The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 12, 1951, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SATURDAY, MAY 12, 1951
Truman Told MacArthur
That Russia Was Threat
WASHINGTON, May 11— (VP) President Truman told Gen.
Douglas'MacArthur last Jan. 13 that Soviet Russia was the "main
threat" and that any spread of the Korean war might involve Japan
and Western Europe in a large-scale struggle.
The chief executive wrote a letter to the five-star general out
lining the aims of the American Government in Korea and saying:
"Steps which might in them
selves be justified and which
might lend some assistance to the
campaign in Korea would not be
beneficial if they hereby involved
Japan or Western Europe in large
scale hostilities.
"In reaching a final decision
about Korea, I shall have to give
constant thought to the main
threat from the Soviet Union and
to the need for rapid expansion of
our armed forces to meet this
great danger."
The letter—in paraphrased form
—was read to the Senate armed
services and foreign relations
committees by Secretary of De
fense Marshall in the fifth day of
his defense of administration pol
icies in Asia.
It was written by the President
after General MacArthur had ad
vised Washington that he might
have to evacuate United Nations
troops from Korea unless he were
permitted to bomb Re d China,
blockade the Red-held coast, and
use Chinese Nationalist troops.
Poultry Club
Show Opens
On Campus
Complete dressing of poultry
for market is one of the features
of the fourth annual poultry
show to be held today at the
College.
The exhibit will be open from
1 to 6 p.m.
This year's show, sponsored by
the Penn State Poultry Club, is
educational in nature., No con
tests are planned, director Roger
Strait has announced.
Other features of the show will
be a caponizing demonstration by
Hugh Lesley and Harrison Born
mann, and a demonstration of the
correct method of cutting up
chickens by Morris Brown and
Bridget Hollen.
Double Tent
A double tent will be erected
between Patterson Hall and the
Livestock Pavilion to house' the
various exhibits.
In the double tent will be dis
plays featuring eggs, turkeys, em
bryo development inside the egg,
growth stages of chicks, live
birds, and electric feather pick
ers.
Corsages made from turkey
feathers will be sold by club
members at the show.
Poultry Banquet
The first • annual' poultry stu
dent-faculty banquet will be
held Thursday at the State Col
lege Hotel.
L. W. Steelman, former poul
try extensionist in Pennsylvania
and now owner of the Valley
Forge Farms, will deliver the
main address.
The club's newly elected offi
cers, Thomas Stabler, William
Haensley, Roger Strait, and Hugh
Lesley, will be installed at the
banquet.
FRENCH ASSEMBLY
PARIS, Saturday; May 12 (in—
The French National Assembly
voted early today to end its own
life, thereby making certain that
a general election will be held
next month.
The date for the election is ex
pected to be June 17.
EXTENDED• FORECAST
Extended forecast for the period from
Saturday May 12 through Wednesday
May 16:
• Eastern Pennsylvania, East:ern New
York and Middle Atlantic states: tem
peratures will average near normal in the
north and three or four degrees above
• normal in the south portion: seasonal
temperatures Saturday warmer south
portion Sunday and Monday, followed
by cooler Tuesday or Wednesday. Little
. day to day variation in temperature in the
north portion. Showers tonight and again
Monday or Tuesday.
Western Pennsylvania, Western New
York. Ohio and West Virginia; tem
perature will average two to four degrees
above normal; cooler in the southeast and
little warmer in extreme west portion
Saturday; warmer Monday and over south
portion Sunday. Cooler Tuesday and Wed
sesday. Showers Monday and Tuesday.
IfI . FE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
2nd Divlsion
Alerted For
European Duty
WASHINGTON. May 11—(2?)
The alerting of the Second Ar
mored Division today for service
in Europe increased the pros
pects that Gen. Dwight D. Eisen
hower will have from 12 to 14
ready-to-fight divisions by the
end of this year.
Six of those divisions will be
American. The First Infantry Di
vision and the Constabulary
Force, which is considered the
equivalent of a combat, division,
are already in Germany. The
Fourth Infantry Division is in the
final stage of preparation to sail
for Europe, nearly one month
after it received alert orders at
Fort Benning, Ga.
Today the Second Armored,
based at Fort Hood, Tex., was
notified to be ready for overseas
duty.
The two divisions being pre
pared for Europe are not at full
strength and will need more
training before they are combat
worthy. Both their strength and
their training, however, are ex
pected to be built up after they
reach Europe.
Carnival
(Continued from page one)
Voice" booth with tape record
ings of voices of campus person
alities.
Beta Sigma Rho frAernity
plans a game booth called "A
Winner."
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity has
planned "Operation Marshmal
low" with marshmallows to be
shot with sling shots at the heads
of members.
Puff"
Phi Delt a Theta fraternity's
"Piddle Putt" will feature two
putting, lanes with persons sink
ing their shots responsible for
dunking Phi Delta pledges.
Alpha Zeta fraternity's "Smoke
Range" will use smoke rings to
"knock over" items on a shelf.
A chemical formula explains
the booth to be sponsored by Beta
Sigma Omicron sorority. "BSO
plus water —y i el d s— OH ph -
BOSH" suggests throwing wate.
at a moving target, a Beta Sigma
Omicron pledge.
Putting Green
Delta Sigma Phi fraternity has
planned a putting green for its
"Putt-A-While."
Triangle fraternity has entered
"Let's Swing It" with a "sus
pended ball to be swung at a car
ton of cigarettes.
Suction cup darts will be shot
at a life size figure or. a girl at
their "Hit a Miss" booth.
Ta IA Kappa Epsilon fraternity
will feature a "Test Your
Strength" booth.
The Daily Collegian will set up
a "Win With a Pin" booth with
packs of cigarettes as targets for
the pins.
Dart Throwing
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity ha s
planned a dart throwing game.
Alpha Phi Omega's booth will
be voting headquarters for the
"Ugly Man" contest.
Visitors at Sigma Ph i Alpha
fraternity's "Cigarette Sha c k"
will shoot at packs of cigarettes
with a pop gun.
Alpha Xi Delta sorority and Al
pha Gamma Rho fraternity will
sponsor a "Shooting Gallery"
with cigarette girls as target
holders.
Freak • Show
A "Freak Show," exhibiting a
mechanical man, mermaid, mid
gets, and an illusion of a man
buried alive will be presented by
Moran Gets
Sentence
For Lying
NEW YORK, May 11 (R)—Am
bassador William O'Dwyer's long
time pal, James J. Moran, drew a
flue year prison sentence today
for lying to the Kefauver Senate
crime committee.
Federal Judge Charles A. Dew
ey, adding a $2,000 fine to the
penalty, threw the book at the
ruddy, gray-haired Moran.
To Launch Appeal
Moran flushed and bobbed his
head at the sentence. Then, grim
ly and silently, he strode from
the courtroom to launch an ap
peal from last Tuesday's convic
tion.
His freedom on $25,000 bond
was continued pending
.the out
come of the appeal.
The 49-year-old Moran was
convicted of perjury for telling
Senate crime probers March 16
that he met Brooklyn numbers
racketeer Louis Weber no more
than half a dozen times.
On Television
Millions of persons for the first
time in history watched the act
ual commission of the crime •on
television and heard the words
that branded Moran a liar.
His conviction and sentence
was the first growing out of the
dramatic cross-country series of
Senate crime hearings that end
ed last March.
The government said Moran
and Weber met more than 100
times and called Moran's lie "part
of a calculated scheme rooted in
the monstrous alliance between
crime and politics."
Weber went even further and
denied ever meeting Moran in his
life. He is awaiting trial on a
perjury charge and Moran was
subpoenaed today as a witness
against him.
Donnon Chosen
Res President
Francis Donnon of Pottstown
was elected president of the Penn
sylvania Recreation Association
yesterday at the fourth annual
recreation conference which was
held on the campus.
Donnon succeeds Allen E. Rise
dorph of Pittsburgh.
Other officers elected at the
three-day event were Michael
Wargo, Clairton, vice-president;
Norma Heinrich, Beaver Falls,
secretary; and Frances Hartzell,
Chambersburg, treasurer. •
22 Students Contend
For Ugly Man Title
Twenty-two students have been entered in Alpha Phi. Omega
fraternity's Ugly Man contest. The entry deadline is 5 p.m. today.
Entered in the contest are Richard Bard, 1951 LaVie; John
Clarke, West Dorm Council; Ronald Coder, Phi Kappa Sigma; Bry
son Craine, Mortar Board; William DeCrease, Phi Kappa; Robert
Davis, Women's Student Government Association; George Dem
shock, Education Student Coun
cil; Emerson Jones, Penn State
Omicron; William Hockersmith,
Chemistry-Physics Student Coun
cil; Eemerson Jones, Penn State
Club; • and George Kline. Zeta
Beta Tau.
Louis Koszarek, Delta Upsilon;
Owen Landon, Delta Delta Delta
and Sigma Pi; Harold Leinbach,
Pi Kappa Phi; Joseph Lindsay,
Kappa Sigma; Gerald Maurey,,
Liberal Arts Student Council;
Ivan McGee, Ag Hill Dining Hall;
Drew Mierley, Lambda Chi Al
pha; James Pasike, Delta Theta
Sigma; Huber Stevens, Home Ec
onomics Student Council; Wil
liam Yerkes, Alpha Gamma Rho;
and James Worth, Kappa Alpha
Theta.
the College Cooperative Society.
"Hoopo" will be set up by the
Barons in conjunction with Leon
ides and will feature throwing'
rope hoops at several students.
Acacia fraternity will sponsor a
similar hoop throwing booth but
with live ducks as targets.
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority
will direct a "Kappa Pow Wow."
The booth of Sigma Alpha Ep
silon fraternity will feature dart
throwing at picture targets.
Dart Toss
Sigma Pi fraternity will con
duct a !`Dart Toss and Penny
Pitch" with accuracy bringing L
dance with a Gamma Phi Beta
dancing girl.
"Hop-Bowling" will be fea
tured at the Penn State Club's
booth with a ball rolled down an
alley and up an incline to a tar
get.
Delta Delta Delta sorority will
feature a teeterboard with girls
balanced on it above a tank of
water at the "Dunk A Delta"
booth.
Fresh Red Troops
Stream Into Action
TOKYO, Saturday, May 12 (1?) Fresh Chinese Communist
troops streamed boldly into four main concentration areas on the
western and central Korean fronts Friday in a new and ominous
buildup.
The no-mans-land separating the Reds and the United Nations
forces across the 100-mile wide front narrowed steadily.
Crisis Hits
S. Korean
Govern; ;ent
TAEGU, Korea, Saturday, May
l2—(/P)--A cabinet crisis, brought
about by a financial scandal and
a mass execution, is threatening
the , South Korean Government
while Allied Forces battle to de
fend the Republic against the
Reds.
There is some informal talk of
impeaching Dr. Syngman Rhee,
76-year-old first President of the
UN-sponsored Republic, but he
appears strong enough to stay in
the saddle. .
Rhee fired three cabinet minis
ters recently as an aftermath of
the execution of 187 villagers at
Kochang. Charged with commun
ist sympathies, the villagers were
convicted by a military court and
shot Feb. 12. •
The opposition party, the Na
tional Democrats, charged mean
while that $2,000,000 in Defense
Department funds had disappear
ed. During an assembly debate on
this matter one delegate sank his
teeth into a colleague's cheek.
Dawson Hit
By Sen tors
WASHINGTON, May 11 (iP)—
White House aide Donald Davi:
son today encountered sharp
senatorial skepticism as he de
nied wielding political influence
on the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation, government lending
agency.
When Dawson wound up his
testimony, he told newsmen that
he felt'the hearing "clearly dem
onstrates there has been no im
propriety on my part."
But Sen. Fulbright (D-Ark),
chairman of the Senate inquiry
committee disagreed.
"That's only his opinion," Ful
bright said. "There's quite a
difference of views on what is
proper and improper."
Part of Carnival
The Ugly Man contest will op
erate as a part of the Spring
Carnival, and voting for the con
test winner will take place at the
Alpha Phi Omega booth at the
carnival.
Additional entries may be turn
ed in to Richard White, 138 S.
Allen street until 5 p.m. Satur
day.
PAGE THREE
Allied defensive positions were
braced with sandbags and strung
with barbed wire barricades. Boo
by traps sprinkled approaches to
UN strong points.
The possibilities of Red air at
tacks were fully weighed. U.S.
Eighth Army headquarters, fo r
the first time in the war, pre
pared air raid sirens, camouflaged
key buildings and fixed sandbag
shelters, said AP correspondent
William C. Barnard.
On the central front, AP cor
respondent Jim Becker said the
Reds have "suddenly put in an
appearance and have been re
ported moving south."
Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet's
Eighth Army headquarters con
ceded Friday night that "large
concentrations of the enemy and
considerable movement" of the
Reds were repqrted north of Seoul
and north of Chunchon. Chun
chon is 45 miles northeast of
1 Seoul.
Water Tunnel
Open Today
For Inspection
The College's new Garfield
Thomas Water Tunnel will be
open this afternoon and this eve
ning for inspection by the general
public for the first time since its
completion, officials said yester
day.
Tours and demonstrations will
take place in the tunnel from 2
to 4:20 p.m. and from 6:40 to 9
tonight.
A torpedo model will be in the
tunnel during the demonstrations.
Water will be sent past the model
at 25 feet per second, and the
efficiency of the propellers on
the model will be measured. The
torpedo has within it two 20
horsepower motors that aid in
determining the efficiency of the
propellers.
The tunnel is a part of the Navy
Ordnance Research laboratory
under the School of Engineering.
It is used to test designs of pro
pellers, body shapes, and auxil
iaries of underwater devices
through the use of powered
I models.
An operating console is used
by engineers to control and gauge
the velocity and pressure in the
working section. The tunnel is
capable of sending water through
the testing area at a speed of 80
feet per second.
Weil Equipment
To Be Exhibilzd
A modern well logging truck
will be on campus Monday to
conduct demonstrations of elec
tric logging and other geophysical
techniques.
The demonstrations, which are
open to the public, will take
place hourly, starting at 8 a.m.,
in the area between the Mineral
Industry and Mineral Science
buildings.
The demonstrations were ar
ranged by the Department of
GeophysicS and Geochemistry of
the School of Mineral Industries
through the courtesy of the Sch
lumberger Well Surveying Cor
poration.
Coronation Parade
To Form On Ag Hill
The coronation parade will
form near the College barns on
Ag Hill at 6:15 Tuesday night,
David Schmuckler of the
Spring Week committee, an
nounced yesterday.
Groups sponsoring booths in
the Spring Carnival may enter
decorated cars in the parade
to publicize their booths,
Schmuckler said.
The parade will precede the
crowning of Miss Penn State
in Schwab Auditorium.