TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1953 Hi4ll...Hcourt.-- Rejo;ti•Alien WASHINGTON, Jan: 12 (11 3 )—The Supreme Court held, today that brief membership in the Communist party 21 years ago is ground . for deporting an alien. The' court divided 4-4 on the opinion. This let stand a decision of the U.S. Court of ,Appeals in Chicago against: Refugio Roman Maitinez. Martinez was ordered deported to his native Mexico. How the justices lined up on the , question was not disclosed: The announcement merely noted that Justice Clark took no part in the. case and that the other eight justices were equally di vided. The case was argued only a week ago. Counsel ,for Martinez contended the deportation order could not stand unless substantial evidence was produced to show the Communist party advoated the violent , pverthrow of the American government at the time belonged to it. - Began in 1949 Pope Picks 24 Prelates For College VATICAN CITY, - Jan. 12 (A))— Twenty-four new princes were added te-the College of,Cardinals today in the richly colorful tra ditions of the Roman Catholic church. ' The majesty of the ritual was tempered by sorrow, with Pope Pius XII expressing his grief that two of the new cardinals were unable to leave Communist dominated; lands to receive their honors in person. They are Alo jzijc Cardinal Stepinac of Yugo slavia and Stefan Cardinal Wys zynski of Poland. The 24 new cardinals are from 13 nations and include-66-year-old James Francis Cardinal Mclntyre of Los Angeles, a native New 'Yorker who left a job in Wall Street to study for the priest hood. The College .of Cardinals, the senate of the church, tonight represents 27 countries - and is at its full strength of 70 for the first time in two centuries. The Pope, robed in red and white, spoke from his high throne in the stately marble Consistorial Hall• of Vatican. Palace ...to 22 pre viously named members of the college, garbed in ermine-trimmed scarlet. Briefly, he explained his reasons for choosing new cardi nals and then intoned the ancient question, "Quid vobis videtur?" What do you think of it? The assembled princes silently rose, removed their red skull caps and bowed their heads in sign of_ homage and agreentent. Disloyalty Action Begun by-U.S., km UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Jan. 12 (10—The United States and the United,Nations began a co-opera tive effort today to rid .the world organization of any possible dis loyal American employes. • As a first step, Secretary Gen eral. Trygve Lie agreed to a U.S. request that he refrain from hir ing any more Afnericans until applicants have been checked by the U.S. Civil Service Commission or the, FBI. Lie and four of his top aides conferred for Most of the day with U.S. government officials on ways and means of putting a 'loy alty program into operation im mediately. Russia Asked to Join In Austrian Settlement WASHINGTON, Jan. -12. (IP) the Western Powers" called on Russia today to join in a new Four Power effort to reach agree ment on' a -post War settlement with Austria. The U.S., lAritain and France said in notes delivered in Moscow that a new meeting of Four: POW er deputies will be suinmoned shortly- in London. The meeting was decided on, the Western notes said, "rather than to continue, the sterile ex change of notes" over the Aus trian situation. ,Be Sore to see. 4 • • Martinez was admitted to the United States for permanent res idence • May l i 1924, at the age of 20. 'He said' he joined the 'Com munist party, in 1932, remaining a member for four, or five months, before voluntarily withdrawing. , The deportation proceeding was started in 1949 on the ground he become a member of an organi= ation advocating - the overthrow of the governmet by force and violence after his entry. The Court of Appeals, in ruling against Martinez, did not rely on the 1950 Internal Security Mc- Carran Act. It held that Mar tinez's admission that he had once been a member of the Communist party- was sufficient to sustain a deportation order against him un der the law as it existed before 1950. - But the court observed the Mc- Carran act provides -for the de portation of an alien _who at the time of his entering the United States or thereafter is affiliated with the Communist party. In other actions today, the Su preme Court: 1. Upheld a set of rules by the Interstate Commerce Commission to regulate the leasing and inter changing• of vehicles by_ truckers operating under its permits. 2. Approved a controversial Na tional Labor Relations Board • for mulu for -computing on a quar terly basis the back pay due cer tain employes it found were un lawfully dischargpd. Adlai Retires As Illinois Head SPRINGFIELD, 111., Jan. 12 (IP) Adlai E. Stevenson, defeated Dem .ocratic presidential nominee, to day exited as Illinois governor. Stevenson took• part in the in auguration of his successor, Re publican Gov. William G. - Strat ton;-and left immediately to board a train for Chicago. • At the station he found several hundred persons on hand to wish him goodbye, among them state cabinet members and other offi cials of his administration. Some wept as he said his fare well. ' If he "fulfilled the confidence" of .the people who elected him, Stevenson said, "then I am richly rewarded." "I have done my best," he added. Narcotics TraffiC . Up GENEVA, Switzerland, Jan. 12 (JP)—The United Nations perma nent Central Opium Board re ported gloomily tonight that the number of narcotic drugs has al most doubled in the past five years. It called for a tightening of drugs control throughout the world. • GEORGE BERNARD SHAW'S COMEDY MAJOR. BARBARA at Center Stage January 16 and 17 Tickets $1 at S.U. or at the door THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Other Action Ike Lunches With Advisers, New Cabinet NEW YORK, Jan. 12 (4 1 1 3 ) President-elect Eisenhower inter rupted a busy day of policy talks today for an historic shape-up luncheon with his new Cabinet and his key advisers. They ate oysters on the half shell, chicken rambo, minut e steak and raspberry sherbet and then settled down with coffee to mull over foreign and domestic problems awaiting them Jan: 20, when the general takes office. Richard Nixon, vice president elect, came out during a recess to report everything going fine, with a productive discussion of "one problern' after another." As the 4 1 / 2 -hour con f e r e n c e broke up for the day, Jam-- 1-4 . .agerty, Eisenhower's press sec retary, told newsmdn: "There was a discussion of th future duties of the administra tion, foreign and domestic. The conferences will continue tomor row." - Earlier Eisenhower again talk ed patronage with Sen. Rol , — Taft (R-Ohio) and others, and discussed government reo.• zation with Rep. - Brown (R-Ohio) and Sen. Ferguson . (R-Mich). The President-elect , also ap pointed Dr. James Bryant Con ant, as new U.S.. High. Commis sioner for Germany. Oil Group Refuses Truman Proposal WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (LP)--President Truman met a stormy refusal today when he offered to drop the government's criminal case against five giant American oil companies and substitute a civil anti-trust suit against them. Attorneys for the companies insulting. Arthur H. Dean, - counsel for Standard Oil of New Jersey, called it "outrageous blackmail." Lawyers for other companies agreed. As the next step in the fast moving drama, the Justice De partment promptly announced that unless the companies unan imously accept the terms, the government will go ahead with the criminal action based on alle gations that the companies have set up a world-Wide price-fixing monopoly. The companies have repeatedly denied engaging in any such conspiracy. International Reasons Truman had conditioned his of fer by • stipulating that in return for calling off a federal grand jury investigation of criminal ari= ti-monopoly charges, the oil com panies would have to agree to produce their records as a basis for a civil suit. Highly volatile international interests, -coupled with fears -that the American firms might lose their multimillion dollar foreign 2 0''' REU MEET YOURSELF -10 YEARS FROM NOW Ever wonder what you'll be like when the class of '53 holds its` 10th reunion? If you started to work for one of the Bell System telephone companies after graduation, here's a pretty good idea. POSITION IN THE WORLD: On the way upt A Commercial Man ager, the company's representative and spokesman to as many as fifty thousand customers. A Transmission Engineer, helping to provide the telephone needs of an entire state. A Supervisor in the Traffic Department, responsible for the speed and quality of local and long distance service in several cities and for the personnel relations of a large number of employees. In the telephone com pany, jobs such as these are held by relatively young men and women. FUTURE: Unlimited! The Bell System continually progresses and expands and its personnel grows with it. In the past 25 years, the number of telephones has almost tripled. In the past 5 years, tele phone companies have introduced such things as network television transmission, radiotelephone service and dialing of Long Distance calls. And the best is yet to come. FRAME OF MIND:. Confident' and proud! You'll be satisfied be. cause you have a rewarding job ... not only in pay and security ... but in service. You'll be proud of your share in helping provide and develop a telephone service vital to the country's social and economic life. Like the picture? For furthr information see your Placement Officer. He will be glad to give you details regarding the owes tunities for employment in the Bell System. BELL TELEPHONE 'SYSTEM angrily denounced the offer as oil rights to Soviet RusAa, were reported • to have motivated the President's proposal. The White House announced Truman's _plan at noon. Two hours later, 35 attorneys for the oil companies went to Atty. Gen. James P. McGranery's office, at his reiruest,' to hear the terms as laid down on direct instruc tions from the President. After an hour and 20/minutes with McGranery, the attorneys stormed out of the office and let loose a roar of protest. • Spears for All Dean told newsmen that as far as Standard Oil of New Jersey is concerned, the President's terms were completely unaccept able. "Dean is talking for all of, us," Said Lowell Wadman, attorney for th e Arabian-American Oil Company. Dean quoted McGranery as saying the Pfesident's offer was "cold turkey"—i.e., final. "The attorney general was dis courteous and insulting," Dean said. LIOM PAGE THREE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers