S. Secretarij of State ==3 Other resolutions , adopted it the committee session, with Cuba the dissenting vote unleis otherwise indicated,, included: •The Most stinging denutuji ation of Communist intrusion In the Western world ever adopted by any inter-American body, 20-11. •An endorsement of President Kennedy's $2O-billion Alliance for Progress program. 20-1. •An embargo on arms trade between Cuba and AOS membefs, 16-1, with Cuba voting no afid Brazil, Chile, Ecuador and Bp livia abstaining. Ep.diss. 2.391 ; Viola (lolls Chi. • 2 1•11 Phi Slims Delta. 2-143. II Alpha Epallaa Pl. 2.41: Alpha litaPP• Alpha, 22127: Alpha 141041 a Phi. 2.3 PI Alpha nil Dales, 2.170,, 'Ails 1141 a 210, 2.341; Dona t.3rA ; Tar Kappa Salta. 2.149 3 :Pslioni Pt. 2 434 • Its " 'Tle.eta PI. 2.112. Bola Mims Rho. 2 Mom* AIIIII4I Ep.ihon, 2.32* : Memo Nis. 2.314 t Alpha Kamm' Lambda. 2.31'): 1 4 Kappa Alpha. 2.313; Zits Psi : 2 293: P 1 Lambda Phi, 2.21111: Klima ('hi. 2.316: :111trats Tar Co m. ma. 2 201 Delta Rialaa PM : - 411 n Delta llama's. 2.211: Alpha Rh• ('ht. pa . Kap Ng mai. 2 315 Iholta Tau 0.1 a. 2V. UK. Alpha. 2 241. Thoth /,t hi. t' 245; Kap. P• Dena Rho. 2 23 1 Phi Kappa 2 211: Taw Phi WM., 1121'1. Phi 111.41ph. Two, 2 212; Theta Xl, .4 10' 1 Phl Kappa "Theta, 2 1 , 1 4, . Mama Alike Mr. 21711, Slims PI. 2,141. Moog, hi Phi. 2 057 : Alpha Phl All.ha. 1.910 1 Ad Board Forms ',Available ii Hub 1 Applications for nior, soptio !more and freshman class advistiry lboards are now available at the tHetzel Union desk and must be returned by 5 p.m.ltornorrow. 1 - Juniors with a 2,0 All-Univer lily average may apply for the junior class hoard; Fourth airld ,fifth term student's with a 22 All-University average may apply for the sophomore class board. iFreshmen with a /2. All--Univer isity average may ;apply for the ifresh'man class board. ' Thomas C. Miller. frelholan .class president. said yesterday 'that he also plans tO appoint Dqan Wharton, Class of. d 3. past freph man - sophomore e ass presiddnt, ;and Martin Eiche berger, pripri -11 ,dent of Junior I ter-Froterrity Council. as membeis of the bo a rd tin an advisory capacity.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers