VGL. 63. N0.’40 UNIVERSITY PARK. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. USG To Hear Rules Study Bill By JOAN HARTMAN and MEL AXILBUND The Undergraduate Student Government may undertake an evaluation of Senate rules and. regulations if i Congress passes a bill on tonight’s agenda proposing such a move. The meeting will be held at 8 in 203 Hetzel Union Build- ing. Harry Grace (town) has proposed that such an evaluation be made by a committee consist ing of at least one congressman from the fraternity, town and women’s and men’s residence areas. The committee would not have to be limited to just a con gressman from these four areas, Grace said last night. •■THE IDEA for a student review of the regulations, Grace said, evolved from discussions with President Eric A. Walker, Robert G. Bernreuter, special assistant to the President for student affairs and Laurence H. Lattman, chair man of the Senate Committee on Student Affairs., ; Grace said that Walker told him that he is willing to give students and student government all the control they can possibly be given on student affairs. Grace added, that' Walker also said that qjiything which concerns the Uni versity is the President’s concern and anything which concerns the student is their’s. 1 The bill also calls for the com mittee to make, at the end of its Thanksgiving Bus Plans Cancelled As Company Changes Agreement ' Ths plans of the Transporta tion Committee to operate re duced rate bus service to four major cities for the Thanksgiving vacation have fallen through. The project was called ofi after consultation with representatives of GreyhtwSnd Bus yester day, David Wasson, chairman of the Undergraduate Student Gov ernment. committee, said last night. . .. ! In a telephone conversation jwith H. W. Harvey, Pittsburgh [district sales manager for the I company, Wasson was informed .that the company could not grant the terms earlier agreed upon. Wasson said Harvey had agreed verbally that for each bus with a minimum of 25 persons going BLOODMOBILE: Edward Seidman (Sth-psychology-Philadel phia) give* blood in the Hetsel Union card room. Today is lha lasi day iha Redi Cross Bloodmobila will b* stationed is tha HUB. Students ever 21 and those under 21 with parental re leases mar still sign,up to donate. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE evaluation, recommendations on changes it considers necessary. Excluded from the agenda pre pared by the Rules Committee is an_amendment to the USG con stitution which establishes a pro cedure for approval of ; student government on an all-university level. Alan White (town), who sub mitted the draft amendment to the committee last week, said last night the committee decided not to put it on the agenda because of questions about the wording of the amendment. KATHERINE JOHNSON (South), Rules Committed chair man, would neither confirm nor deny this last night. ■ White said he would again try to have the amendment brought up next week. In addition to Grace's bill, eight others • have been placed on to night’s agenda. There are also four reports scheduled to be giv-. en ana fourteen appointments slated for consideration. to a single destination, a charge of about 2.5 cents per mile would be yi effect. The students would have been able to return on any Greyhound bus. Plans to run busses to the foot- ball game with the University of Pittsburgh, Nov. 24, have not been cancelled, Wasson said, but the bus company has changed its earlier agreement for this trip also. Originally, the company said students could return to the Uni versity on any scheduled-., bus. Now, students will have to re turn immediately after the game. Wasson said he was told the company would try to meet the agreed arrangements at a later date, but that a company policy change is involved. NOV. 14. 1962 FIVE CENTS RICHARD TRIGIUO . . . receircs 37. votes Trigilio Wins TIM Seat On Congress Richard Trigilio (Sth-tecon-, dary education-Erie) was elect-' ed to a seat on the Under graduate Student Government Congress yesterday. Trigilio. who is also a mem ber of the Town Independent Men's- Council, was elected with 37 votes! A total of 91 town! area students voted In the special election. Bert Kapinus (lOih-businesi adxuiniitxation-Boilon. Pa.) and Robert'Osman (Bib-busi ness. adminislzation-Marble head.' Mass.) received 28 and 26 voles respectively. There were no write-in votes cast Assuming each of the six town i congressmen represents a Rill 500 students, the area has a - population of 3.000. Based, on this figure. Trigilio captured about 1.2 per cent of the votes which could have been cast in the election. The 91 votes which were cast rep resent 3 per cent of the town population. Future Jr. Prom Termed "Unlikely" • The ; probability 'of another Junior Prom is very unlikely, Guy Jackson, Junior Prom Committee Chairman, sa|d last night. In a reporti to the Junior Class Advisory Board, Jackson cited the loss of class money in fi nancing the prom and the lack of attendance as major reasons for abandoning the idea ' of a Junior -Prom. '» A report will be made to next year’s advisory board recommend ing that the existing type of Junior Prom be discontinued, he said. "This year’s prom cost the Junior class approximately $l,OOO, because of the 500 tickets required for the class to break even, only 230 were sold.” ’• Construction To Begin Soon On Pollock , East Dormitories of the new| academic services architects, Thalheimer'and Wietz building, whtfch will house eight of. Philadelphia, also., designed administrative divisions of the I Chamber*, the horticulture build- University. will be somewhere! ings near Tyson and the electrical south of Wagner. I engineering extension. 