The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 05, 1951, Image 3

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

    FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5;l 1951
Ridgway Asks
To Pick Truce
TOKYO, Friday, Oct. S—(JP) —Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway invited
the Communists Thursday' night, to pick a site in no-man’s land for
immediate resumption of Korean"truce talks.
The next move was now up the Reds again.
Loyalty Oath
A bill requiring loyalty oaths
by all public employes will’be
passed by.the General Assem-'
bly,- Gov. John S.' Fine said
terday. the Associated Press
reported.
4 Hoodlums
Kill Moretfi;
Use 2 Slugs
CLIFFSIDE PARK, N.J., Oct.
4—(AP) Glib-tongued Willie
Moretti, pal of undprwbrld king
pins, was silenced today by- the
guns of four men who joked with
the bigtime gambler just before
the triggers were squeezed.
Authorities said the. pudgy,
balding chatterbox, who once
boasted he’d never be murdered,
had been “taken for a ride by his
friends.” .
Talkative Witness
Shot twice in the head, Moret
ti was found sprawled on a tile
floor of a small restaurant. A
waitress, who had gone into .the
kitchen just before, the shooting,
discovered the body beside a
slnall, square-topped table.
-Moretti, an intimate of the late
A 1 Capone, Frank Costello and
Joe Adonis, had been perhaps the
most, talkative witness to appear
before the Senate crime investi
gating committee. Former .Mayor
O’Dwyer of New York told the
committee Willie was one of the
directors of Murder, Inc.
Sen. Kefauver (D-Tenn.) for
mer chairman of the committee,
the _ slaying, by a Senate
reporter, said, “it is pretty clear
that Moretti talked too much and
had been talking too much for too
long. He was one of the most co
operative witnesses we heard.”
Crime-sleuth Rudolph Halley in
New York echoed Kefeuver’s sen
timents. He said gangsters, may
have ordered the mobster’s execu
tion because he “talked too
much.”
French Rout
Red Columns
' SAIGON, Indochina,' Oct. 4
(TP) —The French announced today
they have hurled back one Viet
iriinh column probing into North
west Indochina from the upper
Red river and killed 300 of a
second column, stalled before the
city of Nghia Lo. '
Warplanes presented by the
United States. helped thinly
manned French garrisons and
their Vietnam allies to counter the
-opening blows of . the .Moscow
schooled Ho Chi Minh’s fall of
fensive.
A Commuhist-led Vietminh de
tachment „ which overran Binhlu
Saturday crowded its luck by
pressing on toward Laichau, the
primitive capital of the. Thai Fed
eration, 30 miles to the southwest.
Panofsky Appointed
Dr. .Hans A. Panofsky has been
appointed associate professor of
-, . ;
Born in Germany, . Dr. Panofsky
received his bachelor of arts de
gree at Princeton University and
his doctor of philosophy degree at
the University of California.
Special Offer jWigg||j|§i
WalfefPhotos fgjM
20 for $l.OO
Pot -Application and friendship Photos
Exact miniature reproductions (2%x
3%) from your portrait, any size, but
not red proofs. Printed on silk finish
double weight paper. .
Simply write your name-add address
felearly on back, of your portrait. No
further, instructions are necessary. In
clude remittance and 15c - for postage
and handling. Satisfaction guaranteed
or your money back.'
MAIL TO-DAY CO.
P. O. Box 1112 ALTOONA. PA.
-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Reds
Site
The Allied proposal came two
hours after release here of the
Reds’ flat refusal, to accept Ridg
jvay’s offer made a week ago to
move the talks, from Kaesong to
Songhyon, a ruined, village in no
man’s land..
Ridgway Asks New Site
. The Communist message, ending
a seven-day silence by the Reds,
again proposed the armistice del
egates return to Kaesong.
Ridgway in his brief message
to the Chinese and North Korean
commanders reiterated that his
UN command finds Red-controlled
Kaesong an unsuitable place for
resuming the talks. Noting .the
Red rejection on his proposal to
meet at Songhyon, he said,. “I
propose that our delegations meet
at a site, selected by you and ac
ceptable to me approximately
midway between our respective
front lines.”
Battle Blazes Anew '
Ridgway insisted that the talks
must be conducted in “an area
which is not under the exclusive
control of either" side.”
The sudden exchange of. mes
sages came as fierce fighting
blazed along, the - Korean , war
front. ' The Eighth Army , was
pushing its ’ “autumn offensive”
proclaimed by Gen. James A-
Van Fleet.
Iran's Premier,
To Fly to U.S.
TEHRAN, Iran, Octf 4—(AP) —
Premier Mohammed Mossadegh
will fly to New York Sunday with
the aim of killing Britain’s oil
complaint in the Security Council
before _ the council takes up the
basic issues, his chief aide said
today.
“He is making the trip to show
why this oil dispute should-not be
handled by the Security Coun
cil and why there are no grounds
for the complaint,” Dep
uty Premier Hossein Fatemi told
newsman.
The council session is scheduled
tentatively for Oct. 11, but' may
be moved forward when Mossa
degh arrives.
The last British oil , men in
Abadan left today, completing' an
evacuation in which the British
cruiser Maritus took away the
major group Wednesday.
Placement Association
Elects Leetch President
George N. P. Leetch, director
of the placement service at the
College, has been elected presi
dent of the Middle; Atlantic
Placement Officers' Association,
which met recently in Atlantic
City, N. J.
For the past three years, Leetch
had served on the executive com
mittee of the organization which
includes . placement directors
from Pennsylvania, West Vir
ginia, Maryland, Virginia, and
Delaware.
, ■ i
LAUGHS
GIRLS
SONGS
Penn State Thespians’
"BOTTOMS UP"
r '
'■ Original Musical Comedy ‘
Its One Just Wonderful Colorful Hit. It's The
\ Show You Can't Afford to Miss. It's Yours '
for the Asking and at a price That .Can't Be
Beat.
HOMECOMING WEEKEND ■
, Thurs. - 8 p.m. $1.90
Fri. , , 8 p.m. -$1.20 .
Sat. v 8 p.m. $1.20 ■
Tickets go on sale Mon.; Oct. 15 at Student Union, 1:30 p.m.
1 • V I . ' ■ "
Chicago U.
Fires Head
Of Paper
CHICAGO, Oct. 4—(AP)—A
University of. Chicago, -student
who attended the Communist
World Youth Festival in’East Ber
lin. Germany, last August was
fired today from his post as edi
tor of the university newspaper.
■ The ousted editor of the weekly
Chicago Maroon is Alan D. Kim
mel, 24, pi Chicago, a graduate in
the school’s Department of Geo
graphy.
A statement by the University
said Kimmel was removed as edi
tor because of his sponsorship
and participation in the World
Youth Festival:
The, Maroon staff said an all
campus meeting will he called for
Tuesday {light to protest the dis
missal.
The University statement said
Kimmel, still in Eastern Europe,
was notified of his removal by let
ter from Robert M. Strozier, dean
of students.
Kimmel was elected editor last
May by members of the paper’s
staff, a long-time custom.
-Two issues of the Maroon have
been published in Kimmel’s ab
sence. The University said the
paper’s staff had been notified that
the \ssue scheduled for tomorrow
may be issued bi{t that further
publication is suspended until a
new editor is appointed.
Austin Supports
Jesspp in Inquiry
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—(AP)
—Warren R. Austin, chief of the
U.S. delegation, said today - the
American delegation to the United
Nations needs Ambassador-at-
Large Philip C. Jessup to help
“canjr. the - torch” against Com
munist trickery.
Describing Jessup as a “power
ful protagonist” of American in
terests, without a trace of Com
munist sympathies, Austin de
fended Jessup against pro-Com
munist charges fired by Senator
McCarthy (R-Wis.)
Earlier Attendance
Wanted for Chapel
Because of the large number of
people who attend chapel, Wil
liam Hoke, chief chapel usher,
asked ■ those who attend to come
early in order to get seats. j
He suggested that' it would
facilitate the work of the ushers
if - chapel-goers would fill the
fron£ seats first.
People’ attending chapel may
ndt park their cars on Pollock
road.
Dr. Steidle Invited
To Ohio Conference
Dr. Edward Steidle, dean of
the School of Mineral Industries
at the College, has been invited
to present a. paper, “Mineral
Forecast,” before an Ohio mineral
industries conference . today, at
Ohio State University in Colum
bus, Ohio.
Pointing to the years 1975 and
2000 A.D. Steidle’s paper em
braces the mineral fuels, metallic
and.non-metallic minerals.
Chinese Attack in Waves
To Stop Allied Offensive
U.Si EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Friday, Oct. 5
— {lP)— Chinese Reds surged down from their hilltop bunkers today
and attacked U.S. positions in waves .on the flaming Western front.
, The Reds were fighting furiously to crack the Allied line, which
was rolled forward as much as four miles in two days of a roaring
autumn offensive. The Allies
kicked off their drive Wednesday
with 100,000 troops from nine na
tions paced by mammoth British
Centurion tanks.
First Beaten Back
First Cavalry Division troops
fought off the Chinese counterat
tacks throughout the night. But
the Reds still were pressing their
attack at daybreak. The action
raged southwest of Chorwon.
A battalion of 1000 Reds spear
headed the attack, which bpgan
at 2:40a.m. (12:40p.m. EST),
Thursday. When the Americans
beat off the first wave of attack
ers. the Reds stepped up their
strength to 3000 men.
Puerto Rican Units
Ageneral headquarters com
munique said only that Allied
troops hurled back several Com
munist counterattacks.
. Troops of the U.S. Third Divi
sion, with attached Puerto Rican
units, stepped up assaults against
«^° m r^, UniSt hlll P° siti on in the
Ch £ r T° n area wh ere the
Chinese Reds counterattacked. '
“txr , . Sliff Fight
Were in a stiff fight, there’s
no question about it,” said Maj!
the ThirH rt TV°“ l? - comman der of
me ihnd Division. “We’ve hit
a ?ough m ficht ard bUt * ere « still
Th inS, on our hands.”
. The 100,000-man Allied offen
sive, spearheaded by the Britffh
ossra" 1 a d u f wo
Draft Announced
HARRISBURG, Oct. 4—(AP)
Pennsylvania’s December
-draft quota was fixed today at
1,015 men.
State draft headquarters said
all inductions will be made by
Dec. 21. There will be no in
ductions after that date until
Jan. 1 because of the Christ
mas holidays.
The Keystone draft quota for
November was 2,002 men.
Truman Backs
Security Order
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4-h'AP)—
President Truman said today he
issued his hotly-disputed security
order because a survey showed
that “the newspapers and slick
magazines” had published 95 per
cent of the nation’s secret infor
mation.
He said this is what he -is trying
to stop. He disavowed any effort
at censorship, said he hates it, and
has np desire to curb freedom of
the press.
During the question period,
Truman said publishers have a
responsibility not to print infor
mation that might help an
enemy even though it has been
cleared by a government agency.
This, puzzled newsmen, but the
President repeated that this was
what he meant.
Senator / Lectures /
GOP's Gabrielson
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (API-
Republican National Chairman
Guy Gabrielson testified today he
tried to get the presidency of the
New York Stock Exchange for an
RFC director last year. Senator
Nixon\ (R-Cal.) lectured him
sharply for the effort.
Gabrielson. said he acted in be
half of Harvey Gunderson, a Re
publican member of the old RFC
board, who left it last Oct. 12.
Nixon told his party chief that
his sponsorship of Gunderson
certainly creates a bad impres
sion,” since Gabrielson’s gas re
fining company then owed the Re
'cpnstruction Finance Corporation
$18,500,000.
Dr. George L. Haller, dean -of
the School of Chemistry and
Physics, has announced that 61
students in that school have been
named to the dean’s list for the
spring semester.
DEAN MARTIN
JERRY LEWIS
"THAT'S MY
BOY"
ROBERT MITCHUM V
JANE RUSSELL
"HIS KIND
OF WOMAN"
“■ iIwUVmTL TIT.'^T.,~JP!L£iILL!JiL l .'lPlli.
Doors Open at 6:20 p.m.
Features 6:30, 8:19, 10:00
RICHARD WIDMARK
"FROGMEN"
PAGE THREE
, students in the School of
Chemistry and Physics completed
the spring semester with perfect
3 averages. pexiecr
V ; ; BROTHERS -
CAT H ADM
fBDAY MIDHITE
SHOW!
Doors Open 11:30, Seals GOc
■%J»THE SUNSHINE
.fpv Musical!
fcapw
ss^s>^
eiMctco/oy * j.
DAVID BUTLER ®
Scrwn P\*r bf V
Harry Clork, Roland Kibbee «*s Peter MiJn
Htwical Oirtct»oo bi His*«lp d