PAGE TWO Action Urged on Outer Space Control GENEVA CAP) The United States urged the 17-nation dis armament conference yesterday to take early action to put outer space out of bounds as a nuclear battleground. U. S. Delegate Charles C. Stelle told the delegates this could be achieved either in a.general dis armament treaty or by separate agreement even before work on the intricate details; of a general treaty is completed.. : "THIS CONFERENCE could lead to measures designed to in jure that outer space can become an impetus to man’s peaceful pro gress and not a battleground in the future," he declared. Although none of the big pow ers have.any plans now to place nuclear weapons in space, he went on, the technical possibil ity of such action cannot be ruled otit for the future. And although not required urgent action, this possibility is not so remote that it r does not warrant serious and timely preventive measures. i SOVIET DEPUTY Foreign Min ister Valerian A. Zorin had no immediate comment. Both U.S. and Soviet disarmament treaty: drafts call for a first-stage ban on mass destructions weapons in space. But -several previous U.S. attempts to deal separately with the space-weapons issue have been turned down by the Russians. j On another question. Zorjn said the Soviet Union is ready to have armed forces in East and'- West cut in the first stage of a disarma ment treaty to any level the West , WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen ate rejected again yesterday a men tion to cut off debate on the Ken- 1 jnedy administration’s voter liter- Labor Officials Convicted of the civil rights n™ S ri N 5 T P) - Th , eSu - bbckS for the lte c ? mu “£ con - being a move to drop the fight • ycs^[^ a y c *"^?L am ' ; a n d go on to other matters. - steis Union President Dave Beck. and Carpenter's Union President . DESPITE THAT ACTION, there Maurice A. Hutcheson. {appeared little doubt that the Sen- Both probably will ask for newj ate ' s big civil rights battle of Supreme Court hearings, but yes-1 1962 was about over, terday’s decision could mean im- Sen. Clifford P. Case, R-NJ., led prisonment for them. {off a series of speeches against the —{bill following an unsuccessful ef fort he.had made to substitute New College Diner w-C »s r '*Oviv ' Moviei STATE HOW Feat. 1:30. 3:3«, 5:31. 7:35. 9:32 fit oot=ersot. V > -l?’- THE v CHtLQREftTS HOUR BetaraeotttxmiUrcnitart of rtstfme— this motion petort & ttcffiswfxH for *Wts any. NEXT ATTRACTION “THE JOKER” LIBERAL ARTS LECTURE SERIES t presents j r•• • | E 'K ( | ' , Joseph Faulkner ! "The Religious Milieu of the College Student! 1 ! MAY 15 at 7:30 P.M. ! j i- • ■ r ;(m HUB Assembly j .) | : ' Reception and refreshments in HUB Umgn j AH stadeafe and faculty are iavHtd ia attcad ! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA VALERIAN A. ZORIN . . . declines to comment , * propriate $73 million for payment! thought necessary to maintain a Q f claims lodged by 86,000 Fili , balance of military power. : p j nos f or damages from U.S.! THE SOVIET CHIEF delegate, operations in the islands in World jmade the offer in reply to a speech‘War 11. Senate Rejects Motion to Cut Off Debate on Voter Literacy Test Bill j |WuaumtHuimßiHuiuiuamuuimummuummi£ I RADIO’PHONO I 1 • SERVICE * | 1 defivety ADB^02 | | | & pick-up j = CENTER = 1 232 S. Aden St; | 'CENTER s T v / I P*nn £Ute A « I -PUy>r« Cr KRRPPS , ,0^ , r- I APP.I E o > MAY n JL_Mh=> I 1 ! : -rppET— : THEI ■ , MRN —1 or n fed -1 i. SHR last Friday fay Swedish) Delegate Rolf Ed berg, who pointed to West-: em fears that the Soviet-proposed 1 first stage abolition of all foreign bases would upset the iyorld..mil '.tary balance. The original Soviet tijeaty draft provides for the' Uni;|ed States and the Soviet Union tjach to re tain 1.7 million men under, arms at the end of the first s'lage, while all carriers of nucleair weapons and foreign bases would he elimi nated. The U-S. proposal asks re duction to- 2-1-million men and a 30 per cent cut in carriers. Macapagal Delays Visit NILA CAP)—A snaifl in U.S.- Philippine relations letj President Diosado Macapagal to'put off in definitely a 12-day siqte visit to the United States scheduled for next month. The issue was rejected by the U.S. House of Representatives! last Wednesday of a bill to ap-j for ‘ the administration's literacy test bill a proposed constitutional amendment to do the same thing. CASE ARGUED ‘that many members share his Relief that a: change in the Constitution would; be needed to accomplish what; President Kennedy vras trying to! do with direct legislation—exempt! anyone with a sjxtlj-grade edu-' cation from having to pass a state, literacy test to qualify as a voter in federal elections. ' j Kennedy contends literacy tests] have been used in some Southern! areas 4 o prevent Negroes from 1 voting. | i * BOACTOtOT *'i ) last Times T(j>NITE I William Holden “SATAM NEVER SLEEPS” " Starts WED. "WALK ON THE "Wild side" BECKETT Self-Restrain By Algerian ALGIERS, Algeria CAP) alist Liberation Front—FLN—had Algerian commandos suddenly observed the cease-fire that end dropped their self-restraint under ed the 7%-year civiL war between goading of Secret Army Organiza- France and the nationalists. TL° n a fWITH SUBMACHINE guns through Algiers in the first PjH blaring from windows of speeding ]or anU-European mmpage sincef cars> the nationalist commandos the March 18 cease-fire. j addled cafes, bars, .European can French authorities said groups of Europeans in wide machine - gunners firing from spread parts of the city, speeding cars killed 18 or mord Stunned Europeans-scurried to persons and wounded at least 54 j . their homes and apartments, nearly an of them Europeans, j Polke ( twQ ? department Secret army terrorists, fighting stores were set fire by bottles of to keep Algeria French, werf gasoline thrown by moslems. blamed for 10 other deaths. 1 inKfioth stores were gutted before eluding three Moslem women. I firemen could reach the scene.' A' CURFEW was Complicating thef situation were throughout the ctiy. in late after-:a series of secret army noon. By nightfall the streets.one with mortars and machine were empty, except for long cor-jguns on a Moslem street in the voys of French army vehicles an TBelcourt district, heavily guarded, barricades, • \ : ; . thrown across major avenues. „ .. ... .. I Dinas Given 8 Years The Algerian nationalist attack; * _. , . _ [signified an end of Moslem pi-\rOT Disclosing Secrets Itience with French official efforts]’ BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — £o . smash the-..secret army. TlielA three-judge tribunal convicted underground organization has at-i former Vice President Milovan counted for more than 1.000 deaths Djilas at a secret trial yesterday —mostly Moslem—since the na-j of disclosing 'state secrets. For tionalists and Krench signed thesthat and parole violation, it sen- Evian peace accords two monthsjtenced him to eight years and ago. I eight months in prison. The secret army campaign tips] The presiding ju4ge said Djilas been aimed af provoking just such had disclosed confidential in attacks .in hopes .of bringing the formation and added to it Lis own French army over - to its side and impressions “to give reactionary breaking the Evian - agreements, circles a tool to pour oil to the Up to now the Algerian Nation- fire of the cold war." ■■■■■■HHnnnni i LAST TIMES TODAY BOGEBS »; HAMMEHSTEDTS HEW at 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 “STATE FAIR” "lH COLOR CATjHAV/Vli Begins TOMORROW STEFANIE POWERS Begins 1 j TOMORRi LAST TIMESTO! 1 TUESDAY. MAY 15. 1962 Dropped errorists SEE IT FROM BEGINNING al 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:20 P.M. LTHE BflftßDslsi- >w lEßimi i "PICNIC OH THE GRASS'*