The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 14, 1951, Image 3

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    , ,
.14; 1951
,Adieo*.i .., ,Callio:-:•Chilie - se . 'Reds
Red China Hopes 'for UN Seat
Blasted; Soviet Dealt 4 Defeats
PARIS, Nov.,, 3—(R) 7 —The United Nations assembly today
slammed the 'door of its Paris session on-Red China, whose conduct
was denounced, by Secretary of. State Dean Acheson as ,being far
below ”the general level of barbarism,"
Handing - its fourth stinging reversal of the 'day to the Soviet bloc,
the assembly Voted 37 to 11 against considering any proposal to
seat the Communist Chinese re
gime:
The assembly acted after Ache,
son's brief part in a day of vigor
ous debate had. constituted one of
the most scathing indictments of
Red China ever heard, in the UN.
' Guilty of Aggression '
In other setbacks to Russia the
- assembly:.
1. Voted - 30 to 8, with 13 Ab
stentions, to consider Nationalist
- China's • old charges that Russia
aided the - Red . Chinese and is
guilty of .aggression.
2. Decided 47 to 6, with - two
abstentionS, to take up the United
States - British - French proposal
for an impartial. • international
corinnission - to investigate whet
`'her 'preSent conditions make it
possible -to hold genuinely free
elections in all Germany and unite
the country. ,
Disarmament Plans -
3. 'Voted 44 to ,5, With four ab
stentions, to hear Yugoslavia's
complaint' of hostile activities by
Russia, Bulgaria, Hungary, Ro
mania, Czechoslovakia, , Poland,
and Albania.
,The , assembly , also decided,
without discussion, td debate the
rival disarmament plans of the
three big Western powers and of
the Soviet Union,
Finally, ' it decided, on Egypt's
suggestion, to postpone a debate
on. whether to put the question of
Morocco on the agenda.
Civil Service
To Give Test
The U,S. Civil. Service Com
mission has . announced a 'high
way engineer trainee - examination
for filling jobs paying $3lOO and
$3825 yearly.
The requirements for the jobs
paying $3lOO a year arelhat the
applicant must have completed
at least three-fourths of the total
number of credits required .for a
bachelor's degree in civil engin
eering.
Those applying for the jobs
paying $3825 a •:year must have
completed a four year course in
civil engineering, ~or have had
four years of professional civil
engineering , experience, or ,pos
sess a combination of both., 'Any
one expecting to complete these
requirements by Sept. 30, 1952
may apply. •
Further information may be
obtained frail first 'and second
class_ post - office&
_ _
Democrats Oppose
Party Loyalty Plea-
-HOT SPRINGS, Akr., Nov. 13
—(IP)--:- Anti-Truman Democrats
came back fighting today against
House ,Speaker Sam Rayburn's
call for party loyalty to the DeMo
eratic nominee in the 1952 Presi
dential, election.
t Rayburn—hn • old friend of
President Truman—irritated some
of the chief executives by pulling
the loyalty issue out of the back
room into the front, parlor of 'the
Southern Governor's conference.
Gov, James F. pyrnes of South
Carolina,- who once served as
Truman's Secretark of State, chal
lenged Rayburn's loyalty plea,
He declared the South. owes its
loyalty 'to the - country and not to
any party or political candidate.
'Penn; State Night' Held
Af Ceramics Meeting
A joint meeting yesterday of
the Pennsylvania Ceramics Asso
ciation\ and the Pittsburgh' , sec
tion of the American Ceramic
Society featured "Penn S tate
Night." -
As a part of the program held
at th e _Mellon Institute, Pitts-
burgh; Dr, Edward C. Henry,
chief of the, division of ceramics,
reported •on recent ceramic ac
tivities .of the. School of Mineral
Industries_ and discussed the pre
§ent program of 'instruction and
research. '
STNIT colittgE. PENNSYLVANIA
Effort to Solve
Iranian Dispute
Ends in Failure
WASHINGTON, Nov, 13 (VP)
—An American effort to settle
the Anglo-Iranian oi 1 dispute
ended in failure today, with the
State Department announcing
that "no new basis" for an agree
ment is in sight.
Iran's prime minister, Moham
med Mossadegh, intends to leave
by plane for Tehran Thursday.
He has spent three weeks in
Washington while American
mediators tried unsuccessfully to
find a compromise. The interna
tional quarrel began , when Iran
nationalized huge British oil in
terests in its territory.
Although no solution was found,
the State Department expressed
belief that "prO4ress .has been
made," It added ip a statement:
"The United States continues
to hope . . . that the two parties
will be able to find a mutually
acceptable basis for a satisfactory
settlement, and will continue to
do everything loossible to assist
them to this end."
Earlier today the International
Monel a r y Fund extended an
$8,750,000 credit to Iran to help
tide At over the financial crisis
created by the dispute.
School of Fish
Stops Truman's
Atlantic Swim
KEY WEST, Fla, Nov, 13--(W)
—President Truman abandoned
his daily swim in the Atlantic
Ocean today when a school of
large fish, possibly barracuda,
swarmed to within 30 yards of
him.
Swimming close to shore, he
scrambled out of the water when
secret service men spread th e
alarm.
•T h e President himself was
never in any • danger, but hi s
Army aide, Major General Harry
H. Vaughan, and David Bell, as
sistant to special counsel Charles
S. Mtfrphy, had to 'be hauled in
by secret service • men in a row
boat.
Rock Bass (Anbloplites rupes
tris) is an excellent bass of the
northern United States and Mis
sissippi Valley,
READ \
Party Platforms
Lion Party
The. World
At a Glance
Too Much BlCass
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 (IF)
A Senate "watchdog" commit
tee said today - that Washington
is topheavy with high military
brass. .
In' a- sharply worded report,
the Senate group hit at what it
termed an "inefficient, wasteful
and dangerous situation."
Plane crash Feared
FRANKFURT, Germany, NoV.
13--(iP)--:-A U.S. Air Force plane
carrying 34 persons was lost on a
flight from ,Frankurt,to Bordeaux
today and was feared to have
crashed somewhere in the moun
tains of central France.
New TV Projection
ZURICH, Switzerland, Nov, 13
—(A")—SPyros K. Skouras, presi
dent of Twentieth Century Fax
Film Corp., said tonight a new
television projection unit develop
ed by Swiss scientists will revo-.
lutionize the entertainment in
dustry in the United States.
Communist Indicted
BALTIMORE, Nov. 13 OP)
A scientist who formerly worked
at the Army's big weapons de
velopment center at Aberdeen,
Md., today wa s indicted on a
charge of ,concealing that he once
was a Communist party member.
Th e U. S. district attorney for
Maryland identified him as
Franklin Victor Reno.
Philippine Elections
MANILA, Wednesday, Nov. 14
—ol—Anti-administration candi
dates today led in all nine Senate
races in test returns from Tues
day's bloody national election in
the Philippines.
Egypt Won't Compromise
With Western Powers
- CAIRO, Egypt, Nov. 13—(JP)—About 100,000 Egyptians paraded
silently in Alexandria today and Premier Mustapha Nahas Pasha
vehemently attacked WeStern powers in a bitter outpouring of anti-
British feeling oh the nation's independence day.
.
"We will obtain our rights or perish in the struggle," declared
the premier in a speech to about 3,000 cheering supporters .at the
shrine to Saad Zaghloul Pasha, a
nationalist_ leader who made the
first bid for Egyptian indepen
dence 3 . 3 \years ago today.
.Nahas Pasha shouted a slogan
of no compromise in the contest
to oust British troops from Sudan
and the Suez Canal Zone:
"Struggle, fight, fight, patience,
patience, resistance, resistance, no
hesitation, no bargaining, ahead
with no retreat."
True to the government rule
that the demonstration would be
allowed if there was no shouting,
the marchers were silent but car
ried sloaans• declaring, "by the
name of we will defeat Eng
land," and "get out, -YOU dirty
British."
A bigger•.parade is to be held
tomorrow in; Cairo in memory of
20 Egyptians the government says
have been killed in recent clashes
with the British..
The government relaxed - the
)an on demonstrations 'imposed
last month when it cancelled the
1936 treaty with Britain for de
fense of the canal and the 1899'
treaty -for joint rule of Sudan.-
Taft
GOP
HARRISBURG, Nov. I3L---(iP)—Sen. Robert Taft (R-Ohio) said
today he has no plans at present to carry his fight for the GOP
Presidential nomination into Pennsylvania's primary election next
year.
He told newsmen however he feels most Keystone Republican
leaders are maintaining an "open-minded" attitude regarding his
Presidential aspirations.
Taft made the statement after
arriving here for a speech before
the annual convention of the
Pennsylvania Council of Repub
ican Women.
"At the present
ime P have no
intention of go
ng into any pri
mary outside .of
Wisconsin an d
Ohio," Taft said,
'lut added quick-
"I do not wan
co make th a
binding, o
course."
The Ohio senator was a lunch
eon guest of top Republican lead
ers shortly after his arrival. At
tending the luncheon were M.
Harvey Taylor, state Republican
chairman; G, Mason Owlett, GOP
national committeeman fr o m
Pennsylvania; former U.S. Sen.
Joseph Grundy, of Bristol, Sen.
Edward Martin (R-Pa.), and sev
eral women Republican leaders.
Gov. John S. Fine was unable to
attend because of a heavy cold.
Sen. James' H. Duff is the only
Pennsylvania Republican leader
who has openly committed so far
to a presidential nominee. Duff
is actively backing Gen. Dwight
D,; Eisenhower for the GOP pres
idential nomination.
State Supreme Court
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 13—UP)
—The State Supreme Court to
day was asked to set aside an
Allegheny County court order
which would permit _a defendant
indicted by a grand jury to ques
tion legally whether the indict
ment was properly secured.
The state's highest tribunal,
with only Justice Charles Alvin
Jones absent, took the case under
advisement.
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ATTENTION !!
All Campus Organizations
QUEEN OF THE
HARVEST BALL
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Entries MUst )3e In By
Friday, Nov. 16 At Student Union
'Barbarians'
Won't Carry
Fight to Pa.
Truce Talks
Approach
Breakdown
MUNSAN, Korea, Wednesday,
Nov. 14—(W)--The Korean armis
tice talks looked dangerously
close, to a breakdown today with
debate over the stalled buffer
zone issue growing hotter.
Tempers ran
_hot at a non-stop
five-hour session by sub-corn
mittee negotiators in the Pan
munjom conference tent Tuesday.
One allied delegate, Rear Adm.
Arleigh Burke, emerged with a
hoarse voice, even though the
Red negotiators did most of the
talking.
. While no progress was made,
the opposing sides scheduled a
21st meeting for 11 a.m. today
(9 p.m. Tuesday, EST).
An Allied spokesman, Brig.
Gen. William P. Nuckols, refused
to, comment when a correspondent
asked whether the talks were de
teriorating.
However, Nuckols did say that
the Communist delegates became
more impatient and their tempers
grew shorter as the 20th session
Wore on without stopping for the
customary lunch hour. -
The United Nations command
in a release after Tuesday's meet
ing said "little doubt remained
that the Reds want a cease-fire to
become effective as soon as agree
ment is reached on the buffer
zone."
U.S. EIGHTH ARMY H E A D
QUARTERS, Korea, Wednesday,
Nov. 14—(W)—Allied infantrymen
hurled back swarms of drum
beating, bugle-blowing North Ko
rean Reds who attacked Allied
positions Tuesday south of Ko
song on the eastern front.
Clearing skies enabled Allied
airmen to roar back over North
Korea in strikes at Communist
supply lines and front line troop
positions.
Committee to Erect
Parking Signs
The public welfare committee of
Pollock Council• decided at last
night's meeting to erect parking
signs between dorms 10, 11, and
12.
Richard Niedbala was elected to
the committee and Donald Doug
las was appointed- treasurer in
pla - ce of Lewis Johnson who had
resigned. ,
SUBMIT ENTRIES ,FOR
SATURDAY, DEC. T
PAGE THREE
10. 7
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