1 The units using the building The first meeting* with the will be moved from their present architects will be held' Nov. 28 to scattered locations in central determine a design timetable, he campus' to east campus because said they do not require easy access by students, he said. THE DIVISION? which will occupy the new building include the controller, admissions, regis trar, housing assignment, pur chasing, general services, corre spondence instruction iand the In stitute of Public Safety. I Wiegand said ' the' building’s By TONY FOGLIO Construction on the four new residence halls in the Pollock and East Halls areas.will begin as soon as the contractors establish field offices ; and organize the work, Walter H. Wiegand, direc tor of physcial plant, said yester day. He said the architects, contrac tors and representatives from his office - met, last week for the first construction conference. . THE TWO new East Halls resi dence halls will be built east of the dining hall, and the two in the Pollock area will be built south of the Pollock dining area. Wiegand said the tentative site Red Offer Includes Guantanamo Base UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — Cuba yesterday countered U.S. that reportedly injected the Gu Soviet negotiations on the Cubi The formula apparently s; first Deputy Premier Anastas with Prime Minister Fidel Casl The proposals were offere that the International Committee of the Red Cross had abandoned plans to arrange inspection of Cuba-bound shipping. One immediate result seen here -5 BULLETIN HAVANA Security of ficials claimed -yesterday they bad captured the leader of a band of heavily armed. U.S.- trained saboteurs who landed in Cuba the weekend before President Kennedy clamped his arms embargo on the island. An attempt to sabotage the big copper mines of Mataham bre was smashed, the official report said, even though the invaders succeeded in planting demolition charges. The charges were discovered before they went off. Miguel Angel Orosco Crespo who reportedly once served as an army lieutenant under for mer President Fulgeneio Batis ta, was identified as leader of the* band. He was described as "principal chief - of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency." was continuance of the U.S. naval blockade of Cuba for an undeter mined period. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov and Cuban Ambassador Carlos Lechuga laid the new proposals before Acting Secretary-General U Thant in a Deans Act Telephone Action will be taken against students who misuse pay tele phones in residence halls, Dean of Women Dorothy J. Lipp and Dean of Men Frank J. Simes said yesterday. MALE RESIDENTS who owe charges for long-distance calls will be required to pay their bills to The Bell Telephone Co. be fore November 23. Simes said. After that date, the company wilt submit to the dean of msgt’s office a list of those students who still owe bills. The staff wilMhen contact each of the .students in dividual! y, Simes explained. Women residents discovered misusing, residence hall phonrs will be disciplined through the Association of Women Students' judicial system. The Dean of Women’s office has not taken action against women students who owe charges for long-distance calls, Dean Lipp said. The problem is being dis cussed in staff meetings, she added. The company officials" will eventually remove the pay tele- The Soviet Union and , demands with new yuoposals ontanamo naval base Into U.S.- n crisis. :emmed from the talks Soviet I. Mikoyan has been holding ro in Havana. d as wdrd came from Geneva private meeting of an hour and 15 minutes. - LATER KUZNETSOV callecTon U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Steven son at the U.S. mission to the United Nations Kuznetsov re quested the meeting m order to present the proposals to Steven son, special advisor John J. Mc- Cloy. and US. Ambassador Charles W. Yost. The three U.S. representatives conferred Monday in-. Washington with President Kennedy. The United Stales wns rcportedNhold ing firm to ils demandjt that the Soviet Union pull its jet bombers out of Cuba and abide by promises to permit verification of the dismantling of Soviet missile bases. Reliable sources said there was nothing especially new in the So viet-Cuban formula and it seemed certain the United Stntes would reject it. The informants described the proposals ns based on the 'five demands made earlier by Castro. These included withdrawal of the United States from Guantanamo, end to the U.S. arms block ade. and adoption of measures by the United States to--prevent hos tile activity against Cuba by exile groups. MIKOYAN. who has been in Havana . for nearly two weeks. (Continued on page two} To Halt Misuse phones from the icsidence hulls if the bills are not paid, Simes said. The inmpanv's proposed ac tion would only apply to pay telephone booths and not to ihe toll-frcr* wall telephones' in the residence halls He said the problem has arisen breause many students, make •orfg distance rnl)« fmm- residence hall pay telephones .and walk away without paying full toll I'harges. THESE STUDENTS have also ignored subsequent bills from the telephone enrnpnny, Simes added. Concerning action to be taken by his office,, Simes said that under normnl conditions the Uni versity cannot serve as a collec tion agency for non-campus or ganizations. "Special consideration must be given to Bell Telephone, how ever, since they offer a service to resident students,” he ex plained. In cases where the validity of the charges is questionable. Simes urged students to contact the company's local office at 116 E. College Ave. Candidate Test Tonight Candidal** tot tba editorial staff of Tha Daily Collegian will meet af 0:30 tot right in 134 Sackalt. At this lima the final last lor promotion to lb* Board of Inlanns-diala Reporters will b« grree
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers