Wtl/NtSDAT, aCP!EjyUSCK Tf. I YD4 France Fights German Arming LONDON, Sept. 28 (JP) —France, thrice invaded by German hordes, toddy proposed a seven-nation armaments authority to put the brakes on any runaway West German rearmament. The United States, Britain and Germany promptly, opposed the plan. Premier Pierre Mendes-France made the French proposal at 1 the opening of a nine-power conference oil granting West Ger many sovereignty and rearming the Germans-within the North Atlantic treaty Organization. West G.erman Chancellor Kon rad Adenauer offered his own plan to the conference, calling for an end to the nearly ten years of occupation of his country by U.S., British, and. French troops. He renewed the Bonn’ govern ment’s offer to / join NATO and an enlarged Brussels alliance in or der to contribute to. Western de fense. He promised to limit West German'rearmament to the quota fixed by the French-killed EDC unified army plan. Adenauer, in trouble back home after a demand tonight by the Free Democrats on German re unification,. evidently was seeking quick and'tangible benefits to his country from the conference. Two major problems arose dur ing today’s session: 1. Mendes-France proposed that the French-German dispute over the Saar be settled as part of, a “package deal” that'would include an agreement on West Germany. Other delegates feared this would complicate the conference. The French and Germans have differ ing ideas about the future of the coal and steel producing border territory which for. generations has been a bone of contention be tween them. 2. Combined U.S.-British-Ger man opposition to Mendesr; France’s plan . for a European • armaments authority. Instead • they want NATO to control the ' West German buildup. Adenauer, • with full British-American 1 back- ' ing, proposed giving NATO more , powers to ensure that NATO con- ' trols would be effective. Ridgway Sees Need of Power In Atomic War DENVER, Sept. 28 (£>)_Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway said at Pres ident Eisenhower’s headquarters today that with survival of the nation at stake in any atomic war, there probably would be need for more armed manpower than ever before.' Ridgway, Army chief of staff, made the statement at a news con ferenc£ after he arid Secretary of 'the Army Robert T. Stevens had given the President a progress re port on building up combat strength. ..“We see a very definite possi bility that a war in which atomic weapons were freely used may re sult in a need fof increased man? power, rathef than decreased,” Ridgway declared. “The stakes in the next world war are survival. It’s not some thing you. can play with. The whole survival of our people as a independent nation may be at stake.” ■ Ridgway’s remarks appeared to implied criticism of any advocates of relying on air power and atomic weapons at the expense of a re duction in ground forces strength. In reply to a question, the gen eral said the: United States now has 25 divisions, including six in training. But he would not say whether he is satisfied with that strength. Death Toil Reaches 80 In Indian Rail Disaster BOMBAY, India, Sept. 28 (JP) — The known death toll in India’s worst railroad disaster climbed to 80 late-today as rescue workers continued to pull bodies from a flooded river miles from Hy derabad. At least 100 persons were in jured, 29 seriously. Five cars of the Hyderabad-Ka zipet express huptled into the rac ing waters , early today when a flood-weakened bridge collapsed. An estimated 600 dozing passen gers were aboard. I British OK Rearmament Of Germans _ SCARBOROUGH, England, Sept. 28 (/P) —Britain’s Laborites today endorsed West German re armament—but by a margin of less than two per cent.’They kept control of their party’s foreign policy in the hands of moderates led by former Prime Minister Cle ment Attlee.' The moderates’ narrow victory at the Labor conference weak ened the 71-year-old Attlee’s in fluence in West European So cialism. It also brought small comfort to the nine-power Lon don foreign conference discussing West German rearma ment. Aneurin Bevan’s defeated left wing followers trooped out of the seaside conference hall more jubi lant than the victors. They inter preted the outcome as a sign of mounting strength. . The delegates approved by a vote of 3,270,000 to 3,022,000—51.8 per cent—a motion by the Attlee moderates calling for a West Ger man contribution to Western de fenses. A Bevanite motion calling for a ban on arms for the Germans was defeated 3,281,000 to 2,910,000 — 52.9 per cent. - The closeness of today’s ballot ing was due to the fact-that while the local party organizations were strongly on Bevan’s side as usual, the big trade unions which have, supported Attlee solidly hereto fore were divided on German re armament. During the debate Attlee, speak ing in the tones of a schoolmaster, asked the conference to avoid tak ing “a sterile and negative” step that'.would tie the hands of any future Labor foreign secretary. , Israeli Freighter Seized lit Canal by Egyptians CAIRO, Egypt, Sept. 28 (/P) —Egyptian gunboat seized a small Israeli freighter today! as it tried to run Egypt’s blockade on Israeli shipping through the Suez Canal. Egypt charged the vessel fired without provocation oh a cluster of Egyptian fishing boats, killing three persons. Israeli government spokesmen in Jerusalem quickly denied the charges and said the vessel was unarmed. They accused Egypt of violating international agreements permitting free passage of all ship's through the Suez. .. Israeli officials conferred with their delegates in New York on a possible U.N. Security Council test of the case. Israel long has sought a showdown on Egypt’s 7- |year blockade of Israeli, shipping through the vital waterway. Maj. Amin Shaker, a spokesman for Egypt’s military regime, said the 500-ton Bat Galim opened fire with small automatic weapons on the fishing boats near the Red Sea coast village of Sharm El Shekh, 25 miles from the south entrance Have You Gotten Yours? PERSONALIZED STATIONERY Now on Display in State College Hotel Lobby Tuesday and Wednesday 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. me UAILT e-ULLCGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Leader Charges 'lrregularities In State Funds ALLENTOWN, Pa., Sept. 28 (IP) —Sen. George M. Leader, Demo cratic candidate for governor, said tonight there are “shocking ir regularities” in the interchange of funds between the State Liquor Control Board and Gov. John S. Fine’s budget office. “It is inconceivable but never theless true that the governor’s office and the Liquor' Control Board have become part of a cur ious interchange of state funds to build up the illusion that liquor profits were millions of dollars more than they actually were.” Leader, in a prepared speech, pointed to the governor’s finan cial report for the first half of the current biennium which showed liquor store profits at 44 millions for the year ending May 31. The net yield, he said, actually was $39,917,000. He added: “During that year, cash trans fers amounting to 44 millions were made by the Liquor Control Board to the general fund and it is this figure which turns up in the gov ernor’s report as ‘liquor store profits,’ when the designation is false and misleading. “Against the 44 millions hand ed over to the general fund by the Liquor Control Board is a ‘loan’ of 15 millions the general fund handed: back to the Liquor Control Board. “In other words, the general fund received only the net amount of, 29 millions from the state stores fund and not 44 millions' as er roneously reported in. the gover nor’s financial statement.”.-,. McCarthy Issue Denied by Hall WASHINGTON, Sept. 28 (IP)— The chairman -of the Republican National Committee said today the battle raging around Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy will have no effect on the November elections and added: “The American peo ple are sick and tired of the whole situation.” GOP chief Leonard W. Hall gave this estimate while answer ing questions after q National Press' Club luncheon. One of McCarthy’s friends, Sen. William E. Jenner (R-Ind), said that -\yhen the Senate considers a censure vote against the Wis consin Republican it must remem ber that the Communists are out to discredit McCarthy. of the canal. A boat was overturned . and three fishermen were wounded, he said, several others were wounded, according to Shaker, who said the Egyptians did not return the fire. He said the freighter and its crew of ten were seized by an Egyptian, gunboat and placed un der arrest in Port. Twefik. Bay pending an investigation. It was the first time since Egypt clamped down the blockade dur ing the 1948 Palestine War that an Israeli vessel flying the blue and white Star of David flag of the Jewish state had tried to make way through the canal. Delaware Students Rebel At Segregation End MILFORD, Del., Sept. 28 (/P) —Only a third of the 1562 pupils enrolled at Milford’s formerly all-white school showed up today on the second day of a boycott against the end of racial segregation. Meanwhile, there were-signs that a boycott against enforcing the Supreme Court’s integration ruling may be spreading to other south ern Delaware communities. A majority of the pupils at the \ I g g all-white , elementary school in ¥w fL ||C the small town of Lincoln, seven miles south of here, were missing * from their classes today. And in ItJP I*l Q T Laurel, 12 miles to the southwest, o^ a a meeting was called for tomor- § A _ • / row night to “formulate plans for B residents ... to vote on desegre- &J 1 II yC gation ” • “ Increase at Milford Dr. George R. Miller, state sup erintendent of public instruction, announced that 509 pupils —53 more than yesterday—showed up this morning at the Milford school. And a crowd of adults estimated at 100 and notably smaller than yesterday stood quietly on the streets outside the school. For the second day ten of the Negro high school pupils who pre viously had to attend out-of-town all-Negro schools, arrived for classes in private cars and school buses. School officials heard re ports that the other Negro pupil had decided to return to a school in nearby Dover. Reopened by Board Milford’s combination elemen tary-high school was reopened yesterday on orders of the State Board of Education after the local board resigned. An attempt by local school officials to institute racial integration met with threats of violence. State and local police continued to patrol the streets to control any possible demonstrations. They also escorted the Negro pupils to their homes after class. Only 36 of an enrolled 140 pupils appeared this morning at the only school in Lincoln. I Mary | Leitzinger’s M 136 E. College Ave. J y y • ©£ fas Mon gay, giddy, and stylish— can-can petticoats— all in practical 100% nylon. The more the better! LOCK HAVEN, Pa., Sept. 28 (#) —Lt. Gov. Lloyd H. Wood, Repub lican gubernatorial candidate, to day described his Democratic op ponent, Sen. George M. Leader, as “a captive candidate.” “He cannot think for himself; he cannot act for himself; he can not decide for himself!” said Wood. “He must turn to his political masters for advice and direction.” Wood, in a prepared speech, said Leader could not make “a single move” in the election cam paign until he received the ap proval “from the Pittsburgh boss es and the contractor political" strategists, headed by, Matt Mc- Closkey. McCloskey, a Philadelphia con tractor, is Democratic state fi nance chairman. Wood went on: “The Pittsburgh gang of ward politicians and contractor boss McCloskey have a big stake in this election. Their stake is pat ronage and millions of dollars in state contracts in a public-be damned policy. “They care not for the welfare of the citizens of Pennsylvania as long as their empty pocketbooks are fattened. They care not for educational needs of the children of this state unless they are in position to grab the contracts to elect new buildings.” PAGE THREE