Weather Forecast: Simny, Warmer VOL. 63. No. 35 aiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiimHiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiimmiiimiiiimiiiiiu | Elections Roundu Returns Show Mixed Results By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As returrts poured in from a crucial off-year election. Democrats clinched early control, of the U.S. Senate as ex pected. They elected such men as the young Kennedy clans man, Edward M., in Massachusetts and Abraham A. Ribicoff in Connecticut. As for the House .the GOP scored some upsets but it was too early to say that-their gains in that chamber would be more than.inarginal. Here's the way the score stood in the big battle for con tro)sf Congress: '_.l SENATE Democrats, ip. a breeze, which was inevitable. They had such a big carry-dvbr njiang'in .tjhat ,they heeded only eight victories to get the 51 sCatS necessary to retain control. These came early, with the rejection of Sen. J. W. Ful bright of Arkansas the Clincher. He beat Dr. Kenneth G. Jones (R), orthopedic idol of rightists. HOUSE Still much in doubt, but .with Republican gains seeming to fall short of a turnover. The GOP turned up with thpfre victories over Democratic incumbents and led in nine other races while Democrats were ahead in eight races where Republicans now hold office. The guess: That Republicans would make Headway in the House, but woujd not pick up anything near the 44 ad ditional seats they need to wrest control from the Democrats. Brown Leads in Early California Returns SAN FRANClSCO—Democratic Ciov. Edmund G. Brown took an early dead over Republican Richard M. Nixon last night, as California voters turned out in what could be record numbers for an off-year election. The surprisingly heavy vote in a state with a 4-3 Demo cratic edge in registration bolstered Brown’s hopes of turn ing back the former vice president’s bid for a political come back —* ' Returns from 775 of 31,820 precincts, including 380 in complete of Los Angeles’ 1i,980| showed Brown 42,008 and 31,654. , In Los Angeles, with 40 per cent of the state’s voters, the turnout was estimated at 80 to 84 per cent. The 1958 record was 79 per-cent,- -and forecasts this-year were only 70 to 75 per .cent. Democrats outnumbed Republicans in the county by more-than 500,000. * Kennedy, Wins Big in Massachusettes BOSTON Edward M. Kennedy, youngest brother of President John F. Kennedy, last night won his brother’s former seat in the U.S. Senate, on the basis of early returns which showed him building an insurmountable, lead. Kennedy built up a 5-2 lead s the early returns rolled In, with his home town of Boston giving him a better than 3-1 lead over Republican George Cabot Lodge. Before an hour had passed after the polls closed, it became’apparent the Kennedy magic was working for Ted Kennedy as it had for his oldest brother in his Massachusetts election contests. NvY. Reflects Rockefeller ALBANY, N.Y. Nelson A. Rockefeller won re election Tuesday night over Democrat Robert M. Morgenthau and was automatically established as a prospective candidate for the Republican nomination for president in 1964. Rockefeller beat Democratic nominee Robert M. Morgen thau handily. Political professionals were speculating on his final margin—whether it would increase or fall short of his 573,034 plurality in 1958. ■ Lausehe, Rhodes Score Ohio Wins COLUMBUS Democratic U.S. Senator Frank J. Laus che was re-elected yesterday, but Republican James A. Rhodes defeated Democratic Gov. Michael V. DiSalle in his bid for a second term. Rhodes rode a crest of rur£\J votes to defeat- DiSalle, one of the early supporters of President Kennedy in 1960. Lausche pulled way ahead of Republican John Marshall; Briley of Toledo early in the evening and was never headed; by the Republican. * I In the race for Congressman-at-large, it appeared that; Robert Taft, Jr., son of the late senator, had won by a large niargit}.-u>vej his Democratic opponent Richard D. Kennedy of Cleveland. Romney Apparent Winner In Michigan DETROIT George Romney cut sharply into tradition ally Democratic Wayne County Tuesday night and was headed for election as Michigan’s first Republican governor in 14 y*« -s - ’ . i s , • Romney, 55-year-old former American Corp. pres- ident, apparently defeated incumbent G«v- John B. Swainson with a margin of some 40 per cent in industrial Wavne'Coun ty, Detroit. Political observers estimated Romney needed 34 per cent of the total Wayne County vote to be successful in his first bid for an administrative state office. • Ribicoff Wins Senate Seat HARTFORD Connecticut voters elected Abraham Ribi coff, former Kennedy Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare to the US. Senate yesterday. ' Ribicoff easily defeated his Republican opponent Horace Seeley-Brown. Wiley Defeated in Wisconsin MILWAUKEE Sen. Alexander Wiley, the senior-' Re publican, m the U S. Senate, was defeated in his bid for an unprecedented fifth term from Wisconsin by Democratic Gov. Gaylord Nelson in Tuesday's election. Connally Wins Texaf Governorship DALLAS An avalanche of votes swept Democrat John Coimally into the Texas governor's mansion Tuesday night, destroying hopes of the GOP to seal Jack Cox as the state's first Republican chief executive since reconstruction. Daily @ (Holbgtatt Scranton Elected 41st Governor; Clark Leads in Senatorial Race Early Tallies Give Democrat Slim Edge . PHILADELPHIA (/P) While Republicans celebrated their return to the governor’s mansion after eight years of Democratic occupancy last night, the Democrats confidently predicted incumbent Clark would hold on to defeat Republi can James Van Zandt in the U.S. Senate battle. Clark, helped by a 180,000 vote majority iri Philadelphia, and a 66,000 edge in Allegheny County, including Pittsburgh, said abqutmidnightrhe was making noclaims. He tvas count ing on his big city margins to stave off the ajmost certain gains by Van Zandt in the predominant ly Republican areas still to be heard from Tor'senator, in 6,117 percincts, the vole was: . Clark. D, 1,494,817 Van-Zandt,R, 1,370,44? George T> Bloom,' Republican state chairman, claimed victory for 'the entire Republican state wide ticket with little more than one-third of the vote counted. "I have a .feeling af this mo ment that the entire ticket, in cluding U, S. Rep. James E. Van Zandt will be elected,” Bloom said, bubbling with confidence. Bloom made his statement with 3,700 of the state’s 9,200 precincts reporting unofficial returns. They showed that Rep. James E. Van Zandt 'was trailing Democratic incumbent Joseph S. Clark by 41,000. . 0 "We will do well 1 up state to easily .wipe' out Clark’s margin in Philadelphia,” Bloom said. REPUBLICANS, for almost a century ,the dominant party in this state, hoped to end an eight year Democratic hold on the state- HOuse and oust incumbent Joseph S. Clerk-from thc-Scr.etC: ■■■ Clark had been elected to the Senate in 1956 by 1 a little over 17,000 votes, in the face of- a 600,000 vote! landslide by Eisen hower in hiS second term bid. It was not until'l96o that Dem ocrats outregistcred Republicans in - this. state. This time, out of 5,673,497 registered voters,. , the hkd an edge of slight ly less than 200,000. President Kennedy, before the Cuban situation ended 'his cam paigning,-came into the state sev eral times to stump for Clark and Dilworth. CLARK offered himself as an all-out supporter of Kennedy, who! carried the state in 1960 by 116,- 326. He said Van Zandt never sponsored a major bill during 20 years in Congress. Van Zandt de scribed Clark as being in the left ,\ving of the Democratic parly and. USG Congressmen to Consider $14,900 For Proposed Inter-Class. Budget -fes By JOAN HARTMAN I Debate on the bill, which is field near Ladakh, high in the • mci AYiintmn sponsored by Michael Dzvomk Himalayan frontier, a Defense ' . »nd mtl i(fraternity) and Harry/ Dugan-Ministry spokesman said yester- A proposed $14,900 inter-class'(West), may center aro'und the|day. budget will be presented to the issue.of USQ endorsement rather! The government .announced it Undergraduate Student Govern-jthan the merits of this specific ; planned to recall nearly 7,000 In ment-Congress-aUj£_meeting to-'plan. ,dian troops serving overseas un night. | USG now endorses an acctdcHLder the-thl'fc-flafr—lt-also-sard-it USG President Dean. Whartonjand sickness policy. This policy,-will beidn teaching villagers to called the budget non-controver--however, differs from the pro-'shoot, as a back line of defense sial yesterday and said that itsjposed life plan in that it was de- against Communist intruders. | 'adoption should be routine. -signed specifically for University; For the first time since the Red! I LAST YEAR'S Congress, how-students, while the life plan ts Chinese opened their military; |ever, passed a budget only after;available to anyone. .drives to occupy-disputed border 'John Witmer (fraternity), presi-; Other, business on the congrcs- teirjtories, their forces have made ;dfijt pro tempore, questioned the sional agenda is approval of a'spearhead thrusts into territory [portion of-it which dealt-with number of 'committee appoint-*not previously ‘ claimed 'by thej scholarships for USG executives.ments. The following chairmen Peiping regime. I |and twelve $5O floating scholar- are to be appointed: Margaret One of these thrusts was made; ships. ' iMurphey (Pollock), By-Laws:into an abandoned Indian mili-: ; The proposed scholarship allo-jCommittec; Gary Smith, Bicvcle.tary base that controls northern; Ications are the same as those ap-'Committee; and Sharon Hall- Ladakh, endangering the entire; Sproved m the last budget. The'mann, Committee on Commlttees.Tndia'n position on the western; scholarships are USG president— Rules'Committee appointments, front. $4OO, vice president—slso, secro- which were announced yesterday,. The spokesman:reported anoth-; tary-treasurer—s27s, and $6OO for, also have to be approyed. Those er incursion into Indian territory the floating scholarships., Appointed are Harry Grace 850 miles to the Southeast of La- Coftgress will also consider a itawnL-BaTUara' Baer( Simmons- dakh, Qn the other end of the, bill calling for it to recommend McElwain). Fred Good (frater- Himalayan front. But, he‘ said, the and endorse a student life insur- nity! and-Dugan. Chinese force was driven back ance plan. The plan concerned is CONGRESS WILL also hear a across the Tibetan border, administered by University Life bill proposing the establishment, The Chinese appeared to be Plans, Inc., and is underwritten of a Service Committee to ayt as seeking to occupy Chushul air by Life Assurance Co. of Penn- a liason between welfare institu- field near Ladakh. Informed sylvania.- ~~',tions in ' the State College area sources saidthey-had moved up ‘ The policy provides $lO,OOO and campus groups which .wish artillery, tanks and large numbers' coverage for $2O per year. to serve them. of troops. j U.N. Cuban Negotiations Fail ' UNITED NATIONS. NY. (AP) moving on" But he stressed that pleting agreement for the ship in -The United Slates and the So- nothing constructive came out of -'.Potion. , _ , viet Union railed last night ma .. was understood that many Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan met marathon negotiating session to points remained to be settled be- with Cuban Prime Minister Fidel resolve’ mounting difficulties over fore agreement can be reached Castro for the fourth day in a repioval-of Soviet offensive weap- on the inspection issue. row. on? from Cuba. . .Additional U.S.-Soviet..j\efiotia- . There was no official indication - U S. Ambassador Adbi E-Ste- tions were expected but no dates of whartook place, but the num venson and Soviet Deputy Foreign were set for new meetings. The ber of Mikoyan-Cast.ro talks and Minister Vasily V Kuznetsov con- exchange was the longest to'date the secrecy around them ipdi ferred at the U S mission for 5 in current negotiations. cated the Soviet troubleshooter hours and 20 minutes. , .At UN. headquarters.' Acting was having difficulty getting Cas- STEVENSON SAID afterwards SwieUrv-General U Thant _met tro to accept on-site inspection of the talks were "not fruitful.” with officials of the International the Soviet missile withdrawal. No details of the discussions Red Cross on arrangements for AUTHORITATIVE source? in were made public but it was ap- m.sptvtion by '.heir organization of Washington said the United States parent the ifmted Slide* was ny Soviet _ has to'.d tne Russian* they cannot creasing pressure on the. Soviet Thar.t saw Paul Ruegger./fcr-'use'"troubles' With Castr-T "ss an- Union to abide oy its. pledge to mer president of the International excuse fqr J not carrying out rentove Soviet missiles m Cuba and'Committee of the Red Cross, and Khrushchec !s p'tdge 'The .Soviet dismantle missive bases under'm- Melchior Borsi.nger, secretary of Union has stated that the promise tematiohal inspection . the ICRC executive bear'd, who (till. but have pointed out Stesenson siid. "The ipt.iii.les flew here from. Geneva Thant ddficultse.- in dealing wv.h tlie are moving out. -The lifts ire .was 1 reported ol coax-'- Cufcae psaae snniiter. UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 7. 1962 said he lacked firmness and fore sight on issues such as Cuba. Both Clark and Dilworth arc former mayors T of Philadelphia. Clark wetft homg to bed at midnight'after.commenting, "I’m not claiming' anything.” Clark, facing a tough race . against Republican Rep. James E. I Van Zandt, told a newsman, "I; (have nothing more to say until I : make a concession or until Van;.’ 'Zandt concedes.” IN 1956, when Clark unseated Republican Sen. James Duff by!" 18.000 .votes, Clark .went home tolT bed hours before it was clear, he!!;! had won. ! " Voting was heavy as the state ~ in addition to electing a governor!; and senator, voted for 27 con- 11 gressmen and various state and local officials. •’ Clear and cold weather aided": the turnout, with tin- morning l '! rush, in some areas exceeding the;, record .numbef in the 1960 Presi-!: dential balloting. , The polls opened at 7 a.m. and 1 closed at 8 p.m. I • Republicans Poll Victory in Centre County Elections Republican candidates for of-! cratic and 25 Republican senators.; fices of district and county scope; Fulmer, of State College, will swept to victory yesterday with! serve his third term as this coun-, DaniekA. Bailey defeating Demo-jty’s choice for the State House of cratic incumbent Jo Hays for a Representatives, seat in the State Senate from the Schneobeli, of Williamsport, and 34th senatorial district. currently a member of the House, According to unofficial report, Hays- was-defcatcd- in Clearfield! Cqunly, Philipsburg and ,Belle-] fonte. ‘ ; ” ' i At 12:30 a.m., Eugene M. Fulmer which now includes Centre and had'rallied 12,120 votes against nine other counties. Centre Coun- Democratic William L.. Miller’s ty was formerly in the 20th Dis -7,873 for the seat in Pennsyl- trict represented by James E. vaniaV Holise'of ReprcserilfftlVCS."Van Zandt. - - Republican Herman T. Schnee- Democratic County Chairman beli.led Democrat -William W. Charles Emeribk said last night Litke 11,613 to 8,903 for represen- after the totals from $9 precincts tative to U.S. Congress from the had been tallied: “Right now it 17th District. i - - ■ " | Bailey's victory over Hays is i significant because it could give' the Republican party a'majority-; in the State Senate which has [been stalemated With’ 25 Denio-" FOR A BETTER PENN STATE Late Centre County Returns Record Sweeps by State GOP Candidates, of the Republican party for state and XJ.S. Senate offices made a clean sweep in Centre County as 12:30 a.m. tallies for 59 out of>69 prCtincts in the county-gave all GOP candidates substantial margins of votes over their Democratic ppponents. William W. Scranton polled 13.429 votes as opposed to Democratic candidate Richardson Dilworth's' 6,492. „yan-Zandt polled 12,535 votes against Demo cratic incuntbent Sen. Joseph S. ClarVs 7,555 votes. In the race, for .Secretary of Internal Affairs, Audrey B. Kelley, Republican, led with 10,945 votes Democratic Genevieve Blatt’s 8,396. ' . Samuel J. Roberts, Republican, carried . 12,579 votes against Democratic Earl S. Heim's 7,448 for Suprfeme Court Justice. t- "" . apparently lias succeeded in' re -gainifl£his_seat for the U.S.-House of Representatives. He will ■ lijp resent the expanded~l7th _ district Red Forces Gross Over JOSEPH S. CLARK WILLIAM W. SCRANTON doesn’t look like we're going to; • Harry Bind, Rrpublica-n Reg-; win a thing m this area." ister of Wills for Centre County,! • Fulmer said last night: “I never expressed surprise thut Bailey had know'how many votes I’ll get and beaten Hays. I never guess." , I H. Bencher Chormbury, Rcpubll- He said, however! that he had can County Chairman and depart fclt that Bailey would win overiment head for mineral- prepara- Havs. itlon at the University, said he 6. H. McCormick, Democratic, had expected the : race between CountyCommissioner_and_chair-[BailcyandHays to be closer than man~of-Centre County Elections] it was. Commission said: "It is significant . According to Burd and William that Hays didn’t run very much] Dulaney, treasurer for Citizens for over the registered Democratic] Clark-Dilworth, the election re vote anywhere in State College.]suits in Centre County will mean Although lam a-Democrat I knew! that Emerick will probably be Bailey would win." lout of a job. —CollrffUn Photo hr Tom Brown? CASTS HIS BALLOT James G. Hogan. Stale College resident, emerges from a makeshift voting booth at Alpha Tire Company yesterday after casting his ballot in the 1962 state election. Seat* ed are Mrs. H. F. Reed, majority clerk, and Paul Holizman, minority inspector. Senate Okays Bill On Voluntary ROTC By not taking action vcrtciday.ia more rational choice could be the Univeiaity Senate j?ave final 'nadc „, ,0l ~ ... He cited the first three weeks chinery to make it a more ade appiocal to the bill p ss of the term as a prcfeiable time,qyate tool in Retting things done month which .recommended a f,, r the prugiom to ■b- > held. Pres- iyi terms of the 20th century's voluntary'Reserve Officer Tram-ident Walker referred ' the pro- problems,” Corter said. m.R Corps program .posal to the Educational Policy. "Both candidates know this, hut Yesterday’s meeting was the , I h * M ‘ hlary Af- once again they must rely pu la,. onnortunitv for a motion to Committee. , i manly on legislative action, last opportunity tor a motion o - The other two communications, reconsider the bill. lnc- bi 11,,,.,., 1 Record Low Rrvrr ta l«-J? r .?i ! ! Kf ntie- Dean of the College of Fynartarl Toc/av vsJn.f ‘ £. nß wv t Business- Administration tffron h‘ I 000/ sJim 104 J 9 marein at*the Oeto- le,ters **P re »* c<l approval of the. Near record low temperatures bill l are expected in Pennsylvania ■ , Whartons letter was in behalf early this morning as the center The Senate did receive three of th p USG Congress and it said of an arctic air maw moves corpmunications concerning the that that bodv felt the hill was through the state, recent passage, however. passed with the best interests of, A noticeable warming trend The fir-t was from Leon'Cur- the student- in mind. will be evident today'm the wake low, senator from .the Colfege of MacKEHZIE wrote on behalf,of of the arctic air Southerly winds Education"He proposed a the. bu-mess.administration fac-end sunny irkics should aid to study of a mandatory military ulty who had’ fornially approved day's upward temperature trend, orientation program 'be referred and endorsed tljc bill. A high of 55 is expected, to the Senate Educational Policy In other business five new *en-, Mostly cloudy slfies, showers. committee • . —a tor* were by Robert and cool weather ace-forecast for . THROyGH truth a program, G Bernreutcr, secretary of the tonight! The low 'Will be about which may include compulsory Senate. _ '3-3 degrees. attendance at lecture, Three of the senators were sp- Showers or anovy flurries, by various" survive offxiak' and omnu-d to fill unexpired term* wtrdv a ,'4; colder weather are rue. ft rente, with incpnhng. to ieaves-of—atier.ce. Two predicted for- tomorrow and a men, Gorlov, s letter stated, thal.wett newly appointed. high of. 45 is likely. Di I worth Concedes n 12 a.m. Statement PHILADELPHIA (/P) Republican William W. Scranton as elected governor of Pennsylvania.last night. With little more than half the state's 9,200 precincts united. Scranton claimed a victory that appeared inevitable most from the start’ of ballot counting, and his opponent, ichardson Dilworth conceded. The