SAtIIttDAY, MAY 17, 1952 Murray Sawyer PHILADELPHIA, May 16 (R)—Steelworkers President Philip Murray today accused Secretary of Commerce Sawyer, boss of ,the seized steel industry, of an "unthinkable degree of bias" in federal handling of the steel dispute. Murray did not immediately explain his remarks to the closing session of the steelworkers convention, but he lit into Sawyer and told' the union delegates that the commerce secretary is "no friend of yours." , Rhee Hits Panmunjom Truce Talks NEW YORK, May - 16 (IP) '— President Syngman Rhee of the South KOrean Republic today de nounced the Panmunjom truce talks which he said would "make North Korea a part of Red China." Speaking on a - wire hookup from Korea to the United States Conferences of Mayors. here,' Dr. Rhee said: " "We believe• there is no real compromise possible between the alternatives .of permitting Com munist aggression to succeed or of hurling it back from our in vaded country. "If an army of 900,000 Chinese Communist aggressors is permit ted to remain in Northern Korea, where none at all• -existed - 18 months ago, we believe that fact will be interpreted on both sides of the Iron Curtain as a Commu nist success." Mayors from 250 American cit ies, midway in their' three-day 20th anniversary meeting, also heard discussions on tax and traffic problems. Animals Blockaded In Struck Plant ()P)—Half a million noisy animals were blockaded today with top ranking scientists in Lederle Laboratories' strike-bound won der drug plant. Massed AFL pickets let in• two truckloads of food for the ani mals, isolated with more than 400 humans in the big 400-acre laboratory. But this was only a drop in the bucket to what the animals need and the company was trying to arrange for More.' The animals are used_ to test drugs at Lederle, the world's on ly producer of the wonder drug aueromycin. The humans ,/ including the company's 50 to 60 top scientists, were getting along well as they headed into' their third night of self-imprisonment. A helicopter airlift yesterday brought them fresh food and air mattresses after the men and wo men spent Wednesday night curled up in blankets on the hard floors. 'Paradise' Opens To Trout Angiers BELT.EWONTE, Pa., May 16 (2?) Trout enthusiasts by . the 'hun dreds tried their luck with barb less hooks and lures today- at Pennsylvania's famed Fisherman's Paradise along Spring Creek. With good trout weather, the state Fish Commission reported the opening day's fishing at the state-owned project was "the nicest in a long time." . Only one trout may be killed by an individual fisherman. Th e season ends July 19. Large trouts hooked during - the day included a brown, 22 inches; 70 ounces by Mrs. Edna, Mills, Altoona; Rainbow, 21 inches, 60 ounces, Paul J. Lindsey, Dauphin; and brown, 20 inches long, by Mrs. %Ellen - Ferry, Somerset. Dead Cat . Sent Adenauer HAMBURG, Germany; May 16 (?P) —A country Postoffice in Schleswig-Holstein seized 'today a suspicious package addressed to Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. Explosives experts, recalling that someone mailed Adenauer a. bomb two months ago, opened the new packEige gingerly. Inside they found a dead cat. DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Blasts 'Bias' .Sawyer was not immediately available in Washington for com ment. Orderly Shutdown Is Policy Murray read a letter from Saw yer, which said that while work ers generally had taken care dur ing the recent three-day steel strike to preserve mill equipment and other facilities, that this "was not universal." Murray - said it is the fixed policy of the steelworkers union in the event of a strike to close down mills and furnaces in an orderly. manner to avoid damage. He said that any damage occur ring during the recent strike was due to failure of the steel com panies to make, arrangements with the union for proper shut down precautions. • "The implication here," Mur ray said; waiving Sawyer's letter, "is designed to show - that the steelworkers will not protect property." Murray Asks Negotiations The union leader said that Saw yer knew this and, rather than write the union, the 'government should instruct steel companies to make necessary shutdown prep arations with the union when a walkout occurs. Murray, at the same time, again called on the steel industry to begin promptly new labor negoti ations on the basis of the govern ment's Wage Stabilization Board's 26-cent hourly package • pay in crease finding. , About;3oo of the 2500 delegates to the union's sixth biennial con vention loudly protested passage of the constitutional amendment to raise ; dues from $2 to $3 a month, and the initiation fee from $3 to $5. But the majority, egged or by, Murray, outshouted and outvoted them. Rail Conference Called WASHINGTON, May 16 (JP) —Presidential ' Assistant John IL Steelman called three rail road union chiefs to the White Douse tonight and it was re liably reported that he was seeking last-minute _ informa tion before making a settle ment proposal in the three-year old rail dispute. Democrats Reject Kefauver Support State Early PHILADELPHIA, May 16 (JP)--A large group of Pennsylvania's Deinocratic national convention delegates, pledged in advance to support the state's popular choice for president, , said almost una nimously today they do not feel bound to back Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. Kefauver was far ahead in the state's April 22 presidential pref erence vote, carrying every con gressional district. The pledged delegates said in an Associated Press poll-that they do not feel they are bound by the preference vote because no names were. on the ballot and Kefauver's total of some 88,000 votes was only a small fraction of the total vote. The newest AP poll showed that the state's Democratic dele= gation, which will have 70 votes, remains almost solidly a party organizatiOn group, ready and willing to back almost any can didate: As the preference at this time, delegates who will have a total of seven votes said they favor Ke, fauver; 10 1 /2 votes favor Gov. Ad lai Stevenson of Illinois, and 2 1 / 2 votes lean to W. Averell Harri man; two support Chief Justice Fr e d Vinson of the Supreme Court, one still contends he will back President Truman, and the remaining, 47 decline to state any choke, or they have none now. It appeared probable that the position of the state delegation Spring Raids Go on; Miami, Columbia Hit NEW YORK, May 16 (AP)— More than 1,000 prankish Colum bia University students staged a panty raid on Barnard College early today and the girls got blamed for egging them on. A similar raid was staged at the University of Miami and riot ing broke out at all-male Harvard University. Male college . raiders have sought out co-ed lingerie prev iously at the Universities of Flori da, Nebraska, lowa, Purdue, Den ver, Illinois, Penn State, and Ot terbein College in Ohio. About 300 Barnard College girls waved undies from their windows and tossed water-filled bags as Columbia males fought police and special guards. Girls Encourage Raids Barnard's dean, Millicent C. Mclntosh, -took her girls to task later for their "unexpectedly im mature behavior." She added, "The Columbia boys could not be dispersed by the police because of the con tinued encouragement giv e n them by the' girl students in the dormitories." Barnard College is the girls' branch of Columbia and its dor mitories are on Columbia's cam pus. Columbia began its own inves tigation of the raid which lasted more than two hours. One po liceman was hurt and bne male student was given a disorderly conduct summons. • Like Goldfish Fad The epidemic of panty raids has reminded many people of the goldfish swallowing fa d that swept - college campuses years ago. At the University of Miami early today, about 3000 men. stu dents raided the Dickinson Dor mitories on the main .campus. Police and firemen used fire hoses to quell the demonstrators •dur ing the two-hour melee. Indiana Raid Foiled In Cambridge, Mass., last night- some 1000 Harvard stu dents got intc the riot act but not over lingerie. A peaceful rally— a campaign to put a comic strip character in the White House— erupted into a fight when- a rival group presented another comic strip character for the presi dency. Meanwhile, at Bloomington, Ind., male students at Indiana University were invited to dip into a barrel full of lingerie. Sev eral hundred students were foiled in. an attempted raid on a wom en's dormitory there last Mon day night. Today, a college official said, a barrel loaded with discarded un dergarmeints would be available —free to all takers. may not be clarified until the first caucus of the group. This may not be until shortly before the convention opens in Chicago July 21. An official of the Demo cratic State Committee said today that there is no plan at present to call a caucus. This lineup of the Pennsylvania delegates placed Harriman in the lead in ,the national Associated Press poll, with a total of 92 con vention delegates pledged or oth-, erwise supporting him, to 8831 for Kefauver. ATTENTION -- AIRCRAFT PILOTS I.D. cards are mandatory. Provide the following: (1) Identical Photographs (1" by 1"). Full face head only. (2) Birth certificate or •baptismal or your old CAA I.D. during - W. W. 11. (3) Your airman's certificate.' A federal security representative will be at the State College Air Depot Tuesday, May 20, 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Phone 6615 for appointment. STATE COLLEGE AIR DEPOT, Inc. Marines Win Joint Chief of Staff Seat WASHINGTON, May 16 (IP)—The House voted 'overwhelmingly today for a permanently strong U.S. Marine Corps with a voice of its own, for the first time, in the nation's highest military council. Brushing aside a protest that it would create a "private army" to be used- anywhere on the globe at the President's whim, the chamber passed 253 to 32 a mea sure to '-1. Give the Leathernecks equal representation w i t h the Army, Navy and Air Force on the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff. At present they are represented by the Navy. 2. Set a permanent minimum strength of 220,000 enlisted men plus officers, with at least three full-strength combat divisions and three air' wings. The legislation provides a limit of 400,000 men, plus officers. Of ficers usually run about 10 per cent of enlisted personnel, which would bring the minimum up to 242,000 and th e maximum to 440,000. At present, the Marines have about 237,00 'officers and men, with next year's projected total 343.000. The bill passed over strong ob jections from Pentagon top brass and charges by Rep. Teague (D- Tex.), a much wounded infantry veteran of World War 11, that it would "set up a private army for the President to use anywhere in :he world." The measure now goes back to the Senate which had previously voted for a ceiling of 400,000 en listed men, but had fixed no min imum. The legislation marks the first time Congress has acted to set a minimum strength on any of the armed forces. There have been maximum; fixed by law, but no minimums. French Shoot At U.S. Consul TUNIS, Tunisia, May 16 (AP) —French troops, apparently sus pecting evasion of the curfew, shot up the motor cars of U. S. Clnsul General John D. Jerne gan and a member of. the French governor general's staff in an cient Carthage early today. No one• was injured. But two sub-machinegun bullets pierced Jernegan's machine as he drove with his wife and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Horwitz o f Cleveland, Ohio, toward his home at 1 a.m. and several smacked into the car of the Frenchman, William de Peyster, in the same area 90 min utes later. The consul general, who is leaving this tense French protec torate Monday for home leave and reassignment, said Resident General Jean de Hauteclocque had expressed his regrets and or dered troops in the area not to be so nervous on the trigger. Though a curfew applies in Tunis and its suburbs, including Carthage, from 8:30 p.m. to 5:30 a.m., officials and diplomats have passes which permit them to move about at will. It was with such a pass that Jernegan was on the road. United States TOps Record ABOARD the S.S. United States, May 16 (iP)—The United States, new queen of this nation's merchant marine, has exceeded the -31.8 knots Britain's Queen Mary averaged on her record At lantic crossing. NAME CARDS . for graduation announcements - Conimercial Printing Inc. Glennland Bldg., State College PAGE THREE Joy Gives Reds Silent Treatment MUNSAN, Saturday, May 17 (JP) —Allied armistice delegates today were prepared to give Communist negotiators another dose of the silent treatment that infuriated the No. 1 Red delegate Friday. The rage of Gen. Nam 11, head of the Communist delegation, rose Friday as Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy sat silent and refused to be drawn into debate on the prison er exchange issue—the last one holding up an armistice agree ment. Nam Il returned again to the letter Brig. Gen. Charles F. Col ! . son wrote to Red prisoners hold ing Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd on Koje Island last week. He charged the let ter was "proof' that Red prisoners had been forcibly screened—that is, forced by their captors to say they did not want to return to Communist soil. Joy in his "final" offer early this month reiterated that no prisoner would be forced to go home against his will and that only 70,000 out of 170,000 wanted to return to Red rule. After Nam Il had run on for 28 minutes, Joy observed: "We are here to attempt to gain an armis tice and not to engage in an *ex change of propaganda • and re crimination." Joy again suggested a recess un til the Communists were ready to make a new offer. Once more Nam Il virtually dared the Allies to break off the talks. "Unless .you formally declare the termination of these armistice negotiations," he said, "you have no reason to object to the normal holding of conferences." AF Cancels Skywatch HARRISBURG, May 16 (IP) The Air Force today called off plans to establish an around-the clock watch on the skies in 27 states, including Pennsylvania, for unidentified planes. But fine foods • at popular. prices and a Genuine Hospitality that has made this I d of popular,for years I. The 6 ," ll l 'COINER' I I' (Unusual I` l i ~ 1 1 1 ~.1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers