TI-tUtgDAY, FtBRVAFtY 28, 1952 UN Votes Dowd Reds In China Seating Issue UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Feb, 27—(m—The UN Trusteeship Council voted down today, 11 to the latest in a series of nearly 'lOO Chinese attempts to throw out the Nationalist 'Chinese and Red Chinese delegates. The British president of the council, Sir Alan Burns, then banged delegate, Alexander A. Soldatov, in the midst of a speech charging aggression" in Korea. The public gallery of some' 300 persons at this, first meeing held in the new UN conference area applauded Burns. Soldatov started the scrap by proposing a resolution calling for expulsion of the nationalist Chin ese delegation and an invitation to the communist Chinese to send a delegation to the council. The Russians have made this a stan dard practice at every opportun ity since January, 1950. SOldatov blamed the United Na tions for Red China's attitude. He said that even the Panmunjom armistice negotiations might have been different if communist Chin ese' had a UN seat. He assailed the Chinese in the room as mem bers of the "Kuomintang clique." S. S. - Liu, nationalist Chinese delegate,, called Soldatov's pro posal out of order and said it would admit to UN halls "an ene my of world peace." U.S. delegate Francis B. Sayre told the council "It is out of the question to consider this proposal at a time when the conduct of the Chinese Communist regime has departed so far from the ac cepted rules of international con duct " Laborites Suffer from Debate Blow LONDON, Feb. 27—(JP)—Parlia mentary observers generally agreed today that labor party uni ty suffered a damaging blow from Winston Churchill's disclosures in • foreign policy debate. According to this view, Church ill did more than successfully de fend the Korean record of his Conservative government in the House of Commons yesterday., In time, the wounds Churchill inflicted conceivably could help promote an open • break betw' the leader of bor's left, Aneurin 'Bev; and the lead of the moder faction, Clem Attlee and H bert Morris, Conseivati strategy w. clear: If labor's st face appearam. of unity is ever shattered, the laborites might wander in a poli tical wildernes's for years before they could hope to gain office again. Churchill said that when the laborites themselves were in pow er last year they, agreed to as sociate Britain with , the United States in ,action "not confined to Korea" in the "event of certain new belligerent acts by the Chi nese Communists. Thus; Churchill added, when he told the U.S. Congress last month that Britain would take "prompt, resolute and effective" action in such circumstances he merely was giving voice to a policy already formed by his predecessors in office. This caused consternation on the Labor benches. One, well placed informant said today, he believed a large number of Labor back benchers had not been aware of the commitments. Guild to Present' Kocher Script The "Apocalypse," a dramatic script by Eric Kocher, will be pre sented by the , Radio Guild at 8 tonight over WMAJ as this week's program in the Thursday at Eight series. The cast includes Richard An dersen, Mary Ann Honess, Allen Adair, Irene , Janoski, Ross Ban nard, John Citron, Sidney Archer, and Milton S. Eisenhower Jr. The sound crew consist of Pa tricia Hathaiiray, Ann_Jones, Lou ella Martin and Nancy Luetzel. Peter Farrell and John Price will direct the show. State Maps 'Loyalty Day° HARRISBURG, Feb. 27--(JP)—County highway officials were given the job' today of mapping local ceremonies in connection with Pennsylvania's big "Loyalty Day" observance Monday. The State Loyalty Day committee said county-wide programs are being arranged by State high way maintenance superintendents in each county. GoV. John S. Fine has desig nated. Monday as Loyalty Day to dramatiip the State's new loyalty 'oath law. ,Thousands of public employes affected by the law will join with the Governor Monday in mass oath-taking, ceremonies. Patriotic demonstrations an d oath administerings will be held in every colifity - except Philadel phia and Alle , gheny. Philadelphia, Pittsburgh arid Harrisburg will mark the occ xsion with giant ral lies. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Sayre proposed that the coun cil postpone further discussion of this question and this was ap proved by the 11 to one •vote. Soldatov held up his hand against it. During the hour-long debate. Soldatov charged that the United States has violated- UN principles in Korea. Sayre ,replied that "to call the United Nations action in Korea an aggressive war and to con den-in the United States is to con demn the united opinion and con science of the vast majority of the peoples of the world." Three GOP Men Reported Backing Taft PHILADELPHIA. Feb. 27-4/P) ident Herbert Hoover, and Gen. —Gov. John S. Fine, former pres- Doug l a s MacArthur were re ported tonight to have held a sec ret meeting in New York to dis cuss backing the presidential can didacy of Sen Robert A. Ta f t (R-Ohio). The. Philadelphia Inquirer said that the meeting was held at Mac- Arthur's quarters in the Waldorf- Astoria Hotel. Fine is scheduled to lead the 70-member Pennsylvania delega tion to the GOP national conven tion at Chicago in July. The Inquirer, in a story by staff writer Joseph H. Miller, said that the meeting was called by MacArthur. Fine has been reported in Penn sylvania political circles to be favoring the candidady of Mac- Arthur himself. The governor will take the oath at the Harrisburg rally and afterwards will speak over a state wide radio network. All public employes except elected officials, must take the oath or lose their jobs. They must swear they do not belong to an organization aimed at the violent overthrow of the U.S. or State gbvernments. Fine, although not required to take the oath himself, said all citizens should greet the 'oppor tunity to take the oath as a "priv ilege." his gavel and halted the Rus the United States with "bloody Bulletin TOKYO, ,Thurs., Feb. 28 (W) —the United States and Japan today signed terms under which American armed forces will re main in Japan after the end of the occupation. Acheson 'Happy Over NATO WASHINGTON, Feb. 27—(JP)— Secretary of State Acheson flew home from the western European defense meetings today with a "happy" report of substantial pro gress in the erection of a common barrier against Soviet aggression. President Truman, greeting Acheson and Secretary of the Treasury Snyder at the airport, declared: "I think they accomplished in the last few days in London, Paris, and Lisbon the things we have been working for in the last three or four years." Then all- three went to the White House to talk over the ser ies of meetings which revised North Atlantic Treaty Organiza tion defense plans and cleared away some of the obstacles to bringing western Germany into the defense lineup. Friday night Acheson will make anational radio and television report to the public, the State department announced. Meantime he arranged meetings with members of the Senate and House foreign affairs committees who - were seeking detailed ex planations of what was accom plished in bolstering western de fenses. - His report promised to have a bearing on the fate of the admin istration's new $7,900,000,000 for eign aid requests, which Mr. Tru man is expected to submit in about two weeks. The President, at the airport, termed the Lisbon conference of the 14-nation NATO c ouncil "most successful." Acheson responded that the four American delegates were "happy m the belief that we have accomplished what you sent us over to accomplish." Snyder, also a delegate, said that the "fundamental decision has been made which will tend to accelerate • the European de fense forces" and predicted that "we are entering a period now where pro gre s s will become achievement." FTA to Conduct Panel Tonight A panel entitled'Hands Across The Sea in Education" will be conducted at 7:30 tonight in 2 Carnegie Hall as part of the Fu ture Teachers of America meet ing. J. H. Britton, professor of psy chology, will §peak on education in Germany and G. E. Ehmann, professor. of education, on other countries of Europe. Pedro Von Achenbach, of Para guay, and Ruth Sugihara, of Hawaii, Will round out the panel with talks on education in their native countries. Vincent Sailers, president of FTA, will act as mod erator. Following an open discussion, refreshments will be served. Statehood for Alaska Delayed; 11female Dubious WASHINGTON, Feb. 27—(10 By a one-vote margin the Senate today sent the Alaska statehood bill back to committee for fur ther study—virtually ending any possibility the territory will be given statehood by this session of congress. The vote was 45 to 44. Still pending is a bill to grant statehood, to Hawaii. Holdup Suspect Seized JOHN RICHARD BAYLESS, center, stands manacled in custody of FBI agents who arrested him at New York's LaGuardia Airport Tuesday as he left a TWA transcontinental plane. They charged him with a $19,628 Los Angeles holdup. The agent at right holds a brief case in which the FBI said Bayless was carrying the loot. When the plane landed, an agent, wearing a TWA uniform, went to the top of the stairway and seized Bayless as he stepped out. The agents said Bayless had a revolver partly out his belt when seized. (AP Wirephoto) Ike Supporters South May Go WASHINGTON, Feb. 27—(P)—Fifteen Eisenhower-for-President leaders from 11 southern states organized here today and said the South is ready to go Republican in November if the GOP nominee is Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. "The South is today ready, for the first time in history," a joint statement said, "to give a majority of its 128 electoral votes to a Re publican nominee for President— if that man be Eisenhower." The statement referred to a re gion where Senator Taft of Ohio has mustered strong support for the presidential nomination in the p ast. Without mentioning Taft's 1952 southern effort by name, the Eisenhower group said: "Old guard die-hard leaders in the North are striving in every way to dominate the Republican party machinery in the south. The people of the south are deter mined to throw off this old guard Republican yoke just as they are determined to strike off the fet ters of Trumanism." Coincident With the Eisenhower meeting, David S. Ingalls, a Taft campaign manager, issued a state ment taking exception •to one by Senator Lodge (R-Mass.), na tional director of the Eisenhower campaign, that the general's con vention delegate strength is "on the upsurge" in the midwest. "If there is any upsurge, it has probably been the best kept sec ret of the campaign," Ingalls said. 2 Groups Prepare Museum Opening The Arnold Air Society and Members of the Theta Kappa Phi fraternity l'r - 2. been helping pre pare the r estate for the op ening of the Boalsburg museum April 6. The air society is restoring and erecting an old Pennsylvania Dutch staircase and cupboard in the large barn, which will house these and other relics. WATCH FOR ... i * i • '''lP' z! do ,v %), 4 H G I, r. v 4k l ' ' A 04 ,( r, PLAYERS INTERNATIONAL THEATER Starting at tenter Stage TICKETS ON SALE AT STUDENT UNION Reds Threaten Sit-down Strike In UN Truce MUNSAN, Kore a, Thursday, Feb. 28 —(p)— The communists threatened a virtual sit-down strike in Korean armistice nego tiations Wednesday unless the United Nations reversed itself and accepted Russia as a neutral truce inspector. "Until such time," declared North Korean Col. Chang Chun San, "there will be no progress in these negotiations." The Reds made the statement in again rejecting an Allied plan to cut the number of neutral na tion truce inspectors from six to four by dropping Russia from the Red list and Norway from the Allied selections. Sweden and Switzerland were the other two neutrals nominated by the UN. Poland and Czechoslovakia also were chosen by the Reds. The Russian issue was so sharp ly defined that observers specu lated the next decision probably would come from Washington or Moscow. TOKYO, Feb. 27—(JP)—The lack of tub thumping by the Chinese Communists about their air force in the Korean War may mean that the only Red victories in MIG alley are won by Russian pilbts. Lt. Gen. 0. P. Weyland, head of the Far East Air Forces, ex pressed this thought today on the mysterious reticence of Peiping propaganda broadcasts, which never mention alleged exploits of Chinese pilots. MONTH PRODUCTION Fri., Feb. 29th PAGE THRE'A Say GOP