ScrftntotVvictor-y-wasmade.possible.by .thefirst term mgressman’s ability to rut into the custothary big city Derho ■atic margins, especially in Philadelphia where he cam* igned on alleged corruption; Di!worth’s administration dur- r a second term ns mayor of the ite's largest city. * With 6.092 of lh« iitiicVS.SCO counties reported the. vole was: Dilworth. D. 1,329.079 Scranton, R. 1,517,249 Pennsylvania voters in an ob viously statewide crush of ticket splitting, reversed the roles they cast in similar elections four years ago, when they elected a Demo cratic governor, David L. Law rence, and a Republican senator, Hugh Scott. The ticket splitting also showed: in the races for lieutenant gover-j nor, secretary of internal affaire -ijandva scat on the state- supreme ■•• court bench. The Republicans led -v for lHsutenant governor and the high court, but incumbent Seore f tary of Internal Affairs Genevieve Blatt, a 1 Democrat, bucked the tide and held a slight load. ’ j DILWORTH,. 64-ycar-old cx ■;!Marine, said in a telegram to ]!Sc'ranton, the -multi-millionaire ' ifirst term congressman, "Con igratulations, I hope you will be evaluation of USG Exotutlve —see Page 4 able to continue moving the state forward," ’ Republican Raymond P. Shafer, 45-year-old stHte representative, led his Democratic opponent, Ste phen McCann for lieutenant gov ernor, and Judge Samuel Rob erts. 55-year-old president judge of Erie County Orphans Court, was in front or Democrat Earl S. Keim, of Westmoreland County [for a .seat on the state supreme I court. Scranton-and Dilworth, both Yale graduates, engaged in : a bit tor, name-calling campaign. Both agreed unemployment' in this state with almost 7 per cent of jthe labor force out of work jwHS the main issue. Scranton blamed it on policies of the last two state administrations. Dil worth on policies of Republican governors. ANOTHER issue was allega tions of corruption in Philadelphia government during Dilworth’s ad ministration. Dilworth conceded, there was wrong-doing, but said' his administration uncovered it, cleaned it up and punished the guilty. No one ever said Dilworth profited personally, but Scrhnton kept hammering the theme it hap pened during Dihvorth’s adminis tration. \ Gov. David L. Lawrence, a Democrat, was not eligible under the stale constitution to succeed himself. His election in 1958 marked the first time in state history - Demjv?r*t succeeded a Democrat as governor and only the fourth time a Democrat won the governorship 'since Civil War days. .. ’ THE VOTER turnout was re ported running very high in pre jdominanlly Republican areas in Pittsburgh, ana in tho OOP su burbs around the Democratic stronghold of lh Philadelphia, balloting was heavy in the northeast where Rep. William Green, Jr., the Demo cratic chairman, holds sway. The Democrats hold-a. 235,000 regis tration" edge in the Btate's biggest •it" orter Sees tote Money s Problem ic. new have work cut out for him in secur rcvenue (or government pro and distributing the money s to satisfy most people. Lee Sorter, assistant professor of leal science, said • yesterday re the elections results were 'd. 'here-is nothing new about problem," Corter said. “To ■dy it the new.governor mu«t the state the kind of leader ‘ it 'would have- to have—in r to move. 'he biggest job by far ia where are going to get the added inue for the services that the le of the state demand,” he ext it must be determined to divide that revenue in terms of a priority jiat of state cervices, like education and wel fare. "BUT IF THE governor doesn’t get more money, what are we going to do with that which we do get? This is where the real tough going will be.” A second problem facing the new governor is that now the state constitution makes it very difficult to get additional,revenue from certain sources, Corter said. “Both candidates are committed to update the constitution,” he noted, "hut they will have to assert a terrific amount of leader ship because the legislature is likely to be conservative. “Finally,'he mu;i continue the reorganization of government ma- FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers