ulltf latli] VOL: 63;.N0..61 UNIVERSITY PARK, PA;, TUESDAY MORNING. JANUARY 22.. 1963 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiumiiiiiiitiiu USG Congressional NITTANY Paul D. Miller (1 seat) NORTH William Keller (2 seats ) Thomas Lavey TOWN Dan Smichnick Whiton Paine John Blish (1 seat) WEST (2 seats) nisimmmimimimimmiiEmimimiimmmimimmmiimmimimimimimiimmimmmimimiimmmmimiis Four Areas Will Elect Six Congressmen Today Six new congressmen will be elected today to fill the partially depleted ranks of the Undergrad uate Student Government Con gress. ' Male residents In North Halls, Nittany and West Halls may vote from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. in their respective dining areas. . Town residents may cast their ballots 4 Placed on Suspended Suspension For Fighting, Creating Disturbance Four students were placed on suspended suspension until the end of fall term 1963 by the Senate Subcommittee on Discipline .at a hearing Jan. 18, Daniel R. Leasure, assistant dean of men, said yes terday.- THE STUDENTS were disci plined for fighting and creating a disturbance in State College early Sunday -morning, Jan. 13. This penalty gives the Dean of Men the authority to suspend these students, if any further mis conduct occurs, without further action by the subcommittee. The offenders include three fifth term students, one in education, one in business administration and one in the Division of Counseling, and an eighth .term student in liberal arts, Leasure said.' . The fight began when two of the students become involved in an argument. after leaving their dates at a residence hall. They left campus and met a short time later downtown, where they were joined by three others. One was i —Collegian Photo by Den Coleman : A LABOR OF LOVE:'John Collrane, face beaded with peispira . lion, demonstrates, the feeling he puts into his avant-garde music which has drawn both adulation and disdain. His quartet per formed in Schwab Saturday evening. ~ (See Related Story bn Page 3) _ FOR A BETTER PENN STATE CAMPUS (nomination) James Anzalone David Kopp Gregory Young William Kakareka Ronald Ence from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m, at a booth on the ground floor of the Hetzel Union Building. Students should vote in the election as a means of demoh strating their interest in. student government, USG President Dean Wharton said yesterday. PARTY SLATES of nominated or endorsed candidates for the special congressional elections not a student at the University' The non-student pulled a knife. At this time two of* the students left the group and began'walking down East College Ave. The other three caught up with them, and the fight occurred on the Little Mall. A passer-by notified State Col lege police and the fight was stopped. The non-student, the only one injured, was taken to the Ritenour Health Center for treat ment. In a hearing Jan. 16, an eighth term student in the Division of Counseling was also placed on suspended suspension by the senate subcommittee until the end of winter term 1963 for fraudulant use of the telephone, Leasure said. The student had been making long distance- calls and charging them to a local merchant without the merchant’s knowledge. When the merchant was billed'for calls he had not made, he notified police, who traced the calls and obtained the name of the person placing them. (Mtojtatt Candidates LIBERAL ( nomination ) UNIVERSITY ( endorsement) Lawrence Linder INDEPENDENT David Tanner were rounded out Sunday , night when University Party endorsed three men. These candidates ' are ' John Blish, town; Lawrence Linder, North Halls; and Gregory Young, West Halls. • • Campus Party nominated candi dates for each of the six vacant seats_ last week, and Liberal Party had named men for two of the seats earlier. Campus Party nominees are Paul D. Miller, Nittany; William Keller and Thomas Lavey, North Halls; Dan Smichnick, town; and James Anzalone and Ronald Ence, West Halls, THOSE NOMINATED by Lib eral Party are David Kopp, West Halls and Whiton Paine, town. . David Tanner, Nittany, and William Kakareka, West Halls, are running independently. At its meeting' Sunday, Univer sity Party unanimously elected David Wasson (Bth-business administration-New Kensington) party vice chairman and Judy Leitzow (sth-secondary education- Montclair,' N.J.) secretary of the party. Party Chairman Francis Conte appointed six administrative vice chairmen who -will ■ co-ordinate campaigning in their respective areas for the All-University elec tions this spring. The six coordinators are Paula Narbut and Margo Foth, women on campus; Theodore Wilkes, men on. campus; Alfred Migliac cio and Thomas-Mayer, fraterni ties; and Robert Osman, town residents. George Jackson, Elections Com mission chairman, said last night that candidates must submit their expense accounts by 4 p.m. today at 202.HU8. Walker Says University Image Important for Appropriations By WINNIE BOYLE The image .of the University contributes either to the ease or to the, difficulty of getting ade quate' appropriations from the state legislature, President Eric A. Walker, said yesterday. He spoke at the .weekly meeting' of the Faculty- Luncheon Club. IN DISCUSSING the image, Walker said that for about the first 50 years the University was known as a “cow college.” The next 25, he said, was the “country club era." ' 1 For the next quarter of a cen tury, people -thought of the Uni versity as a “big octupus,” be cause. of its expansion program, -Walker said. In this period, he added. “We made more enemies than friends.” During the last 23 years up until the present time, .Walker, said the University is viewed Chinese i Expected FIVE CENTS WASHINGTON (JP) — Criss crossing statements from East and West yesterday on atomic testing underscored the com plexity of the task confronting U.S. and Soviet negotiators in new test-ban talks starting here today. The State Department gave out a U.S. estimate that Communist China- is working on nuclear weaponry and may be able to explode an atomic device late this year or in 1964. IN PROVIDING this estimate, press official Lincoln White added “there would, of course, be a long gap” between the first Red Chi nese A-explosion and Chinese “de velopment of a meaningful nucle ar capability.” Other U.S. authorities suggested that, even with a successful un clear explosion this -year, Peking would require many more years —perhaps a decade—to perfect an atomic weapons system. In Moscow, Foreign Minister Andrei Gormyko said the Soviet .Union would agree to no more than three on-site inspections a year for policing of a nuclear test ban. Gromykp also said that France, now building an atomic force, must come under the ban, too. U.S. authorities said three on the-spot inspections a year would not be enough, with current sci entific know-how, to make sure Problem Holds Up Froth Charter Okay By ROCHELLE MICHAELS A final decision on whether to .recommend chartering a new campus humor magazine will probably not be reached today at the meeting of the Committee on Student Organizations, George L. Donovan, chairman, said yes terday. DONOVAN SAID a “major problem” had developed in the proposed constitution for a new Froth which no one on his com mittee had anticipated. He de clined to disclose the difficulty, saying that he preferred to let his committee discuss it first. After last Thursday’s committee meeting with the sponsors of the new humor magazine, Donovan had said that he “hoped” a final recommendation would be reached today. He then explained that the only hold-up might be the preparation of a statement of reasoning behind whatever de cision was reached. The constitution was submitted to the committee by Andrea Buscanics, co-editor of the former Penn Stale Froth. That magazine lost its charter last Oct. 23 due with mixed ideas depending upon the age of the viewer. In discussing the University’s relationship with other Pennsyl vania colleges and universities Walker told the faculty that one of the. causes of tension and mis understanding is the competition for. the best students: He also listed competition for athletes as a cause although he said this has almost disappeared. “Some tensions are born of jealousy," he said, because the University has a most beautiful campus, many grants,, out standing research- and professors of high- stature. . Admitting that the University in some , instances of causing- tension and misunder standing, Walker cited one in stance in the recent past. The University was asked by a company in a town where an other college is located to offer a graduate course. After checking A-Test in Year that Russia in not setting off sneak underground explosions. WHILE NOT naming a specific minimum U.S. requirement for on-site inspections, they pointed out that the United States already has lowered its demands from 20 inspections annually to 8-JO. The Kremlin, they said, must up its offer, .Moscow earlier had agreed to inspection in principle, offering around three inspections annual ly. However, after resuming nu clear tests in the fall of 1961, the Soviets rejected inspections altogether. The latest Soviet turn about came in an exchange of let ters between Khrushchev and President Kennedy, released Sun day. THE BRITISH, represented by Ambassador David Ormsby Gore, will sit in on today’s negotia tions because Western policymak ers think the Russians may want to talk seriously. U.S. strategists figure that Khrushchev may be more inter ested now in a test ban accord with the West because of the br i n k-of-war experience over Cuba and because of the Soviet dispute with Communist China. Also, they calcuate that Rus sian miliary men have had their fill of atomic testing for the time being and are not now pressing the Kremlin to ditch test-ban ne gotiations., The Soviets have con ducted-an announced 71 tests and the United States 95 since Russia broke the moratorium in Septem ber 1961. to a failure on the part of those concerned to live up to its con stitution. The document is being spon sored by a special committee formed by the Undergraduate Student Government Congress immediately after the charter revocation. USG President Dean Wharton chairs that committee. At the meeting of Donovan’s group last Thursday, Miss Busca nics and Wharton were present to clarify certain sections of the constitution. Later that day, Miss Buscanics submitted a revised version of the document to Dono van. THE CHANGES made last week were mostly concerned with grammar and sentence structure, Miss Buscanics said. After the meeting she said that she wel comed the suggestions because they tended to "strengthen what I wanted to be a strong constitu tion.” If Donovan’s committee recom mends chartering the magazine, the constitution will go to the Administrative Committee on Student Affairs for final approval or rejection. with the president of the college in the area, and receiving his okay, plus accepting his offer to use his college’s facilities, the course was offered. NOT ONLY did the University use the college’s room, "but we also hired one of their professors,” Walker said. When the president of the college called and objected, saying all the University was doing was collecting the fee, Walker said “All I could do was apologize.” Some of the rewarding times of being president, Walker said, however, are those when other presidents commend the Univer sity on its progress. IFC Meeting The Interfraternity Council met last night to discuss the hazing policy passed last week. It was a closed session.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers