RAMBLING ROCKET—I-Peru% State's all-American left' half back, Roger Kcclunsul 'tikes off on a 14-yard: run in the third - quarter of the Lions' 204 victory over. the Air Force in Beaver Stadium Siturdiy. keoctin scored two touchdowns and was the leading rusher, and receiver in the genii:. Nittames Stop Fired-Up Falcon Onslaught, 20-6 By JOHN MORRIS, Sports Editor , . For awhile last Saturday it looked like the ,Penni State !Dothan team was a bu i nch of avid newspaper readqs. Perhaps the Lions had read all week how they were one of the best teams in the t country after they squashed Islavt 41-7. Or maybe they read the fact that Penn State football teams had won the second game of the_ sea son only thfee:. times during' Rip NEW YQ,RIC M.—Pessis Stale was a unanimous choices as the East's lop college football team yesterday in the first billoting for the Lambert Trophy 4 Army, was second followed by Pittsburgh. Boston College. Princeton. Syracuse, Holy Cross, Navy, Dartmouth and Villa nova in order. Engle's 12-year tenure as head • 'coach of the ,Nittanies. At any • rate, for s 30 , minutes Engle's Lions stumbled and fum bled around in ,front of 45,200 people in Beaver Stadium Satur day, looking Very little like a team that is supposed to be the fourth best squad in the country.. Only a severe case of fuinbilitis contracted by Ben Martin's eager Falcons kept the 1962 Nittanies frotn adding , to the second-game loss string. THE LIONS managed a 7-6 lead at the end of the first half, mail Senat By MEL AXILBUNT) The University Senate is sched uled to consider the question of approving voluntary participation in the Reserve Officers Training .Corps mogram for students in the tCollege 'hi the Liheral Arts this afternoon.. The ROTC question comes to the Senate floor after a series of delays, the latest occurring at the July Senate meeting, when the ROTC proposal was tabled. JOSEPH G. RAYBACK. chair man of the Senate Committee "on Military Instruction, said yester day that his committee 'will rec ommend to the Senate /that the, proposal "ofthe Liberal Arts Plan ning Committee, which 1 initiated the ROTC bill, be denied because that group has failed Ito show' sufficient cause for change in the ROTC program. An opposing view wasJig n ir a essed by Warren ,Smith, chairman of ly on the strength of three Air Force fumbles. The Lions came back in the second half for two long drives featuring sensational touchdown Passes from Pete Liske to Roger Kochman. • The final score was 264 and the Nittanies retained their fourth place ranking, but not without a great deal of help from Dame Fortune in that nightmarish first half. State kicked off to the fired up Falcons, who immediately started pushing toward the Nit tany goal against a ponderous State forward wall. Sparked by jitter-bugging Terry Isaacson, Air Force moved the ball to the Penn State 40-yard line before Darryl Bloodworth fumbled the ball into Lion ;center Jlm Williams' hands. The Lions started a drive of their own from there. But with fourth down and inches on the Air Force 19, the Falcons stepped Kochman At the line of scrim mage: On the very next play Isaacson. fumbled to give the Nittanies an other chance. THIS TIME the Lions took ad vantage of the Falcons' generosity, scoring in three plays from the 20. Kochman slithered for 12 yards, but Liske was off on a pass to Dick Anderson. Then Junior Polvell added the extra point and the Lions led, 7-0. - Air Force marched = down the field again, but the Lions held on their own 35. They managed to keep the ball for only three (Continued on pcige seven) ' Will Debcite ROTC the liberal arts group which wrote the report answering the Senate request to "show cause." He said his grobp had presented evidence showing: •ROTC is not an essential part of the liberal arts curriculum. • Well oresented voluntary pro grams produce, better military of ficers than compulsory ones. •The general • trend since the conclusion of the Korean con flict has been away from com pulsory ROTC. As a part of today's debate. Ray back said he intends to inform the Senate .of propbsed . revisions in ,the ROTC programs of. both Army and Air Force. - • " These proposals are now, ac cording to" the best available in formation, before the Bureau of the Budget for study. The major features of the Army- Aii?orce proposals, as reported in Army Times. include: • •The establishment of two-year ycit.. 63. No. 9 UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. - TUESD4( MORNING. OCTOBER 2. 1962 FIVECENTS Meredith i , Enrolled, AethiStOids Guard OXFORD, Miss. (s) Battle ready troops continued to pOur into Oxford yesterday as James H. Meredith, a. Negro, finally en rolled and went to class at the all-white University of Missis sippi. Meredith, 29, a veteran of the Korean War, registered in a• 55- minute routine session with Reg istrat Robert 'Ellis, failed to find his first class anti drove off with an escort. : . , Infantrymen ringed the univer sity campus, where Sunday night's gas fumes blanketed the central area. MEREDITH SEEMED outward ly 'calm, paid his $230 cash for tuition, and asked about class routine. . A Justice Department spokes man said marshals will live with him and escort him to class "as long-as he is in any danger." As Meredith left the registrar's office, smiling, he said he .was at Ole Miss for purely academic reasons, would attend classes only and would not participate in ex tra-curricular activities. At the •same time Army gun fire and tear gas smashed riots in downtown Oxford, and troops ar- Uidversity Merges Arts, The f establishment of a College of' Arts and Architecture, com posed of the Department of Art, Architecture, Misic, Theatre Arts and a ,newly-created Department of Landscape Architecture, was approved by the University's BOard 'of TruStees Friday. The new college Will become operational at the beginning of the winter, term. Jules Heiler, profes sor of art and •director of the School, of the Arts in the College of the , Liberal Arts, will be dean of the' college.' ' JOHN R. RACKLEY, vice pres ident fpr resident instruction, said that the new college was approved after a series of evaluations of t . . Fair Weather Expected The : stagnant air 'mass that covers the Commonwealth is ex pected to show little movement during the next few days. "Today should be partly sunny and pleasantly .warm, and a high o f 73 degrees is expected. Partly 'cloudy to ;occasionally overcast skies are seen for tonight and tomorow. Tonight's minimum will be about 50 and a high of 68 is! forecast for tomorrow. ROTC programs for institutions wishing to adopt them. However, since the services may also con tinue existing programs at in situtions which want them, Sit least for an interim period, both the new two . -year and ithe existing four-year prggrams Would not be allowed to co-exist atone institu tion. • , •'The two-year program would operate at the junior and senior year levels with the participating students receiving either scholar ships (with an obligation to serve four years active duty and to ac cept regular commissions if of fered). or increase subsistence al lowances and summer camp pay (increases are also proposed for juniors ana seniors in. institutions dffering the four year program). The obligations of non-scholarship students would extend to their acceptance of reserve commissions and service on active duty for less_ than four yeprs., rested former 'Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker. Walker, who (Sunday night led a charge of students against fed eral marshals 'on the Ole Miss cantpus, wherii two men were killed in nine l hours, of rioting, ,waived a preliminary hearing on thanes of trying to obstruct jus tice. U.S. Cormissioner Omar Craig held him on $lOO.OOO bond. The controversial Texan, who led federal forges in the 1957 Lit tle Rock desegregation crisis, but changed sides because he said he was wrong, also showed up in renewed skirmishing in the col• lege town yesterday. Troops took him into custody at a roadblock. IN MID•AFIERNOON, a cara van of 92 vehicles, carrying most ly military police, rolled into Ox ford. Units of the crack 82nd and 10Ist Airborne Divisions landed at the Oxford I Airport. At Columbus, fresh troops of the Ist Airborne Battle Group of the 328th Infantry disembarked after flying from Ft. Campbell, Ky. Gov. Ross, Barnett, who once voted to go 'to jail rather than see Ole Miss integrated, called for an end to violence. Law and. or der must prevail "even 'though the inter-relationships and de vojapment of these curriculums. Administratitie details, such az; the degrees to be offered and the location of pemonnel offices, will be worked out within the next three months prior to the activa tion of the new college, Itackley said. The School of the' Arts, which now comprises the Department of Art, Music and Theatre Arts, will be discontinued in January when , the new college assumes its func tions. With the establishment of the College of A and Architecture, landscape a rchitecture will be elevated to departinental stand ing. It Is presently a curriculum in the Departinent of Horticul ture in the College of Agriculture. Wayne H. Wilson, professor of landscape architecture and direc tor of the program for the past five years, will .head the depart ment. The Depgrtment of Architec- Candidates Solicit Names, Support In Race for Congress, Class Posts By ROCHELLE MICHAEtS and WINNIE BOYLE As prospective USG Congres sional candidales walk the .halls of their living; areas and fresh man and sophomore class presi dential hopefuls don their usual electioneering attire, soliciting signatures for official Elections Commission petitions begins. • Petitions' are available upon request at the Hetzel Union desk. SIGNED PETITIONS are due at 10. a.m. ThurSday at the HUB desk. A meeting of all candidates, party chairmen and the Elections Commission will be held Friday to discuss the newly-adopted Elections Code and campaign pro cedures. Campaigning will begin, at if a.m. Monday and continue until 5 p.m. Oct 17. Voting will be Oct. 15, 16 and 17.. The hours and places of balloting will be an nounced later. All candidates except freshmen must have an all-University aver age and a previous term average of .at least 2.0, Congressional candidates may spend $6 and presidential candi dates may spend $lO on %tapir campaigns: This money must be our state has been invaded by federal forces," Barnett said in a broadcast from Jackson yester day afternoon. ile told Mi&sissippians not - to leave their hometowns. To out-of staters who had rushed to Oxford, Barnett said, "Please go home; and I say this with great em phasis." In addition to two dead in the night-long campus rioting, 20 were. injured. In Washington, the Justice Department . reported no one had been killed or hurt from gunfire from the weapons of fed eral troops. On the campus and in Oxford, military police and infantrymen— with rifles and bayonets--arrest ed 176 persons, about one'thtrd students. Some lived as much as 500 miles away. AFTER httREDITITS enroll ment many students were seen leaving the campus with packed suitcases. In New Orleans, Jack Green burg, attorney for the National Association for the Advanc(thient ..f Colored People, told the. , ,New Orleans States-Item that a second Nogro, a girl, is in the proce of applying for entrance. into __the University of Mississippi. Architecture ture will be moved to the. new college from the College of En gineering and Architecture, which will be redesignated as the Col lege of Engineering, Also effective in January will be the establishment of a Depart-. ment of Architectural Engineer ing in the College of Engineering. This department will conduct research and instruction In.struc turn) performance and function. GIFFORD H. ALBRIGHT. as sot-late professor of architectural engineering, will head the depart ment, formerly a curriculum in the Department of Architecture. :The college of Arts and Archi tecture makes the 10th under graduate college at the Univer sity. It is the first to be established since the College of Business Ad ministration was organized in f 053. _ln addition to training profes sional personnel, the new college will offer cultural courses to students in other curriculums. deposited in the Associated Stu dent Activities_ office, 202 HUB. Candidates may •then obtain a purchase order from the ASA office for the approximate cost of the material they plan to use. These materials must .be regis tered on the purchase order. Itemized expense accounts must be turned in at the ASA office at the conclusion of the campaign. Receipts and copies of all pub licity material must be included with the account. THE RECEIPTS will then be. matched against the materials Listed on the purchase order. Any campaign activity other than organization and prepara tion before the official time net, petitions without a sufficient number of legitimate .signatures and spending over the allotted budget will be considered grounds for disqualification. Collegian Seeks Cartoonist Persons interested in cartoon ing for the• Daily Collegian should inquire at the CoLleg;sus office in the basmnent Sackett after p.m. Monday through Friday.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers