PAGE TWO Supplies Pour Into Quemoy TAIPEI The Nationalists poured a accord quantity of supplies into Quemoy yesterday under Communist guns silenced on the first day of a Red cease-fire. But early this run mug the Nationalists denounced the cease-fire as only a lull before a new storm. As both sides held their fire, Sampson Chen, a Nationalist , -- , , :pokesman, called the week-longs !truce proclaimed by the Corn-' Imunists early yesterday a "dia !bobcat peace offensive" and pre-. 'dieted the Reds would make more , 'trouble soon. He pledged again that the Nationalists would stand firm ' against the Communist call for , direct negotiations of the For masa Strait crisis. But the Nationalists demon-! ~ , trated they would accept a de-! 'facto cease-fire even if opposed ; Ito talks with the Reds. National-I gist guns remained silent yester-1 :day Nationalist officials indicat ed they would not renew the fir ;mg unless fired upon. A massive supply convoy es-I 'sorted by U.S. ships landed sup plies on Quemoy's battered beaches six hours after the shell ing of the off-shore island stopped 'at 12:51 a m. yesterday. lOne of the provisos of the Red I cease-fire was that the United '1 States stop escorting the Na tionalist convoys to the off shore islands. Burton Will Retire From Supreme Court WASHINGTON (I)) Harold, 11 Burton IS reining as an asso-' crate Ju-tice of the Supreme Court, effective Oct. 13. The White Hou,e announced yesterday that Pt esicient Eisen hower had received a request from Burton for retirement and had approved it with great re- Burton. 70, wrote Eisenhower he iva , 4 stepping down from the high tribunal "with regret but in accordance with competent med ical advice and with a desire to serve the be.,t interests of all con cerned " Button, a former U S senator from Ohio, is a Republican He NN as appointed to the Court by President Truman on Oct. 1, 1945. . . _ . 'Burton's retirement came as the,ers and that U.S. planes flew 13 court stated its fall term yester- sorties over the same area yester day. day after the cease-fire. With the eight other members; In Washington, the acting sec of the court, he joined only lastretary of state, Christian R. Her week in reaffirming the tribunal's ter, expressed hope the halt in school integration ruling. the Red bombardment would be The tetnement means Eisen- permanent. Should this be the hover now will fill the fifth high:case, he said, there would be no court vacancy to occur since he; further need to shield Naitonalist took office in 1953. I supply shipments. NEW LONDON, Conn.(,4)— The atomic submarine Sea wolf surfaced yesterday after a record two months beneath the sea and came home in glory. Her skipper said she could have stayed down twice, as long. The Nautilus, America's first atomic submarine, was among the first to congratulate the Seawolf on her record of remaining sub merged 60 full days. The previous record of 31 days, 5 1 2 hours was set last May by another atomic sub, the Skate. The Seawolf broke water on the edge of the deep Atlantic, about 40 miles from New London, her home port. She then moved in on the surface and tied up alongside her pier. At a news conference, Laning estimated the time which an atomic sub can remain under the surface at half again or once again as long as the 60-day-mark set by the Seawolf. With Laning at the news eon forenoe were several officers and members of the crew, including Lt. Cmdr. John Ebersole, the Sea wolf's doctor and an expert on atomic medicine. Ebersole said that during the 60 One of the first acquisitions for the PSU library was a book en titled, The Fruit Grower's Hand book. RADIO &Pa and ..Eupptiei •Car Radios • Portable Radios ~ •Phanographs *Batteries ./ _ifi • I # ,<• State College TV 232 S. Allen St. Peiping lashed out at the Uni ted States again, charging that - l eight American warships vio lated Communist territorial wat- days there were only about 35 cases of "routine" sickness. The majority of these were common colds. He said that nothing was related in any way to the pro longed endurance test through which the 116 men aboard the ship underwent. Ebersole also said there were no psychological problems among the big company of men who lived for two months in the confines of a submarine. Laning said' that at one point in the long underwater test. the Seawolf was within a few hun dred miles of Iceland, high up in the North Atlantic. He also said the crew was told THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA McGonigle Outlines New Labor Plan HARRISBURG 01)) -- Arthur T. McGonigle, Republican candi date for governor, outlined a seven-point labor program last night, which he said would curb, "the dishonest men giving labor' a black eye" But in this major campaign speech he omitted a stand he took in the May primary campaign op posing a "right-to-work" law for Pennsylvania. Such laws prohibit union membership being used as a requirement to obtain or retain a job. The GOP gubernatorial candi date made the statement in a 15- minute speech televised on film over a 10-station network. In another development, the Re publican state committee said the prospect of President Eisenhower making a personal appearance in Pennsylvania appeared remote. Democratic gubernatorial can didate David L. Lawrence cam paigned through eastern Pennsyl vania yesterday praising the rec ord of Gov. Leader, the man he seeks to succeed. Lawrence, now serving hi s fourth term as mayor of Pitts burgh, said Leader, who is the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, has an outstanding record as governor. Nuclear Weapon Fired by Russians WASHINGTON (P) The Rus sians fired another nuclear weap on Sunday in their current tests series—the fifth detected so far— the Atomic Energy Commission announced yesterday. A brief statement by AEC Chairman John A. McCone said the detonation had taken place north of the Arctic Circle, the same area where the other four I were set off. before departure that they would attempt the 60-day submergence record. The Seawolf will remain tied up for a time at the submarine base while the machinery, the re actor and all other equipment are checked over. Meanwhile, Laning said, the crew will have leave at home. Then the Seawolf will go out again for more 'operations before she is put into drydock in Janu ary. The sub, at the yards of the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics Corp., where she was built, will receive a new reactor. Students in Get Vacant CLINTON, Tenn. (/12s) —Clinton High School's white and Negro students bounced back lustily yesterday from the dynamite blasts which ripped into their school plant before dawn Sunday. They cheered, whistled and clapped loudly as Supt. James A. Newman and Principal W. D., Human told of plans to move alli ap of them to a vacant grade schoolThenshikov Protests building at nearby Oak Ridge,' probably by Thursday. rielevision Show "We've been knocked down, buts we're not out," said Human, tot WASHINGTON (iPi The or the obvious delight of the assem-1 4 . . ...inatli: . bled students, inclding 10 of the! Mikhailcheerful Soviet ambassa- Menshikov, protested 11 Negroes. About 85 students, in-i d 9 r . bitterly yesterday an American eluding one or two Negro boys, ... television show entitled "The Plot were absent. The FBI set up shop in a To Kill Stalin." This show, carried by Columbia vacant office across the street Broadcasting System Sept. 25, from the the shattered school and pelted Soviet Premier Nikita began working in typical closed- Khrushchev as preventing an aide mouth fashion to find the cul- from giving medicine to Joseph prit in the blast. Stalin as the Soviet dictator lay Rewards totaling $60,700 have dying. been offered for the arrest and Menshikov went to the State conviction of the dynamiter. Department with his complaint, The state of Tennessee posted "This kind of slanderous attack $5,000, and officials of 47 south- is incompatible with international ern cities have a standing offer standards and inadvisable in nor of $55,700 for solution of anyl mal diplomatic relations." 'southern bombings relating to in- The State Department took tegration. I Menshikov's protest under advise- The explosions, three minutes I ment apart in three separate wings of the school, caused $300.000 damage to -the school, built in 1927. The school was integrated ra dally in 1956 under federal court orders, and became the first state supported high school in Tennes see to mix the races. Sporadic violence, fanned by convicted racial agitator John Kasper, accompanied the first year of race mixing, but last year and this had been quiet. Red China invents Sun With High Temperature TOKYO UP) Communist Chi na has produced a small man made sun that throws off temper atures of "tens -of millions de grees centigrade," Radio Peiping reports. The broadcast gave no details and did not say how the sun would be used. Almost 46 of each 100 coeds who marry pick out one of the men with whom they associated on campus. ESTATE NOW ANDY HARDY COMES HOME TRUE STORY of LYNN STUART • STARTS WEDNESDAY• PLAYERS present at tenter Stage "THE DRUID CIRCLE" Tickets at NUB OPENING FRIDAY Ihk„kitA TUESDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1958 Clinton School Glass Workers Strike For Wages, Procedures PITTSBURGH (PP) About 5,- 000 striking glass workers halted production yesterday at plants of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. in Creighton and Ford City. Wages, incentive procedures and reclassification of duties re portedly are the chief issues in the contract dispute. Lehigh Freight Derailed BATAVIA, N.Y. (4?) Ten care of a 139-car Lehigh Valley freight train were derailed this morning near a highway overpass east of here. The wreck tore up 500 feet of trackage, knocked down telephone and power lines and blocked both tracks of the main line. * NITTANY •NOW—Doors Open 6:45 BRIGITTE BARDOT "The Night Heaven Felt" • BEGINS WEDNESDAY• KIRK DOUGLAS SILVANA MANGANO "ULYSSES"