Weather Today Cloudy, Warm, Possible Thundershowers VOL. 44, No. 19 Late AP News Courtesy Radio Station WMAJ NEW YORK—The shape of So viet policy abroad has begun to emerge mare clearly following yesterday's lengthy footnote by Soviet Foreign Commissar Molotov to the comments yesterday of Pre_ mier.Stalin. The Stalin statement was viewed by foreign. observers in Moscow as likely to have an, immense effect on building peace and in implementing the effective ness of the United Nations and th e Foreign Ministers Council, Here in brief is what the Soviet representative had to say: .He underscored Stalin's attack on Winston Churchill by accusing the wartime British prime minis ter, and his friends of managing a campaign against the Soviet Union. He said Churchill's group had influence both in Britain and America and he said the aim of the campaign is domination by the people running it. The Soviet Foreign , Commissar Charged that two politidal tendens cies are in conflict. He identified one. as aimed at cooperation for peace—"with which," he said, "we all agree." He said, the other was aimed at the domination of other countries. Molotov dismissed the (Continued on page two) POl : kicls Circle Elects:Offiters- Pollock Circle Council elected • Phillip Davis president at its first official tbusiness• meeting. Monday. • 'As Council, president, • Davis will repreSent Pollock Circle on the - All Collegc..Cabinet in an ••-• (propping-their 'nUmelilcaliden: •tities, the: - .fourteen' units of the_ Circle adopt the names of • fourteen State men who died in World ,War• I and 11, . according to .Alexander - Atty, resident coun selor:Of Pollock Circle. The names will be adopted at the second council meeting scheduled for next Wednesday.. • Other officers elected at the Council meeting Were Edward • Kosl, vice president; W. Wilson, secretary; A. H: Lentz, treasurer. Committee chairmen appointed were _A. Serafini, program; Ed ward Koval, scholarship; T. Reiss . mann, social; P. lanni',-*recreation; - Shapiro, public works; F. Maguire, Health and sanitation; J. Hartman, cultural; G. Lytchkoff, athletic;. J. P. Green, public saf •ety; D. W. Mitchell, fire preven tion. College Artist To Attend Chicago Cocktail Party • By RALPH PEARSON • • :"A junior in th e Department of Fine Arts has been granted per rilliSSiOri (by the .Dean of Men to attend a , cocktail Party 'in. Chicago Friday: Don.% get the Deaq wrong, however; it will be a . piarty with a more punpose.than have most .such affairs. - It is being held in honor of. ..Tchn T. Biggers, the above-mentioned junior, and at IA he will meet Chicago's most noted antiSts and writers.' Th e following day he will formally unveil two murals that have broUght him considerable fame in the world of art Biggers, a Navy veteran, trans ferred . this semester from Hampr ion Institute where he had plan ned to study plumbing with the intOntiOn of eventually going into buSiness in his home town of Gas tonia, N. C. die was graduated second in his class from prep school at Lincoln Academy in King's Mountain, N. C. Qn hii . freihman year at Hamp ton.. he made such outstanding PrOgress in art, a subject with which he had had no previous ex perience; that he decided to change his course from plumbing to painting. He has completed a sculpture and several paintings, but it was' chiefly his two Bxlo foot murals done in the tempera technique that attracted critical Eittitg T it WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 30, 194 G-STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA • . . Tickets On Sale For Belle Hop Tickets for Saturday night's Belle Hop, annual All-College dance sponsored by the Junior Greeters Club are, now on sale and may be purchased from any Hotel Administration student for $2 including tax. Latecomers may also purchase their tickets at the door or at Student Union, George Earnshaw, publicity chairman of the dance, stated. The feature of the dance this year is the selection by applause of a coed to reign as "Belle of Belle Hop" with the prize of a free room - in one 'of. Pittsburgh's leading hotels for the Pitt Week end. • Glenn Michael's orchestra of 11 pieces plus three vocalists . will supply the dancers with rhythms in the style of the late Glenn Mil- ler. Sweet dancealble ballads are the specialties of Michael's group, who is establishing a name as one of the favorite oiihestras for col lege dances in the East. The Penn State Junior Greeters Club is an organization of Hotel Administration students. The name comes from a nationwide society of hotel managers and front office employees to which the local group was one of the first to be granted - a junior char ter. The purpose of the dance, Earn shaw stated, is to acquaint stud ents with the club and raise funds with which to. entertain visiting prominent hotelmen who journey to the campus. to lecture to the hotel students. Fa(s'm - 40 - Take - Oath of Office Jack Branigan, chairman of the Elections , Committee, will ad minister the oath of office to All- College President elect, Robert Foote, in 104 Old Main at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow. (Witnessing the ceremony in his capacity of Tribunal head will be Gordan 'Miller. Foote, in turn will inaugurate the remainer of the recently elected All-College 'Cab inet officers. . nines Sheehan will become the first senior president under the newly revised constitution. Eugene Fulmer will take office as junior president and Richiard Sarge as Sophomore president. attention to his work The first was "The Dying Sol dier" which won acclaim when it was exhibited at the 'Museum of Modern Art in NeW York City. It dvicts a soldier dying on a banbed-wire entanglement while above him are shown scenes from his life as they crowd through his mind. The left side shows the spiritiaul side of the soldier's lifp while on the right is a graphic series of realistic episodeS recalled from his ordinary experiences. Both elements combine to sweep away into the - clouds. The second mural entitled ,"The Rural Preacher" was first exhibit ed at the Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Va. It is a 3 detailed. study of the reactiqns and thoughts of a rural religidius group as they respond emotionally to the eloquence of the preacher. Each (Continued on page four) To Sing Roland Hayes To Give Recital Roland Hayes, celebrated Negro tenor, will give a concept in Schwab Auditorium - November 14. Best know.n for his singing of spirituals, Hayes musical genius extends to all types of songs, no matter what the language or who the composer. ;Rage's [favorite spiritual is his great-grandfather's account of the crucifixion called "He Never Said a Mttmberlin' Word." great grandfather had been a high-born chieftain on the Ivory Coast until he was..rmibushed and sold into slavery. "Anyone can sing spirituals," says Roland Hayes," if the ap proach is only . right. For .so many thought of as being light-minded and light-footed, the 'song and _dance' attitude. What is not al ways realized is that feeling runs deep among the Negroes, and re ligious conviction is a very real thing." • Tickets for the recital, spon sored by PSCA and the Citizen's Legislative Action Committee, are $1:50, including tax, and may be obtained Student Union, Keel er's or the Corner Room. - LA Students to Elect Members for Council From 25 Candidates Liberal Arts students will have a student , council of their own, for the first time in campus his tory—if they turn out for the special elections to be held Thurs day evening. A total of. 25 candidates, from which 20 will be elected, are to be placed in nomination for the elec tion. Students may file their own. names, - or the names of other candidates in Room 132, Sparks Building, by. 5_ p. m. today. Of those names presented, the .25 having the highest All-College average for last semester will be officially listed as nominees. The election will take place Thursday evening, at 7:30 p. m., in Rcom 121, Sparks Building. Fred C. Abel to Manage Windcrest COoperative; Sparks Heads Directors Fred C. Abel has been named manager of the cooperative store to be operated in Windcrest. Ho ward Sparks, who is chairman of the cooperative's board of direc tors, will work with Mr. Aibel in setting up rules, and regulations. The store will be operated in the comrruritiy Mr.. Charles F. Lee Decker, as sistant executive secretary of the College's instqute of local loVern ment, and member of the board of directors of the State College co operative, will act in an advisory caPacity to the Windcrest coopera tive board. • In This Issue rgiatt Forecast P 3 Stork P 2 Swim Coach P 3 Excited Father:Rushes To Critically Ill' Daughter An anxious and worried father —Roy Heidt, an Army Air Forces veteran of the Italian campaign and now a postgraduate education major at the College—rushed from his 4 o'clock clit;ss yesterday at the urgent summons of his broth er-in-law to speed over the 60 miles that separates him trokri:his:l critically ill daughter in Broad Top, Bedford County. Little Suzanne, who will be two years- old next month, is-clyiag feverish on her bed, her mother, and a physician by her side: Slie has pneumonia. With the. crucial, temperature of 106 degree.s, she is given only • a fighting chanc6' to live. The family doctor has' istered sulfa• drUgs and penecillin to the diniiiiittive •pneuirridnia (Vicl tim in a last attempt bring hen • through the crisis. ' 1 : The child•showed the first syth ptom of lllness last Sunday - o:4ring a visit with her mother and her veteran-father on the Pampustt i Given zit ice cream cone, the child would not eat it. She,,suddeply.de.- veioped forefiead be came warm. Taken home she was found to be running a temperature. which led rapidly to a critical case" of pneumonia. Judge Grants Student Vote pecipripg that residei{ e - than' State College;' Ed= ward Banyai, a student at the Col lege, was granted permission to register to . vote by Judge Ivan Walker in Bellefonte Monday. Under the law stating that ,students in a community other than their own are not permitted to register in the community in which they are attending school, Banyai . had been refused permis sion to register by the County election board in August. Banyai appealed to the court sayinii, that he had 'no other home and that he intended to continue using Centre County as his resi dence. Judge Walker explained that the procedure was in no way a test case and that any such ease in the future would have to be de cided on its own merits. 13znyai, an ex-serviceman, had never been registered in any other community. Phi Mu Alpha Elects Phi Mu Alpha, music honorary, elected Frank Hess president at a recent meeting. Other officers named are Donald Lehrman, vice president; Norman Walter, secre tary-treasurer; George Winnett, historian; Prof. G. William Hen ninger, faculty adviser. LA Elections Applications for seats on the Liberal Arts Student Council must be filed in 132 Sparks -by 4 o'- clock today. Elections will be held in the same room at 7:30 tomor row night. All Liberal Arts stud ents are eligible to vote and are urged, to attend. Overnight Cabin Party An overnight cabin party, spon sored jointly by the Gantenbury Cluib and the American Russian Organization, will be held at the PSOA cabin, 5:30 p. in. Saturday. Members of the Russian club who' wish to attend are requested to contact Michael Feda'k at the Colonial immediately. Roland Hayes Preview Recordings made by Roland Hayes, tenors who will appear in Schwab Auditorium soon, and dis- FIVE CENTS A COPY Defense Sees Galloway Case As Accidental Evidenc e that death wa's acci dental will be presented at the trial of John Edward Galloway, State College 'student charged with Ilatally shooting his wife in their trailer home' at Windcrest gay], Saturday morning. Furst and Furst, attorneys re tained by Galloway,: said in statement today thlat they are con vinced the bride's deathwas_ "horrible accident."• . . "Upon the thorough develop- Ment of the . case in cOuritrlimes C. Airsi "the public a gree that our conclusions are cor • rect " . . The , charging Galloway with homicide will be presented : tc:th,e,Centtre County Griand Jury the week of N0v..25,. District At : •torney Edward L. Willard said to day, . I IS the jury returns a true bill, ..Ttlye,,base is scheduled to ,b e tried in criminal court the week of Dec: . ...Mr. Willard said that an inquest ,would be held next • week when .Coroner Charles Sheckler returns from a vacation trip. Funeral services were held to- Clay at Nanticoke for Galloway's bride whom he married in State College 34 days before th e shoot ing. • • -• • Galloway, being held without bail in the County jail at Belle fonte, has been "standing up well." it was reported by jail of ficials. H e has been visited by his altiorneys. Football Ticket Tickets are still available for the Fordham, Temple, and Pittsburgh football game s. They are on sale at the A. A. Office window in Old Main at $3 *ler ticket. 'Dad' Dennis To Speak At AVC 'Meeting William V.. 6Dad) Dennis. pro fessor of rural sociology, iw!ll be guest speaker at_ the regular meeting of the American Veter ans Committee 'tonight at 7:30 in Room 121 Sparks. The 'chairman - of the coillege chapter of AVC is urging all members and 'their friends to be present at this evening's meet ing "not only to hear our guest speaker, but to listen to a .detall ed report of 'what „w_as,„,•-q•Rsoui- L plished at the State, eariStttituinat convention last • week,' l Other matters to be considered' at the gathering are 'final adop tion of the local chapter's `consti tution and assigning of „oommit tees to work on the plans . .fo'r - the AVC Collegiate ConferenceTAO be held in State College' Note:Mber 24 News Briefs cussions on his life will be given in 304 Old Main at 7:30 o'clock tonight, announced Willa Taylor, director of the chapel choir. La Vie to Meet All senior who attended last week's meeting of La Vie cre ask ed to attend a meeting in 412 Old Main at 7 o'clock tonight, an nounced Seymour Rosenberg, edi tor. Newman Club Initiates An initiation of 94 Catholic students was held by the Newman Club in a candle-light ceremony at the Hillel Foundation Sunday. Common Sense News Anil !Wanda' .End Rustum .Roy were the principal speakers at the forum, "The Changing Face of India,' sponsored by Common Sense recently. Over 200 people were present.