WEDNESDAY. MARCH 21. 1956 Westinghouse Walkout s . e , nb ° wer ' e/ ?r u t° O J d wm ■ jT #4 Wide-Range Talks in July Ends Ja IJfIVS i WASHINGTON, March 20 (/P)—Prime Minister Jajawharl jf Nehru of India, a leader of cold war "neutralists,” will come WASHINGTON, March 20 (/P)—The hotly fought Westinghouse Electric Corp. strike to this country in July for wide-ranging talks with President was settled tonight in its 156th day. Dwight D. Eisenhower. Settlement came with union acceptance of a five-year contract ( peace plan proposed The visit, announced today in Washington and New Del more than two weeks ago by a government panel. hi, will give Eisenhower a personal opportunity to relieve The walkout, longest major strike in at least two decades, had idled about 55,000 the Indian leader of any doubts --- workers for more than five} —he may harbor of the United Teachers Get PctV Boost months, I States’ deeply rooted desire for „„ „ Signing of a formal agreement MmneSOtd Vof/flO pcace _ . . The' hSEdL«tiJn Comndtt« was expected later tonight or to- & \ To Aw India s Positron today recommended payment of a ■morrow morning. GIV&S KQTQUVGf ! 11 aiso will allow Nehru to dis-$5OO cost-of-living bonus to Penn- The striking International Union . . _ mil • euss his own government’s post- sylvania’s 60,000 school teachers, of Electrical Workers reached its LGCtCI OV6f Ad IQ I Uon ’ which has inspired com- The extra moncv would be in decision to accept the settlement| T tplaints from some members of addition to the automatic $2OO a terms after nearly 26 hours _ oft MINNEAPOLIS, March 20 (>P) —.Congress that failure to take sides year pay boosts received each Farm Bill Dissatisfies Ike —Bridges closed door conference yesterday (Minnesota wound up the ballot-1 wl( h the free world has in effect 'year by " most teachers under a and today by the union’s negoti- ling tonight in a vital presiden- a 15000 t 0 the Communists. 1951 taw . WASHINGTON, March 20 MP)— ? tmg committee and Westing- tial primary en d the first 12 pre-j American efforts have been Sen Styles Bridges CR-NH) re h ° USC Coor ° rence 4 B T oard - cincts supplied 484 votes for Sen.'P™ toward bringing India! , ;/ , oriages m-iun re- Statement Issued Estes Kefauver to *>l7 for \dlai closer to the West. i> ported today President Dwight D. A statement issued tonight by Sfevenson in the Democratic! This will be Nehru’s second, Eisenhower thinks some sections the lUEs officers the Westing-! C ontest visit to the United States. In 1949. of the Senate farm bill are “un- °H S 0„ Boar ~. “ nc 1 ? \°[ The Tennessee senator tonned-while a guest of former President'; workable” and others “unsound.”!'additwn* the S set ’ ithe farmer Illinois governor in 10! Hurry S. Truman, he restated the! Bridges, chairman of the Re-'ttement plan thatf P * of these 12 Precincts, scattered Neutralist policy that still guides, publican Policy Committee in the! “Westinghouse officials rausti ovel ’N e state. None of the first] 10 1 ‘ Senate added that at n lonfri reco £ n * ze most of all that their returns were from cities where' To Stay 4 Days ; w t „ g strategy of trying to starve us jStevenson was considered strong. The White House said Nehru wtnte House conference Eisen-]j nto submission has failed and we! In the same 12 precincts. Presi- will arrive July 6or 7 and remain Power clearly indicated he w . as 'emerge from this strike strong, dent Dwight D. Eisenhower'about four days His visit will be not enthusiastic about the legis- 1 unltec j anc j determined. iblanked Sen. William F. Know-j ‘'informal,” the White House said, lation passed by the Senate last! - Now we have an agreem ent land 145-0. |and include talks with the Presi - 'that we can accept. It is our re-j The voting ended with evidence dent covering "matters of mutual sponsibihty as leaders to accept'of Republican invasions of the interest between the two coun- 1 it, and utilize our strength to see! Democratic battle. I tries.” * that its terms are carried out ] honorably and fairly.” 5-Year Conlraci The Westinghouse management, however, won the five-year con tract it started out to- get last October to match a similar agree ment given by the same union to General Electric, Westinghouse’s principle competitor. The union came out of the strike with much the same de gree of wage increases as it could have gotten some months ago— from five to more than 17-cents per hour. The average wage be fore the strike was $2.10 an hour. However, the lUE won some bitterly contested guarantees against job changes proposed by the company. Ike Dissatisfied Bridges told reporters that GOP leaders spent more than an hour going over the patchwork bill with the President. While Eisen hower expressed dissatisfaction with it, and a hope that it could be improved- in conference with the House, he did not discuss the possibility of a veto, the senator said. ' The Senate's majority leader, Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, was in a more cherful frame of mind about the job the Senate did for the farmers. Velo Threat Ignored “The Senate ignored the threats of a veto and the intimidation of Ezra T. Benson, secretary of agri culture, and voted to give the farmer more income,” Johnson said. “I believe the conference can improve the bill as it was passed by the Senate. Knight Refuses To Back Nixon SACRAMENTO. Calif., March 20 (i*P) —Gov. Goodwin J. Knight refused point blank to endorse Vice President Richard M. Nixon for re-election. The Republican governor, main taining his consistent reserve against Nixon, was asked at a news conference whether he would endorse the vice president for the 1956 ticket. "No,” he replied, “not until the President does." Did he consider the California delegation to the Republican na tional convention an Eisenhower- Nixon slate? “No, it’s not,” he said. “It’s an Eisenhower slate.” Knight shared selection of the 70 delegates pledged to Eisen hower with Nixon and Sen. Wil liam F. Knowland of California, L. E. KLINE SHOE REPAIR SHOP Opp. Post Office SOLES & HEELS Repaired While Ym Walt Or Ib Six Kmts WE SPECIALIZE IN DYEING WOMEN S SHOES 140 Colon to Chooao From Bring those old shoes to 113V4 E. Beaver Avo. Foe Speedy Repairs SEE HR. KUIE ALWAYS QUALITY WORK THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Satellite to Look Like Huge Bullet BALTIMORE, March 20 (/P)— The public got its first descrip tion today of the rocket expected ;to roar into space and give the earth its first man-made moon. [lt’s a skinny missile—without [fins —and appears no more im posing than a huge rifle cartridge, j The Martin Co. said its history making Vanguard will be the [‘•first liquid fuel rocket designed to be controlled without the use ;of fin.” The absence of fins provides for further weight saving—a high ly important factor in rocketry at its present stage of develooment. Martin engineers said. I wm thinking of wnjrp to Smproyt student nmsMst »d realised that if I wanted to help improve it, I could hy nominating mywtU for ■ position. Do ywt want to help isnpreee stvdeot irovernment? Teo eoa by voting. and through wiisf jet prseerve the denso cratie w»jr of life- and when yoe vote, vote for BOWIE. Howard P. Zeitles ftor s senier Mot oa (he Business Administration Student Council. FleaihUHy I Buperieace ! In tegrity 1 Effteieweyl Ability! Secretary. Treasurer. Vise President of Don* Unit. Pollock CsncU Marketing Club and National Marketing Associa tion, Accounting Cl ah, Society far the Adeaneeanemt cf Ifaaagemsat. Pena, tyhuis Air Watioaal Cased. Air ton lateWgeaae gihnsl A Cam pus-to-Career Case History “Our business Winfield J. Giguere, or Giggs as he is known, graduated in 195 1 from the Uni versity of New Hampshire with a B.S. in Electrical Engineering. Shortly after graduation he joined Bell Telephone Lab oratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey. “Experience has come my way in a hurry,” 9ays Giggs. “I’ve worked on carrier system amplifiers, speech trans mission problems, and experimental types of coaxial cable. The Labs are al ways pushing ahead, trying new ideas, exploring new developments. “For example, right now I’m working with ‘the transistor that smashed a fre- Winfield Giguere is typical of the many young men who are finding careers in Bell Telephone Labo ratories. Many other career opportunities exist in the Bell Telephone Companies, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. Yonr placement officer has more information about these companies. Fin field Giguere, here tuning the coils of «* IF strip on an experimental F\f receiver that uses the new high-frequency transistor. ideas, new developments” is new VOTE! Today and Tomorrow 8-5 IN THE HUB IT'S YOUR DUTY MATRIC CARDS NEEDED queney barrier.’ This new transistor has a cut-off frequency of at least 500 me and can Le used to amplify 2500 separate telephone conversations simultaneously. It will make possible broadband, high frequency amplification in many fields using subminiature components. “There are thousands of other fascinat ing projects underway at the Bell Labe. You see, at the Labs our business is new ideas, new developments, and that's one reason why I like working here. It’s ex citing. If there are better ways to commu nicate, you can bet the Labs are looking for them.” PAGE THREE Tolopfeono Sjrstoai
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers