'WEDNESDAY, MAY 21,1952 U. 5.,: Gucirdi . kill 1, Squelch Pusan Riot PUSAN, Korea, Wednesday, May 21 (AP)—U. S. soldier guards Tuesday stamped out a rebellion in a big Pusan prison camp, killing one red prisoner and injuring 85 in a wild battle lasting nearly three hours. It was the first bloody prisoner uprising on the Korean mainland. It came 'as the U.S. Eighth Army disclosed that two minor revolts had been squelched without bloodshed ,on Harriman Hits GOP Candidates W. Averell Harriman hi t at both major Republican candidates yesterday arid bi d for labor's support in his own campaign for the Democratic presidential nom ination. At a Boston news conference, Harriman had these things to.say about the leading GOP conten- Wers: Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower— "No experience on the domestic side .. . He has embraced the policy of the Republican party which has' blocked progress in this country." Foreign Policy Experience Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio— " Taft and I disagree on practically every issue, domestic and inter national." The 60-year-old f or ei g n aid chief also pictured himself as the only candidate with more exper ience in international affairs than Eisenhower, and he told news men: "We can't have a progres sive foreign policy and a look back policy at home." 'MeanWhile, Eisenhower said he does not aspire to the presidency and would accept the nomination only out of a sense of duty. He made the comment during a fare well visit to the Hague, in Hol land. Eisenhower Leads Race With the Republican conven tion jUst seven weeks away, The Associated . Press tabulation shows Taft leading Eisenhower 375 to 337 in the nation wide race for delegates to the national con clave.- Nomination requires 604 delegate votes. In the nation's capital, Taft ap peared certain to pick up the six District of Columbia votes. The Ohio senator's candidates were elected 'in 10 of 12 precinct meet ings as delegates to the district wide June 5 convention at which the national delegates will be elected for the area. Servicemen Get Pay increases WASHINGTON, May 20 (?P)— More than three million men and women in uniform got a raise to day when , the White House an nounced that President Truman has signed a bill increasing mili tary pay and allowances - by 484 million dollars a year. Everyone from buck priVate to five-star general gets a four per cent boost in base pay beginning this month. The increases were voted by Congress to help offset higher liv ing costs. They apply to all in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps,' including retired personnel. - While the bill was in Congress the senate voted 'to give an extra $45 a month, combat pay to par ticipants in he Korean fighting and veteran of the action there. This section was eliminated from the 'final version of the bill, but it may be' , considered again in separate legislation. ',House' and Senate passed the pay bill May 15. Grpinge to Meet Tonight The Penn State Grange will hold its last meeting of the se mester at. 7 tonight in 100 Hotti culture. Officers for next year will be elected: nearby Koje Island last week. Koje is the main prison camp for hard-core Communists. They staged two riots• and kidnapped the c amp commander, General Dodd, recently. Reds Defy Orders The Pusan fighting broke out at a prison hospital enclosure where both Communist and anti, Communist prisoners are treated. The Army said a small group of fanatical Reds who served as hospital attendants defied orders to leave the, compound for trans fer elsewhere. Combat-seasoned U.S. infantry men went into the compound to get them, and the fighting erup ted. The infantrymen were armed, but they fired no shots in the battle of clubs and fists. Used Riot Tactics One soldier was injured slight ly. About half of the 85 prisoners injured received only minor htirts, the Army said. It did not say how the one prisoner died. Pos sibly he was bayoneted. z 'For two and. one-half hours the fighting swirled across the com pound. The soldiers used riot tac tics in rounding up the prisoners. The , Army gave few details, and correspondents were not per mitted to enter the camp, known as Compound 10. It was not known whether the prisoners were North Koreans. Chinese or both. Senate Passes Appointment Of McGra nery WASHINGTON, May 20 (EP)— The Senate approved tonight President Truman's appointment of Federal Judge James P. Mc- Grariery of Philadelphia to be at torney general. The nomination of the 56-year old jurist to succeed 'J. Howard McGrath in the Cabinet post was confirmed by a vote of 52 to 18. Action had hung fire since April 3 when President Truman named McGranery just after he had let McGrath out of the Cabinet in a follow-up to McGrath's firing of Newbold Morris as • government corruption investigator., ' Senator Ferguson (R-Mich.) and Senator Watkins (R.-Utah) led the opposition to McGranery's 'nomination. They assailed him as a man of "most questionable" • in tegrity, ability and veracity." °Charman McCarran (D.-Nev.) of the Senate judiciary commit tee and other Democrats spoke out in high praise of McGranery, a former member of the House. McCarran described McGranery as an "honest, sincere, God-fear ing, fair • official" and predicted he would have "a great adminis tration" as attorney general. Japanese Assert Reds' Stay Illegal TOKYO, May 20 ,(4 1 ')—A Japa nese Foreign Office spokesman today described the position of the Russian mission staff, as."very delicate" and no longer has a legal right to •be here. . The old Russian Embassy itself 'is in a virtual .state of siege. The gates are closed. - Technically, Russia is still at war with - Japan. Russia refused to sign the treaty of peace at San Francisco. Foreign Minister Katsuo Okas aki told the Foreign' Affairs Com mittee of the House of Council lors Senate that the Russian mis sion virtually has ceased to enjoy diplomatic privileges. • If Russia reaches no agreement with Japan within six months, Japan would be in a position to inform the Russians their wel come .had ended. TIC'DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. Repatriation Stalls Korea Truce Talks MUNSAN, Korea, Wednesday, May 21 (gyp) Allied negotiators Tuesday told the Communists vol untary repatriation of prisoners was based on United Nations principles from which there could be no retreat. , The statement was met by a storm of new Red charges which Vice - Adm: C. Turner Joy, chief UN delegate, termed the most "vicious, degrading propaganda" since/ the truce talks began 10 months ago. More storm clouds gathered .as the negotiators - headed back for Panmunjom and a meeting at 11 a.m. New disorders in Allied prisoner of war camps were almost certain to be seized upon by the Com munists as fresh ammunition for the daily charges that Red pris oners are given "barbarous" treat meat. Gen. Nam 11, the North Korean who heads the Communist ar mistice team, called the UN team liars at Tuesday's bitter 62-min uate session. Joy replied'that Nam Il's statements were "fraudulent and hypocritical." Nam declared that recent Com munist-led outbreaks in the Koje Island prisoner of w al. com pounds "have killed and buried the myth that our captured per sonnel refuse to be repatriated." A recent allied screening of prisoners and civilian internees showed only 70,000 of 170,000 were willing to go to the Reds ofl their. own free will. The Communists want all their soldiers back regardless. This is the issue that blocks the signing of a Korean armistice. Karam' Casuaiity List WASHINGTON, May 20 (IP) The Defense Department tonight identified 43 more Korean War casualties. Of the total, 19 are dead, 23 wounded, one missing in action. WEDNESDAY at the A Itencrest Luncheon Special Chicket i t Croqubtte Dinner Special ... Grilled Smoked Ham Steak • liEri SWIM. Adm. C. Turner Joy LakhuamtEl Thousands of Men Raid Women's Units In Nationwide Riots Spring madness swept another batch of college campuses Mon day night, turning thousands of feverish young men into -baying, brawling panty raiders. Nearly a dozen schools witnessed riots or near-riots as the males stormed co-ed dormitories in search of sexy souvenirs. It was the biggest outbreak yet in the snow balling, weeks-old fad. It was good clean fun in some spots. But not in Columbia, Mo., where the National Guard was called out to cope with rioting University of Missouri students. And not at Colorado University where one youth broke his hip. The panty raids, weirdest col legiate fad since the goldfish swallowing 19305, have been .blame ci by psychiatrists on everything from sex to simple mindedness. Some 3000 Missouri students went wild on their own campus and then raided two nearby girls' schools, Stephens and Christian Colleges. Damage in Thousands Panties were reported stripped from the person of at _least one girl. Police said a group of girl students trapped a - boy on a fire escape and stripped him of his clothes, returning his pants only after he begged for mercy. Columbia's acting police chief, J. L. Parks, said damage might be in the thousands of dollars. At Boulder, Colo., Robert Ba ko, 20, of Des Moines, lowa, broke his hip as 1500 Colorado • men stormed girls' sorority houses and dormitories. Firecrackers exploded during a three-hour siege of girls' dorms by 1000 University of Alabama Pittsburgh Told `No TV Station For 5 Years' PITTSBURGH, May 20 (JP)—A member of the Federal Commun ications Commission told Pitts burghers today it will be four or five years before the city gets another television station. Robert Franklin Jones, who ad dressed the Pittsburgh Radio and Television. Club and. the - Pitts burgh 'Advertising Club,' • 'was - a dissenter from the ,FCC majority which gave this city only one new commercial station in the present very high frequency band. Commissioner Jones declared: "It seems to me that the com mission is doing its best to stran gle television." Jones said• the FCC decided to space TV stations 250 - miles apart: "That is the reason why Pitts burgh will get only one more commercial station in the VHF band," he stated. "The other chan nels are being used up in cities within a distance of 250 miles of your town." Jones suggested instead that an tenna height and power input be regulated to prevent interference and that stations be spaced only 150 miles apart. "This would place two and seven-tenths times as - many sta tions on the air," Jones said. STARLITE DRIVE-IN Wed, and Thurs., 'May 21-22 Teen Age plus Youth Aflame . . Friday, May 23 Dana Andrews in Seated - eargo • • and • The Longhorn Saturday, May 24 Randolph Scqtt Fort Worth and Stop That. Cab By The Associated Press men. Police arrested ten students and kept most of them out of dor mitory row. But co-eds egged them on and a few tossed out panties. Co-eds Spark Raid State police were called to aid local cops at Burlington, Vt., when 600 University of Vermont men roamed the campus. Rocks and tear gas filled the air and at least two students were injured. Co-eds sparked a fairly goo1:1- natured demons tration at Northwestern Un iv er s it y by serenading in front of men's dormitories. Some 1000 males responded with a panty raid on the girls' residences. Pickings were scarce at the Uni versity of Minnesota where 500 students stormed three women's dormitories. The haul was four bras, four pair of pants, one silk slip. Co-eds drenched University of Connecticut males with buckets of water i as 3000 invaded sorority quadrangle with a lust for lace. _ . More than 1000-panty-intrigued University of Wisconsin me n made their -way into three co-ed halls but their mood was prankish and there were no incidents. Stubborn co-eds at the Univer sity of Delaware fought back with fire hoses as-250 snorting, pawing youths rushed their quarters. Jet Pilots Report 4 MIGs Downed SEOUL, Wednesday, May 21 (AP) —U.S. Sabre jet pilots reported they shot four Communist MIGs from the skies yesterday—the first anniversary of the y crowning of America's first jet ace. Th battle over Northwest Korea produced the 16th jet ace of the war. Col. Harrison R. Thyng got his fifth MIG near the Yalu River boundary of Manchuria. He also has five damage claims. The battle matched 12 MIGs with" 12 Sabres. It ranged from 30,000 feet to 200 feet. Allied plane losses -are announced weekly. 6vet anAli-the NOD_OZ way ! , ---;51,`" , // \OO / /110, /.4: ~.9. I)) 4 '___ i - 0 3 .___ _-/>‘. i/ . _.„--- dy - „/ /------'s ~~~~ Gotta cram for that exam? Don't get coffee-logged. Don't get drowsy. Keep alert safely with NoDoz Awakeners. Completely harmless and mighty helpful when you're burning the midnight oil. Take a NoDoz Awakener when you hit the books and make the grade! L. NoDez A‘Vak eners give you a lift with out a lefcloWn. Quickly help you become your normal, alert self. Large economy 9 3c sire Par Greek IS tablets 35c , Row and Dorms) 60 tablets „ „ . At your drugstore a►o ~.......„:„..„, D ato oz: 11 . W . li: K E IV 1 ) R - 5 7 - HARMLESS AS PAGE THREE