WEDNESDAY, OCIUtitR 14, 1959 Van Doren lke Bre II: ks Ground •,, 'Will A ,p, pear For New Leh 1....,rary WASHINGTON (iP)—The chief of President Eisenhower's! In Probe i ABILENE, Kan. vP)—President Eisenhower took a shiny steel strike inquiry board said yesterday it would be " a NEW YORK (iP) —Charles Van 'stainless steel spade, stuck it into the rich Kansas earth, and Doren's lawyer said the officially broke ground yesterday for a library in his honor. miracle of the very first order" if a strike settlement can be , big-money television winner will, , Abilene's most famous son spurned doing the job the 9 achieved this week. I accept a subpoena to testify at' • la congressional probe of fixed, easy way- In evident discouragement, Dr. George W. Taylor, chair- ,quiz shows ' Part of the ground had been dug up in advance, to make ,man of the fact-finding panel ex-, The lawyer, Carl 3. Rubino. de-' plormg the 91-day steel strike, flied Van Doren has been dodaina 'the presidential chore easier. ________ . . - - --- indicated there was little hope ° l ithe subpoena and notified federal ( , Eisenhower preferred to do his • averting a Taft-Hartley law in - lauthorities he would sct up a date 'own digging junction forcing 500,000 steel-:with his client for today. light Plans , It was quite a day in Abilene workers back to the mills for an, "He could not evade lo a su poena' 80-day cooling-off period. —bands, schools out, children • f • an,, he did not know had been. chattering everywhere, local po- ! For Satellite Eisenhower set Friday as the,issued. If the committee wants to: !deadline for the panel's report.jserve him. I'll arrange it. I'm liticians, a speech by Eisen- When Ihe gets it, the President making no secret of the fact that hower in which he stressed once ' 'may instruct the attorney general;Charles Van Doren knew nothing, more the need for international m a d to seek a federal court injunction about the subpoena. He first knew e Public ending the walkout for 80 days about it Monday night. He didn't cooperation. while mediation efforts go for-, know one was issued and he Or, in Eisenhower's words: "The' LANGLEY RESEARCH CEN ward. - ;hasn't been avoiding one," Ru-!world must learn to work togeth- ITER, Va. (.41 —The first Amer- Taylor told newsmen that the I bino added. i •er, or finally it will not work at . panel is very distressed that it The subpoena was issued last , ~ fican to vault into space aboard a :all. still has not been able to get ,Friday. Monday, Rep. Oren Har- Mercury• satellite will circle the „ ! the issues in the dispute de- ris ( D-Ark.), chairman of a Eisenhower did his digging only . earth three times at an altitude fined after two days of testi- :House subcommittee conducting;a block from the old Eisenhower, , of 100 miles if the flight plan . mony. ;the TV probe, accused Van Doren home—anddirectly across the, • The chairman said mediators , of evading it. 'street from the Eisenhower Mu- J works out. (cannot work effectively until the' The House inquiry now is in re-Iseurn.i The flight plan for the pioneer (issues are etched out. jcess until Nov. 2 and the sub- 1 Here a three-million-dollar li- !man-in-space voyage was made He chided both sides for not; poena presumably will call for brary will be constructed, to !public ye , terday at this research clarifying the issues. Van Doren's appearance then, ; house Eisenhower's papers and :center of the National Aeronau "They have not been bar- 1 Van Doren, a Columbia Univer-' other documents of his adminis- :tics and Space Administration. gaining—at least they haven't : sity English instructor, dropped! tration. One set of documents i The flight itself is not expected been bargaining like those of from sight last week when the, already is earmarked for the :' for about two years. us long in this field have known (subcommittee first sought his tes-j library—the papers of the late , The specialists who plotted the it," Taylor said. Itimony at the Washington inquiry.' Secretary of State John Foster ' flight plan expect the Mercury After recessing the hearing for ; In Washington, Ha r r iis chal-' Dulles. capsule to stay aloft for 4L2 hours a brief news conference, Taylorllenged Rubino's statement This was homecoming that for El-;before coming down in the At reconvened the panel with atlVan Doren had not been ev adi n g'senhower—and everything had al lantic Ocean off the Bahama Is least two more hours of testi-1a subpoena. I lands, not far from the launch many-taking ahead of it last' He said the committee last Sat-inastolgic touch. mg site at Cape Canaieral, Fla. night. I urday advised - the attorney that, One sign read: "Welcome home ! On its three passes over the Only union witnesses have ap-,a subpoena had been issued. ; Mr. President. Happy birthday. On at a 18,000-mile-an-hoer peared so far. Industry spokes-j He pointed out that the com-!A. timely reminder that the Pres ;clip. the manned satellite would men are expected to get their i mitte sent Van Doren a telegramlident will become 69 Wednesday 'cross South Alma, Australia and turn today. !last Wednesday inviting him to; Eisenhower's speech painted .a a.! nan.o„, strip of the southern The Steelworkers Union wasiappear and that although it had picture of today's world as chilly United States. trying on its own to bring about been widely publicized, the corn-las the weather—in the 40s, with' last-ditch bargaining in hope ofimittee had received no reply. )'a brisk wind blowing. ending the steel strike before the,------ - ----- No Word Given government moves in court to do, c • so. David J. McDonald, presi- I • 3 tit ecu y Council Deadlock ,:On U.S.. Prisoners dent of the striking Steelwork- 1 ~,,,. , , , WASHINGTON tiP) A State the decision-making heads of 1 ers Union, tried openly to get (Remains Unbroken in UN , Department spokesman sa i d ' the country's four biggest steel yesterday the department has no companies into immediate, information whatever on a 're brass-tacks bargaining, ported effort of Soviet Premier "I challenge these gentlemen to Nikita Khrushchev to obtain the appear, sit down with us, and do ( release of five American prison the job," he said, ers in Red China. A London dispatch Monday said secret diplomatic informa jtion from Peiping, following Khrushchev's recent visit there, indicated he had raised the mat ter of the Americans with Com munist China's leader Mao Le 'Ling. No Settlement Seen By Board Reuther Is Re-Elected UAW Head ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (iP) The United Auto Workers ,rester clay raised basic dues of the un ion's 1,200,000 members $2 a month and then re-elected Walter P. Reuther president. Ellective Jan. 1, dues will go up from $3 to $5 a month—but members will no longer pay a .pecial strike assessment of $1 a month. The new dues rate earmarks $1 25 for the strike fund to build it up to $3O million by 1961 nego tiations in the auto industry. The fund now has less than $l5 mil lion The convention's 2500 delegates authorized the dues increase by a standing vote which Reuther said showed 80 per cent in favor of the increase. A demand for a roll-call vote on dues was defeated. Reuther rule dthat less than 500 delegates wanted a roll . call and the rules matured at least 775. Reuther's election by acclama- ; lion was declared unanimous aft er secretary-treasurer Emil Ma rey, who also was nominated for president, declined to run. The 52-year-old militant Red titer first was elected president of the 'UAW here in 1946. His re election set off a big demonstra tion in the Convention Hall. Before taking up the dues ques tion, the convention rejected a minority group's effort to have a cities increase as well as election of top officers submitted to a referendum vote of rank-and-file members. Economy May Hit Half-Trillion Mark WASHINGTON VP) The United States stands at the threshold of a half-trillion-dol lar economy, a Republican study committee said yester day. The gross national product now stands at about $485 billion and could reach the half-trillion mark Within the next few years. With wise private and pul4 policies, it added, the nation'. gross national product of good. and services could reach $9OO bil lion annually by 1976, with sus tamed growth in the vicintiy o 4 per cent a year. The Committee on Program and Progress , of the GOP Na tional Committee made its fore cast in the last five reports on long-range party goals. _ _ Ask for Penn Slate Laundry and Cleaners at the Student Agency • WATTS • NITTANY 20 0 WARNOCK • REDIFER Included in recommendations of its task force of economic oppor-1 tunity and progress were a broad manufacturer's sales tax to re-i existing selective excises,, and reductions in individual and! corporation income taxes—modest at first but substantial later. Pub lic debt reduction would come! first. The committee favored more freedom for' farmers, an ex• panded soil bank program retir ing more acreage from crop production, and gradual resort to price supports that would move basic crops into markets instead of storage. The committee said the tax sys tem should help promote steady growth of the economy., It as serted certain features of the present system are clearly inequit -1 economic growth, and still others !limit revenue capacity. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. Prestige was the big factor in' ',ll 3 )—The United Nations fail-!the bitterly contested race for a! two-year seat on the 11-nation ed yesterday to break the major council. ! Polish-Turkish deadlock for a ! In the current contest the Unit-. ed States has campaigned for' seat on the Security Council.:T urkey, a partner in the NATO Additional balloting was post- alliance. poned until Monday. ; If Poland eventually wins it ' Communist Poland maintainediwill be a blow to U.S. prestige !its edge over Western-backed!and a victory for the Soviet Un- Turkey in 12 ballots in the 82 ion, which has championed the nation Assembly but failed to w i n lPolish candidacy. the required two-thirds majority - • • of 54. , An attempt to start a compro mise switch to Yugoslavia failed to gain any momentum. U. S. Has Nine Satellites Counting Explorer VII WASHINGTON (W) —The suc cessful launching yesterday of Ex plorer VII brings to nine the num ber of American satellites now in orbit, including one that is or biting around the sun. The So viet Union has three still up, also including one that is wheeling around the sun. " Announcing - Table Service for an adtli- tional 25 customers at the . .. where 60,000 customers have enjoyed the most delicious hamburgers in town. Won't you join the' crowd? YE OLDE HAMBURGER SHOPPE Directly Across from Old Malh MY-0-MY we've been hiding! Come find us at the opening of State Col lege's newest lounge. PAGE THREE Have you heard.. that.. You can win a beautiful &luny &Jett tcp (free for nothin') by entering the Nittany Sweater a-week contest. Send a post card with your estimate of the total com bined air and ground yard age gained in Saturday's game to . . . &lan y Sweaters Box 494, State College In case of a tie, the earlier dated post card wins. Last week's winner: Judy Sost man with her estimate of 534 yards. A N D Like if you have the cash and want one of the coolest sweat ers anywhere, see Norm Kahn, "Mondo" Vega, or Gerry Gar- NITTANY SWEATERS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers