PAGE rwo Blast Kills Six; Bomber Dies HOUSTON, Tex. (.I*, A man tossed a suitcase of ex plosives on a school playground yesterday and killed three children, himself and two other adults. Police believed one of the dead was the bomber's son. r llie explosion sent at least 19 children and the school Governor Asks Butler Resign From Position H\RRISBURG Gh— Gov. Law r-'nre indicated yesterday! th ii Democratic national chair man Paul Butler should resign. ‘ A bn* element of the Demo rr Ui< paity is dissatisfied with him.’’ said Lawrence, an nifluen tul member of the Democratic National Committee The committee meets in Wash-j ington, D C , today. "If I weie national chairman; and had all that discord, I would i.‘sign." Lawience told his week ly news conference. But Lawrence declined to issue a flat call for Butler's resigna tion "I can only say what I would] do if I were chairman.’’ | Lawrence said he didn’t know of: any movement to oust Butler at the meeting. j However, he added, he could be voted out of office “simply by a majority vote.” Lawrence and Butler have been at political odds since 1954 when the governor backed the late James Finnegan, former Philadel phia Democratic chairman, for paity chairman. Butler criticized Lawrence over the weekend for what Butler termed an alliance with southern Democrats. Lawrence replied that Butler won the chairmanship at New Orleans in 1954 for making an agreement with the southern wing of the party not to inject the segregation issue into national party politics. Washington Welcomes Mr. K (Continued from page one) scoring of differences and points of abrasion. It sounded a bit patronizing when Khrushchev predicted that U.S. scientists will get a rocket to the moon, too, as the Russians claim to have done over the weekend. “The Soviet pennant, as an old resident of the moon,’’ he said, “will welcome your pennant and the\ will live there together in peace and friendship as we both should live together on the earth in peace and friendship, as should live in peace and friendship all peoples who inhabit our common mother earth who so generously gives us her gifts.” Eleven times in Iris 709-word airpoit talk, the Soviet Premier spoke of peace. He was still on that theme when he went to the White House lor seciet confeiences with Eisenhower only three horn's af ter his landing. ’ Perhaps with current Com - munisl menaces to Laos and In dia in mind, the President told Khrushchev this about the Capparelli's Tavern “the only italian restaurant in the world that features . German Hamburgers” # PIZZA * SPAGHETTI and MEAT BALLS • YOUR FAVORITE LEGAL BEVERAGES On the Corner of PUGH St. and BEAVER Ave. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA principal to hospitals "That is the bomber,” declared Mis* Pat Johnson, a teacher, when police showed her a photo graph of Paul Harold Orgeron. 49, a tile contiactor in suburban South Houston. Police Chief Carl Shuptrine said posime identification of Orgeron as the bomber was established through fingerprints takpn from a hand found a block from the school. The Poe Elementary School explosion rocked a 3-acre area in a fashionable residential sec tion near Rice Institute. The principal, Mrs. R. E. Doty,, 64, said a man with a suitcase and a 7-year-o!d boy came to her office yesterday morning. The man sought to enroll the boy in the second grade, “I told him he would have to register him first,” the principal said. “He walked out and a few minutes later I got a report of a 'suspicious man on the school grounds.” I In the meantime, the man • registered the boy in the achool as Dusty Orgeron. I The principal said she and ! school custodian James Mont gomery, 58, talked with the man. “Theie were three groups of childien on the playground at the time, with their teachers,” said Mrs Doty. “I tried to tell him he would have to leave, but he told me: ‘The police can’t do anything to me.”’ The next moment, she said, the explosion erupted. “ Ml I could see was the chil dren.” she said “They were cry ing ” The dead included a boy who police said was Dusty Orgeron, two other children, a teacher, Montgomery, the custodian, and Orgeron. American people: "I assure you that they have no ill will to ward any other people, that NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV they covet no territory, no ad ditional power. Nor do they seek to interfere in the inier- Congress Breaks For Vacation WASHINGTON (TP) A bat tle-weary Congress broke for home yesterday a scant six hours before the arrival of Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev. By adjourning its 8-month ses sion, Congress avoided a possible embarrassing dilema over wheth er to invite the Soviet leader to address it. The end of this longest session in eight years came at 6:24 a.m. At that time, the Senate had been working for nearly 21 and a half hours and the House had been sit ting off and on for almost 18 and a half hours. Before scattering for home un til next January, Congress took these major actions: 1. Voted to extend the life of the Civil Rights Commission for two years beyond Nov. 8 and to i provide $500,000 in funds to carry lon its work. 2. Appropriated $3,225,815,000 for foreign aid during this fiscal jyear $704,182,000 less than President Eisenhower originally I asked. In the final hours, the Senate planted the seeds of what prom ises to be a searing battle over! broad civil rights legislation at I the next session starting Jan. 6. Senators seeking such legislation won an understanding from Dem ocratic and Republican party leaders that a showdown fight on the issue will be waged starting about mid-February. Cool Silence— (Continued from page one) While Eisenhower spoke Khru shchev began playing with his black homburg hat, gently wav ing it back and forth .Then he used it as a sunshade for his bald head. He held it a few inches above his head like an umbrella, raising it, then lowering it. Afterward as the two men rode side by side in an open limousine, Khrushchev repeatedly waved his 'homburg. nal affairs of any other nation." Eisenhower said he trusted “that a full and frank exchange of views on many subjects may contribute to better understand ing, on both sides, of unresolved international questions." So. he said, it was in the spirit of workuig toward a common goal of a just, universal and en during peace that he welcomed Khrushchev to Washington and the United States. $ AThHtCN^v^-U^TTn' ■/ ST-ATI. CbtKCi' • V U( 7 ; • ■ o*|N r-'DAW *ib^Y*noNSx... s to:? »s\ ‘ $ '■ ... SuN 04*5*11 TO ? Senate Starts Cut Of Lawrence Budget HARRISBURG (TP)—Senate Republicans yesterday began the task of trimming upward of 60 million dollars from Gov. Lawrence’s proposed $1 billion budget. But after five hours of secret session the lawmakers were still far from agreement on what appropriations should be trimmed or eliminated. The 28-member majority finally called it a day and agreed on a newi try today. | GOP leaders have estimated that between $56 and $63 million should be slashed from the gov ernor’s program before they will provide the necessary votes for final approval. Sen. Robert D. Fleming (D- Allegheny), caucus chairman said the caucus was heai'ing the recommendations of a special GOP subcommittee named to study the budget and find means of cutting it. Ii was reported unofficially by sources close to the caucus that the GOP had come no where near finding half of the fuqds it wants to cut. though near the middle point on the budget. The source said the GOP was discussing plans to amend the bill to add $2B millions for increased school subsidies, to be available Collegian Senior Board (Business Staff only) VERY IMPORTANT MEETING TONIGHT 8:30 P.M.-CARNEGIE Penn State Football on WMAJ Tune in Saturday at 3:25 for State-Missouri broadcast. Pre-game warmup at 3 p.m, Also listen for these: V.M.I. 1:25, Sept. 26 Colgate 1:25, Oct. 3 Army 1:25, Oct. 10 Boston U. 1:25. Oct. 17 Illinois 1:25. Oct. 24 West Virginia 1:25, Oct. 31 Syracuse 1:25, Nov. 7 Holy Cross 1:25, Nov. 14 Pittsburgh 1:25, Nov. 21 WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 16, 1959 only if present tax equalization board assessments were contin ued, instead of putting into effect a new reassessment. In other action the Senate again failed to consider three tax proposals, all part of Gov. Law rence’s tax program, which would bring in $l9 million. The mea sures are in position for final pas sage, but have been hanging fire for weeks. They include measures doubl ing the 4-mill tax on bank shares; extending the 8-mill public util ity gioss receipts tax to gas com panies, and extending the hotel occupancy tax from 3 and a half to 4 per cent. In Japan it is considered im polite to hand a tip directly ta your bellhop or waitress. You are supposed to enclose the tip in an envelope. SCAPEGO 0* tto ttont $? DAPHNE DU UAWE* iftrrhg BETTE DAVIS Oi fli Csmliii FEATURE 1:46, 3:43, 5:40, 7:37, 9:34 . . AIR CONDITIONED *CATHAUM NOW 1:10, 2:48. 4:26, 6:04. 7:42. 9:30 A Story of Lost Innocence "blue denim" U/ ; fl^lassgsa ★NITTANY NOW-DOORS OPEN 2 P.M. Feat. 2:15, 4:06, 5:57, 7:48, 9:30 The film without false modesty! ' v dXuWKNCE’S CORTROVKSttL' LADY ‘ ttSTW,a * CHATTERLEY’S miiK wmm immir
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers