• —Collegian Photo by Ken Pianklin NEW GOVERNOR: William W. Scranton is sworn in as - governor of Pennsylvania by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Bell, Jr. in the State Farm Show =Arena yesterday as his wife Watches. Former - governor David L. LawrenFe and his wife stand behind Scranton. Scranton Takes Office, Predicts State Progress By "ANN PALMER Editor HARRISBURG The 103rd chief executive of Pennsylvania, William Warren Scranton, was in augurated here yesterday amidst spontaneous cheers frbm informal delegations of the state's 67 coun ties. To the crowd of 12,000 which packed the state Farm Show Arena, Scranton said: "Pennsyl vania is on the march. Toward greatness for herself. Toward pro gress. for her people." THE OATH of office was ad ministered to the 45-year-old Re publican shortly after noon by. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania John C. Bell, Jr. after which Scranton moved to the podium to deliver a brief and general address. The new governor challenged the government and citizens of Pennsylvania to ,look realistically at the problems which face them and to work relentlessly to solve them. "Resources and advantages and spirit must be put to work. Human courage and human hope must drive the motors of human effort and-human toil. "s bM E OF Pennsylvania's problems can be solved soon . . . others can only-be solved in time. But nothing will happen, nothing Wise Submits PAIFC Plan By PENNY WATSON A constitution for a proposed -Pennsylvania Association of Inter fraternity Councils has been writ ten by Wilmer E. Wise, dean of men in charge of fraternity af fairs. - The prDpOsed association would deal with Interfraternity Council problems on the local level and help bridge the gap between the National Interfraternity Confer ence and the individual councils, IFC officials said yesterday. Foundation To Sponsor Pianist In Artists Series Appearance The. Ford Foundation has al located-One of the 45 performances in its Program for Concert Soloists to the Artists and Lecture Series. Abbey Simon; pianist and win ner of the Nainnberg Award, will present the concert in February, 1964, Nina Brown, Artists Series administrator, said yesterday. AT THE CONCERT, Simon will prerriiere a composition written by - Ania Fuleihan, former director of the Beirut, Lebanon Conserva tory. Mrs. Brown explained that 15 artists' were selected by the Ford Foundation to participate in the program. Each of them received a $5,000. fellowship. Each of the -artists chose an will move, unless the labor begins today." _ Scranton's normally low-pitched voice reached a peak of emotion only once during the five-minute address when he said: "Don't tell me that - Pennsylvania can't lick its problems, because I know it can. Spontaneous applause fol lowed. - Scranton closed his remarks with words of hope for this state: "With the help of God let us embrace the 'challenge, let us welcome the labor. Let us stand tall . . . as Pennsylvanians. Let us walk proudly . . as Pennsyl vanians." REPUBLICAN Governor Scran ton succeeds Democrat David L. Lawrence, 73, who will soon leave his Pittsburgh home to accept a position as-chairman of President Kennedy's commission on fair housing in Washington. Following the formal inaugural ceremonies, visitors - watched • a four-hour .parade which featured bands from schools throughout the state and a presentation of Military forces. In attendance at Scranton's in auguration were five form e r Pennsylvania governors Arthur H. James, James H. Duff, Edward Martin, Lawrence 4nd Chief Jus tice Bell, who served•as governor for 19 days. WISE SAID he and Charles Meyn, dean of men at Bticknell UniversitY, got some of the ideas for the association while attend ing the annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Association of Stu dent Personnel Administrators recently. - - The NIC fulfills an important purpose as a large-scale directive body, but a smaller group could deal more effectively with the special problems shared by Penn sylvania councils, Peter Lock- American composer - to write a piece specifically for him to per form as a part of the - program, Mrs. Brown said. THREE RECITALS are being scheduled by the foundatien for each of the 15 artists. Each of them will appear at the - Grace Rainey Rodgers Auditorium of the New,_York Metropolitan .Mu seuni of - Art and at two education al institutions. Selection of theirtists was made by a confidential committee of foundation consultants who chose from among 231 nominated artists. Nominations were made by com posers, conductors, critics' and others engaged._professionally - in the field of music, Mrs., Brown said. Ito VOL. 63, No. 57 UNIVERSITY PARK. PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JAN. 16. 1963 FIVE CENTS Tshombe Gives Secessionist LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo(l1 3 ) —Katanga President Moise Tsh ombe gave up his secessionist fight yesterday. He quickly won assurance of a general amnesty that he had asked as his only con dition for Congo unity under U.N. Secretary-General U Thant's re conciliation plan. "We are ready . to proclaim im mediately before the world that Katanga's secession is ended, to allow United Nations troops free dom of movement and to return to Elisabethville to supervise the methods of applying U Thant's plan," Tshombe announced at Kol wezi, his emergency capital. He pledged loyal cooperation with the United Nations. THANT,_pften skeptical of Tsh ombe's declarations in the past, welcomed this one. In New York; he expressed hope that it will be put into effect promptly and fully "and thus bring an end to the con flict and. destruction which have been needlessly experienced in .. • Katanga." Tshoin.be's capitulation came in the 19th day of a U.N.-Katanga war, the third such conflict since he led his copper-rich province from the Congo after Belgium freed this former colony in 1960. Western diplomatic and economic pressures contributed to his down fall. THERE WAS no immediate as surance that -military operations will end. Tshombe's white soldiers still talked of a lost skirmish Monday against a U.N. column 60 miles east of Kolwezi. But they appeared to feel the shooting was as good as over. Nine cleared out of Kolwezi to Northern Rhodesia. They probably will be followed by others. A New York spokesman for the United Nations said U.N. military action at the moment was at a standstill, but the troops were pre paring for the time when they could take over Kolwezi—"peace fully, hope." Bitterness of the -long struggle spilled over into a riot by 1,000 Congolese youth against the Brit- hart, public relations chairman said. At present, he said, the NIC is not broken down into regions, so the PAIFC would be unique. One problem with which the PAIFC could deal would concern th e Pennsylvania legislature, Lockhart said. Individual coun cils, especially those of state uni versities, are affected by state laws, he explained. THE NEXT step in setting up the association, Wise said, is to mail copies of the constitution to the approximately 40 other coun cils in _Pennsylvania, and appoint an IFC member to contact them for their opinions on the PAIFC. Once contacts are made, he said, councils could decide when and where to meet to consider the constitution. ,The purposes of PAIFC, as stated by the constitution, are to foster better relations between the member councils, exchange ideas and promote the best in terests of the member councils. , The . association would meet `once a year, hosted by different member councils do a rotational basis. Each delegation, consisting of a minimum of three repre sentatives from the member coun cils, would be entitled to one vote in PAIFC matters. Drop-Add Deadline- - Today is the last day_of the ten-day period In which stu dents may drop-add courses. , 4 ,1 1 i - , k .4\ t 41, •". W. xi . 1 It, .. so r 111 'rig' a irt '. ------.1,- • FOR A BETTER PENN STATE ish Embassy in Leopoldville. Accusing Britain of supporting Tshombe in his _months of maneu vering against reunification, they stoned the embassy, smashed its windows, ripped out telephone lines and spilled files into the street. Three staff members were injured by flying glass. BRITISH Ambassador Sir Derek Riches protested strongly to both Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula and Foreign Minister Justin Bomboko. Bomboko dropped by later to sur- Re-listing In Journ An evaluation team will be sent to the University's School of Journalism next fall by the American Council on Education for Journalism, which dropped Penn State from its list of accredited schools in 1961. A four-man group from the council visited the University In February 1961, but was unable to evaluate the School of Journal ism at that time because of a de partment conflict over the struc ture and direction of the school. Although dropping the school from its accredited list of about 45 schools, the council made it clear that the action was not to be thought of as a reflection on the journalism program at the University. HERBERT BRUCKER, council president, said in a- letter to Presi dent Eric A. Walker in May 1961: "ACEJ wishes me to make it clear that this action is not an adverse vote on journalism instruction at Penn State so much as a re flection of the inability to reach a decision, because of the situa tion at the time of the visit." A confidential evaluation made of the School of Journalism in December 1961 by two distin guished journalism deans (Fred Siebert, of the College of Com munication Arts at Michigan State University and Norval Neil Luxon, of the .School of Journal ism at the University of North Carolina) prompted the journal ism faculty to request through President Walker that an other evaluating . team be sent by the ACEJ. The earliest date con venient to the council was the fall of 1963. H. EUGENE GOODWIN, direc tor of the School of Journalism, said ,that today the journalism faculty is in basic agreement on the objectives of the journalism program, although this has not restricted normal departmental debate and discussion about courses and curriculums. He said he feels that the school is now giving its students a "gen uinely liberal education putting the press, broadcasting and ad vertising into their proper social, economic, historical - and philo sophical contexts." Panhel Outlines PI 17 Sororities Eligib The Panhellenic Council last night outlined plans for open bid ding for all sororities who have not filled their quotas. All women wishing to partici pate in open bidding who have not previously participated in rush activities and those who dropped out of rush last term must register from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow or Friday at 129 Grange. Transcripts must be presented at registration, and all women who have not previously partici pated in rush must pay a fee of $-1,, Open contacts between rushees and sorority wom?ri ere rcrmittr-1 p Fi • ht vey the damage and express re grets. Tshombe showed little emotion as he read a three-page communi que to a small group of newsmen in Kolwezi, a strategic mining center 150 miles northwest of Elisabethville. He said he and his ministers had decided to give up to avoid fur ther destruction that would plunge the Congolese people into misery for "the profit of foreign inter ests." Sought School Full Slate Nominated By Campus ' Seven new aspirants entered the race for \ vacant seats on the Undergraduate Student Govern ment Congress yesterday. Campus Party, with only two registered party members at its meeting, nominated candidates for all six of the vacant seats last night. The Campus Party nominees are: West Halls, James Anzalone (2nd-pre-medicine-Wyoming) and Ronald Ence (2nd-pre-law-Wind ber); North Halls, William Keller (2nd - liberal arts - Northport, N.Y.) and Thomas Lavey (2nd division of counseling-Westfield, N.J.); Nittany, Paul D. Miller (Bth-pre-law-Sunbury); and town, Danny Smichnick (Bth-agricul tural and biological sciences-Mo nongahela). MILLER previously had taken out a self-nominating petition. In addition, a town area resi dent and a West Halls resident secured self-nominating petitions. Robert Osman (9th-business ad ministration-Marblehead, Mass.) is the town student and Gregory Young (4th-engineering-Doyles town) is the West Halls resident. Self-nominating petitions must be returned by 5 p.m. today at the Hetzel Union desk. All candidates must submit aiall term transcript and a list of their activities, plus a photograph, if possihle, by the same deadline at 202 HUB. Campaigning begins at 8 a.m. Friday and elections will be held Tuesday, • •ns for Open Bids, e to Participate until bidg are issued. Strict silence must be maintained after bids are given out. Bids may be issued Tuesday and rushees must submit a reply to the Panhellenic' Office within one week after receiving a bid. Sororities eligible to open bid are: Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Epsi lon Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Alpha Sigma Alpha, Chi Omega, Delta Phi Epsilon, Delta Zeta, lota Alpha Pi, Phi Mu, Phi Sig ma Sigma, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Delta Tau,Sigma Sigma Sigma, Theta Phi Alpha and Zeta Tau Alpha.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers