PAGE IWO. Gaulle's Algerian Plan Approved Large Margin in France, Algeria De By ALGIERS, Algeria (iP)—President Charles de Gaulle's policy of self-determination for Algeria rode to victory on a wave of fear, hope and despair. A 75.25 ,per cent "yes" ballot among those voting in France and a surprising 65.4 per cent among those voting in Algeria assured him sufficient backing to press ahead with his program. Massive abstentions cut t 4 per cent of the eligible voters Red Rebels Aim For Laos Capital LUANG PRABANG, Laos (/P) Pro-Communist rebel forces seem to be closing in to ward this royal Laotian capi tal from the north while gov ernment forces maneuver for a drive that officers say will be aimed at the adjacent Plaine des Jarres from the south. A major attack by one or the other appears maybe a week away. No one can say who will strike first. French army, which once again ,proved it effectively controls vast A dispatch from Vientiane said iiortions of the Algerian interior. an army patrol was reported am-ISome Moslems, however, voted fives in the hope that this time De bushed by rebels on a road to armed with the country's Luang Prabang. japproval, will end the bloody re bellion by negotiating with the Soviet planes are building tin -cebel leadership. pro-communist paratroop Cant. Although most Europeans voted Kong Le's . . strength with a con-i no, some cast a yes ballot in a tinuing . airlift . of arms and ammu— desperate hope that the French nit ion into Meng Khouang Pio\ ' - ipresident's formula will permit ince _which, with the Plaine des! them to live in the Algeria of the Jarres, has become a primary future. supply base for pro-Communist The eyes of Algeria now turn forces in the heart of Laos. , to Paris and Tunis, expecting There is ample evidence atl s o me contact between the Paksane and at Tha Thom that' French and rebel leadership. It Premier Prince Beim Oum's pro- appears at the moment that Western regime is finally gather- 1 only negotiations can bring an ing its forces for the offensive rt end to hostilities which have has promised against Kong Le and claimed nearly 200,000 lives. To his Pathet Lao guerilla allies. most Europeans and army of- Paksane is on the Mekong Riv- ficers, negotiation would mean er 70 miles northeast of Vientiane,' a victory for the rebellion. the administrative capital from The Europeans have abandoned which Kong Le was driven in hope that the army will help them mid-December. maintain a French Algeria. Rioting Routed BRUSSELS, Belgium (11)) About 25,00 D demonstrators were routed by police tear gas in Charleroi yesterday after stoning a jail and a Catholic newspaper office. Another 200 workers fought police in Mons. The government ordered 2000 more troops home from its 40,- 000-man force in West Germany as the Socialist-led strike against Premier Gaston Eyskens' auster ity program entered its 21st day. This swelled to 5000 the number' recalled from NATO duty in the A no-surrender call came from Andre Renard, one of the strike leaders, at a rally of 20,000 work ers in the industrial and coal mine center of La Louviere. "We will accept no compro mise . . . until the austerity bill is withdrawn," he declared. Eyskens has said his program of higher taxes and curtailed so- Where Were You? We're Closing This Weekend! "SUMMER and SMOKE" by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS LAST TWO PERFORMANCES Jan. 13 & 14 For Reservations Call UN 5.2563 8 P.M. he over-all approval ratio to 5' 'in France and Algeria. De Gaulle had said abstentions would he considered no votes, but Elysee Palace sources in Paris called the results from the referendum good. The referendum simply asked for approval or rejection of De Gaulle's Algerian policy. But now De Gaulle is free to go ahead with his plan to let Algerians govern themselves in local affairs through a new executive and parliamen tary assemblies. Only when the 6-year-old Alge irian nationalist rebellion against French rule ends will Algerians vote again to decide their own future independence either in !side or outside the French com ,munity. The 65.4 per cent "yes" vote in Algeria surpassed the most optimistic official expectations for the territory, even though P's million of nearly 4 1 / 2 mil lion registered voters failed to cast ballots. Most Moslems who voted yes followed the directions of the Thousands in Belgium 'cial services must be carried through to offset revenues lost when the Congo became inde- I pendent. Apparently calling for some sort id a political settlement, Renard !told the rally: "We are asking the Socialist party leadership to open the fight's second front. It is up to the leadership to deter mine the means of doing so." The government, determined to crack down on violence, studied reports that sabotage is increasing. A communique said that in Hainault Province alone, 70 road accidents were caused by strikers' barricades. About 130 persons were arrest-' ed at Cahrleroi and Mons and another 14 at Huy, where minor I violence was reported. The violence in Charleroi, where' support for the strike is strong, came after Socialist union leader Arthur Gailly pleaded for disci pline. He was booed and the I crowd ran to the jail and smashed its windows. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Ten Convicts Attempt Brash Prison Break PHILADELPHIA (in Offi cials said yesterday 30 tough fel ons-10 of them convicted killers —who made a bold bid for free dom with a homemade arsenal will be prosecuted to the Ihnit. The mutineers will be charged with attempted prison break and a variety of other crimes, as yet unspecified, Paul Chalfin, acting district attorney, said. He indicated it will go especial ly hard with those who stabbed two guards at Eastern State Pen itentiary and held them along with seven others as hostages for about two hours. As state and city.officials delved into the why and how of Sunday night's audacious attempt, they uncovered an array of weapons including homemade grenades. "Molotov cocktails" in the form of gasoline-filled tobacco cans, meat cleavers, a tire iron, zip guns, bullets, ice picks, knives and forks, screwdrivers, saw ,blades, files, razor blades. Led by desperate men with nothing to lose, the rioters aimed to go over• a 40-foot stone wall encircling the penitentiary, one of the oldest and grimmest in the country and situated in a crowded part of the city. The prisoners had a ladder for that purpose, too. It was made from lengths of rope interwoven with strips of cloth ripped from mattresses. Evidently weeks of work went into its making. Hagerty to Replace John Daly at ABC NEW YORK Pi James C. Hagerty, press secretary who leaves the White House with Pres ident Eisenhower Jan. 20, said yesterday he is taking John' Jaly's old job at the American Broadcasting Co. Hagerty and Leonard H. Gold-, enson, president of American Broadcasting - Paramount The aters, Inc., announced the long rumored appointment at a joint news conference. The White House press chief will become vice president in charge of news, special events and public affairs at ABC at an undisclosed salary which he de scribed as a very handsome sum. Hagerty said, however, that the rumor his salary wauld be $lOO,- 000 a year was not very accurate. His White House job paid $21,000 a year. He will take over on Jan. 23 the network job which Daly resigned in November in a dispute with ABC executives whom he de scribed as newcomers to news broadcasting. Hagerty said he thought there would be a change (If climate in news reporting at ABC under his leadership. [STATE NOW Today 1:37, 3:36, 5:35, 7:34, 9:33 U. of Ga. Must Drop Segregation Ruling ATLANTA, Ga. (JP) The doors to the all-white Univers ity of Georgia closed to two Negroes seeking admission yesterday and then reopened BULLETIN ATLANTA (?P The Uni versity of Georgia will be closed this morning with its operating funds cut off, the Associated Press learned last night. just as quickly as one federal judge overruled another in a dramatic series of develop ments in the state integra- tion crisis. First Judge W. A. Bootle at Macon stayed his order of last Friday requiring the university to admit Charlayne A. Hunter, 18, and Hamilton E. Holmes, 19. A few hours later in Atlanta. Judge Elbert P. Tuttle of the U.S. sth Circuit Court of Ap peals set aside Bootle's stay af ter hearing arguments by attor neys for the state and the Na tional Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People. "It is my considered opinion," TOMORROW EVENING ... 8:15 P.M. ---- PUCCINI'S MASTERPIECE "MADAME BUTTERFLY" COMPLETE OPERA I•N FULL COLOR SUNG BY Giuseppe Cornpora Ferdinando Lidonni Orietta Moscucci Anna Marie Canali JAN. 18th "FIGARO, BARBER of SEVILLE" Jan. 25th VERDI'S "AIDA" FEB. Ist PUCCINI'S "TOSCA" Only One Performance Weekly Full Hour Hi-Fidelity Concert Before Curtain Each Week PRICE POLICY: $l.OO Each Opera. Tickets for Four Operas $3.00 TICKETS ON SALE NOW at BOX OFFICE PLENTY OF TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE A `STANLEY - 10V/ 1 1, ATR .7HEA 7 2E: co . Till um, TODAY thru f - fa ...h. r' . •-,41 ~' - )1 .,"?. 1 4, YOU NE -20 ,i p , k - . / A/7 , )7/ ' il / SEE ANOTH 'MO / 14 — ji 1 IN YOU( I s /I 'v. YOU MUS' 'lll3ll.lllllolllowf' 111110.- IN / s t l if talrawirollaY- Ze7-A&aOre _ —Last Day: "WE'RE NO ANGELS"— STARTS TOMORROW . . . 3 HITS THE UNTOUCHABLES! "AL "PURPLE "LEGS CAPONE" • GANG" • DIAMOND" TUESDAY. JANUARY 10. 1961 said the white-haired Tuttle, a brigadier-general in the Army Re serve, "that the stay extended by Judge Bootle has to be set aside and the stay denied." Tuttle called Bootle's original findings of discrimination on the part of the university clear cut and said of Miss Hunter and Holmes: "They have daily been denied their rights on account of race and color." State Atty. Gen. Eugene Cook said state attorneys were unde cided about appealing Tuttle's ac tion direct to the U.S. Supreme Court. Kiss Costs Couple $56 SOUTHAMPTON, England (JP) —A kiss and a cuddle in a car cost Michael Stone and Christina Hicks 20 pounds or $56. Stone, 27, pleaded guilty in court to careless driving and was fined 10 pounds. Christina, 20, was fined the same amount for aiding and abetting. Avalanche Kills Students GRAZ, Austria (IP) Two Aus trian students were killed and a third seriously injured by an ava lanche in the Gesaeuse Mountains Sunday. The snowslide buried a group of 30 students. Most were able to free themselves. MATINEE TOMORROW I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers