The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 15, 1959, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY, A
RIL 15, 1959
e Neck Cancer
Possib
May E
WASHING
recent neck pai
Dulles may be
ON (k) Doctors reported yesterday that
s developed by Secretary of State John Foster
ue to a new outbreak of cancer.
-1 authorities said this virtually ruled out the
vould ever return to fulltime direction of the
Some medicl
chance that he I
nation's foreign p.
Acting Secretar
tian Herter has
named as a subst;
at diplomatic tallc
ish, French and
ministers opening
29.
of State Chris
already been
tute for Dulles
. with the Brit
erman foreign
in Paris April
Dulles has been
that he might hi
the cancer which
February in his a.
lie hoped to atten
Big Four meeting
11.
linging to hope
_ht back from
was found in
dominal region.
the follow-up
in Geneva May
A top team of
him another exa
ter Reed Army
day and the Stat
ported afterward
pecialists gave
ination at Wal
ospital yes ter-
Deartment re
" During the
last several days H
has experienced
comfort in the lo
'ecretary Dulles
increasing dis
er neck. •
"X-ray studies suggest the pos
sibility that his i' iseomfort may
be attributable to the presence of
a malignant tum•r in the lower
cervical vertebrae External radi
ation treatment to-the lower neck
began today.
"The condition of the secre
tary's abdomen remains un
changed and further treatment to
the abdomen is not now indi
cated."
The carefully guarded language
of the State Department bulletin
did not say flatly that Dulles had
P new malignant tumor.
d Dulles' Reign
Soviet Jets Buzz
2nd U.S. Transport
BERLIN (~ P ) The East-West
dispute over air access to isolated
Berlin sharpened yesterday with,
disclosure that Soviet jet fighters
have buzzed a second U.S. Air
Force transport plane.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman in
Bonn said that 'on April 3 two
Soviet MIGs conducted very dan
gerous maneuvers in harrassing a
big propeller-driven cargo plane
in one of the three air corridors
linking Berlin with West Ger
many.
The Soviet, fighters flew within
100 feet of the C 97 transport and
flew over it and under it because
it was flying at an altitude of 12,-
000 feet in defiance of Moscow's
warning that Western planes must
stay below 10,000 feet.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
"Long-range programs are important
-fop both men and missiles"
"In a company dedicated to research and development,
a young man's opportunities to learn more— to increase
his technical skills—are almost unlimited," says 31-year
old Harry Lawton, Jr., a General Electric engineer
engaged in the development of inertial guidance and
fire-control systems for ballistic missiles. "And to main
tain America's scientific leadership, we're going to need
all the technical training and skills we can produce.
"An important aspect of my job at General Electric
is the continuing opportunity to learn more. I've been
able to continue my education in the company's Physics
Program for college graduates. And I also have the
advantage of association with top technical experts in
my work. Opportunities like this have helped me real
ize that long-range programs are important —for both
men and missiles."
Harry Lawton Is one of several hundred technical
graduates who are devoting their skills to the develop-
Timing Device
Fails on Rocket
IN GL E WOOD, Calif. (IP) —A ;
faulty timing device dashed Airt
Force hopes yesterday of making!
a sensational aerial catch of a,
capsule from the satellite Dis-'
coverer 11.
But experts still planned to
'eject the capsule later last night
as a test of its various kinds of
equipment. It will fall north of
the area where Hawaii-based
planes were poised to try to
snatch it as it parachutes down.
They called the recovery try a
1000-I shot. And despite the odds,
it looked for a while as though
conditions were ideal. The orbit
was about as good as could be
hoped for—low, nearly circular
and short lived.
FREE
Tutoring Service
for A
engineering students
sponsored by
ETA KAPPA NU
and
_TAU BETA P 1
every Wed. 7-9 p.m.
Room 220 E.E.
—UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT—
• Quiet Study Environment
• Fine Food
• Lodging
Applications now being taken
for Fall Semesters
• Room a Board by semester
Board only—by month or
—by semester
Di g N o ... N n
207 East Park Avenue
—Can AD 8-0890—
ment of 14 government missile projects to which General
Electric is a major contributor. More and more our
scientific progress and our national security depend on
men like this men who bring high qualifications to
their work and who continue their quest for knowledge,
both on and off the job.
General Electric believes that individual initiative
and career growth are essential to America's continued
technological leadership. To this end, the company en
courages all of its employees including more than
30,000 college graduates —to develop to their fullest
capabilities by providing opportunities for increasing
knowledge and working skills.
Phwess Is Cu, Mot imporhant Aoritvi
GENERAL ELECTRIC
PAGE THRE