The Nation and the World... Compromise Proposal Splits Western Nations Compiled by A1 Karr Emerald A»»i»t»nt Wire Editor UP>__T|,e \\ s. delegation in the United Nations is reported Riding an uphill battle against a strong desire by British coni i :on\vealth nations and hrance to accept the Indian compromise on Korea. India’s V. K. Krishna Menon lias urged the U.N. political committee to accept his plan for a compromise settlement of 'he Korean prisoner exchange problem, but U.S. delegation stood firm in its belief that India's plan will not work. 'I lie Indian proposal calls for • 'lablisliinj^ a repatriation coni mi'-ion composed of Poland, ( zn lmslovakia, Sweden and Switzerland. A fifth nation would act as an umpire to vole in ease of a tie. Some L.X. iounces propose that India rvc as the umpire. Mcnoii sail! his plan would rule out forced repatriation or forced detention of prisoners. He ex plained that the prisoners could he sent to n demilitarized zone, anil that aetual custody of the prisoners .would he turned oxer by both sides. U.S. spokesmen •' iy the plan is f ill of ambiguities. Diplomatic !■ cnees say that Canada, Australia a d to some extent Britain went along with India’s proposal, with slight modification, and France is prepared to accept the plan. » » 0 Rescue Plotted For Elk Hunters Lost in Arizona (/l’> Some 100 to 300 hunters were stranded Wednesday night in Arizona’s Mogollom Kim country. An all-out effort to rescue them was being mapped, with ground parti s being dispatched, accord ing to a public information officer at Williams Air Force ba.e, near Phoenix. Fixe planes were to join the rescue operation today. The planes are equipped to drop ra tions and portable radios. Mogollom Rim a jagged 3.000 foot high jumble of mountains was lashed by a .-eve storm Sat in day. Mo t of an estimated 1,000 elk hunters are believed to have fought their way to safety through the snow. Bat up to 300 hunters were possibly stranded late Wed nesday night. * * * Book Publication Rapped by Army (/Pi The army nays it haa decid ed to press court-martial charges against Lt. Col. Melvin B. Voor hees, a former Washington state newspaper man who served as a top army censor' in Korea. The charges will center on a hook Voorliees wrote about tile Korean war. The army says he failed to submit a manuscript of the book to the Department of the Army for review and disre garded an order by his com manding officer to withdraw the book from publication. As Voorhees put it, he took a slap at a large part of the Cor re spondents corps, which ho felt was violating security and endangering lives. Voorhees, former editor of the Tacoma, Wash., Times said a superior officer tried to block his hook’s publication, claiming it re flected against Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur. An army spokesman says the charges against Voorhees don’t involve any breach of military se curity and that his court-martial will be held in the near future. Trumon Urges GOP Progress i.T) President Truman said Wednesday night that the Eisen hower administration will find it self behind the time if it tries to stop what he called the social and economic progress made under the New Deal and the Fair Deal. Addressing the Association of .Military Surgeons, the President said also that atomic energy will be diverted from bombs to peaceful purposes during the lifetime of the present genera tion. The American people will look to the Eisenhower administration for action in the field of health and in other important aspects of eco nomic and social life, Truman said. * * * Allied Planes Make Third Biggest Raid i.l’i In one of their biggest op erations of the Korean war, Allied planes have attacked Communist I ositions from the front lines to within 25 miles of the Manchur ian border. One air attack on a 30-acre ore processing plant set fires visible for -10 miles. In 24 hours Far Bast air force planes Hew more than 1,300 missions again .! Red troop, supply and manufacturing targets. It was the third highest total number of missions in the war thus far. B-29's dropped 100 tons of 500 pound bombs on the ore plant and a troop and supply area on the Chongchon river. Ticket Required To See Marx Admission lo tho Groucho Marx assembly Dec. 2 in the Student Union ballroom will be by ticket only, the University assembly com mittee has announced. A special section will be set aside for those who obtained their tickets through blood donations. The remainder of the ballroom will be for the remaining ticket hold ers. Ushers for the assembly will be Scabbard and Blade, military hon 01 ary, and members of the faculty student assembly committee. Shrubs Replaced Wear Oregon Hall New shrubbery will be planted around what was Oregon hall, to replace the present growth, which is becoming old and woody, I. I. Wright, head of the physical plant, raid Wednesday. Purpose of removing the old ohrubs in front of the former Ore gon and Commerce halls, (now part of Commonwealth), is to al low more natural light to pene trate basement classrooms, Wright explained. Also, the new shrubbery will better fit the landscape around Commonwealth, he pointed out. Campus Calendar 10:00 Educ I'lung Comm 111 SU Noon Arc h Design 110 SU 1:00 House Comm 313 SC 3:00 Music: Comm 313 SU 4:00 Whiskerlno Ilec: 112 SU Stu Affrs 337 SU Wldskerino I’mtn 313 SU 0:00 Arc:h Comm 1I0SU 0:30 ASUO Senate* 333 SU SU Coffee Hr Dads Km SU 7:00 IFC 315 SU 7:30 Betty Coed-Joe College 313 SU 112 SU Chess Club Traffic Court Hears 5 Cases Five cases which came before the Student traffic court Wednes day night yielded only one fine. That was the case of Richard Buf fington, freshman in liberal arts, who had parked in the middle of two parking spaces. Buffington was fined §1, and a!:-:o reprimanded for hot displaying hirs registration sticker on the car. Gloria Lee, liberal arts sopho more, and her friends were unload ing materials for a rally in the SU driveway. The court acquitted her case with a suggestion that she in sert the word "loading" under the windshield wiper in the future to avoid repetition of the incident. A case involving court policy and the establishment of a prece dent was that brought up by Tracy Caldwell, 5th year psychology stu dent, against Jim Dersham, senior in r.rt. Caldwell, a resident of the Amazon housing project, had seen Dersham violating the 12-mile per hour speed limit of the area. He estimated Dersham’s speed at 24 miles per hour at the time he saw the car. The court realized the fact that they had jurisdiction over the case, but since the case had no prece dent in its records and since neith er side produced witnesses or con clusive evidence, the case was ac quitted. Second-year law student Henry Bauer brought his citation to the cour t with a request that they con sider its fairness. He had parked in the area between Deady and \ illard hall, for a period of about 20 minutes only. His case was ac quitted because he had been park ed temporarily and had not real ized the danger- of the area. Corwin Barnett, senior in Eng lish, received a ticket for “block ing a driveway" which he had not realized was such. Claiming that it was marked in an “ambiguous manner”, he added that the day tTter his violation the area was painted yellow. The court acquit ted him quickly because he had not received sufficient warning of the existence of a driveway and be cause no serious outcome had re sulted from his violation. Emerald Classified Ads Bring Results. ’i For the Best in fish and seafoods Call 4-2371 NEWMAN'S FISH MARKET Fresh, frozen and canned fish and seafoods 39 East Broadway Foreign Students To Give Benefit National Costume Parade Toniohf foreign students on the cam pus with the aid of several Amer ican students, will take part in a national costume parade at 7:30 tonight at the downtown YMCA 1076 Willamette St. Besides the fashion parade the students are billed for several items on the evening’s program of the YWCA to raise funds to send to the Y’s in foreign countries. Those taking part in the fash ion will be Mrs. Marie Beringuel from the Philippines, Belkora Ab dulhak from Morroco, Dagmara Grisle and Biruta Steinbergs from Latvia, Vishnu Waissamul from the Gold Coast, Mineko Imai, Yas umasa Kuroda, and Ayako Nag asaka from Japan and Manakkal S. Venkataamani from^ndia. Mrs. Beringuel, aided by Mrs. Olivia Hunt and Ayako Nagasaka, will perform the ‘•Carinosa” a Philippine native love dance. Mineko Imai will render a Jap anese folk dance. Adriana Juan lins will interpret the Latvian Harvest Dance. Juan di dios Montenegro, grad uate in music from Guatemala will provide South American music. Tickets for the entertainment will be 50 cents and will be ob tainable at the gate or from Mrs. Gladys Y. Patterson, 74 W. 19th. She/fhrf %0f (^e a/mostct/