■ j: : . _ « j . . ; -| . | ■ *£: ea,sh (jjjj# U&tly (Efllfrgtatt o^?S, yi VOL 63. No. 37 Kennedy Signs Incorrect Version Of Bill into Law WASHINGTON!.^)—II seems to happen about once a cent ury. President Kennedy has signed into law a kill that was not the correct version of a bill that passed Congress. .When it was placed before him on Oct. 23. the bill was attested to by the speaker of the House and the president of the Senate as being a prop erly enrolled copy .of the bill passed by Congress. But it wasn't. , j The bill establishes a Court of General Sessions in the Dis trict of Columbia. Originally, it provided that the court should have subpoena power within a 100-mile radius. It was amended to limit’ the power to a radius of 25 miles, however. 1 But the bill the President got said 100 miles, not 25. ; In spile of the mistake, the bill is now law. To change it. Congress must pass a new law when it convenes in. January. The last lime such' a thing happened was in the 191 h cent ury. ; Town Election Results Debated by Congressmen Town area congressmen and Elections Commission Chairman George Jackson debated at length the question of the correct num ber of town representatives Wednesday night. The debate occurred on the floor at the Undergraduate Stu dent Government 1 Congress meet ing after Jackson had presented his report on the recent USG elections. Alan White (town) began the debate when he asked Jackson why Allan Wolf, towif congress man-elect, was : not given the seat vacated when George Gordon're signed last week. ■ JACKSON replied that Wolf had been elected to the seventh seat, and it is the sixth seat which Is vacant. ; The debate then centered around three seta of area popu lation figures which Jackson said he has obtained and his decision to have .eight men elected but only six', men seated until ;the official, figures'hre available. George Rathmell (town) said town population last year re quired eight seats and it seemed unlikely that there would be a Transportation Committee Schedules Chartered Bus Service To 4 Cities : Chartered non-stop, busses to four and possibly five population centers are tentatively scheduled by the Transportation Committee to leave the University the day before Thanksgiving. .The committee, fn a report to the Undergraduate Student Gov ernment Congress Wednesday night, announced that .service is planned to Philadelphia, Pitts burgh, Harrisburg and New York City. The committee chairman, David Wasson, said last night that service is also being con sidered to Scranton. J ; The following details were an nounced at the meeting: i i • Busses will leave parking lot 50 at 5:30 p.m. Nov/ 2\. j • Students must purchase round-trip tickets in advance. | •The return trip may be made oh any scheduled Greyhound bus leaving from the point to which the student purchased his ticket. j • Fares will be about 25' per cent less than usual, or approxi mately 2.5 cents per mile. 1 Wasson said ticket sales will probably begin in the Hetzel Un ion Euilding Tuesday. UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 9. 1962 *'<■ i’ , ‘ FACE-LIFTING: Although the renovation of the Slock Pavilion into a lhealre-in-the-round will not be completed before Feb ruary- plans to schedule the first of the arena's theatre_arls pro ductions for early May haye not been changed. See related story on Page 11 decrease of 1,000 students living downtown this year. There is an indication, Jackson answered, that last year a num ber of fraternity men not living in fraternity houses were includ ed in the town population. These men should not be included in the town representation, Jackson said. , BURT KAPLAN, the other town congressman-elect, asked if it was “ethical to give town men eight votes in the election and have them expect.eight seats and then seat only six.” *T guess its just a matter of whose ethics you use,” Jackson retorted. “I don’t understand how i you could run an election for seats which don’t exist," Kaplan coun tered. USG President Dean Wharton then admonished Congress oh the length of its discussion. I "This is what we get our name for, discussing something that is in the past. You can’t- get the figures from Housing now as to how many men live downtown,” he said. j - ITS A MATTER, of opinion, Wharton continued, whether an During the report of -the Stu dent Handbook .editors,- Alan White (town) requested permis sion to read a column written by Joel Myers, editorial editor of The Daily Collegian, entitled “The Hollow Men.” MORRIS BAKER. Congress chairman and USG vice president, ruled White’s request out of or der at that time. White again attempted to read -the column, which facetiously criticized- Con gress, after the, business on Con gressional agenda had been com pleted. Again Baker ruled White out of order. . White appealed the decision of the chair, but Congress upheld Baker's ruling by a vote of 20 to e. i : ■ f , Congress also approved six ap pointngehts which had been pre viously-annouficed, and a seventh which was changed at the begin ning of the meeting. Herbert Wit mer was appointed chairman of the Committee on Committees which was formed last week, rather than J Sharon Kallmann, who was originally slated for the position. . FOR A BETTER PENN STATE election is run with the lowest or highest figures obtained as the base for the number of repre sentatives for the town area. On a motion made by Michael Dzvonik (fraternity) Congress ended debate and then accepted Jackson’s report. Warmer Weather, Showers Forecast . Rain is expected in this area today and tonight, but partial clearing tomorrow morning should allow the Penn State- West Virginia football game to be played under partly sunny skies. The’ rain that was forecast to begin early today is associated with an intensifying storm that is moving .northeastward along the East coast. Appreciable rainfall amounts are predicted for most of the eastern states during the next 24 to 36 hours. Temperatures both at the sur face and aloft appear warm enough to prevent any snow from falling in Central Pennsylvania. However, snow may be mixed with the rain in some of the high er mountain regions of northern Pennsylvania and New York. A trend towards milder tem peratures Is expected to begin tomorrow. Afternoon tempera tures may come close to 50 de grees. Company May Remove Phones By STEVE CIMBALA Officials of the Bell Telephone Company have threatened to re-' move pay telephones from Uni versity men’s and women’s dorm itories, Ken Hershberger, vice president of the Men's Residence; Council, said at Wednesday’s meeting. This action may be taken be cause many students have not been paying full charges, for long distance calls from these tele phones, he added. HE SAID in most cases a stu dent deposits the initial amount for a long-distance call, talks much longer than the alloted three-minute, period, and, after completing the call, walks away without paying the additional charges, t; In such! a situation, the com- Soviets Remove Arms from Cuba WASHINGTON (AP) The Defense Department reported last night all Soviet missile bases m Cuba have been dismantled and their nuclear rockets put aboard ships. This report was based on aerial reconnaissance and the depart ment said further verification of Soviet withdrawal of offensive arms is expected within 24 hours by US. warships' "close along side observation,” of the Soviet merchantmen outbound from Cuba. SHORTLY BEFORE the De fense Department announcement, the State Department had said the •nt-sea checking does not remove the need for on-site inspection in Cuba; to confirm that the nuclear threat to U.S. security has, indeed, been Yuliy eliminated. The Defense Department 'gave Ifirst j word of arrangements for | at-sea examinations Wednesday ; but did not say how it would be fdone: Yesterday's announcement .indicated it would be. by visual inspection from alongside, It'was added “it is understood the So viet vessels will cooperate in this procedure.” •' * Although the announcement spoke of along-side inspections, a Pentagon spokesman said the pos sibility of boarding the Soviet ves sels ;is not eliminated if that is deemed necessary. AT THE UNITED NATIONS. informed sources reported that the Soviet Union has told the United States that all missiles would be out of Cuba by Monday and there would be no need for inspection beyond that time. It was not clear whether this was merely informative or was intended by the • Russians as a deadline at which they want inspections at sea jo cease. The Pentagon reported that three Soviet ships presumably carrying nuclear rockets have been sighted outbound from Cuba GO P Liberal Trend Threatened The election of four .Republi can: governors in Michigan, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania may hurt the OOP’s chances of winning the 1964 presidential election if President Kennedy's popularity isn't reduced, Henry M. Albinski, associate professor of political. science, said last night.,., Albinski said there seems to be a trend in the Republican party toward a more liberal stand in domestic and foreign affairs. The younger generation within the party—men like Nelson Rocke feller and George Romney—are vastly different in their political viqws than the “Barry Gold waters,” he said. pany cannot bill the person who received the coll, since he did not agree to pay any charges. However, Hershberger said, the Students are “not getting away with anything." jWHEN A student leaves with out paying his additional' charges, the operator calls the party 'to whom the student was speaking and gets the student's name. Bell Telephone Inc. then bill*,the stu dent concerned. When students refuse to pay the company’s bill, Hershberger said, the situation is further com plicated. The company cannot extract delinquent bills from the students through University action, since the University commonly refuses to collect bills for private com panies, Hershberger said. : Consequently, Hershberger said, and they probably will be the first ones contacted by the l|.S. wai ships The Defense Depart ment said the first contact might come about daylight today. j The Department announcement said that in addition to the ii»e dium-range and intermediiite range rockets that have been spot ted in aerial pictures, imskde transporters'and other vital nick-, etry equipment' has been sheiv loaded aboard Soviet ships, tncljud mg some no.w at sea. i ' In .an impromptu news confer ence, Soviet Premier Khrushchev said the missiles "probably jnre on their way" back to the Soviet Union and mentioned a figure of 40. A U.S. Defense Department spokesman said yesterday "Vfe'U certainly .be looking for a-mini mum of 40 missiles” when the warships rendezvous with the So viet ‘merchantmen. AT THE TIME thehasty ejec tion of bases brought a limited naval arms blockade of Cuba blus’ aerial surveillance of the sites, the Defense Department had said at least 30 medium-range mobile rockets and intermediate-rang* ballistic missiles' were known-to be in Cuba. ; Although officials discount! re ports by Cuban refugees 'that many of the nurlear rockets! are beinß hidden in Cuban enves.J the State Department said the agree ment for examination of the mis sile ships at sea doesn't remove the necessity for ground inspec tion and verification in Cußa^ .THE SEA CHECK also j left unanswered the problem of at least a score of IL2B medium jet” bombers Moscow is known to have sent into Cuba. The U.S. position is that .tjjese 700 mile-range | air craft must go along with! the missiles. ’ -Pending satisfactory- answers to the inspection and bomber ques tions, the United States.is main taining its blockade. ! IF THE GOP were-to nominate one -of these liberal-leaning poli ticians in the coming presidential elections, there us a chance! that “he may be annihilated” if placed against a strong, popular Oppo nent such as President Kennedy, Albinski said. i The present trend . toward changing the popularly accepted* conservative image of the Jiarty may then be reversed (or fear o( another Ruch loss. He said the danger would be in confusing the opponent- with the liberal phil-, osophy. In that case, the GOP would run conservative candidates in the face of ■ a . continuously growing liberal electorate, Albinski said. the company mqirt take some gen eral recriminatory action, such as removal all pay telephones from University dormitories. BELL TELEPHONE officials do not intend to lose money on these telephone* and wilt remove them if students continue to re fuse to pay their bills, Hershber ger said. He told council members that the threatened company action would apply only to par tele phone booths and not to trie toll free wall telephones in the dormi tories. ; MKC president John Mikulak said all students who have out standing phone bills should pay them “immediately.’' He said he thought the company might, ! in addition to the possible removal of phones, contact privately tne ! individuals ovru-i-rned. FIVE CENTS
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