Partly cloudy and warm today: high near 75. Cloudy with showers fikely tonight, becoming partly sunny and mild tomor row; high tomorrow nfear IQ. VOL. 68, No. 107 from the associated press j News Roundup: 1 | From the State, j j Nation & World jr The World N, Vietnam Hit in Largest U. 5. Raid SAIGON U.S. fighter-bombers, in the year’s biggest raid on the North, have hammered its southern panhandle in an effort to Mow the flow of men and supplies to South Vietnam, the American command said yesterday. After 45 missions Thursday, the command said first checks showed, the planes destroyed or damaged 4 bridges, 13 trucks and 16 supply ships, cut bridges and roads in many places and touched off explosions and fires that in dicated fuel and ammunition dumps were hit. In South Vietnam, Air Force 852 s launched six more raids late Thursday and early yesterday on' the A Shau Valley, the probable destination for many of the soldiers and supplies moving through the panhandle.' An enemy build-up in progress in the valley for weeks threatens the old imperial capital of Hue 25 miles to the northeast. The Stratofortresses dropped about 1,000 tons of bombs on suspected troop concentrations, truck parks and gun positiohs in the valley. Czechs Want Proof of U.S. Goodwill PRAGUE Czechoslovakia’s foreign minister charged yesterday that the United States had failed to show “any proof of good will” toward improving relations with the new Communist leadership here. It is struggling to find an independent course away from the Soviet Union. “Our relations with the United States are not good,” Foreign Minister Jiri Hajek told reporters. “The respon sibility for this does not lie with Czechoslovakia.” Hajek, who took his post 10 days ago, said the United States “simply repudiated” a 1961 accord outlining princi ples of a settlement under which 18,400 kilograms of Czechoslovak gold were to be returned to the Prague gov ernment. The gold, worth around $2O million, was looted by the Nazis and at the end of World War IT fell into American hands. Technically, a tripartite commission created to han dle such matters is still in charge of the gold and recent reports indicated it might be returned to the new anti- Stalinist government here. ★ ★ ★ Plan to Protect Europe Too Costly THE HAGUE, Netherlands The United States and half a dozen Atlantic allies shelved as too costly and un certain yesterday a plan for protecting Western Europe by means of an antiballistic missile system. Clark M. Clifford, the new secrecary of defense, rep resented the United States at the meeting of the nuclear planning group founded by his v-.cdecessor, Robert S. McNamara. The two-day session also brought together cabinet ministers from Britain, West Germany, Italy, Can ada, Holland and Greece. Their final statement said: “The ministers felt that present circumstances did not justify the deployment of an antiballistic missile system, in Europe, but agreed, that it tyas-necessary to keep developments in their field under Constant review.” - ‘ , -- - . ----- - The United States has decided not to build such a system for its own defense against the Soviet Union. But it is undertaking a cheaper “thin” defense of the same kind against Red China. It would fire missiles designed to bring down missiles launched by the enemy. The Nation Cosa Nostra Figure Slain in Brooklyn NEW YORK An ex-convict with Cosa Nostra con nections was machine gunned in a Brooklyn luncheonette yesterday, in a killing that bore all the earmarks of an organized gangland rubout. The victim, Cologero Lo Cicero, 64, known in the underworld as “Charlit the Sidge,” was sipping coffee when a masked man entered the luncheonette, leveled a sub machine gun and s let go with eight bursts. Then the killer fled. Police sought to determine if Lo Cicero’s slaying marked the opening of a second front in a two-year war for control of the Cosa Nostra family of Joseph “Joe Bananas” Bonan no, which already 1 has claimed five lives. Lo Cicero was said by police to be a lieutenant in the family headed by Joseph Colombo, hitherto not known to be involved in the Bonanno family warfare. However, there has been bad blood in the past between Colombo and Bonanno. Powell Predicts Negro Extermination BIMINI, Bahamas Adam Clayton Powell said yes terday he will launch a campaign May 4 to regain a seat in Congress and will tell Harlem Negroes they are in danger of extermination by whites. “Let it be known that this week sounded tHe begin ning of officially sanctioned genocide in America,” Powell told newsmen called to this island where he has resided since his ouster from Congress. He said Chicago’s Mayor Richard J. Daley, who criti cized police for not shooting arsonists and looters after the killing of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., laid the “adminis trative ground floor for the extermination of black people.” “First we shoot to kill looters; we shoot to kill arson ists,’ Powell said. “Then we shoot to maim persons for disorderly conduct, then breach of the peace. And finally we shoot niggers for just being niggers.” Re-elected to Congress last year, Powell did not claim his seat. He has asked the Supreme Court to restore his seniority and said, “I still hope to get it back.” ' The State Western Electric Strike Affects Beil Communications Workers of America picketed about 400 Western Electric Co. facilities across Pennsylvania yes terday, but Bell Telephone Co. said the strike and related walkouts had little effect on telephone service. Approximately 21,300 CWA workers in the state joined a nationwide walkout. Although there are no CWA employes working for Bell of Pennsylvania, some unionized Bell employes re fused to cross CWA picket lines at Bell installations. Many Western Electric facilities are located in Bell buildings. Despite the walkouts, said Bell, local and direct dial long distance calls were handled by automated equipment. There were delays, however, in calls to operators and in installation and repair service, said Bell. Bell said about 60 per cent of its 8,000 operators across Pennsylvania failed to report. Most are represented by the Pennsylvania Telephone Union. Bell also said about 37 per cent of its 1,400 accounting department employees reported and 90 per cent of its 2,600 business office workers showed up. Charges Against Three Men Dropped PHILADELPHIA Charges of plotting to murder city officials and blow up public buildings were dropped against three men yesterday when the court was told one had become a worker for nonviolence in his community. • Police commissioner Frank L. Rizzo, one of those allegedly marked for death, has agreed to leniency, the court was told if “it would help insure peace." Assistant Dist. Atty. William H, Wolf Jr. told the court that two, George Anderson,. 22, and Karl Clowers, had, agreed to plead guilty to a lesser charge—conspiracy to breach the peace. When they were arrested, police de scribed them as members of the Revolutionary Action Movement, a Negro extremist group. Charges against George Anderson’s brother, Lonnie Anderson, 19, were dropped Friday. , All three had been- charged after their arrest last September with solicitation of murder and solicitation to commit riotous destruction. 12, COPIES; ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 6 Pages THEY WAITED AND THEY WAITED Thursday night in the Hetzel Union Building Ball room, -prior to the USG election result announcements. At top (right, sitting) is vice president-elect Harv Reeder. At bottom (left) is Dick Weissman, Student-Lion Party chairman, showing concern as the crowd (right) keeps the vigil. Police Seek Ray in King Killing WASHINGTON (/P) The-.elusive Eric Starve Galt, who is wanted for the killing of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was identified by the FBI yesterday- ; as a 40-year old drifter and ex-convict named James Earl' Ray. The FBI said Galt’s real identity was traced through “a systematic and exhaustive search of latent fingerprints” developed in the King case against the fingerprints of more than 53,000 persons for whom wanted notices are on file in the bureau’s identification division. • Galt is only one of the names Ray has used in brushes with the law which began, according to the' FBI dossier, when he was 21. The FBI said he has- used the names of James Mcßride, James Walton, W. O. Herron and James O’Connor. He was described as about 5 feet 10, weighing 163 to 174 pounds, with blue eyes and brown hair and two scars: a small scar in the center of the forehead and another on the palm of his right hand. At the time King was shot and killed by a sniper in Memphis, .Tenn., April 4, Ray was being sought on a jail breaking charge. The FBI said he escaped on April 23, 1967, from the Missouri State Penitentiary at Jefferson City, where he Federal Reserve Chairman Sees U.S. Financial Crisis WASHINGTON (AP) A quences of a new and danger warning that the country is "in ous “over-all boom.” the midst of the worst financial Martin’s speech to the'edi cnsis we have had since 1931’ tors was interpreted as an at was issued by Chairman Wil- tempt to increase pressure on ham McChesney Martin Jr. of Congress for the 10 per cent the Federal Reserve Board yes- income tax surcharge request terday. e( j by President Johnson. Martin told the American So ciety of Newspaper Editors that De ay Actum . unless huge deficits and infla- lhere was some belief, how tion are curbed in the next sev- e . v ® r - that the board’s money eral years, the dollar could be lightening action of Thursday borne down “in a worldwide de- might encourage some lawmak valuation of currencies.” ? rs “ e * a y tax action longer. r v i i, „» In an apparent effort to fore man hour-long address, Mar- stall such delay, Martin held tin called upon his audience of o ut hope that if ' taxes are 550 editors to marshal public raised, the credit squeeze may support for a tax iiicrease and be lessened and a epetition of expenditure cuts. He said the the 1966 “credit crunch” avoid nation is plagued by “an in- ed tolerable balance of payments deficit, side by side with an in tolerable domestic deficit.” Recession or Inflation “Both have to be corrected, and both have to be corrected over the next several years, or the United States is going to face either an uncontrollable recession or an uncontrollable inflation,” Martin said. He spoke one day after the Federal Reserve Board took strong money-tightening action by raising its discount rate from 5 per cent to 5%. per cent, the highest interest rate on loans to commercial banks since 1929 when the discount hit 6 per cent. The action is expected to push up interest rates and make credit scarcer through out the economy. It was taken on the same day that Chair man Arthur M. Okus of the President’s Council of Eco-. nomic Advisers said the coun try is suffering the conse- UNIVERSITY PARK, PA., SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 20, 1968 Scarred Cites Deficits, Inflation Slave Sale Scheduled Gamma Sigma Sigma, na tional service sorority, will ..ponsor a slave auction at 1:30 p.m. today. Bidding will take place in the semi-circle at the foot of Old Main lawn. Laurence H. Lattman, pro fessor of geomorpholog;, will serve as auctioneer for the slave sale. Girls will be auctioned to clean apart ments, iron shirts, wash cars and perform other such menial chores. Proceeds from the auction will go toward Gamma Sigma Sigma’s pledge project, an outing with an orphanage on May 12. Eric Starve Galt an Alias was serving a 20-year sentence for armed robbery in. St. Louis. Ray, who is now being sought on a Tennessee murder charge in the King slaying, has an arrest, record dating at least to 1949 wljen he served time in Los Angeles on a burglary charge. This followed his discharge from the Army. The FBI said he served as an enlisted man from February 1946 to December 1948 when he received a general discharge for ineptness and lack of adaptability. His Army record showed a three month sentence at hard labor for being drunk and breaking arrest, the FBI said. The bureau’s dossier on Ray indicates he has been a drifter since he left school in the 10th grade at Alton, 111. He has worked as a baker, laborer and color matcher. In 1902, according to the FBI, he was convicted in Chicago for armed robbery and served two years in' Joliet and Pontiac, 111. state prisons. In 1955, the FBI said, he was convicted of forging U.S. postal money orders in Missouri and was confined to Leavenworth penitentiary until 1958. Longtime Con The FBI said Ray was sent to the Missouri State Pen tentiary on March 17, 1960, and spent some time in Septem- Martin divided blame be tween the administration’s gcns-and-brtter Policy and the “recalcitrance of Congress" in refusing to approve a tax in crease and spending reduc tions. Federal Reserve to point out the disastrous efforts of the per petual deficit, both in our bal ance of payments and in our domestic economy ” Martin said. In what may have been the first public admission by a high government official that a de valuation of the dollar is con ceivable, Martin sa.d: “Unless we reverse our current trend, it will inevitably le-d to world wide devaluation of curren cies." •Perpetual Deficit Afterward he told reporters h e was including the dollar in that statement but added that he was “not making a predic tion—we still have it within our power to prevent this.” He emphasized in his speech that his diagnosis "of “the worst financial crisis we have had since 1931” did not mean a business crisis, but a financial crisis. The difference between 1931 and today, he said, is that the country was in a depression then and is in an inflation now. “We ha”e worke-', ourselves slowly into a situation of grow ing, perpetual deficit,” Martin said. At a closing banquet the editors installed a new presi dent—Vincent S. Jones, of the Gannett Newspapers, Roches ter, N.Y. Jones succeeds Michael J. Ogden of the Provi dence Journal-Bulletin. West Results Still Uncertain By DENNIS STIMEUNG Collegian USG Reporter The outcome of the West Halls con gressional race remained undecided last night because of a controversy between the Undergraduate- Student Government-Su preme Court and the USG Election Commis sion. Edward Dench, elections commissioner, said no re-voting will take place under the direction of the Elections Commission. Dan Clements, Supreme Court chief jus tice, said an election will be run, however, next Tuesday and Wednesday. . Early yesterday the Supreme Court had announced that the West Halls congres sional election results would be discarded, and the election-would have to be run again. This, was the last contest to be decided in the USG Spring Term election campaign held Tuesday through Thursday of this week. In the original race, the candidates were Barry Todd of the Student-Lion Party and Garry Wamser of the New Party. In addi tion, Jay Hertzog entered the election as a write-in candidate. Clements said his decision to rerun the contest was based on the court’s belief that “there was a reasonable dpubt as to how the instructions for voting for a write-in candidate were given to students by the Elections Commission.” Hertzog had presented an affadavit to the court signed by seven students- who al legedly had been denied information on write-in voting or had been given incorrect information. Dench said the Supreme Court “accepted the charges made by those seven people without any verification of the names and without allowing the members of the Elec tion Commission to refute the charges made against them.” Army Dropout GEORGE L. DONOVAN Retiring after 33 Years Student Affairs VP Retires George L. Donovan, assistant to the.yice president for student affairs, has retired, completing 33 years of service in student activities at the University. . In recognition of his service, the 1968 La Vie, which will be published in June, has been dedicated to him. Following his graduation from Penn State in 1935 with the bachelor of arts degree in comerce and finance, Donovan was named to head the Student Union program, Which was or ganized in 1930 to promote stu-, dent extra-curricular activities. On leave during World War 11, he served with the U.S. Navy as a commissioned offi cer. . Returning to the campus, he was named in 1947 to head the Associated Student Activities office as well as the Student Union. “The court deliberated on this case for' only about 10 minutes, while spending much more time on all other contested races,” Dench added. “This may be due in part to the fact that two members of the Supreme Court are or were members of the West Halls Men's Residence Council, and Hertzog hap pens to be president of West, also under MRC,” he added. ... Dench said he doubted that the charges could be substantiated and added that he was “angered because the Supreme Court apparently did not trust the Elections Com mission.” A high ranking USG official informed The Daily Collegian that Todd had defeated Wamser in the original race by more than a three-to-one margin. He added that Hert zog, had received “only a handful of votes.” . Dench said in return. that “a re-vote will only give the second. place candidate another chance to defeat the person who has been.elected. This is most unfair, par ticularly when the . write-in ' candidate re ceived such a negligible part of the votes.” Dench added that a new election could change the results, because “those who voted, in the first race may not vote again, or Hertzog might get a sympathy vote.” Clements answered Dench saying, “If the first election was unfair, then the re sults should possibly be changed.” Dench said that any new election in West Halls “will not be conducted under the direction of the Elections Commission.” He added, “The current president of USG must appoint a new commission before such an election can be held.” Clements took exception to this state ment and said, “An election in West Halls for two days will only require about four or five persons. We will not need the Elections Commission;” her 1966 in the maximum'security w'ard : at'the state hos pital in Fulton, Mo. The FBI said Ray has listed his birth date as March 10, 1928, and his birthplace as Illinois. The city'clerk at Alton, 111., Paul A. Price, said a James Earl Ray was born there on March 10, 1928, the son of a laborer. The principal at Alton Senior, High School said his records showed three James Rays attended the school dur ing the period Ray would have been there, and he was trying to determine whether any of them was the man iden tified by the FBI as Galt. The bureau did not say what set of fingerprints in the King case was matched with those of Ray, but it is pre sumed that prints wOre found on a rifle dropped near the scene of the killing as well as in the furnished room oc cupied by the sniper. The FBI also has reported recovering a white Mustang automobile in Atlanta, Ga., believed to have been used by the killer. In a warrant obtained by the FBI Wednesday, the fugi tive was accused of conspiring with an individual “alleged to be his brother” to “injure, oppress, threaten, or intimi date Martin Luther King Jr.” Hanoi Rejects 10 New Sites TOKYO (IP) A North’ Vietnamese Foreign Ministry' spokesman charged yesterday that Washington is engaged in a “peace swindle” and practically wrote off 10 new U.S.- suggested sites for preliminary talks. - ■ Secretary of-State Dean Rusk Thursday suggested l Afghanistan, Austria, Belgium, Ceylon, Finland, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Nepal or Pakistan and called on Hanoi' for “a serious and responsible answer.” “Within three weeks only, the United States, which at first did not set any conditions with regard to the choice ' of a site for talks, has come to pile up extremely absurd • and insolent conditions,” Hanoi radio quoted the spokes man as saying. Demands Neutral Country “Moreover, the 10 places advanced by Mr. Dean Rusk - fail to meet even the conditions posed by the United States. The United States demands the choice of a site where the two parties have representations, but in the places advanced by Dean Rusk there are only U.S. embassies. “The United States demands the choice of a neutral country, but many of the countries proposed by Mr. Dean Rusk are not neutral. Some are support bases for the U.S. war of aggression in Vietnam.” The spokesman did not name the countries supporting the United States in Vietnam, but a dispatch from Hanoi by Tass, the'Soviet News Agency; said two were Japan and Malaysia. "American Peace Swindle" While the United States has bases in Japan under a mutual defense agreement, the only connection that Ma laysia has with the conflict is that of providing rest and recreational facilities for U.S. soldiers on furlough from South Vietnam. “The U.S. government’s tortuous maneuvers,” the For eign Ministry spokesman said,- “calculated to create addi tional difficulties and delay the preliminary contacts be tween the D.R.V.N.—North Vietnam—and the U.S.A. have exposed the American peace swindle.” The spokesman insisted on holding the preliminary talks in Warsaw. Considering Communist Poland hardly neutral, the United States has rejected Warsaw. The spokes man did not refer to Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital, first suggested by Hanoi but rejected by. Washington. , Proposals Rejected - - The United States first proposed Geneva, and when that was rejected suggested India, Burma, Lacs or Indo nesia. It has avoided mentioning Paris, one of the few places outside the Communist world where the North Viet-, namese have a permanent mission. The official North Vietnamese newspaper Nhan Dan also accused the United States of raising another condi tion for the talks—the presence of the Vietnam war allies at the first meetings. < The newspaper said “this brazen move” helped to prove a lack of good will on the pari of' the United States. Review of the Week —See Page 2 SEVEN CENTS