The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 07, 1959, Image 3

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    SATURDAY. FEB
RUARY 7. 1959
eg Hope for Airmen Titan Firin 9
j v n ■ Called Success
ired Tape Release ! By Air Foree
TON ffl-U.S. officials have virtually given; CApE CANAVERAL . Fla .
*r leai'umg what happened fo 11 airmen who ;A Tlltln ICBM was
the Soviet side of the Turkish border lastaloft for the first time yesterday!
on what reportedly was a highly!
successful test after two earlier!
‘failures to get the big war rocket
_ # a _ a joff the ground. 1
Buna I Services j Informed sources said shortly
lie . . |after the shoot that the new mis
rifilfS ff%t ijt - Ie performed smoothly and hit.
: ,C,U ,UI tnCn near the prescribed impact areal
| WASHINGTON (fl 3 )—On a sun-dess than 300 miles from the!
isplotched windy hillside in Ar- |]aunchinK site [
hngton National Cemetery, two) !
unknown airmen were buried yes-! The 90-foot Titan, which could
terday with full military honors [Play a key role in U.S. plans to
A sobbing woman looked on i match Soviet intercontinental-
She was the widow, perhaps, of range ballistic missiles claims,
one of them. No one knew. ; made its fiery launching debut at
These men were among the vie- 4:22 P’ m - j
tims of what the State Depart-i In Washington, Gen. Thomas D i
ment has said was a merciless;White, Air Force chief of staff,!
attack by Soviet fighter pianesisaid in a brief announcement thati
on an unarmed American trans-j“preliminary reports indicate it!
port winch strayed into Sovietjsuccessfully accomplished the pro-!
Armenia last Sept. 2. Igrammed objectives.” i
Bodies of 6 of the 17 men! The liftoff appeared to be suc-j
aboard were turned over to this cessful. Twice before on Dec 20 j
[country by Soviet officials. Four and last Tuesday, the Titan ig
of the six were identified, and nited on the pad but on both oc
were buried by their families last casions the engine died a split
fall* jsecond before liftoff.
Wan!
Triggi
WASHING
up hope of evi
disappeared 01
Sept. 2.
State Dep.
hope which trig
to make public i
of Soviet fighter
eating the Amt:
transport plane v
flames.
rtment officials said it was this diminishing,
;gered a decision
a tape recording
pilot talk indi
ricans’ unarmed
ras shot down in
The Slate Department press
chief, Lincoln White, told his
news confer ence yesterday,
however, that the United States
will continue to do everything
possible to learn what happened
to the 11 missing members of
the 17-man crew.
He declined to speculate on
whether they are alive or dead.
The decision to release the
record. White said, was made
because the U.S. government
had been unable in five months
of diplomatic inquiries to pry
any information* out of Moscow.
He denied speculation that the
recording was made public in an
effort to influence possible nego
tiations with Russia this year on
the status of Berlin and other
cold war problems.
Few officials would deny,
however, that the tape recording
has significance far greater than
the light which the State Depart
ment says it throws on the de
struction of the Air Force trans
port.
Soviet Leader
Blasts Senator
MOSCOW yP) Soviet Pre
mier Nikita Khrushchev says
some of U.S. Sen. Hubert Hum
phrey's (D-Minn) reports about
their eight-hour interview were
fairy tales. He practically called
the senator a liar.
The text of his address to the
final session of the Communist
party congress as published yes
terday revealed a scorching at
tack on Humphrey.
Khrushchev denied he gave the
Minnesota Democrat secrets to
take back to President Eisenhow
er. He called it unthinkable that
he would talk confidentially with
Humphrey about relations "with
our best friends, the leading peo
ple in the Communist party of
China.”
Humphrey had been quoted in
the United States as saying
Khrushchev, though reluctant to
discuss China, referred to the sys
tem of communes as old-fashioned
and reactionary, based upon the
doctrine: To each according to his
needs, from each according to his
ability.
Senate Overshoots
Ike's Budget Again
WASHINGTON yP)— I The Sen
ate last night overshot President
Eisenhowers budget recommen
dations by voting for a federal
aid airport program costing 465
million dollars.
The vote was 63-22.
Eisenhower had urged that the
federal grants, which have to be
matched by the states, be limited
to 200 million dollars over the
next four years.
Every Republican effort to cut
the total of the airport bill was
rejected.
Former U.S. Navy Pilot
Denies Part in Plot
HAVANA (/P) —A former U.S.
Navy pilot denied yesterday he
had come to Cuba to kill Fidel
Castro. Police claim Alan Robert
Nye confessed plotting to assassi
nate the rebel leader for $lOO,OOO.
Tn an interview at the suburban
military headquarters in Camp
Libertad, the 31j-year-old flier
from Whiting, Ind., said:
"I have not signed any confes
sion. I did not go to the Sierra
in the mountain?
Maestra (the rebel headquarters
in the mountains) to kill Fidel
Castro.”
He added he had "full faith and
full confidence in the justice of
Cuba.” He said he had not yet
appointed a lawyer. I
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
PUT IN A GOOD WORD AND MAKE *25
We’re paying $25 each for the hundreds of Think
lish words judged best! Thinklish is easy: it’s new
words from two words—like those on this page.
English: INSECT-COUNTER
TWnkftibi PESTIWATOR
JACK BONANNO, U. OF SAX FRANCISCO
English: MAN WHO STEALS FROM
THE RICH AND GIVES TO THE POOR
mjCKY]
\sißixy
[-vam.naov
C. tGARETTES
<H>
English: FAKE Frog
Thmktisht SHAMPHIBJAM
ftSGY ARROWSHITH, U. OF S. CAROUNA
Thinklish translation: To
smuggle loot, , this fellow dons his
plunderwear. For street fighting, he
wears a rumblesuit. He totes his
burglar tools in thuggage. The only
honest thing about him is the Luckies
in his pocket. (Like law-abiding folk,
he enjoys the honest taste of fine
tobacco!) In the old days, he’d be
called a robbin’ hood. Today, this
churlish but altruistic chap is a
(good -{- hoodlum) goodlum!
Get the genuine article ,
Get the honest
of a LUCKY STRIKE
jhmkidqf is t*r middle name:
Dulles, deGaulle Are
Agreed on Germany
PARIS f/P) Secretary of
;S ta t e John Foster Dulles!
[found general agreement in
talks with France's leaders!
[yesterday on future moves'
iconeerning Germany.
i Dulles had meetings with Presi
dent Charles de Gaulle and For
eign Minister Maurice Cmive de
Murville to round out the Western
Big Three consultations he opened
on London Wednesday.
Now comes ihe clima x—a
conference wifh West German
Chancellor K o n rad Adenauer
and his ministers—in probing
Allied opinion about the best
wavs to aporo3ch a new parley
with ihe Soviet Union bn the
German question,
Dulles will flv to Bonn to
day, where West German parties
are squabbling openlv about West
ern no! icy.
Spokesmen for Dulles and ihe
French Foreian Office released
only meaaer bits about the talks
here, Both confirmed however,
that the Berlin situation and
German unification were the
main items discussed.
Both sides eirmhasired that
[Dulles and the French lender c
Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mount
Vernon, New York. Enclose your name, address,
college or university, and class.
stood firmly behind previous deci
jsions on the nerd to keep open
[Western routes into Berlin and
jnot to accept any unilateral action
jby the Soviet Union to upset the
'four-power control of the city.
Mining Laws Scored
; By State Mine Official
j HARRISBURG (/V) Mines
Secretary Joseph T. Kennedy yes-
Iterday complained that Pennsyl
vania's coal mining laws were
antiquated and called on the
[Legislature for quick changes to
javetl disasters.
Repairs |
Car Radios Television
Phonographs | Radios
television
service jtk
center '
State College TV
232 S. Allen" St.
English: VALISE FOR A TRUMPET
Thinklhh: TOOTCASE
JOYCE BASCH. PENN. STATE
llish! DIVORCE PROC« O,NOS
English: REFORM SCHOOL CLASS
TbinWiitii BIRATTftI
PHUU3 DOBBINS* U. Of WASHINGTON
taste
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