THURSDAY, NOVEMBER, 1, 1951 Peace Talks, Rain Slow Fighting on Korean Fronts U.S. EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS , Thursday, Nov. 1--VP) —The rain-soaked Korean battlefront had its ; quietest day in months Wednesday as peace prospects improved in negotiations for a mili tary armistice. ' - The U.S., Eighth Army apparently was holding in check any sizable ground actions,. pending more developments at Panmunjom Allied airflights also were cut' sharply by rain storms and low . clouds over mdst of Korea. The U.S. Fif t h Air Force mounted only 318. sorties by 6 p.m. Wednesday. No 'contact was reported with Red fighters who -usually remain at their Manchur ian bases during stormy, weather. • Th e Communist PyOngyang radio claimed 12 Allied planes were shot down in an air duel Tuesday over the North Korean .capital of Pyongyang, but the Air Force denied it. The ground fighting action shbwed Allied troops repulsing a night' attack by perhaps 200 or fewer Red troops 'southeast of Kumsong 'on the central front. ' On the central front 'a UN pa trol clashed for 30 minutes with Chinese Reds north of Kumhwa, about 20 miles north' of the 38th parallel. Elsewhere on the , central, east ern and western fronts, Allied forces maintained or adjusted po sitions and patrolled. In Washington the U.S. De fense Department issued its lat est battle casualty report which continued to reflect ,heavy fight ing of recent weeks. An increase of 2,595 since last week brought the announced casualties in the Korean War to 95,592. Council Elections-- (Continued from nage one)• sentatives were Merle Brubaker, freshman, and Quentin Rea, sophomore. Peter Merkel, freshman,, and Robert Collins, sophomore, won seats in the civil engineering de partment. In the architectual• de partment Sanford Cook,- fresh man, and Richard Gibson, sopho more, were elected. - Mary Lynch, Gail Green, Lee Weber, Joanne Sherts, and Elaine Tocht, were elected to the Home Economics Student Council., Physical Education and Che m councils will hold elections today. Presidents of the -respec tive councils said that too few votes being cast was the reason for the change. •Mineral Industries' will hold its eleCtion iri Dean Edward Steidle's lecture .class from 4 to 5 p.m. Monday because not enough nom inations were made. Sophs Sponsor -- (Continued from page one) to lead in singing and cheering. The Blue'Band will also be pres ent The cheerleaders are requested to meet at '7:45 p.m. on the steps of Old Main. Gerald • Maurey, last- y=ear's freshman class president, asked the sophomores to show their class spirit and turn out in force for the rally. • Wagner said that he hoped the rally would produce a spirit unifying the class as well as a spirit supporting the team. Egyptian Elected CAIRO. Egypt, Oct. 31—(JP)— The British ejected an Egyptian police captain from the Suez canal zone today as an agitator in a boycott campaign intended to deprive them of all Egyptian labor. Y Rf{ .'BROTH rt !V I TTA NY . An International , THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. •PENNSYLVANIA teachers Will Get Pay :Oost Fine HARRISBURG, Oct. 3 1— (g) Gov. John S. Fine said today leg islation granting a multi-million dollar salary increase to Pennsyl- Vania school teachers will be "fav orably disposed of" by the- gen eral assembly. Fine at the same time assured the Pennsylvania Congress of Par ents and Teachers he will do his utmost to maintain educational standards in the commonwealth. Discussing the proposed teacher pay increases, Fine declared: "We want, and we are going to have, in Pennsylvania an effi cient teaching' personnel which is reasonably compensated. We want ; too, and we need, to make teaching in Pennsylvania an at tractive- career. This bill can help do that." The teacher pay bill would cost the state an estimated $56,000,000 extra the next two years in school aid. • It ; would grant the state's some 60,000 public school teachers an immediate $2OO pay increase and set up 'new minimum and maxi mum salary levels for all teachers. Scholastic Society , Invites 67N Students The local chapter of Phi Kap pa Phi, scholastic honorary so ciety, has sent membership .invi tations to 67 students. Membership is, open to seventh 'and eighth semester seniors and' graduate students who have suf ficiently high all-College aver ages, Phi Kappa Phi's eligibility requirements are the highest of the honoraries on campus. Prof.. C. C. Dillio, president of the chapter, announced that a $5O scholarship will be given again this spring to a deserving fresh man who has completed one sem ester. This will be the second year this award has been made. Players to Hold, 'H ei ress i Tryouts Tryouts for Players' p r!o d u c tion of "The Heiress" will be held Sunday and Monday in 202 Will ard Hall. AppointmentS for tryouts will be made in the Schwab Audi torium Green Room. • , Rehearsals for "The Heire'ss," which will be directed by Dra matics instructor Walter Walters, are scheduled to begin Nov. 12. "The Heiress" was written by Ruth and Augustus Goefi an d first produced on Broadway in September 194'T. The-idea for the play came from Henry James' novel "Washington Square." The oil of the cashew nut is much used as a flavoiing foi ine. • THURS . . and FRI. Featuretime 6:30, 8:17, 10:04 ilm Club Presentation . . 'DOOR $3B Federal Tax Boost Is in Effect . WASHINGTON, Oct. 31—(P)— A $5;700,000,000 tax increase, pil ing an additional average load of $3B a year on each of 150,000,000 Americans, goes into effect at midnight. Here 9.re the Hallowe'en tricks the tax collector is playing: An individual income tax boost averaging between 11 and 12 per cent for most persons. The with holding rate goes up on every •ay check bearing a November date. That is the biggest piece of new' money in the law—s2,- 280,000,000 on a yearly basis but applying to only a sixth of this year's income. Higher excise taxes on a lot of widely sold items such as cig- PHILADELPHIA, • Oct. 31---(iP) —Pennsylvania retailers 4will not be permitted • to raise the price of cigarettes more than a penny a pack under the new tax law which becomes effective tomor row. t The new federal levy increases cigarette prices one cent a pack and 10 cents a carton. arett e s, automobiles, gasoline, liquor, , and some household ap pliances. -Heavier corporate and excess profits taxes calculated to bring in $2;207,000,000 a year. The tax hikes on corporations are retro active—some of them to last April 1, others to July 1. A few shafts of sunshine pierc ed 'the tax cloud. The levy on telegrams goes down from 25 to 15 percent of the message charge. The 20 percent retail tax is removed from baby oils, powders, and lotions. The tax on smoking and chewing to bacco drops from 18 to 10 cents a pound. A three and one-third percent levy on, electric current is repealed. Bolduc to Attend Infantry Conclave Col. Lucien E. Bolduc; profes sor of military science and tactics, has been chosen by the command ing general, Second Army, to at tend an infantry conference at Ft. Benning, Ga. next week. Similar conferences, all de signed to increase student interest in the combat arms,, will be held at the artillery school, the armor ed school, and the anti-aircraft artillery school. Discussions will center on train ing literature and aids, changes lin tables of allowances, summer camp policies, and distinguished military student an d graduate programs. For Best Results Use Collegian Classifieds ESTHER WILLIAMS RED SKELTON "TEXAS CARNIVAL" DICK POWELL PEGGY DOW "YOU NEVER . CAN TELL" PHYLLIS CALVERT EDWARD UNDERWOOD "HER PANELLED DOOr- • Allies, Closer MUNSAN, Korea, Thursday, Nov. 1—(W)—Alli0 and Commu nist truce negotiators today drew closer to agreement than ever before on a buffer zone across Korea, but the status of Red-held Kaesong blocked speedy settlement 'of this issue. The Communists made a major concession Wednesday, abandon ing demands for a line from five to 15 miles south of the battleline. They proposed a buffer zone which, approached that asked by the Allies But the Reds wanted to keep Kaesong, site of the futile 'first cease-fire talks. The United Na tions command considered Kae song essential to guard the mili tary approaches to Seoul, 34 air miles to the southeast. Even if the buffer issue is set- tied, the truce negotiators still have three other major 'agenda items to consider before a military armistice can be arranged. These include arrangements for the exchange of prisoners, •truce supervision of areas behind the opposing armies, and recommen dations for the ultimate with drawal of foreign troops from Korea. Truman Greets Princess in D.C. WASHINGTON, Oct. 31—(W)-- Pr esident Truman welcomed Princess Elizabeth to the U.S. to day by saying: "Margaret tells me that when ever anyone becomes acquainted with you they immediately fall in love with you." The words weren't in Mr. Tru man's orenared remarks. But jUding by the way he and the 550,000 persons acted who turned out to greet Britain's Eli zabeth and Prince Philip, they pretty well filled the bill. In a voice calm and firm, Eliza beth told the President and the millions more watching and lis tening by television and r adio that Britain and Canada will "work with all our strength for freedom and for peace." • "F re e men everywhere," she said, "look towards the United States with affection and with hope." Atr , Reds Drawing to Settlement Gore Reports On Atom 'Mast WASHINGTON, Oct. 31—(VP)— , A Congressional eyewitness said today the latest atomic bomb blast over the Nevada desert "looked big enough to destroy any enemy division" on the bat tlefield. • Rep. Gore (D-Tenn.), chairman of a House atomic energy sub committee, said he and four other Congress members witnessed the .explosion yesterday from "sev eral miles away," and he told newsmen: "The atomic bomb can now be used on the field of battle. They are no longer .mysterious un certainties—they are now speci fic, accurate arid certain." Gore indicated that the Con gress members , would have been in danger if they had been as close as five miles •to the dual action blast which was reported felt 130 miles away. Official secrecy blacked out any technical disclosures on the ap parently new type of bomb ex ploded—the 20th major U.S. atomic blast. The fouxth in the series of test explosions on Yucca Flat, north of Las Vegas, Nev., is scheduled for tomorrow and is expected to in v o l v e troops in experiments with smaller atomic weapons. Players Welcome • , you to "OUR TOWN" UXEDO RENTALS Bur's MEN'S SHOP Opposite Old Main PAGE THREE