PAGE TWO Primary Looms For Rockefeller LOS ANGELES (if') --: Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller yester day pin-pointed the New Hampshire primary as his likely target date for deciding whether he'll campaign for the Republican presidential nomination The New York governor Amendments Of Taft-Hartley Go Into Effect WASHINGTON (if't The most conhover.ial feature , ; of the new lahor latr, including strictL - hang on picketing and boycott`, go in to vile( t today. The ,e are amendment, to the 12-year-01(1 Taft-Motley law. In gener3l, they amplify and extend the re , ;trictions on certain labor union activities The anti-corruption features of the new law--those that spell out union member rights and union' operdting standards—already are in ef feet They became operative when President Eisenhower signed the bill on Sept. 14. Beginning today the National Lobo' Relations Board's regional office- in major cities will begin accepting cases under the new 1,11%. These ace the main changes• •Se(ondai y boycott—The old law barred a union in dispute with one employer (torn inducing worker; of a second employer to quit wink to bring pressure on the pilmary employer. The new law bans pressure on the second employer, or on his woikers It extends the ban also to railroads, tnuntcipalitie, - ; and govet nment agencies •Picketing• This limits to 30 days puketing with the object of unionizing M ut kers, Pi ohibited is picketint , where an employer has alteadv hvslully recognized an other union Another provr,o bars picketinc, armed at extor ting money from an employer. Eisenhower Golfs To Relax for Trip AUGUSTA. Ga. PO—President Eisenhower flew to the Southland yesterda% and started a golfing working vacation as a tune-up for a strenuous good-will mission abioad next month. Exclaiming, in delight at ideal Indian summer weather—clear and sunny with the mercury at it—Eisenhower was on the first tee at the Augusta National Golf Club an hour after he arrived from Washington. The President expects to be here a week or 10 days, storing up rest and relaxation before tak ing off Dec. 3 on a 20,000-mile swing to 11 nations on three conti nents lie has v.ork ahead of him, too. on the legtsiative program and budget that must be wady for Congtess in January. 4 ... ...4ksieii -. .. • .-; i .. . - . :, .. ~ - ~• • /- -. 7 .-- 4 . . . .. ... . ... L,Aim,„... it .:, .. .ist,„...n.N•._ ...,.,. ~i,c ‘., to .. ,A. . ... ..... :. :.. 44 0> -100' TONIGHT ON BORROWED TIME 8 p.m. t CENTER STAGE TICKETS at HUB THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA niched his possible candidacy to his legislative program and how he goes over with Republican leaders. Rockefeller' told a press con ' feience that entiv into the first 'in-the-nation New Hamp,hire pri- mare next March would be his first specific decision. : S. Flemming, who announced "The framework for dealing Monday that portions of the with the problems of New York' crop grown in Oregon and will have been established by the time I have to make the decision," he ,aid Record! Snowstorm Fog and prominent Nixon but tons greeted Rockefeller's kick- :Smothers Montana off ata five-day, fact-finding : expedition in the West. HELENA. Mont. (/-7?) Billow mountains of snow furied all The fog diverted his plane from, ins` Los Angeles to Burbank but after but isolated patches of Montana landing he returned to Inter- Yesterday, stranding hunters. national Airport here for a we 'choking traffic and closing : coming ceremony. ;schools. The Nixon buttons were on The storm extended eastward trill California Republican leaders whcrthe Lake Michigan area creating, gree t e d him. They said they; hazardous driv i n g conditions pinned them on after noting that, throughout the area. Traffic! the gavel nor's fans wore Rocke-;deaths mounted. feller buttons. California GOP Snow piled to a record 25 inches ! leader: staunchly support Vice!in 2t hours in this capital city,, President R i chard M. Nixon,:of 18,000, while winds built barn- 1 deemed a likely seeker of the;.high drifts on the open plains. 1960 GOP presidential nomina-i Western South Dakota was blank-' tion eted with five inches. Rockefeller made quick note ; of the fact he was in Nixon's home state, but said Nixon knew what he was talking about when he said the New Yorker would find a warm welcome I here. "He will certainly be equally; welcome on his next visit to New; York next month—as he always is . v, hen he visits the Empire State,"; Rockefeller said. I This statement appeared in a speech prepared far delivery be- fore a Western States Republican Conference dinnei Steelworker Gets $3300 1 For Plant Improvement 1 PITTSBURGH (JP) John Filo,, 42, a steelworker back on the job only Iwo days after the 116-day: steel strike, was given $3,300 yes- 1 terday for an improvement he: suggested to Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp. The award was one of the big gest ever given by Allegheny, Ludlum since it began paying em- , plOyeS for suggestions. The pro gram was initiated in 1956. T.G.I.F. Combo TODAY 4 to 6 P.M. and 9 P. M. to 12:30 A. M. THE DON KREBBS QUARTET STOP IN, and see our new "3 levels of atmosphere." TOMORROW NIGHT our first two levels will be open. ENJOY music played on our hi-fi. suttonp lace Will open at 1 P.M. this evening. For those that are superstitious we invite you on this Friday the 13th, to tall down our steps. (where the Western Auto store meets the sidewalk) Senator Urges Federal Berry Buying WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D.-Gre.) suggested yesterday that the government buy up untainted portions of the cranberry crop to prevent serious money losses to producers. Neuberger's proposal announced through. his Capitol office, varied somewhat from those which have been made by others for some kind of reimbursement to cran berry producers not at fault in the :current situation. Secretary of Welfare Arthur For CLASSIFIEDS Call UN 5-2531 TATE NOW Feat.: 1:54 3:49, 5:44, 7:39. 9:44 141 -L-s "One of the few great motion INGMAR BERGMAN'S pictures of our time" el —N.Y. Pose I le 4 W MeS ?lea , „ WMAJ Morning Show With GLENN SHEFFER 6:30 - 11 A.M. Monday thru Saturday on WMAJ --1450 Washington have been found to be conteTninatgui by a weed killer, was asked by reporters yesterday about industry as sertions that the government should pay damages amounting to perhaps IN million dollars. "As to any responsibility to in demnify the growers." Flemming said, "I have not looked into it and I do not want to get into that." The weed killer, known as ami nothiazole, is approved for use in cranberry bogs after the crop is harvested. In research tests, aminothi azole has been found to produce cancer in rats. Flemming, who has advised housewives not to buy cranber ries, either fresh or canned, until State House Apprnves Immunity for Newsmen HARRISBURG The house voted Yesterday to extend to radio and television newsmen immunity against disclosing news sources. The measure now goes hack to the senate for action on a house change which stipulates that the immunity applies only if the sta tion keeps a certified record of its neNvcasts for one year after 'the date of broadcast. epain Cast Radios Tele - vision Phonographs j Radios television service center f : = . l4.4 State College TV 232 S. Allen St. ",`Lett he Stoics say what they please, we do not eat for the good of living, but because the ?neat is savory and the appetite is keen." THE TAVERN RESTAURANT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1959 the situation is cleared up, said yesterday there are no new de velopments. 'I was called and told about it at home on Sunday," Flemming said. "It is that kind of informa tion that I believe we have no right to sit on." Mrs. Flemming, asked at a luncheon Thursday if she plan ned to serve cranberries for Thanksgiving, replied that it was "much to early to maks plans." Told she had been quoted by the San Diego (Calif.) Evening Tribune as saying she planned to serve cranberries as usual, Mrs. Flemming denied it and said "I made it perfectly clear that I had no idea what I would serve." For CLASSIFIEDS Call UN 5-2531 Emerson, Essays, Second Series: Nature
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers