sNi•mibi - r, NOVEMBER 10, - 1951 Immediate.: Arms Urged by United PARIS, Nov. 9 (VP) The United States urged Soviet ,Russia today to enter disarmament talks immediately in the sixth UN General Assembly instead of waiting for develop ment of a Russian-propdsed world conference outside the UN. The Russians were silent on the call, issued by U. S Ambassador Philip C. jessuP at a special news conference Some leading delegates. ex pressed shock and amazement that Soviet, 'Foreign Minister An drei :Y. Vishinsky chose \to laugh .off the arms limitation .plan pro posed. yesterday by the United States, Britain, and France. At the same - time, Yugoslavia - charged • the Russians and their satellites, have been eltercising aggressive pressure against the Yugoslays. Premier Marshal Tito's Communist nation submit ted a memorandum to the assem bly saying the pressure was. ex erted ."for the purpose of. en croaching upon her. sovereignty .and threatening her territorial in tegrity and national independ ence.' The Yugoslays asked a. U.N. investigation. The a'ssembly's general debate continued with speeches from some countries allied with the Big Three, position on arms limi tation. The Russian bloc held its fire until next week. It 'Was known, however, the Russians were studying with interest the official and press reaction ,around the world to Vishinsky's ' speech. Vishinsky proposed that the arms conference meet as soon as possible, but in any event before June 1, 1952. Jessup told the' news conference the United States, Britain, and France " went the arms talks to begin now in the as sembly. Warren to Reveal '52 Election Plans Goii. Earl Warren of California said yesterday he will announce in a few days whether he will run for the Republican presiden tial nomination. And in New York, Republican National Committeeman •J. Rus sel Sprague Said, he has "been assured" that Gen. Dwight- D: Eisenhower will accept the GOP nomination.- „ Other developments c a r r i e d forward the long build-up of the presidential election a year hence. Delegates to the CIO conven tion in New York applauded a speech in whiCh Mizey of the United Auto Workers de clared Eisenhower has not dem onstrated his fitness for the presi dency. "I find nothing in his record which would indicate that he is an acceptable candidate for presi dent as far as organized labor is concerned," Mazey said. ROTC Will Hold, Armistice. Services A short ceremony, commemor ating the end of the First World War, will be conducted by . ROTC students in front of Old Main at 10:55 a.m. Monday. An honor guard composed of members of Pershing Rifles and a group of Navy midshipmen will march to the flag pole at that time. The combined Army, Navy, and Air Force band will play the na tional anthem. After the sound ing of taps the flag will be raised from half-staff to full staff. THE DAILY. COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Election Violence Rocks Argentina .BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 9 —OP) —Argentina's presidential elec tion campaigning came to a cli max with a blaze of gunfire and brickbat throwing here today. There were general predictions that' President Juan D. Peron will win a new six-year term in the election Sunday, but the op position !did not give up hope. The violence occurred at a radical party rally in Constitution Plaza during a speech by .presi dehtial. candidate Ricardo Bal bin. Eight parties are more or less in the running, but the real elec tion contest is between Peron and Balbin, his severest- critic. The radicals said they believe if the election is free from coercion and as honest as Peron ,has promised, they have an outside chance to win. Buffer Zone Bogs Talks; Jet Battles Mark Action MUNSAN, Korea, Saturday, Nov. 10—(W)--The 'Allies insisted today that Communist proposals for a Korean buffer zone would cause a sterile bogdown without ever achieving a real armistice. Nevertheless, the Allied subcommittee scheduled another meet• ing with the Reds at Panmunjom at 11 a.m. (9 p.m. Friday, EST) They had cancelled a Friday afternoon session after a futile morning conference. As the fruitless talks entered their fifth month, •a command spokesman 'said the United Na tions -negotiators - were "begin ning to view with some mis givings the idea of a formalized line" for a cease-fire. In fact, said the spokesman, Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols, the