TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1952 Oklahoma Loyalty Oath Out; No Change Expected in Pa. WASHINGTON, Dec. 15 (R)—The Supreme Court . knocked out Oklahoma's loyalty _oath law today on the ground that it does not provide ade quate safeguards for the innocent. Justice Clark, who wrote the court's 8 to 0 de cision, said that under the act, association alone determines loyalty—"it matters not whether as sociation existed innocently or knowingly." "Indiscriminate classification of innocent with knowing activity must fall as an assertion of arbitrary power," Clark said. ."It offends the due process of law." The Oklahoma 1a w required state officers and employes to swear, among other things, that they had no t belonged to any group listed by the U.S. attorney general as subversive or as a com munist front for five years 'prior to taking the oath. Backs Oustiiig In Oklahoma City, the author of the law, Rep. William Shibley, said he will introduce a new loy alty bill in the legislature next year, drafting it to meet the Su preme Court's requirements. - "I haven't changed my mind a bit," Shibley said. "I think it is a good thing. I am sincere about it." • In earlier decisions the court had upheld non-communist oath laws for Los Angeles city em ployes, New York school teach ers, and Maryland political candi dates. In those cases, Clark com mented, persons required to take the oath were given a chance to say they had no knowledge of subversive activity on the part of organizations to which they be longed. Upheld in State Clark said the Oklahoma Su preme Court ruling upholding the state loyalty oath , law "must be viewed as holding that knowledge is not a factor under the Okla homa statute." The question before the high court, Clark said, was this: whe ther the due process clause of the 14th Amendment permits a state, in attempting to bar disloyal in dividuals from its employe, to ex clude persons solely on the basis of organizational membership, re gardless of their knowledge con cerning the organizations to which they had belonged. In other cases today, the court: 1. Ruled for the first time. that use of wire tap evidence in state courts does not violate the Fed eral Communications Act. 2. Refused to interfere with a federal grand jury investigation of an alleged world oil. cartel. Anglo-Iranian Oil Enjoys Immunity WASHINGTON, Dec. 15 (W)— A federal judge ruled today that the Br iti s h controlled .Anglo- Iranian Oil Company enjoys "sov ereign immunity" against criminal prosecution in American courts. Defense lawyers promptly hail ed the decision as a blow to a four months old grand jury investiga tion of an alleged world wide oil monopoly. President Truman had personally ordered the inquiry. In handing down today's deci sion, Judge James R. Kirkland said however that the ruling of "sovereign. immunity" would not prevent possible civil suits against the Anglo-Iranian company. Electric Welding Added To Farming Course The College has added electric welding to the general farming shirt courses, A. L. Beam, direc tor of short courses, has announc ed. The welding course will be in cluded in the course scheduled for Jan. 7 to Feb. 4. Applications are now being filed. - Prof Awarded Clock William J. Re . agan, associate professor of metallurgy, was pre sented an engraved 400-day clock at the tenth annual conference of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers in recognition of his part in the or ganization of the institute. , THE IMILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA HARRISBURG, Dec. 15 (?P)—Atty. Gen. Robert E. Woodside expressed doubt today that the Penn sylvania loyalty oath law will be affected by the invalidation of a similar Oklahoma law. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down Okla homa's loyalty oath law on the ground that it penalizes persons who might have joined sub versive organizations innocently. Woodside said the saving feature of the Penn- Ike to Study European Unity Against Reds NEW YORK, Dec. 15 (R)—Pres ident-elect Eisenhower, just back from his Korean 'look and learn" trip, plunged today into talks on European unity against commu nism. Eisenhower conferred with John L. McCloy, former United States high commissioner in Ger-. many ,and John Foster Dulles, who will be his secretary of state. The nature of the talks indicat ed the President-elect was weigh ing whatever plans he might have concerning Korea with the rest of the world picture. McCloy, who lunched with Eis enhower and Dulles, said "we talked about the steps that might be taken in relation to European unity, a subject we have all been engaged in and interested in for a number of years." Asked 'if West German rearma ment was discussed, McCloy said "not particularly, except in rela tion to other things." Congress Praises Radio - TV Cleanup WASHINGTON, Dec .15 (W)— The radio-television industry was commended for its voluntary cleanup efforts today by a con gressional committee which said some programs are bad but fed eral controls might be worse. The committee, a special House interstate group headed by Rep. Harris (D-Ark.) objected particu larly to overemphasis on crime programs, and said some programs contain "offensive, objectionable, or suggestive material." Also, it said some advertising is in "poor taste." But, it added, the existence of a voluntary code of ethics and indus try efforts to make it work "are proof of the sincerity of the in dustry in this endeavor." WASHINGTON The De fense Department today identi fied 103 - Korean War casualties in a new list which reported 29 dead, 68 wounded. five missing and one injured. sylvania law is that the word "knowingly" was inserted in a section dealing with a person be coming a member of a subversive organization. 'He emphasized his final opin ion of the relationship of the Penn sylvania and Oklahoma statutes would have to await his receipt of the U.S. Supreme Court deci sion. He said, "Deputy Atty. Gen. Robert L. Kunzig and I have ex amined the Oklahoma statute and notice that the oath required -in Oklahoma contains certain provi sions which we deliberately kept out of our oath because we felt they were of doubtful constitu tionality. "Our oath is more nearly like the Los Angeles oath which has been declared constitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States than the Oklahoma oath which has just been struck down." The Pennsylvania oath requires all public employees, including teachers, to swear they are not subversives nor knowingly are members of a subversive organ ization under penalty of dismissal. 10 Air Battles Rage in Korea SEOUL, Tuesday, Dec. 16 (21 3 ) Clearing weather touched off • a series of ten air battles high over northwest Korea Monday in the first appearance of the Commun ist Air Force in five days. Air Force headquarters said Sabre the damaged at least two of the MIGs and drove the rest back across the Manchurian,fron tier before they could interfere with slower Allied fighter-bomber sweeps. Allied losses, if any will be an nounced later in a weekend sum mary. One MIG was damaged in a morning encounter between ten Red jets and four Sabres. The other MIG was riddled in an af ternoon duel between four Rus sian-built jets and four Sabres. 49 Thought Drowilecii MANILA, Tuesday, Dec. 16 (IP) A wall of water flooded the shaft of a gold mine 125 miles southeast of Manila Monday, trapping 49 workers who were feared drowned. Twenty others were accounted for after the disaster. 82 Die as Reds Try Mass Prison Break PUSAN, Korea, Tuesday, Dec. 16 (P)—Allied guards quelled a masS' breakout attempt by 3600 die-hard North• Korean Communist prisoners Sunday on Pongam Island, killing 82 and wounding 120 more. Two U.S. and rock-hurling Reds Brookhaven Cosmotron Dedicated UPTON, N.Y., Dec. 15 (A)—A giant machine today was dedicat ed to the task of discovering se rets of the insides of atoms and new secrets of the universe. The machine is the cosmotron, the world's most powerful atom smasher. It is a great doughnut shaped magnet, covered with a red plastic skin to keep it clean and rust free, weighing 2,200 tons and measuring 75 feet, in diame ter. It is the newest tool for learn ing what holds the hearts of at oms together, where the energy of stars comes from' and what are the basic atomic facts of life and of the universe. The cosmotron was dedicated at Brookhaven National Laborator-. ies, one of the research centers of the Atomic Energy Commission, in ceremonies attended by 200 prominent scientists and educa tors from 10 nations. Like a slingshot, it has hurled atomic bullets at the fantastic en ergies of 2,300,000,000 electron volts, sending them smashing into the cores of other atoms. The collisions shatter at om s more powerfully than any ma chine yet built. The parts and pieces that come from the smash ed atoms will yield new secrets about - the hearts of atoms and atomic structure. In work already, the cosmotrons have produced some new - and yet unexplained particles from atom ic collisions. Bertrand Russell Takes American Bride LONDON, Dec. 15 (VP) At the age of 80, white-haired philoso pher Bertrand Russell was mar ried today to an American wom an, 59 year old Edith Finch. She became.his fourth wife, his second American wife and, by virtue of the brief civil ceremony in the Chelsea Registry Office, she became a countess. . The philosopher is the third Earl Russell of the United King dom, and by rules governing prec edent in the British peerage his wife is automatically a countess. octopontoomictemavectovactocictextoemcmciag.ictelmvoextvemo si Did You FORGETP • X REMEMBER • Your Friends with beautiful Christmas cards; we have a wide selection in all sizes and colors. METZGERS 111-115 S. Allen two South Korean soldiers also were injured by who ignored all orders to halt and charged the guards in waves, the UN prisoner of war command announced. The Allied announcement was expected to bring angry new pro-- tests from the Communist truce delegation and blasts from the Red radio. It was the bloodiest uprising yet, exceeding by one the number of Red -prisoners killed in a Feb. 18 riot on Koje Island. Pongam is a small, terraced, wind-swept island about one and a half miles on the southwest tip' of Koje. It said that wind blowing across prison camp site at the time of the uprising "prevented the use of tear gas to quell the rioters." After an investigation, Col. C. V. Cadwell, commanding the, UN prisoner of war command, praised the island commander, Lt. Col. George P. Miller for "using sound judgment." "Col. Miller did not use any more force than was necessary," Cadwell said. "He acted promptly. It could have been a very serious situation." The mutiny occurred at 1 p.m. Sunday among one-third of the 9000 Korean civilian internees held in UNC Camp IC. These prisoners—many of them former inmates of notorious Compound 62 on Koje Island—had originally been classified as prisoners of war at the time of their capture. They had been picked up during chang ing tides of war, mainly in Red retreats. Santa Suggests.. . CAR® SHUFFLERS...i turn. handle ._. . cards come out shuffled $5.50 NOVELTY ASHTRAYS $l.OO to $2.50 The Treasure House Across from Old Main Christmas is a time for spreading greetings of good cheer. PAGE FIVE State College