WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1951 Bill Outlawing Reds Passes State Senate Proposal Approved By 46-0 Vote; House to Get Bill HARRISBURG, Nov. 27—(W)— A bill outlawing the Communist party in Pennsylvania by name was passed unanimously tonight by the Senate. The measure, submitted under bi-partisan sponsorship, went back to the House for •action on Senate amendments. The bill was introduced in the General Assembly with the back ing of state supreme court justice elect, Mich a - e 1 A. Musmanno (D-Pit). The anti-Communist bill would impose a maximum jail sentence of 20 years or a maximum fine of $lO,OOO on anyone "who partici pates in the revolutionary activi ties of the Communist party." Merely Police Action Sen. Hugh J. McMenamin (D- Lackawanna) termed the bill "the landmark of the 1951 , General Assembly." "This bill is merely a. police action," he told the Senate. "It is not the final step to eliminate Communism but it is certainly a necessary one." Musmanno, in a statement, said the measure, if • finally enacted "will ring down the curtain on the Communist party in Pennsyl vania." • "It is utterly fantastic'," he said, "that while Communists are kill ing our boys in Korea we have been permitting Communists in Pennsylvania to maintain head quarters and use our facilities to help in that murdering busi ness.", _ Called Unconstitutional The bill was revised in the Senate to meet objections raised by the State Justice Department. The Department claimed the measure in its original state was "unconstitutional." The bill would• 1. -Make it unlawful for the Communist party to receive any of the privileges of an incorpor ated body in the state. 2. Prohibit membership in the party in Pennsylvania. 3. Prohibit anyone from taking part in the "revolutionary activi ties" of the Communist party. 4. Make it illegal to be a mem ber of -any 'organization whose purpose is •to overthrow the United States government. Reds Say U.S. Backs Subversives PARIS, Nov. 27—(JP)—The UN steering committee tonight recom mended a General Assembly hearing of Russia's charge that the United States is financing subversive activity in Commu nist states through the 1951 mu tual security act. The 'United States urged the hearing, saying it "has nothing to hide, has had nothing to. hide, and will have nothing to hide." There was no record vote in the 14-member committee. However U.S. Ambassador Er nest A. Gross and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky dueled briefly over Vishinsky's declaration that the security act finances subversive action in the -Russian bloc and thus constitutes aggression. - . Vislu'nsky accused the United States Friday of paying and arm ing Red traitors under the act, which President Truman signed Oct. 10. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. , STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA 9500 in Stdte Called for Draft HARRISBURG, Nov. 27—(2 1 1 3 ) State selective service headquar ters today called up 9,500 Penn sylvanians to take pre-induction physical examinations next month to help meet draft quotas for January. Local board quotas for the pre induction physical examinations include: Reporting to Altoona recruiting main station: Bedford (27) 60; Altoona (32) 60: Al toona (33) 27; Ebensbuig (38) 36; South Fork (29) 30; Johnstown (40).34; Johns town (41) 26; Bellefonte (44) 10; Clear field (48) 60; Huntingdon (75) 15: Somerset (166) 67. To Erie: Emporium (43) 10; Meadville (51) 10: Ridgway (62) 10; Corry (46) 221 Oil City (71)-10; Bradford (101) 10; Mercer (102) 25; Sharon (103) 26; Franklin (161) 24; Warren (162) 26. To Harrisburg: Williamsport (99) 20; Williamsport (100) 10; Shamokin (116) '35; Sunbury (117) 35; New Bloomfield (118) 28. To Pittsburgh Connellsville (66) 36; Uniontown (67) 74; Perryopolis (68) 32; Brownsville ( 69 ) 20; Uniontown ('7O) 20; McConnellsburg (73) 30; Waynesburg (74) 60 ; • Charleroi (163) 112; Washington (165) 92. To Wilkes-Barre: Mauch Chunk (43) 99: Stroudsburg (105) 26; Milford (148) 11: Mahanoy City (151) 84; Mahanoy City (152) 56; Laporte (157) 12; Honesdale (166) 24. , News. Bias Blamed In MacArthur Firing NEW YORK, Nov. 27—(JP)—"Biased, prejudiced and inaccurate" news coverage of the Korean war contributed to the firing of Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur, his former chief of intelligence asserted today. The charge was made by retired Major-Gen. Charles Willoughby in the December issue of Cosmopolitan magazine. He accused,six newspapermen and three news magazines of reporting which "created an at mosphere of tension, uneasiness and distrust between Tokyo and Washington. This is believed to have 'been a major cause for the MacArthur-Truman split." ' Willoughby said the six cor respondents also gave "aid and comfort to the enemy." The men he named were• Deny Charges Joseph Alsop, syndicate colum nist; Hanson Baldwin, military correspondent of the New York Times; Homer Bigart, war cor respondent of the New York Her ald Tribune; Hal Boyle, war, cor respondent- and columnist of the Associated Press; Drew Pearson, syndicate columnist; and Christo pher Rand, former member of the Herald Tribune staff in Korea, since resigned. ( They denied Willoughby's charges, and reiterated their be liefs that faulty intelligence re ports by him preceded the UN surprise setback in Northern Korea last year. Willoughby also accused three news-magazines, T i m e, News "`it.,.re•zi r John Ireland Mercedes McCambridge " THE' SCARF" • JEAN WALLACE RICHARD WRIGHT NICHOLAS JOY "NATIVE SON" OPEN, at 6:20 From Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize Novel "THE BRIDGE OF SAN LUIS REY" Allies, Communists Split On Two Truce Issues MUNSAN, Korea; Wednesday, Nov. 28—(W)—Allied and Com munist negotiators were divided today on two major issues in their attempt to work out a plan for supervising a Korean armistice. At stake were United Nations proposals for (1) joint truce in spection teams free to roam Korea from the Manchurian border to the southern tip of the peninsula and (2) a ban against military buildups. The Communists did not im mediately reject the seven-point UN plan which included these provisions but their chief dele gate, Maj. Gen. Nim 11, said his side thought they were matters that should be settled by a high level conference after an armis tice is arranged. Cease-Fire Gen. Nam. Il Week, and U.S. News and World Report of having "appeared to go out of their way to 'create de featist thought patterns, and to belittle the country's-armed forces." Berates Tribune As against these accusations, Willoughby said the press as sociations were "generally ao, curate and balanced." But the ex-intelligence chief said "the en tire' Herald Tribune crowd, with the possible exception of th e beauteous Marguerite H i g gin s, seemed. bent on castigating their own army." Correspondents, replying to Wil loughby, said they had criticized Willoughby's work as an intelli gence officer in Korea last year. And they said they had attacked MacArthur for his strategic moves, which preceded the sud den withdrawal from the Yalu river region, last year. 'But they denied having criti cized the UN army, as such, or the actions of th e individual soldiers. BEGINS THURSDAY GLAMOR: ?o notovioOD M AGIC i GEgSOW MUIC: \CUR 1, AN, )) * 4: , AMERICO, l'i •• ' , NN PAR/S 10 TML MUSIC OF 1 5 , :. *. GEORGE iumpis ~, GENE KILLY k ••• ' 6 I! efirahil A.? 4:. , . t. 51,,:,, ~)....,z OSCAR GEORGES 11 . j pp 4 ,,ti."' L E SOAR MAW , it : , Prices For This Engagement As Requested By Producer ADULTS - MAT. .60 tax incl. ADULTS - EVE. .76 tax incl. CHILDREN 45 tax incl., The Allied plan was presented by Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief UN negotiator. It provides: 1. A cease-fire effective within 24 hours after an armistice is signed applying to all forces under either command. 2. A supervisory organization with an equal number of Allied and Red personnel to carry out armistice terms. 3. No increase in military forces, equipment, supplies, or facilities. Forces to Withdraw 4. The armistice commission and its joint observation teams "shall have free access to all parts of Korea." 5. , Air, naval, and ground forces, including irregulars, to withdraw from enemy territory. 6. Armed forces will stay out of the buffer zone. 7. The military commander of each side shall administer his half of the 21 mile wide buffer zone. They feel at home in . . . he CO Report Eisenhower To Run NEW YORK, Nov. 27—(?)— NBC Correspondent Jack Begon said tonight Gen. Dwight Di Eisenhower has indicated he plans to leave his European com mand early next year to seek the Republican nomination for presi dent. "General. Eisenhower," Begon said, "has indicated to intimate military associates that he will leave his command no later than next February to seek and accept the Republican nomination for president." The. same speculation has come from a number of sources, in eluding close friends of the gen eral. However, Eisenhower re peatedly has refused to say how long he expects to remain in Europe or whether he would ac cept nomination if it was offered to him. Begon continued: "His military associates, I've learned on good authority, in sisted that Ike declare himself at least to them so that they could plan for the future." Begon's report came fr o Rome, where Eisenhower attend ed a meeting of the North Atlan tic Treaty Council. Comment of Gen. Eisenhower or associates was not immediately available there. Penn State's 1951 football at tendance, bolstered by a record 30,449 at the Michigan State game, showed an increase of 10,987 over 1950 attendance figures. For the traditional four home games, the 1951 total was 80,023. Y , IllanY mer 3 return and again CORYKR they have Popular Prices Quality the best and • Pleasing service PAGE THREE