'.-4r. SOlg IMil=l his first start __, the At. takes - apitchOut fir__ Alva . Hayes , ~ me play, early in from State' quarterback Pate Liska (24) the tint) quarter, war good for three yards. _ wad sets out around left end. Leading' inter- , .., I .0 4 . -, , ' 4 ! • ititanies- Edge; Syracuse . 0 • _.,.., , .. n ate Touc own Drive By JOHN MORRIS i slugged away at the larg State' - S I Editor lineand assumed a 19-14 lead - All in I Zorts - - this was a highly about half way through the last quarter. y Penn State - Syracuse foot- q . I • ball gaine. ' i Then came the Lions' greatest - 'A contimiation Of one of the moment. On' the brink of their most exciting and closest football second straight • defeat, the Nit series i n the. coun t r y, th e Nit- tanies drove .58 yards in eight tanies' 20-19 victory over the plays to clinch the win. f Orahge was as close as .the score "That was'a great fourth .4 uarter indicates. I' • , effort," ,Engle declared las the What started out , as a rout for smoke of battle lifted. "Tile boys Rip Engle's Lions quickly turned really came through." into a spine-tingler 'that had all Quarterback Pete Liske got the 46,920 fans that jammed Beaver Nittanies' scoring started en he Stadium sitting on the edge . of, grabbed a Syracuse .1 le - in their seats. .. i I mid-air on •the Syracuse 3-yard A$ THE TREMENDOUS Home- line. - • coming .crowd cheered delighted- •The Lion, signal - caller Iwhipped is tu ly, - the Lions jumped off to a 1 4 14 an 11-yard pass to halfbac Frank lead in the' first vivo minutes on Hershey to, put the ball n - the two perfectly executed plays. Syracuse 32. I - But i the Nittanies .savedi their On the next play, All finest 'efforts for the fourth and halfback 'candidate Roger deciding quarter. man took_ a handoff from The , Orangemen of Syracuse veered to the outside and --- . . • • Two Spectators Die D The 'deaths of tvio fans marred the HOmecoming fitstivities tat the Penn State-Syracuse-game Satur day. Robert B. Bird, :58, of Silamo kin, collapsed under the stands at halftime. He was ;taken to Rite nour Health - Center *one ne was pronounced - dead oxL arrival. Bird had a history:of heart trouble and died of a heart - attack, W. Robert Centre CoUnty coronet, said FOR A luring Game of :the Shamokin News-Di patch.. Gerald V. George, 46, Erie, father of Jerry George ( th-arts and letters-State College) ied on University Drive while vtalking to the game. A field engineer for the Greenleaf Corp. in Pittsburgh, George's death was also due to a heart attack, Neff said. Fourteen people were treated in the first aid room ateaver Stadium and an addition p 1 five taken to they health :&•••-::.*:-:::,de -. '''.Ciib, - a , 61 - 4kgitin into the end zone untouched. Ron Coates' - conversion made the score 7-0. Following the kickoff, Syracuse quarterback Walley Mahle faded to pass' and, lofted a beautiful spiral right into the arms of Her shey on the Penn State 47. Hershey, in' his first starting assignment of ,the year, returned the ball to the Syracuse 41-yard stripe.. Twa plays gained nine yards before Liske faked out the entire Syracuse team with a beautiful bit of deception and hit Kpchman all alone around the ten-yard line. Again Kochman scored un molested and Coates' conversion made it 14-0. - THE NITTANIES regained pos session of the ball moments later on a short Syracuse punt to Liske on the Orange 48. The Lions drove down to the Syracuse 18 before the Orange stiffened and Coates attempted a field goal. The kick was wide to right The missed kick seemed unimportant at the time, but hardly anybody in the howling crowd expected the Orange- to come back. encan Koch- Liske, altzed Early. in the second quarter Syracuse started to move. Start (Continued on page seven) Froth Defends Position Today By WINNIE BOYLE and; Al BUTKUS Froth representatives will be given adequate time to present their answer to the charges made against the' magazine, George L. Donovan, chairman of the commit tee which is to determine the magazine's future, said yesterday. Before the charges were offi cially presented by the dean of women and •the dean of men at last week's Initial'meeting. a time limit of 20 minutes apiece for presentation was set. Donovn said yesterday ? however. that if the time BMA had to be extended for additional evidence,. it would be if the reqtlest was within •rea son. 4 THE COMMITTEE on Student Organizations' , will reconvene at 8:30 a.m. today to hear Froth's answer to, the charges made last week by • Dordthy J. Lipp and Frank J Simes, They have charged that! the - magazine has been publishing jokes and stories which e were of a "salacious, ir reverent, and libelous nature. JFK Warns Nation Of Soviet Offensive WASHINGTON (ill Presi dent Kennedy proclaimed a U.S. naval blockade against Cuba last night, saying the Soviets have started to turn Cuba into an of fensive military base capable of raining nuclear destruction on all the Americas. • A defense department spokes man says the United States is ready to sink any communist bloc ship headed for Cuba,' which re fuses to stop and submit to search under the arms blockade. He said this country's blockade fleet, now being deployed, will order any ship of any nation obviously bound for Cuba to stop and un dergo search by a boarding party —using force tf necessary. SAN JUAN. Puerto Rico 1111 —The U.S. Navy announced last night that more than 40 ships and 20.000 men originally sched- uled to participate in maneu vers near here now are sustain. lag the blockade of Cuba. Speaking grimly to .the nation in a suddenly called radio-tele vision broadcast, Kennedy- said the United States would wreak "a full retaliatory response upon the Soviet Union' if any nuclear missile is fired on any nation in this hemisphere. Kennedy reported that within the past week the United States has received unmistakable evi dence that—contrary to Soviet assurances nuclear-type long range missile sites and! atomic capable Soviet jet bombers are being established in Cuba. Kennedy uttered what seemed an implied warning that the Unit ed States may have to bomb of fensive sites in Cuba if the build up continues. And the President cautioned the Snow flurries Predicted Tonicitt A winter-like arctic air mass is forecast to overspread IPennsyl vania today, bringing sflow flur ries to this area tonight. . STRONG and gusty northwest erly' winds will transport the Canadian air into the area, and temperatures Should fall steadily during the day. A high of 52 is expected before noon. Heavy snow squalls may de posit 2 to $ inches of snow in northwestern Pennsylvania to might, but little or no accumula• tion is expected locally. Hurricane Ella moved out to sea Saturday without seriously damaging any part or ,the east coast. Although the mammoth tropical storm did not have any direct influence on the local weather, her movement into high latitudes helped to effect a major At the conclusion of the charges, they asked that the humor mag azine's charter-be suspended be cause it can not "continue to rep resent the University under whose name it is published." The Undergraduate Student Government Student Opinion Bureau may conduct its first survey Ionia:low night, Susan Krauss. chairman.' said last Approximately l',ooo stidexas would be called and asked their opinions on the controversy concerning Froth, campus hu mor magazine, Miss Krauss said. A Jzoininiurn of 80 persons are needed to work on. the survey, she said. All students who are intenrsted in helping to conduct the poll should call Potts Krauss at UN 5-4880 before 13 p.m. to- Alter being prenti.d with these charges, the Froth editors and advisers asked additional time , to prepare an adequate answer, The committee adjourned. Donovan said yesterday that a Soviets that, if they react by ag gre ss cal somewhere else In the world, they "wilt be met with de termination," "ANY HOSTILE move .'any - where in the wortd agaitist the safety and freedom of peoples- to whom we are committed—mclud, ing the brave people of West Ber lin—will be met by whatever at tiou is needed." he said. ne emphasized, both in his'pre pared text and in his delivery, that the steps he was ordering now were only "initial"- ones. KENNEDY ACCUSED the So viet Union and its foreign minis ter of lying in denying that Cuba was being transformed into a base capnble of launching "weapons of sudden mass destruction." - Kennedy said the only purpose of a series of offensive misaile sites that have been established in Cuba can be to provide a nu. clear strike capability against' the Western Hemisphere." - Two distinct types of installa tions have been detected, he said. Several of them, he said, include medium-range ballistic missites that could send a nuclear warhead more than 1.000 nautical miles— to such places as Washington, the Panama Canal, Cane Canaveral. Mexico City, or any other city in the Southeastern United States, Central America or the Caribbean area. THE SIZE of the undertaking. he said, makes *it evident that I t was planned months ago. Yet only . last - month, Kennedy said, the Soviet government stated puhlle ly, on Sept. 11, that the armaments sent to Cuba were designed ex clusively for defensive purposes. "That stntement also was false." (Continued on page Oro) • chdnge in the Northern Hemi sphere's atmospheric circulation. The new pattern ravers very cold weather in the eastern states. Temperatures should- average well-below normal throughout the northeastern states - this week. Today should be mostly cloudy, windy and colder with light shOwers. As Armperatures fall during the late afternoon. the showers may become mixed with snow flurries. A mixture Of snow flurries= and light showers is y:een. for tonight. Temperatures will be much colder. and a low of 34 degrees is ex pected. CONSIDERABLE amounts of cloudiness and chilly te,mpernttireir and seen for tomorrow. A high of 52 is expected. A low of 29 degrees Is forecast for tonight. definite decision would he made today and he expressed the hope that the committee would be able to begin considering its deem by 10:30 a.m. At any , time during the hearing, either side may present additional evidence for the committee to.- cGnsider, Donovan said. ' • lie said that if Froth. did sub-; mit the petitions that have been circulating since the editiarii were' ti)1(1 they would have to appear before the committee, the docu ments certainly would be con sidered. Before the initial hearing Andrea Buscanics. co-editor u/ Froth, said she had several peti tions with approximately- 2,450 signatures, supporting Froth's con tinued. publicatit.n. Last week she said she would pre-,ent thew and any other petitions she received to the committee today:• Robert M. Pockrass, Froth• lit erary i adviser, said • he has pre pared ; a seven-page statement in which: possible solutions to the situa t km 'ate proposed. (Continued on page three) ,„
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers