Skit - fib/kir, MARCi 8, 1652 Truman Blasts Use of Dragnet' WASHINGTON, March 7-0 3 )—President Truman today barred any "dragnet" grappling for evidence . of corruption in federa, agencies He also accused same Senators of trying to hold onto "politica patronage" plums at the.expense of his plan to revamp the scandal• jarred Internal Revenue Bureau. Just before departing for a vacation at Key West, - Fla., the Presi• dent fired two• letters to Capi tol Hill in which he: 1. Disclosed he had ordered all government agencies to refuse a House sub-committee's request for data on cases they have sent to the Justice Department for prosecution. 2. Accused critics of his Intern al Revenue Reorganization Plan of seeking to "play politics" with the nation's tax - -collecting- system and of being "more interested in their political patronage" than in clean government. Senator George (D.-Ga.), one of the leading foes - of the President's plan, took the Senate floor to reply angrily to Truman late to day. He declared the President was trying "to remove the issue of corruption from the 1952 cam- paigni' George. said the President, in hisi latest statement, "confesses that he has not been able to appoint clean, efficient and honest collectors of internal revenue." The Georgian is author of a resolution which would reject the internal revenue reorganization plan. A vote is due next week. The committee had requested a list of all cases over the last six years in which the Justice depart ment had either failed to prose cute, delayed action or sent the cases back to the agency which originally recommended action. In reply, the department said Wednesday 'that would mean dig ging into half a million cases. As far , as it was concerned, it turned down the request with a tart as sertion that the Executive Branch of government is "independent" of Congress, and said the com Mittee was going beyond its authority. " Official Refuses Seat HARRISBURG, March:7—(R)— Earl C. Bohr, Secretary-Treasurer of the state AFL; doesn't want the job of Democratic delegate at large to the Party's National Con vention. Snow Fails Taft Drive CONCORD, N.H., March 7—(/P)—Senator Robert A. Taft swept through western New Hampshire today, over snowbanked roads and into the remotest communities, in a closing drive- to win next Tues day's primary election, from General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the indicated favorite. For two days, .Taft has been • waging a campaign the like of which this state has never seen. • He is traveling by automobile through back country, areas re cently hit by heavy snowstorms. His daily schedule keeps - him going 12 and' 14 • hours -without a stop, making speeches, 'shaking hands, i tin g factories and schools, and standing in the slush at cross road junctions to press home his arguments. Late surveys, however, indi cated that Eisenhower is still hold ing a slim • lead. • Taft is one of three presidential candidates - touring New Hamp shire before Tuesday's election, the first primary in the nation. Senator Estes Kefauver; oppos ing President Truman, and Harold E. Stassen, a third Republican hopeful, continued today by auto mobile to more towns end- vil lages in a personalized, folksy quest for votes. To c o u n te r Taft's intensive eleventh. hour campaign, Eisen.- hower's backers brought two United„ States Senators before New Hampshire audiences today. \ Senator Carlson, from , Eisen hower's home state of Kansas, spoke in New London. Senator Lodge of Massachusetts appeared at a rally in Nashua. Taft is basing his effort on three major arguments: I.—The claims' that if' iiominat ed he will be . , - victorious. "I have THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA A.Bomb Crater Plans Stopped WASHINGTON, March 7 The Atomic Energy Commission announced today it would tem porarily hold up plans to fill in the New Mexico bomb crater. It is willing to see whether ways and means can be found to pre serve part o' it for historic pur poses. At the same time, however, the AEC declared the crater site is a "potential hazard" to health which would grow worse with the passage of time. . The commission made these statements in answering a tele gram. from New Mexico's Gover nor Edwin Mechem. He had wired the AEC asking reconsider ation of plan:, to fill in the crater at Alamogordo, south