TUESDAY. M. AY 14. 1957 nson Blasts Joh Ike s Spending NGTON, May 13 (/P) —Senate Democratic Leader Johnson” of Texas said today the Republican ad . has adopted a “revolving door philosophy” about spending. He asked President Dwij wash: Lyndon. B. ministratioi governmenl e-Calls Cutback id Plan Hoiis For < In A IRG. May 13 signal went up to harply revised plan state aid to schools on in the next-two riod starting June 1. HARRISBI JThe go-slow night on a~: for increasinj by $30.3 mill year fiscal p« Republican caucus on the measure af- The House put off actioi ’> discussion behind There were''reports ter .an hour' .closed doors. j position from Phfla • ‘gheny and Potter of specific od delphia, All* e plan. counties to Ren. Johnson, House Republi can floor leader, passed over the legislation or the floor without comment from either the GOP or Democratic leadership. Passage Foretold Rep. Moscrip (R-Potter) freely forecast its passage hut declined to pinpoint a specific date. “Like all new things that make a great change it takes time to .exnlain.” he told a newsman. “The Republican members want to look at it closely and see how It affects schools in their- districts rather than rush into it." Increased Subsidies The measure increases maxi mum subsidies to school districts from $5lOO per teaching unit (22 secondary students or 30 elemen tary! to $6OOO. But, at the same time it changes the complex school subsidy for mula requiring school districts to put up a larger share of the funds: House Posses 10% Raise In Disabled Vets' Pay WASHINGTON, May 13 (fl>> The House passed by unanimous voice vote and sent to the Senate today a hill raising by 10 per cent the compensation payments of war veterans suffering service-con nected disabilities. There, was no debate. The vote came after a terse explanation of the measure by Chairman Teague (D.-Tex.) of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee. The estimated first-year cost of the hfll is $169,707,000, with an nual costs thereafter dropping tc $164,585,000 after the fifth year. Committee Reports U S. Needs Tox Cut WASHINGTON, May 13 (IP) —This country needs a tax cut but can’t afford it until government spending is brought into line, the committee for Economic Development said to day. In a publi look at all presj government sp« overhaul of the] and hesitantly national sales ' o' der. ■ The commit!* bility in formula 1 rests squarely -w senhower. Immediate Report Urged : It urged President Dwight D. Eisenhower to tell Congress im mediately what government pro grams are going to cost, not only in the coming year but for four or five years ahead. ic statement the committee called for a stem sent and proposed ending, a drastic federal tax laws, suggested that a 'ax might be in e said responsi ing budget policy ith President Ei- The committee said the funds necessary to support “the • high and rising level of federal spend ing are being raised on a basis that is both economically unsound 'and unfair.” • :] “Such a tax'system will jeop ardize economic growth,” it sard. The Committee for Economic Development is a nonpartisan, nongovernments organization of 150 industrialist; and educators THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA ight D. Eisenhower to put a stop to it. Johnson told the Senate that; Eisenhower’s scheduled nation wide TV-radio defense of his bud get tomorrow night “may well be' a night of decision.” Eisenhower is going to have to! decide, Johnson said, “whether he| wants an economy administration; or a spending .administration.” i The Democratic leader said j that from the record ol what he rallgd copflicting statements by administration officials, "the confusion has now been com pounded.” / - Johnson said Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey was for; cuts in the President's $71,800,000 spending budget and Vice Presi dent Nixon was not. He quoted the President as say-; ing on Jan. 24 that Congress has “the duty to cut the budget,” and on April 3 that no substantial] reductions could be made. Subsequently, Johnson went on, presidential assistant Sherman! Adams had said the budget could! stand reductions of up to two! billion dollars. Republican Sens. William F. Knowland of California and /Styles Bridges of New Hamp shire, who have urged cut* of three billion dollars or more, sat silent as Johnson told his colleagues "confusion" had hit a nevr peak. Earlier Knowland, the Senate Republican leader, had told re porters he didn’t regard Adams’ statements as indicating there was any “basic change in White House policy on the budget.” Johnson suggested, however, that perhaps Adams was “fore casting the shape of the Presi dent’s speech tomorrow night.” “A review of this revolving door philosophy of budget mak ing indicates clearly why the American people have been so completely bewildered by the de velopments,” Johnson told the Senate. Britain Says Russia Has 'Big Submarine Fleet' LONDON, May 13 (>P) — The British government warned to day that Russia now has “the biggest submarine fleet the world has ever known.” . Christopher Soames, parliamen taor secretary to the Admiralty, told the House of Commons the Soviet navy has 500 submaries in commission, over half of them built for long-range operation. engaged in research on national and international economic prob lems. Problem to Gel Worse It said this country’s budget problem is going to get worse be fore it gets better. “The evidence suggests,” it said, “that the ris ing trend of federal expenditures will not be .halted in fiscal 1958, and that next year we are likely to be faced with a budget that will exhaust another year’s growth of tax receipts.” It asked Congress to thoroughly study the present tax law, with “the advice and assistance of a special advisory tax commission recruited from among representa tives of business, labor, agricul ture- and consumer groups, with ample staff and time to explore all of the major problems.” One of the things that badly needs overhauling, the committee said, is the individual income tax, particularly in the higher brack ets. Beck Selling Beer To Alaska Market ST. LOUIS (>P>—The Post-Dis patch reported today Dave Beck,! president of the Teamsters Union,; received five cents on every easel of Budweiser beer sold in Alaska! for a period of several years. The newspaper said government! investigators learned the money Was paid to Dave Beck Jr. by K & L Beverage Co. of Seattle, a distributer for Anheuser-Busch Inc. and “eventually found its way into the accounts of the elder Beck.” The tracing of the commission is scheduled for an airing by the Senate Rackets Investigating Committee in Washington, prob ably this week, the Post-Dispatch reported. U.S. Pushes Russia To Lift Secrecy WASHINGTON, May 13

— i The United States prodded Russia) again today to lift the veil of se-l crecy which bars 30 per cent of| !the Soviet Union from travel by: ! foreigners. j ] The gesture was made in a for-! ]mal note of protest handed the [Soviet Foreign Ministry in Mos cow by the U.S. Embassy there. Th note complained that “road blocks and other forms of police action” interfered with travel by Americans in areas officially stamped as open by the Soviet government. Russian Blocks Up Since last July 1, the U.S. note said, American officials in Russia have been blocked in open zones on more than 36 occasions. The note said this was done by declaring open areas temporarily closed, by denying travel facili ties or restricting auto travel to a particular route or by other means. ' ' The note contrasted this treat ment with what the United States has been doing toward Russians in America. Closed Bui Twice It said that only twice have open areas in the United States, been temporarily closed since last! July 1. No curbs on travel facili-; ties and no special auto routings; have been imposed in the United) States, it said. ! About 400 Russians live in the' United States. i U.S. Rejects Japcin'sßequest WASHINGTON, May 13 UP) —j The United States today politely; but firmly rejected Japan’s re-1 quest that it call off atomic tests! scheduled in Nevada this month.! The rejection was made m a! formal note handed at the State Department to Takesc Shimoda,! acting chief of the Japanese Em-! bassy in Washington. i The note, signed by Secretary of State Dulies, expressed sym pathy for Japan's fears that con tinued nuclear tests may harm humanity by raising the world’s radiation level. The Japanese have asked the United States, Britain and Russia to suspend all nuclear tests. The American note blamed Rus sia for having “obstructed prog ress toward control of the nuclear threat and the ending of nuclear weapons tests.” Pilots Fly 6710 Miles Nonstop in Sabre Jets LOS ANGELES, May 13 -(•■P)— Three youthful Air Force pilots flew 6719 miles from. London to Los Angeles today, the longest single engine jet plane flight ever made. The pilots flashed past the Los Angeles International Airport tower in their swept-wing FIOOC Super Sabre Jets at 2:22 p.m. and 14 minutes later landed within seconds of each other to complete the epichal 14-hour, five-minute flight. Ike Golfs With Foursome GETTYSBURG, May 13 UP) ■ —President Eisenhower set out , with a golf foursome today com - plaining that he hadn’t had a good ■round since he was iIL MacmillanAcceptsNasser As Head of Suez Canal LONDON, May 13 (/PJ —Prime Minister Harold K. Mac jniillan today grudgingly acknowledged Egyptian President Abel Gam el Nasser as boss for the moment of the Suez Canal He told British ships to resume sailing through it on Egypt’s terms. Eight Conservative members of Parliament immediately quit the government party as a protest against what they regard ed as a surrender to Nasser. They said appeasement of any kind “leads only to disaster.” Macmillan announced his re-j vised position on Suez in the; House of Commons, which was crowded but quiet. “This is by no means the end oi the s lory." be said. "It is not a settlement- not an agreement. Thai is why ii is unsatisfactory. What we have to face... is ihe actual situation." At the same time Macmillan- set out to put Brit ish relations with Egypt back on a businesslike bas is. He announcer slight easement of Britain’s fi nancial squeeze lon Egypt ant disclosed the tw< countries 3001 will begin dis (cussing a dollars and-cents a< counting. j Mac mill a n’s -MacmiiUn statement began the long process [Of unwinding the diplomatic and financial tangle brought about by Egypt's nationalization of the Suez Canal last July, which cul minated in the British-French in-; vasioa of the Suez area last fall. The British-Egyptian talks will open in Rome May 21 Mac milfrin did not ihaif scope* Other British officials, however, said they will range over the entire field of financial i claims and counter claims aria -1119 out of the Suez crisis* MacmiUan’s government ad-! jvised British ships early last (month to steer clear of the canal, iopened by a UN salvage fleet |after more than three months of • work. Only two or three ships fly , ing British colors had disregarded ,the advice. Phila. Tax Bill Sent to Leader Penna - Sportsmen HARRISBURG, May 13 UP) - UfQe Flood Control <£>%. S' A WASHINGTON. May 13 M»)_ House-approved proposal to ex-^J^il I J'^ lvania sp . ol l smcn s re P“ empt non-residents from Phila- St Sen }? t '- Ve f Congress to £g"*'* 1!i p " c,n ' ”»tij fml SpJSIS fCd Thp measure passed JHB after “ PP " ““ I tv, f , ?, yea ’. . . ; should be made by all “interested The vote followed strict -partjr federal government agencies” and [lmes with five Democratic sen-pot the U.S. Army Corps of Engi nes absent, Ineers alone. Similar bills have been intro-t Henning said sportsmen are duced in many previous sessions, united in their opposition to con- Such a measure passed both Hous- struction of the huge 125 million es in 1953 and was vetoed by Gov. I dollar dam recoraemnded by the John Fine. Army Engineers for Kinzua, Pa. Tvl Other HALIT MOTHS — The Barclay & Park Bank * Barry Af. Anhalt, Praridmt Texas Town Paralyzed By Floods | LAMPASAS, Tex., May 13 f/P) • —Shocked residents counted four | dead and $5 million damage to day from a 10-foot wall of water ;that crashed through a broken ; levee into this central Texas town last night. Five persons still were unac counted for and searchers probed debris fearing there may be mort bodies. The wall of water destroyed the business section of 45 establish ments, damaged 150 homer, sweeping some of them away and paralyzed this town of 4689 per sons 130 miles southwest of Fort Worth. 730 Homeless An estimated 750 persons were driven from their homes. More than 30 were hospitalized. Cars and houses stacked up on obstructions as the flood carried them downstream. A church, two stories tall, hit a bridge and lodged. Rescue parties carrying food, wa ‘ er , cots, blankets, milk, and medicines streamed into Lampas as today. The city water supply was contaminated. At Red Cross headquarters, cold wet refugees shivered on cots throughout the n i g.h t There j weren’t enough blankets. Adults [slept two on a cot. Most children islept five to a cot, huddled to gether for warmth. ■*«Vk I Everybody meets X>-„. Unjd&olk&Clock vL at the BILTMOHK |jtf With students everywhere, “Meet IKlr* la Under the Clock” is a tradition) J® \ It means "that special weekend” at . r«w York’s most convenient location . times is the famaus Palm Court Preferred for its special services for students. Write the College Department for reservation#. No cab fare nacessary—direct private elevator from Grand Central Station. //biltmore !Ijoh Avenue at 43rd St., N. T. 17, N. Y. PAGE THREI Water