The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 28, 1952, Image 3

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    , FRIDAY, lvlA'Rell 28; 1952
Steel Talks Stalled;
Truman May Get Dispute
WASHINGTON, March 27—M—High-level government
efforts to break the steel industry's deadlock with its CIO
union workers ran into unexplained snags today amid signs
the whole dispute may be turned over to President Truman.
King Says
Bridges
Was Duped
WASHINGTON, March 27—(W)
—The chairman of a }rouse inves
tigating committee told Sen. Brid
ges (R-N.H.) today that he had
let his friends take "deliberate
advantage" of him when he in
terceded in a seven million dollar
tax case.
Bridges, Republican floor lead
er in the Senate, appeared before
the committee at his own - request
to testify that his only interest
in the case wa s "to encourage
quick and proper action by the
government."
The investigators have devel
oped evidence that Henry W.
(the Du t chma n) Grunewald,
Washington wirepuller, and Wil
liam-Power Maloney. a New York
lawyer fortherlY with the Justice
department, a 1 s o were working
behind the scenes on the case in
1949.
It involved a huge jeopardy tax
assessment against Hyman Har
vey Klein, Baltimore wth is k y
dealer.
mine. to Attend
Ag Conference
Over Weekend
Nine students of the College
will attend the annual Tri-State
Conference for Young Men and
Women to - be held at the Pocono
Manor Inn today, tomorrow, and
Sunday.
Participating in the conference
are representatives of groups or
ganized under the sponsorship of
the Agricultural Extension Ser
vice of • New York, New Jersey,
and Pennsylvania.
Chauncey'P. Lang, professor of
agricultural extension at "the Col
lege and assistant state extension
club leader, will conduct a worlc
shop.
' Macklin E. Johns, head of the
Department of Agricultural Eco
nomics and Rural Sociology will
be featured speaker at' the Sun
day morning session. He will dis
cuss "L e a der s in a Changing
World." -
Students participating from
Penn State are Leslie Watkins,
Eleanor Griffith, Hu b e-r t Sell,
Henry Gruber,' Robert Menges,
navid McAlpine, Lilly Greiddr,
Jilliam Nichols, and Ernest Stahl.
In' 1945 and 1948 there were
two cases of quintruplets being
born; however, both sets died
soon after birth.
The Lemon, an irresponsible Penn State publication,
appeared in 17 issues during the years, 1906 to 1909.'
The Lemon Board was instrumental in the adoption
of the Nittany Lion as the Penn State emblem:
As the Nittany Lion is symbolic of Penn State, the
name of Vic's is gradually becoming associated
with- Penn State. The gang meets
,down at Vic's
after their last class. Join them.
"
C S _
145 5... ALLEN ST.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
The President is returning from
his vacation at Key West, Fla..
today. He could invoke the emer
gency provisions of the Taf t-
Hartley Act, which call for an 80-
day cooling-oftperiod, if he thinks
that step is necessary to avert a
strike threatened for April 8.
Mobilization Chief Charles E.
Wilson called off a meeting of his
top aides to discuss the steel
wage-price situation. He also dis
carded plans to issue.a statement
setting forth the government po
sition.
Instead, Wilscin met separately
with Roger L. Putnam, head of
the Economic Stabilization Agen
cy; ' Chairman Nathan P. Fein
singer of the Wage Stabilization
Board (WSB); and Ellis Arnall,
director • of the Office of Price
Stabilization (OPS).
The WSB last week recom
mended a settlement which'would
include a three-installment pay
boost of 17 1 / 2 cents an hour, plus
other benefits worth about •five
cents• an hour. for the 650,000
steelworkers. •
The union, headed by Philip
Murray, accepted th e proposal
and started individual talks ,with
producers on the basis of the WSB
plan, which Wilson has described
as a serious threat to the whole
stabilization program. '
Feinsinger -replied "Hell, no!"
when asked whether Wilson had
suggested today the WSB back
track and recommend a smaller
wage boost. Arnall• declined com
ment on his talk with Wilson.
Students Indicted
in Grave Robbery
CHATHAM, Va., March 27—(JP)
—Spirit rites around a freshly
dug-up skull and bones in a col
lege lounge room led today to
the indictment of six students on
the felony charge of grave rob
bing.
A special Pittsylvania County
grand jury' certified the charges
against two girls and four young
men to make more solid the
wraith-like rumors that have been
whispered hereabouts for nearly
a month. •
Five of the students attended
Averett College and the other at
tended-Danville- Technical. Insti
tute.
Waitkus 'Assailant
TO Face Charges
CHICAGO, March 27—(JP)—The
Chicago typist who was found in
sane after she shot and wounded
baseball player Eddie Waitkus in
1949, was returned today from
Kankakee state hospital to face
charges of assault with intent to
kill.
Miss Ruth Steinhagen, 22, com
mitted to the hospital after the
shooting, was released today to
Cook County (Chicago) authori
ties. She has been pronounced
cured.
Kefauver Tells
Truman to Let
Voters Alone
By the Assoc!ated Press
Senator Estes Kefauver called
on President Truman, in effect,
yesterday to keep ,hands off and
let the nation's democratic voters
choose their own nominee if Tru
man himself decides not to seek
re-election.
Kefauver spoke out, after read
ing reports—unccinfirMed but not
denied by the White House—that
Truman has asked Gov. Adlai Ste
venson of • Illinois to become the
administration's candidate for
President.
Truman withheld any comment
on the purported offer to Steven
son. Rettirning to Washington
fr o m his Florida vacation, the
President told newsmen he could
not say anything about it' at this
time.
Along with Kefauver's jab at
any king-malting move by the
President, a well-informed demo
cratic source in Washington sug
gested that Truman may have
little 'say about the choice of a
successor by the time the demo
cratic national convention rolls
around in July.
The President may find he will
have lost complete control of
everything by that time," the Cap
itol informant said.
Cats were first domesticated by
the Egyptians and were men
tioned in Sanscrit manuscripts be
fdre 2000 B.C.
TICKETS NOW ON SALE FOR THE
W* -
A.
.
o e4' ,
ar ima C 1 ncert
3:3) - 5:30
Russia Offers Views
On German Peace
MOSCOW, March 27—(JP)—Diplomatic sources-said tonight Rus
sia has told the West that Germany should get the same military
deal as Japan got in the San Francisco peace treaty, even though
Russia still regards that pact as illegal.
Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky, in a highly unusual step,
gave his country's views Tuesday in a half-hour oral analysis of
American, British and French re
plies to Russia's proposal that the
Big Four sign a peace treaty with'
a unified Germany.
He talked to diplomatic repre
sentatives of the three western
nations after receiving the texts
of their replies, delivered jointly
to the Kremlin
Vishinsky t o 1 d the diplomats
Russia stands firm in rejecting
western proposals that elections
for an all-German government be
supervised by the United Nations.
He said such elections should be
prepared by the presently divided
East and West German govern
ments with whatever aid is neces
sary from the Big Four.
The West insists that United
Nations commission be permitted
to study whether conditions in
East' and Weft Germany are fav
orable for free all-German elec
tions. The West German govern
ment welcomed the commission,
but the Soviet-backed East Ger
man government refused to let
it in.
The Russian proposal is that a
united Germany, staying clear of
foreign commitments such as the
North Atlantic Treaty Orangiza
tion (NATO) and the proposed
unified European army, be per
mitted to build up her own army,
navy, and air forces for defense.
at Stueent Union
PAGE THREE
Judge Extends
Railroad. Order
CLEVELAND, March 27—(?P)--
A federal judge today extended
to April 10 a temporary order
restraining unions of engineers,
firemen and conductors fr o m
striking against the railroads.
With the consent of both the
government and the unions in
volved, Judge Emerich B. Freed
continued his restraining order
of March 11 beyond its original
expiration time of next Monday.
'lt was that order which ended
a three-day strike against the
New York Central lines west of
Buffalo and the St. Louis ter
minal association. About 5000
strikers walked off their jobs in
an effort to force action on their
three-year-old demands for work
rule changes, a 40-hour week for
yard duty, and pay raises.
Charles W. Fairbanks was vice
president under Theodore Roose
velt during his second term of
office.
`k 1.25 per