3enate 's By MR AXILBUND j (See Related Editorial) . The University''penate yesterday afternoon 5 in passed by a narrow margin a olution calling for a Reserve Officer Traiiiin Carps ; program voluntaryfor all students. The resolution was in the f of h recom mendation t to. President Eri A. Walker and the Board of Trustees that ' such a program be' , adOpted with the start of the summer term, 1963. c The motion was approved 104 ..to 99 by 'written ballot. The votecame at the co nclusion i of abOut an hour of debate on pros and tons of the - resolution. The difference between the motion adopted by the Senate and the motion which was Originally .proposed by the ;faculty of the Col lege, of the Liberal Arts=that voluntary ROTC be instituted for liberal arts students--stems • from an amendment proposed during the de bate. THE AMENDMENT TO BROADEN the scope of the liberal arts proposal was offered by Leon Gorlow, senator from the College of Education. His amendment, the only one offered during the debate, also had the effect of ne gating a major objection of the Senate's educa tional policy committee—that special provisions should not be made for individual units of the University. VOL. 63, No. 10 UNIVERSITY PARK. PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 3. 1962 ' FIVE CENTS HUB Group The Sahara Room, a student operated night , club, will open its doors this Saturday night in the Hetzel Union ballroom. The club will feature live music for dancing ; and entertainment will be provided during intermis sion. Waiters will serve anything ordered from the Lion's Den. Tickets for the Sahara Room are now on sale at . the Pretzel Union -.desk or may be purchased at the door for 41.60 a couple. • • THE SAHARA ROOM which is to be held every Saturday night ,is the the first project of the new ; student HUB committee. The - student' HUB committee was proposed and approved by the Hetzel Union_ Board last spring and held its organizational meet ing last night. As explained by George Hen lug, student chairman, the l pur pose of the committee is to co ordinat the activities of the' HUB and introduce new programs Registrar Receives Schedule Changes The' Registrar's Office is now accepting schedule changes for the winter term, 1963, from students who have revisions to make in the schedules they filed at. regis tration. Deadlines for these schedule changes or the filing of a winter term schedule by those students who did not do so at registration, are: Seniors' and graduate stu dents', Oct. 8; juniors, Oct. 'l2; sophomores, Oct. 19; and fresh men, Oct. 26. Students filing revised sched ules should see their adviser for proper procedures and forms. Ram Predicto l itilar heating boosted the mer cury into the- low lets for the second successive day yesterday afternoon. The high temperature, officially, was 71 degrees. • The high pressure cell that has provided The siate 'with partly cloudy skies and pleagant autumn weather since'Sunday is begin. , ming to .. - move eastward. , widespread,:areal of precipi tation that has Vaught rain to the central and southern states for the past several days , is es-peewit . ' - - 1 - : 4r. .... : ,• . • EittilLti _ .* - ..''.* . i,•( N ,E. tatt II FOE A BETTER PENN STATE to Sponsor Night Club suited to the interests and tastes of the student body. THE STUDENT HUE. commit tee has the support of William F. Fuller, HUB inazinger,l and has been promised room on the sec ond floor of the HUB and funds to get on its feet. After the program ,has gone into effect the committee expects through various projeOs to be financially self-sufficient. Positions are still open for stu North Holls Men Fail To. Cloini USG Petitions With two Beata available on the Undergraduate Student Govern ment Congress for reprt%entatives of North Halls men, no one has "yq picked up a petition to, run for office from that area. • Signed petitions for ally USG Con gress Seats and the freshman and sophotnore class presidencies are doe at 10 a.m. tomorrow in 202 Hetzel Union i Li AREA it S other than North H3lls ihave at leasta; sufficient number of petitions Circulating to =insure filling the congressional seats 11 enough signatures are ob tained on the petitions. ' The areas, the allotted seats and the number of petitions circulat ing are: North Halls women, one seat, 'two. petitions; town area, ne, nine petitions; fraternity azea, our, 11 petitions; East Halls trien, hhe, one petition; East Halls wcome.n, one, three petitions; West }falls }men, two, six petitions. !Also, West Halls women, one, one petition; Pollock-South Hans nien, 'two, four petitions; Pollock lAiom n, two; three petitions, Sbut Halls women, two, six pe or Area Today tO mdve into the state hehind the high Pressure cell. I Rain is forecast to begin some time Itoday and continue inter ittently through tomorrow_ Temperatures should be some- What I cooler than those of recent days'ibecause of the cloud cover. A high of 63 degrees is seen for Oday, and a maximnia, of 62 is likely tomorrow. Tor t tight's low will be about 53 detNes. 1 Gradual clearing is forecast to begin! Friday. • VOLUNTARY ROTC BILL ADOPTED: Yesterday's adoption by the Senate of a resolution calling for the end of compulsory ROTC may, if approved by the Board of Trustees. be lb. start ing point for the shorianing of columns of students now taking the program. dents on the committee. Mem bership applications are available now at the Retzel Union desk. THE GOUP will be composed of 10 smaller committees to deal with each of the areas - of interest. These committees are social, recreation al, art and literature, music, per sonnel, publicity, house, hostess, special events and films. Each special committee will choose a chairman who will meet with- Henning -to coordinate ac tivities. • titiomi; Nittany Halls, one, three petitions; Simmons - McElwain, two, two petitions; and Atherton, one, three petitions. IN - ADDITION. five persons picked up. petitions to run for freshman class president and five for sophomore class president. PEACTICE zateze-rt The setbzn of - taxer to prat:tics their manavvers. Tins, anausay ! blai .tinarporrataxas and class skies to members of ono of the squads sae shown above tkia Onletnity weathat picture ymtarday pro• during ai practice mission yesterday afternoon aided intramural tootiaill players with an appal'. on the Retail Union Building lawn. Elective R• TC After the ballot tally was announced. Walker read a prepared statement in which he said the University administration would sup port the Senate decision. HE ALSO SAID HS would present the Senate's position to the; Board of Trustees with all the vigor helcan command. He said the Trustees would have .to review the decision because there are aspicts of it which go beyond the powers the Trustees have delegated to the Senate. These, he said, were ltgal and moral ques tions implied or specified in the University's obligation to the state and nation. He predicted, however, that the Truitees would, perhaps by a vote as cloie as the Senate's, accept the recommendation., Ben Euwema, dean of the College of the Liberal Arts, opened the discussion by pro posing the motion of the college's 'faculty that ROTC be made voluntary for liberal - arta stu dents. - THE FIRST SPEAKER for the proposal was Warren SMith, chairman of the sub-com mittee of the Liberal Arts Planning CommitAt* which prepared a report showing cause to the" Senate why the proposal shoujd be adopted. Joseph GlRayback, chairman of the mili tary instructs , committee, and J. J. &hunt (Continued on page five) Schirra to Try 6-Orbit Flight CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. UP) —Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr. entered the final phases of prepa ration for a six-orbit journey around the earth today, and them was a possibility that much of Europe might witness the launch ing on television. . Improving weather conditions in the Atlantic and Pacific areas where the Mercury capsule might come down increased the chances that the spacecraft might race into orbit any time between 1 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. Eastern Stard dard time today. IF THE LAUNCHING occurs between 7:45 and 8:15 a.m., the Telstar communications sateltite will be within range so that Ifre coverage of the liftoff could sent almost instantaneously to viewers in 17 countries of the Eurovision network in Europe.) • The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NA4A) said conferences are also under way in Paris leading to possible hookup with the nine Soviet bloc countries of Europe's network.* The U.S. plan calls for an eight minute Telstar transmission to Europe„lf the launch comes dur ing that period. NASA hopes to be able to show Europe the last two to four minutes of pre-taunch activity and the four-minute climb until the launching rocket is out of sight. TM TRANSMISSION would go by land line to the sending station at Andover, Maine, and then by Te/star. After eight mitt utes there would be a like period available for relay to the United States 4l from a station in France, of thel European reactions to the showing.. The. space agency said the as tronaut and Leroy Gordon. Cooper Jr., his backup pilot; his space 'craft and his Atlas rocket appear all to be in good condition for flight and have completed the first part of a split countdown with no trouble. A 28-ship armada plus 143 air craft ; and 22 parachmte-medical teams began final deployment yesterday to rescue the astronaut' wherever and whenever he re turts from space. TO. LAUI4CI4 THE 39-year-old' Navy commander into space, track him through six orbits or less and then pluck him from the Atlantic or Pacific oceans reqUiree the cooperation of about 30,000 men, including 17,000 from the armed forces. Two separate Navy task force. will be deployed, one In the Pa. eitie under Capt. Thomas S. King Jr.. and the other in the Atlantic under Rear.. Adm. Harold G. Bowen. Since there; are nine places where he might come down in the Atlantic, Bowen's fleet IM much larger than that in the Pacific..