The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 23, 1956, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY. MAY 21 1956
Farm Bill Gains
Senate Approval
WASHINGTON, May 22 (W)—The Senate accepted a
compromise version of the "Second round" farm bill today,
passing it on a voice vote and sending it to the House, where
legislative action may be completed tomorrow.
The bill is tailored closely
Postal Hike
Approved
By Group
WASHINGTON, May 22 RI
The House Post Office Commit
tee today approved a $432 million
increase in postal rates which Sec
retary of the Treasury George H.
Humphrey says may spell the dif
ference between a balanced and
an unbalanced federal budget.
The committee voted behind
closed doors to boost the present
3-cent letter rate to four cents
and hike the air mail charge from
6 cents an ounce to 7 cents.
Estimates Highei Rafe
Postmaster General Arthur
Summerfield has estimated the
higher letter rate would cost the
average family 10 to 12 cents a
month.
Bigger increases were approved
for second-class mail— chiefly
magazines and newspapers—and
for third-class advertising matter.
Rejected was an Eisenhower ad
ministration proposal that rate
setting authority be transferred
from Congress to a postal rate
commission.
Bill Vote Reported
The committee reportedly voted
13-8 for the postal rate bill, which
apparently has drawn increasing
support since it was advanced by
the administration early in the
session.
However, some Congress mem
bers have held out slight hope for
increased postal rates in this elec
tion year, and the measure has
not been listed by House leaders
as "must" legislation.
Department in Debt
The administration's big argu
ment has been that the boosts are
needed to offset the Post Office
Department's operating deficit,
now running nearly $5OO million
a year.
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to President Dwight D. Eisen
hower's pattern. Its big feature
is a $1.2 billion soil bank system
for paying farmers to cut down i
their production.
The bill was agreed upon by
a Senate-House Conference
Committee earlier in the day.
Prospects appeared bright for a
favorable House vote and for Ei
senhower's acceptance of the
measure as a substitute for the
bill he vetoed April 16.
Top farm spokesmen for both
parties were lukewarm in their
comments on the compromise
during the Senate debate, which
lasted less than an hour.
Sen. Allen E. Ellender, (D-La.),
chairman of the Senate-House
Conference Committee, contented
himself with explaining the pro
visions of the agreement and call
ing them "fair."
New Base Reported
LONDON, May 22 (EP)—An au
thoritative source said today
Christmas Island, the big Pacific
atoll claimed by the United States,
will be used as a British base.
NOW L oo K HERE FO R LU C KY DR oo DLE s
• •
PARACHUTIST
LANDING IN WATER
Breakfast
John Arterbery
U. of Oklahoma
Lunch
Coffee-break
Dessert
ANT PARTT
Please order
1 day ahead
AD 8-6184
PILLOW FOR PERSON
MIRK NARROW MIND
Wynn Dahigren
U. of Oregon
Clowns (MOM
Lowell Grissom
Southern Illinois
BLOWGUN FOR. FiATIVII
CONTIMPILATIFtG SUICIOII
Richard Torpie
Holy Croce
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER" Cleaner, Fresher,
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA
WHAT'S THIS?
For solution see
paragraph below.
THERE'S A MEETING OF THE MINDS in the Droodle
above: Board meeting out for Lucky break. All in
favor of better taste have signified by lighting up a
Lucky. Luckies fill the bill when it comes to taste,
because they're made of fine tobacco—mild, good
tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better.
First item on your agenda: pick up a pack of Luckies.
• You'll say they're the best-tasting cigarette you ever
smoked!
lANDAGED MGR
Joshua Harvey, IV
JETS INI Qom
roamanota
Donald Knudsen
Harvard
Duties Disputes
Stassen View
WASHINGTON, May 22 (.41—
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles refused today to go along
with Harold E. Stassen's state
ment that military manpower
cuts announced by the Russians
are "an initiative we wanted them
to take."
Despite the hopeful face put on
the Soviet move by Stassen, who
is President Dwight D. Eisen
hower's disarmament specialist,
Dulles stuck to his guns.
Dulles repeated his statement
of last week that the Russians, if
sincere in saying they will cut
1,200.000 men from their armed
services, are reaction out of eco
nomic. military and propaganda
consideration—not in any genuine
spirit of disarmament.
Hall Asks for Time
To Answer Democrats
By the Associated Press
GOP Chairman Leonard W.
Hall said Tuesday the Republicans
want equal time on the air to
reply to the Adlai E. Stevenson-
Estes Kefauver debate in Florida
even though it "hardly seems
worth answering!'
"The biggest flop of the year,"
Hall called this meeting of the
two Democrats who are cam
paigning to get the nomination to
run against President Eisenhower.
DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price
91g. TOASTED" ,
lo taste befferl
Leader Fights GOP Blockade
Against Postponing Toll Hike
HARRISBURG, May 22 (W)—Gov. George M. Leader
moved today to overcome a Republican blockade against a
proposal to postpone a 41 per cent increase in automobile tolls
on the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
He said he planned to name John F. Byrne. a Democratic
member of the Philadelphia city
council, tomorrow to one of two',
vacancies on the five-man agencyJ
Democrats Get Vote
That appointment would give;
Democrats enough votes to voidt
the position of James F. Torrance,
Westmoreland County Republi
can, that the rate revisions go
into effect as scheduled on Fri-1
day.
Another commission meeting—
the second in 24 hours—was ex-i
pected to be called tomorrow to
push through a postponement un-i
til at least July 15.
During the day, Torrance block
ed a proposal by Joseph L. Law
ler, secretary of highways, and a;
commission member, asking fori
the postponement.
Votes With Lowler
Chairman G. Franklin McSorley
voted with Lawler but with the
commission reduced to three
members, a unanimous vote was
necessary.
Leader r e cent 1 y submitted
Byrne's appointment to the Sen
ate but the Legislature adjourned
today without .confirming Byrne.
His name was simply returned to
the governor.
COLLEGE
SMOKER!
PREFER
LUCKIES
Luckies lead all
other brands, regu
lar or king size,
among 36,075
college students
questioned coast to
coast. The number
one reason: Luckies
taste better.
PAGE THREE
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