THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 23, 1954 Segregation Talks Ordered by Court WASHINGTON, Sept. 22 (£>)—The Supreme Court today fixed Dec. 6 for the start of arguments on how to end public school segregation. The timing raised a possibility that final decrees may not come until about the time for the spring windup of classes. Announcing the December date, Supreme Court Clerk Harold ,B. Willey said this earliest time the argument could be,_heard. The court’s argument schedules tor October vember already were "filled. The decision on the date was' reached at a closed conference of seven justices. Justices Douglas and Minton have not returned from • their vacations, but they communicated their agreement with the decision and thus made it unanimous. ' The new arguments will pick up not only the question of how to order the end of school segre gation which was unanimously declared unconstitutional last May 17. Another major question will be the timing in final orders for desegregation. The court’s opinion last May asked interested attorneys to dis cuss whether decrees should re quire admission of Negro children “forthwith” to schools nearest their homes, or whether . there should be an “effective, gradual adjustment.” Attorneys also were asked t 9 discuss whether in event orders were issued for' gradual integra tion, the court should give de tailed instruction, appoint a spe cial master to study and recom mend methods, or allow lower federal courts to devise detailed arrangements. The five cases directly involved in. the May decision—those fi>pm South Carolina, Virginia, Kansas, Delaware and. r the District of Col umbia—have been allotted a total of 10 hours on the December ar gument • schedule. Atty. . Gen Brownell was given an hour, Pink Tickets Warn Drivers During Ihe past iwo days, pink tickets have warned ap proximately 105 State College motorists that they have violat ed traffic ordinances. Except where violations have been exiremely serious, police have issued pink cour tesy tickets to motorists, as part of a move to curb the number of traffic violations.' The courtesy tickets’ carried no penalty, but beginning at midnight yesterday police re sumed the issuing of the regu lar yellow tickets. David R. Mackey, Stale Col lege , burgess, explained "We are trying to dramatize the number- of violations in hopes that it will decrease in the fu ture." Turnpike Urged To Pick Pane! On Grievances HARRISBURG, Sept 22 (JF)— The Pennsylvania Turnpike Com mission was urged today to join in selecting a three-man panel' to resolve grievances of turnpike toll collectors. Robert A. Callahan, interna tional representative of the Amer ican Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes, said the commission is .obligated under Commonwealth law .to name one member of the panel. Local 1216 of the union, he said, already has selected Sidney Wil lar, of Bellefonte, as its panel rep resentative. The third member would be selected by the first two appointed. Meanwihle, Chairman T. J. Evans of the turnpike commission, concluded two days of meetings with representatives of the Penn sylvania Turnpike Officer-Collec tors Assn. Both Callahan’s AFL group and the Officer-Collectors Assn., head ed by John K. Kilko', Boiling Springs, association president, are seeking .to bring grievances of the collectors before the commis sion. Callahan has charged, however, that Kilko’s organization is a “company union” which has been “pressuring” the collectors into joining. Kilko replied that he has been organizing the group on his own time and at the association’s expense. FFA Honors Proxy President Milton S. Eisen hower yesterday was presented with the degree of Keystone Farmer by the Pennsylvania chapter of the Future Farmers of America. - The presentation, in recog nition of his interest in the FFA, was made by Jerry Li Fuhrman, New Freedom, Slate president of the association. WELCOME STUDENTS Portage Cleaners on Campus S.D.C.A. Off Campus 118 S. Pugh St. <■ • in the Alley Harriman-lves Vie for T@p NY Post By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Republicans gathered today to make official their ex pected nomination of Sen, Irving M. Ives to oppose Democrat Aver ell Harriman for the state’s gov ernorship. Harriman, former Roosevelt and Truman administration official, won the Democratic nomination as expected early ' yesterday from Rep. Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., the son of the president he once served. Roosevelt’s name still will appear on the Nov. 2 ballot as a candidate for reelection to his House seat. ' Ives, the personal choice of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey to be his suc cessor, was unopposed for the nomination at the GOP state con vention in Syracuse. Political maneuverings in the nation’s most populous state over shadowed temporarily the party campaigns elsewhere for control of Congress, but that drive was picking up steam. President Eisenhower headed out from his Denver vacation headquarters for a three-day visit to four western states while Vice President Nixon and House Speaker Martin (R-Mass) con tinued more extended speaking tours. First on Eisenhower’s schedule was . an airport speech last night at Missoula, Mont. The President is, to speak today at dedication of McNary Dam on the Washington-Oregon . border, and tonight at. a major political rally in Los Angeles’ Hollywood Bowl. He winds up his tour to morrow with an off-the-cuff talk to the American Federation of THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Trice Says Censuring Uncertain WASHINGTON, Sept. 22 (JP)— J. Mark Trice, secretary of the Senate, said tonight he had been advised by the office of Sen. Knowland (R-Calif.) that no an nouncement would be made be fore tomorrow on whether a pre election session of the Senate will be called to act on a resolution to censure Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.) Trice, who waited into the night to receive a call from Knowland; the Senate majority leader, had said earlier there was a possibility he would be instructed shortly to send out telegrams summoning senators- to return here. Sept. 29 was the date generally mentioned for the start of the sea son, although some thought it might be a few days later. Trice said Knowland’s office had informed him the senator had another Republican senator lie wanted to contact before making a decision but did not expect to reach him in time for an an nouncement tonight. , . Trice said he expected to re ceive a call from Knowland to morrow morning. Labor national convention in Los Angeles. The Los Angeles rally tonight will climax a two-day convention of the National Federation of Re publican Women, which opened yesterday on the keynote that the nation is enjoying its greatest prosperity. Qh the Democratic side, Sen. Estes Kefauver ,(D-Tenn), just back from a month’s visit to Eu rope, told a" Washington news conference U.S. foreign relations have “deteriorated- greatly” in the last two years and will be a ma jor issue in the campaign. Kefauver said he will speak to morrow in San Francisco, starting a 14-state campaign of 39 speeches for election of Democratic sena tors and representatives. He said this country is “placing too much reliance now on German rearmament to the exclusion of the French,” and contended that Secretary of State Dulles “has not given us the kind of leadership that is required of the United States.” Vice President Nixon, swinging through the West, praised the Ei senhower-Dulles program and said the two men are leaders “best qualified to meet the Communist threat and to attain an objective of peace without surrender.” Nixon, addressing a turkey day celebration at Worthington, Minn., warned against the “drug of so cialism” which he said “does ter rible things to the addict.” The Republican farm program, HOUSE MANAGERS! for all your ® Plumbing ® Heating # Repair Work Call' or Visit Nitlany Plumbing and Heating N. Atherton St. AD 7-2561 Soviet Union Balks UN Assembly Debate UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Sept. 22 (fl s )—'The Russians balked today, at discussing the admission of Laos and Cambodia to the UN until a satisfactory settlement is made in Indochina in accord with the decisions of the Geneva conference. The UN: Assembly’s steering committee voted 12-0, however, to recombaehd that the 60-nation As sembly debate a proposal by Aus tralia to give Laos and Cambodia a place in the UN. Russia and Czechoslovakia abstained was the and No- The Soviet Union still has the upper hand, for it can veto in the Security Council the admission of Laos and Cambodia regardless of what the Assembly does. The So viet opposition to debate now made it clear the Russians will demand the tJN pay attention to the decisions of the Geneva con ference, which was held outside the UN. . . Secretary of State John Foster Dulles also may touch ori the Ge neva conference tomorrow when he speaks to the Assembly and gives the 59 other countries a re port on the state of the world as the United States sees it. The Assembly today elected se ven vice presidents and seven committee chairmen who, with the .president, constitute the Steer ing Committee. As usual, the five big powers were elected vice presidents. Burma and Ecuador also were chosen. Britain received 52 out of 55 valid votes for vice president, Burma and France 50 each, Ecua dor and United/ States 49 each, Soviet Union 47 and Nationalist China 41. Five of the 60 votes cast were ruled invalid. Pennsylvania Week HARRISBURG, Sept. 22 (JP)— A nationwide radio salute Oct. 10 will set off Pennsylvania Week 1954, the time when Pennsyl vanians consider what is Penn sylvania. a major target of the Democrats,' is, he said, “the one best designed to bring the full parity income without imposing on the farmer those .stifling controls which inev itably lead to regimentation and socialism.” National Crime Reported Higher WASHINGTON, Sept. 22 (#>)— FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said today the national crime rate jumped another BY2 per cent in the first half of this year, com pared with the same period in 1953. And, he added, if this trend continues, major crimes will reach a record high in 1954. In a semiannual issue of the Bureau’s Uniform Crime Reports based on police reports from all parts of the country, Hoover esti mated that 1,136,140 major crimes Were committed during the first six month of the current year, up 88,850 from a year ago. The report noted that during the 1954 period “a major crime was committed every 13.8 sec onds.” ✓ The FBl’s summary of the po lice reports asserted: “Each day during the first six months of 1954, it is estimated that an average of 36 people were feloniously slain and 252 other felonious assaults were commit ted; 48 rapes were committed; 608 cars were stolen* 1 nrr and 1454 burglaries were com mitted. Scelba Hit For Murder By Reds ROME, Sept. 22 (JP) — Italy’s powerful Communist '' party to night charged pro-Western Pre mier Mario Scelba with full re sponsibility for the 'Wilma Mon tesi death scandal- and demanded his resignation. x The maneuver by the largest Communist party organization outside the Iron Curtain had been anticipated. Scelba promised to answer the charges tomorrow. Before the government-shaking storm broke on the Senate fioor, police chiefs of key Italian cities, summoned urgently to Rome, were briefed on how to carry out anti-riot operations. A high pol ice official said the Communists were expected to stage “disorders and demonstrations.” The Communist assault-joined by fellow-traveling Sociahsts-de veloped from the detention last night of two prominent Romans. They are Piero Piccioni, 32, .jazz pianist son of Attilio Piccioni, who resigned last Saturday as Italy’s foreign minister in order, he said, “to defend my son and my family’s good name,” and a rich, self-styled marquis, named Ugo Montagna. Both are . accused in connection with the death of Wilma, a shape ly, 21-year-old party girl. Her death has led to allegations of sex and drug orgies involving per sons. high in Italy’s society and politics. Her nearly nude body was found on the beach at Ostia, Rome’s Coney Island, in April, 1953. From the floor of the Senate, Sen. Umberto Terracini, Commu nist Senate leader, accused Scel ba of “being responsible for the Montesi affair.” Martin Welcomes Conestoga Wagon WASHINGTON, Pa., Sept. 22 (A 5 ) —Sen. Edward Martin (R-Pa.) today welcomed a 130-year-old conestoga wagon to Washington arid described it. as the vehicle which “g av e. permanency to transportation.” Flanked by city and county of ficials at the Washington County Courthouse, Martin told an esti mated 2000 persons of how some 200 years ago “mighty fleets of great, white-topped -wagons trav eled daily on the Corfestoga Trail,” Sen. Martin said. “Pennsylvania was the great gateway to the west from Philadelphia to Harris Ferry on the Susquehanna, across the Alleghenies to Pittsburgh and on to the Ohio River.” About 10 per cent of United States farms produce about 51 per cent of all commercial United States farm products. Set In Step! A!! Penn State Students Listen To GROOVOLOGY where you can hear. McLANAHAN'S "Collegiate Musical Salute” 11:10 P. M. NIGHTLY WMAJ. 1450 on the dial PAGE THREE