“SST | 5% lailH @ (Eollpgtan | £& VOL. 63. No. 33 Student In Cycle By TONY FOGLIO Paul E. Zock, Jr. (lOth-mechani cal engineering-W arr e n) was killed about 3:30 p.m. yesterday when his motorcycle went out of control and collided with a dump truck at W. College Avenue and N. Barnard Street. Police said it was the first fatality in the bor ough since Oct. 7, 1947. The truck driver, Joseph S. McClellan, was driving west on College Avenue when he said he saw the motor cycle jump the curb at the inter section. The motorcycle then hit the right door and step of the truck. McClellan •was unhurt. W. Robert Neff, county cor oner, said death **»»1 B- B ol ** was apparently instantaneous and due to a broken neck, frac tured skull, crushed chest and other: injuries. The coroner said there would not be an autopsy. Two witnesses to the accident, C. D. Slagle, 439 W. College Ave., Dismantl WASHINGTON I/P) Presi dent Kennedy told the Amerifcan people last night the Soviet rock et bases in Cuba are being dis mantled, the missiles are being crated and “progress is now being made towards the restoration of peace in the Caribbean.”, The President, appeared on ra dio and. ..television, after little more than an hour’s advance no tice, with a brief progress report on settlement of the crisis that a week ago had the world teeter ing on the brink of nuclear war. HE SAID it is “our firm hope and purpose” that the progress he said is being made will con tinue. He said, "The United States in tends to follow closely the com pletion of this work through a variety of means, including aerial surveillance, until such time as an equally satisfactory internation al means of verification is effect ed. “While the quarantine remains in effect, we are hopeful that adequate procedures can be de veloped for international inspec tion of Cuba-bound cargoes.’ The International Committee of the Red Cross, in our view, would be an appropriate agent in this mat ter. - “The continuation of these measures in air and sea, until Occasional Rain Expected Today Dismal weather conditions may test the hardiness of Penn State football fans this afternoon. Occasional rain and cold weath er is forecast for today and tem peratures are expected to. be no higher than the upper 40's at gametime. . The rain isn’t expected to be heavy, but it may be annoying to the 42,000 persons expected to watch today’s game with Mary land. - The circulation pattern across the Northern hemisphere contin ues to favor unseasonably cold weather in the eastern states, and no important change, in this pic ture is likely for several days. Skies are likely to remain nyistly cloudy tonight and to morrow, but only a few light showers possibly, mixed with snow flurries are indicated for tonight. A low'temperature of .34 is ex pected tonight, and a high of 48 is seen for tomorrow. UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. SATURDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 3. 1962 Killed Mishap and Robert Sprankle, 120 N. Bar nard St., said that Zock tried to jump off the cycle when he rea lized he couldn't control it. Zock had difficulty in starting it when he left his apartment at 439 W. College Ave., they said. He lost control of the motorcycle after turning in to Barnard Street from his parking lot, they added. He jumped the curb on the west side of. the street and collided with ..McClellan’s heavily-loaded truck. DAVID GETTIG (lOth-mechan :al engineering-Birch), one of .ock’s three roommates, said that ~ie motorcycle Zock was driving belonged to Dale Schmidt (7th nechanical engineering-Somer ■t), another roommate. Zock, who would have been years old on Jan. 22, graduated om Warren High School in 1958 .ie attended Behrend Campus in Erie for three semesters, and transferred to University Park in the summer of 1961. Gettig said Zock was a mem ber of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and was to be initiated • into Pi Tau Sigma, the mechanical engineering hon orary society. ing Begins in Cuba the threat to peace posed by these offensive weapons is gone, is in keeping with our pledge to se cure their withdrawal or elimi nation from this hemisphere. It is keeping with the resolution of the Organization of American States, and it is in keeping with the ex change of letters with Chairman Khrushchev of Oct. 27th and 28th.” The proposal that the Inter national Red Cross be asked to play a role in verifying removal of the missile bases was advanced by the Soviet Union. The details of how this would be done would have to be worked out. Soviet troubleshooter Anastas I. Mikoyan flew to Havana yes terday to soothe ruffled Prime Minister Fidel Castro amid the dismantling and withdrawal of Soviet rockets from Cuban soil. The Soviet first deputy premier was greeted by Castro and other top Cuban officials upon his ar rival at Havana Airport. •Before leaving New York, Mi koyan, en route from Moscow, SEASON'S FIRST FORMAL: Viewed from the Junior Prom lest night. Dubbed "The Most Ex projection room of the Hetzel Union ballroom citing Dance 3andU in ibe Land" this is the formally clad students danced to the music of orchestra's first campus appearance. The dance the 17-piece Ronn Metcalfe Orchestra at the was attended by about 200 couples. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Lions Host Terps In 'Must' Game By JOHN MORRIS Sports Editor Penn State hosts Maryland :;n Beaver Stadium this after noon at 1:30 in what ranks as a “uiust” game for both teams. The Lions and Terps sport identical 5-1 records going into this afternoon's clash and several post-season bowls have shown more than a passing interest in both teams. Scouts from the Cotton, Orange and Gator Bowls ary expected to be on hand to witness today's game. The winner'' could very easily land in any of these an-' nual extravaganzas. Coach Rip Engle’s Lions; have an added incentive to win. The Nittanies still remember Mary land's 21-17 .victory at College Park last year and are deter mined not to let it happen again. IN THAT GAME, Maryland quarterback Dick Shiner led the Terps •to three early scores and endorsed Castro’s demand that the United States evacuate its Guantanamo naval base in Cuba as a condition for a Cuban settle ment. Havana radio, broadcasted Mikoyan's New York statement. However, it was believed , Mi kayon would seek in Havana to persuade Castro to drop his op position to international verifica tion of Soviet Premier Khrush chev’s promise to -dismantle So viet missiles in Cuba and ship them back to the Soviet Union. CASTRO REFUSED in a broad cast Thursday night to permit any kind of U.N. inspection or verification on Cuban territory. ' The Defense Department had announced that aerial reconnais sance photos showed work dn dis mantling the missile bases had started. 1 a.m. Permissions The Association of Women, Students has granted 2 a.m. permissions for all women stu dents tonight. then the defense took over to hold the Lions in check the rest of the way. . Shiner, a junior, is at the con trols again this season and his presence In the lineup makes Maryland one of the best passing teams m the country. The Terp quarterback is the nation’s leading collegiate passer with 87 completions in 131 at tempts for 1,034 yards and four touchdowns. Shiner has been hampered by a pulled muscle in the Terps’ last three outings, but should be ready to go full speed this afternoon. : "He got hurt against' North Carolina State." Maryland coach Tom Nugent said yesterday, "but he’ll be ready to go. We saw films of Craig Morton (California quar terback) but I think Shiner is better." That’s bad news for Penn State fans. Morton was little short of sensational against the Nittanies last week, completing 20 of 28 passes for 274 yards. t ENGLE HAS been putting the Lions through pass defense drills all week In preparation for Shi ner’s expected aerial barrage, "We have to stop Shiner ” State scout Sever Toretti said after watching the Terp quarterback against South Carolina last week. Fertilization Tests to Use Effluent Front Sewage Plant at University Treated effluent, which pre viously had contributed to "fish kills" m Spring Creek by reducing the amount of oxygen available for fish, will be used in a fertil izing demonstration in wooded tracts. David E. Davis, professor of zoology, said yesterday. i Work on the project wi.ll begin Monday or Tuesday, when a pipe* jine from the University’s Sewage Plant south of Benner Pike to the test area is to be installed. The four miles of pipeline is expected to be completed in December or January, depending on the weath er, Davis said. THE TREATED SEWAGE piped into the creek had no disease causing bacteria in it. he said, but it was full of fertilizer ma terials. These materials helped increase the growth of algae in the water, which in turn deprived "If we don't stop Shiner, w* won’t beat Maryland" Nugent agreed with Toretti. "This game is going to be decided by the defenses. Both teams have team that can stop the other .will come out on top." i The game may develop Into * passing duel betweep Shiner and Pete Liske, currently ranked as the 10th best passer:in the coun try. i I Shiner's favorite | targets this year have been wi fig back Tom Brown, halfback Ernie Arizzi land end Mik« Funk. BROWN IS the nation's fourth ; best pass receiver with 34 catches i.for 431 yards. The Maryland speedster has caught 28 Snintfr heaves in the last four games. Arizzi has replaced Funk as the second best Tkrp receiver.. Arizzi has 18 grabs for 203 yards' while Funk has picked up 193 yards on 18 catches;. Funk has been nursing a pulled, muscle and probably won't start this afternoon, but the will »«• some action on offertse. . Liske’s favorite receivers hav* been Junior Powell and th* Lions’ two Atl-Amejrican candi dates—halfbuck Roger Kochman and end Dave Robinson. Powell, the right halfback on (■Continued on page tight) fish of sufficient oxygen to live, Daivs .said. The area which it td be fertilized by the effluent is a 180-acre tract of woods north of Beater Stadium. Davis said the long-range ob jective involved is to.develon this area into a conservation anti rec reation area withirj 25 years. Tentative plan* melijtle a scries .of ponds for boating! and fishing and ust of forest lands for pic-. nicking/hiking and hunting. •TWO YEARS of planning went into the project, with ithe Colleges of Agriculture, Engineering: and Mineral Industries contributing to the overall program. [ Davis said that Richard R. Pari/ek, assistant professor of geology, spent a year; in studying the geologic formation under the forest urea to determine where the water table lay and what wa* the danger of fertilizer nutrient* getting into wells in, the area. Davis said (hat lhe (vatcr would not be polluted by these malenals evon Plough il might,appear pol luti d. These materials! do not con t.im dr case-causing baetcria. Phi Sig Delta Retains Trophy Phi Stgrna Delta fraternity re tained its trophy for "postering, the most school spirit” Irist mgh(?by having the most cars, in the''pre rally motorcade.' Donald Morabito, ! master of ceremonies for the I Block “S” Club sponsored pep , rally, said the fraternity turned but with 18 i.irs. Two other groups had on* car earh. • - i The University Clde Club, di rected by Frank Guild, sang "Hail to the Lions,” “Hail, Hail Penn sylvania State,” and [other Penn State -long* during the 35-rninute rally for the Penn State. Maryland game tomorrow in Beaver Sta dium. Bloek "S” President Paul Krow estimated that 250 to 300 people attended the rally. [Cheerleader Lillian Lei* attributed the rela tively small turn-out! of student* to the "bigtweexend and the cold weather." ! FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers