35#]: iaily ©CExilbgian | "3T VOL. 63. No. 62 . Capps Parties: Obtain 2 C@ngr@ss Seals Each In Special IJSC Elections Two candidates from each of the three campus political parties were elected to the Undergrad uate Student Government Con gress in the special election yes terday. Paul D. Miller, nominated by Campus Party, defeated David Tanner, an independent candi date, 93 to 80, for the Nittany area seat. Roger Smith (2nd-engi neering-Saylorsburg) received 27 -write-in votes. Two other candi dates each received one vote •apiece. , - -In the town area, Whiton Paine, nominated by Liberal Party,- re ceived 31' votes to defeat John Blish, endorsed by University Party, who received 19 votes. Blish also.was docked five per cent of his, votes for,failure to submit his. expense account.-The Campus- Party candidate, Daniel Smichnick, received six votes. , . Lawrence Linder,, endorsed by University Party,' and - Thomas Lavey, nominated by Campus Party, won the two seats in North Halls. Linder received 113. votes, but was docked five per cent be cause he failed to turn in his expense account. Lavey; captured 102 votes,, and the third candi date, William Keller also nomi nated by Campus Party, received 80 votes. Gregory Young, endorsed by University Party, and - 'David Kopp, nominated by Liberal Par ty, captured the two congres sional seats from the West' Halls area. Young received 101 votes, and Kopp received 68. William Kakareka, an independent’ candi date, was third with 60 votes. THE TWO Campus Party nomi nees, Ronald Ence and JamesAn zalone, received 32 ■ and 27 votes respectively. One candidate had two write-in: votes. - Elections Commission Chair man George Jackson said last night that he was surprised at the number that turned out for Congress To Meet USG May A request for an additional .voting student member on the Senate Subcommittee on Disci pline will be voted upon at 7:30 tonight by the Undergraduate Student Government Congress. ' Fred Good (fraternity), sponsor of the 1 bill, 'said last night that if a male student is being tried, the chairman of the tribunal which originally tried.the case should be 'the' additional committee mem- 'Greek System As A Whole' Selected for Contest's; Theme ' Displays featuring “the Greek system as.a whole” will be ap pearing in the windows of State [College merchants between Feb. *7 and 9 as the prelude to the 1963 [edition of Greek Week, Feb. 10-17.- Dorothy Samuels, and Harold .Ishler, Greek Week committee men in charge of the window , dis play and poster .contests; have ;mailed .copies of the contest rules ;to participating fraternities and sororities.. : ; . Greenhouses land suites were told to contact merchants on S. Allen ‘Street' between College' and Bea ver Avenues, and those on College -Avenue 1 betweeft Allen and Gar- Streets.. Most of! them' will UNIVERSITY PARK, Miller Linder the special election. Six hundred and four students voted in the election. About 35.8 percent, or 202 men voted in the Nittany area. rin North Halls, about'22,3 percent, or 169 stu dents, cast ballots. . West Halls area ' had 14.4 per cent, or 177 men, vote in the election. In the town-area, only 1.74 per cent, or 56 residents, turned out to cast their votes. Ask Discipline Post ber. If the case involves a coed, then the other member should be the chairman of Women’s Central Judicial. AT THE PRESENT time, there is only, one student voting mem ber on the subcommittee.. If it is a case involving a male-student, the USG President.is thestudent member, and if it is 'a case in volving a coed, the president of the Association of Women- Stu- conseiit to window displays, the co-chairmen-said. : : Greeks. entering the poster contest are to use the same theme, although last year’s theme, “Greeks Light the Way,” can also be included, they, said.' . The co-chairmen have,- limited posters, to 20 inches by 25 inches although' they -.may..be of any shape. Contest rules stipulate.that the posters must- be' two-dimen sional, with no projections from the drawings. Perspective drawl ing is permitted; The posters are to be-judged-oh originality, appeal, simplicity, re lationship, excellence of; design and lettering, and other , bases, including, “strict adherence to .the rules.”’ 1 ■ - ’ 1-’-f t.) ?.; - . ; FOR A BETTER PENN STATE PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. JANUARY 23, 1963 Results of Talks Remain Unknown WASHINGTON (/P)—East-West negotiators met for nearly four hours yesterday at the start of a new round of talks on a nuclear weapons test ban. No results were announced. A Soviet delegate, Nikolai Fe derenko, told newsmen only that the talks Would be resumed today. . U.S., British and Soviet repre sentatives are participating in the talks. Britain’s ambassador, Sir David Ofmsby Gore, likewise declined comment after the 3-hour, 50- minute secret session at the State Department. He said the negoti ators had agreed not to comment. WILLIAM C. FOSTER, U.S. disarmament chief, represented the United Slates. It was reported that President - Kennedy himself had wanted the conservations conducted in a nonpublic fashion in order to provide best chances for success in reaching agreement in the long-outstanding East-West issue; . Presidential science adviser Jerome 'B. Wiesner said ’in ad vance of the meeting that he be lieved the two sides were “within shooting distance” of an agree ment to outlaw atoihic weapons tests, Wiesner made that predic tion in a Voice of America radio interview. Wiesner said the real issue now is the gap between the yearly number of inspections which Khrushchev offered —two or three —and the U.S. demand, which has been 8 or 10. OTHER U.S. authorities mixed reservations with any optimism. They noted a wide range of other issues remain to be solved in the East - West negotiations ' which have been going on in one form or another since 1958. Lavey State Department press officer -Lincoln White touched on one of the issues when he was asked about Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko’s statement Monday that France must be in cluded in a test-ban pact. White noted that the treaty pro posed by the United States calls on the signatories “to cooperate dents is the student member. A*bill, co-sponsored by Thomas Musumeci (Polloclc-Lyons) and USG President Dean Wharton, calls for the establishment of a committee to measure the effects of.the term system. The committee, if established, will study student education, morale and other facets of col lege life. Special consideration will be made of the final exam periods and vacation periods. The com mittee will then make recommen dations to Congress and carry out actions deemed .necessary. - The third bill on the congres sional agenda proposes that USG condemn.the actions of the House Committee on Un-American Ac tivities', because of the commit tee’s /gross.lack of. regard for the rights of American citizens. THE-BILL, sponsored ..by Jon Geiger, (fraternity), also asks that a letter be written to Herman Schneebeli, representative from Pennsylvania’s 20th Congression al District. . : The lone appointment this week is George Gordon, former town area congressman, as chairman of the National and lnternational Af fairs Awareness Committee; Congress will also be asked to give its approval for the • USG Secretary-Treasurer to serve on. the Froth-Board, of Directors; Last week Congress approved the USG to - serve on.-the board; i in encouraging other states to participate." But he said the U.S. focus now is on seeking agreement among the atomic Big Three—the United Staes, Soviet Union, and. Britain. The State Department spokes man said, the United States cer tainly "would try to bring in France,” now vigorously pursuing independent atomic development, if an agreement is reached. And "by the same token we would undertake to urge” that the Rus sians bring in their Red Chinese English Department Stymies New Froth By WINNIE BOYLE and ROCHELLE MICHAELS - The refusal of the Department of English to participate in forming a new campus humor magazine was the “unexpected delay” which prevented a decision on the publication’s consti tution yesterday. ... George L. Donovan, chairman of the Committee on Organizations, said the committee had been unable to reach a final decision on whether or not to recommend chartering Froth, In a prepared statement, the committee said: "In view of this development, this committee has asked the Undergraduate Student Government Committee, which originally drafted the proposed constitution, to restructure it. in order to provide an acceptable alternative.” Andrea Buscanics, co-editor of the former Penn. State Froth, stated when she submitted the proposed constitution that she had obtained the “full co-operation” of both the Department of English and the School of Journalism. The constitution specified that the heads of both departments, or their representatives, would sit on the magazine’s Board of Direc tors and that a member of each department servo as advisers. USG president Dean Wharton said last night that this develop ment came,as a surprise to him, and that the committee would meet tomorrow to consider pos sible alternatives. HE SAID that he had discussed the matter with his coordinating committee last night and they had come up with several recommen dations. There is some question as to whether an individual member of the English Department could serve as an'advisor to the maga zine, even though the English Department as a whole does not wish to be associated with it, Donovan said. There is little possibility of simply deleting the additional ad visor from the constitution, he said, because the committee con sidered this to be a major change from the former Froth’s structure. 37 Women Ribboned by 8 Sororities At End of First Day of Open Bidding During the first day of open bidding 37 coeds accepted bids from eight sororities, Marjorie Zelko, Panhellenic rush chair man, said last night. New ribbonees are: Alpha Ep silon Phi, Esther Lipson; Alpha Omicron Pi, Mary Ann Crouse and Margaret McClellan; Alpha Sigma Alpha, Nora Grumbmeyer. . Delta Sigma Theta, Bernadine Johnson, Ernestine Portis, Caro lyn Riddick, Stephanie Shelton, Nadine Walker, Lindsay Wilson afid -Earnestine Wimberly, , Delta Phi Epsilon, Susan Eren worth‘and Phyllis Roubloff; lota Alpha Pi, Linda Berres, Suzanne fKatfeiVianj 5 Pearls'lein', colleagues, he said. U.S. authorities suggested that Gromyko was fortifying the ScP viet bargaining and propaganda position by restating Moscow’s in sistence on such participation. Gromyko did nbt mention Red China, which is also reported to be working on an atomic force. U.S. officials noted that under ini! American proposal, no nation signing the treaty would remain bound by the ban if any other country—in or out of the treaty— set off a nuclear explosion. Sams Hits 'Censorship' For Froth A student humor magazine should operate without any fac ulty participation at all, I-Icnry W. Sams, head of the department of English, said last night in ex plaining why he declined to act as an adviser or member of a board of directors for the pro posed Froth. "We don’t like the role of cen sor,” Sams said referring to his department. “I prefer a spontan eous magazine expressing student sense and sense of humor.” The proposed constitution for Froth now before-the Committee on Student Organizations, chaired by George L. Donovan,- requires that Sams or his representative serve on the board of directors and a member of his department serve as adviser.. EXPLAINING HIS position, Sams said: “I want the magazine to come forth as a medium of student expression. It should be frankly and fully a student publi cation in which the students take the initiative and responsibility. “We were asked lo function solely in the role of a stuffed shirt; This is an artificial relation ship with what should be a stu dent publication.” ' “If I stepped in as.a convenient step-father at this moment, I don’t think it would help to re solve the situation at all.” Marjorie Schwartz and Janice Wiener, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Susan Bruce, Karen Cupcr, Pamela Ferrier, Sandra Ford, Made- line Grief, Jackie Houle, Kar en Karnosky, Carol Kordich, Karen Krouse, Nancy Krouse, Myrna Lloyd, Helen MacDonald, Margaret Meier, Carol Robertson, Marcia Rice, Sandra Short, Eliza beth Voight and Gail Watson. Theta Phi Alpha, Lenore Wal dron. Miss Zelko also said that the Panhellenic Council has granted Alpha Kappa Alpha and Delta Sigma Theta' permission to ex tend bids to coeds who have not rep” t ?rsd • FIVE CENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers