TUESDAY, OCTOBE Cast Of P HAVANA (ifF) States, last night from American si He dramatical incendiary bomb 1 Ferman S Negro W Denied J WASHINGTON UP) A .pokes-' man for the President's Commit tee on Government Contracts said yesterday that qualified Negro workmen were denied jobs on three major federal projects in Washington. Irving Ferman, the committee's executive vice president, said the discrimination involves construc tion of the 'new east front of the Capitol, the new House office building, and a third government btructurc. Ferman said the contractor in volved on ail three projects is Matthew McCloskey of Philadel phia, and that the discrimination grows out of McClelkey's agree ment with Local Rodrnen's Union 201, AFL-CIO, to supply rodmen for the project. Rodmen put steel reinforcing rods in cement. Herbert Hill, labor secretary of the National Assn. for the Ad vancement of Colored People, told an audience in Alton, last night that he had complained of the job discrimination to Vice President Richard M. Nixon, chairman of the presidential com mittee set up to prevent dFcrim ination on government contracts. Ferman said he conferred with Calvin L. Walker, business agent for the union, after McCloskey reported his hands were tied by his agreement with the local. Ferman did not disclose what his next step will be other than to say: "We fully intend to bring this to Mr. McCloskey's attention as we have in the past with the hope that there might be fuller com pliance on Mr. McCloskey's part in hiring qualified Negro work men." Formosan Flood Relief TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) The government announced Friday it JS issuing saving bonds to the equivalent of 7 1 / 2 million U.S. dol lars for flood relief in central and south Formosa, ravage by the great deluge in August. U.S., Czechoslovakia Share Nobel Prizes STOCKHOLM, Sweden (,tP),for still closer and more fruitful !cooperation between scientists of Communist Czechoslovakia both world systems are now open yesterday got its first Nobel i— ing up." - Prize. The United States, which has won or shared in more than 50 prizes, got an other The 1959 chemistry prize worth , $42,606, was awarded a Prague professor who gave the world's in dustries a lift by inventing a new, method of analyzing complicated substances. He is Prof. Jaroslav Heyrovsky. 68. The Swedish Academy of Sciences honored him for develop ing since the 1920's the polaro graphic method of analysis, which has proved particularly valuable in metallurgical fields. A big vir tue is that the method is fast. The professor, who lectured in polarography at a number of American'' universities in 1933, said he regarded the award as "further evidence that new roads Catherman's BARBER SHOP basement of The Corner Room Daily 8-5:30 Sat. 11-12 27, 1959 o Accuses U.S. rmitting Bombings Prime Minister Fidel Castro, in his angriest speech against the United charged U.S. officials are impotently permitting planes to bomb Cuba charged an unidentified light plane yester a sugar mill in western Cuba and burned Castro previously had shown ex- , treme irritation with anti-Castro: leaflet raids carried out from' Florida since last mid-week and attributed to a former Cuban air' force chief. This time he specifi cally charged a fire-bombing oc-; curred, The bearded revolutionary chief , addressed a giant rally of Cubans gathered outside the presidential, palace. Castro dramatically arrived by ;helicopter with a Belgian auto 'matic rifle in hand, stood by for ; 'three hours of warmup speeches ;by others and then received an' :8-minute ovation as he rose to' ;speak. Eyes and anti-aircraft guns were; cocked skyward for signs of new. leaflet raids but none had de veloped by nightfall. Castro stopped in midspeech to read a report from Miami saying the U.S. chief of cus toms there had announced sev en or eight planes were known to have left Florida for flights to Cuba. Angrily the bearded Prime Min-, ister announced that he had just; been informed an unidentified; light plane had dropped an incen-; diary bomb on a sugar mill at; Pinar del Rion in western Cuba,l burning one house to the ground.; Replying to a thunderous roar ; from the crowd of several hun-; dyed thousand, Castro shouted' "This is to say that the proper, authorities in Miami knew these; ;planes left for Cuba. Now we can ;tell them—the Miami officials—. the first results and ask them to; please let us have the first war', communique of this attack against; ; the Cuban people." Emotional and bitter, Castro , then asked: "How is it possible that a powerful nation with limitless technical resources to intercept even guided missiles admits they are incapable of stopping planes coming to bomb defenseless Cuba." Another roar went up from the giant crowd, its anger echoing that of Castro's The Prime Minister's charge against the United States fol lowed a pattern of anti-American speeches by those who preceded him, including his younger broth er Raul and Maj. Ernesto Gue vara. The crowd cheered repeat ed anti-American references rkers bs THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA day afternoon dropped an a house down. Appalachin Delegates Go on Trial NEW YORK oP) Twenty-two Apalachin underworld convention delegates went on trial in Federal Court yesterday, accused of a con spiracy to conceal the purpose of the conclave. Selection of a jury was delayed for several hours and the list of defendants shortened because a heart attack felled Joseph Bonan no in Brooklyn Sunday night. He also was to have gone on trial. Judge Irving Kaufman Jr. sepa rated Bonnano from the list of de fendants on trial and put off in definitely a hearing on his case, The government made no objec tions after a court-appointed doe kir confirmed Bonanno's illness. The tedious process of picking a jury from among some 800 pros pects finally did get underway, but no progress was made. "It is tell ibly important that we select a jury which has not form ed an opinion," Kaufman told the prospects. The trial is expected to take weeks, or even months. The 22 were among some 60 hoodlums and friends who gath ered at the upstate New Yoik home of the late Joseph Baibara Sr. on Nov. 14, 1957. State Police broke up the conclave. There was official speculation that the underworld gathering, was for the purpose of carving up narcotics, gambling and labor racketeer territories, as well as to adjudicate gangland problems. However, local, state and fed eral investigators hit a stone wall when they tried to extricate in formation from the delegates. All had the same explanation, if they talked at all—that they individ ually happened into Apalachin that day to pay respects to the ail ring Barbara, who died last June. Last' May, the federal govern ment indicted 27 delegates and named 36 others as co-conspira tors. Four of the defendants nev er have been located. The 27 were charged with con spiring to give federal investiga tors false information about the Apalachin gathering, as a means of hiding its true purpose. Adlai Stevenson Seen As 3rd-Time Candidate NEW YORK (IP) Eleanor Roosevelt said yesterday that Ad lai Stevenson probably would be come the Democratic presidential nominee for the third time if a deadlock occurs at the party's convention next year 7 Lunik Photos Reveal Moon's Hidden Side MOSCOW VP) The hidden side of the moon is largely drab plains with far fewer landmarks than we see on its face, Soviet scientists said last night. They presented this analysis of photographs ascribed to picture-taking apparatus aboard Lunik lll—used Oct. 7 as the Soviet rocket station passed be- yond the moon. • • i i • Russian names are being given New Pentai , in to eight landmarks. As presented last night on Mos- Pt • cow TV the pictures meant little f to ordinary observers A helpful; in rroduchon announcer pointed to certain: SYRACUSE. NY.al -- A new areas and said, "That is a sea. streamlined penicillin is in pio- This is a crater" ,duction—the vanguard of many But Prof. Alexander Mikhai- corning synthetic penicillin weap loy in a broadcast reported these l ons in the battle against disease. findings: "The unseen part of I The new drug promises to be the moon is considerably more monotonous than the side , safer and mote potent than natur turned to the earth. It contains lid penicillin, Dr Amel R. Menotti, fewer seas and fewer contrasts." { vice president of Bristol Labora tories, said yesterday. He said the general monotony{ Called syncillin, it seems to of the landscape is "beyond doubt !successfully attack resistant germs associated with the question of the ithat have escaped natural peni origin of the configuration of the! i c.nin_a . and it causes none of the moon." unfavorable side effects produced "The dark patches of the so -'by penicillin shots, Dr. Menotti called seas are clearly visible,",added. Mikhailov said. "Some of them: It is given by mouth but still extend to the other side of the. has such powei ful effects that it moon." 'may make penicillin shots obso- The Russians say the pictures Mete, he said. were transmitted to earth over ; Futuie snythetic penicillins may I distances up to 290,000 miles— just when was not announced. ' 'be tailor-made to do certain jobs —and the range of targets may Among the eight features be widened to include still other named is "the Sea of Moscow." 'germs. CHRISTMAS DELIVERY , - for li m ited number of fortunate Penn Staters, we can still deliver to you one of the finest class rings in America . , . YOUR PENN STATE CLASS RING We suggest you call Santa today for wampum. our In the "A Store" PAGE THREE by Balfour
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers