The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 30, 1958, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE TWO
Flaming Bomber Makes• ...
B i g-3 Reject
Near Miraculous Landing'
Red Summit
OMAHA (IIP)—A landing previously considered npos Talk Plan
sible was made at Abilene Tex Air Force Base by a burning 1
WA S H INGTON Pi—Russia s
B-47 jet bomber on which the top canopy had been blown off proposal to add Communist Po
The Strategic Air Command said Lt. James M. Ooenauf Iland and Czechoslovakia to pre
24 co-pilot,made the landing Monday night from the blind summ t talks was reported reject
scat behind the pilot's posit on ed yesterday by U S British and
The story of the harrowing land French envoys.
Senate Votes ing began near Dalhart, Tet Instead, informants said the,
when one of the plane's six jet lrepresentatives of the allied Big
•
Three chose a less unpalatable
Raise in Pay Lt. John Cobbengines exploded
la the oak iga I
!tor, used his ejection seat to bail course Agreement to meet sep
l out. Maj. James M.Graves, 34 arately with Soviet Foreign Min
For Military I the plane commander, fired off' late r Andrei Gromyko in Moscow,
the top canopy to escape.
WASHINGTON q A gener al; orthe jorma's seat failed tows he demanded last week.
pay raise for the Army, an d.Thus, the Big Three apparently
Air Force was approved BT -0 by Nav y eject Graves then went to the nicked what they considered the
the Senate yesterdl, i nosA and parachuted through the lesser of two evils. Final approval,
escape hatch. (however,depends upon London
With a minimum of debate,it
Obenauf, four years in the Air an d p ans
passed a bill providing for S '„
Force and with 850 firing hours No hitch was expected in the
million in increases over the fir - t found that Maj. Joseph B.Max allied capitals. A formal notice to
year o operation {well, 33 the navigation instruc the Kremlin was looked for be
-
The measure now goes back to tor unconscious due to lack of fore the end of the week.
the House, which has approved oxygen. The dip 1 o matic maneuvering
increases totaling $683 million.As His own ejection seat had failed cent e r s around ambassadorial
Senate House conference may be and he had crawled forward to talks in Moscow designed p
tore
necessary to adjust the differ -!find May. Maxwell unconscious, pare the way for a possible heads
ences in the two bills. I then had crawled back to his seatiof government meeting.
Sen. John C. Stenni s (D Miss) behind the pilot's place. Gromyko first refused to meet
who guided the legislation on 1131 Lt. Obenauf, still unable to see Jointly with the U S British and
swift passage through the Sen the ground, was talked down "French ambassadors in Moscow
ate, said it is "aimed at providing by Col. Anthony J Perma com He saw them one by one
a remedyfor the alarm ng short mander of the 341st Bomber Wiling I Last week the Big Three cour
age of trained and qualified per -S Obenauf and Maxwell were os
olained Gromyko fired back that
sonnel in the armed forces.”ipitalized for shock, frost bite andi parity must be maintained. He
Almost everyone in uniform burned eves. Their condition was
saac' it was either one by one or
with more than two years of sere -;reported good three by three with Poland and
ice would get an increase of at Czechoslovakia on Russia's side
least 6 per cent over present base
pay as a cost of 11% mg boost. Ad Uruguayan Leftist of the table
d tional money would be offered
for proficiency among enlisted Debates With Nixon
men and special responsibility''
among officers. MONTEVIDEO GP)—Vice Pres
ident Ni debated goodnatured
i ly with a leftist student in a cor
Stassen sCampaign ridor of the law school at Uru
guay's National University Tues
Lacks Funds—GOPiday ,
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. (ffl
The Republican organization de
clared last night that-Harold Stas
sen's independent campaign for
the party's gubernatorial nomina
tion has run into financial diffi
culties.
The state ment reversed pre
vious organization charges that
Stassen was getting substantial
support, the figures most often
mentioned were between half a
million and three quarters of a
million dollars.
KildayHitsEisenhower'sPlan
ForßevampingArmedForces
WASHINGTON (IP)-Rep. Paul J. Kilday (D.-Tex.) - said
yesterday that President Eisenhower's plan to revamp the
armed forces could lead to a military organization more
powerful than the old Germa
General Staff.
Gen. Nathan F. Twining, chair
man of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of
S t a ff, disagreed. Twining said
there are enough safeguards in
the reorganization bill to prevent
the armed forces from becoming
too powerful. Not that they would
want to, he added.
Twining continued his pro
longed appearance before the
House Armed Services Committ •
in support of the administration's
bait. Among other things it would
concentrate strategic planning in
a Joint Staff including representa
tives of all the military services.
Kilday recalled that the Ger
man General Staff which wielded
great power until the end o
World War U was made up of
army officers only. He said the
danger of military control would
be even greater under the pro
posed U.S. setup.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA
Apparently Nixon won, for
when he finished students jam
mmg the hallway cheered: "Neex
on, Neexon."
Students from the same school
greeted Nixon Monday with
chants of go home and strewed
his path with handbills accusing
the United States of oppressing
Latin American countries.
Nixon and his wife, Pat, were
met in a hallway by Richard°
Yelpo, 26, of the leftist Univer
sity Student Federation.
Really end up Spring Week with an eve
ning of enjoyment. See the Axidentcds.
Relax with the captivating songs of this
ABC-Paramount recording group. Also, see
the Coronation of Miss Penn State and the
Presentation of all Spring Week Awards .
ALL SENIORS
ORDER YOUR NAME CARD
AS SOON AS POSSIBLE
Processed Printing
or
Engraving
Prices Start at $3.50
KEELER'S
The University Bookstore
i,*••••••••••••••••••••••0000110011100•11104•••••••••••e ,
7,1
: •
• Forsooth ...
• •
•
• •
• •
• Players Present
•
• •
"MERCHANT OF VENICE" e :
5
•
•
by Wm. Shakespeare •°
• ip
•
•
• 8 P.M. MAY 8,9, 10 Schwab
••
. .
1.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Jobless Decline by 78,000
In April Says Government
WASHINGTON (EP)—The government issued a hurry-up
report yesterday showing a slight unemployment decline of
78,000 in April. AFL-CIO President George Meany cited it as
proof that the recession "con
tinues to Worsen "
Meany stressed that employ
ment figures failed to improve as
much as usual from March to
April, a fact noted in the report
from the Commerce Department.
Both also noted that the rate of
unemployment, seasonally adjust
ed, increased from 7 to 7.5 per
cent of the labor force, which in
cludes both the employed and
those looking for work. The labor
force increases at this time of
year.
The employment figures came
out on a day when there was
much new talk of tax cuts, none
of it encouraged by the White
House.
. . _
The announced drop in unem
ployment was less than normal
for this time of year.
Also, a gain of 600,000 in the
number of employed workers was
attributed by Secretary of Com
merce Weeks almost entirely to
the usual spring gains in agricul
tural and other outdoor work.
Nasser in Russia to Aid
Arab-Soviet Relations
MOSCOW (J--President Nasser
flew into Moscow on . a Soviet jet
airliner yesterday for 18 days of
red carpet treatment. He said his
visit will strengthen the ties be
tween his United Arab Republic
and the Soviet Union.
Sensational
Spring Week
Feature
Axidentals
TOMORROW
May 1
Rec Hall
Don's..
Rec Hall
sa this great evening at
...
Proceeds given of student
scholarship fun d. Donation 50c.
Tickets on sale: Huh Desk, The Mall,
and Fraternity Houses.
The
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 30. 1958
Stock Market Declines
Amid Lower Earnings
NEW YORK (lP) The stock
market declined for the second
straight day yesterday amid a
rash of sharply lower earnings.
Industrials set the lower tone
with losses ranging from fractions
to a point or so in key issues.
TAT • NOW
•
Feat. 1:46, 3:42, 5:38. 7:34, 9:30
Is NE aim gmi -I
t 305
O E,
- •
• r --;,!%," •
•
ti t .
I o
7.
it
sr
NEI 11.111 Nil MIMI INN MR INIE
000000000000000000000000
* CATHAVIVI
Now 12:35, 2:47, 4:59, 7:11, 9:30
From H. Wouk's Best Seller
"Marjorie Morningstar"
Gene Kelly - Natalie Wood
00000000000000000000000
* NITTANY
Now - boon Open 6:45
World-Wide Adventure
"OUT OF THE CLOUDS"
ANTHONY STEEL
From J. Arthur Rank - in color
000 000000000000000000000
* STARLITE *
DRIVE-111
Midway Between
State College and- Belletonta
SHQWTIME 8:40
WED. & THURS.
THE CARELESS YEARS
DEAN STOCKWELL
-AND
NATALIE TRUNDY
STEEL BAYONET
LEO GENN
-AND
KIERON MOORE
• PLUS CARTOON •
•••••••••••••••••••••0111•
WMAJ Programs
WEDNESDAY
Sign On
Morning Show
Morning Devotions
Morning Show
News
•.71;:silWinterlude
News
Swap Shots
Music for Listening
--_ News
Queen for a Day
Musio at Noon
Centre County News
What's Going On
Musts
Area Sports
Strike Up the Band
_ World News
Afternoon of Mullin
Bob and Ray
News
35 _ Music for Listening
00 ..._Norwe and Market Report
30
46
65
-Local News
00
15
20
5----- High School Prograts
45 ____ _ Mode for Listening
:00 -........ .7ses Panorama 11411F111
:00 --_,...„......... Campus News (WDTM
:16
:30 ---........--. Dr. Sheller (WDFIII
.03
:06
:66
.03 • Sign OM
•••••••••••••••lesee,