FRIDAY. FEBRUARY Ike Ra Of Am ACAPULCO, terday he will al halfway in solvii U.S.-Mexican bon “We want it 1 [ /lexico (IP) —President Eisenhower said yes ways meet neighboring Mexico more than g problems because he never wants the ier defended by guns, o be guarded by the friendship that lives Board O Schools As Fire HARRISBURG {R Industrial Board j jected time extensic officials of two public schools and buildings closed im fire hazards The board also oildercd second floor classrooms i i six other schools closed off because they were found unsafe from fire dan ger. Ordered closed after appeals heard by the board last week were the Boswell School in Som erset County and Myerstown Ele mentary School in Lebanon Coun ty. William L. Batt Jr., labor and industry secretary and board chairman, said: "We have not found anyone who is filling to risk the lives and safety of children in order to avoid spending ■ the money necessary to make the improve ments in our schools." Lawrence Asks Tight Laws To Curb Speed Violations HARRISBURG <2P) Gov. Lavvrence—memories of a family highway tragedy still with him— yesterday proposed get-tough leg islation to curb speeding on Penn sylvania highways. Lawrence’s ready smile faded as he told newsmen speed laws "must be tightened, up” to make auto license suspension manda tory for the first speeding viola tion. Highway safety has been a sub ject close to Lawrence’s heart since he lost two teenage sons in an automobile accident during World War 11. The governor said legislation is now being drafted to pattern the commonwealth’s speed laws close ly after the Connecticut system and remove the present regulation calling for a warning for a first violation. In Connecticut a motorist auto matically loses his license for 30 days after the first speeding vio lation, 60 days for the second vio- 20. 1959 ssures Mexicans irican Friendship within the hearts of your people and ours,” he said. Eisenhower reaffirmed Mexi can-American friendship'as he arrived in this palm-ringed Pa cific vacation resort for two days of good-will talks with Mexico's President Adolfo Lo pez Mateos. ‘ In welcoming him at the city’s gaily decorated airport, the smil ing 48-year-old Mexican chief ex ecutive said relations between the two nations are truly satisfactory. Throngs of cheering, flag-wav ing Mexicans, estimated at 30,000, gave Eisenhower such a rousing reception that they tied up the city streets in a gigantic traffic jam. ders :losed anger ’)—The State esterday re n appeals by Pennsylvania ordered the mediately as Throe hours after he flew in aboard the White House plane Columbine 111 from an over night stop at the Bergstrom Air Force Base. Austin. Tex.. Eisen hower sailed off into the blue waters of Acapulco Bay for talks with Lopez Mateos aboard the while yacht Sotavento. There had been advance indi cations that Communists and Red sympathizers might attempt to embarrass Eisenhower. But if they had any such intention, the Mexi can police seemed to have quash ed it completely. lalion and indefinitely for the third. Under the system no restricted licenses are issued after violations that would, for example, allow a motorist to use his car in his job. “The carnage on the road has to stop.” Lawrence asserted. "There has been too much cod dling.” Vl M I , YVT , l M rTVTVTYTT , » 4 TT*l M i‘TTVTTT , t ,, rT' Matrix Table Tickets by invitation Available at the HUB Desk until 5 P.M. Today THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Group Asks income Tax Ban Lifted HARRISBURG (/P) —A minor ity on the Constitutional Revision Commission has decided to sub mit a report recommending that the state constitution's prohibition against a graduated income tax be lifted, a commission member said yesterday. The House Democratic leader ship was sounding out Republican sentiment for using the minority report as the basis for a new leg islative test on the income tax. Miss Genevieve Blatt, - internal affairs secretary, said she has written a minority report giving the views of herself, Mayor Rich ardson Dilworth of Philadelphia and Mrs. Robert L. McGeehan, legislative chairman of the League of Women Voters, that the consti tution should be changed to per mit graduated taxes. Rep. Stephen McCann, House Democratic leader, said the com mission’s proposals—both minor ity and majority—would be laid before legislative leaders of both parties at a meeting here March 1. McCann said he has proposed to Rep. Albert W. Johnson, House GOP floor leader, that they joint ly sponsor the package of about 30 bills to be drawn from the com missions’s recommendations. Asked whether he might join in sponsoring a graduated income tax amendment, however, John son told a newsman: “That I won't know until I discuss it with the Republican caucus.” McCann would not say whether the Democratic majority in the House would push the tax amend ment if Republicans refuse to put their names to the bilL For Expert Tailoring See C.W. HARDY, Tailor 222 W. Beaver Avenue :ollar style OW Glen icloth shirt with the college man style. The collar irse), is a shorter, model. The fine you throughout \rm days ahead. There are trim checks in many >t combinations, white, of course. $4.00 up. hion Heart Doctor Asks Intensified Research WASHINGTON (/P) —Ultimate decisive victory over heart disease, including large-scale prevention, is possible if re search is highly accelerated and intensified, Dr. Howard Sprague, a Boston heart specialist, said yesterday. From the same platform where Dr. Sprague made this prediction, Rep. John E. Fogarty (D.-R.1.) accused the Eisenhower administration and its Budget Bureau on making cutbacks in medical research appropriations requests and of misleading the public as to the pace of medical research. Fogarty said current budget requests for medical research are 12 to 13 million dollars less than the administration sought a year ago. He said the cut back includes a lwo-million dollar drop in funds for heart disease research. He and Dr. Sprague spoke at a symposium where some of the nation’s top heart doctors gave a report to the nation on advances made in the last decade in treat ment and diagnosis of -heart dis ease. The theme developed was that new and better surgical and med ical treatment and diagnostic methods as well as advances towards prevention can be ex pected, provided continuous and generous support is given for heart research. The billlon-dollar spenders are after you again! Lying in wait for you and other taxpayers is an unnecessary expense of ten billion dollars. It’s being set up by the most expert big spenders of your money—the lobbyists and pres sure groups who promote federal "public power.” This ten billion dollars is in addition to five and a half billion already spent for federal gov ernment “public power”—all collected from you and Qther taxpayers. And it's all so unnecessary! Because Amer ica’s many independent electric light and power companies are ready and able to supply the na tion’s electricity needs— without your tax money. What can you do about it? Plenty! Spread the word among your friends and neighbors. As soon as enough people know they are paying needlessly for federal government "public power,” they will stop it. PI WEST PENN POWER Jet, Airliner Nearly Crash . CHARLOTTE. N.C. (JP) —A Cap ital Airlines plane carrying 37 persons almost collided with a big military jet bomber near here yesterday. Passengers were shaken up when the propjet dived 600 feet to avoid the six-engine 847 bomber, but no one was hurt. Robert Spink, pilot of the com mercial plane, said upon landing in Washington that the near miss occurred 30 miles northeast of [Charlotte at 9:55 a.m. Dynamite Cap injures 7 KILLEEN, Tex. (A*) Seven students in an elementary school were wounded yesterday when a dynamite cap used in a science demonstration exploded. Doctors transferred two of the students to the nearby Ft. Hood Army Hos pital for further care after initial treatment at the Killeen Clinic. PAGE THREE