PAGE TWO Allies Talks LONDON (iP)—Key Allied leaders came out yesterday for talks with the Soviet Union aimed at settling the whole question of divided Germany. Their views on the Berlin crisis were linked with specu lation that a summit meeting with Soviet Premier Nikita Dems Deny Illicit Use Of Private Aid HARRISBURG (W)—The State Elections Bureau reported yester day four corporations made finan cial contributions to the Demo cratic party in apparent violation of the law. However, party spokesmen said money coming from the firms was for advertising and not for cam paign expenses in the Nov. 4 elec tions. They said the funds were erroneously entered as campaign expense contributions. The corporations were the Som erset Limestone Co., Inc., Somer set; New Enterprise Stone and Lime Co., Inc., and New Enter prize Equipment and Supply Co., Inc., both of New Enterprize, and the Lynn Construction Co., Pitts burgh. The first three each gave $lOO to the Cambria County Democrat ic Committee and Lynn $5O, ac cording to a report filed with the Elections Bureau. Albert E. Eberman, director of the bureau, said that while cor porate contributions are prohibit ed by law his bureau is powerless under the elections code to chal lenge them. Justice Department Rules Audit for All Pa. Schools HARRISBURG (/P) The State Justice Department made Pennsylvania's 2,500 school districts subject to an nual audit by the state in a Chicago Fire-- (Continued front page one) chial schools across the country. A spokesman replied, "We're just interested to see if there is anything there for us at all." The bodies will be buried in a special section of Queen of Heav en Cemetery. The section is known as Holy Innocents Shrine. The main investigative effort was to find a definite answer to the question: How did it happen and why? Fire Commissioner Quinn says boys who handled *the waste baskets will be questioned. He said the school janitor, John Raymond, 43, who is in a hospital, also will be questioned in the quest for information. in Favor Of on Berlin Khrushchev may be in the minds of some Allied statesmen. But one united resolve quali fied willingness to negotiate. It was that there must be no sur render to Khrushchev's plan for making West Berlin a neutral ised free city shorn of the pro tection of U.S., British and French garrisons. Prime Minister Harold Macmil lan told the House of Commons he wrote to Khrushchev 10 days ago serving notice that Britain means to stay put in the former German capital. Adenauer, President Eisenhow er and French Premier Chart de Gaulle have gone on rei ord in favor a summit discus sion on the issi of German un fication. They did th) before the CUT rent Berlin crir blew up. Info mation here su gests they still would support the idea if it prom ised a chance of progress. In other developments yester day •Macmillan made clear that positive Allied counterproposals are likely fo be placed before the Soviet Union on the Ger man question. •Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd refused to propose postpon ing supply of nuclear weapons to West Germany and other Atlantic Pact powers in Europe. •The West Berlin city govern ment warned the Allies against accepting Communist East Ger man border guards. sweeping ruling yesterday. The unp r e cedented decision written by Atty. Gen. Thomas D. Mcßride interpreted state law to empower the auditor general to go into each school district to examine the books. Spot or ran dom checks of selected districts would not carry out the letter of the law, Mcßride added. The ruling probably will need action by „the 1959 Legis lature to become effective. It was estimated the audit would cost about two to three million dollars a year and would re quire twice the present staff of Aud. Gen. Charles C. Smith. At present, school auditors are a local responsibility. Richard Eisenhour, ge n eral counsel to the auditor general, said it would be "physically im possible" to get into such a broad auditing program for any period less than six months. Smith's request for a Justice Department ruling was prompted by a teachers' strike in West Ma hanoy Twp., Schuylkill County, where the high school was closed down amid demands for a state audit of the district's books. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Fire Imperils Resort Area In California MALIBU BEACH, Calif. (4P)— Devastating flames, fanned by trot desert winds, swept the hills near this Southern California re sort yesterday—much as they did in a disastrous blaze two years ago, Two fires broke out on the in land slope of the Santa Monica Mountains, quickly joined and raced toward the sea. Thousands of residents were evacuated. Several expensive homes were reported burned. There were no reported injuries. By late afternoon 10,000 acres were charred. Complicating the picture, two new fires burst out. One was in Topanga Canyon four miles east of the blaze. Another was near Thousand Oaks, four miles west. Both could join with the major blaze. Firemen said they suspect arson because of the quick succession of blazes. The scene encompassed brushy, oak-dotted slopes five miles in land from here and 30 miles west of downtown Los Angeles. Resort homes of Hollywood film stars, including Bob Hope's ranch, were endangered by the fierce Santa Ana winds—and hot dry blasts from the desert. Physician Asks 'Humane Care' MINNEAPOLIS (iP) The na tion's new outstanding family doc tor of the year wishes all physi cians would practice medicine from the humane side, caring for any patient needing their services. And that's the life story of Dr. Lonnie A. Coffin, 68, a kindly mannered onetime horse-and-bug gy doctor from Farmington, lowa. He was named general practi tioner of the year Tuesday by the. American Medical Assn't policy making body, the House of Dele gates. "I am worried that a small mi nority bf doctors loOk at their practice from the commercial side," he told a news conference. "But it is a very small minority. The majority of doctors do a good job." What's the difference between today's medical - patients and those seen nearly a half century ago? More of today's patients, both rural and in the towns, suffer from psychosomatic complaints. "Its tension caused by fast-clip living," he said. Mil Ball, . Rec Hall FRIDAY Tickets On Sale Every Day . AT THE HUB BILLY MAY BAND Starring Frankie Lester Dancing 9-1 Stop Radio Jamming, U.S. Asks Russians UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (/P)—The United States yester day appealed to the Soviet Union to end jamming of foreign radio broadcasts as one way of removing barriers to friendly cooperation with the West. U.S. Delegate George M. Harrison estimated the Soviet Union spends 100 million dollars a year to maintain 2500 jamming transmitters, Harrison told the U.N. special political committee the Krem lin started 0111 with a dozen in 1948 when the Soviet Union be gan jamming broadcasts of the U.S. Stat Department's Voice of America. He said this "army of jammers is one of the largest radio sys tems in the world" representing a capital investment of 250 mil lion dollars. It is five or six times more expensive than all the broad casting of the Voice of Ameri ca, in all languages, to all parts of the world. Yet it broadcasts nothing but meaningless noise," Harrison said. "Its purpose, which it partly accomplishes, is to shut off the peoples of the Soviet Union and the Soviet Communist bloc from outside broadcasts in all their na tive languages. This' includes broadcasts not only by the United States but by other countries too —and even by the United Nations itself." More Job Opportunities Seen for Heart Patients MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (?P) —A physician contended yes terday that thousands of heart patients are able to hold down jobs thought too rigorous for them. • Dr. Edward E. Gordon of Chi cago blamed the situation on standard classifications that guide doctors in determining how much energy a patient expends in var ious work tasks and recreation. These classifications set limits, ranging from no restriction to marked restriction, based on how heart patients react while performing the tasks. Dr. Gordon said the classifica- MIL "Now reap-If co - N daft-ling. don't fret • Yong Afghan will turn up in * bin COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS." WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1958 Union, Coal Co. May Sign Pact WASHINGTON (W)—An agree. meet on a new bituminous indus try coal contract was reported to . have been reached yesterday. An informed source said Ed ward G. Fox, president of the Bituminous Coal Operators Assn., has been authorized by his board of directors to sign the agreement with the United Mine Workers Union as soon as language could be agreed upon. No details were immediately available. Industry sdurces have said that UMW President John L. Lewis was seeking a two dollar a day pay boost for the 180,000 soft coal miners whose basic wage has been $22.25 a day. John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers Union, was reported of have met with his un ion Wage Policy Committee for the purpose of ratifying the deal. tions make no distinction between continuous and intermittent work, although most work and domestic activities fall into the intermit tent class. The worker gives short bursts of high energy output followed by pauses. It appears quite possible that overcaution has been the rule in regulating physical activity, ha said. CATHAUM o NOW SHOWING • ti ':Ao* • ° '-9 TARAWA CHHEAD A MOM ttOCYCDON COOSA WWI • COMING FRIDAY • PAT BOONE "MARDI GRAS" * NITTANY TONITE - DOORS OPEN 8:45 DEBORAH KERR "TEA and SYMPATHY" • THURSDAY EVE • Rodgers and Hammerstein's "CAROUSEL" WMAJ Sign Oa Morning Show Kerning Detotlons News Headlines Morning Show rows • 15 —..---- Cheesiest inter:tido 00 . Music at Noss County News What's Going On Musk Show ---- News and Fluorin Contact Loral News and Show Tunes Will Show - 41 4 n w ee s Newa and Markets and'l'lhow rts ° par a! Tunes Fulton Lewis Jr. LP's and Show Taney 'Public Sallee Program News WDFM PrOgrillna News Grogrolog7 --- News Sports woke, News and Oporto .1 News s C a r d 11tiotte Sign Ogg
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