UN command is increasingly skeptical of considering any pro posal that shows a cease-fire line on a map. The Allies took the position that a line agreed upon now would become an actual cease fire line, discouraging future miliL tary action across it. This, the UN command . fears, would free the Communists of the necessity of settling such other armistice ques tions as exchange of prisoners and rear area inspections. CAN YOU COMPLETE THIS REBUS? The answer is an "often quoted" saying by a famous American _ . teq4 N2p >p Jave.t,p.i Talks States Egyptians Hurl 'Nazi' Charge; Iranians Riot Trouble in Egypt and Iran grew hotter yesterday with Egypt ac cusing Britain of using Nazi-like tactics in pouring troops into the disputed Suez Canal Zone while Red demonstrators and anti-com munists clashed, in Tehran shout ing "Death to British and Ameri can imperialists". A formal Egyptian note handed to the British Embassy said the "uninterrupted influx" of British troops "can only encourage and intensify spontaneous movements of resistance of the Egyptian people." The hote said the Suez situation, is getting worse daily, but there were no reports of ma jor violence. In Tehran police said the com munists tore down ,anti-commun ist posters in the heart of the city and were attacked by the anti communists. The Red Demonstration went on for two hours despite a driving rainstorm on what the Reds call ed "International Democratic Youth Day." U. S. EIGHTH ARMY H E A D QUARTERS, Korea, Nov. 10—(P) —Two jet battles, in which three Russian-made Migs were shot down and four damaged fea tured the Korean fighting Fri day, as cold weather slowed, ac tion on the ground. In the first of the dogfights, the Fifth Air Force reported 19 F-80 Shooting Stars took on 30 Migs, downing two and damag ing three, without losses of their own. The victory was considered remarkable, since the slower Shooting Stars are regarded as a poor match for Migs, ,especially when outnumbered. In the second clash 33 Ameri can F-86 Sabre Jets tangled with 20 Migs. They were credited with down ing one and damaging one, also without loss. It was one of the few times the American Jets have outnumbered the Reds. New York Dockworkers End City's Costly Strike NEW YORK, Nov. 9—(AP)—Rebel stevedores ended a billion dollar tieup of east coast docks today, streaming back to work to the shrill pipe of shapeup whistles. The wildcat strike—longest and costliest ever on the New York waterfront—began 26 days ago as a revolt against a new contract. It CIO Convention Reelects Murray NEW YORK, Nov. 9—(AP)— The CIO 13th national convention ended today amid storms of con fetti, shouting delegates, a blar ing brass band and the reelection of president Philip Murray-11 times president before. Also reelected without a trace of . opposition were secretary treasurer James B. Carey, and the nine CIO vice-presidents headed by Allan S. Haywood. Haywood will assume a new post of execu tive vice-president, making him No. 2 man in the CIO. Murray said the big job for next year will be a super drive among the 20,000,000 unorganized workers in the U.S.—"the great est organizing crusade that has ever taken place in the history of organized labor." For Best Results Use Collegian Classifieds :.: :: ' —:. ?: :. '.. . gO H: '.... i : s i.: S :' ' ' ' ...' i. .' '4 1 . :• ' "i . .. i'''. ( 0 15 —,,,,.•.• - "—• . 'I . ' agets a frue course wilt pipe that Starts savest.. smokes spest...stais west quickly spread to Boston. More than 20,000 AFL long shoremen and over 130 ships were idle at the peak of the strike, as pickets roved miles of ghostly de serted piers. Railroad men said it probably will be a week before a log-jam of piled up exports across the na tion gets moving normally. A state fa . ct-finding board— with persuasion as its only weap on—was • praised by harassed shippers for it - -6 part in - bringing peace to the largest port in the world. • •It got the rebel dockers to go back to the piers with their griev ances still unsettled. The board promised to hear them out and offer its recommendations later. The fact-finders took over after city, state, and federal mediators got nowhere,• and after 'strikers turned down a back-to-work ap- peal by President Truman. However, the strikers apparent• ly bowed as much to fate as to fact-finders. PAGE THRtz .; • ~.~~ l]'.i:aaa.:ii'rnli~C~
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers