SATURDAY. OCTOBER 8. 1988 Three Western Propose 'Atom' Atomic Energy For Peace Use Topic for Talks UNITED NATIONS,_N.Y., Oct. 7 (/P)-.The United States; Britain and Australia today called for a second conference within -three years on the ude of atomic power for peace. In a resolution put before the 'UN Assembly's Political Commit tee, those three powers said con tinuing international cooperation in developing and expanding the peaceful uses of atomic enefgy is ess*ntiEil for the benefit of man kind. They reported widespread satis faction with the first conference held in Geneva last August. Another Resolution In a separate resolution, India, Yugoslavia and Burma also pro posed another conference but sug gested it be held at an "appro priate" date. As the committee debate open ed, Sen. John 0. Pastore (D.-R.1.), U.S. delegate in the Assembly, disclosed the Soviet Union has replied to American proposals for an international atoms-for-peace agency. He' said the reply would be considered carefully. Reds To Aid Pool The Russians have promised to contribute atomic materials to a peaceful pool but have withheld agreenient on joining the scheme which first as put before the UN by President Eisenhower on Dec. 8, 1953. Pastore predicted an agreement on the international agency would be reached early next year. Amer ican sources said they expected the agency to be operating by the end of 1956. Statute Opposed Some small and medium coun tries, especially from Asia, were dissatisfied with the proposed sta tute sent out by the United States in ,August. These countries were said to feel the ,big Powers were given too much authority. The statute gives final authority on actions of the proposed inter national agency to. a group of five powers—the • United States, Britain, France, Soviet Union and Canada. The statute does not outline the exact relationship of the agency to the UN. . Peron's Plan Called farce BUENOS AIRES, Oct 7 (11") "The atomic . farce of the 20th century"— , a pipedreani that cost Argentina an• estimated billion, pesos ($71.5 million). That was the way investigators for the new provisional govern ment described today the atoms for:peace .project Juan D. Peron dramatically announced in 1951. The dictator—flow in exile ln Paraguay—created a worldwide sensation.when he proclaimed that Argentina had discovered -the se crets of atomic power, and Was on the :threshhold of producing nu clear power for p4aceful pur poses.' Stevenson Hits GOP Farm Program GREEN BAY, Wis., Oct. 7 (EP) —Adlai E. Stevenson said tonight the nation's farm problem is a "desperately difficult one," and the present Republican policy of sliding or flexible supports "is not working." "Instead of eliminating-Surplus es, as advertised," Stevenson said "it is eliminating farmers, as not advertised. After two or three years of heroics, ballyhoo and un precedented applause from the Republican press, our past prob lems are all still with us, just as we Democrats foresaw. "Export subsidies, impor I quotas still sharply conflict with our declarations' about frogs world trade. Thera is still indefensible discrimination be tween different commodities. Ike, On Dulles Confer ,• Foreign Policy DENVER, Oct. 7 (A' ) —:T e White House set up for Presi dent Dwight D. Eisenhower today the first major business conference since hisiSept. 24 heart attack—a foreign policy discussion with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles next Tuesday. "I think you could say," Craig Heads Home To Open Meetings On Strike Riots NEW CASTLE, Ind., Oct. 7 (/P) I —Governor George N. Craig sent word he is hurrying back to In diana from Florida late today, a few hours after Perfect Circle Corp. won city officials' , permis sion to re-open Monday its found ry where eight persons were shot in rioting Wednesday. Gov. Craig's office in Indianapo lis immediately arranged for a conference of company, union and law enforcement officials Sunday afternoon in the Statehouse. Craig's aides would not say whether his return was prompted by the pistop ring company's de cision, approved by Mayor Paul F. McCormack of New Castle, or how he was traveling. Meanwhile ranking' National - Guard officers had informed Mc- Cormack that they intend to with draw their men and equipment from the foundry property before it opens Monday. They said, how ever, that their. strength would be immediately available if need ed in case of any disorders. est Proposal Told BOURNEMOUTH, England, Oct. 7.(A)-Foreign Secretary Harold MacMillan announced to day the Wept will offer Russia a ."military understanding" in ex change for a Soviet agreement to reunify . Germany by free elec tions. This proposal will be made by the U.S., British and French for-, eign ministers at the four-power Geneva talks Oct. 27, he said. Student Attacked BUTLER; Pa.. Oct. 7 (W)— Donald' Wolfe. 15. a But 1a r High School pupil. today bore scars that formed the letters and 'HR.' The initiali were cut into his skin by four youths who accosted him on a street at, night. Wolf. is one of four Butler High School pupils to be at tacked since the Butler and Hai-Brack High School foot ball . teams played to, a • 7-7 deadlock. Friday. Polcie theor isejhe intense• football rivalry brought eik-th6 attacks. storables and perishables. And the burdensome surpluses are still burdening us. As a result the problem of , controls. effec t:lye controls, still 'remains." In a speech prepared for the Wisconsin State Democratic con vention Stevenson added: "Yet the difficulties that now beset the farmer pose grave prob lems and also dangerous tempta tions. It will be tempting to us Democrats to say: 'Return the Democrats and the farm problem will be soled.' And let me say, parenthetically, thank heaven it is a problem of too much instead of too little as it is in so much of the world where I have been. "Wall. let's leave that kind of talk to the Republicans. For such promises, or even more moderate ones. will do us no THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Nations Conclave Presidential Press Secretary James C. Hagerty told a news conference, "that the secretary would discuss with the President matters with which the President is very familiar and topics which will come up at the Geneva con ference of foreign ministers which opens Oct. 27." These topics inclyde unification of Germany, European security, disarmament, and increased East- West contacts. The Eisenhower-Dulles talks will follow a weekend visit by Vice President Nixon. DENVER, Oct. 7 (. I P)—For President Eisenhower's lunch today there was a surprise—a bowl of his favorite vegetable soup, prepared by his valet, John Moaney. Using the Presi dent's own recipe Moaney put the soup on to'sunmer two days ago. The announcement that Mlles will fly to Denver came as the chief executive neared the close of his first critical two weeks on the recovery road. Medical bulle tins today repeated the familiar theme that Eisenhower is making satisfactory progress "without complications." An ever-present "if" still is at tached both to the Nixon visit and the Dulles conference. They will take place "if" the chief ex ecutive's doctors allow them. But if Eisenhower continued to make the expected headway, as his phy sicians say he has done so far, no medical barriers will be erect ed to the meetings. Nixon is due here from Wash ington early tomorrow afternoon aboaird the 'President's plane, the Columbine 111. Flying with him will be Eisenhower's White House chief of staff, Sherman Adams; the President's son, Maj. John Eisenhower, and the Boston heart specialist, Dr. Paul Dudley White. Mexican River Recedes MEXICO CITY, Oct. 7 (AI— The swollen Panuco River at Tampico remained at the same level overnight after dropping a few inches and neartened 100,000 persons driven from their homes by hurricanes and flood. But the water still was 19 feet above flood stage and the forecast of rain later today posed the dan ger the river might rise again. WASUENGTON, Oct. 7 (W)— John L. Lewis, 75, president of the. United Mine Workers, 1e f t Emergency Hospital today after a two-week convalescence from "a very minor heart attack." Lewis went from the hospital to his home at nearby Alexandria, Vac credit in th. eyes of an awak ened American farmer. "The farm' problem is a des perately difficult one. It has been made more difficult by the ne glect, the- indifference, the y ' post ponement and the slogan-making of these past years. Let us not promise what we cannot perform. Farmers will trust the Democratic party next time but they will not trust it to perform miracles." The former Illinois governor, who has not announced wheth er he will be a candidate for the 195$ Democratic presiden tial nomination, told the Wis consin convention "it is unfair and dangerous that farmers. alone among the great economic groups in our cow:lll..7"er* not sharing in the current pros perity. The farmer's lot gets worse while for everybody else things get better." Plane Crash Probed LARAMIE, Wyo., Oct. 7 071— Investigators probed the snow swept site of the worst commer cial airlines disaster in America's history today as rescue teams struggled through deep drifts to retrieve the bodies of the 66 vic- i , z,..........,. .. / .. :1 7, ~.;,...,,...,.., '4 rl \ -.1 ...,.• .. ' "........... .: ......-:,,, - • i ...,,, • -) sr. , . ~ ~...,5tit,....,,,,,•,..• ~,..c . :,.... it , • :• ~,,::::,..,,n,,,,:-ifig, Why do more college men and women smoke VICEROYS than any other filter cigarette? Because only Viceroy gives you 20,000 filter traps in every filter tip, made from a pure natural substance found in delicious' fruits and other edibles! "1 Yes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000 tiny • filter traps. You cannot obtain the same filtering action in any other cigarette. 2 The Viceroy filter wasn't just whipped up and rushed to 0 market to meet the new and skyrocketing demand for fil tered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Started research more than 20 years ago to create the pure and perfect filter. 3 Smokers en masse report that filtered Viceroys have a • 'finer flavor even than cigarettes without filters. Rich, satisfying, yet pleasantly mild. 4 Viceroy draws so easily that you wouldn't know, without 0 looking, that it even had a filter tip ... and Viceroys cost only a penny or two more than cigarettes without filters! That's why more college men and women smoke VICEROYS than any other filter cigarette ... that's why VICEROY is the largest selling filter cigarette in the world! Government and airline offi cials sifted the wreckage in an effort to determine what caused the United Air Lines DC4 to smash headlong into • the top of 12,005-foot Medicine Bow Peak yesterday. PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers