PAGE TWO Eisenhower Proposes Atomic Research Unit NEW YORK tiP)—President Eisenhower last night pro posed construction of a $lOO-million atomic research unit to help preserve America's freedom in the nuclear age. The President announced he will ask Congress to author ize the huge project—a mach Senate Ends Hearings On Strauss WASHINGTON //f1 Senate hearings on Lewis L. Strauss', nomination to be secretary of commerce ended yesterday after 16 day, of turbulent testimony. The Senate Commerce Commit tee will vote behind closed doors ne'ct Tuesday on confirmation or rejection of Strauss' appointment to the Cabinct post. Chairman Warren G. Magnuson (D-Wash t said he hoped the rec ommendation: of both majority and minority groups would be ready for the Senate late neat week. The committee's hearings end-, ed amid confusion, with police; coming on the run to eject a; woman spectator. Just before the final gavel fell Strauss was trying to finish a statement listing a group of scien tists who have praised his services and Sen. Strom Thurmond (13-SC)' was trying to read a statement endorsing Strauss. In the back of the room Agnes. Waters, a familiar figure at con gressional hearings, shouted a de mand that she be given a chance to present a statement opposing Strauss. As Magnuson banged his gavel, she creamed that Strauss had fi nanced the Russian Revolution. Police hustled her out of the building. Thurmond finally put his state ment in the record without read ing it In it he said he had con cluded that Strauss had refitted the charges against him. Thutmond added that his con science dictated that he should vote for Senate confirmation of Stratm.s . nomination, formally sub mitted by President Eisenhowe last Jan 17 Strauss has beer serving a., secretary under an ap pointmertt made while Congres was in recess. Housing Bill Released For Debate in House WASHINGTON (4 3 i—The Hous Rules Committee turned loose $2.1 billion housing bill yester day. Debate will begin in tl Hothe next Tuesday. A sharp argument is likely n whether to include money fi low-lent nubile housing. The bill had not been dea-• locked more than a month with; the committee by a combinatic of Republican and Southern Den ocrats. ne two miles long, the largest of its kind ever to be built. Con struction would take six years. Eisenhower outlined the build ing plan at a science symposium dinner sponsored by the National, Academy of Sciences, the Amer- can Assn. for the Advancement of Science, and the Alfred P.' Sloan Foundation. In a prepared speech, the president said: "Our immediate task—America's first responsi bility—is to see that freedom is not lost through ignorance, complacency, or lack of vigi lance." He said science and technology are the cornerstone of American security and the nation's p!ogram for a just peace. - For the government to ne glect this fact would be folly," Eisenhower asserted. The President told his dinner audience at the Waldorf-As toria Hotel that plans for con struction of the big atomic re search unit were recommended to him by his Science Advisory Committee. He called for construction of a huge new electron linear acceler ator. The project has been pro posed by Stanford University and the plans are to construct the accelerator there. Such acc e 1 erators—or atom smashers are one of the main tools of physicists who explore the subatomic universe. The more precise tools are beams of high-energy particles required to probe the structure of the tiniest particles of matter. Such high-energy particles are produced in giant accelerators. The Eisenhower program calls for construction of what is known as a linear accelerator. The larg est now operating is a 220-foot tube located at Stanford. The new proposal is for a two mile-long accelerator tong Asks Time For Dillon Probe WASHINGTON lA') The son f the late Huey P. Long offered - •1 , -3terdav to take on the whole '-nate, just as his father used -I do. The son. Sen. Russell B. Long D-La.), is fit - 41ring against eon 'rmation of C. Douglas Dillon as 'o. 2 man at the State Depart ,.nt. If he isn't given the necessary • - nom to completo his investigation " Dillon. Long threatened venter -v: "I shall feel compelled to loge in delihrrate, dilatory tac ^s tr, slow down this steam -01er." "If a junior Senator from Lou iana lacks the courage to fight -ir his convictions." he told a iarsely attended session, "he did -at get it from his father or his lather." Prompt Repair Service *Car Radios *Portables *Table Radios *Record Players *TVs Come hear Zenith or RCA 19 Stereo at : WJAC-TV * 8 . 'FRIDAY CM sports-Weath• 4:311 Bold Journey I:N Highw■y Pa trol 7:10 Polties 1 Talks i t:00 finery Queen F 11:1141 IA Pqnsd t i:3O Silent Sere. FlO :041 Bob Hope 11:14 Newt-Sports i 11 :IS Movie. ' Jelin ! iIY O'Clock" WJAC-TV 4. 6 WFBG-TV to 10 SATURDA 1:30 Penn State Glee Club ' 2:01 Baseball. Pi rates vs Culn 4:10 Armchair Ad venture 9:00 Cisco KM 1:10 Lone Rannor 1:00 Union Pacific II:30 Command Performance 1:00 Siena, Fiction 1:10 People Are Funny 1:00 Perry Como 9:00 Black Saddle 9:20 Cinueron City 10:10 D.A.'s Man 11:00 State Trooper 11:30 Sea Hunt 12:00 News-Snorts ,12:11 Mani*. "The Mumoas" 116111161. 444444 11111•••••••••••1•441 WIEIG-TV la 10 FRIDAY 6:66 Powers Play -6:16 Outdoors 11:U News - Sports -6:46 News TM Bander Patrol 7:26 Tusl+l Annie 5:05 Walt Diane/ -• Teenbstons Territory tan TT Sunset Strip 16:110 Person to Person 1.1:60 News, Wends. 11 :t$ Moyle "Brie lava Uwe L=! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA One Killed In Crash Of Blimp LAKEHURST, N. J. (JP) A Navy blimp returning from an Atlantic patrol in swirling fog early yesterday crashed into a hangar while trying to land. One crewman was killed. Six other crew members were hos pitalized, three of them in critical condition. Others in the crew of 18 officers and men escaped with scratches. The huge ZPG2 airship, 343 feet long, approached the Navy base here on instruments, using radar surveillance, The control tower knew what part of the field the blimp was over but not its altitude. The blimp made one pass but was waved off. On the second try from the southwest, the corrugat ed steel hangar suddenly loomed out of the fog and the darkness. Gunning its motors, the airship tried to clear the roof. It crunched against the hangar,' where several helicopters were stored, at 35 to 40 miles an hour. The engines and the metal gon dola, slung beneath the 150-ton craft, jabbed through the hangar 'and emerged on the inside. The blimp's rubberized neoprene gas bag was torn open and a mil- Ilion cubic feet of helium shot free. Then the empty skin billowed down over the hangar's roof like a shroud. There was no fire. Killed was Lt. j.g. David M. Loyd of Vega, Tex., whose chest and lungs were crushed. Loyd was a reservist on active duty. due for release next month. He and his wife, Marian, lived at Pinehurst Estates in Lakehurst and had two children. The commander of the two year old airship, Lt. j.g. Richard W Sirch of Flushing, N.Y., was still unconscious 10 hours after the crash. He was in critical condi tion at Philadelphia Naval Hos pital with severe lacerations. Jupiter Said Ready for Use CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (EP) —The Army declared its Jupiter intermediate-range , ballistic mis ,sile ready for operational use yesterday after the reliable rock et made a successful 1500-mile The t verful missile roared down the Atlantic range shortly after midnight and the Army an nounced hours later in Washing ton that, it had successfully trav eled the planned distance. The Army said the Jupiter can now be delivered to Air Force troops for operational use. This does not necessarily mean that its weapon system is assembled rand ready for combat firing. It is expected to be assigned to NATO forces in Italy. The Air Force will operate the rocket because of the Defense De partment's assignment of roles and missions, which limits the Army to missiles of less than 500-mile range. KEYSTONE TV W. College at Frazier AD 1.4677 SATURDAY 1:30 Country Style 1:41 &W Wl. White Sox - Yankets 4 :3G CongTessm'n'4 Report 4 :25 Cartoons 6:30 Preakeesa G:00 Dancing Frty 7:00 Leave It To Beaver 7:20 Perry Mason 11:261Wantsd-Thead Or Alive 9:00 Zane Ore, 940 Have than. Will Travel le :00 Cuosmoko 10:50 Flight. drama 11:®0 News-Bvolt' 11:20 Movie "Here Comes the Nevy" Gang Suspected In March Bombing WASHINGTON (JP) Investi gation of the March bombing of a Jewish center M Nashville, Tenn., has turned up evidence pointing to a possible interstate terrorist gang. This word came yesterday from Police Chief Douglas E. Hosse of Nashville, who told a House Ju diciary subcommittee: "The Jew ish center bombing followed a pattern extending all over the southeast part of the country." Hosse recalled what he de scribed as amazingly parallel events in other southeastern cities, occurring about the same time. Sammy's Billiards North on 322 Open Mon.-Thurs. 3 to 12 Fri.-Sat. 12 to 12 Underneath the Victory Diner •••••eleipire 000000000 esibece i:111 e:32 I :SO t:45 8:41 11 :eil Man Oa Morning Show Hernias Devotions _ News Headlines Koran, Show, News 11 Ad ll :15 Classical interlude 12:00 12 :15 12:35 12:31 :Of 1:15 5:0 5:05 LP's and Show Tones 6:55 5:36 6:l0 0:15 5:34 _ Patten Lewis Jr LP's and Show Tunes Pablls guars Program News WLIF2II Fragrant.' News , Grooroloil News -- Grogram', Snorts News and Smuts 11:115 11:09 11:18 11:a 12:1111 WJAC-TV • 6 SUNDAY 1130 Oral Roberts 2:00 Baseball. Pi rates vs Cubs 4:30 Briefing See. 6.00 RaleidoseoPe 6:00 Meet - Press 6:30 Casey Jones 7:06 Midwestern Hayekle T:10 Steve Allen WFBG•TV • 10 SUNDAY 12.46 BaseWl. White Sox-Senators 2:20 Movie. To be *need. 4:30 Life of Tri umph 6:00 race the Ne.• tion I 5:20 G-Ps Collet* i Bows 6:00 Bader Father 6:30 ZOth Center 7 7:00 Lassie 7:16 Maverick ! WMAJ Summer whites and spectator styles 0 / /' Now only $11.95-$12.93 )ft fief Roam. Don't Miss Our Mannequin Shoes is fashion ... and fashion costs no more FRIDAY, MAY 15. 1959 Money Bill Sent to Ike After Passage in Senate WASHINGTON UP) The Sen ate sent to the White House last night a money bill carrying $l5O million of the $225 million Presi dent Eisenhower asked for loans to underdeveloped nations abroad. Passage came after the Senate turned back an effort by Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La) to renew a fight with the House over Ar my and Marine Corps manpower levels. Q`~~~j'i Now 1:54, 3:46, 5:38, 7:30, 8:30 n00110PW,r,,„,,L OM WELIM I ° -I Ura l BRAM DIWAIN WNW 20. mniguomis•opE. rpolo& PIM. NM soma *NITTANY NOW - DOORS OPEN 6 P.M. "WHY DOES THIS BEAUTIFUL FRENCH GIRL WANT HER BABY BORN IN PUBLIC, ::":: 'th e t_e %a.1.... ge of (...i . A . .. ,. .....; . : 7 ;1 4 ,,,,..'4 Dr. Laurent" ' .,. S'''''' 4.y, "Explosive" t *:,...1 w : 1 , —Post
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers