PAGE TWO Lomu mb ca Asks U.N. For Congo Referendum UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (/P) Deposed Premier Patrice Lumumba asked the United Nations yesterday to supervise a referendum in the Congo as a prelude to election of a new president. He said such a step was nefcessary to end a reign of terror under his rival, Pres ident Joseph Kasavubu. Lumumba’s request came as Pierre Wigny, Belgian fore Space Capsule Caught in Flight By Air Force VANDERBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif, (3») An Air Force plane, swooping over the Pacific, yesterday made history's second aerial catch of a capsule kicked from an orbiting satellite. ] A big Cl 19 Flying Box Car,| dubbed Peiican II and piloted byi Capt. Bene W. Jones, snagged thej parachute of an instrument pack age from Discoverer XVII—a so-' phisticated new moonlet expected! to become a work-horse in var-j ions United States satellite pro-; grams. | The gold-plated, 300-pound cap sule was ejected on the 31st or bital pass, a little more than tvvq days after its rocket was launched at this West Coast space base. Reverse rockets slowed it, then its parachute blossomed and it floated down over the ocean near Hawaii. - The plane crew spotted it 10 minutes later, snatched it with a trapeze-like device, and headed for Hawaii. The Air Force said: ‘‘From first orbit accpiisition through re-entry and recovery this has been our most successful operation in the Discoverer series." Thus, on only the second try, the Air Force scored a success with its new model satellite, Agena B. Try Number 1, with Dis coverer XVI, failed when the shot failed to achieve orbit. With the old model, Agenn A, there were 12 failures before the first success. Legislature Ends Before Terms Expire HARRISBURG (/P) Penn sylvania’s lawmakers agreed quickly yesterday to end the first annual legislative session in the state’s history. In quick succession, the Repub-' lican-controlled Senate and the Dcmocratic-dominated House un animously passed a resolution to wind up business IG days before the automatic expiration of the lawmakers’ terms. Thus ended a months-tong stalemate which had seen House Democrats frustrated time and again in attempts to convince the Senate to close up shop for good. Democrais argued that the session the first under the constitutional amendment pro viding for annual instead of bi ennial assembly meetings had nothing to do since the first few weeks. But Republicans kept the session going by a string of recesses. In recent weeks, Republicans had said the session should con tinue to give backing and subpoe na powers, to the Senate vote fraud investigation committee mxnsss Feat.: 1:51, 4:26, 7:00, 9:25 [""" COLUMBIA PICTURES A WMM GOETZ PROOUCTIOff 1 Song I Without I ENorsj fcCNEMASCOPE - Eastman COLOR .JR drawal of his country from the United Nations, and described the U.N. operation in the Congo as a failure. Wigny made his statements at a news conference called by him to deny U.N. charges that Bel gian nationals are trying to stir up trouble in their former Afri can colony. Wigny said that the report sub mitted recently by Indian Am bassador Rajeshwar Dayal, U.N, special representative in the go, disclosed the failure of the United Nations to restore order in the new African republic. He asserted Belgium could not be singled out as the villain responsible for the U.N. failure. Dayal had accused Belgian ci vilians of frying io block U.N. objectives in the Congo. Wigny added that his govern ment “could not see the way of remaining as a membjbr of the United Nations in the ifuture” if U.N. officials “do not exercise the rules and restrictions imposed upon them as public officers." Lumumba's position was set forth in a letter to Frederick H. Boland of Ireland, president of the U.N. General Assembly, that contained criticism of the United States. The Congolese leader charged that a fund of 30 million francs, $600,000, seized recently at Stanleyville from a group plot ling to assume power, "came from United Stales sources." He did not identify Ihe group by name, or elaborate further. He said the Congolese people the attitude of the U.S. government in defending Bel gium against the eriiicism voiced by Ambassador Dayal. which is operating in Philadel phia, But Sen. William Z. Scott, (R- Carbon), committee chairman, said yesterday he felt the com mittee could complete its job without subpoena powers. He said the committee should have recommendations on re medial legislation early in the 1961 session. There was almost a holiday air as the long session ground to a halt. Congratulations were given to members who won re-election to another term. Those who lost re ceived private words of sympa thy from friends and there were brief speeches from many of the senators and representatives who are retiring. Although the session has stretched out over almost 11 months, there have been only 15 legislative days, broken up by 15 recesses. Pmb State Ptawers present BOMAMOFF and JULIET A Satire by Peter Ustinov at Center Stage Nov. 18-19 For Reservations Dial UN 5-2563 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA gn minister, threatened with- U.S. Admiral Lost in Crash j MANILA (/P) A U.S. Navy I amphibian plane carrying Rear Adm. Arthur F. Spring and his wife on short hop home from a Manila dinner dance crashed early [yesterday on a Bataan peninsula i mountainside. Four others were I aboard the plane, i A Navy helicopter spotted the wreckage on a slope near Cubi Point Naval Air Station. Also aboard the Albatross am phibian were the pilot, a copilot,! a crewman and two officer pas-i sengers, the Navy said. | Spring commanded the big! 'Subic Bay Naval Base, of which I the Cubi station is a part. The base serves as the key support link for U.S. 7th Fleet operations in the South China Sea. A Navy spokesman said, “We don’t believe there are any sur vivors.” ’ j Spring, 52, was a 1,930 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, where he starred in football and la crosse. He won the Navy Comtrienda tion Ribbon as gunnery officer on the cruiser Louisville in World War 11. Fire Kills 152 in Syria DAMASCUS, Syria (/P) A roaring fire set off by a movie projection room explosion killed 152 school children at a special .showing of an educational film Sunday night in the town of Amude, officials said yesterday. It was described as Syria’s worst fire disaster in memory. LAST "Battle of the Sexes" DAY 1:30, 3:05, 4:30. 6:15, 7:50, 9:30 fCATHAUIVIJ • Begins Tomorrow • itfiH Seven who fought like seven hundred! MBMEHx & EUWAUACH SmbQD UNITED S 3 WHISTS LAST DAY at 7:30 & 9:15 p.m. "School for Scoundrels" E. A-£ r AM(.£Y~ y/Af/vez M fIITTANY 1 New Orleans Begins Racial Integration NEW ORLEANS, La. (/P)— Four Negro girls broke the color barrier of the Deep South’s largest city yesterday, marching into two white schools escorted b y U. S. marshals. . The two races have not been mixed in Louisiana elementary and secondary schools since re construction days after the Civil War. Physical resistance to actual in tegration- did not develop despite a gathering of 75 state policemen working for the state legislature. Nor was fhere violence among the racially mixed crowds of spectators. “They ought to take judge (U.S. Dist. Judge) J. Shelly Wright and hang him by his toes "i yelled one woman at William Frantz Elementary School. She! yelled it again and again. It was Wright who issued the desegrega tion order last May. When three cars containing three Negro first graders pulled up to McDonogh, No. 19 school, a white woman screamed: “I’m going in there and get my chil dren out.’’ She strode into the three-story GRAND OPENING MONDAY, Nov. 14 RECORD ROOM 350 E. COLLEGE AVENUE-Campus Shopping Center Most Complete Record Seleciion in Central Pennsylvania FREE PRIZES: 2 Portable Stereo Record Players opMjn| SpBCiais’T h B f B Mind Sirik, S Back" aa oe Mull 2. Kingston Trio’s (Holiday Album) Mite 63611 "The Last Month of the Year" The Record Room offers the best selection and prompt service Noon to Nine Mon. thru Fri. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Sat. Miss Elizabeth Taylor as- photographed for the Tri Sigma composite • Putting our neck on the block, we’lLstate that of the several formats held this past weekend, the best looking gowned specimens were seen at the Theta dance. More sedate but worthy of mention were the Theta Zi's • You'd best get your rocker checked if you miss Marcel Marceau this Sunday. Too bad that a needed concert hall is so low on the priority list. • Awfully corny but true .... if you want him to remember you as you'd LIKE to look, give him a portrait for Xmas. Beautiful supply of shoulder drapes just arrived. Proofs shown the following day. I We salute .... Pat Higgins, Sherry Zwoyer, Carol :| Bitting, Dotty Lerew, Phillys Allegretti and Dee if Dietrich . . . our most enjoyable sittings this past M week. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER T 5. T 960 gray stucco building and came out holding her one child by the hand, White spectators cheered. One Negro girl, weai’ing a white dress and with white ribbons in her hair, drew boos at the Frantz school. William Frantz is located in a workingman’s neighborhood in east New Orleans. McDonogh No. 19 is located on a busy avenue in the center of the city. City police blocked off a two block area around Frantz. The city’s police superintendent, Joseph Giarrusso, said police were there strictly to preserve order. The three Negro girls left Mc- Donogh at 2:45 p.m. picked up in three cars by federal marshals. “You better not come back to morrow,” someone in the crowd— j swelled to 400 at school closing— yelled as the cars pulled away. The one Negro girl at the Frantz School left promptly at 2:30 p.m., in a car driven by a federal marshal. School Board President Lloyd Rittiner told newsmen he believed “the worst is over’’ and the lack of any “appreciable amount of demonstrations indicates the peo ple of New Orleans are going to accept the inevitable.” biii cofeman