TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1958 1 U.S., Britain ,Schwartz Says Order Agree On 'Granted Postponement WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 VP)—President Eisenhower has'Missile Sites i WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 (4?) Dr. Bernard Schwartz I • called on Soviet leaders to halt their "constantly mounting! testified today North American Airlines won an extra five 1 WASHINGTON, accusations" against the United States if they want to set the..- T , :ers of operating life after President Eisenhower's chief he United States. having com- - , - stage for a successful summit conference. 1 t pleted arrangements for nuclear, aide, Sherman Adams, discussed its status with the head of negotiating the n British Isles,' Eisenhower proposed that Soviet Premier Bulganin workl i n s liss noilwe bases the Civil Aeronautics Board. .quietly through normal diplo- i launching sites in France. 1 Schwartz, ousted counsel matic channels to arrange such a State De p. t . di 1 p. , men sources . in - ( sight subcommittee, said he was, meeting instead of firing frequent! cat d Gated the Ang.o-America n agree- i 1101 suggesting anything illegal or! public letters at him. i , merit may be signed and sealed' the! He set forth these views in a here tomorrow. It is expected to' even improper resulted from lsternly worded answer to a letter, be the pilot pact for arming otherll9s3 meeting between Adams ancl Bulganin sent him two weeks ago.:NATO allies with medium rangeH. arman B. Denny, then CAB act- The White House made Eisenhow- rocket weapons. .ing chairman. 1 , er s reply public today, two days , But Schwartz told the mil- The British bases, reported to • 'after it was delivered in Moscow. mittee CAB did grant a pc.est be four in number and strung I The new letter , the toughest ponement of its order putting along Britain's eastern coast. ' Eisenhower has ever seat to with the airline out of business a ft er are scheduled to be armed I Bulganin, denounced Commu-; Adams talked with the chair nisi party chief Nikita Khrush- : U.S. Jupiter and Thor ballistic , man on behalf of the line's missiles by the end of the year. ' chev. as well as Bulganin, for counsel, Murray Chotiner. spreading "totally false concep- i From Britain these 1500-milet BChot i n e r . former campaign.ons" about American aims. missiles could conceivably reachl V The President challenged thenorth !as far into Russia as Arch- manager for ice President Nix- I Kremlin to allow leaders of, angel, just below the Arctic Cir-:on, is a California lawyer creditedl thought and influential citizens de, and as far east as Odessa,!with important influence among ,from Russia to visit this countryi on the Black Sea. Moscow andißepublicans. and learn first-hand the real facts Leningrad would be within the! Schwartz to l d the North about the American longing for' firing radius. Bases in France. American case after Chairman peace. , would provide even deeper pene-I Oren Harris (D.-Ark.) read into A copy of Eisenhower's letter tration - ' the record two letters from Ad was inserted in the Congressional. Gen. Lauris Norstad. NATO's : ams to Chotiner. One, marked Record by Sen. William F. Know- European commander, said. in ; "p erso n a l and confidential." land (R-Calif). , Paris today that while prelimi- ' said Adams had talked with Eisenhower used such words nary discussions have bee n ' Denny about steps North Amer. as "bitter." "uncalled for," and . started with France for bases : ican could take to delay the ef ' "misrepresentation" to describe ! there, no specific agreement has ' fective date of an order revok his reaction to Khrushchev-Bul- i been reached so far. , ing its operating authority be ganin claims that American i Under the arrangement with, cause of alleged violation of leaders are eagerly seeking to , Britain, the launching sites will, CAB rules. North American plunge the world into war in be jointly controlled. was a nonscheduled airline, or order to make financial gains. • 1 one operating without a regu "l deplore the constantly mount-, laxly assigned route. ing accusations within the Soviet, 6 - Alarm Fire Earlier Schwartz said there Union that the United States is a were many allegations in Florida nation ruled by aggressive war -'• and elsewhere that Col. Gordon, minded imperialists,"he said. ;Hits Pi ttsburg h ',l oo r e 'qrs. Eisenhower's bro ther-in-law, engineered the award Ike Appoints Anderson I PITTSBURGH, Feb. 17 fi rm_Alof a Miami television license to a Attorney General Aid :six-alarm fire damaged the top ; subsidiary of National Airlines. I THOMASVILLE, Ga., Feb. 17i floor and roof of a three-story' (Al—President Eisenhower todayibrick apartment building in the chose D. Malcolm Anderson, now' Squirrel Hill section today., U.S. attorney for western Penn-;Twelve families fled into near sylvania, to be assistant attorney, zero temperature as the $75,000 general in charge of the Justice; blaze sent up a column of smoke, Dept's. Criminal Division. that was visible for miles. The President's vacation head-1 Fireman Charles McGuire was quarters announced that Ander-linjured when the roof collapsed ' son's nomination will be sent to t and fireman Frank Rappa was the Senate in a few days. treated for smoke inhalation. Ike Orders Soviets To Halt Accusation Air Force Launches 'Rascal' EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla., Feb. 17 (W)—The first successful launching of the Rascal, an air to-ground guided missile, by a Strategic Air Command crew was accomplished today. The. 32-foot missile was fired at the - White Sands, MM., proving grounds by a D 847 Stratojet which took off from Eglin. The D 847 was refueled en route by a KCI3S Stratotanker. Maj. Gen. Robert W. Burns. commanding officer of the Air Research and Development Command's air proving ground center at Eglin. said the Rascal carried no warhiad. It is cap able of employing either nu clear or thereto-nuclear war heads. The missile has a range of more than 100 miles and can fly at su personic speeds at altitudes above 50,000 feet. It can be launched at a point distant from the defenses of a target area, permitting the aircraft to turn away from the target area before it comes wth in range of the air defenses. The Rascal is carried beneath the wing of the plane. It has previously been launched by test crews of Bell Aircraft Corp. and now is under going suitability tests at the air proving ground center. Europe Talk Set for Tonight A talk on "Viewing Europe Through Slides" will be given at 7 tonight in 213 Hetzel Union. Marterie—Music—Memories ,i.ki•::;:'!:', - ,'.i. , ..'....'_ -- -,- - 2, ' f_ _-:-..,-,--,',;',,,,,-, ---: ----',1,174-,-.!..,:j.r...,,,...--.F. ,:~ ~-` - "THE" DANCE OF THE YEAR SEM Dancing 9 'til 1 Semi-formal THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA iN '%, ,,5.., 'Ns ...,Nr PANHEL tkr IF ~,..„ RALPH MARTERIE Fulton Will Propose Surplus Food Shipment WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 (.41— Rep. John J. Fulton (Ft.-Pa.), said today he is proposing to the White House that the Agriculture Dept. ship 15 carloads of surplus food immediately to Pittsburgh for distribution to the needy. e r r- r „if MARCH 21 REC HALL PAGE THREE o the House Legislative Over- Summerfield Denies Increase In Postal Pay WASHINGTON. Feb. 17 (T)— Postmasler General Summer field today discouraged what he called "false hope of exorbitant pay increases" for postal workers. But he declined to say whether President Eisenhower would veto a 7 1 / 2 per cent raise. Summertield appeared before the House Post Office Committee to push for an administration favored 6 per cent increase bill which he figurfd would cost about 160 million dollars a year. The Senate is getting ready to vote on a Democratic sponsored measure to raise the pay of the half million postal workers 7V: tier cent. plus flat sum increases for employes in lower brackets. The cost of this was estimated at double that of the administration measure. Rep Corbett (R-Pa) said it looks to him as if this year "it's going to be a test of strength again as to who has the votes and who can bring the most pressure to bear." Last year Eisenhower's veto killed an II per cent increase by Congress. Rep. Porter (D-Ore) asked. Summerfield if Eisenhower would veto a 71i. per cent boost. Reciprocal Trade Bill WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 al— The Eisenhower administration launched its reciprocal trade ex tension bill in Congress today with a warning that its defeat might jeopardize 4 11 million jobs. 111