TUESDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1956 Ike Asl For At )N, Oct. 15 (iP) —President Dwight D. Eisen erday for fast work to build a 20,000-horse rchant ship. WASHINGT< hower called yesl power atomic me world’s first, so far as is known, and Eisen it as “a floating laboratory, providing in dispensable information for the further application of atomic en ergy in the field of ocean trans portation.” Eisenhower directed the Atomic Energy Cofnmission and the Com merce Department "to proceed as rapidly as possible with the design and • construction.” A joint statement by Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks and AEC Chairman Lewis Strauss said the time of delivery of the vessel depends on how long it takes to complete the atomic pow er plant. It will be thi hower sppke of Clark Ch< Indifferei In Educat ion PHILADELPHIA Joseph S. Clark, D didate for the 1J charged today thi hower Administrati “indifference to th< cation.” , Oct. 15 (/P)— :mocratic can .S. Senate, it the Eisen on exhibits an crisis in edu- ■ln an address gathering in front Philadelphia head former Mayor said cans ' and Sen. Jan is seeking re-electi< ticket, failed to sup ship needed to di crisis in education. “This crisis ha; been well known for four yea’s,” Clark said. Clark said Mrs Oveta Culp Hobby, former' Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, “absolutely set her face against any action by the federal govern ment.” Clark said that the administra tion then sponsored a bill which he declared was "rejected by ev ery reputable school group in the country." He said that the rejected bill proposed to lend money to school districts “on a basis far more fav orable to investment bankers than to the boys and girls in overcrowded* classrooms.” o a noon-day of his midcity quarters, the the Republi les Duff, who n on the GOP Dly the leader ■al with "our » Duff Against Halt Of H-Bomb Tests PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 15 (A*)— U.S. Sen. James H.. Duff, Re publican seeking re-election,' said today “it is beyond-imagination” that the United States should give up its H-bomb tests. Duff, in a speech before the Republican women of Pennsyl vania here, said that Adlai E. Ste venson, Democratic candidate for president, “does not know what he is talking about because he wants us to give up the things that keep us strong.” Troops Fool Rustlers LA (3UIACA, Argentina, Oct. 15 (JP) Border "troops surprised a band trying to rustle a strange cargo into Bolivia. The rustlers got away but they left behind their wooly contraband—ll 9 ll amas, the South American ver sion of the camel. Will Continue to Yugoslavia u.s. Aid WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (/P) — President Dwight D. Eisen hower decided today to continue economc aid to Yugoslavia but to hold up delivery of heavy military equipment including about 200 jet warplanes. The President announced foreign aid legislaton which tomorrow whether continuing aid is in the interest of American for eign policy. In a letter to leaders of the Senate and House, the President said that after “careful study and examination” he has decided: “The balance- of available evi dence leads me to find that Yugo slavia remains' independent of control by the Soviet Union and desires to continue to be indepen dent.” The President said “only small, routine and long-planned deliv eries” of military equipment would be allowed to go forward under his decision. “I intend that this attitude which implies the nondelivery of jet planes and other items of heavy equipment, shall be main tained until the situation can be s Building Speed mic Power Ship irges ce They estimated this would be 39 months from the time con tracts are entered, which would mean delivery after 1959. How ever, Weeks and Strauss said, “ef forts are continuing to reduce this time.” * It will be a combination pas senger and cargo ship, fitted to carry 100 passengers and 12,000 tons of cargo. It will have a service speed of 21 knots, or over 24 miles an hour —fast for a merchant ship. This is not the ship Eisenhower originally asked for. In April 1955 he asked for a sort of display ship, which would visit ports over the world to demonstrate peace time uses of atomic energy. Congress voted instead for a working ship. It set a cost limit of 46V& million dollars. Westinghouse Gives $l5OO Scholarship The Air Arm Division of West inghouse Electric Corporation has established a $l5OO scholarship to encourage outstanding students to enroll in the field of engineering and the physical sciences. Known as the Westinghouse Air Arm Division Scholarship, it will be awarded to a student who has successfully completed the first year of a four-year program or the second year of,a five-year pro gram in electrical or mechanical engineering or in engineering sci ence. Water Tunnel Head Receives Award Dr. George F. Wislicenus, direc tor of the Garfield Thomas Water Tunnel, has been presented the Manly Memorial Medal for his contributions to the field of air craft propulsion. The award was made in Los Angeles at the aeronautics meet ings of the Society of Automotive Engineers. his decision in keeping with requires a determination by more accurately appraised during the days to come,” he said. “I believe, however, that eco nomic aid for the people of Yugo slavia, primarily in the form of foodstuffs, may now prudently and wisely be proceeded with.” Eisenhower made bis decision only ten days after Yugoslavia’s President Tito returned from highly confidential talks with So viet leaders at the Black Sea re sort of Yalta. Tito had flown to the Crimean conference on the Yugoslav island of Brioni. Responsible officials said that since the Tito-Russian. talks, Yu goslav Foreign Minister Popovic has , given Secretary of State Dulles categoric assurances that no change is contemplated in Yu goslav foreign policy. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Church May Lax Ban on Re-Marriage HARRISBURG, Pa., Oct 15 UP) —A major Protestant church to day weighed a plan to remove its long-time technical bars to re marriage of divorced persons— and substitute restrictions based on conscience. The proposal before, the bien nial convention of the United Lutheran Church was part of a plain-spoken, comprehensive re port on Christian teachings con cerning love, sex, marriage and family life. Among other things, it provides for dropping the church’s quarter century-old rule allowing only the “innocent party” in a divorce granted for adultery or desertion to remarry in the church. He must have met “his obliga tions” to those involved in the previous marriage, and be ready to undertake “the full responsi bilities” of the new one "in de pendence upon God.”, The revamped marriage code approves birth control and parent hood planned in line with “ability to provide” for children and nur ture them in “fullness of Christian faith and life.” "Irresponsible conception of Children up to the limit of biolpgi cal capacity and selfish limitation of the number of children are equally detrimental,” the pro nouncement states. Work Started On Colorado River Project GLEN CANYON, Ariz., Oct. 15 fA > ) —A blast deep in the Colorado! River's rock-walled canyon herej and another 300 miles to the north! began construction yesterday on the biggest reclamation project: ever authorized as a unit. President Eisenhower tapped a! telegraph key at the White House in Washington. The signal trav eled along telephone lines and radio circuits. The two structures are units in the billion dollar Upper Colorado River project, largest ever ap proved by Congress at one time. Congress actually authorized con struction costing 760 million dol lars. Approval of other units must come later. It appropriated 13 mil lion dollars for use in the current fiscal year. Completion of the entire project will take decades. In Washington, Eisenhower said the two dams are “much more than just big masonry projects.” Their construction, he said, will help preserve “one of our most previous resources, water.” The President referred to the "partnership concept” which has been a feature of the Eisenhower administration’s power policy. The Colorado project, he said, is “too large to be handled by local resources, so the federal gov ernment steps in, and gladly.” Shoplift Dispute Reaches Embassy SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 15 (.P) — A diplomatic immunity dispute involving shop lifting charges against the wife of a Yugoslav vice consul reached embassy levels in Washington today. What began as a petty theft charge against Mrs. Sonje Juznic ballooned into something of an international hassel when the Yu goslav consul general here, Bran ko Karadjole, appealed to his am bassador, Leo Mates, in-WashinS ton. The Yugoslavs contend Mrs. Juznic is entitled to-diplomatic immunity under a 75-year-old treaty between the United States and the former kingdom of Ser bia. The U.S. State Department says the immunity extends only to consuls and vice consuls; not to their relatives. Storm Heads for Florida MIAMI, Fla. (A A Caribbean storm of uncertain temper edged northward toward Florida today where its every move was watched for signs of possible peril. Premier Says Israel Will Fight Until End JERUSALEM, Oct. 15 (/P) —Premier David Ben-Gurion said today Israel is not eager : “if we are attacked we shall fig end—and that means until vict from the United States. Ben-< amid rising tension over the plans of Iraq to move troops into neighboring Jordan, which faces a general election Sunday with its people in ferment over powerful military raids by the Israelis. Even as the 70-year-old Israeli leader delivered a major policy speech before the Knesset Parlia ment, Jordan called on the UN Security Council in New York for quick action-to end what it called! “actual aggressions” by Israel and a most serious border situa tion. The Israelis contend the raids are retaliations for Jordan ian killings on Israeli soil. At the same time Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, chief of the UN Mixed Armistice Commission, re ported that Israeli refusal to co operate had stalled his investiga tion of border incidents. Burns told UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold “I feel it is my duty to draw your attention to the obvious dangers involved.” Of reports that 3000 Iraqi troops are poised on Jordan’s eastern frontier ready to move in to sup port young King Hussein’s shaky Arab government, Ben-Gurion said Israel reserved freedom of action. The Israeli Foreign Ministry shortly before had warned in a statement obviously aimed at! Britain, which has treaty tie with! both Jordan and Iraq, against support for any such move. 17 Miners Remain Trapped in Calcutta CALCUTTA, India, Oct. 15 (/P) —Eleven miners crawled out of the Burra Dhemo coal mine near Asansol today after having been trapped underground since Sept. |29, an official report said. | Mine officials began a search for 17 others reported to by the survivors to be “wandering some where underground.” Altogether 39 miners were trapped in a pock et when part of the workings col lapsed after heavy rain. The 11 who escaped were in a hospital and did not explain immediately how they had been able to sur vive so long without food. Noted Astronomer To Lecture Here Dr. Harlow Shapley, professor of astronomy at Harvard Univer sity, will present the second lec ture of the Graduate School Series at 8 p.m. Thursday in Schwab Auditorium. His subject will be “Galaxies and What They Do to Us.” The lecture is open to the public. Stevenson Again Hits H-Bomb Test Issue CHICAGO, Oct. (TP) —Adlai E. Stevenson said yesterday his first act as president would be to “follow up on the op portunity presented now by the other atomic powers” to halt hydrogen bomb tests. “What are we waiting for?’ r the Democratic presidential nominee asked in a radio-TV (ABC) address which he and his staff regarded as one of the most important of the campaign Stevenson said that since he first proposed that this country itake the lead in trying to ban further tests of the super weapon, both Russia and Great Britain “have declared their willingness ,to join us in trying to establish the kind of policy I have sug gested.” Taking direct issue with Presi dent Eisenhower and other top ! administration leaders on the question of calling off further H bomb tests, Stevenson said that if elected he would “count it the I first order of business to follow up on the opportunity presented now by the other atomic powers.” On the other hand, various nu clear scientists, including 10 from the California Institute of Tech nology, have voiced agreement PAGE THREE for battle with the Arabs, but ;ht with all our strength to the :ory." He called anew for arms Grurion’s broad warning came Tanker Finds Raft, Wheels In Sea Search LONDON, Oct. 15 (/P) —A Brit ish tanker reported that it plucked a yellow raft and two aircraft wheels from the Atlantic today in the search for a U.S. transport plane missing since Wednesday with 59 American servicemen aboard. U.S. 3rd Air Force headquarters, which made public the report from the tanker Navicella. said no sign of life was noted in the area. The raft had American mark ings, but there was no positive report that it came from the miss ing plane. The raft, partly de flated, was found some time after the wheels were spotted, and about eight miles away, the tank er said. Finding of the wheels spurred flagging hopes among the search ers. It was the first solid clue turned up since the big Cl 18 vanished on a flight from England to the Unit ed States via the Azores. Earlier reports of flares seen on the sur face of the sea and weak SOS signals possibly coming from life rafts have proved to be will-o’- the-wisps. Since the transport disappeared one of the greatest aerial searches ever undertaken has sent Ameri can and British planes flying over the lonely Atlantic night and day. The search is now centering on an ocean area 370 miles south west of Land’s end, the southwest ern extremity of England. It was from there that the British tanker Navicella radioed she had fished the raft and plane wheels from the sea—wheels of '.he same size and type as those used in the nose of the missing .aircraft. The Navicella herself, en rout* to Hamburg, put her helm over and slowly moved around the spot hoping for the sight of rafts or survivors or even more wreck age. Six other ships as well as a covering of planes joined in the search. Communist Huk, 10, Nabbed by Filipinos MANILA, Oct. 15 <£>)—The Phil ippine army has captured a Com munist Huk. Not much news in that, except that this one is 10 years old. He joined the Huks at 7. [with Stevenson that further H bomb tests should somehow be halted. Stevenson said it may well not be possible to reach any interna tional agreement in the imme diate future to stop further tests. I “In the meantime—and frankly because bitter- experience has proved that we cannot rely even on the frim agreement of one bloc of world powers—we will proceed both with the production of both hydrogen weapons and with fur ther research in the field,” Ste venson said. “There is little danger to na tional security involved because if another power conducts further tests we would know it, and as I have said, we would have no choice but to resume such tests ourselves.”
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