TUESDAY. MAY 8. 1956 Five States Will Cast Primary Ballots Today Five Five states—lndiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Florida and New Mexico—hold primaries, today. From a national standpoint, the Indiana results will bear the closest watching. The question there is how much the Republican vote will exceed the Democratic_ Both sides say the Republicans will be on top, as usual. Ohio will elect national conven tion delegates with 58 votes at the Democratic convention and 56 at the Republican. West Virginia al so will pick its convention dele gates. with 24 votes at the Demo cratic convention and 16 at the Republican. Monday Maryland voters chose their convention delegates, with 24 votes at the Republican con vention and 18 at the Democratic. Maryland slates favoring Presi dent Eisenhower for Republican l i renomination and Sen. Este Ke fauver of Tennessee for the em ocratic nomination, at leas on the first ballot, were oppos by groups pledged to no cand . date. The big interest in Mar land was the race between former Sen. Millard Tydings and George P. Mahoney for the Democratic nom ination to the U.S. Senate. Sen. John Marshall Butler, who now holds the seat sought by Tydings and Mahoney. was op posed for Republican renomina tion by two political newcomers. Butler beat Tydings in 1950 after Tydings had served 24 years in the Senate. Germans Ask For POW Release BONN, Germany, May 7 GLPI— Germany's Assn. of Former War Prisoners called on three American war veterans organiza tions today to support demands for the release of war criminals held by the United States. The association sent letters to the American Legion. the Jewish War Veterans and the Veterans of Foreign Wars asking their back ing for the release of the 21 pris oners held in the U.S. War Crimes Prison at Landsberg. 5 O'Clock Theater "All the People, All the Show," will be presented today by the 5 O'Clock Theater in the base ment of Old Main. The play is a one-act original by Philip Wein. senior in arts and letters from Clarion. Leffler Publication A modified edition of "Your Bank," by Dr. George L. Leffler, director of planning and research in the College of Business Ad ministration. has been published on the Philippine Islands. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Solon Says Committee , 'Will Speed Farm Bill ITo Senate Next Week _____ Algerian Nationalists Stage 1 1 a a —Sen Ellender (D-La.) said to- Attacks , Hammarskjoici 1 WASHINGTON, May 7 (41 on Colonist Farmers , say his agriculture commit- ALGIERS, Algeria, May (P)—Nationalist forces hurled Asks Cautious tee was ~ ,,, o trz to do a rush job , their heaviest coordinated attacks on European colonist farm- on the new farm bill and have ers today, killing a score and burning farm homes across ar il-oreiqn Plan it read% for Senate action early ...s. fertile strip of western Algeria next week. The raids apparently caught massive French military UNITED NATIONS N YMay The committee voted to dia fortes in the region completely by ; 7 ,pi , —Secretary General Dag pence with a further public hear- I i ,surprise.l area They were staged in an Hammai skiold favors a cautioue I:rigs on the House-passed measure Anne Frank of some 200 square miles,land quiet policy by the Security andsession it up in a closed seton ranging as close as 16 miles to Council to avo i d upsetting thei edneaday. / • the French Foreign Legion head-'cease-fire pledges he got on his Ellender took the Senate floor Diary Receives quarters at Sidi Bet Abbes. !Middle East peace mission to invite his colleagues to have 40 Farms Burned I their amendments and any state • I( This view was expressed in dip- ' ' More than 40 farms were over- lomatic • atic quarters here today ass iments they wished to make, ready Pulitzer Prize run and the buildings burned inl Hammarskiold gave his personal at that time a seven-hour operation launched: impressionsthediddleE tl . on NEW YORK, May 7 oP)—A last midnight The area centers individually to members of thEe testimony and that we're ready husband and wife today became near Ain Temouchent, a markett o take the House bill or delete Security- Council the first such writing team ever,town for 20,000. 40 miles south- ' from it or add to it.' Ellender to win a Pulitzer Prize. They west of Oran and 50 miles east Hammarskiold met first with; I Ambassador Joza Brilei of Yugo wayaseie cited for the poignant Broad- of the Moroccan border. slavia. Council president lot May.l "ff we get into further extended state hit, "The Diary of t French reports listed about 20 in my judgment we will pre _iNext he talked with Soviet Am-hearings, Anne Frank." I Europeans and five Arabs. bassador Arkadv A Sobcdev. then othave any agriculture legisla- Albert Hackett and Fran c e s lumably farm hands kille-1 byt with UN Chief Delegate Henry, tion this session." I Goodrich won the drama aw•ard, the rebels. Details were scanty for their stage adaption of the 'Cabot Lodge Jr. and later withi New farm legislation has been because the nationalists cut corn -1 uary of a 13-year-old Jewish girl ' w•ho died in a Nazi concentration a l on g , ri camp in World War 11. It co- munications lines as they swept Biggest Operation Ambassador Dialal Abdoh. Iran-;knocking around in Congreae for tan delegate and an unofficial more than a year. The House Council contact for the Arab mem- passed a bill in 1955, but the Sen- E uro _ hers of the UN. rate didn't act until this year and stais Joseph Schildkraut and Su-' Although farms run by Isan Strasberg. peans—mostly French—have long No one in the conference would their combined version was vetoed MacKinlay Kantor's "Anderson- been a favorite target of the reb- talk for publication and Hammar-)by President Eisenhower April vine," an historical recital of the els this was the biggest such oper- skjold pursued with usual deter- 16 The House passed a new btll horrors of a Confederate prisoncallsquiet s ,, ation reported since the insurrec- urination the policy he ast week, giving Eisenhower a camp of the Civil War, won the tion began Nov 1, 1954. diplomacy. Guards kept newsmen' . 1956 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. ' The 1.200,000 European colonists off the top floor area of Hammar i soil bank program but not the The annual awards were made in Algeria occupy most of the`-Hold's skyscraper office authority he asked to make ad by the trustees of Columbia Uni- ic hoice costal farm land vance payments Farmers It was said that Hammarskiold this year on crop versity under the will of the late ; a mong the eight million Algerians' feels nothing should he done here land to be withdrawn from pro- Joseph Pulitzer. publisher of the' l have been left with marginal to excite the Middle East In ac- duction next year. eld New York World and the St areas to the south, bordering on cord with that view the Sccurityt Grazing land was added to the Louis Post-Dispatch. They have the Sahara. The French govern-,Council likely will not m zet until soil bank in the House version been an annual feature in the' ment recently began a program May 20 or later. , and several other changes made fields of music, literature and of agricultural reform to aid the' which may brirg on some new Journalism since 1917. Algerian farmers. . . Froth Circulation Staff fv.ht•• in the Senate. - ^e of • l "Ira important th None of the 1956 winners had won the prize before. Biology Professor Tesitfies in Crash PITTSBURGH OP)—A Lehigh University biology professor, one of 14 passengers to survive an Easter Sunday Trans World Air lines plane crash, testified today that the airliners never got more than 50 feet off the ground before plunging into the earth, killing 22 persons. Dr. Hope Ritter Jr. of Bethle hem R.D. 4. said he recalls the tip of the plane's wing scraping along the runway and making sparks "similar to those from an emery wheel" after the big plane went into an approximately 23 degree bank. 54 Take Med College Test Fifty-four students took the Medical College Admission Test at 8:15 a.m. Saturday in 121 Sparks. . , imp( ...ant _Jai we -a c , rich black soil and is important' The Ain Temouchent region has i . The Froth circulation staff will'quirklv." Sen. Mundt (R-S.D.) orange growing country. meet at 6:30 tonight in 214 Het-'told the Senate. "A matter of a r p el Union. Attendance is corn- few weeks will be of great im 'Surviving Siamese Twin ulsory. portance to some farmers." , - - Returns From Hospital i FERRIS, 111. (W)—Rodney Dee 'Brodie, the 4 1 / 2 -year-old survivor; I of a history-making Siamese twint separation operation, was back; home today, 11 months after he [suffered a brain hemorrhage. I Fhysicans at the University of: 'lllinois Medical Cer.ter in Chi-; icago said they copsidered Rodney[, "recovered" from the hemorrhage: he suffered in May 1955. Atomic Energy Fuel Noncompetitive—Cook Franklin H. Cook, professor of i business law, believes the atom is not yet a competitive fuel. JJ In an article published in Pub-i lic Utilities Fortnightly, he pre-1 dieted that atomic energy will! enter the power field slowly and will ultimately replace other fuels, as primary sources of power. I . : eku)s)s,ka sue. CANDIES sweetest way to remember Mother The finest freshest you can buy! HOME FASHIONED FAVORITES- pecan rolls, fudge, butter bong, jf-Ilies *1.35 1 Ih. hoz MOTHER'S DAY CARDS and Famous Name Toiletries . . . Luxurious Gifts at $l.OO to $5.00 Wrapped to Assure Safe Mailing GRIGGS PHARMACY $2.60 2 lb. box -ALSO Opposite Old Main PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers