.. . . . . , . . . . . , , ----- , . . _ . . . , . ) • , ~,,. d •if - • ,, z , - . Onvyartt .. . o ..- . •• 1 Wepfh' er Forecast: / He. ' , ....,. .., . State! 1 SwinY, . . '': -p .(.t, , —Sao Page 4 . Pleasant • lash • : . . - V0L.63. No; 3 "Vert. ~ogee _ Sieminski-' -have all received pre-season All-American honors. Ail seniors. they us being collated on to lead the Lion cause • this year. 1 Stevenson Warns Soviets . . "),. , . = . UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (WP ) take offensive action in this hem- The Soviet Union sounded a isphere, neither will we permit agf i r e es i T ec oil ar i e n d thi s that the warning yesterday in the United the right of Nations that U.S.' attack on Cuba the United States to defend its means war: The United States security is "anchored in. the U.N. promptly replied that the Soviet charter. . Union is threatening peace .by ."The threat to peace in Cuba supplying, military aid to Cuba. comes not from the United States Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei but from the Soviet Union," he A. Gromyko delivered the warn- said. ing in , a major policy speech to "The threat arises from the U.N.- General Assembly . in. extraordinary and unnecessary which he„.lashed out at President flood of Soviet arms and military Kennedyt and U.S. policy toward personnel pouring into Cuba. It Cuba. - . ~• is this foreign military inter- HE--GOT an-immediate answer vention in - the Western hemis front Adlai E. Stevenson, the chief phere which is •creating grave. U.S. delegate. . concern not only in this country, In words directed at both GM- but throughout the hemisphere. myko and the Cuban ,representa- "For what purpose'is this great' tives in the assembly, Stevenson military buildup in ; Cuba - in said: . tended?" he asked.. 1 ' . I _ • - "We are not taking and. will net Student's Aiiio Hit A 70-year-old pedestrian cross ing state Route 64 five-and-a-half miles south of Bellefonte was killed Wednesday when . he was struck by - a car operated by Earl I. Rosengrant , (4th-engineering- Factoryville), state police said last alight. Fred Wiliams, of R.D. 3 Belle fonte, was pronounced dead on arrival at Centre County Hospital. Vote Docking Provided as Penalty in Recommended Elections Code In the process of writing a new election code a new penalty for infractions has been suggested-- docking a candidate's • rtes for minor violations. . Elections Commission Chair man George Jackson, speaking on behalf of the-committee explained that although vote docking has been used in the past it has not been used in :recent elections. • AT THE PRESENT time_ either the infraction- goes unpunished or the candidate .is disqualified. The committee felt that a minor vio lation should definitely be pun ished but that "disqualification is too strong- especially in a case 'where an honest mistake may haVe occurred, he added. • By adding this penalty, Jack; son said the committee felt Clean er elections would be insured. It is: more of "a preventive measure than an enforcement measure.' .Another major proposed change provides•lor four eominiisioners 'under the' Chainnan td rule on alleged violations_ - ' • I UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. SATURDAY MORNIN G . SEPTEMBER 22. 1962 "If the Soviet Union', genuinely[ , Kills Pedestrian* Police reported that Williams! had walked about three-quart of the way across the highw when he suddenly reversed h direction. In ,!so, he walked directly into the path of the east bound Rosengrant County Coroner: Howard Neff has not determined whether an inquest will be necessary, polial said. UNDER THE present system the Elections Commission chair. man mak/mg the ruling himself. Several times in last year's presil dentist campaign Allen • Fein gold, then Elections Commission chairman, took charges to the Undergraduate Student Govern ment Congress for a ruling. If the new code Is'_approved the Elections Commission will have final authority in `their rulings, 1 The four additional commt4- sioners would be appointed by the chairman - with the approval of the USG Congress. The. proposed , code would. alSo • (Continued on .. ge fifteen) Collegian Subscriptions; Subscriptions .to the Dal* Collegian will be sold outside; of Beaver Stadium before and after the football game today.l Special fall ffmat football sub- 1 , sceptic= be available feel S22S. Year subscriptions sec $8.50 will also be available. FOlt A BETTER PENN STATE Lions '----- Host `Navy ifi Season Qpene,r By JOHN -MORRIS , -Sports Editor Penn State's football team Opens defense of the Lambert Trophy this afternoon at 1:30 against a fired-up Navy team that has been tabbed as the number one pretender to the Eastern throne. l'The Lathbert Trophy, . emble matic of Eastern football suprem acy, is not awarded until the end t4e season, but the winner. of today's Beaver Stadium clash will be an odds-on favorite to top the balloting in December. . Tho game is the. first contest in a: round-robin schedule that, for the first time in history, pits the "top five teams 9f Eastern football—Penn State, Navy, Syra- Cuse, -Pitt and Army Approximately 40,000 people, including some 900 Midshipmen, are expected to jam into the desires to keep the peace in the Caribbean let it atop this warlike posturing, this stuffing of Cuba with rockets, military aircraft, ad vanced electronic equipment and other armament all out of propor tion to any legitimate needs."' GROMYKO ACCUSED - s o m e U.S. political leaders of displaying "flippant attitude" to the ques tion . of 'war and peace in regard to the situation in Cuba. He also said "brazen politician? in the United' States were ,"clear ly losing control of their reason ing" by. proposing' a blockade on Soviet ships carrying material to Cuba; "An attack on Cuba," he said, "would have implications about which the Soviet government warned the whole world in the well-known statement issued on Sept. 11, 1962.7 In that statement, the .Soviet government declared flatly - that if an attack is launched on Cuba "this will be the beginning of the unleashing of war: Cutler Resigns Post as Aide Howard A. Cutler, assistant to President Eric A, Walker, has resigned his post effective Oct. 1 in order to accept an appoint ment as academic vice-president of the University of Alaska. The resignation was announced , early this-meek. To replace Cutler, Walker has appointed 41/1. -- Nelion McGeary, professor of political science and twice head of the department. IN ACCEPTING Cutler's resig nation, Walker said: "You have made substantial contributions to Penn State during your stay here, and I know you would continue to do so in the years ahead. I am sure you can do a great deal for the University of Alaska." Cutler has been a meml)er of the University staff since 1951, when " profess(» served professor men'. ant to demi , direct was last • In of Mt 4er so be rt self-e' McGc since cavernous Lion lair to watch the highly-rated Nittanies of coach Rip Engle meet the 'ambitious Middies of Wayne Hardin. STATE HAS been drawing rave notices all fall and, betause of a strong late-season, sure in 1961 and a tremendously• talented starting unit, has to rank as the team to beat. in the East. That is exactly what Hardin and his Middies have in mind this Sunny skies an d pleasant: temperatures are forecast for today. Temperatures will climb rapidly from chilly *arky morn ing readings. and the mercury should reach the €5 degree mark by sparnetims. afternoon. The Middle mentor thinks the Lions can be beaten and feels that his team is in a good position to do just that. Hardin; standing on the emerald green carpet in Beaver Stadium as his .team completed Its brief workout yesterday; repeated a comment he had made earlier in the week: • "We are defense-minded and we think if we can stop their offense, we will score enough to beat them." The Middies may also• still be feeling the sting of their 20-10 opening game loss to many of these same Lions last year. Navy returns 24 lettermen, giving Har- Registration Total Hits 19,874 Three days of registration ended more students were registered at 5 p.m. yesterday and at that during the 85 15-minute, registra tion periods ,than` were registteed time the University had an en- last year, Bernreuter added. rollment of 19,874 students, Rob- Bernreuter expects abotit 1,000 ert G. Bernreuter, dean of admis- more persons to registen lode sions .and registrar, said. These registrants would be most ly The enrollment fistire repre- University employees and late gents students enrolled in all registering students. colleges and schools ,Of the Uni- The total number of students versity at all Commonwealth registered by noon today may Campuses as well as at University change somewhat, but dot. sub- Park, Bernreuter explained. stantially, during the drop-add The figure also represents an period he said. increase of 314 students over the During October a report will tit number who registered in the issued showing the breakdown, comparable three-day period last by college, class, campus and fall. other categories of the student At • Recreation Building, 274 body, Bernreuter said. M. NELSON **GAY to assist Prtry Walker also said the University will continue to support McGeary in his participation in studies dealing with constitutional re vision and improvement of poli tical and governmental institu tions. "Professor MeGeary Is rightly din ample material for his three platoon plan. The red-haired Navy coach In stalled the three-team program at Crabtown last season in an effort to field as many football players as possible in what, was sunPoseti to be a rebuilding year after the graduation of Joe Bettina:). THE SWARM of playels re placed Bellino admirably, p )Sting a 7-3 record. This year one of the Middies' main tasks was finding a replace ment foe Greg Mather, a; good end and a better kicker. • Mather booted 11 field goals in 1961 and converted 22 of 23 extra point attempts. Dave Sjuggertid, another flanker. has inherited the place-kicking chores and, it he is half the kicker Mather was, the Lions may be in for a busy} after noon. But while Hardin worried about State's offense and extotts the virtues of his defense, Engle does the exact opposite. And, actually, the conflicting abilities of Navy's passing attack and State's pass defense should hold the key to the outcome_ of this Eastern battle. ; A porous defensive secondary cost the Lions dearly on several occasions last fall and En*le has been concerned with the; defen sive talehts of this year't team. "Our pass defense hmnft been (Continued on page JetltAtlttri) considered to be one of the lead ing political scientists in the Commonwealth," Walkers said. McGeary 15 a native of Greens burg, received his undergraduate degree from Lafayette College, and his masters and doctorate, from Columbia University. At, Lafayette, he was senior class' president, editor of the yearbook' and a member of Phi Beta Kappa., McCleary has been a' member of the University faculty since 1935. From 1348 through ;1951 and again from 1957 through 1960 he was head of the Department of Political Science. Of McGeary's publistittd works, he is most noted for the 'book "Gifford Pinchot: Forester Poli tician," which was published by the Princeton University Press in" 19410. )4cGEABY HAS also had prac tical political experience. serving from 1952 until 1956 as yresldent of the State College Borough Council. At the University of Alaska, Cutler will direct the entire aca demic program of that university, which extends to six colleges on the main campus situated near Fairbanks and five community' college branches throughout the state. The University at Alaska comprises the entire System et public higher education in Alaska. FIVE CENTS.