PAGE TWO i- U.N. Committee Demands Test I Ban i ■ <= i . UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. UP)— The U.N. Political Committee overwhelmingly demanded yes terday an cpd to all nuclear tests by next Jan. 1, despite objections from the :United States and Brit ain. It approved a plan calling, for an outright prohibition on tests in the atmosphere, in! outer space and under water. The plan also recommends a limited ban on underground tests coupled with .inspection rights feir an inter national scientific commission. The three major nuclear powers —the United States. Great Brit ain and the Soviet Union—object ed to various portions of the draft and abstained as the plan passed Bulgarian Premier Ousted, Denounced Before Congress " 'SOFIA, Bulgaria <&f~ Pre mier Anton Yugov was ousted in a widespread purge of Bulgaria’s Communist regime, apparently dictated by the Krem lin to stamp out lingering vestiges .of Stalinism. The 58-year-old Yugov was de nounced before 1,005 delegates at tho-Bulgarian party's eighth con gress on charges of “frartionism*’ and. was bpoted out of the party. THE DENUNCIATION came from part y chief Todor Zhivkov tt few hours after he returned from a weekend trip to Moscow. Zhivkov disclosed a number of) other ranking government offi cials • were ousted and expelled from the party as well. These included former Deputy Premie: Georgi. Zankov, former Interior Minister Ivan -Baikov and (fall forum series I The Newman Club presents the second in the | "Liturgical Changes | Flexibilily Within the Church" nuniiniiniHiiiiiiimiitmiminHiiiHitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiinniuiiiiiiinif? TOM6HT . !I(ma 7 p.m. Spend a Weekend in Pittsburgh and see the PENN STATE -Pin OOTBALLGAME •Grt, nd Bus from Hotel Webster HallalTrtlO pjn_ No vember 25th. arriving in State College about 5:15 p.m. Coffee break en route. MINiMUH BF 3t PERSONS - REGISTER HOW! THERE’S STILL TIME ' I ervrv Stabs T/ul*i*L w i i 116 W. College Ave, State College Phone AD 8-0528 81-0. Twenty-two other nations abstained. The General Assembly is expected to approve the reso lution today. The United States and Britain abstained after failing to knock out the Jan. gl • deadline. They have consistently opposed a blan ket prohibition j which does not include specific I rights for inter national verification. THE SOVIET UNION abstained, apparently becajise of the piece meal nature of jthe draft setting up a limited, verified j ban on underground tests. The U.S.S.R. •has called for a permanent ban on all tests without on-site inspec tion rights. • Before the vote, the 110-nation his deputy, Apostil Kotchev, for mer Trade Minister Rusi Khristo 7ov, until recently Bulgarian am bassador to East Germany, and another former Trade’ Minister Georg 1 Kumbililyev, until now the ambassador to Red China. KUMBILIYEVS OUSTER could have a bearing on the grow ing rift between Moscow and Pei- ! Yugov took over as premier in 1956 from Vulkp Chervenkov, who was kicked but when Moscow stepped up its janti-Stalinist cam paign. Chervenkov’s disgrace was made complete Monday with his expulsion from the party. The Cuban -crisis could have been a factor jin the final dump ing- of Yugov, whose former links with Stalinists had left him in a shaky position' anyway. by Dr. William Storey November 24 and 25. 1952 For Only M 2? 5 fhound Bus (with Lmtoqr)ls HaM ebster HtU, Leaving State. College a-m., November 24th. Coffee break route. in Hotel Webster HalL 4 persons room. btdM doubla | ' THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, _ UNIVERSITY PARK. J PI committee accepted a U.S.-Brit ish amendment specifying that any interim agreement on sus pending underground tests “shall include adequate assurances for. effective detection and identifi cation of seismic events by an in ternational scientific commis sion.” Arthur H. Dean, chief US. dis armament negotiator, later told newsmen the wording of that draft did not mean the West, had dropped its earlieri demands for on-site inspection rights. DEAN SAID identification : is impossible without on-site in spection and the new. Anglo- American draft amounts to the same thing. The change in the wording vi>as made in response, to “dozens of requests,” he said, but he stressed that the wording “made no dif ference to us.” In addition to calling for an end to all tests by Jan. 1, the com mittee's plan also' asked the 18- natibh disarmament commission to reconvene at Geneva not later than Nov. 12 and to report back to the General Assembly by Dec. I°. _ UNDER THE TERMS of a Ca nadian amendment, the resolution recommended that a ban on tests in outer space, in the atmosphere and under water become- effective immediately if no agreement is readied on banning all tests by -Jan. 1. explosions would bii barred for d limited time under the provisions of the An glo-American addition to the Canadian amendment. oopooooooooooooooooooooo f LOCAL AD § f STAFF § g^TONIGHT ! IMPORTANT! g O g o Everyone Must g g be there er hand % S in excuses to § g Jane or Jean by g g 5 p.m. % MEETING 6:45 § 131 Sackett l O'O 0000000000000000000000 —•TODAY ONLY— 2:00-4:15-8:80-8:30 PM. TWO BELOVED STARS . . Singing Sigmond Romberg’.'; .Mm l»0\ tl.ll i, v ./ * Klim thi Golden Weif Starts TOMORROW Nit* Tha. Sam* Hilarious Gang That Brought You 'CARRY ON NURSE” Now Gang up ca iba Laugh* Again and tha d< INSYLVANIA State to Vote Today In General Election PHILADELPHIA (JP) Penn sylvanians will elect 'a governor and a U.S. senator today and,the outcome apparently will depend on the strength of the Democratic vote in three areas—the economic ally" depressed soft coal area near Pittsburgh, the hard coal region and Philadelphia. ' More than four million of the state’s 5*673,497 registered voters are expected to vote in an election that also will send 27 candidates to the UJS. House of Representa tives. ALSO: TO' BE elected are a lieutenant governor, secretary of internal,affairs, a state supreme court justice, all 210 representa tives in the General Assembly and 27 of 50 seats in the state Senate. Two former mayors.of Philadel phia head the Democratic ticket' —Richardson Dilworth, who seeks the governorship, and U.S. Sen. Joseph S.‘ Clark, running for re election. 1 I The Republican gubernatorial candidate is Rep. William W. Scranton. Rep. James E. Van Zandt of Altoona is trying to un seat Clark. In a statement yesterday, Dil worth said:. “I will work, with President Kennedy and his admin istration for Pennsylvania’s: grow - STATE THEATRE, STATE COLLEGE PA. I ACT |>AVI " THE LONG HOT SUMMER" IMI HATS "THE 300 SPARTANS" Stark , :15. R;2F,7:3 n , 9:35 Last Titties Today JOAN chawford betty davis 1:30-4:05-6:40-9:05 "Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?" No Senior pictures will be taken the afternoon of Nov. 8 andjall day Nov. 9. —Thank you The Penn Slate Photo Shop fATf/At/ZW! ★ Begins TOMORROW ★ THREE STORIES OF THE SEXES . . . Somewhat different, Somewhat daring, Somewhat delicious! » JOSEPH E. nap TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 6. 1962 ! th and development. It .would do our state no good and much harm to be drawn up in political and personal opposition to the ■President. I will seek and I will welcome federal assistance in our problems." ■ Clark said in a statement yes terday: “As a friend, and support er of the President, as chairman of important committees, and as a member of the majority party in the Senate, I can do more for our state.” IN A STATEMENT yesterday, Scranton said: “Pennsylvania's predicament can only be solved by an all out attack on the many disturbing elements that have joined -to create the. ' problems (of unemployment and economic stagnation). ° “This state will not have a good industrial climate and will not have full employment until it has modern, progressive government.” Van Zandt said in a statement yesterday: “It has been a Sjrand feeling to realize that this ifyour own state, that these are your neighbors and that you want to be elected so that you may, work with them and to better serve them as their U.S. Senator. This makes you determined to revive the prestige of the office of U.S. senator from Pennsylvania.”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers