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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 1

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Tampa Bay Timesi
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St. Petersburg, Florida
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1
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rf h. psro Folr Today Fair today, rept lor early mornlug fo. Gentle lo moderate variable winds, montly from Iht south. Low temperature eipected. 60 62 de greri; high, 78-80 degrees.

Heather Map, Tempera-turei, Page I B. 0, 73rd YEAR NO. 186 COMPUTE ASSOCIATED PRESS, AP WIREPH0T05, UNITED PRESS AND INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA, SUNDAY, JANUARY 27, 1957 PHONE 3-1 It! WANT ADS S-t 131 188 PAGES PRICE 15c wvvfv- IM THE TTMESfi; Peinivojoou Win)'ft Peony CAMPBELL CITES CONTROL BOARD POLICY FSU Hare Stiudemti Who tUJirges To Heidi Megro for Cifty Posti yJ 0 100 U. S.

S. R. HAFUTtMHtS jj LHINA Oil Production Increase Asked To Aid Europe WASHINGTON, (T) The government appealed yesterday for an increase in U.S. oil production and a slowdown on gasoline refining to help meet "an especially critical period'" in the European oil famine. West European nations cut off from much of their regular supply sources by the Suez Canal dosing are sorely in need of fuel and heating oils, the Interior Department said, but can get along on rationed gasoline.

It said "domestic gasoline stocks are at an all time high" and refinery operations can be temporarily reduced without risk of a shortage in this country. The statement was issued by Felix E. Wormser, assistant secretary for mineral resources, whose office disclosed that emergency shipments to Europe had slumped to an average of 275,000 barrels a day during the week ended Jan. 16. The daily target set when the emergency program was started last November was from 400,000 PeihnwM V4tujjor' TIBET PAKISTAN ST INDIA 251 I IT) 6" I I i i aiwa ii WM IlWWWWIaw B-''- PAKISTAN Bomby7 jr Boy ol Atohion Bmoal AREA OF BITTER CONTROVERSY another U.N.

problem. IN DISPUTE OYER KASHMIR Mobs in Pakistan (AP Wircphoto) House Group Calls for Bold Mid-East Policy WASHINGTON, (P) The House Foreign Affairs Committee yesterday called on the Eisenhower administration to come'up with "positive and comprehen sive measures for dealing with the fundamental problems of the Midle East." "Our country should lead in boldly pursuing and implementing policies and programs to bring peace, security and economic stability to the Middle East," the committee added. The. committee spoke in a report on President Eisenhower's military economic resolution aimed against Communist expan sion. 'GRAVE IMPORTANCE' The report spoke of the "grave importance" of Middle East questions like the Suez Canal and Arab-Israeli disputes.

The Eisenhower resolution is directed, not primarily at these questions, but at the "external" threat of inter national communism. The committee approved the resolution by a 24-2 vote Thurs day night. The House is expect, ed to pass the bill next week It would empower Eisenhower to step up foreign aid to the Middle East and to use military force if necessary, to stop any overt Communist aggression. The committee document gave general endorsement to the Eisenhower plan. But its call for a "positive" program, coupled with a statement by Sen.

Fulbright (D-Ark), heightened prospects that the Mid East issue will again come to the fore later this congressional session. FULBRIGHT FOR REVIEW Fulbright, a senior member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he believes a Senate inquiry into the administration's Middle East policy will follow Congressional passage of the Middle East resolution. The senator said he will ask for the policy review Monday when his committee and the Sen ate Armed Services Committee meet in closed session to con tinue their questioning of Secre tary of State Dulles. He predicted the inquiry would be approved. Dulles, the target of stiff at tacks by Fulbright and some other Democratic senators, has contended such an investigation would harm U.S.

relations with Britain and France. Collegian Says He'll Challenge School Action By BOB DELANEY (Timet. Bureau) TALLAHASSEE John M. Boardman, 24-year-old graduate student at Florida State University and ardent integrationist, has been tossed out of school. Boardman talked to reporters at headquarters for the Tallahassee Inter-Civic Council, the Negro organization that has sparked the bus boycott here since last May and in the presence of Francisco Rodriguez, Tampa attorney for the NAACP, who also represents the Tallahassee organization.

He said that Dean of StudenfH R. R. Oglesby told him yesterday morning he would be refused permission to register next semester, which begins Feb. 6. because of his speech last week urging support of a Negro candidate for the Tallahassee City Commission against the white incumbent, and because of an incident that took place on campus in December.

CAMPBELL STATEMENT Dr. Doak S. Campbell, FSU president, in a prepared statement, said that the university does not ordinarily give publicity to disciplinary action having to do witha student, but since Boardman issued a statement, "the university feels it is necessary to state the facts." Dr. Campbell said that in December Boardman violated the regulations of the university "which provide that meetings may not be held on the campus in "which the two races are mixed." Dr. Campbell said the regulation was a long time State Baard of Control policy and that Board-man specifically invited students from A.

M. University to attend a party on the campus of FSU given by the International Students' Club. A VIOLATION Dr. Campbell said Boardman did this despite the fact that "Mr. Boardman was told explicitly by officers of the dean's office that such action would be in violation of university regula4 tions." The university president said that while this matter was under consideration for final action, Boardman engaged in public statements which were "misleading and untrue regarding actions ot the dean of men.

When asked specifically whether in the future he would be willing to abide by regulations, he stated he had no (See STUDENT, Paw 7-A) HOW THEY FISH IN EEMIDJI R. A. Jackson, of Bemidji, smiles over his latest good catch, a 23-pound Northern Pike he, speared through the ice at Lake Marquette yesterday. Riot Against Nehru KARACHI, Pakistan Pakistanis demonstrated angrily in every major city of this Moslem nation yesterday against India's LED NEW LIFE IN ANOTHER STATE Convict Caught After 22 Years to 500,000 barrels a day. Wormser said: "Our relationships with Western Europe are of fundamental importance to us.

Our NATO associations are basic to our security. Both are likely to be seriously undermined unless the economic efforts of the oil shortages on vital industries of Western Europe are mitigated. "The supply of oil to the civil economy of Europe is of major importance to our own armed forces." Wormser said he had discussed the situation at a meeting Thursday with oil industry representatives. Also attending were representatives of the State and Defense Departments. The oil problem was discussed with the State Department yesterday by French Ambassador Herve Alphand.

The envoy talked with Deputy Undersecretary of State Robert Murphy, then, told newsmen the rate of U.S. oil exports to Europe should be virtually doubled. American Republics Meeting In Miami WASHINGTON, UP) Representatives of the 21 American presidents will meet here Monday to select about 10 projects they think can best speed the economic and social progress of the hemisphere. Their main objective is to build a more powerful economic instrument out of the Organization of American States, the inter-American agency that has helped keep peace in the new world for more than 60 years. The presidential committee, was suggested by President Eisenhower at the Panama Conference last year as a new way of solidifying inter-American bonds in a strife-torn world.

Salient points on the committee's agenda are bringing research in j)eacaf ul uses of atomic energy to Latin America stimulating housing development, public health and the fight against illiteracy. MADISON, Wis. UP) A 54-year-old man who has "had a good life" in nearby states since he fled a Wisconsin state prison farm 22 years ago to attend his father's funeral must return now to a cell in the penitentiary at Waupun. U.S. Discloses lev Missile Flight Tests WASHINGTON, (P) An Air Force attempt to launch a test version of its Thor ballistic missile was reported yesterday to have ended in failure, with the multi-ton rocket in wreckage.

The incident occurred at Pat rick Air Force Base, the missile test center used by all the armed forces and from which weapons are fired out over the Atlantic Ocean in a southwester ly direction. The usual tight secrecy con cerning all missile tests was thrown around the Thor. launch ing attempt. OFFICIAL COMMENT Officials at Patrick, when asked about the report, replied tersely that "anything like that would have to come from Washington." When the question was posed at the Pentagon, the offi cial answer was: "The Department of Defense today stated that extensive flight testing of rocket vehicles in support of the long-range ballistic missiles program and others has been going on for some time at the Air Force Missile Test Center and that these tests are to be continued." A Pentagon spokesman was asked about earlv reoorts that there may have been some injuries when the Thor launching went The reply to this was that "in the entire period covered by the tests at Patrick Air Force base there have been no casualties." This could have meant that no one was injured in the Thor incident or that at least there were no deaths. Beyond that, the Pentagon flat ly refused to discuss the reports.

However, from unofficial sourc es the story seemed to add up this way. 1,500 MILE RANGE. The Thor, the design specifica tions of which call for a 1,500 mile range, had been placed in position for firing some weeks ago. If earlier attempts at firing had been made, they obviously hadn't succeeded. Finally, the rocket motor was touched off.

The huge tube of steel lifted slowly from the launching pad, climbed a short distance into the air and toppled back to crash and burn from the flames fed by the fuel tanks. The incident appears to have left the Air Force far behind the Army in the interservice race to produce a practical ballistic missile. Last September, the Army was reported to have fired one of its Jupiter intermediate range ballistic, missiles out from Patrick AFB on a course which carried the rocket several hundred mile's up and laterally a distance of about 3.000 miles. three more rolls when there was a second report. Then he felt a stinging sensation in his left elbow.

This time Giuseppi could make out what appeared to be a white shirt front in the doorway and decided that maybe he had been shot. He ran through to the front of the store and then out into the street, shouting, "Mama mia, Mama mia." There was nobody outside, however, so Giuseppi returned once more to his work. He was still making dinner rolls about 6:30 a.m.. when Pas-quale Nardi, Jhe boss, showed up and learned what had happened. Nardi called police.

Police took Giuseppi to a hospital, where the doctor discovered an entrance and exit wound in his left elbow. The bone had been shattered, also. Neighbors reported hearing two reports, but nobody could offer an explanation why anybody would want to shoot Giuseppi, including Giuseppi himself. Kashmir in defiance of the United nine-year struggle between Pakis tan and India first 'with arms in the field and then with words in the United Nations over the future of the Minnesota sized state once known best for a love song about the pale hands somebody loved beside the Shalimar. "Hands off Kashmir!" demanded signs carried by parading students in Karachi.

NEHRU COXDEMMED Leaders of all political parties of Pakistan joined here in condemning Nehru for ignoring a re solution on Kashmir adopted by the U.N. Security Council last week. Approved 10-0, with Soviet Russia abstaining, this resolution called for a freeze on the sit uation until Kashmir's people could decide its future by plebi scite. India Marks Freedom NEW DELHI India, (R-Spec- tacular pageantry, a display of armed force and fireworks marked India's celebration yesterday of its seven years as a republic. Hundreds of thousands of per sons, many of whom had walked miles from their villages, lined the streets of new and old Delhi to cheer paraders.

Taking part were the camel corps, turballed lancers, elephants and tribal dancers. Leading off were Ameri can-made tanks. Soviet Defense Minister Georgi Zhukov reviewed the two-hour spectacle with Prime Minister Nehru. He was fined $55 for reckless driving at Fort Dodge, then was rearrested at Independence, Iowa, Friday night after a routine check of fingerprints identified him as the fugitive Dietsch. "I'm kind of glad it's over," Dietsch sighed as he waived ex tradition to Wisconsin in municipal court at Des Moines.

"But I had a good' life. I didn't hurt anybody. I didn't steal anything. Everything I ate, I paid for." Francis Lamb, acting pardon counsel for Wisconsin Gov. Vernon W.

Thomson, said that not in his memory had a case covering such a length of time come before the executive office. Even if investigation shows that Dietsch did indeed lead an exemplary life after he walked away from the prison with two other trusties in 1935, Lamb said, "under the law certain processes must be complied with." Judging from precedent, Lamb said, Dietsch would be returned to state prison at Waupun. He then would be taken into circuit court in Dodge County, site of the prison, tried and sentenced for escape. The sitting judge, Lamb noted, might make his recommendations a part of the sentence if he so desired. Dietsch then would be remanded into the custody of the prison, and thereafter might petition the executive office for clemency in the usual fashion.

If the executive office should intervene before the escape trial. Lamb said, Dietsch technically still would be liable to prosecution for that offense. absorption of the richest half of Nations. A mob burned effigies of Indian Prime Minister Nehru one of Kashmir's most famous native sons, outside the Indian High Commission office in Twenty thousand men stoned a Pakistani police guard and smashed windows in the office of the Indian Assistant High Commissioner in Hyderabad to pro test India's integration of the Indian-occupied section of the border state whose 4'i million people are predominantly Mos lem. Several were injured as the police struck back with clubs and tear gas.

THOUSANDS IN PROTEST Others marched by the thous ands in Karachi, Dacca, Lahore, Peshawar, Syhlet, Chittagong. Most shops and businesses closed. Pakistan's Prime Minister H. S. Suhrawardy indicated his nation might appeal to the United Na tions to avert possible violence in the controversy with India.

Political and religious groups declared this a "black day" or day of mourning because of formal dissolution Friday mid night of the constituent Assembly in the fertile Kahmir section oc cupied by Indian troops. Demonstrators in Dacca, the capital of East Pakistan, wore black badges on their left arms to protest developments in the 100 Yemeni Raid British Protectorate ADEN, Fighting flared again yesterday on the embat tled frontier between Yemen and the Aden Protectorate. A British communique report ed a raid by about 100 Yemini was repulsed. It said the raiders fled back across the border after attack ing a guard post in the Dhala Emirate, then launched an artif lery, machine gun and rifle bar rage at the Aden forces. The British force responded and si lenced the barrage, it added.

No casualties were reported on the Aden side. Yemen has accused the British forces in Aden of invading Yem eni territory. Britain claims that Yemeni tribesmen have been raiding inside the protec torate's territory. The border between them has been disputed for years and re newed fighting followed the British-French invasion of the Suez Canal zone. DIAMOND SACRIFICE Sro Our Ad In Clottititd Section Un-dor Pononolt On Pofo D-e.

ROMLIY't 414 lit AV. N. Adv Body of Missing Jet Crewman Found in Sea MAMI MIA. MAMA MIA' George Dietsch, who found a new life and a new wife in Minnesota and Iowa, also will have to stand trial and submit to sentence for the felony of escape before he can hope for clemency, Wisconsin officials said yester day. But even if there is no clemency, "I'll only be three years older," Dietsch said cheerfully in Iowa.

"And I think I'll be just as good a man then as I am now." Dietsch was unmasked after a Jan. 8 arrest for a traffic offense in Fort Dodge, Iowa, where he and his wife of 13 years, Anna, were visiting friends while Dietsch looked for a new job. He had been living as James Arthur West while working on farms and during more than four years as an attendant at Iowa mental hospitals. The planes collided at a height of 10,000 to 20,000 feet while on a practice refueling mission. They splashed into the ocean be tween the big resort island and the Cuban mainland.

BROKEN BACK The Air Force disclosed that one of the survivors, Maj. James McFarland 37, of Watson town, suffered a broken back in bailing out of the falling plane he had commanded. A spokesman said he would be in a hospital for several months. Maj. Winfred E.

Lynn, 3S, of Paducah, and Lt. James E. Rose, 28, of Dallas, were interviewed by newsmen at the Key West, Naval Hospital where they are recuperating from flight injuries. The two officers shed no light on the cause of the collision. Lynn, who commanded one of the planes, said flames broke out in his aircraft in the collision and that his seat automatically ejected.

He parachuted into the water with a deflated life raft attached to his gear. He inflated the raft and climbed on it. SHE'S BACK AGAIN Mmt. Olja Pataky, your tavoritt cot-mitician. at Willton-Chott tor htr St Annual Ltcturt Stnti, ttartina, tomorrow) Daily tectum 10:45 A.M.

and P.M. Monday thru Saturday. Htar tht antlrt mm Itorn how to look your bait. Door Pritot Stall froo. Will-ton-Chat Ird floor Auditorium.

Ad. Baker, Shot in Arm, Continues Making Rolls j) A 1 KEY WEST, UH The Cuban Navy reported yesterday it has found one of the three U.S. Air Force officers. missing after the collision in flight of two B47 jet bombers Thursday night off the Isle of Pines. The Navy spokesman in Havana said a Cuban surface craft participating in the search for the men found the unidentified body in the same area where three survivors were rescued Friday, one of whom had a broken back.

BODY FLOATING The body was floating half a mile north of Cay Manteca on the northern rim of the Isle of Pines. The body was to be turned over to U.S. search teams, the Cuban spokesman said. Planes and ships, meantime, maintained a search for those still unaccounted for. Missing after the crashes Were Maj.

William E. Norris. 41, Lansing, Capt. James H. Parker, 35.

Rock Hill. and Lt. Earl Chrisawm 26, Sumter. SC. MOVING TO FLORIDA? Contact Termini! Van Linei for raiM.

Ph. 7-7181 7-5577. Sam nl ratel from Chicago 2000 lb. 1 165. From New York 2000 lb.

$166.40. 325 9th Sl So. St Pete. Pioneer long distance movcrt Ad HARTFORD, Coun. UP) Such a thing had never happened to him before.

Maybe that's why Giuseppi Cavalleri, the baker, kept right on making jolls yesterday morning after somebody shot him. He's not the only one who's baffled by what happened. Three Hartford detectives are too. Here is what the 65-year-old Giuseppi related when he finally got in touch with police: Giuseppi, who is nearly blind, and lives alone, went to work as usual about 11 p.m. Friday in the bakery.

About 5:45 a.m. he was alone in a room at the rear of the bakery, standing at a table making dinner rolls. A rear door barely was open. Suddenly there was a report in the rear yard. Giuseppi decided somebody out back was moving barrels around.

He thought no more about it and went on with his work. Giuseppi said ht had made Itside The Times Business Page 8 Editorial Page 2-D Fraternal Page 17-F Goren'on Bridge Page 5-D Gulf Beaches Page 13-B Hproscope Page 12-B Jumble Page 7-D Obituaries Page 15-B Real Estate Pages 1-18-F Schools, Educa. Pages 17-19-E Society Pages 1-18-E Teen-Agers Page 16-E Theatres Pages 10-12-B Time Clock Page 10-C SUNDAY MAGAZINE Home Garden Pages 9-11 Books Pages 14-15 Travel Pages 16-25 Photography Page 27 Wax Works Page 12 BRITISH DEFENSE MINISTER ARRIYES Duncan Sandys, British Defense Minister in the new Cabinet of Prime Minister Macmjllan, said American-British friendship is as great as ever despite differences in the Middle East, lie will confer with U.S. defense officials in Washington on guided missiles..

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