THURSDAY. NOVE Air 3rd Moon Shot WASHINGTI potshot at the al N M--The Air Force may take its third lon early tomorrow. predecessors, the new lunar probe is de- Like its two signed to: • Measure val toward the moon • Provide da a on the intensity and extent of magnetic fields of the earth and the moon. ; !Report the number of impor tant impacts with meteorites. Referel 1 siScan the far side of the ' moon with a television type de- Retu ns vice and relay to earth impres- D , . , mons that would be converted ' ew ems into crude photographs. in B ief !Also like those in the most re- N 0 'cently laUnched probe, the 25,' Spenders ° New Jersey pproved 1:1 a i pounds of instruments aboard the! 45-million-dollar b nd issue 'forltiew space traveler will be thor- : oughly sterilized 24 hours before WASHINGTON (.-P) --President reservoirs serving orthernt New blastoff, against the extremely'Eisenhower said yesterday peo- Jersey areas. :remote prospect that it might ac-;ple he classes as spenders have New York A pi oved a 100- ; tually hit the moon, been elected to the new, Demo million-dollar bon issue to fi- , I Scientists have agreed to make. cratic-controlled Congress. He' vance low-rent p iblic housing. every effort to avoid lunar con- ( served notice on them that he will Gave counties hom -rule powers. tamination until after earthmen' fight higher spending as hard as Pennsylvania uthorized the:have had a chance to explore the' he can , Legislature to exempt timber-•moon's virgin surface. , Again and again, Eisenhower land from the uniform real estate. The launching site is Cape returned to the subiect of unnec tax, to encourage forest conserva- Nr federal spendina He made' Canaveral, Fla. There, another essar-r '' ' • 'it clear that one of his major bat ton. i Thor Vanguard combination lu- Missouri Killed ;Hsnex t e year will be to pare it a proposal to! nag probe rocket is on its firing I d 0 ,,,,' . n. permit branch banking. pad and at the ready. I Texas Approved pensions for And. the calendar, inflexible Unnecessary spending mu s t Texas Rangers. Reject , - 1 annual And for lunar 'said thel said, "if we are going stop, he . sessions of the legislature and a early , morhin hoursf irings , 0 1 .- .„,_,, a to keep further dilution of the retirement fund for county offi- would b I fist period lua y e t.te irst in this American e dollar from taking pl ac." cials. , ; month suitable for a moon rocket North Carolina Refused to launch. Similar favorable periods In what areas can cuts be broaden the power of justices of occur in the early morning hours. made? the peace. of Saturday and Sunday. , "Every single one except where' i • • existing law forces us to spend' Ohio Rejected an amendment! After Nov. 9it would be futile " „ 1 the money, he replied, "and if , to permit metropolitan federations to fire away at the moon until, we think that there are cases, in populous counties, so that town-'Dec. 4or 5, when once again the; where we can get that law amend-, ships, villages and cities could moon and earth are in the p re- red, I think we would go into that; unite in providing sewer, water l ferred position with regard to , t 00 .,, and other services. leach other. I The for t h coming shot is the I Eisenhower said his campaign speeches against what he called ;third of three assigned to the Air t h e ; "spender-wing" of the Demo-, Force in connection with the Inl iternational Geophysical Year cratic party apparently didn't pro - make a great impression on the; ;gram. !electorate. It also will be the first di- "Obviously, we did not get rectly under the National Aero- , nautics and Space Administra- , enough Republican votes," he commented lion, which has taken over all A newsman asked him wheth- civil space and satellite pro- er he thought the people chose jects. I left-wing government rather ' The first lun a r probe failed, than responsible government. ' Aug. 17, the rocket exploding 77, Eisenhower had maintained , 'seconds after launching. , during the campaign that these The second attempt, Oct. 11.-- were the alternatives, ! given the code name Pioneer-- ; "I don't know whether they did !was a success in its own fashion,, this thing deliberately," Eisen-, ;but the flight traveled only about ihower replied. "I know this, that, Ia third of the 222,000-mile dis- , they obviously voted for people, tance to the moon, ;that I would class among the Pioneer justified itself by send-,spenders, and that is what I say' ing back, over its radio voice, vai- , is going to be the real trouble." , uable data still being analyzed.' "And I promise this: For the Among its other discoveries were next two years, the Lord sparing, indications that radiation far out , me, I am going to fight this as' in space may be Jess than sci-'hard as I know how,' he wentl enlists had believed. 'on. Control Slight In Legislature HARRISBURG (W) Pennsyl vania voters split control of the Legislature for the 1959 General Assembly with Republicans win ning control of the Senate and Democrats the House. The practically complete tally of Tuesday's votes gave Republicans a 28-21 edge in the Senate with only one contest not yet decided. The Democrats captured a 10'7- majority with only a single con test to be decided in that race. The GOP won 102 seats. A voting majority of 26 is re quired for control of the Senate and an edge of 106 of the house's 210 votes are needed for control of the House. State Democrats Gain in Congress PHILADELPHIA (A')—The 86th Congress, opening in January, will seemore Demo crats than Republicans in the Pennsylvania House delega tion for the first time since 1941. Capturing three new seats from the Republicans in Tuesday's elec tion the Democrats put themselves in line for a 16-14 edge in Penn sylvania seats in th,e next session of Congress. Pennsylvania's was kept in the fold, however, w by newcomer Will head. In the vanguard triumphs was form A. Quigley's win o S. Walter Stauffer trict. In another stro race, State Assembi Toll defeated Repu Gartner to take 6th District vacate Hugh Scott. The third chan Democrats came i trict, comprising i awanna County counties of Pike, quehanna, Wayne BER 6. 1958 orce Sets iations in radiation along a 2 1 , :,-day journey dum Democrat Stanley A. Prokon emerged victor over incumbent Republican, Joseph L. Carrigg. In Republican Delaware Coun ty, Walter H. Milliken, burgess oft Sharon Hill, stopped the drive ofj Democrat Hubert P. Earle, son of! former Gov. George H. Earle, to grab the 7th District seat from] which Rep. Benjamin F. James,l Republican, is retiring. Three incumbent congress- I men were elected to full terms for the first time. These includ ed Reps. Robert N. C. Nix, 4th , District, Philadelphia Democrat and the first Negro ever elected to the House from Pennsyl vania; John A. LaFore Jr., Re publican, 13th District, and John H. Dent, Democrat, 21st District. All had been serving out unexpired terms. • 128th district Democratic h a victory am S. Moor- Id Democratic •r Rep. James er incumbent n the 19th dis- Rep. William J. Green, Phila delphia Democratic chairman, won,' reelection in the sth District a-` long with Reps. William A. Bar rett, Ist District; Kathryn E. Gran-! lahan, 2nd District; and James A. Byrne, 3rd District. Rep. Francis E. Walter, chair-, iman of the House Un-American! !Activities committee, won by the', !biggest margin he has ever run! up in a score of years of repre-; senting the 15th District. Other Democratic incumbents, winning handily were Reps, Dan- gly contested man Herman dican Fred C. Philadelphia's by Sen.-elect rl.eover to the the 10th Dis idustrial Lack :nd the rural •ullivan, Sus 'ad Wyoming. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Rockefeller Denies Ambition For 1960 Presidential Race (Continued front page one) r, Rockefeller insisted again that he has no interest in the 1960; GOP presidential nomination. The last GOP seat tumbled in! the last Senate race to be settled,; in Wyoming. Sen. Frank A. Bar-i rett, a conservative Republican., l was nosed out by Democrat Gale .W. McGee, a young history pro- ; 'lessor. With the outcome of governor- Ike Calls "The conservative Democrats, the newspapers. every kind of person that has get the brains to see what is happening to this country with our loose hand lings of fiscal affairs has got to fight it." Eisenhower said he didn't know; all the national trends which' I might have contributed to the; GOP defeats. But he said the Re-I publicans are prone to campaign! hard in the last two weeks or two months before an election and j then not fight between elections.' Democrats shook loose a trio of; old guard Republicans in Senate: 'races in Ohio, Wyoming and Ne-1 'vada—and ousted Republicans' from the governors' mansions ass well. i Besides downing Barlett in the, Wyoming Senate race, the Den - 10-i I crats squeezed Cheyenne attorneys ,J. J. Hickey into the statehouse', ,in place of Republican Gov. Mil-1 ward L. Simpson. ' A nationally obscure Demociat., 'Howard Cannon, dumped Repub-, lican Sen. George W. Malone ov-i ,erboard m Nevada, while team mate Grant Sawyer pushed Re publican Gov. Charles H Russell 'to the sidelines. Snowy-haired John W. Bricker lof Ohio, a pillar of Republican conservatism, fought a hard but losing battle to hold his Senate seat against Democrat Stephen M. Young, a former congressman. In neighboring Indiana, Sen. iel J. Flood, 11th District; George, William E. Jenner didn't seek re- M. Rhodes, 14th; Frank M. Clark.:election, but tried to put over his 25th; Thomas E. Morgan, 26th and i ally, Gov. Harold W. Handley. Elmer J. Holland, 30th. :Handley couldn't match the vote- Republicans James E. Van-'getting prowess of Democrat Zandt. 20th District, and John P. Vance Hartel. Saylor, 22nd, each won reelection! Republican Sen. William Lan by carrying all three of their;ger of Dakota got himself re counties. Rep. Carton E. Kearns,;elected without ever going home Republican, did the same in the to campaign. His wife was ill in 24th Districr - hut tr , a consider- Washington. ably smaller margin than in 1956. Sen. John S. Kennedy uncorked ship races undecided only in Ne braska, Democrats had lost four of their own governors and taken eight places from the Republi cans. They nudged a blonde former schoolmarm, Rep. Cory Knutson, l out of politics something her husband couldn't do in a widely ; advertised family squabble One other Democrat fell in the . balloting, but not at Republican hands. Rep Brooks Hays of Al . -, !kansac, a lay Baptist leader and . , eignt-term veteran in Congress, lost to a poweiful write-in cam— -Ipaign based on the racial issue. !Dr. Dale Alford, a strong segre gationist on the Little Rock (School Board, ran as an indepen dent Somewhat strangely. Republi cans fared better in the South 'than any other region proportion ately. although the integration is sue had been expected to hurt them there. They took only one ,House seat in Kentucky. Even with mops and prices im proved, undercurrent unrest over 'administration price support pol icies finally came to the Surface 'in such states as 'Wisconsin, Ohio, Minnesota, the Dakotas, lowa, Nebraska and Kansas. A jovial, powerful Democratic vote-getter emerged from the ; California governorship victory of Edmund G Pat Brown. Down to defeat with Knowland went the man he elbowed out of 'another try for the statehouse, `Gov Goodwin .1. Knight. Knight switched reluctantly to the race for the Knowland Senate seat, :and fell before Democrat Clair !Engle. No Time Wasted There once Nee a co-ea from Penn State Whose bcau took ber out on a date She gild to her dove Let's talk about lo%e Ana Green's lectures uhlie we osculate." the greatest 'plurality ever turned out for a Massachusetts Senate seat—around 800,000 and still go ing up. Thus in the new Congress con vening in January, Democrats will have a Senate margin of 62-34, with only :in needed for : majority, The line-up was 49 Democrats, 47 Republicans in the Senate. Referendum Returns Announced WASHINGTON (..P1 Voters generally refused by heavy ma vaities to curb the powers of un ions or impose new taxes, in Tues day's statewide referendum votes acrot.s the country. In Louisiana. a prosep,r2g,ation amendment to the state constitu tion authorizing creation of a pri vate school system with public funds had rolled up a 3-1 lead in yestei day's slowly arriving count. But Illinois apparently had scuttled a one-cent-a-pack boost in the cigarette tax to finance a 75-million-dollar bond issue to pay bonuses to Korean War vet erans. Labor was victorious in five of the six states where right-to-work proposals were the hottest meas ures on the ballot. The prohibition against union shop agreements, under which workers rnust loin unions to keep then' jobs, was scuttled by over whelming majorities in California, Ohio - , Washington and Colorado and by a narrow margin in Idaho. But in Kansas, right-to-work was endorsed as thumpingly as it was rejected in the industrial states. The Kansas vote in creased to 19 the number of right-to-work states. Labor now has enough friends Congress, come claimed, to re peal the Taft-Hartley Act section which permits states to adopt right-to-work amendments to their state constitutions. Union strategists said repeal would be sought in the 86th Congress. along with a higher minimum wage, im proved unemployment compensa tion and other union-favored causes California swamped two other controversial measures by lop sided majorities. One was a soak-the-rich tax backed by labor as a counter blow at the right-to-work advo cates. Overwhelmingly defeat ed 4-1, it would have slashed low-bracket state income taxes. sharply increased higher-brack et rates, and reduced the states sales tax from three percent fo Iwo per cent. The other soundly defeated measure was a plan to levy prop erty taxes on parochial and pri vate schools. These are exempt in every state Delicious 11l is a feature at Morrell's FAMOUS, TOO, for ... *submarines *hot sausage *meat balls *salami *pastrami *ravioli CARRY OUT SERVICE MORRELL'S 112 S. Frazier Phone AD 8-8381 Open Evenings PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers