PAGE TWO Hawaiian Statehood Bill Signed by Eisenhower WASHINGTON (11')---President Eisenhower yesterday signed the bill offering to Hawaii the statehood it has sought for inane• years is now up to the people of Hawaii to accept statehood the terms and conditions specified by Congress. uncle► Fire Damages Area School LOCK HAVEN ilVr File last night badly damaged the Lock Haven Junior High School. The second-floor auditorium wal hardest hit by flames which de , droyed the stage. Surrounding classtoorns were flooded with wa ter Dr, Wayne C Roy, superintend-1 ent of schools, said he was calling' the state police fire marshal at Montourwille Barracks after it had been determined the fire started in the auditorium of the 3-story brick building. There was no apparent cause, he added No one was in the building except the cleaning force and no one was reported injured. Firemen were able to keep flames from the $1 million cafe teria-gymnasium in the rear of the building. When firemen arrived shortly after 10 p m., they found the building filled with smoke and had to wear air packs to get to the blazing auditorium. No dam age estimate was available im mediately. There is a $2 million insurance policy on the building. Atlas Flight Tests New Nose-Cone CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (P) —A fire-belching Atlas missile sporting a shiny new warhead surged skyward last night on the start of a 15,000 m.p.h flight test through the fringes of space. Atlas, the intercontinental bal listic missile that soon will dou ble in bras as the booster for huge satellites and later for the first man in space, blasted out a triple tail of fire as it climbed through the clouds at 9 p.m. The appearance of the huge white nose-cone seated snugly atop the 80-foot rocket was the feature of the spectacular launch ing, the 22nd in 22 months. It was learned that for the first time an attempt would be made to recover the complete warhead intact to see how it weathered a fiery re-entry from space through the earth's atmosphere. The new cone is radical com pared to the blunt-shaped de vice that usually is on top o Atlas. Dulles' Treatments Over WASHINGTON (al—Secretary of State John Foster Dulles' doc tor:: announced yesterday com pletion of his X-ray treatment for cancer and ordered him to rest and recuperate under their close observation. 60 DAY EUROPEAN TRAVEL STUDY TOUR INCLUDES Airline Transportation 30 Days in Paris tO Hour Course in Culture of Europe Today At Private Accredited University • 30 Day Tour, S Different Itineraries, Including 1'',7611 .gnnized W. !:::xi r '\ . , 4 , 66re /6 am , z, , ,,,;i.,, nw . .sl 175 f Organized Weekends PARIS-FIAKE•EUROPE ASSOCIATION FOR TRAVEL AND STUDY i 10 Egli 4PIA Streit, Now Yak IF, N.Y. I Please send wo riyr flu li pp bream Addruf I . Coy— PARIS lANCE-EUROPE ASSOCIATION FOR TRAVEL AND STUDY IN Ent 49th Street, New York 17, N. Y. By moving fast, they could vote on this question and elect their first state officers by late July. However, a schedule end ing with the official statehood proclamation by the President in mid-September appears more likely. In no event did it appear pos sible for Hawaii to enter the Un ion before the 49-star flag be comes official on July 4. The 50th star, for Hawaii, thus would be added to the flag on July 4, 1960. Immediately after the signing in which the President used nine pens—Eisenhower notified terri torial Gov. William F. Quinn byi cable. He also dispatched a letter duplicating the cable. Quinn has 30 days, if he choose to use them all, to issue his proclamation of elections. The primary can be no less than 60 nor more than 90 days after the proclamation. The general election can be no later than 40 days after the primary. The maximum schedule totals 160 days—more than five months. After that, the election results must be formally certified to the President, who has no fixed time limit on issuance of his proclama tion admitting Hawaii and chang ing the design of the flag. It took Alaska six months to en ter the Union on Jan. 3 after Ei senhower signed its statehood bill. One month was required to can vass the general election votes— including mailed ballots—and cer. tify the results to the President. View on Foreign Aid Hit WASH INGTON (41—Sen. J. Committee, already holding hear-, William Fulbright (D.-Ark.) said ings on a companion bill, mean yesterday the Eisenhower adrnin- while heard a plea for the full istration's approach to foreign $1.6 billion sought for military aid indicates it is "unaware of foreign aid, so that modernization the depth and scope of the Soviet of NATO and other friendly for challenge." ces would not be held up. Fulbright, chairman of the Sen- Fulbright called attention to ate Foreign Relations Committee, President Eisenhower's recent re introduced the new $4 billion for- marks that the foreign aid pro cign aid authorization, at the ad- gram is the same one Congress ministration's request. authorized last year. But he told the Senate he re- "There is no evidence that the serves "my right to support it in administration is now or ever will whole or in part, and to offer be willing to urge the American amendments as may seem appro- people to take in one notch on priate." our belt to deal with a Soviet The House Foreign Affairs challenge which confronts us." LAST DAY STUDENT COUNCIL 9-12 a.m. Vote Now! 1-5 p.m. Business Administration Home Economics . . Education Engineering and Arch . Liberal Arts . . . Chemistry-Physics . . Mineral Industries . • THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Ike Names Lemnitzer Army Head WASHINGTON (A—Gen. Ly man L. Lemnitzer, who became a paratrooper at the age of 51, was tapped by President Eisenhower yesterday to take over as Army chief of staff next July 1. Now 59. Lemnitzer has been vice chief of staff since July 1957. He will succeed Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, who plans to retire when his term expires June 30. The White House said Taylor had asked that he not be reappointed. Lemnitzer was awarded the Legion of Merit for accompany ing Gen. Mark W. Clark on a secret submarine mission to North Africa In 1942. Unlike two years ago when there was a major reshuffling of the Pentagon top command, Ei senhower renominated the other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Air Force Gen. Nathan F. Twin ing was named to a second 2- year term as chairman of the Joint Chiefs. His present term ex pires Aug. 15. Adm. Arleigh A. Burke was nominated to his third term as chief of n a va l operations, to extend until August 1961. Gen, Thomas D. White was se lected for a second term as Air Force chief of staff for the two years beyond next June 30. All four nominations are sub ject to confirmation by the Sen ate. NATO Reaches Decision BON N , Germany UM—After 3 1 / 2 years of negotiations West Germany and six NATO allies have agreed on conditions for stationing NATO troops in Ger many. ELECTIONS Briton Says West Will Pool Strategy OTTAWA (?P)—British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan said yesterday he is sure the Western powers will pool their strategy in the Berlin crisis and present a-firm stand against Soviet threats. He flew in from London for a day of talks with Canada's policy planners before leaving to day for cold war strategy confer ences in Washington with Presi dent Eisenhower and a hospital chat with ailing Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. "I have no doubt that our visits to Otawa and Washing ton will serve to consolidate and confirm the united will of the Western world," Macmillan said, "Only in unity shall we find the strength to combine firm Principles with readiness to ne gotiate." He noted that there are wide differences between East and West on a German settlement. But he asserted there was gen eral acceptance now on both sides that negotiations must take place this summer. Eisenhower said Monday he is agreeable to an East-West summit conference this summer, provided that foreign ministers lay adequate groundwork. Macmillan and Foreign Secre tary Selwyn Lloyd are said to be convinced that a summit meeting must be held in an attempt to avoid shooting over Soviet de mands that the Western powers get out of West Berlin. Macmillan and Lloyd held closed meetings with Prime Min ister John Diefenbaker and his entire Cabinet. Macmillan gave them a fill-in on the exchanges with Khrush chev in Moscow, and later with President Charles de Gaulle of France and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of West Germany. for Expert Tailoring See C. W. HARDY, Tailor 222 W. Beaver Avenue FRATERNITY NEWS LETTERS Letterpress • Offset Commercial Printing In N. COLLZCZ AD 114791 Boucke and HUB cardroom Home Ec Building HUB cardroom Engineering Library HUB cardroom Osmond Md. Building THUSRDAY, MARCH 19, 1959 Oil Import Controls WASHINGTON (A)—President Eisenhower's March 10 order im posing mandatory controls on oil imports came under a fire of crit icism yesterday in the senate. Sen. George .D. Aiken (R.-Vt.) demanded that Eisenhower with draw the order "before irrevoca ble damage shall have been done to our economic and political system." FOR GOOD RESULTS USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS G#0•1444 720 S. Atherton St: r State College OPEN S'TIL 9P.M. DAILY; , . SUNDAYS, 12 'TIL 8 P.M. ;CLOSED MONDAYS RESERVATIONS -CALL 8-0082- _ _f_ *CATHAUM Now 2:07, 3:58, 5:49, 7:40, 9:31 JAMES CAGNEY SHIRLEY JONES "Never Steal Anything Small" *NITTANY Now - Doors Open 6:45 ALEC GUINNESS 'THE HORSE'S MOUTH' FRIDAY & SATURDAY JEFF CHANDLER "AWAY ALL BOATS" George Nader - Julie Adams 111011101 1 / 1 1111011000 0000000 II sees WMAJ 0:31 --------- dtgn On 11:32 ----..—___ Morning Shore 8:30 8:45 —___---.. News Headlines 8:17 11:01 News 11:33 Swap Shop 11:16 11:00 ----..-- Mush at Noon 12:15 12:30 _ Musk Show News and Sports Contort - Local News LP's and Show TURNS 5:31 —Naws 5:35 ---......---,- LP's and Sh ow Tunes 0:00 1:15 Sports Swim! :30 --------- I.P's and Show Tanen 7:00 7:15 LP's and Show Tones 7:45 Labile ihrvira Program 8:01 8:15 WOFM Programs 12:10 _ .--- News oruovologY News droov• SWIM 10:05 11:00 11:10 L/105
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