TUESDAY. NOyEMBEII 30, 1954 Asian Made CHICAGO, Nov. 29 (/P) —Secretary of State John Foster Dulles declared tonight the United States will "react vigorously" against Communist provocation in Asia but he ruled out for the present any "war action such as a naval and air blockade of Red China." The secretary said that, in contrast to soft talk from Moscow, the Chinese Communists "have talked and acted with increasing Violence." "They break their armistice agreements and they outrage the elemental decencies of international conduct," Dulles said. He spoke out after Senate Re ' publican Leader Knowland of Cal ifornia, called for a tight block ade on the Chinese eCommunist coast in retaliation for the Pei ping regime's imprisonment of 13 Americans on what the State De partment has called trumped up spy charges. Dulles said America's greatest contribution to peace ,"is to be ready to fight, if need be." His prepared text did not speci fy that he was here talking of the imprisonment of the 13 Ameri cans, but he had used similar language in •notes to the Chinese Communists on the subject. His speech continued: "Perhaps international commu nism is trying by a new way to divide the free nations. They seek to be soothing in Europe. They are provocative in . Asia . . . "What has happened is a chal lenge to us, and indeed to all who want peace, to find ways, con sistent with peace, to sustain in ternational rights and those of our citizens, rather than now resort ing to war action such as a naval B-25 Plane Crash Kills Five Airmen BALTIMORE, Nov. 29 (W)—The bodies of five men were found to day •in the wreckage of an Air Force B-25 which crashed last night against a wooded hillside about two miles from Friendship .12nternational Airport where it was attempting to make an emer gency landing. A sixth man, found alive by res cuers nearly 12 hours after the crash, is in critical condition but expected to live. The two-engine plane, on a rou tine training mission returning from Tulsa, Okla., to Andrews Air Force Base near Washington, crashed about 10:30 p.m. shortly after it contacted the Friends - hip , tower that it was running short ' of gas. Optical authorities estimate that there are 11,132,544 lens ciNnbina tions possible for eyeglasses. Promise by Dulles and air blodkade of Red China." President Eisenhower talked over the speech with Dulles be fore the President went to Augus ta, Ga., for the Thanksgiving weekend. Eisenhower has prom ised to do everything, he can by peaceful means, and may speak out in more detail later this week. U.S. Win Executive WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 (JP)—An organized "executive reserve" of industry and labor union leaders trained for government duty in wartime will be created Wednesday by theh Office of Defense Mobilization. Officials who disclosed this today said it is expected to develop into a government-wide reserve of executives pledged to drop their private afafirs and report to Washington immediately on re ceiving notice of full mobiliza tion. Some 30 or more industry men, almost all of whom served in emergency control agencies dur ing World War II or the Korean crisis, have been invited by ODM Director Arthur S. Flemming to Wednesday's initial meeting here. Before being appointed, 'the businessman reservists must vol unteer to stand by for a call to full-time government duty in an emergency, and to report to Wash ington periodically for brief terms of refreSher training. Each will be tabbed in advance for his wartime post in ODM or the successor agencies which would sprout out of ODM in war time-defense production, price ad ministration, wage control, ration ing and so on. klemming thus hopes to avoid the delay and confusion encoun tered in each previous emergency, when vital: agencies possessing vast war powers were organized on what in government language is called a crash basis. That means get it going in a hurry at any cost. 'HE DAILY COLLEGIAN: STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Churchill Reaches Birthday Threshold With. World Plans LONDON, Nov. 29 Vl 2 l—Prime Minister Sir • Winston Churchill tonight reached the' threshold of his 80th birthday immersed in plans for the future of :Britain and the world. Tomorrow Churchill will 'be 80 and a new session of' Parliament will be opened by Queen Eliza beth 11. The two events- - -one look ing back and the other forward— are entwined in a program. that provides Churchill a strenuous day even by his standards. Elsewhere in London, in a small; three-room office, 50 volunteer workers struggled, to keep ahead of an avalanche of checks, letters and. telegrams pouring in , for ChUrchill's 80th birthday Presen tation fund. The fund has now reached more than $280,000. Organize Reserve 'Merry Widow' Uses Poison on 4 Husbands TULSA. Okla., Nov. 29 (2P)— The smile that wreathed Mr. Nan nie Doss' plump face through cheerful confessions that she poi soned four of her five husbands vanished today at her • arraign ment on a murder charge. Interrogators, who have said at least four other persons once closely associated with the defen dant died strange deaths, quoted the gum-chewing Mrs. Doss after her last confession as saying: "You can dig up all the other graves in the world but you won't find anything else on me." 14th Anni,,,,er...11,: Sale Reductions up to 0% ENDS TODAY 5:30 P.M. Senate Agreement WASHINGTON, Nov. (fP)---Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) won Senate agreement tonight to wind up debate and start voting Wednesday on the question of censuring him. Sen. William Langer (R-ND) blocked the move for a while, but withdrew his objection after earnest appeals on the Senate floor by Republican and Democratic leaders—as well as by McCarthy and his supporters. At the same time the Wisconsin senator refused to back down an inch from the views and actions reflected in those words of his. McCarthy tried at one point to get in proviso that he could file some censure charges of his own against his accusers. Under the rules, this would give those ac cused McCarthy named Sens. Ralph Flanders (R-Vt), J. William Fulbright (D-Ark) and Wayne Morse (Ind-Ore) as likely targets —only 30 minutes to defend them selves. Sen. Everett Dirksen (R-Ill) an- Coats Suits Dresses and Sportswear nounced he will have ready a com plete substitute for the censure resolution submitted by the Wat kins committee and lately broad ened to rebuke McCarthy for at tacking the Watkins 'committee itself. This is the special biparti san committee appointed by Sen. Watkins (R-Utah), appointed to investigate charges of unbecom ing conduct against McCarthy. "BAIT" Cleo Moore John Agar Doors Open 6 p.m. Alec Guinness "THE MALTA STORY" STATE NOW BATTLE OF ROGUE RIVER George Martha Montgomery Hyer PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers