PhiKPsi Pro Until June Asked 31|f VOt. 58. No. 88 Reds Will Evacuate N. Korea This Year, Chou, Kim Announce Red China Premier Chou En-lai and North Korean Premier Kim II Sung said today Red Chinese troops will withdraw from North Korea by the end of this year. The announcement of trobp withdrawal was made in a broadcast from Pyongyang, the North Korean capital. The two premiers said the withdrawal would begin before April 30. The broadcast contained no stipulation that American troops would have to withdraw simultaneously. SEOUL, Korea, Feb. 18 (JP) —A commercial airliner that flew to North Korea Sunday with 34 persons aboard probably; was seized in flight by at least seven Communist agents, South Korean police said today. Finances Of Parties To Be Viewed Studies of . politcal party’s fi nancial set-ups and elections code penalization methods will be pre sented to the All-University Elec tions Committee at 7 tonight in 214 Hetzel Union. Previous Elections Committtee discussion- of penalization was tabled, until tonight’s meeting. The committee will also discuss financing of cam paigns by the parties. A tentative schedule of dates concerning preparation for the spring election has been an nounced by Peter Fishbum, Elec tions Committee Chairman. The major dates are: Party pfelimination nomination meetings, 7 p.m., March 2; final nomination meetings, 7p.m., March 9; review of party plat forms by Elections Committee, 7 p.m., March 12; start of cam paign, 8 a.m., March 17. Meeting of Elections Commit tee with the clique and party chairmen to answer any ques tions, clarify the election code or hear any complaints or code vio lations, March 24, 7 p.m.; and spring elections, March 24, 25 and 26, 8 a.m. to Bpjn. Students May Get Refunds at ÜBA Students may pick up their money for books sold through the University Book Exchange throughout the week until 5 pm. Friday in the Hetzel Union card room. Any hooks which have not! been sold will be returned to their' owners. Student Injured in Auto Crash j In Monday Night Snowstorm A University student was slightly, injured in a head-on collision during a blinding snow storm late Monday night. Larry; R. Carson, senior in agricultural economics and rural sociology from Centre Hall,j~ and Laura Belle Rubble, frompfLacy, associate professor ofi ManTiPitn, were treated by a doc- ! eaucationai administration, was! " , ’ / . . . ■ “ [involved in a two-car crash which ' tor'for cuts and bruises after a;. cause( j an estimated $550 in dam - mishap on Rt. 45 near the PennsUges. Valley Junior-Senior High School, state College police said a car The injured were taken to the driven by Edward R. Holtzinger, , home of Dr. John Shooks a vet- State 'College, skidded into the erinarian, and he took" them to a rear of the DeLacy car which doctor for treatment.. 'was stopped afS. Atherton St. at In another accident, Walter J. I Hamilton Ave^ (UnUegtatt STATE COLLEGE. PA.. WEDNESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 19. 1958 BULLETIN I As police who examined the |passenger list speculated about which passengers took over the airliner, a North Korean news man indicated a fight had taken place aboard the plane. The newsman, covering a UN| truce commission meeting at Pan munjom, told South Korean re porters that some of the 34 per sons aboard the plane were; wounded and are receiving medi- i cal treatment. • j The police discounted specula-; tion that the'primary objective of Communist agents was to kidnap some of the passengers or the two I American pilots. Police said the| agents, including two former war: prisoners who refused repatria-j tion to the. Communist North in 1953, wanted primarily to escape to Communist territory. P.olice said Kim Hyung, 34, ap parently masterminded the plot to seize the Pusan-to-Seoul airliner. Kim, his 21-year-old wife and their baby boarded the Korean National .Airliner plane at Pusan, giving a false address in Seoul. Kim’s 1 wife worked until four months’ago as hostess-entertainer at an expensive Seoul restaurant frequented by government offi cials. The U. S. State Department went along with the South Ko rean belief that the plane was highjacked by Communist agents. State Department press officer Lincoln White said in a statement in Washington “this would seem but another provocative act by the Communist authorities in North Korea.” Communist representatives at the Panmunjom meeting, rejected the UN Command’s demand that the airliner and its occupants be returned. Col. Kim Joon Kyung of North Korea claimed those aboard the -plane “defected be cause they could not stand any more of the U.S. aggressive policy against South Korea.” The Communists insisted on di rect negotiations over the plane with the South Korean govem 'ment, which has never recognized jthe Communist regime. A South [Korean official said the' Red de mand was impossible.' FOR A BETTER PENN STATI 'NO PARKlNG'—Except for snow removal. University workmen have been working overtime cleaning walks and keeping campus roads safe for traffic. Mercury Rise Seen; 16 Injured in Falls A little of the ice is supposed to be taken out of the Centre County ice box today as temperatures are forecast to; hit a high of 10 to 14 degrees and winds will drop to about 10 miles an hour. Sixteen students have been treated at the University Health Center during the cold ; wave for broken bones a.nd, the flu is "smouldering" in soma : sprains received in falls on ice-!areas glazed streets and sidewalks. J The Nittany Lion this morning, i Six of the students had frac-d n a prepared statement, an-. !, nounced that he has had enough tures, according to Dr this kind o{ weather . He said H. Glenn,* director of the health;he simply refuses to be hauled' service. -out of his warm den every day Although the bitter tempera-!" 10 prognosticate what everyone day and tomorrow in the'Hetzel itures have sent students to the^ especially when'Union card room. jtures nave sent students to xne it>s always bad news .» The University Christian As dispensary aching from frostbite g comnlete with steamer rue >ociation has made available in ew ii normal h and'Sssibty eJen* trunk in tow - the Lion P lans to; nominational church groups the Wer l set out this afternoon for a legen-. American Friends Service Com lower than usual, Glenn said dary o!d tevern> hidden faraway mittee, the YMCA and YWCA, He said it is quite likely that! t jj e northern Pennsylvania and the University planned sum* the number of virus cases willjmountains f mer projects of the UCA. increase when the- cold spell; Before leavino the I ion will 1 Tb* s projects include inter ram™«and Warmer Wea 1 fake time out to issue wothS ; natlona! w °* cam P s - study sem campus. statement, this one. congratu- m politics and world affa.rs^ lating highway crew*, service I mg, migrant camp service, study station operators, furnace serv- (Work in social sett ements camp icemen and communications - r ®!’B lous retreats personnel, many of whom have institutes. .National been working round-the-clock :. ar^ s Service, internship m in to ease the ordinary citizen's : d ustry and work with youth oliahi. ’ groups m city and rural churches. . , .... . * A chaplain or a student will While school children (and a t the desk from 9to 5 p.m. teachers) enjoyed a holiday yes-j today and tomorrow to answer terday, extra operators were_ put, questions and give information, into service by the Bell Telephone Zc Co AIM Governors 260 Tickets Remain To Meet Tonight For Artists Show ! The Association of Independent .. . , . .. , I Men Board of Governors will About 260 student tickets re- :lneet at 7 tonight in 203 Hetzel mam for the Festival Quartet ; xj n i o n to hear a report on a pro concert, 11th program in die Ar- j nd ie Encampment, lists Senes which will be pre-j Ejection dates will be set for sented at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in |th e offices of president, vice pres ! Schwab Auditorium. ident and treasurer of AIM. I Students may pick them up to-. The group also wi n discus* ;day and tomorrow by prvsentmg, send j n g a de [ e g a te to the National a matriculation card at the Hetzel! independent Student Association : oeslc . (convention to be held in Okla- Ticket sales to non-student3,h onla during the last week of i will begin today at the desK.U 1 , rf .i 1 Tickets are priced at $1.25. jj ■■ ■■ - « | About one-fourth of ihe stu dents have received flu shots : at the dispensary. Glenn scid. ; He urged that all students get ! the shots, and he strongly ad- | vised second injections for those who have had the first. | The flu shots are given at the [dispensary from 8:30 to 11:30 e m. [Monday through [Saturday and [from 1-JO to 4:30 p.m. Monday [through Friday. iThe first and [second injection [cost $1 each, j Throughout the [nation, the num jber of deaths [from flu and [pneumonia has been rising i steadily for the past four weeks, ! according to a report by Surgeon i General Leroy E. Burney, U.S. Public Health Service. The cause of the increase is unknown, because there seem ingly is no evidence of a wide spread increase in Asiatic flu cases. But the New York Times reported that Burney suspects Cub Reporters to Meet Cub Reporters tor The Daily Collegian will meet at 8 tonight ia 9 Carnegie. —Dally Collegian photo by Bob Thompson Spring Week Forms Independent groups wishing to. enter Spring Week competition! may obtain application blanks this; iweek by contacting John Bott,: I carnival chairman* at AD 7-3250.1 Pledge Code Violations Are Cited FIVE CENTS Phi Kappa Pst has been rec- ommended for removal of privileges for the rest of that semester, permanent removal from office of the house presi dent and vice-president and a 3150 fine fcr violating the pre initiation practices code. The recommendation was made la.st night during a 3-hour meet ing of the Interfraternity Council Board of Control. The social pro bation was recommended to be gin immediately. The recommendation called for removal of Thomas Brown, house president, and William Harris, vice president, who is also in charge of pledge training. If the recommendation is ap proved by the Subcommittee on Discipline of the Senate Com mittee of Student Affairs—as it must be to become affective— the iwo will be barred from holding further office in the house. A hearing of the subcommittee is expected today or tomorrow. George Wills, chairman of the board of control, said “The recom mendation was based entirely on testimony given by member's of the fraternity at the hearing.” The fraternity probation was recommended for violating the code, which slates: "At no time shall a pledge or candidate for initiation be subjected to any practice that... is detrimental to his physical health. or offen sive to the basic principles of human dignity." According to Wills, the fra ternity was also judged for violat ing the ruling against conducting all pre-initiation practices, not .ritualistic in nature, within the .individual fraternity house. The fraternity also failed to up hold its responsibility to abide by the initiation code, Wills said. UCA to Soonsor 9 Summer Work Project Display A display on summer service opportunities, will be featured to- CoMecvcn Business Staff Candidates and persons in terested in becoming candi dates for the Daily Collegian Business Staff will meet at 7 tonight in 305 Sparks.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers