PAGE TWO . Europeans Start lives Sees Reform In L . Union Macninery Labor Laws t WASHINGTON,Jan. 5 (ri —A sho vdo in is e--pected in the '‘iat onal Security Council this st eek between Secretary PARIS,„Ia UT —Foreigni r sof six nations meet WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 ("P)-- of State Dulles and Harold E. Stassen on future U. S. M Ives (R - N . Y _) sad disarma in Paris tomorrow to set mac} ner in - notion for Western S.n Irvi ng ment policy. It may come tomorrow . today he i s '' desperately hopeful” Europe's historic rr ach toward economic and politi cal union. Congre s s wll enact laws thi s year;Stassen , President E senl o er s chief The mtnistcts represent France , West Germany - , Italy, o correct evils in the labor man-adviser and negotiator , has pro Hollarld, Belgium and Luxembourg, signatories of the Corn agement field posed 9 berahz ng the policy . mon Market and Euratom—atom- Rut Ives, vice chairman of the'Hts ch ef recommendation was • • • . Al iss 1 i e Firings c e en , trea es in effect snc Senate Rack e t s Int. est gat ng reported to be that the United i Jan I.n Co m tteesaid he would oppose States dro p its insistence on halt anyplan to bring unions under mg atonic bomb production as • They a 11 set up the commis S a t This Week nto put tato operation the a ntitrust la w s , part of a two-year ban on nuclear The Rackets Committee plans a ' testing. plan to slash all/traffic barrie r s Dulles i s understood to oppose ser es of closed door meet At Canaveral among them over al2to 15 3 ear starting this week to consider th is, as does Chairman Lewis period and to unite the nations n u•hat bills it should recommend to Strauss of the Ato m i c Energy Congress to deal with corruption Comm i ss i on . C%I f. CA Ak FP Al i'lsi Jan a solid economic bloc racketeeringand other abuses t Informants said Dulles and 5 7 —A gigantic assn a v ext re The leaders who prepared the has investigated in nearly a year Strauss clin g to current U.S . di,play of this n biggest treaties hope a political union of, of public hearings.policy.which is that the Soviet missile-n , including those of JOOO the Fast area with 1:0 million Ives said it is too early to pre I Pr°Pesed ban an nuclear test mile range, today appeared e for persons will follow economic un det now `what fate would meet explosions is acceptable provided that in the first year pro - Tiring 11 s w k f cat on efforts. to pass labor leg station gress is made toward creating n the Congress session open in Thar of the Air Force's Atlas, an effective inspection system The m i n i s t ers w 11 name n ine Tuesday. an intercontinentalballistic rats - `against the manufacture of nu - y sale—lCßM—capable bj e of c arry in members of the Common Mar- 11 s statements were made in an clear weapons interview recorded for television; a hydrogen warhead , stand m ket Economic Commission andStassen is described as ready their towers at this missile test tat ons In West Virg ma and the fire man Euratom Commis• Ito bow out if some of h s ideas o a A part al transcr pt of the cente r ......___ are not accepted He s known to One of the "big A's" was static, sion. ;program was made public by, his, or test-fired, Saturday. No one The Common Market Commis-;cffice. i will say whether this dry run of sion will organize the European The Fisenhower administration; its engines was a success. Work-,lnvestment Bank and name its'also will push for new laws to' ers have been putting in long administrator. It will also be;curb abuses in labor management , hours in the areas of the Atlas charged with creating special relations. President Eisenhower; launching pads. At least one more,funds 'or the development of the; will send Congress a special mes-" Atlas is in storage here. overseas territories' of the rnem-isage on this subject the week off At least one Air Force Thor. an her nations. !Jan. 19. The commission also will Intermediate range ballistic mis-' I or-, site--IRBM--deafened to hit a tar- ganize an agricultural conference • get area 1500 miles distant, also::• :Furman Claims Aid i to coordinate the agricultural D . 1 rests in its tower. • cr ,icies of the member nations. i Before the end of its first In Governor's Race Indonesia to Purchase i ?ear. the commission will have to establish the method of co- ' HARRISBURG, Jan. 4 IM—Lt. Arms from Yugoslavia operation and issue ' directives :Gov. Roy E. Furman, who is be- 1 BELGRADE. Jan. ri (Wo—A five-i concerning the internal trade of ing opposed by Gov. Leader, said: man Indonesian military delega.l I the six-nation pool. This will today he had "powerful support"! tion arrived today to uurchaze 4 lead to the eventual elimina- 'and "ample financial backing" fori arms in Yugoslavia. ' tion of an trade barriers. :his aspirations to become the Col. Jani heads the delegationd The commission will also tackle'Democratic candidate for govern-I Yugo s I a v authorities banned the problem of outside trade, set—or press, television and newsreel;ting a scale of uniform tariffs on He described as "false propa photographers from the airport. !imports for the six nations. iganda" reports that he would not The Indonesian Embassy said The main task of the Euratornbecome a gubernatorial candidate in a statement Indonesia wants:Commission is to obtain a picture;should May o r Richardson Dit to purchase .arms from both Westiof the nuclear industries of the,worth of Philadelphia seek the and East in a demonstration of:community. The commission will,same post. its independent policies. It sant ,establish contacts with the mem-i a request to buy arms in the UM- :ber nations and their atomic prof-1 red States remained unanswered. ects. _, I Presley ' s Deferment 'Rocks Draft Board Ike's Education Proposal Insufficient, Says Leader HARRISBURG. Jan. 5 (.4'4--Gov. George M. Leader says Presi dent Eisenhower's latest proposal to improve 'U.S. education is "a fine beginning" but won't solve the Commonwealth's education woes. "Any action to meet the nation's pressing shortage of scientists and enguteers IS to he commended and the President's plan to grant federal scholarships arid fellolg e ships to deserving students is a significant step in the right di rection," Leader said in a week end statement. "The fact remains that the President's plan . . . simply can not solve Pennsylvania's own problems of higher education," the governor warned. "We do not need scientists and engineers alone in Pennsylvania," he declared. - We need well edu cated youth in all fields of enter prise, such as medicine, teaching, government, industry, agriculture and business," he explained. Be said the President's plan demonstrates that the federal gov ernment is - at last realizing its responsibility for extending high er education to the most valuable men and women who would oth erwise be unable to go to col lege." Leader said he backed a bill in troduced last year by Rep. Elmer J. Holland - (D.-Pal which called foray similar program under which 30 scientific scholarships would be granted by the federal govern ment each year for each congres- 1 sional district. "This legislation, which I fa vored. is still before Congress„"i be said. *Elephants like to go on binges; . They eat great quantities of, wild grapes which ferment in their stomachs and cause them to, become inebriated. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Reds to 'Treat' Sarayan LONDON, Jan_ 5 oPi—Williarr Saroyan's literary works will ge! the full treatment by Soviet Un ion publishing houses, Moscow radio said today_ Three of Moscow's largest pub lishers are preparing editions c , writings by the American author Senate to Look Into Gavin's Retirement WASHINGTON, Jan. skiP) —Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, (D.-Tex.), said today Senate investigators will inquire into the possibility that "ad ministration rubber hose tactics" figured in Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin's move to retire from the Army. Johnson, who heads the Sen ate Preparedness subcommit tee, said Gavin will be ques tioned about his decision to quit as chief of the Army re search and development divis ion working on missiles and earth satellites. "This committee an d its chairman are not going to tol erate any administration rub ber hose tactics or any effort to put committee witnesses in a straitjacket," Johnson said. MEMPHIS, Tenn., Jan. 5 (IP)—; "After all, when you take him The draft board here used to be out of the entertainment business a rather quiet place. !what have you got left? A truck That, of course, was before Elvis; driver. Presley was drafted. i "One woman in a letter yester- Since then—especially after the:day called us a bunch of damn rock 'n' roll idol was granted an;Southern goons. Well, she's the eight week deferment in order to one who's a goon. complete a movie—letters have' "I talk Elvis Presley more poured in. than I sleep. A crackpot called And peppery Milton Bowers f me out of bed last night and Sr., board chairman. is "fed to I complained that we didn't put the teeth" with the outcries of BEETHOVEN in the Army ... those 'all% think Elvis it the I "I told him we put Mr. Eisen greatest. and those who think ihower in the Army and that ought he is the 'east. to count for something. "Wit au due respect to Elvis, :ho's nice boy, we've draftedlwas and when he told me he was ;eople who are far. far more irn-j52 I asked him how he got so mrtant than he is." said Bowers . stupid in 52 years." "The circumstances sur rounding Gen. Gavin's re tirement decision will be in quired into when he comes before us in closed session this week?' Sens. Stennis (D.-Miss.), sub committee vice chairman, and Symington (DAYIo.), a mem ber, joined in separate inter views in urging ao inquiry in to reports Gavin was threat ened with transfer to an ob scure post unless he altered some of his views about the missiles program. Sen. Francis Case (R.-S.D.). predicted Gavin's "startling" move would spur action toward greater unification within the armed services on scientific and technological programs. "I am sure that Gen. Gavin's action is going to make the Armed Services Committee re ceptive to whatever reorgan ization steps he recommends in the missile program," Case said. Policy Clash Seen . Over Disarmament flu _ ,be thinking of running for the, Republican nomination for gov ernor of Pennsylvania. Dulles and Stassen have been at odds since the London disarma-I meat talks with Russia last year' ended in deadlock. " Dulles says Stassen went be yond his instructions in pri vale negotions with the Soviet representative. Stassen denies this. National Security Council mem- 1 hers have been briefed on Stas- Isen's recommendations. This top' ,strategy board was originally scheduled to decide on them at' a meeting tomorrow. But one re port said the session might be postponed to- Thursday. The question of whether there (this be East-West summit talks this year hinges on the disarma-1 , ment question. Eisenhower and. Dulles are understood to want ev idence of Soviet good faith. through new disarmament con cessions, before any summit con ference. "Then I asked him how old he "His action undoubtedly will accentuate consideration of legislation to provide for co ordination of service efforts that will make it less likely men of his caliber will want to get out." Sen. Jackson (D.-Wash.) told a reporter it would be "inter esting to know just why the country is losing the services of a man of Gen. Gavin's abil ity, courage and professional integrity." . Neither Case nor Jackson is a member of the Preparedness subcommittee but both are on the parent Armed Services Committee. At Gettysburg, where Presi dent Eisenhower was passing the weekend, White House press secretary James C. Hag erty said there was no com ment on the Gavin develop ment. Hagerty said the first Eisenhower heard about it was from news reports. MONDAY. JANUARY 6, 1958 disarmament Bigger Budget, Forces Revamp Said Necessary WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 (PP)— The Rockefeller studies group said tonight the United States must boost defense spending by about S 3 billion each year for the next several years if it wants to halt a "rapidly" deteriorating position in the military race with Russia. It made other far reaching rec ommendations, including one for a drastic revamping of. all opera tional military ,forces into unified commands to carry out strategic missions. The individual armed forces thereafter would be respon sible only for recruiting, training and supply. Officers above the one-star rank 'of brigadier general would cease to have service identity and would become officers of "the armed forces of the United States." Ike Schedules Science Confab WASHINGTON. Jan. 5 UP) A national conference to find some answers to the threat posed by Russian scientific progress was announced today by President Ei senhower's Committee on Scien tists and Engineers. The committee said 100 prom inent Americans will meet Feb. 3-4 at Yale University, New Hav en, Conn., to examine this coun try's competitive position in world science and technology. Guidelines for mobilizing hu man resources in the field also will be sought by The conferees, who will represent such interests as science, education, industry, la bor, government and religion. Dem Chairman Predicts Victory in November HARRISBURG, Jan. 5 (Al Democratic State Chairman Jo seph M. Barr says he expects a Democratic victory in the Novem ber elections for governor, U.S. senator and other offices. In a weekend statement, Sen. Barr said he was "supremely con fident" on the victory, "on the basis of our present registration totals." 011...........".."..... LISTEN TO WMAJ 1450 on your dial Penn Stale Tour of EUROPE Featuring: England. Switzer land, Riviera, Monaco, Italy, SICILY, Austria,- Germany and Holland. June 19 - Aug. 1 Under the direction of: Dr. Dagobert de Levie Assoc. Prof. of German Call: ADams 8-6635 Register Now - TATE _ NOW Feat. 1:30, 3:32, 5:34, 7:3G, 9:38
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers