riih)AY, gOVEMEsft, , Ri_iisia RelOs UN Plan For, \stediiiiiikii' - Of 'Ainis PARIS, Nov. B—(Jp)—Soviet Russia rejected the West's riew arms reductions plan in the United Nations today. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky clashed head-on with Secretary of State Dean Acheson in a debate which left few delegates hopeful of con ciliation. - Vishinsky proposed instead a proVide for a world disarmament conference by June 1. A - cheson called on the Russian's to give the word for a halt to the Korean conflict and said a settle ment of the Korean problem could open• the door to broader consul tations on other aspects of the Far Eastern situation.. Acheson made it plain the, United States will not begin on a piogram of arms limitation, until the Korean war is ' stopped and existing world problems Settled. Vishinsky ranged up and down every policy of the United States and the West and found nothing good about any of them, es pecially the North Atlantic Treaty organization. He then offered a four-point resolution calling for: 1.- A finding that participation in the "aggressive Atlantic bloc" and establishment of foreign na val, army and air bases in any part of the world is incompatible with the principles of the UN. 2. A cease-fire in Korea, with troops to be withdrawn in 10 days from the 38th parallel and from Korea in' three months. 3. To ask all countries, in and out of the UN, to scrutinize at a world conference the question of the reduction of armed forces and armaments and to recommend that this conference convene at least before June 1, 1952. 4:'A Big Five peace pact to which all other pe a c e-loving states would ,adhere. Five at College To Participate In Model UN Five students at the College will participate in the model UN Security Council 'meeting spon sored .by the International Rela tions Club today and - tomorrow at Lehigh University. The three-,delegates from the College are Marion Venzlauskas, John Henry, and William Dusin berre. Robert Post and Donald Cutler will be sent as alternates. Each country on the council will be represented by one of the 11 Pennsylvania colleges invited to the session. They are Seton Hill College as Brazil,' the Uni versity of Pittsburgh as China, Pennsylvania College fo r • Wo men as Ecuador, Beaver College as India. Allegheny College as' -Netlier lands, Ursinus College as' Tur key, the University of Pennsyl vania as Russia, Lafayette Uni- versity as the • United Kingdom, Bucknell University -as .the Uni ted States, Lehigh University as Yugoslavia, and Penn State as France. , Current issues to be discussed by the group are th,e India-Pak istan dispute over the peace settlement of, the Arabs with Palestine, and the method of selection of the UN SecretayK- General. For Best Results Use Collegian Classifieds Tilit DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA four-point resolution which would Blasts Arms Plan Festival Raises $4OO for-Fund Approximately $4OO was raised by the international r elati o n s committee of the School of Home Economics through the second annual International Festival Oct. 27 and 28. Money received , from the festi val will be used toward a scholar ship fund for a foreign student in the school year 1952-53. This year, the committ is sponsoring William Banfi e 1 d, from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, who is a student in Hotel Administra tion. After studying at the Col lege for a year, Banfield expects to obtain a Position with one of the Pan-American Airways' ho tels in South America., Since there are few places out side the United States where it is possible to obtain & university degree in education for home and family life; the committee has had requests - for • help 2rom India, China, Japan, New Zealand, and parts of Europe and South Am- . erica. First • Pivot Issue To Appear Soon Pivot, campus poetry maga zine, will be released for the first time this year around Thanks giving, Prof. J. L. Grucci, ad viser of the publication, has an nounced. The issue will announce the winners of th e poetry contest conducted by Pivot, in which two prizes, of $lO and $5 will be awarded for the - best poems sub mitted. Professors Grucci and W. L. Werner and Pauline Locklin are judges for the contest. The .Pivot• staff will meet at 8:30 p.m. Monday in 234 Sparks, where it will elect a new staff for the spring magazine. The newly created Fred Louis Pattee poetry award of $25 will be presented to the person who submits the best poems for k the year. , Winner• of that award will he announced in the spring issue. NO Eng Lecture Todak • There willbe no Senior Engin eering ,Lecture today. The World At a Glance ktherican Threatened CAIRO, Nov. 8 —(JP)— Myles Standish 111, 26, third secretary of the United States embassy in Cairo, fled to the protection of an Egyptian police station last night when a group of Egyptians threat ened him. They accused him of being a British spy. . French Editor—Deputies PARIS, , Nov. 8 —(iP)— Th e French parliament tonight passed a bill requiring its members who also are editors of newspapers to name associate editors who could be made responsible for w•li a t their papers print. The bill, introduced by tw o socialists, was aimed against edi tor-deputies who shelter behind their parliamentary immunity when libel proceedings are brought againSt them. British Coal LONDON, Nov. 8 —(10 Brit 'ish households will be colder than ever this winter. The Ministry of Fuel and Pow er tonight rationed home-heating coal to 1,344 pounds in the north and 1,120 in the warmer south for the three-month period of No vember, December and January. Under previous rationing, the average British family could get 3,584 pounds of coal a year and up to two long tons-4,480 pounds —of coke if it was available. 'Quake Recorded By Seismograph An earthquake that took place within 6300 kilometers of the Col lege wa s recorded yesterday morning on the seismograph of the College's Geophysics depart- Ment. Everett Kauhonen and John Duecher of the seismology divis ion of the Geophysics department • said the quake took place either in, Peru, Spain or the Aleutian Islands. They said the seismo graph records only the distance of the shock, and not the exact location. They said the shock, first re corded at 8:54 a.m., reached its maximum here 20 minutes later. They said in the area of the quake, that meant the maximum would have been reached in about 70 - seconds. Joseph Berg, of the division, is responsible for inter preting the seismograph's record ings. sth Week for 'Doorstep' Players' comedy "The G r eat Big Doorstep" begins its next to last weekend performance at 8 tonight at Center Stage. Tickets are on sale at the Stu dent Union desk in Old Main at 90 cents for tonight's show and $1.25 for tomorrow's performhnce. STARLITE DRIVE-IN on BELLEFONTE ROAD SHOW TIME 7 P.M. FRIDAY and SATURDAY 'BORDERLINE' Fred MacMOrray Claire Trevor --plus-- 'HELLFIRE' with Elliott Korea Truce Talks To Resume Today MUNSAN, Korea, Friday, Nov. 9—(?P)—The Korean armistice talks, tightly tied up on the buffer zone issue, resume at Panmunjom at 11 a.m. today (9 p.m. Thursday,• Suspecting a Red booby trap, the allied negotiators Thursday "Completely rejected", a Communist proposal. to fix a demilitarized zone immediately once and \ for all—regardless of future battlefield changes which might favor the United Nations 'The allies insisted, howe4er, they were still hopeful, but far from optimistic, of future progress. Where' to draW a buffer zone has been the snag in armistice talks almost since they began July 10. After the talks were ltarted on Russia's - gugestion, the Chinese and" North Korean Communists long held out for settlement only on the 38th par allel. They abandoned that demand for the old prewar boundary when the current series of subcom mittee talks began Oct„ 25. Conceding that a ,buffer zone should - be based on the current battle line, which is mostly well inside North Korea, the Reds Wednesday proposed that agree ment be reached on where that line is and _it be firmly fixed. Each side would have a veto power over any subsequent changes proposed by the other. Prise Ceilings Raised WASHINGTON, Nov. B—(2EP) Pri c e control chiefs revamped regulations affecting 100,000 manufacturers today and said that generally higher price ceil ings can be expected,on 'many 'consumer goods as a result. Van Heusen Products. exclusive with 3hir's MEN'S SHOP Opposite Old Main PALL I.u.rcr,E, Truman Denies He Offered Support to Ike WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 —(R)— President Truman said today "There'snot a word of truth" in a published report that he had offered to step aside and support Gen. Dwight D.,Eisenhower for the Democratic presidential nom ination in 1952. Aides at Gen., Eisenhower's Supreme Allied Headquarters in Europe also discounted the story, published in the New York Times. They called it "purely fictional." There was no immediate com ment from the five-star general himself. Aides said there would be none. The Times article was written by the veteran Arthur Krock, chief of the newspaper's Wash ington bureau, who has had the inside track sever al times in White House news breaks. He is a three-times Pulitzer Prize, win ner.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers