The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, December 05, 1952, Image 3

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    FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1952
Reuther Named
CIO President
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., Dec. 4 (A 3 )—Dynamic Walter P. Reuther
was elected president of the CIO today in a political scrap wind
ing up the labor group's annual convention
Reuther, 45-year-old chief of
the ClO's million member auto
workers union, was selected in a
hotly contested balloting over Al
lan S. Haywood, veteran 64-year
old executive vice president of
the organization,
The voting was 3,079,181 for
Reuther, and 2,613,103 for Hay
wood, based on the ClO's claimed
membership of '5,692,284. Reuther
thus won by 466,078 votes.
The red-haired Reuther, perhaps
best known for his many pro
posals for social change in the
United States, succeeds the late
Philip Murray who had guided
the CIO for a dozen years before
his sudden death 9.
Despite th e bitter battle be
tween the opposing Reuther and
Haywood • forces,. bo t h sides
pledged afterward to bury the
hatchet and work together in the
future.
After Reuther was elected CIO
president, Haywood, amid much
praise for his long work in the
labor movement, was unanimously
re-elected as executive vice presi
dent. James B. Carey, head of the
ClO's electrical workers union,
was re-elected secretary-treasurer.
urer.
Reuther became the third pres
ident in the ClO's 17-year history.
The first was John L. Lewis, now
president of the independent Uni
ted Mine Workers union; the sec
ond was Murray.
The CIO. 'which was formed in
1935 when it splintered off from
the AFL to organize some of the
mass production industries, also
took steps to renew negotiations
with the AFL looking toward re
uniting the two union organiza
tions.
The convention adopted a reso
lution calling for more coopera
tion between th e two and an
eventual merger if it could be
arranged.
AIM Nominations
Will Close Today
The deadline for nominations
for two representatives-at-large
to the Board of Governors of the
Association of Independent Men
from the West Dorm area is 5
p.m. today. Nominations must be
turned in. to the Student Union
desk in Old Main.
Nominations may be made by
a self-initiated petition signed by
50 residents of the West Dorm
area. ' .
Elections for the two positions
on the AIM board will be held
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday.
Students must show their' meal
ticket and matriculation card- to
vote.
CHRISTMAS SHOP
should all be included on your Christmas
list. The Blair Shop has a wonderful
selection of Christmas gifts
We will Christmas-wrap and mail
your gifts._ Shop before Dec. 15th
South Korea
Turns Down
Indian Man
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Dec. 4
(?P)—South Korea turned down
today an Indian• compromise pro
posal for ending the Korean War
as the president of the UN As
sembly wrote an appeal to the
Communists to accept it.
Y. T. Pyun, foreign minister of
the UN sponsored Republic of
Korea, announced here that his
government could not accept the
Indian resolution, approved yes
terday by 54 of the 60 UN mem
bers, because "it is against , the
spirit of the Constitution of the
Republic of Korea."
Pyun objected to the heart of
the plan, which is a provision for
sending thousands of North Ko
rean war prisoners to a demilitar
ized zone from which they would
be repatriated by a UN commis
sion. Pyun said his government
regarded the prisoners as liber
ated Koreans. Those who desired
to remain , in the South should be
liberated now. he added. The
others are Communists, he said,
but they still are Koreans and
are not alien prisoners of war.
He said it would reflect on Ko
rea's sovereignty to send them to
the demilitarized zone, even tern
porarily.
AT THE . BLAIR SHOP
Copper Jewelry
-Leather Items
Christmas Detorations
to assure delivery
Blair Shop
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Lie to Fire 18
UN Employees
After Quizzing
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Dec.
4 (iP) Eighteen American UN
employees who refused to answer
U. S. federal inquiries on sub
version have been fired or will
be disinissed tomorrow by Secre
tary General Trygve Lie, UN
sources said tonight.
Nine of them already have been
fired for balking at questions of
the U.S. Senate internal security
subcommittee headed by Sen. Pat
McCarran (D-Nev) or queries of
New York federal grand juries.
The other nine refused ' today
to give what Lie regarded as
satisfactory answers at his own
followup inquiry and are to be
let out tomorrow, the sources
said, when Lie makes a public
report.
Six of those already bounced
were ousted by, the UN after the
McCarran Committee began pub
lic , anti-Red dragnet hearings in
New York in October. The other
three of these were fired earlier
in the year.
GIFTS for the PHO J 0 FAN
argus 75
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World's easiest camera to use
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exactly as you'll take it . . .
Simple, automatically synchro
nized plug-in flash unit—bulbs
—batteries—film—leather car
rying case—everything needed
for easy picture-taking in color
or black-and-white! Complete
$23.95
package—only
MANAHAN'S DRUG STORE
Killingsworth Replaces
Cox as WSJ Chairman
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 (W)—
President Truman tonight ac
cepted the resignation of Archi
bald Cox as chairman of the Wage
Stabilization Board and named
Charles C. Killingsworth to re
place him.
Cox quit in protest against Tru
man's decision to overrule the
board in the soft coal wage in
crease case. Truman ordered ap
proval of the full $1.90 a day in
crease negotiated by John L. Lew
is for his United Mine• Workers.
The board had voted against any
increase beyond 81.50 a day, on
the ground that it would be in
flationary.
Killingsworth, the new board
chairman, is a 35 year old eco
nomics professor from Michigan
State College. He had been vice
chairman.
Despite the speedy shift in chair
men, the wage board was unable
to function because of a boycott
by its six industry members, who
had sided with Cox and the five
other public members in the mine
wage dispute.
The industry members called a
meeting for tomorrow at which
Get het ter pictures
everytime with this '‘
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Complete with carry
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tachment at' this low
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$69.50
•
Cameras and
' Accessories
*Photo-Lab develop
, ing and printing
outfit $7.95
*Three Section
Tripods .... $7.95
*Argus
PB2OO .... $49.50
*Kodak Merit
Projector .. $26.10
Photography
Books
*Kodak Reference
Handbook .. $3.50
* Kodak Color
Handbook .. $4.00
*How to Make Good
Pictures .... $l.OO
they may decide whether to fol
low Cox's lead and resign. Some
of them at least were believed
certain to pull out. One told a re
porter the President's action made
a "mockery" of the board's work.
Late today the government ap
proved a daily wage boost of
about $1.90 for hard coal miners.
GIL VISIT FROM ST. NICHOLAS)
FULL COLOR PICTURES
IN THREE DIMENSIONS
Children delight to see their favorite poem
The Night Before Christmas "come to
life" in View-Master full color, three di
mension pictures. Seven thrilling stereo
Kodachrome scenes mounted in each low
cost View-Master Reel... for use in View-
Master Stereoscopes and Projectors.
PARTIAL LIST OF OVER 400 REEL?
Alice in Wonderland (3 Reels) Mother Goose
Day ot the Circus (3 Reels) Fairy Tales
Aladdin's Lamp (2 Reels) Cowboys
Sam Sawyer Adventures Magic Carpet
Christmas Story (3 Reels) Animals
Rudolph, Red-Nosed Reindeer "Travel" Reels
STEREOSCOPE $2.00
355
3 forREELS each
$l.OO ( par.. 9
o r ,
•
PAGE THREE
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Every Day
7 a.m. 'til
Midnight
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