The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 12, 1963, Image 1

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VOL: 63; No. 55
Iffkials - Hit
Mere4l6's
:,:loogonists,
• OXFORD, Miss..(N) —,Univer
sity of Mississippi officials warned
yesterday they will not• tolerate
further demonstrations in the
campus cafeteria against Negro
student James H. Meredith.
After three nights when stu
dents hooted and jeered at Mere
dith as he ate supper at the cafe
teria, Dean of . Students L. L. Love
told the student body that further
outbreaks in the cafeteria will
lead to, disciplinary action.
THE STATEMENT was issued
hours after an unnamed Justice
Department spokesman in Wash
ington accused university officials
of failing to maintain proper dis
cipline on campus.
The nightly demonstrations
started after Meredith announced
he would not return to the uni
versity campus unless the atmos
phere becomes "more conducive
to learning."' •
•
• -
The • Student -Judicial Council
held a special meeting to consid-.
er charges against a student ap
prehended after Thursday night's
demonstration.
Shortly before 5 p.m. opening
of the cafeteria last night, campus
security- police turned out in re
inforced numbers.
Whe - n- Meredith entered the
cafeteria last night and took a
table, most of the.students - picked
up their trays and walked out
silently.
Campus police and school offi
cials checked the identification
cards of all students including
Meredith—as they entered. Per
sons standing around the build
ing were dispersed.
Earlier, Chancellor J. D. Wil
liams, speaking out at about the
same time as the Justice Depart
runt spokesman was criticizing
the university, said the latest se
ries .of demonstrations was Mere
dith's own fault.
"WE WERE getting.along quiet
ly and normally," said Williams,
"then Meredith saw fit to give a
press conference in which he im
plied that students and others
were not doing what they should
to make his life what he thought
it should be."
A Department of Justiee
spokesman said much of Mere
dith's campus harassment was
due to Ole Miss adminNtrators
being unable or unwilling ,to deal
with aggressive white students,_
Cold - Arlic Air Penetrates Stale;,
Major Winter Storm May Arrive
Considerable weather activity
Is expected in Pennsylvania this
weekend.
The bitterly cold arctic air that
has covered the western two
thirds of the nationlfor the - past
few days has been reluctant to
move eastward. However, colder
air began filtering into the Com
monwealth late yesterday and
temperatures are expected to re
Coltrane Tickets
Will Go on Sale
Tickets will go on sale Monday
for • the - Jazz .Club concert • fea
' turing John Coltrane, which is
slated for 8 gm. Friday in Schwab.
Coltrane, tenor saxophonist who
has 'been making jazz history in
the last fe* years with his strik
ing and controversial sounds, has
been featured with Dizzy Gilespiet
Theloneous Monk - and Miles Da
yis, whose group he 'left in 1960.
Tickets will be available Mon
day through Friday at the Hetzel
Union desk at $1.50 for non
members, and at-the club booth
on the ground floor of the HUB
at V ,00 for Jazz Club members.
UNIVERSITY PARK; PA., SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 12. 1963
• —Ctillegion Photo by Bill Goodman
INTERLANDIA DANCES: Colorfully-clad folk dancers swing
through the Helsel Union ballroorn, as students learn . and per
form,dances of many lands. Vyis Balijus, nationally linown folk
dalq a teacher,.was featured in last night's program.
USG Court Studies
Grade Requirements
The grade point' average re
quirement for students seeking to
serve on the Undergraduate Stu
dent Government Congress will
be studied by the USG Suprerne
Court and USG's By-Laws Com
mittee, USG President Dea ri
Wharton said Thursday night.
In announcing officially to Con
gress that there are six • vacant
congressional seats, he said that
the average requirement is un
clear.
A by-laws provision in the USG
constitution - states: "There shall be
a- previous term average of 2:0 and
a 2.0 All-University average for
all U.S.G.• officers."
THE STIPULATION of a pre
vious term. aVerage requirement
is apparently not in agreement
with action - taken March 8, 1962,
when Congress adopted a 2.0, All-
University average requirement
for inclusion in the by-laws. At
that time Congress defeated a
motion calling- for a 2.0 previous
term average, Wharton. said.
main near or below freezing . to
day.
High temperatures from Color
ado to Minnesota failed to climb
above 10 below zero yesterday as
one of the coldest air masses to
affect the United States in recent
years covered the region.
Yesterday morning it fell to zero
in Texas and to 40 below zero in
Wyoming and Montana.
Snow fell yesterday.-over most
of the central states.
The weekend weather locally is
dependent upon the development
of • a storm in the south-central
states. With extremely cold air
to the north and abnormally warm
and humid air to the • south, the
ingredients are present for a
major winter storm.
THE FORECAST for this area
calls for occasional rain,, sleet and
snow today changing to snow to
night: Snow should change to
snow flurries tomorrow. There is
some chance .of heavy snow late
today or tonight. '
' It will be colder`today and be-
come' much colder tonight and
tomorrow_ A high temperature of
33 is forecast for today and•a low
of 20 is indicated for tonight.
Tomorrow's high will - be about
25 degrees,
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
Although none of the students
who held the now vacant seats
would be affected by deleting the
previous term- requirement from
the constitution, Wharton said- he
wanted the court to clarify the
issue so that it will not be ques
tioned in the future.
Congress was asked also to con
sider a method for reducing the
number of ele'ctions during the
year. Funds which could be used
in other ways are now spent on
special- elections caused by res
ignations or academic
ity, he said.
LAST TERM two special elec
tions were held in addition to the
fall congressional election.
The election of new congress
men for this term has been set for
Jan. 22. Self-nominating petitions
will be available .at the Hetzel
Union desk Monday and must be
returned by Wednesday. Students
in campus ,residence areas Tided
100 signatures on their petitions.
Town area residents need-75.
There are two vacant seats in
the West Halls area, two in North
Halls, one in Nittany and one in
town.
LIBERAL AND Campus par
ties will nominate candidates for
some or all of the seats in the
election, according to their chair
men. Liberal Party has scheduled
a meeting at 7 p.m. Sunday in 111
Boucke. Campus Party will meet
at 7,p.m. Tuesday in 119 Osmond.
University Party will support
bu t not nominate candidates,
Francis Conte, party chairman,
said.
Formal Rush Nears Completion
Women participating in rush
will sign coffee hour invitations
between 10 a.m. and 12:45 this
morning in the Hetzel Union main
lounge. Each rushee is permitted
to attend two coffee hours, which
will be held Sunday night.
Marjorie Zelko, . Panhel rush
•chairman, said sorority girls and
rushees are to continue observing
strict silence.
"WE'RE URGING sororities to
maintain strict silence because in
fractions will be reported," she
said.
Rush chairmen may pick up
coffee hour invitations at 10 p.m.
tomorrow in 105 Old Main. '
'The coffee hours, to be held
from 6:15-7:45 p.m. and 8:30-
10:00 tomorrow evening, will be
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ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga (il 3 ) President -Moire
Tshombe of Katanga has offered to yield peacefully to the
IThited Nations if he is permitted to remain as a provincial
president in a unified Congo, Western diplomats reported
yesterday.
Diplomatic sources said Tshombe's offer included free
entry for the U.N.- into his last
stronghold, at Kolwezi, and free
U.N. movement elsewhere in the
province.
The informants said Tshombe
wants the United Nations to put
the proposal to the central Congo
lese government, which - would
have to agree to such an arrange
ment.
However, Tshombe left Elisa
bethville late yesterday on an un
disclosed mission.
THE INFORMANTS said re
ports from Elisabethville indicated
Tshombe headed either toward
Kolwezi, his stronghold 150 miles
northwest of Elisabethville, or to
ward the British-controlled Rho
desias.
Tshombe would be beyond U.N.
control in either Kolwezi or the
Rhodesias and free to effect the
scorched earth policy he had
threatened to wage against the
U.N. .military takeover of Ka
tanga'.
Officials at U.N. headquarters
in New York said late yesterday
they had no word of Tshombe's re
ported peace, offer, but a U.N.
spokesman said the United Na
tions would not relay it to the
Leopoldville government. Th e
United Nations takes the position
that such matters are the concern
only of the Congolese people,
However, it was believed that
Tshombe's reported offer could
reach Leopoldville through, other
channels if necessary.
TSHOMBE'S reported of fe r
came as U.N. troops moved slowly
on the road from Jadotville to
ward Kolwezi, a hydroelectric and
mining center 150 miles northwest
of Elisabethville. Tshombe's mer
cenaries and gendarmerie there
had threatened to destroy mining
and power installations if the
U.N. tried to take the town.
A South African Press Associa
tion report received in Johannes
burg said Tshombe spoke to his
ministers in Kolwezi yesterday
morning over the Union Miniere
radio and was believed to have
asked them to suspend scorched
earth plans and meet him in Elis
abethville for truce talks with the
U.N.
The diplomatic informants said
Tshombe also wants the central
government to grant full pardons
to his' cabinet ministers and offi
cials and to grant amnesty to his
army and police. _
The informants also indicted
that Tshombe is prepared to ac
cept a' lesser' role than the one
assigned to him before — he took
Katanga out of the Congo shortly
after Congolese independence 30
months ago.
formal. Sorority women will pick
up rushees at their residence halls
or homes, and fraternity men will
drive the women to the sorority
suites. Rushees will be escorted
into the suites by sorority rnem
bers.'
Dress for coffee hours is formal
and favors will be given to
rushees at the sorority suites. Re
freshments will be served.
Rushees will be escorted back
to their rooms after the first cof
fee hour. After the second coffee
hour, rushees will go to, their
rush guide. meeting places, where
they will sign preferentials be
tween 10:15 and 11 p.m. All in
vitations will be placed in sealed
envelopes before being handed in
to rush guides.
Life Insurance
For Students
Enroi is 352
Enrollment in the life insur
ance plan administered by Uni
versity Life Plans, Inc., reached
592 students yesterday and addi
tional applications mailed during
the official enrollment period are
expected to be received next
week.
Enrollment in the plan on an
individual basis will continue
throughodt the term, George
Bonsai, managing director of the
company, said yesterday.
university Life- Plans mailed
information about the policy, en
dorsed by the Undergraduate
Student Government, to all stu
dents' homes.
BONSAL SAID he attributed
the high degree of response to
thellasic need filled by the policy
and to the endorsement given the
plan by USG.
New students entering the Uni
versity at the start of spring term
will receive the plan's brochure
several weeks after registration,
he said. All students will again
be contacted by mail after fall
term registration is complete and
directories are available.
The plan basically offers a
$lO,OOO term life insurance policy
to students aged 16 to 23 for $2O
per year. Life Assurance Com
pany of Pennsylvania underwrites
the plan.
Full House Seen
For Artists Series
Gyorgy Sebok, pianist, and
Janos Starker, cellist, will perform
at 8:30 tonight in Schwab in the
first University Artists Series pre
sentation of the term.'
All student and general admis
sion tickets have been distributed,
but thOse without tickets may fill
any seats remaining empty at 8:26
p.m. Student ticket holders must
also present matriculation cards
to be admitted.
Violinist Ruggiero Ricci will
perform in the second Artists
Series presentation of the term•at
8:30 p.m. Thursday in Schwab.
Student tickets will be distributed
from 1:30-5 p.m. Monday and
from 9 a.m.-noon and 1-5 p.m.
Tuesday thrdugh Thursday at the
Hetzel Union desk.
At this' time, rush guides will
bring preferential cards to
Grange. Sororities will bring their
preferential lists Monday morn
ing.
RUSHEES' preferential cards
and sorority preferential lists will
then be processed and matched
by IBM machine. Sororities may
pick up pledge class lists at 4 p.m.
Monday in 729 Grange.
Ribboning ceremonies will be
held at 7 p.m. Monday in the
sorority suites. Strict silence is
not to be broken until this time.
All sororities may take 25
pledges, Miss Zelko said. Addi
tional pledges may be taken dur
ing open bidding if the sorority
quota -is not 25, including March
graduates.
FIVE CENTS