The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 19, 1960, Image 3

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    SATURDAY. MARCH
Reds
Cath
TOKYO (/P)
Bishop James Edwt
foreign prelate of :
China, to 20 years i
overthrow the Con
In quick reacti
issued orders in Wasl
night for the strongi
protest to Red China.
Herier denounced the charges
against Bishop Walsh as totally
false.
Fear was expressed that the
aging bishop could not possibly
survive the prison sentence-
Peiping Radio also accused
Francis Cardinal Spellman of
New York of having joined with
Bishop Walsh in carrying out
subversive activities.
Cardinal Spellman;'' longtime
foe of the Chinese Communists,
described the charges against
Bishop Waish as absurd. He said
he had not had any direct word
from him since they parted in
China in 1958.
Richard Cardinal Cushing de
clared in Boston that in sen
tencing Bishop Walsh, "a man
of charity who has given his
life for the Chinese people, the
Communists have attacked
China itself." ,
Peiping radio reported the sen
tence against the ailing, 68-year
old churchman just a day after
announcing that Bishop Ignatius
Kung Pin-mel of Shanghai and 13
other Chinese Catholics had been
sentenced to terms ranging from
five years to life on espionage
and subversion charges.
Bishop Walsh was named as
their ringleader but no mention
of any trial for him was made
then.
Senate, House
Reject Changes
In Rights Bill
WASHINGTON (/P) The Ei
senhower administration’s civil
rights program weathered storms
in both the Senate and House yes
terday.
The House, by a teller vote of
137-134, rejected a Southern
backed drive to exempt state and
local elections from the proposal
for court-appointed voting ref
erees. Members are not recorded
by name on a teller vote.
In the Senate, a move to substi
tute presidentially appointed reg
istrars for the referee plan was
turned back on a 53-24 roll-call
vote.
The Senate move was sparked
by Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D.-Ill.),
who contended the plan for court
referees to insure the right of Ne
groes to register and vote with
out discrimination would prove
"almost completely ineffective.”
Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R.-Ill.),
quarterbacking the administration
program, torpedoed the Douglas
amendment with a successful mo
tion to table and thus kill it.
CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS
50c BUYS 17 WORDS
Gibbs girls get top jobs
firm;
field.
Corn*
Gl&BS
BOSK
RE*\
MONTI
BBSVI
19. 1960
Sentence
tlic Prelate
A court in Shanghai yesterday sentenced
ird Walsh, an-American and the last high
he Roman Catholic Church in mainland
1 prison. He was accused of conspiring to
imunist regime.
in, Secretary of State Christian Herter
;i:st possible
Flashing Satellite
May Map Earth
WASHINGTON (JP)— U.S. sci-'
enlists —flushed with the success;
of their Pioneer V space probe—
will try mapping the earth pre-;
cisely by taking readings from a
satellite flashing very intense
light.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration said yester
day it may be fall before such a
flashing star satellite is launched
into orbit 800 to 1000 miles from
earth. The project was disclosed
in the space agency’s semi-annual
icport to President Eisenhower.
Also mentioned in the report
were plans for weather satellites
carrying equipment to' scan the
earth’s clouds. The first such ex
periment is due soon.
>'"v?'
A*
Raising a genius? He’ll like crayons made of a special wax
developed by Esso Research. They’re stronger, less
apt to break. For budding artists...for grown-up
motorists, Esso Research works wonders with oil. V y
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Russia Calls jNegroes Stage
Meetinq On f' f d° wn Strikes
k . S D ln w - Virginia
nUCI6Or OGH B ? Th * Associated Press
! I Negro sitdown demonstrations
i GENEVA (JP) The Sovietj a t lunch counters spread to West!
|Union has called an urgent meet-;,,-. ■ • ... ... . , 1
ling of the nuclear test ban con- u ® ln a terday while a varietyj
jference today to allow Soviet-store at Suffolk, Va., opened its'
(delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin toj counters on a service-to-all, stand
jmake ‘‘an important statement.”j U p b as j s _ i
It will be the first Saturday! .
meeting of the 3-power conference i Elsewhere in the racially trou-]
in nearly a year. The surprise bled South courts continued to
move caused a flurry of specula-'crack down on students arrested
tion. A first guess, without any in various kinds of demonslra
confirmation, was that the So-'tions
re t dl ; ! Authorities at white Florida
gn A Paitial nUC al test i State University in Tallahassee
: It was held equallv possible, X ,Y H - ® ai ? le l„ p ™ s i d l" t
'however, that the USSR was call- £ u ,'„ n ug!;estec * hIS
mg the extra session merely to'*V * 1 , if $lOO ° t pa , y flnes
protest U.S. plans to test a non-,?* Southein Negro students con
mililary nuclear device in a New uc c “ *? slt ' lns -
Mexico salt mine next January. Bluefield, W.Va., was the scene
The test ban talks are not di-,of two sitdowns at the S S. Kres
rectly connected with the 10-'ge and F. W. Wool worth stores,
nation disarmament conference'
now under way here. But a nu
clear test ban is the first point
of the Soviet proposals before the
disarmament conference
The nuclear test ban talks be
tween the United States, Britain
and the Soviet Union have been
deadlocked on the issue of under 1
ground tests since last summer.
Investigators Hunt Clues
On Indiana Plane Crash
• TELL CITY, Ind. (d 3 )—An Air
Force pilot’s report disclosed yes
terday that a Northwest Airlines
iplane might have hit violently
turbulent air before exploding and
! crashing with a loss of 63 lives.
Bonsai to Resume Post
As Ambassador to Cuba
WASHINGTON (/P)—The Slate
Department announced yesterday
that Ambassador Philip Bonsai
will return to his post in Havana
at an early date probably next
week.
This announcement was made
after the department rejected as
absurb and groundless a Cuban
suggestion that the United States
instigated the defection of Cuba’s
top military official in Washing
ton, Lt. Cmdr. Miguel Pons.
CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS
50c BUYS 17 WORDS
"KIMI il’ ITU, IMI.I ,'H' ,
HEY!
Something New At
MORRELL'S
Tantalizing Chile
Delivered to You
Ai lhe Dorms—
Different from the
Usual Snack
Delivery 9-12
AD 8-8381
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PAGE THREE