of Albi querque. It was there that the world's first atomic bomb was exploded July 16, 1945. Asked to amplify on the "po tential hazard" to health aspect, AEC officials told a reporter that while it is believed there is not "active" radioactivity in th e area, the material inside the crater might in time crumble and be scattered by the wind—thus spreading radioactivity if in fact it is present in 'any significant amount. $150,000 Fire Levels Pittsburgh Church PITTSBURGH, MarCh 7—(lP) Fire leveled St. Peter's Catholic Church in the south side district today, causing damage in excess of $150,000. The blaze started in the base ment while, preparations were be ing made for the first mass.,Some 40 worshippers were forced to flee and four fir em en were slightly injured. Halt NH aivvays won," Taft repeats in virtually every appearance. 2.—He is hammering away at the administrations foreign policy, calling - Korea "an unnecessary war t " and criticizing Truman for having failed to follow General MacArthur's advice. 3.—He asserts that the Republi cans lost the 1948 national elec tion largely because the candi date (Dewey) failed to get out and fight, and the people - to vote. • Harold• Stassen, speaking • at Hanover, seat of Dartmouth Col lege, lashed out directly at Taft. He said, "Senator Robert Taft has been wrong in the vital matters of foreign policy for the last 12 years." Stassen said Taft voted against lend lease, against the Atlantic pact, against the mutual assis tance act,• and "even after the Korean war broke out he advo cated a smaller defense program." Bridge Lessons Twenty-nine students have enrolled for bridge lessons be ginning at 6:30 to 8 p.m. Sun day in the TUB. The classes, under the in struction ,of Sidney Archer, will meet every Sunday for the next six weeks. Another State Bank Employe ?leads Guilty 1 PITTSBURGH. March 7 —(AP) —Mrs. Goldie Caldwell, former bookkeeper at the New Alexan dria National Bank, today became the third western Pennsylvania bank employe to plead guilty to charges of embezzlement. Federal District Judge Wallace Gourley delayed sentence. Mrs. Caldwell was scheduled to go on trial Monday, having previously denied the charges. She is free on $5,000 bond continued by Judge Gourley. An employe of the New Alex andria Bank in Westmoreland County for 28 years. Mrs. Cald well was arrested by the FBI Aug. 25 and charged with em bezzling $28,000 in bank funds. The FBI said the shortage re sulted from the taking of bank funds on several occasions be tween Oct. 21, 1948, and Aug. 10, 1951, three days before it was dis covered. Mrs. Caldwell declined to say what she did with the money: However, her attorney, Joseph Sheridan of Greensburg, said he didn't think it went "into slot machines as had been reported" and said it "might have, been used fo , :. household expenses." Mrs. Caldwel was one of 11 bankers taken into custody by the agents of the Pittsburgh office of the FBI within the past 19 months in a series of 13 bank shortages involving some 3 1 k million dol lars. Two former employes of the First National Bank of New Ken sington have pleaded guilty to embezzlement charges. They are Otto Raymond Grotefend and W. Paul Smeltzer. Two Tremors Fe't in • pan TOKYO, Saturday, March 8 —(AP)--Two earthquakes, one light and one fairly heavy, shook the area north west of Tokyo Fri day, killing one Japanese, injur ing seven, and causing damage to buildings and rail lines. . The National Rural Police, who reported the casulaties, said 34 houses were "half-demolished" in and around Kanazawa. 200 miles northwest of Tokyo. There . was a power failure at Toyama, 150 miles northwest of Tokyo, and a landslide blocked trains between Urlliya and Hosorogi. The Japanese Government meanwhile listed the toll of Tuesday's heavy quake and tidal waves on Hokkaido island in Northern Japan as 27 dead, 570 injured and 3,353 homes wrecked. Gas, OH Strike Delayed DENVER, March 7 (JP) —An oil and gas industry strike set for midnight Supday was called off 'today when union• officials agreed to a postponement pro posed by President Truman. The threatened strike had been called by 22 CIO. AFL and inde pendent unions in support of their demand for a wage boost and other benefits for 'some 250,- 000 workers. TONIGHT IN SCHWAB `You Can't*Take It With You' Tickets on sale at SU Desk for tonight and tomorrow night Cleanup Chief Newbold Morris Morris Hit For Trade Halt Failure WASHINGTON, March 7 —(W) —A New York attorney testified today that a foundation headed by Newbold Morris, the govern ment's cleanup chief, had the power to halt a subsidiary com pany's oil trade with Red China, but did not exercise it. The oil shipments have come under the fire of the Senate's Investigations Sub-c ommitte e. Senator Mundt (R.-S.D.) has de nounced what he called "the blood-soaked profits" made in the traffic. Witnesses have testified the shipments began in 1949 and con tinued in early 1950. They ceased before the fighting began in Korea. Under questioning before the committee today, Houston H. Was son acknowledged that the China International Foundation, Inc., could have stopped the shipments because it controlled the tankers operated by United Tanker Corp. Wasson is Morris' law partner. He testified that their law firm has received about $158,500 in fees for representing two of the shipping firms involved in the oil trade. Morris is president of the China International Foundation an d Wasson is Secretary and Treasur er. It is described as a philan thropic organization financed by Nationalist Cliinese money and dedicated principally to aiding the education of Chinese students in the United States. Waynick Presents Polarization Paper Dr. Arthur H. Waynick, head of the Department of Electrical Engineering, recently presented a paper to the Institute of Radio Engineers in New York. The paper, "The Polarization of Vertically Incident Long Radio Waves," was written by John M. Kelso, Harold J. Nearhoof, Robert J. Nertney, and Waynick, all of whom are of the School of En gineering at the College. . . . TONY KIRBY is a stranger to the Sycamore family— but RUTH SYCAMORE loves Tony and invites him and his parents to - one of the most hilarious dinner parties ever held at the Sycamore home PAGE THREE Ground, Air Korean Forces Have Light Day SEOUL, Korea, Saturday, March 8 —(W)— United Nations airmen and ground forces had a light day along the Korean war lines Fri day with the exception of Ma rines on the Eastern front. Grenade-slinging Leathernecks drove off five North Kor e an probes in early morning darkness North of the punchbowl, .an oval mountain rim some 19 miles North of the 38th parallel and 20 miles inland from the East coast. The Red attacks ranged up to platoon size—about 40 men—and lasted from a few minutes each to 30 minutes in the heaviest skrimish. The Marines captured one Red and estimated they wounded 11 North Koreans in the half-hour fight. AP photographer Fred Wat ers -reported no Marines were wounded or captured. A Marine officer speculated that the North Koreans attacked be cause they wanted prisoners. The opposing for ces are becoming more curious each day about en emy intentions as the spring thaw draws closer. U.S. Sabre Jet pilots patrolling "MIG alleg" in North Korea sighted no communist jet fighters during •the day. Because of an overcast, Fifth Air Force fighter-bombers flew only 200 daylight Sorties and blasted only 12 holes in Red rail lines. Joy Silent On Truce Talks MUNSAN, Korea, Saturday, March 8 —(AP)----Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy, chief United Nations truce negotiator, returned Friday from Tokyo conferences with Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway but was non-committal on whether he had brought any new formula to ease the tight deadlock on the Korean armistice talks. An !Ailed spokesman at this advanced U.N. headquarters would not comment on the Tokyo talks or the possibility Joy had received new instructions. Only developments in the would tents at Panmunjom would dis clos • this. During a one hour, 58-minute session Friday, Chinese Red Col. Pu Shan sent truce supervision talks off on a new tangent. He proposed striking out specific -references to Korea in a para graph covering withdrawal of naval forces during a truce. Allied staff officers quickly diagnosed this as a new commun ist attempt to broaden the scope of the Korean armistice agree ment to cover Formosa. Grand Central Station in New York City receives up . to 15,000 phone calls a day asking train in formation. KIRK DOUGLAS ELEANOR PARKER "DETECTIVE STORY" RAY MILLAND HELENA CARTER . "BUGLES IN THE AFTERNOON" TODAY ALL DAY TIM HOLT "OVERLAND TR,E6RAPH IV