PAGE TWO Parties Pick Gubernatorial Candidates Democrats Endorse Difworth . HARRISBURG l/P) The Pennsylvania Democratic Policy Committee smoothed over a factional rift yesterday and unanimously, en dorsed former Philadelphia mayor Richardson Dilworth lor governor. The action of the 72-member policy group ended weeks of speculation whether the party organization would back Dilworth in the face of opposition from U.S. Rep, William J. Green, Philadelphia Democratic chairman. ' THE POLICY GROUP also unanimously en dorsed U.S. Sen. Joseph S. Clark and Secretary of Internal Affairs Genevieve Blatt for re-elec tion. Endorsement of them had been'expected since they were recommended "by a meeting of party leaders Feh. 14. Rep. Stephen McCann, 44-year-old House Democratic floor leader, was endorsed for lieu tenant-governor. i Following the closed session Green gave no indication why he had changed his. previously adamant opposition to Dilworth. “No comment,” he said coming from the meeting. “Nothing at all. No commenf” GREEK SAID Jan. 31 that if he backed any one team Philadelphia it would be Davis. t ; Dilworth, 63, resigned as Philadelphia mayor three' weeks ago to seek the Democratic nomina tion. He said, he planned to start early to carry hi 3 campaign for the governorship into, every one of the state's 67 counties. Dilworth also expressed a desire for meeting his GOP opponent on tele vision to debate the issues. The only other announced Democratic candi date for governor is State Sen. John Karl Miller, D-Beaver. He said at Aliquippa that he was still in the race. French Cl ash With Alger ALGIERS (AP)—French troopsj fired on Moslems in two sections j of Algiers yesterday in furious reaction to the fatal stabbing of two soldiers'by terrorists. ' The squalid Casbah was the scene of an hour-long battle in which at least five Moslems were, killed and eight wounded. Red-capped Zouaves sealed off' - Once Again The Famous TCE EUROPEAN STUDENT TOUR ’£uZ»* toor tturt "BP • 53 Days in Europe $B2l • aava pr Trnasttsetic TrmporUtioo Mdffiml TRAVEL & CULTURAL EXCHANGE, INC, CV; SOI fit* Am. * Nw to* 17. M.Y. •« OX 74129 LAST DAYI “ARMORED COMMAND" —aIso— "GALA DAY AT DISNEYLAND" adaa&nui % - 9. BQBOTBff-—(RJOB 1? inßwaowcotqß , J\~ -> . THE DEADLY COMPANIONS Maureen' Brian 1 O'HARA ICIETH Steve COCHRAN Chill WILLS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA HARRISBURG (,/P) —Republican state chair man George L Bloom announced last night .that Rep. William Scranton of Scranton has agreed to be the GOP candidate for governor, j • : Bloom said that Scranton’s decision hinges only on the approval of the GOPs county chair men and vice chairmen. i In the statement Bloom also said that Rep. James E. Van Zandt has to run for U.S. senator on the same ticket with Scranton under the same conditions.- •*1 am therefore calling a, meeting; of the county chairmen and vice chairmen’for Tuesday afternoon when this proposal will be presented to them with the recommendation of the officers ‘of the Republican State Committee,” Bloom de clared . j BLOOM'S ANNOUNCEMENT followed re ports that a'Scranton-Van Zandt ticket had been agreed on by a group of party leaders during a meeting at the Chester home of John J.. McClure, Delaware County GOP leader. > One report, cropping up in several places, is that. Scranton wants to. be free to announce his candidacy without making any commitments to aniy one party leader or group of leaders. I MEANWHILE, in Harrisburg. J. Collins Mc- Sparran, 46-year-old master of the Stale Grange, filed nomination papers for governor, the first in either party to do so. \ McSparran, who lives in Lancaster County, said, “As of this moment I am running for gover nor and have no intention of changing that in the foreseeable future.” He scheduled a news conference at 3:30 p.m. today in Harrisburg. ans in Two Sectors j that storied Moslem quarter and| went into action with gunfire and grenades against Arab snipers, on the rooftops after a soldier cany ihg rations was stabbed to death. French troops also shot at Mos lems in another area, Clos Salem bier. That was provoked by the i knifing of two Moslem auxiliaries, lone of whom died. The toll of the; ’shooting was not announced. LOOK! LOOK! LOOK! Special L SNEAK PREVIEW! at 8:00 P^^Onlyj Sorry we can't tell the title, but we can say it's the true story of a reluctant WAR HERO and will be acclaimed One of the Outstanding Dramas of the Decadel Come early or late and see both the PREVIEW plus our REGULAR PROGRAM! teawAi/m HELD OVER! THE YEARS FUNNIEST PICTUREI” N. Y. Times —r-nr-rmrrrMgftTTTTTTTIII Hr Jh| WSf IMf I : TODAY at 2=oo-4:00-6:00-8:50 SUNDAY at &OS-3:sfi-S:4<l-7:M-&20 PM. GO P's to Back Scranton Reconsideration Asked , TOKYO (/P) Japan urged President Kennedy today to re consider his decision to resume' nuclear tests in the atmosphere. l STATE IK "SPARTACUS" Through TUESDAY! NEW YORK CAP) V— Icy tidal; waters of Jamacia Bay shrouded any clue to the cause of an Amer ican Airlines jetliner crash Thurs day that claimed the lives of all 95 persons aboard. But searchers in the salt water and silt yesterday were beginning to come across parts of the Ve rmilion' Boeing 707 that may help unravel the mystery of the crash, worst disaster involving a single commercial aircraft, in this coun try. Tides that; raised and lowered the water level from waist depth to ' eight feet' complicated the searcher’s task. CHIEF TARGET of the search was the plane's flight recorder box, a steel globe the size of a basketball. It is designed to with stand the force of any crash, even the explosive plunge which smashed the jetliner to fragments. The recorder tapes data on the performance in flight of a. jetliner —its speed, altitude and other' op eration information. It is the best hope of federal aviation investiga tors seeking I a clue as to why American’e flight' No. lSplunged nose-first to 1 disaster less than three minutes after takeoff at 10:07 a.m. from Idlewild Airport for Los Angeles. Parts of ] the. plane being dredged from the muck of the bay may provide additional clues. TONIGHT! Plane's Sought ? j , Outstanding j Senior Awards ! . / .• ; College of Education Last Day for Applications Applications at HUB Desk No average requirements Return to HUB Desk by 5 o'clock Today newariisfry In diamonds •SATURDAY. MARCH 3. 1962 Recorder Box in Crash Area [Control devices in, such sections as the taQ, wings and cockpit of the aircraft have been found. - THUS FAIL however, there was no shred of evidence to back up various.theories as to what caused the brash—theories such as a stall, motor failure, malfunction of con trols and the like. The jetliner took off smoothly and reached an altitude of about; 700 j feet, then suddenly plunged straight down into ''the shallow bay, disintegrating when- it hit. TULSA, Okla. (AP)—The Fed eral Aviation Agency will make tests at Tinker Air Force Base to try to learn what caused the crash of an American Airlines jet in New York Thursday, Sen. Mike Monroney, said yes terday. '• Monroney said tests would be made at the base, near Oklahoma City, with two KCI3S jet tankers. They are going to try to dupli cate every situation in the New Ydrk crash, Monroney said. New College; Diner p'CV. • SctW.Cfcri ' ’ * okB OYALELEGANCE, created by Lazar*
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