WEDNESDA , SEPTEMBER 17, 1958 nalist Supply Ships ommunist Blockade Nati Run Formosa (41—A Nationalist supply ship ran the blockade of Quemoy again yesterday under a I d artillery fire, the Defense Ministry reported. ~ply drop to Little Quemoy was carried out TAIPE Communis fury of R.: A new su unmolested, istry said the ship, an LST-landing ship, tank- The mi lus II ched Reg Lou By avy GU, Calif., (W) devastating 'Regulus as launched from a .r the first time yes- POINT M The Navy's II missile v submarine f terday. The subm :rine Graybaek fired a 57-foot ' egulus capable of carrying a h Orogen warhead, 200 miles overland to Edwards AFB in California's Mojave Desert. Upon arrival at the base the missile's recovery gear failed. Its wheels failed to lower and it caught fire and burned. Test models of the Regulus are equipped lvlth wheels so they may be recovered after firing. The newly commissioned 320- foot Grayabck surfaced off the Point Mugu Naval Air Missile test Center with the Regulus II mounted on a swiveling launcher just forward of the conning tower. The missile took off in a haze of smoke as it roared into the sky under power of its turbojet engine and the thrust of its boost er rocket. Shortly after launching the booster rocket automatically disengaged and felt into the ocean. Ford Directors May Sweeten I Contract UAW DETROIT, Mich. (JP) Ford Motor Co. convened a special meeting of its board of .directors late yesterday amid reports it would sweeten its contract offer to avert a strike of 108,000 United Auto Workers today. John S. Bugas, Ford vice presi dent in charge of industrial rela tions, said that if the negotiations went into a night-long session as anticipated he would be in con stant touch with the board of di rectors "until we have a settle ment or a strike." Bugas said the board of direc tors makes the final decisions on Ford's offers to its workers and he indicated any addition to Mon day's contract offer to the UAW would have to get board approval first. Fourteen of the 18 members of the board of directors were on call at the big Ford headquarters building ,in suburban Dearborn while negotiations continued at a Detroit hotel with UAW and Ford bargaining teams trying to work out an agree ent. e••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••0••••••••0' • • • • • • • • • • • • • PENAL REEN:46, 4?A4 PLANTS ~ To, .1 4, : ,‘,fit ia ., YOUR ROOM „law 1 unloaded all its supplies in the fast time of 20 minutes. Apparent ly amphibious vehicles were used to dash supplies ashore. The airdrop was at Little Quem oy, 40 miles from a Red air base, and the ministry pronounced it successful. The Fled bombardment dur ing the Lsrs short stay at Quemoy was particularly in tense, the ministry said. By Nationalist count 5820 shells fell in just under live hours. This was a big increase over the relatively light shellings in the past few days. The ministry said that from 6 a.m. yesterday the Quemoy offshore complex took a total of 6840 shells. The supplies for Little Quemoy were dropped, the ministry said, from seven transport planes. No interference came from the Red air base at Lungki, 40 miles west of the Quemoys, where the Reds are believed to have MIGI7s. The Communist blockade was cracked anew after Premier and Vice President Chen Cheng assured the Nationalist Parlia ment earlier in the day the gov ernment has no intention of Idly sitting by and letting the more than 100,000 civilians and mili tary personnel on Quemoy and its adjacent islands be besieged without taking effective meas ' ures for their reinforcement and relief. He said if the Reds succeeded in sealink off Quemoy completely, it would mean extending the war. By this he apparently meant that the Nationalists would be forced to try to break the siege by bombing the Red , batteries. Chen made his - Statement in an open session. Later Parlia ment met in closed session in which reports were submitted by Defense Minister Yu Ta-wei: his deputy. Vice Adm. Ma Chi chuang:' and Foreign Minister Huang Shao-ku. Several legislators reportedly apnealed ,for the government to order the air force to bomb the Red guns. Huang is said to have urged the iI i lawmakers to be patient. Turn-About-- (Continued from page one) Clair . was brought before the hoard--because he violated dress Customs yesterday morning. Board Co-chairman John Nagy said too many freshmen have "the wrong idea about Customs." "Customs are meant to be fun." Both Nagy and Co-chairman Helen Skade asked that hatmen and woin e n continue to wear their hats throughout the Cus tom' period. "The 'Hello Spirit." Miss Skade "The 'Hello Spirit'," Miss Skade said. "also should be encour aped." Forms for reuorting violators 're available at the Hetzel Union desk and will be carried by mem bers of the board, Philodendrons 19c PMI College. Avpnt Pennsylv , _ eeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeoee4 NE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Jersey Train lEngineer Is Examined BAYONNE, N.J. (If'} Xn autopsy indicated yesterday that a weak heart caused by high blood pressure contrib uted to the engineer's death when a commuter train plunged from an open draw bridge into Newark Bay. But medical officials were care-1 ful to point out that the exact! cause of death will not be knowni until further tests are made. At least 21 died in the crashi Monday and perhaps that many more. One passenger coach. pos-1 sibly with bodies aboard, re [mained on the bottom of the bay I Tuesday night with divers and barge crewmen struggling to ,raise it. The enginAer of the Jersey Central train was Lloyd Wil burn. 63. of Red Bank, N.J., a veteran - railroader due to re tire shortly. Mystified officials strove to find out why Wilburn's train did not halt on the bri d g e before it reached the lift-type draw. A series of investigations ei ther were under way or ordered, including probes by the Interstate Commerce Commission and the New Jersey Public Utility Com mission. In Washington, ih. ICC or dered a public hearing in New York on Thursday to establish "an of•the facts, conditions and circumstances" of the accident. One question to be answered was whether Wilburn suffered any sudden disability, causing his hand to slip from the throttle of the diesel engine. Goldfine Case Not Closed WASHINGTON M—The chair man of the Securities & Exchange Commission said today the agen cy has not closed its case on the Bernard Goldfine firm which for seven years failed to file finan cial reports. Penn State Includes Round Trip Air-fare, Breakfast, Dinner, and Hotel for 8 days and 7 nights, including all tipsrand transfers in Bermuda, plus all-day College Week Cruise, Two Bands—jazz and calypso ... Swizzle-party on arrival. Men: $175. Contact: Fritz Terser Barbara Matusow University Travel Bureau, Inc. Ike Hopes Pressure Will Reopen Schools By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS troops being called out again as Th e Eisenhower adminis-Ithey were at Central High last year, •tration expressed the hope' ;Tuesday that public pressure' ,by parents and children would', ;force reopening of Southern schools closed to halt integration. Gov. J. Lindsay Almond Jr. of !Virginia reacted promptly. He, I said it was the "old familiar ;technique of divide and conquer land this i what they've been ti y iing to do all the time." In Little Rock, Gov. Orval Fau lbus of Arkansas announced he [has advanced by IP days the date for a special school vote in the city on admitting Negroes to the I white schools. The referendum 'election now is set for Sept. 27. The governor said the action had nothing fo do with any public clamor for reopening the schools, however. Faubus closed the four high schools at Little Rock after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered in tegration to-proceed immediately at Central High. Almond shut the Front Royal, Va., school in the face of a federal court desegre gation order. At Newport, R. 1., Atty. Gen. Rogers conferred with President Eisenhower at the summer White House and then told a news con ference the administration was holding up federal action "at this time" pending further develop ments in Arkansas and Virginia. He said that "Reports re ceived from the communities involved indicate that the ser ious impact of what it means to have the public schools closed is beginning to be keenly felt and its significance more fully appreciated." Rogers said it was hoped pub lic pressure would force reopen ing of the schools involved. But he made it plain the government would take whatever legal action it could to get the schools open if local authorities failed to do so. The attorney general did not rule out the possibility of federal March 24-March 31, 1959 BERMUDA ADa ms 8-6779 White House press secretary James C. Hagerty, who was with Rogers at the conference, was asked how the President reacted to a statement by Faubus that he would be receptive to another meeting with the chief executive. "He hasn't any reaction," Hag lefty replied. British Socialist Attacks U. S. Role-in Far East LONDON UP) Socialist oppo sition leader Hugh Gaitskell said today that U.S. involvment in a war with Red China over the dis puted offshore islands would like ly undermine the North Atlantic Alliance. , Gaitskell, in a mayor opposition policy statement, claimed that complete obscurity surrounded the position of the British government in the Far East ' crisis and de clared this is endangering the Western Allies. : I TAKE NOTE... 1 Frosh, you'll soon find for quick efficient! two-hour laundry service on week days I the Launderette can't be beaten. i Stop in soon) I 1 Launderette i 210 W. College Ave. 1 Girls: $2OO. ADams 7-3465 Ext. 1468 m PAGE THREE