The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 21, 1965, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    •
...
-,--• --'• • - 0 ' ..
, , . .. • •
•
- •
. • , ,
. ,
. . .
, .
,
. , .
Buck Elected Frosh President- • . . Election Summary
,
1 By LAURIE DE'VINE Alan Buck, Campus Party, swamped
•Referendum: , , North Congressman
"Should Undergraduate Student .
,''...',••••:""." - X:., . ,': '',-.;,.; ":-.::: -.... , ..• • . .
- --„,,,•, ~ his opponents, by amassing almost y ........„. ~..
•, `:- - '•••;c•: .. ' .. f• ..... ......... •':'?••"‘:':•;•::'.: . 1 ''''''''''''''' 1 ''''*'• Richard Grovich (University) ....199*
Government be abolished?" -' ''''.,..,' twice as many votes as his closest Should USG Be Abolished? :,
~
.. ....
"No," said 2,514 students voting * l' „ 4.... , : ~ , :i competitor. >.
,K.27. , ,, 1T : , „.7 , , , ,, ,., ..7.:••,•,•, , ,,-,•••••• , ;',vc , ,,,, 7 . 1 , 1 f' Marvin Peebles (Liberal) 177
in yesterday's USG referendum called -s' t i ' • ' . ~- • ~' ' •' Benjamin Novak, USG President, • Yes* 1547 -,' •,'.„-• •„ . 3 -',- ' ''''''•,', '••,,,,,:•'-.
2514 :--. 1,;•:::',:'•••••' ••• ''; :: ''''''
? '..4* , '-,-;,•-,, .‹,•,:',,,,,,,•*•,• •••• !: .
, -, „ , „
to decide the fate of University stu- s . I .• *„-i',',' - ‘,':,',' , ..:, A , , 5' :,,‘,. ' •••' issued the following statement last No
dent government, but , 1,547 of the :': , , A'.
~,,,,:
,:;•„.-„' „ ~,,,4„4 , i.4 night concerning the referendum's out- - , .
': Two Pollock-Nittany Congressmen
4,061 casting their ballots in the spe- ';'. • ' ‘ „,.,?,,',.." 1 . ,•• 2 . ~, r ,,','• . J-,,,,,- . ,- . 2' , • . ,,‘„ - ‘ , ;•„. come: "I do not regard the vote as a ,
''''''''. • '•'-' •‘' Adelaide Andrews (University) ..280*
cial election voted for the end of USG. - ,,,:, ,~:, • ,
,: I , . ,-,--, . .. • •-••:-,' -,,,, commendation of the past but a vindi- . Freshman Class President: ;,, ~,:,,,,, .:,
' ' • ''''''"'. 7'
' ‘-
: ' Car o 1 Ritch (University) 315*
Alan Buck, Campus Party, was ;. ' !*:.4:,` •', . '',•'''.•''''':',,:-. i ''. ' f fthf t • will be done."
? :i , .;,, ca ion o e u me. His ' s : 1-; ;,., 's :-...,i,:,-,• . ,::: . ,.• : ~.,,,- . to
, 158
elected freshman class president over i,i 1 ' •:, • , . ' , Gary Legon; University
„Party -~t , -:, , ''' 4 .• „ ,?'` ~.. • '>; ' 4 - ''',, ' '... Stephen Shemin (Liberal)
*t'” ••-, -'4 . 1 '• ' •,•;‘ , ;:,1 , „ A . ~,,,,,,, ;;-,, Susan Raleigh (Liberal)
126
„
his opponents, Wayne Zweig, Univer- • • ',..: 1. * 4 . ... •• • . 2 • '_,....i„„ ~ • 1 i , chairman, commented he was "very Daniel Clements (Liberal) 271 - ;.,„ :•,,,-- ~.' f ,• „,„.
..i , -,'• ' :": Douglas Waldmann (Campus) „ ..231 •
•:•::
sity Party and Daniel Clements, Lib- •:i l' P . ', '. f' ; v: ' v . 1 : ' ''' !! : • •• • ' ' •.: ' ,• Y , pleased' with all the elections returns. , Wayne Zweig (University) ..,...145 ',,„ ti.;, ; :i , ' - ;,,,,,,,';',..: k •.' •,:t...: „li 0 ..1 ::: .:'•• Richard Weintraub (Campus) ....189 •
eral Party. :- I : 1 : '- • `-, -, :'• ,1 ?' "Now that the USG controversy, is
:.
In the general congressional and :‘: , . - •• =, ended, we must move ahead," he said.
freshman class presidency race, Uni- ,'', .I. ''''..l •,. ~„•- ' .. ' .
~I i' "USG still has a way to go to become
I ?‘‘ truly effective." Congressmen: ~ ::•,',. •,•--, •'' ":• , if s:'- , - -3 South Congressmen
versity Party swept the election, win- '. !. 7,...• . - • - "o k i f :, - , ,
fling seven of the 11 open seats on the ~ I
...,,,:,‘. -: , ' ' i .:.. Campus Party's chairman, James East Congressman . ,':, - ‘:',r ~ • At/ 4 a . .•• ' A Cheryl Johns (University) 161*
remodeled USG Congress. Campus 4 1„ ' , .;•:, „‘
,; : igiatiiiiiiik ~ !:- Conahan, said. "Campus Party will •••',z. ' - ,'. • , .4, : .: - ,, ,r. . ~..: •
Edward English (Campus) 204 - - • •-;,--,:",-, • .‘,.. .% :-
Party won three congressional seats : • ~, -.1, - ~.. - work hard to make USG an active . . ,
• Victor Hammel (University) 321* .• ):" • ' -- , - -.•' -:. Three Town Congressmen
and the freshman class presidency. ,-: t•,- ' ''''''',' .'..,- •'- : . : -,- organization. We will fight for student ~ ,
~ • i -
Liberal Party achieved only one. con- • . I ‘. l . ~, , ,,v.• • :. ',,*••,,,,,,,,,,, .2 * li' s : rights, we will step on toes, we will
Fraternity Congressman . .
~
.. ,
• ' ~,, ~ -.- --- ... James Caplan (Campus) 233*
gressional seat, from the town area. • '‘,. ''s, 1 . . . i ~, : i• not disappoint those students who 13
'•-' ' ' ''' ‘;''''-";:.• *' Thomas Harlan (Write-In)
.. Gordon Junket (Campus) 47 s.• -• • •:`-`-'• . • i,.‘, Philip Henning (Campus) 184
Approximately 22 per cent of the
. . . ,
undergraduates eligible to participate ::- . •":' • ' •• 11 i4: Marvin Peebles, Liberal Party Dale Mosier (Liberal) 65 ' •..
f / • , -•- Edward Munn (Campus) 176
:, chairman, declined comment on the • Jack Smith (University) , 167* :
in the election voted. The number of ••1 ;'• • ; . ~ ~' „. ',
. ' .•:•' '-. ' ' - *: Jeffrey Roberts (Liberal) 186*
ballots cast in the referendum, 4,061, '1 ~ , . , , . -. . ~•: election results. , ,
surpasses the 2,800 votes registered in
s l . - !" - - - ' • ' ,- 'V, West Congressmen
the last USG Congressional election .; -.—. ,- .. • -; code were reported, according to Larry - . k,i
_ .. .
in the fall of 1963. The referendum
total falls short of the 5,274 votes cast
in the USG executive elections last
spring.
Weather Forecast:
Partly Cloudy,
Clear, Cold
VOL. 65, No. 58
Walker Says Student Rights Issue
Merits Concern, Not Alarm
By RICHARD SPAGNOLLI
President Eric A. Walker yesterday apolo
gized to members of the University faculty
during a public address for unpleasant rami
fications following his remarks last month on
the Berkeley situation.
Referring to his comments made before
the Greater Philadelphia Club, Walker said,
"Let me say that if any newspaper reports of
comments I am alleged to have made in con
nection with this subject have offended any
of you, I am truly sorry.
"Perhaps I let an unbridled sense of hu
mor run away with me. If I have damaged
your reputation, or the reputation of the pro
fession, let me at least say it was not my in
tent to do so. I am sorry, and I offer you my
most sincere apologies."
The President also touched broadly on is
sues of student rights, specifically mentioning
the issues of student government, Froth, and
solicitation of funds.
Student Rights
Commenting on student rights, Walker
said, "One of the current problems that seems
to be facing colleges and universities through
out the nation, is the problem of increased
tensions between students and administration
and between students and faculty on all col
lege campuses—the so-called question of 'stu
dent rights.' "
The President believed that the problem
Tickets for Lecture Sold Out
King To Speak On Future of Integration
By CAROL POSTHUMUS
Tonight's address by the
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
is "a sellout", ticket distribu
tion officials said yesterday
afternoon. Scheduled for 8:30
p.m., the speech will concern
the topic "The Future of Inte
gration."
WDFM will broadcast
King's speech tonight. The
program will begin at 8:25.
King spent the beginning of
this week leading a drive for
Negro voter registration and
integration of hotels and res
taurants in Selma, Ala.
The 1964 Nobel Peace Prize
winner was described to The
Daily Collegian by one of his
former professors as "the per
fect example of the right man
in the right
,place at the right
time."
G. Lewis Chandler, profes
sor of English at Morehouse
College (Atlanta, Ga.), said
when King studied under him
he was "a good student with
above average, but not su
perior, grades; conscientious,
with strong convictions."
Chandler said King "never
argued, and was well -respect
ed by other students for his
trtFAM , ,LY; "'"' :t• s.,
Negroes-Jailed in Alabama;
Pressing for Voting Rights
SELMA, Ala. (AP) Negroes
pressing for the right to vote
were allowed to use one of the
two main entrances to the coun
ty 'courthouse yesterday, but
insisted on using the other and
about 160 of them went to jail.
Sheriff James G. Clark, who
earlier told the Negroes they
must enter the building through
an alley, relented when another
group appeared and told them
they could use the front en
trance.
The Negroes objected to being
told r'oor to use in a pub
lic building. "1
of voter registration was much
President Apologizes for Comments
honesty and integrity. It
seemed easy for him to plan
ahead and organize he
seemed at first glance lacka
daisical, but in reality was
very well organized, articulate
in both speech and writing,
extremely precise in all he ,
did."
In describing the background
too slow in Selma, and that at
the present rate it would take
103 years to register all of their
people of voting age.
They also contended registra
tion authorities discriminated
against them.
But the three-member board
responsible for putting • new vot
ers on the list said it was oper
ating ,according to state law
withod'aiscrimination.
Clark told those in the first
group of about 20 that they were
under arrest when• they • at
tempted to line up outside an
other door and then a short time
later he 'arrested another group
of about the same size.
BENJAMIN NOVAK
merited concern, but also believed nothing
existed in the situation to cause alarm.
"One aspect of our changing social pat
terns that in my opinion tends to offset the
more negative side of the picture is the fact
that our students today are generally more
mature than the students of 30 years ago,"
Walker explained. "It is natural that they
would want to have more to say about their
own government and indeed about the con
duct of the University."
Explaining further, Walker said the trees
mendous growth of the student body, and the
added pressures of their academic work, and
the many outlets for their energies have brought
difficulties in maintaining communications.
Communication Channels
"It seems to me that here, as in faculty
administration matters, our primary concern
should be to develop and maintain easier chan
nels of communication. We have a student gov
ernment and should recognize it. We should
make every effort to keep the channels of com
munication open between the student govern
ment and the faculty by means of appropriate
Senate committees, and between the student
government and the administration through
the appropriate administrative offices.
"If Froth has been a problem," Walker
said, "the real difficulty has not been a mat
ter of freedom, but a matter of coupling re
sponsibility for what is said to the authority
to say it. In this case, I think the problem is
about to be solved."
of King's entrance into the
field of civil rights work
Chandler said "after King
went on from Morehouse to
theological seminary and re
turned home to Atlanta, he
was not (and still isn't) con
sidered strong in his church'
work."
Chandler cited two reasons:
"one because the other minis
ters and laymen all considered,
him too secular too inter- 1
ested in politics instead of re-1
ligious and spiritual matters;
the other because Atlanta had
many educational, religious
Johnson Takes Oath of Office
In Tradition-Tinged Ceremony
WASHINGTON (I?) Lyn
don Baines Johnson took the
inaugural oath of the presi
dency yesterday with tradi
tion-tinged ceremony and a
ringing promise to lead his
countrymen to a destiny of jus
tice, liberty and union.
And before this generation
ends, Johnson promised, it will
see the conquest of poverty,
hunger, ignorance and dis
crimination.
"So," Johnson said in a 23-
minute inaugural address, "let
us reject any among us who
seek to reopen old wounds and
rekindle old hatreds. They
stand in the way of a seek
ing nation."
Standing under a hazy sun
on a chilly day, in a ceremony
as timeless as the nation yet
somehow as new as a dawn
ing day, Johnson uttered the
35 words of the presidential
oath at 12:30 p.m. from the in
augural platform beneath the
towering gray dome of the
United States Capitol.
It was a moment of solem
nity and glowing sentiment.
The tall Texan • suddenly
Shifted the - plans' and asked
Hem, elections commission chairman.
He stated he was "quite surprised at
the voting turnout, especially in the
referendum."
Batig
UNIVERSITY PARK, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 21, 1965
"If he had stayed in Atlan
ta," Chandler continued', "he
would have remained only
that quiet Dr. King helping at
his father's church. But he
went to Montgomery, Ala.,
where his leadership of the
(1955) bus incident (in which
the councilmen of his church;
boycotted the bus service and
others followed suit) brought
him national fame. This seems ;
to be a perfect example of
Shifted Plans
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
PRESIDENT ERIC A•. WALKER
and political leaders already, the right man in the right
and King was only one of a place at the right time."
crowd. Since that time, King's ac-
Right Man
Mrs. Johnson to hold for him
his mother's well-worn Bible.
With stars, or even a trace of
tears in her eyes, Lady Bird
Johnson stood beside her hus
band and complied.
Originally, an official of the
inauguration committee had
been tapped to hold the Bible.
But Lyndon B. Johnson is a
sentimental man. •
He showed it, too, at the end
of his inaugural address with
a renewed assurance to fel
low Americans and all man
kind that he will lead and he
will do his best.
Tragedy
His mind went back to the
November day in 1963 when he
took the presidential oath at
a time of tragedy.
"To trusted public servants,
to families and close friends
of mine who have followed
me down a long, winding road,
and to all the people of the
Union and the world," John
son said, "I will repeat: today
what I said on that sorrowful
November day:
"I will lead and I will do
the best I can.
"But you you must look
Within your own hearts to
Congressman
Leslie Evans (Campus) 173
Patricia Rienzi (University) 272*
Tollrgiatt
complishments in the Negro
movement for civil rights, as
president of •the Southern
Christian Leadership Confer
ence, have brought him inter
national acclaim.
Among examples of his
awards are his selection as
Time magazine's 1963 Man of
the Year, an honorary doc=
torate from Yale University,
and the Johri F. Kennedy
Prize from the Catholic Inter
racial Council in Chicago.
the old promises and the old
dream. They will lead you
best of all."
The presidential oath was
administered for the 45th time
in history.
Johnson said it was a mo
ment of majesty and meaning,
because the oath he had taken
before his fellow Americans
and before God "is not mine
alone, but ours together. We
are one nation and one peo
ple. Our fate and our future
rest not upon one citizen but
upon all citizens."
Dominion
And in broad generalities,
Johnson spoke beyond the
seas to other peoples to tell
them that: "We aspire to noth
ing that belongs to others. We
seek no dominion over our
fellow man, but man's domin
ion over - tyranny and misery."
The forefathers .of this na
tion, the President said, came
here from other lands as exiles
and strangers to make a cove
nant -"Conceived in justice,
written in liberty, bound in
union."
"It binds us still," he said.
"And if we keep its terms we
shall flourish."
Walker Voices Opposition
To More State Institutions
By TIM SHAFFER
Without mentioning Temple University by
name, President Eric A. Walker yesterday re
vealed his apparent opposition to the institu
tion's plan to become the state university of
Eastern Pennsylvania.
Walker said Penn State will press for ad
ditional Commonwealth campuses in the Phila
delphia and Pittsburgh areas, as well as three
other campuses in Western Pennsylvania. The
President's announcement was also an apparent
rejection of a plan announced Tuesday by
private education research organizations to ask
the state not to approve any more centers for
Penn State until a master plan 'for community
colleges is completed.
On Temple, Walker said, "There are those
who will say X will take care of the metro
politian east, and Y will take care of the west
and you (Penn State) take what is left."
Pechan Proposal
"X" was an obvious referral to Temple,
while "Y" probably meant Indiana State Col
lege, which Sen. Albert Pechan (R.-Cambria
County) has proposed become a state univer
sity for the western portion of the state.
The President said, "Unless we are will
ing to make our services available to all Penn
sylvania, we are likely to find ourselves re
garded as the State University of Centre
County."
"There are people," he continued, "prom
inent in education who would drive the state
into three areas—the east, the west, and the
center portion—and who believe that the state's
THE USG ELECTION Commissioners commissioners as they tally the final
counted ballots last night in the Helsel count on the referendum, freshman class
' Union card room. Pictured here are the president and congressional vote.
Annual Report Discusses Program, Research
The 1963-64 annual report
lof the University will be re
leased today under the title
I"Pennsylvania's State-W i d e
University". The report dis
cusses Penn State residence
and continuing education pro
grams, its $18,500,000 research
program and its $78,934,441
budget.
President Eric A, Walker
commented on the land grant
state university system as
unique in the history of man.
"The range of its faculty, the
depth of its commitment to
the people, and the tradition of
service make it a powerful
instrument for the common
good," he says.
During 1963-64, the Univer
sity conferred 5,102 degrees,
including 201 doctorates, 705
masters degrebs, 3,699 bacca
laureate degrees and 497 as
ALAN BUCK
funds for higher education should be allocated
accordingly. If this were to happen, I am afraid
that we would come off not merely second
best, but third best—and a poor third best at
that
In answer to charges that Penn State
should limit its growth, Walker said flatly, "I
do not agree."
The President. said that part of the Uni
versity's long, range development is ". . . a
matter of strengthening and expanding our Com
monwealth campus system," •since 25,000 stu
dents will be the maximum number that Uni
versity Park can accommodate. This number
will be reached by 1970.
To accommodate this increase, Walker said
that the University has lately made requests
to the General State Authority for $75 million
in design and construction funds for 44 build
ings to be added to this campus during the
next five years.
The development of the Commonwealth
campuses has "over the years been generally
a successful venture," he pointed out, with the
associate degree programs having been
. , hailed throughout the country as among
the most outstanding and successful educa
tional efforts conducted anywhere."
Walker, referring to "a statement of gen
eral policy" of the Board of Trustees, said
that the University "has no desire to expand
its facilities merely for the sake of its own
aggrandizement," nor intrude anywhere in the
state where present facilities for higher edu
cation are adequate.
sociate degrees. .
Expanded facilities of the
15 Commonwealth campuses
have resulted in a possible
record enrollment in the
branch campuses of the Uni
versity. Graduate centers were
established at King of Prussia
and in the Harrisburg-Lan
caster-York area.
Continuing education pro
grams enrolled 67,446 men and
women last year. Through
these courses unemployed
workers learn new skills and
again become employable, or
other workers qualify for job
advancement. These programs
have grown greatly in the past
five years with credit courses
more than doubling their en
rollment.
The research program be
gins the studies of varied
problems arising from the -de
gradation of • the human en-
Robert Lewis (Campus)
Michael White (University)
(*Asterisk denotes winners)
No Decision
—See Page 2
No Limitation
vironment from such causes
as population growth, exhaus
tion of resources, pollution of
air and water and failure ,of
large segments of the popula
tion to realize their social and
economic potentials. Walker
sayS, "We are just beginning
to sense the potential that lies
in the modern state univer
sity for providing new and
im
aginative solutions to the be
setting problems of man."
Of the $78,934,441 budget,
31.8 per cent came from the
Commonwealth and 21.1 per
cent from student tuition and
charges. Twenty-seven per
cent was spent for resident
instruction and departmental
research and 22.13 per cent
for organized research.
The annual report is avail
able to any interested Com
monwealth citizen.
SIX CENTS