SAIIIRDAY, NOVEMBER rt, 1952 RustiiiHDeiiiiiiidi.'' Bari On Atoriniic, Weapons PARIS, Nov. le—(EP)--,Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky de manded today an immediate ban on atomic weapons and a one-third cut in the armed forces of the five great powers as an urgent prelude to world disarmament. - Students Arrested For Slingshooting TwO students were, arrested Thursday night for shooting slingshot pellets at fraternity house windows. Leslie E. Romberger, 19, and David McFarland, 20, pleaded guilty to the action before Guy G. Mills, justice of the peace, yes terday morning. Each student was fined $56.90, including costs, and ordered to pay the two fraternities' damages amounting to $1.91. Borough police said they re - - ceived complaints from Acacia and Sigma Phi Epsilon last week that someone had broken win- . dows in, their fraternities by throwing or- shooting pellets at them. While investigating another complaint from Acacia Thursday night, police apprehended Bom berger. He was carrying 32 calibre slugs, .pellets about one quarter inch in diameter and a slingshot. Bomberger implicated - McFar land after being questioned, and both were placed •in jail over night, police said. DeMalay Chapter To Be Reinstated All DeMolays and Masons are invited to attend a ceremony to reinstate the Penn Chapter of the Order of DeMolay at 4 p.m. today in the Bellefonte Masonic Temple. A dinner will follow the ini tiation ceremony, to be performed by th e Williamsport Chapter. Degrees w ill be conferred at 8 p.m. Students desiring transporta tion -should call Thomas Farrell at State College 7773 or 4332. Smith to Address Penn State Club Ray Smith, education director of the Ford Foundation office for adult education 'in community development at the College will speak at -a meeting of the Penn State Club Monday.: Robert A. Higgins, president of the club, said the meeting will be held at 8 p.m. in the West dining hall lounge. - Smith will talk on "Penn State Alumnus—A Goodwill Ambassa-, dor." A movie, "This is Penn State," will be shown - and free refresh ments will be in charge of Julia Brill. Counseling Period Set For E and C Majors A two-week counseling -period ending Dec. -1 for' economics and commerce majors , has been set by the department. Office hours of department staff members are posted outside 106 Sparks. The department is also distri buting• a - brochure, "Careers in Business and Economics," to its classes, which may be .obtained in ,106. Sparks. ' DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Secretary of State Acheson promptly rejected these demands and declared the intention of the United States, Britain and France to persevere with "the serious business of trying ,to get agree ment, on genuine \steps toward disarmament." Vishinsky added the following, planks to a platform he put be fore the Assembly last week: Derhands Reduction of Arms 1. A call for the assembly to declare atomic weapons instru ments of aggression and to ban their production immediately. Th e • combined Atomic Energy Commission and the Commission on Conventional Armaments, ex pected to, be merged at this ses sion, would report to the Security Council by Feb. 1, 1952, on details of this ban. 2. A demand for the five big powers —m caning the United States, France, Britain, Russia and Red China to reduce all armaments by one-third within a year. 3. A demand that within one month after, the Assembly. ap proved the Soviet proposal all countries, in or out of the UN, would, supply full and complete data on their armaments, includ ing atomic weapons. 4. A call for creation of an international control organ with in the framework of the Security Council. This means the Security Council veto .could be used to block decisions of the control or gan. ICG to Meet At 'Harrisburg A state executive meeting of the Intercollegiate Conference on Government will be held at 2 p.m., tomorrow in the Penn Harris Hotel, Harrisburg. 'Delegates to the executive meeting include faculty advisers and student chairmen from each of the 60 active PennsylVania chapters. Attending the meeting from -the College will be Prof. Lee Corter of the political science department and William Klisan in, student chairman, Joseph Gal ati of the College will serve as assistant regional director. Non voting delegates will include George Reese, Edward Gildea, and Edward Chesla. The .meeting will be a plan ning session for the annual state I.C.G. convention to be held April 12-15 in Harrisburg, which will be a presidential nominating convention, Group to Hold 2nd Fork Dance Program The folk dance group, composed of students and townspeople, will hold the second in a series of programs from 8 to 11:30 tonight in the parish house of the Epis copalian Church. The Swedish hambo an d other. Scandinavian and Hungarian ' dances will be 'demonstrated. Tickets may be Purchased at the door for 90 cents. Proceeds will be contributed .to V. F. Bel iajus, noted folk dance leader, who is recovering from an illness in a Colorado, sanitarium. Ridgeway_ Investigates Korean War Murders By the Associated Press Hints of ,skepticism arose yesterday over th e reported murder of 5500 American pris oners of war in Korea as Gen. Matthew B; Ridgway pushed a full investigation into the story that shocked the -nation. It was suggested in Washing ton that figures on some of the 'reported killings may have been duplicated. On the battlefront, the armed services radio broadcast the thfee-day-old report for the first time to U.S. troops and their Allies. The Army denied any cen sorship in connection with the earlier radio silence on th e story of, mass atrocities. U. of Paris Prof To Talk on Galileo Dr. Alexander Koyre will speak on "Galileo and the Founding of Modern Science" at 8 p.m. Nov. 27, in 131 Sparks. Dr. Koyre teaches the history 'of science at the University of Paris and at the present time is a visiting professor at, Johns Hopkins University. He has written several studies on the development of scientific ideaS and techniques. Egyptians Election PARIS, Nov. 16—(W)—Egypt challenged Britain in the United Nations today with a proposal that both let the Sudan alone until a UN supervised election can decide the future of the million-square mile area. Salah El Din, Egyptian foreign minister, proposed in the UN Assembly's general debate that the UN run the Sudan—which run the Sudan which Britain Britain and Egypt have ruled jointly since 1899=until a deci, sion is made by vote of the 8,000- 000 Sudanese people. The proposal hit the UN as a surprise one, day after King Far ouk was hailed in his parliament at Cairo as King of Egypt and Sudan and smilingly acknow ledged the cheers. Egypt ' and Britain each ha s 1,000 to 1,500 troops in the Su dan, but the British _command the several thousand Sudanese police troops Salah El Din, in a bristling spech, accused the British of atro cities in the disputed Suez Canal zone and again rejected the Mid dle East defense command pro ject proposed by the U..n it e d States, , Britain, France and Tur key. ditv , m l ei '' 4 ,4• Vrs Tror . • 40. ) ood, ly, 11 T- :, Propose in Sudan ATTENTION !! Campus Organizations SUBMIT ENTRIES FOR QUEEN OF THE HARVEST BALI. SATURDAY, DEC. 1 Entries Must Be in By Monday, Nov. 19, at Student Union Reds Gain Ground; Peace Still Close MUNSAN, 'K o r e a, Saturday, Nov. 17—(iP)--:-An Allied spokes man expressed fresh optimism Friday over the outcome of the stalled talks on a. Korean cease fire line—but there still was no settlemerit in sight. Another meeting—the 24th on the buffer zone issue since re newal of the talks—was slated for II a.m. today at Panmunjom. However, the acting spokes man, Lt. Cot Howard S. Levie, told correspondents he felt that they were "a lot closer today" than a month ago or a week ago. The subcommittees have been assigned only One problem in the over-all attempt to achie've an armistice in the bloody conflict-- where to draw a temporary'mili tary demarcation line between the United Nations and Communist forces. Their proposals are' similar on that point. It would be a line based on the present battlefront. It would be two and one-half miles wide and would reflect bat tle changes, if any, up to the time a full armistice is signed. 'Maj. Gen. Henry I. Hi:ides, ,UN Command sub-committee chair man, told the Reds Friday that both sides were in agreement on a buffer zone, but added: "We at no time, at' no place, in any formal proposal indicated or suggested where the fighting would stop." Thus, it appeared that the Al lied delegates wanted the Reds to put into writing an agreement that both sides retain the right to use all miiltary power at their disposal right up to the signing of an armistice. Students to Attend Kansas Convention A group of 15 to 20 students representing the College may at tend, the 16th quadrennial con vention of the Student Volunteer Movement at the University of Kansas Dec. 27 to Jan. 1, accord ing to Rev. Luther Harshbarger, executive secretary of the. PSCA. All 'students interested in at tending are asked to contact John Blanchard, of the Wesley Foun dation, before Dec. 1. The meeting, which will be at tended by students from 600 col leges and universities in the U.S. and Canada, has selected th e theme "Christ's Kingdom—Man's Hope." PAGE Th::mzE SEOUL, Saturday, Nov. 17—(Ni) —Sudden Red attacks drove Al lied troops off, two advance posi tions on' the Korean western and eastern fronts Friday. In the West, north of Yonchon, Chinese infantry, aided by at least five tanks, made a sudden push that forced the Allies back from an unidentified location. Al lied officers, who reported the action without disclosing the number of Reds involved, said the defenders withdrew soon after the Communists opened fire. On, the eastern front, northwest of the "punchbowl" above Yang gu, there was a battle of several hours • before Allied infantry re tired from a hill. A Red battalion estimated at about 600 men attacked shortly after midnight. An Allied officer said the fighting involved hand grenade duels. .On the central front, an Allied patrol west of Kumhwa bumped into strong small-arms fire and returned to its own lines after a two-hour scrap. The Eighth Army also reported two small Red probing attacks were repulsed on the central front southwest of Kumson. In clear weather after Thurs day's all 7 day 'downpour, more than 100 Communist MIG jets were sighted on four occasions over North Korea, but avoided combat each time. A dvertisemen t RESULTS BLACK VELVET evening bag contain- ing wrist watch between Lambda Chi and Simmons Friday night. Finder call 9 Simmons. This Collegian Classified brought results. Yes ... within 4 hours after this ad appeared, Miss Mar y Ann Milligan's black velvet evening bag was returned. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers