PAGE TWO Infantry to WASHINGTON (/P) Nearly LOON Mzs,issippt National Guard infantrymen now at OKI.Ord, Miss, will iw releamfd,jimn fedPral service at midnight next Tuesday, the Army announced yesterday. v.'jll ve about 4,500 troops in the Oxford,are;,..where riots broke out, nearly two week ago after Negro 'James H. Mere dab was enrolled as a student at the University of Mississippi_ AT THE HEIGHT of the fed -et-al intervention in Mississippi, a total of 23.600 Regular • Army paratroopers, i nfantrymen, m il tary policemen, and federalized Mississippi Guardsmen, were con •eentrated at Oxford and at two staging arras—Memphis. Tenn.. -and Columbus. Miss For the first tune today, Mere dith strolled through the campus without an escort,at Is side. • , A single loud unfa%;arable re mark was heard as groups of students walked' closer to Mere dith, 29, than his small guard of federal marshals who brought up the rear. THE SCENE WAS sharp contrast to the jeers some 100 students—mostly males—hurled at him as he left the cafeteria Wednesday night. • At noon yesterday, an unidenti fied white student chatted with him. while Meredith ate lunch in the cafeteria. Meredith walked the 300 yards to his residence hall after lunch— again for 'the first time. • While Meredith increased his . . _ POW Deal- Offered MIAMI, Fla. (M) Lawyer James B. Donovan said yesterday he had returned to Miami to await Prime Minister Fidel Cas, tro's decision on whether he•will . accept an offer, of medicine, drugs, and baby foods for release of the 1,113 Bay - of Pigs Cuban invasion pnsoncrs. "I - am always optimistic," the New Yorker said when asked if he thought Castro would liberate the prisoners. Donovan said his offer consisted solely of "medicine, drugs, medi cal supplies - and infant foods, de signed as an offer of the Ameri can people to the Cuban people!' 'NO.mone7 is involved, Dono van emphasized, 19 40 , ,, A AWS Retreat Sunday, Oct. 14 Nittany Lion Inn , r e* , re5ca15.x.m..;=.0v.5....*,,,,.,.:..........:.7.11:,.r.,....b.i.r./..,.7.wir.nzstub,bu . 7..._ .. . . George Pappas drawings and ,paintings OPENING SUNDAY PUBLIC RECEPTION Hetzel Union Gallery . • • . -- . , • • . , • , I- . . Leave Ole - Miss Tuesday Congress Pushes . .... activities on campus. these - meet-; Paul o Johnson Jr. another chance . • • logs were scheduled: Ito shw they are no- to in • The! Student Judicial 'Council i c 4 „,,„ntE'mPt• iO. ' iourn Teri y . ' was to hold a closed session to itr.e court, accepting a Justice ; plan a hearing for six students, Department suggestion, decided f i bill for sorted public works, th v.o face charges stemming from, Oct. 2 that the two must show mostly i the water-projects field. campus riots that killed two. I further that they are now comply- The - other is a b , -supplemental • ing with its orders that forced •The 27-member faculty Ben- i Ag„,.,4;.;,•• a d m i s si on measure •to finance Miscellaneous ate was expected to consider, 1 -------` •7 —, Oct 1 - government activities -at a cost probably within the next 411 hours„' AT OLE HMS, Justice Depart- of about $5OO million. two resolutions on-the demonstra-Iment attorney BUd ' Sather said The third and final obstacle is ; I lions and college Unity. One reso- Meredith's frequent dppearances the "pork barrel" authorization i lution called for an erid to demon- were part of an effort-to get stu- bill for future water projects to ' strations, a faculty source said. l dents used to Meredith's pres- be financed by appropriations to while the other was a weaker; ence. ' be voted later. measure. I ,!'We've decided that since ,Mere- Passage of this measure is not •In New Orleans, the sth U.S.! dith is here," Sather said, "he essential; to assure governmental Circuit Court or7Appeals was- to; should 'be .able to move freely operations after the 87th Congress convene today to give Mississippi! about the campus' under- normal adjourns its final session. But in Gov. Ross Barnett and Lt. Gov.! conditions." • this election year' these projects . are important to incumbents run ning for re-election and it ap peared that a strenous effort was being made to reach a compro mise between the widely different measures passed by House and Senate. • Postal Bill OK'd by SW WASHINGTON /Pi —President Kennedy signed a bill yesterday that raises postage rates for every body and gives pay increases to 1.6 million federal workers. The salary increases starl i ,with the next pay pericid and*Ken nedy called this part of the - bill "the most comprehensive and sig nificant. salary revision in- nearly 40 years." ASSERTING THE highe!,•• pay scales .shoujd- attract more cap able workers. Kennedy. urged all department and. agency heads to try to turn out the same amount of work with fewer people-. The pay increase, averaging 9.6 per cent for a million White col lar workers and 11:2 per cent for 600.000 postal workers.is expect ed to cost $1.05 billion a year when it becomes fully effective in 1964. The new postage rates- going into effect next Jan. 7 are calcu lated to yield an additional $6OO million a year by" 1966. • Most of this, or. ;459 million, will come from a one-cent increase in first class and airmail stamps. liere are the new rates: •Fast Class Mail—Regular let ters will require a- 5-cent stamp, air mail 8 cents, and post cards 4 cents. These increases, adding one cent to present rates In all three cases, are effective Jan. 7. 1963. • Second Class—Magazines and newspapers will pay three art aual increases of 4 per cent each. 1:15 - 5:00 PAPPAS Recent 7 - to 9p. m. . r ».z FP'sZ~lll~ '3~l~'~Y."'a~ THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK. 'PENNSYLVANIA ZEZEIMI lAVer for editorial matter and 10 per cent for advertising matter. These increases, starting Jan. 7, 1963, will yield an estimated ;27.4 mil lion when fully effective. •Thirti mail, most ly • advertising circulars called - Junk' mail, will be required to pay one-eighth of a cent more in each of the next three years. This will raise: the ultimate piece cost from 2% cents to 2% cents and will yield an extra $39.5 million. The rate for a single piece of third class mail goes up from 3 cents to 4 cents, bringing in an additional $34.5 Thi3 is the class used by those who send Christmas cards -in unsealed en velopes. JHUM111111111MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMUM111110111111111111111111111111111111111111111111: --- All Buildings Are Out of Bounds Brothels and Pledges of SIGMA CHI =II WASHINGTON (AP)—A vote weary Congress . broke through one roadblock yesterday in its crawl towards adjournment but bumped into another ,and was fored to put off adjournment at least until today. The deadlock that was pried open was on the $5.4-billion agri culture appropriations bill whieti had become the stage for a Sen ate-House prestige battle. • • Senate-House conferees reached a compromise—which didn't set tle the basic prestige issue—and the - measure was quickly passed by the House after Which it= ad journed until today. The Senate quickly approved the bill also by voice vote. THIS LEFT ONLY three major obstacles to ending a session that already has gone on loiter than any since 1951. • - Two of these are appropria measures that must be passed be fore adjournment but no real dif ficulty is expected in Oearing them. One is a $5-billion money India, Red China Clash •-NEW DELHI. India (AP)—ln dian and .Chinese Communist troops fought their bloodiest bat tle in three years along the dis puted Tibet border with 50 casual ties it was reported • yesterday. Both sides claimed victory in the fighting that broke out Wednesday. DERBY SNATCH Good Luck FRIDAY. OCTOBER 12. 1942 MCA THAI UM NOW at 1:30-5:008:20 Acclaimed Across The Entire World! 'The Picture is Colossall" Time Magazine Technirama-Color Wyy". 7: : : r4.iy..y.:„. -LAST 2 DAYS - MAT. 2:00-EVE. 8:00 SAT. at 2:00-5:154:30 P.M: AestlearirAirard a• immumaimini .7- • scam N unism e Enjoy it TODAY Spencer Tracy • Bart Lataamater Rithani Withaark * Marks. Dhrbicili Jody Garland • Maxi•Elltan &bell and Idsettonam Cliff. .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers