PAGE TWO Khrushchev's Tour Seen As No 'Great Success' BUDAPEST (fP)—Soviet Premier Nikita Khrus'nchev completed a week's fence-mending tour of Hungary Thurs day but there is no sign it was any great success. It was the first publicized trip he has made here since the Soviet army crushed the 1956 revolt. The fact that he took Science Hopes To Find Cause Of Mongolism KANSAS CITY (/Pi Science may be on the threshhold of learning what causes Mongolism, a Salt Lake City doctor says. Dr. Chester A. Swinyard, here to attend the International Coun cil fur Exceptional Children, that too little is known of Mongolhm to say definitely that it might be conquered in the foreseeable future. "The Mongoloid," he said in an interview Thur:,day, "is born with; typical physical features—slant ing eves, lax muscles, pot bellies. At the best, he may develop a mental age of about seven years. His life span IS somewhat shorter l than normal. He can be trained—l to care for himself and to hold down simple jobs. "ft appears that the rate of growth in the womb has been slowed down some way, that the child is born before it's ready. "We don't know what causes this, but experiments with ani mals which are deprived of vita min A produces results which bear a remarkable resemblance to Mongolism. "It may be that the delivery of vitamin A from the mother to the baby in the womb is interrupted Or blocked. If vitamin A deli-, ciency is really to blame, the problem is not getting the vita min A into the mother, but from the mother to the child in the womb" Four Crew Members Perish As 847 Stratojet Explodes NORTH COLLINS, N.Y. (IP)—A 847 Stratojet bomber was ripped in two by an exp Yotk yesterday and fell to th four crew members to theiri deaths. - A 1347 can carry a nuclear! weapon but the Strategic Air Command at Omaha, Neb., report-I ed none was aboard. The flight was a rout me training mission out of Lockbourne Air Force Base, { Columbus, Ohio. An Air Force spokesman said the 847 was about to begin an air refueling operation with a tanker plane. The tanker was about a mile ahead of the 847 when the bomb-. er exploded about 20,000 feet over the rural countryside 20 miles south of Buffalo. Most of the plane fell in two flaming masses of wreckage that landed a mile apart in open farmland. Tony Therm, owner of a private airfield, was flying at 2,000 feet He said he saw an intense ball of fue. "A few seconds later;" he said, "the ball of fire started to de scend. Then it separated into two * STARLITE * DRIVE•HN Midway Brt , oe,tn State College ■nd "Bellefonte Showtime 7:30 Admission .75 FRIDAY ONLY FIRST AREA SHOWINGS Fuzzy Pink Nightgown JANE RUSSELL —and— RALPH MEEKER Abdultah's Harem —ln Color— GREGORY RATOFF —and— KAY KENDALL S PLUS CARTOON 9 so much time for the visit, just after becoming premier as well as party boss, has made a lot of people ask just what it was for. Khrushchev spoke at some of the strongholds of the revolt—the steel town of Stalinvaros, the mining center of Tatabanya, and the Budapest industrial suburb of Csepel. He also made a bow to the peasants, now much in favor in Hungary, and to the intellec tuals, now very much in the doghouse. He made three points in all his public speeches: •Party leader Janos Kadar is emphatically Khrushchev's man. •Hungarian Communists were weak and stupid in allowing the revolt to occur, and they had bet ter look sharp in the future. •The country needs to step up production. Ever since Kadar quit as Hun garian premier in January to de vote himself to party work, he has been under sharp attack by Sta linists within his own organiza tion. From his exile in the Soviet Union, former Stalinist boss Mat yas Rakosi wrote the Hungarian Central Committee saying that, because he was not in charge, party affairs were going from bad to worse. Hungary is a weak spot in Khrushchev's armor. Stalinists blame his so-called liberaliza tion policy for the revolt. Khrushchev blames Rakosi and the Stalinist leadership. An at tack on Kadar, if successful, might lead to an attack on Khrushchev himself. Moreover, some diplomats in Budapest say the economic situa tion in Hungary shows signs of getting worse rather than better despite the Soviet aid. osion high over western New • earth in flames, carrying its balls of fire. They didn't plum met, but fell slowly, very slowly. It probably took a whole minute before they fell to the ground." Br:tish Undisturbed By United States' Recession LONDON (?P)—The business re cession in the United States so far has disturbed Britain very little. The British economy maintains a fairly steady course. So far this year the unemployment figure has averaged only 1.9 per cent of the working force, although there are a few localized black spots. •• 00000 •••• 00000 0 00000 Ilb WMAJ Programs FRIDAY 8:30 --------- Morning Devotions 8:45 .---------. Morning Show Classical Interlude 11:00 .___ ___ __ 11:05 — Swap Shop 11:20 ----- Music for Listening Queen for • Day Centre County 12.116 ._ What's Going On 12:36 ------ __,__- 12:46 EMS Strike Up the Band 1:00 ------.--------.. Afternoon of Music 5:35 ----- Afternoon of Muaic ' Nene and Market Report _— Music for Listening 6:ao ------- Sports Breast' 6:55 ----_________ _ Music Fulton Lewis, M mei e for Listening 7:30 7 :15-- El ink for Listening 8 :DO _ ___.— — Bubsapoppin (W DFII I 8:30 (Ca — sepna News Roundup 1 WDFIvi i 1 :DO _.__ _____ News 9:05 10.09 10:05 11 :BS 1:00 Elisio al ilia Ilaatera N,wa _ Gronvokary 64 News and .Sports Sian 131 f 00000001/•00000116•••••••• THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Ike's Plan Backed By McElroy WASHINGTON UP) Setae tory of Defense Neil McElroy has warned military officers and civil ian members of the defense or ganization not to make speeches against President Eisenhower's plan for revamping of the Defense Department. He also issued what appeared to be a broad hint that such offi cers or officials should resign if they were so strongly opposed to the President's plan that they felt they couldn't work under it. McElroy spoke out Thursday in reply to a question as to how far a military officer could go in op position without becoming insub ordinate. He said all that is being asked in the Eisenhower administration plan for reorganization of the De fense Department is clarification of his authority and a modest flexibility in money matters. U.S. Missiles Beat Reds'—Holaday NEW YORK (A') William M. Holaday, director of guided mis siles for the Department of De fense, said Thursday he believes the U.S. missile program is ahead of the Soviet Union's on an over all basis. "From the information in the, Defense Department and from In telligence, we cannot say we are ahead in this or that in black or white but over-all we believe we are ahead," Holaday said. Holaday told of steps being taken to test missiles on the West Coast as well as the East Coast. He described Cape Canaveral in Florida as the primary range. "We don't have Cape Canaveral loaded up but we are putting in necessary instrumentation and safety parts to test on the West Coast," he said. STATE NOW Feat. 1:30, 3:34, 5:38, 7:42, 9:46 in ± fr . , Suer iiR Ale. 4 PPR MKS 111WESEASZOK WNW MATIME ALINIMINTINIPS mar NITS war A TORPADO The Penn State Jazz Club presents The Tony Scott Quartet IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE ART DEPARTMENT Saturday, April 12 Schwab Auditorium 8:00 P. M. Admission $l.OO Tickets On Sale at HUB Desk Artist Bruce Mitchell Will Make Jazz Drawings at the Concert Sign On Morning Show htnaic at Noon World News Local News Rebel Leader Hits Red's Foreign Policy BUKITTINGGI, Sumatra (11 3 )—Revolutionary Premier Sjafruddin Prawiranegara has accused the Soviet Union of "trying to make another satellite of Indonesia." He said it was now apparent that President Sukarno's regime is getting Soviet aid and this would compel the revolutionary government to ac cept any foreign military and eco nomic help offered. "If the current chill war be comes a Korean-type war, the Sukarno regime will be to blame," Sjafruddin told report ers Thursday, "If this happens, the revolutionary government hopes and expects that the free world will help us." The revolutionary regime so far has avoided asking the West for help, although the Jakarta government has charged the Su matrans are getting U.S. arms through Nationalist China. Sjafruddin said the Russians had given Jakarta aid through ;credits, loans, and through grants of arms and military equipment. ' The bespectacled leader said it actually was Russia "who has done nothing for Indonesian in dependence." adding: "Russian help to Sukarno in the .form of ten merchant ships and I arms to crush out democratic and !anti-Communist revolution is only to gain their own ends. Russia is ' trying to make another satellite of Indonesia as it crushed freedom lin Hungary .. Sjafruddin said if the rebels lose "the Sukarno regime will com plete its evolution and transform itself into a pure form of Com munist government." FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1958 100 Racketeers Land on Secret Government List WASHINGTON(IP)—A hundred hoodlums are on a secret govern ment list for special attention in a new drive against organized crime. This was announced Thursday by Atty. Gen. Williaw B. Rogers who described the hundred hoods as the top men in the rackets. Rogers announced that a spe cial group of former federal pros ecutors is being organized in New York City to spearhead the drive. They will be headed by Milton Wessel, 34, who was an assist ant U.S. attorney in New York in 1953-55 and now is in private practice there. Directing the over-all campaign in Washington will be Malcolm Anderson, newly appointed assist.- ant attorney general for criminal prosecutions. 00000000000000000000000 * NITTANY TODAY - DOORS OPEN 6 p.m. SAT. - Continuous from 1:15 ,----, BRIGITTE ® BARDOT I ft i " 1 111 ‘11 1 . * triefricte . 2:I IIIIM6 OIIROAN I CIfi b eacheihr ir PREUS I LE _
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers