TUESDAY: MAY 22. 1956 RR 'Right-to-Work' Laws Defeated in High Court WASHINGTON, May 21 M—State "right to work" laws as applied in the railroad industry fell today before a 9-0 Supreme Court ruling. State laws banning union shops in other industries were not affected. The decision upheld a 1951 amendment of the National Civil Rights Bill Attacked By South WASHINGTON, May 21 (4 3 ) Southern members of the House Judiciary Committee today at tacked the Eisenhower civil rights bill as "absolutely shocking" and providing for . a "frankenstein" threat against state and local gov ernments. Seven members of the commit tee, including six Democrats and one Virginia Republican, signed a strongly worded minority report against an administration bill ap proved by the committee April 25. The measure ' has yet to win Rules Committee clearance for a House vote. Its,iprovisions, recom mended by Atty. Gen. Herbert J. Brownell, include: 1. Authority for the president to set up a bipartisan commission to study the civil rights problem. 2. Creation of a special civil rights division tin the Justice De partment headed by an assistant attorney general. 3. Opening of the federal courts to broader civil rights actions. Anyone who felt his civil rights were being curtailed could seek a remedy in federal court without having, as now required, to ex haust state court remedies first. Also the U.S. Justice Department could take the case to court for him in his name. The Southerners vigorously de nounced all three provisions and attacked a majority committee re port. St. Louis Profs Record Bomb Blast ST. LOUIS, May 21 (JP)—Two seismographs at St. Louis Univer sity recorded the hydrogen bomb explosion near Bikini Atoll as "very slight disturbances" here. Ross R. Heinrich, director of geophysics at the university's In stitute of Technology, said today the explosion was recorded 13 minutes after the blast. "Time of the recording is about correct for the 6500 miles the ground wave had to travel," Hein rich said. "If the disturbance had shown on only one instrument we might have attributed it to a local shock. Chinese Communists HONG 'GONG, May 21 (4)—The Chinese Communists say they have finished a 14-mile causeway from. the mainland to the heavily fortified island port of Amoy on the southeast coast. This will make it easier for the Reds to bring up ammunition for the shell ing of the Chinese Nationalists on nearby Quemoy Island. H-Bomb Test Analysis Begins BIKINI, Tuesday, May 21 (JP)—Nuclear scientists today began a detailed analysis of what the first American air dropped H-bomb did when it exploded two miles above a test target island in the mid-Pacific yesterday. The scientists sought most of their answers in the huge amount of data gathered by a vast array of recording ii.strurnentg set up on Namu, the target island, on other islands of Bikini Atoll and taken through the huge atomic cloud of airplanes. • The nuclear weapon test task force, headed by Rear Adm. B. Hall Hanlon, concealed behind brief, laconic language all tech nical details that - might be of THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Railway Labor Act which author izes the railroads and labor unions to enter into union shop agree ments, state laws to the contrary notwithstanding. Must Join Union Under the union shop, a worker, must join within 60 days the un- 1 ion which holds collective bar gaining rights for his craft or class of workers, or lose his job. Eighteen states have laws ban ning membership or membership in unions as a condition to holding a job. Proponents call them "right to work" laws. Some union leaders I described them as "right to scab"' laws. • Except as applied in the rail road industry the state "right to work" laws remain intact. The Taft-Hartley Act permits union shop agreements, but specifies this does not apply in states which have laws prohibiting them. Overturned Ruling The decision overturned a ril ing .by the Nebraska Supreme Court that the state's "right to work" law superseded the Rail way Labor Act's union shop amendment. The Nebraska court ruled in a case brought by a group of Union Pacific Railroad employes who did not want to have to join a union. The decision was appealed by 16 nonoperating labor organ izations which have negotiated union shop agreements with the Union Pacific. Cypriots Bomb British Troops NICOSIA, Cyprus, May 21 (.4 ) )— Cypriot rebels hiding among riot ing schoolgirls tossed bombs at British troops trying to restore or der in Nicosia today, killing one Briton and wounding three others. Bomb splinters injured seven Greek Cypriot civilians in nearby. shops, and two policemen. British reinforcements ringed the riot area an effort to trap the bomb throwers. As tear gas clouds cleared later a grim silence settled over the sunny city. Tour ing police loudspeaker vans an nounced that an indefinite curfew had been ordered. PhiKPhi Initiates Include Dean, Prof- Dr. Eric A. Walker, dean of the College of Engineering and Archi tecture, Dr. Miriam E. Lowen berg, professor and head of the department of foods and nutri tion, and 91 alumni, undergradu ates, and graduate students will be initiated by Phi Kappa Phi, national scholastic honor society, tonight in the Hetzel Union Build ing. Following the ceremonies, Dean Walker will address the group at dinner, in a speech entitled "Wanted—Eggheads and Long hairs." use to any enemy. A short communique, written last night, reached the observer ship as she neared Kwajalein this morning homeward bound. It said only: 1. "There was little construction on Namu and thus little damage can be reported. Various effects on structures on nearby islands suffered varying degrees of dam age depending on proximity to the target island." 2. Fallout of radioactivity from the towering bomb cloud —which unofficially was esti mated to have reached a height of about 25 miles—drifted clear of all . people ashore or afloat. There no increase in radia tion in the Marshall Islands generally and The fallout on Bikini Atoll "wk relatively A note appended to Fay's story French Continue Hunt for Assassin In Alders' Hills ALGIERS, May 21 01—Three infantry battalions searched the rocky hills east of Algiers today for a rebel band which killed- and mutilated 19 young French re servists Friday. Fifty rebels were reported killed and 200 suspects arrested as the riflemen moved ahead with the support of tanks and helicopters. The killing of the reservists has pushed tempers high in Al giers and in Paris. All of the 19 men—two others still_ are listed as missing—were from the Paris region and had been back in uniform less than three weeks. They set out Friday on a recon naissance mission toward one of the little groups of clay and thatch huts nestled on a mountain side near Palestro, some 30 miles east of Algiers in the great Kaby lie Mountains. As near, as mili tary officers can reconstruct the scene, they first drew fire from the surrounding heights as they labored up a mountain path hemmed in by rocks. Barbed wire was strung up after their passage to cut off a retreat. French officials said civilians of the village helped in the am bush and disfiguration of the bodies. French troops also launched a clean up around Philippeville af ter 17 Arabs were found dead in a village within five miles of that port city. Seven children and several women were among the victims. There was no indication of a motive, except that the rebels usually choose their Arab vic tims among persons suspected to being friendly to Frenchmen. Coffee Brands Hiked in Price By Maior Producers NEW YORK, May 21 (JP)—You will probably be paying a higher price soon for a pound of your favorite coffee. Producers of major brands to day hiked their wholesale prices as much as four cents a pound. Spokesmen for several of the big supermarket chains said the in creases are certain to be passed on to retail consumers but it may take 10 to 14 days. The chains kept mum about what they would do with their own private brands. General Foods Corp. initiated the new round of price boosts, lift ing the wholesale price of its Max well House vacuum-packed coffee two cents a pound to 99 cents. This almost wiped out a price cut of three cents a pound made last March. Mentzer Elected Orchestra Head Thomas Mentzer, sophomore in physics from Lebanon, has been elected president of the Sym phony Orchestra. Others elected were: Virginia Mensch, sophomore in music edu cation from Bellefonte, secretary treasurer; John Croft, junior in music education from Altoona, manager; and Jere Fridy, junior in music education from Palmyra, librarian. said he was leaving the Mt. Mc- Kinley immediately to board a plane for Honolulu. This indicated that the 10 to 12 other tests of atomic devices scheduled for this summer would not be public. Even though long analysis of photographic blast heat and other recordings would be need ed to tell American weaponeers the exact effect of the first American air-dropped hydrogen bomb. it was possible to make some unofficial estrniates of • "what would have happened if a city instead of a deserted atoll had been beneath the bomb when it detonated at an alti tude of about 10.000 feet. The bomb was believed to have released energy equivalent to about 10 million tons of TNT. The fireball of the bomb was ap proximately three miles in diam eter. Campbell Charges Foreign Aid Abuse WASHINGTON, May 21 (in—The government's comp troller general, Joseph Campbell, said today that foreign aid managers often get more money than they can handle prop erly. As an illustration, he said, the Defense Department held on to 400 million dollars of aid money that, unspent, should have been returned to the Treas ury. Reports to Congress It is the duty of the comptroller general to report to Congress on the way appropriations are spent. Campbell appeared before the Senate Foreign Relations Commit tee in its study of an administra tion proposal to eliminate the, practice of carrying over unspent, funds from one fiscal year to an other. Campbell testified: "A significant portion of the an nual aid programs proposed to the Congress for the past few years has been beyond the capa city if the agency and the reci pient countries to get under way during the fiscal year for which the funds were appropriated." Sl.B Biiiion Left Over He said that at the end of the fiscal year last June 30, there was $l.B billion left over and $2.2 bil lion the year before. Campbell said the International Cooperation Administration, which runs the foreign aid program, has shown a lack of adequate plan ning and "apparently does not consider realistically the avail able resources and capabilities of both the United States and the individual recipient countries." As for the $4OO million he said the Pentagon has held on to, Campbell said this represented a violation of law which Defense Department has attempted to ex plain away with technicalities. Pifer Gets Scholarship The College of Home Economics has awarded Patricia Pifer, senior in home economics from State College, the Ellen M. Stuart Me morial Award of $75. Postponement Asked On Turnpike Toll Change HARRISBURG, May 21 (Ill—Joseph J. Lawler, secretary of high ways and a member of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, said today he would recommend postponing a toll revision on the super highway. Under present plans, automob would increase by 41 'per cent, e reduced about 20 per cent. Lawler said he would ask Chair man G. Franklin McSorley and Commissioner James F. Torrance to join with him in postponing the rate changes until at least July 15. Thee were indications that the commission would go along. Law ler met with Gov. Leader for more than three hours on the subject. There was no comment from the governor. Should Hold Up Fazes Lawler said the commission should hold up the revised fares pending a study and report of the entire operation of the com mission by a competent firm of industrial engineers!' The Senate only last week or dered an investigation of the toll rate change, the size of which commission officials have declined to estimate on a dollars and cents basis. Lawler, in explaining his pre vious vote for the fare changes, said: Reason for Voting "My only reason for voting for the toll revision was to forestall a legal action by the trustee fur the bondholders to compel the commission to adjust the tolls." The highways secretary said he BELLEFONTB Ad u lt s ss e . child. ne PLAZASTARTS TODAY til Robert Tailor -. Stewart Cr "LAST HUNT" 1 in Cinernasen9e! BELLEFONTE I TONITE i WED. NITE STATE Marilyn Monroe Robert blitebom **RIVER OF NO RETURN" 11! able Spencer Tracy "Broken Lance ,"1 - (both in Cineessecepe!) PAGE THREE Compromise Reached on Farm Bill WASHINGTON, May 21 (k')— Senate-House conferees on the farm bill were reported late to day to have agreed tentatively on a compromise which would give the administration largely what it wants on the key question of feed grains, Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-La), chairman of the conferees, would say only after the 2 1 / 2 .-hour ses sion that, "We have discussed various proposals and I'm sure we can reach an agreement to morrow morning." But from other sources it was learned that a compromise of this sort appeared to be in the mak ing: 1. The House conferees would accept the Senate version of price supports for feed grains oats. barley, rye and sorghums. The administration strongly opposed the House plan. 2. The Senate conferees would give in to the House on the ques tion of when the $1.200,000,000 a-year soil bank would be effec tive. 3. The Senate conferees would agree to drop two controversial wheat provisions written into the bill on the floor just before it was passed last Friday. le fares on the 400-mile toll road fective May 25, with truck fares already has drafted a resolution pointing out that the commission itself might "effect substantially savings" by a reappraisal of com mission services and the curtail• ment of unnecessary expenditures.