TUESDAY. MAY 2: 1961 Vathana Issues Protest Against Plan for Talks To Settle Laotian Crisis VIENTIANE, Laos (W) King Savang Vathana came out yesterday against the great powers settling the issue of peace in Laos at a conference in Geneva, Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia said. The king wants Laotians to work out their own Space Trip Will Depend On Forecast CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. —Space experts and astro nauts tried to outguess the weather last night—but clouds and winds may postpone to day's expected firing of an American into space. A midnight look at the weath er by a caucus of experts will decide whether the countdown, now nearly half gone, will con tinue. Today's half of the countdown Is the critical part, when the rocket is fueled and the astronaut prepared and iestalled in the space capsule. Yesterday, mostly, the rocket's electronic systems were checked and the countdown had gone without incident. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has set weather standards well above what is required for an ordinary missile launching. Meanwhile, two Mercury astro nauts flew mock missions yester day in a capsule like that which may take one of them into space. No official announcement of the date or time has been made, but the space trip could come any time after 7 a.m., Eastern Stan dard Time, today, weather and other factors permitting. In the few hours ahead,. one of the two will be named to man the control. The other will be his "backup," or, alternate. Late yes tcrday neither knew which would be which. The identities of the two men were closely guarded. The world knew only that they were among the three picked from the team of seven Mercury astronauts: Marine Lt. Col. John Glenn, 39, Air Force Capt. Virgil. Grissom, 35, and Navy Comdr. Alan Shep ard, 37. Disclosure of the names of the first U.S. spaceman and the back up pilot is not expected until a few hours before• the launching. The man launched possibly to day will be in space only about five minutes, at the top of his 15-minute ride. It will be months before an American astronaut or bits the earth. Indiana's Bellamy Signs With New Chicago Club CHICAGO (W) Walt Bellamy, of Indiana, all-Big Ten and 1960 Olympia basketball player, yester day was signed by David Trager, owner of Chicago's new National Basketball Association club. "Bellamy received a good con tract for one year and a bonus for signing," said Trager, who did not reveal terms of the agree ment. Za Critique Tuesday, May 2nd HUB Basement problems the prince added. By making .the statement, the king took a stand against his own pro-western government, headed by Premier Boun Oum. W. Averell Harriman, roving U.S. ambassador, told reporters Boun Oum's government still favors the 14• nation conference plan after a cease-fire. Harriman declared the United States is doing everything possi- 1 ble to promote the cease-fire be tween government and pro-Com munist rebel forces and pledged anew the support of the United States for the government of Boun Oum. He said any delay in a cease fire is squarely up to Soviet Premier Khrushchev and he "must bear responsibility for it." Earlier, Sihanouk also spoke to reporters and told them the Lao tian king opposed the 14-nation parley, Sihanouk originally had proposed it and the Communists then insisted it must be a condi tion for a cease-fire. Sihanouk said the king stressed that the factions in Laos now fighting their civil war must be allowed to reach their own solu tions without illegal'foreign influ ence. The Cambodian leader said he disagreed with the Laotian mon arch but would withdraw his sponsorship of the parley. U.S. Man Tells Of Polish Camp JERUSALEM, Israel (IP) A witness from Fort Lee, N.J., Dr. Leon Weliczker Wells, testified yesterday in the , trial of Adolf Eichmann that there were five main-traveled roads to death for the Jews in the Polish camp where he was held. Prisoners had their skulls crushed, died from freezing, stran gulation, disease and were killed by guards in "shooting compe -1 titions," he said. Wells was born in Poland and was there when the Nazis at tacked the Soviet Union in 1941. He was 16 at the time. He ar rived in Jerusalem Sunday night to testify. Wells was the fifth witness to come before the court yesterday and describe Gestapo atrocities in Poland. Earlier, two telegrams signed by Eichmann ordering the execu tion of specific groups of Jews were put in evidence in an effort to link him directly with wartime exterminations. Prison Camp Survivor Witnesses Nazi Horrors JERUSALEM (/?) A survivor of a Nazi extermination camp tes tified Friday she saw Jews soaked in kerosene and -set afire as they prayed, small children shot down because they wept and women tied in packs and forced to march for miles in sub-zero temperatures. Engineering Library THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Lee Captures Pulitzer Prize For Top Book NEW YORK (?P) Harper Lee's novel "To Kill a Mock ing Bird" yesterday won the 1961 Pulitzer prize for fiction. The award for drama went to "All the Way Home" by Tad Mosel. In the journalism field, the Pul itzer gold medal for meritorious public service went to the Ama rillo, Tex., Globe-Times, for ex posing a breakdown in local law enforcement with resultant re forms and official shakeups. Lynn Heinzerling of The Asso ciated .Press won the Pulitzer award for international reporting for his coverage of the early stages of the Congo crisis "under extraordinarily difficult condi tions." He also was cited for "his keen analysis of events in other parts of Africa." The prize for national report ing went to Edward R. Cony of the Wall Street Journal for his analysis of timber dealings which drew attention to questions of business ethics. The awards in journalism carry a $l,OOO prize and those in arts and letters $5OO each. The trustees of Columbia Uni versity announced that the prizes were based on recommendations of an advisory board composed mainly of newspaper executives. The awards were set up at Col umbia by the late newspaper pub lisher Joseph Pulitzer. The music award went to "Sym phony Number 7," by Walter Pis ton. Sloan Installed As Pa. Treasurer HARRISBURG (W)—Mrs. Grace McAlmont Sloan of Clarion prom ised to keep a firm grip on the commonwealth pocketbook yes terday as she was installed as state treasurer. A longtime champion of wom en's rights and Democratic party policy, Mrs. Sloan vowed to "See that all state tax monies are properly accounted for, prudent ly invested, and paid out in ac cordance with the law—in the interest of all taxpayers." Mrs. Sloan is only the second woman to be installed in a state ,wide elective office. The other is Miss Genevieve Blatt, elected sec , retary of internal affairs in 1954 and re-elected to the post in 1958. Mrs. Sloan succeeds Republican Robert F. Kent in the treasurer post. House Plans Wage Bill WASHINGTON (JP) Senate- House conferees yesterday agreed on a bill which would raise the minimum wage from $1 to $1.25 an hour by 1963 and bring an ad ditional 3,624,000 workers under the wage-hour act. Ikeda to Break Tradition TOKYO VP) Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda will break tradi tion by taking his wife along on his U.S. trip next month. LOCAL AD MEETING 9 Carnegie Lesson on servicing ac counts. You will be out in time for Spring Week awards. Written excuses must be in by noon. STAFF , TONIGHT 7 P.M. Castro Cites Future In May Day Speech KEY WEST, Fla. (RP)—Hun dreds of thousands of Cubans paraded through Havana yes terday in a gigantic May Day buildup for Fidel Castro's ex pected major pronouncement on the future of his "socialist" regime. Cuban television commentators said 3 million of Cuba's 6 1 / 2 mil lion people were packed into Ha vana's Civic Plaza. Militiamen and civilians of all ages streamed all day before Cas tro, who stood smoking cigars and scanning the crowd through field glasses from a reviewing stand. The square was a sea of men, women and children carrying flags, banners and placards. Dozens of floats and banners praised Castro's revolution or denounced "Yankee imperial ism." Castro was flanked by President Osvaldo Dorticos, military lead ers, members of the Council of Ministers and foreign diplomats including the Soviet ambassador. One thing missing from the Moscow-style demonstration was a display of military equipment. Only soldiers with rifles and one MISS DIANA RICHARDS of Alpha Phi finally ... after several months of observing and experimenting, we are now ready to inaugurate the use of NATURAL COLOR in our portraits this is mad . . . but as an added incentive for you to discover the breath taking beauty of a portrait in natural color es compared to painted photographs, the prices IN THE BEGINNING will be identical to those in black and white. For example: three five by seven inch portraits can be had for as little as thirteen dollars and fifty cents. Cali now for an appointment by the way how'd you Rice your fraternity composite in color? by the way again Interested in a 1960 V.W. Convertible or a Vespa Motor Scooter ? 7 Call Now • mobile antiaircraft' gun were ob served on the telecast picked up in this Florida city 90 miles from Havana. Explaining the absence 'of weapons, an announcement said that while the celebration was in progress, the: military would remain on the alert throughout Cuba against an invasion which Castro's propagandists said might take place. Workers and peasants were brought Into Havana - for what TV announcers proclaimed the first May Day celebration anywhere in the Americas "with ..th( working class in power." Although it was not televised, it was announced that an effigy of U.S. President John F. Ken nedy has been burne publicly on the square. I=l=l TAXI RETURN GRATIS and avoid the rush —bill coleman AD 74454 PAGE THREE