The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 04, 1951, Image 3

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    FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1951
House Plan
May Oust
Acheson
WASHINGTON, May 3 (4)—
Secretary of State Acheson's foes
in the House are whipping up a
plan to force him out of office
by shutting off his salary after
June 30.
They might be able to do this
by• refusing to vote an appro
priation to pay him—or even to
hold up funds for the entire
State department so long as Ach
eson stays in office.
Rep. Arend: of Illinois, the
Republican whip, said today he
is sure such a move will develop.
A number of Southern Demo
crats are ready to give any Re
publican oust-Acheson move their
enthusiastic support.
Rep. Cox (D-Ga.) told a re
porter that denying fundd to
Acheson "will cut the ground
from under him and he will have
to quit or President Truman will
have to fire him."
Hotel Greeters
Elect 6 Officers
The Hotel Greeters Club elect
ed officers Tuesday for next year.
The new officers are Edward
Eretas, president; Thomas Judge,
vice-president; M ajr y Alyce
Strom, recording secretary; Scott
Frear, corersponding secretary;
Leroy Giccini, treasurer; Adam
Krafczek, publicity secretary; and
Professor R. A. Bowser, advisor.
President Eisenhower, who was
scheduled to speak at the infor
mal social program, was not able
to attend because of a delay in
Williamsport.
A dinner dance was held at the
Eutaw House last night. The pro
gram included dancing and card
playing.
British Festival Aims
To Lighten Austerity
LONDON, May 3 —(g)— The
Festival of Britain opened briskly
today under the sponsorship of
King George VI. The King said
"I see this festival as a symbol
of Britain's abiding courage and
vitality."
A $33,000,000 project •to run
five.months, it is aimed to lift the
nation out of austerity •and drab
ness and heighten the lure of the
island kingdom to tourists. About
1,700 communities will have some
part in the shows, pageants, con
certs and exhibitions.
MP SHOT BY RUSSIAN
VIENNA, Austria, Friday, May
4—(JP)—An American military
policeman was shot and killed by
a Russian soldier early today in
the center of Vienna, U.S. Police
headquarters said.
Thomas E. Dewey
Release Planned
For Reservists
Now In Service
WASHINGTON; May 3 (?P)
Enlisted reservists now serving
with the military forces will be
released "as soon as pr^.cticable:
the Department of Defense said
today.
The • announced plans call for
the Air Force to start almost im
mediately to be followed by the
Marine Corps in June and the
Navy in July, and the Army by
next September. Priority will be
given to World War 111 veterans.
The announcement said that
the plans are subject to change
should the international situation
be altered substantially.
The Army, the Air Force and
the Navy announcements said
reserve officers probably will be
required to serve 21 months as
has already been announced. So
today'S order does not affect
them.
Democrats Assail
Fine's Tax Plan
HARRISBURG, May 3—(R)—
A public hearing next Monday on
Gov. John S. Fine's proposal for
a one-half of one percent per
sonal income tax was assailed by
Democrats today as "a farce."
Sen. John H. Dent, Democratic
floor leader, said the State Reve
nue department is going ahead
with plans to process the tax even
before the bill has passed the
Senate.
The department, he added, al
ready ha s received specimen
forms for the tax from a commer
cial printing firm.
SENATE VACANCY FILLED
- - - -
WASHINGTON, May 3 (iP)—
Sen. Brewster (R-Maine) was
picked by his Republican •col
leagues today for a seat on ,the
Senate foreign relations com
mittee. Brewster was named to
fill the place left vacant by the
death of Sen. Vandenberg - (R-
Mich).
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Free Peoples'
Complacency
Hit By Dewey
NEW YORK, May 3—(/P)—The
strongest weapon in the Soviet
arsenal is the tendency of free
ueople to "drop their arms and
become sitting ducks" , when they
think they are in no danger, New
York Governor Thomas E. Dewey
said today.
Dewey maintains the way to
avoid World War 111 is to under
stand "some simple, obvious
truths which are being danger
ously ignored in most public dis
cussions today." These truths are
that "we • are being warred
against by Communist Russia
with bullets, treason, wile, prop
aganda. and every other weapon,"
and will continue to be as long
as Russia is communist.
He, says that war will never
again be declared in the tradi
tional way, but would strike as
we sleep; that we can "probably
live out our lives without World
War III" if we become and re
main strong enough, and that ul
timately we can start rolling
back the iron curtain by capital
izing on the misery and rebellion
o com m u n ist-conquered peo
ples."
Dewey predicts that "bur gen
eration will never again know
what we.used to regard as normal
peacetime."
Reede Talk
On Eastern Policy
Dr. Robert T. Oliver and Prof.
Harold A. Reede led a discussion
of United States Far Eastern pol
icy at the Penn State Christian
Association freshman round-table
in 304 Old Main Monday night
Dr. Oliver contended that the
present trouble is due to the fact
that the United States did not
recognize the Republic of Korea
after it declared war on Japan in
1941. He said he believed that this
country encouraged Russian ag
gression in Korea by not taking
a stronger stand against their in
terference in the North Korean
government. He added that the
United States must take a strong
stand in Korea now despite the
vacillation of its allies, because
if real trouble does start they will
surely side with this country.
Prof. Reede countered that the
present trouble in Korea is a
world problem, not a problem of
the United States alone. He said
that decisions of international
policy made by this country must
be made in the light of the opin
ions of its allies—that it cannot
disregard them and go ahead on
its own.
All boarding students at the
College in the eighties and nine
ties lived on the third, fourth,
and fifth floors of Old Main.
m trooly
ERROL FLYNN
DEAN STOCKWELL
in
"KIM"
MARIO LANZA
ANNE BLYTH
"THE GREAT
CARUSO"
GARY COOPER
JANE GREER,
"YOU'RE IN THE
NAVY NOW"
Air Power
To Control
WASHINGTON, May 3—(R)—Gen. Douglas MacArthur warned
today that unless Red China is beaten into surrender by all-out air
attacks the Korean conflict may explode into a third world war.
He told Senators the course being followed by the Truman ad
ministration may be "inviting" another war rather than avoiding it.
And he strongly urged the use of air power, a naval blockade of
Tank-Infantry
Slash Reds
Above Seoul
TOKYO, Friday, May 4 (in—
lAggressive allied tank-infantry
teams slashed at the Reds above
Seoul in a series of sharp actions
Thursday, ending a brief lull on
the Korean ground front.
The Reds, under constant air
attack, were regrouping fOr an
expected renewal of their stalled
spring .offensive farther east.
One allied tank-infantry patrol
rammed into a Chinese regiment
east-northeast of the old repub
lican capital. It killed an esti
mated 200 Reds in a brisk two
hour fight and returned with 21
prisoners.
Another patrol nosed in t o
Uijongbu, 11 miles north of Se
oul. ReSistance was light. A third
armored force probed southwest
of, Uijongbu and salvaged two
abandoned allied tanks.
The U.S. Eighth. army reported
no action on the eastern front.
Although relatively minor, the
skirmishes were regarded as
evidence the Reds are digging in
on a line roughly ten miles north
of Seoul to regroup their hard
hit forces for a resumption of the
offensive they began April 22.
14 Attend Music
Meeting in N. J.
Five faculty members of the
Department of Speech, one grad
uate student, and eight music ma
jors recently attended the East
ern division of the Music Educa
tor's National Conference at At
lantic City, N.J. The conference,
which lasted from April 27 to
May 1, consisted of a series of
clinics, demonstrations, concerts,
and lectures.
Faculty m ember s attending
were Prof. Rummell Fishburn,
past president of the conference;
and Profs. Willa C. Taylor, J. W.
Dunlop, Frank Gullo, and E. C.
Wareham.
Music majors who attended the
conference were Jean Weder,
Dorothy Miller, Thoman Schreff
ler, Melissa Ward, John Reitmey
er, Virginia Olsen, Wanda Gresh,
Margaret Morgan, and Barbara
Thomas, a graduate student.
DON'T LEAVE WITHOUT IT!
A Message for You '5l & '52
Your Penn State Class Ring can do a lot for you
. . . . Introduce you to new friends . . . Help you
to be recognized as a fellow Penn Stater . .
Bring back memories of those happy college
days.
BALFOUR'S
Urged
Reds
the China coast, and the use of
Chinese Nationalist troops.
Dramatic Appeal
His dramatic appeal came at
the conclusion of more than six
hours of testimony behind closed
doors with the Senate armed ser
vices and foreign relations com
mittees.
He laid down three possible
courses to follow: either to pursue
it to victory; to surrender to the
enemy, and end it on his terms;
or, "what I think is the worst
of all choices—to go on indefi
nitely and indefinitely, neither
to win or lose, in that stalemate."
Losses Will Mount
He said the latter course will
mean "these losses are going to
mount up to figures which would
stagger the imagination."
He conceded the President had
a right to oust him. But he pro
tested he was forced "summarily"
to turn over his job to Gen.
Matthew Ridgway "who was 350
miles away on the Korean front."
And as for the reluctance of
Britain and other UN members
to hit the Red Chinese hard, he
said he would be willing to "go
it alone" if UN members refused
to join in.
Israeli, Syrians
Clash At Border
TEL AVIV, Israel, May 3—(A')—
Israeli and Syrian forces pounded
each other with artillery and mor
tar fire tonight in the border
feud over the demilitarized zone
of Palestine north of the Sea of
Galilee.
The United Nations Palestine
commission vainly ordered a
cease-fire.
Israeli military authorities said
they could observe the order only
if the Syrians stopped blasting
them from inside Syria.
The battle started yesterday
with small arms fire in an area
between the Huleh swamps and
the point where the River Jor
dan flows into the Sea of Galilee.
Leonard Attends
!Business School Confab
Dr. Nilliam N. Leonard, head
of the Department of Economics,
attended meetings of the Ameri
can Association of Collegiate
Schools of Business held this
week in Savannah, Ga.
Leonard reported that a major
ity of 'the deans present estimated
an overall reduction in student
enrollment of 10 per cent during
the coming academic year.
xm4'0.4.41
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