THURSDAY. JANUARY 14. 1960 Ike Satisfied With U.S. Arms WASHINGTON (VP) President Eisenhower yesterday brushed aside questions of a U.S. missile lag and declared: "I am not in the slightest degree disturbed." Eisenhower, the very picture of confidence, assured a news conference that when he enters summit talks with 'Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush ichev, he won't go in with any Two Soviets ifeeling of inferiority. I "I believe," he said, 'that the ;matter of defense has been han- Lose Posts died well and efficiently." Eisenhower took his position in a lively discussion that ranged !from Soviet rocket tests in the in Shake-up ,Pacific to the question of whether Ithe 1960 Republican political cam paign needs whipping up. It was' MOSCOW (Th Alexei I. Ki_lhis first news conference since richenko, one of Premier Nikita lDec. 2. 1 1 Khrushchev's proeges, was moved!l The President almost lost his 1 temper—his face and neck out of the political world of Mos-1 turned red—when he was cow yesterday to a lall-town! thrown a question he took to , job as Communist part) chief in! imply that the nation's nation- the Rostov-on-Don region. i 1 al security is being handled as The appointment to This post { . a parfisap political matter. , was made under circumstances' , "I don t have to be partisan."l that convinced foreign observers'! the former five-star general " said here his bright days as a mem-lin a clipped, precise way, and, to tell you this: her of the party Presidium of theil want I ve spent my life in this, and ; Soviet Union were eclipsed if only; I know more about it than almost temporarily. !anybody, I think, that is in the He could have been sent in as country, and on a basis of doing a troubleshooter, although official l what is good for the government notices gave no hint of this, and for the country." The transfer was announced in Most of the conference was such an icy manner that observ-i on an easier, calmer plane. ers could only speculate that this ) Eisenhower handled such ques man, often mentioned abroad as tions as these: heir apparent to Khrushchev, hadi Rocket Test—"lt would seem been sharply down-graded. very unusual for us to make a protest against Soviet tests in the Pacific when we have done LONDON 0 3 ) Jacob Malik,; the same thing ourselves and in veteran Soviet diplomat who.tend to do it again." served for years as ambassador! Campaign—The withdrawal of to Washington and the United Na - i Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller from lions, has been relieved of his joblthe Republican presidential nom as ambassador to London. (mating contest "does give a cer- Presumably he is heading home.ltain atmosphere of no competi- His departure after eight years Ilion. here had been expected for some) time. He has told some of hisi2o at Apalachin Meet British friends of his eagerness p return home. ;Given Prison Sentences A Tass Soviet News Agency dis-I NEW YORK (/F) Twenty un patch said only that Malik haslderworld delegates to the Apala been relieved "in, connection with chin convention were sentenced his transfer to other work." He yesterday to prison terms rang will be succeeded by Alexander ing from three to a maximum of Soldatov, chief of the American five years. The judge said their section of the Soviet Foreign Min- backgrounds and shady activities istry. Malik now is in London. constituted "a tale of horrors." Hearings Set on Payola, Jets, Food WASHINGTON (/P) Con gressional inquiries were set' up yesterday into radio-TV payola, jet age airline safety and the law on food additives which set off the cranberry scare last fall. They were announced by Rep. Oren Harris (D.-Ark.) as chair man of both the House Legisla tive Oversight subcommittee and its parent Commerce Committee. The food additive hearing was scheduled for Jan. 26. Harris said the subcommittee will begin its long-awaited radio- TV investigation about Feb. 8. Re said the group will go into all phases of payola—under-the table payment to disc jockeys and others for plugging music and other commodities on the air. Other than indicating that several disc jockeys will be in vited to testify. Harris declined to say what witnesses would be called. Nor would he say what EARN YOUR MASTER'S DEGREE AND PREPARE FOR AN EXECUTIVE CAREER IN RETAILING Comprehensive nine-month program for college gradu ates; emphasis on executive direction in major stores dovetailed with classroom work. Total pay for store work MO. Co-ed. Scholarships. Selective job place ment be. ore graduation. G. I. approNed. Next class. August 29, 1960. Apply now. Write for Bulletin C. GRADUATE SCHOOL OF RETAILING UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH Pittlbutsh 13, Pe. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE .COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA other phases of broadcasting would be looked info. Last year the subcommittee held a sensation-packed. two week inquiry into rigged TV quiz show scandals. Harris said the subcommittee staff is now preparing an interim report to cover this and other of its activities last year. He indi cated that the report would be ready for publication in about two weeks and would contain legisla tive recommendations to curb such irregularities as rigged quiz shows. He was not definite about what the Commerce Committee will cover in its investigation of the law covering food additives. Without amplifying, Harris said the problem has become more acute because of recent bans on cranberries and poul try containing certain food ad ditives. Secretary of Welfare Arthur S. Flemming has said he wants Con gress to modify the law because the mandatory ban on use of any suspected cancer-producing agent 40 Killed In Peruvian Earthquakes LIMA, Peru (/P) Forty per sons were killed yesterday and at least 200 injured by an earth quake lasting 50 seconds and felt in three countries, radio reports from the scene said. 1 A state of emergency was pro claimed in southern Peru. The quake shook areas of Peru, Bolivia and Chile The reports from Arequipa, in southern Peru, said the suburbs of Tingo. Tiabaya and Miraflores were hardest hit. Another minor quake was felt 'in the region at 4 p.m., the re ports said, but there was no word of additional casualties or darn age. The major quake occurred early }yesterday. First reports from the area were fragmentary. Land slides knocked out communication lines, hampering receipt of de ttailed reports of casualties and damage. But the quake was said Ito have caused widespread de struction. The quake also was strong at Cuzco and Ica in southeast Peru and in nearby Bolivia. It was felt as far south as Santiago, Chile, but was not severe there. Lima was shaken for 50 seconds at 12:43 a m. There were no re ports of damage or casualties in the capital. Arequipa is about 460 miles southeast of Lima. Health Officials Warned About Flu HARRISBURG UP) The State Health Department, noting re ports of an outbreak in Ohio, yesterday alerted public health officials in Pennsylvania to be on the lookout for widespread cases of Asian influenza. ' Dr. William D. Schrack, chief of the department's Communica ble Disease Control Division, said the agency has not received any reports of Asian flu cases since the new year began. Schrack added that an un known virus called "Q -Flu" that has stricken thousands in Los An geles apparently hasn't invaded Pennsylvania. forces his agency into unfair ap plication of it. A subcommittee headed by Rep. John Bell Williams (D.- Miss.) will conduct the inquiry into what effect the switch over to jets is having on air safety, service and scheduling. "I regard this as one of the committee's most important tasks," Harris said. He indicated the committee has received complaints that airlines are cutting corners in training personnel and providing mainte nance in order to get jets into service. No date was set for the investigation. —To protect the life of the Pres ident and to suppress counter feiters are the two statutory duties of the U.S. Secret Service. .44 It's the 0- ; hytik), Styling Technique that-makes the difference in your / coiffeur, so plan now to have your pretty-do to complement the new season costume look. L = _ V - 7 :lc -- 402 E. College Ave. AD 7-2286 BEAUTY SALON Committee to Study School Finances HARRISBURG UP) Gov. David L. Lawrence yesterday ordered creation of a special committee to make a study_ of school financial problems in Pennsylvania and report its recommendations to the 1961 Legislature. The action dimmed prospects of increasing state aid to schools during the .1960 session. Conceivably, however, the law makeis could go ahead on such a plan if at the same time they in crease taxes to pay for it `lt is our hope and our intention to make this review one of the most intensive and far-reaching ever conducted in Pennsylvania or, for that matter, in any state in the nation," said the governor He made the statement to Re publican and Democratic legis lative leaders called together to consider an agenda for the 1960 session. Under a new constitutional amendment, the current session is limited to revenue and appro priations measures, plus constitu tional amendments, legislative in vestigations and Senate action on gubernatorial appointees. A ground rules committee set up to examine the score of what can be acted upon in the 196 P ses sion said the constitutional limi tation was rather severe. It ordered the Legislative Ref erence Bureau to draft a set of rules for the House and Senate to allow screening of all bills be fore they are printed. The procedure would rule out legislation considered unconstitu tional within the limits set up for session in even-numbered years. An example cited was a pro posal by Philadelphia Demo crats to legalize bingo games in Pennsylvania. The governor. when asked whether he con sidered bingo as a form of gam siling, replied: "I have no set conviction on it." The legislative ground rules committee plans another meeting Jan. 19. On the following day, the governor will again meet with GOP and Democratic leaders on an agenda for the 1960 session. LISTEN TONIGHT at 10:05 BLAINE HARVEY "GROOVOLOGY 54" WMAJ-1450 "Music for Your Listening Pleasure" DeGaulle Fires Finance Boss PARIS (JP)---President Charles de Gaulle dropped Antoine Pinay as finance minister yesterday rather than let him exercise a veto over Gaullist economic policy. A conservative who revived an ailing French economy, Pinay had quarreled with Premier Michel Debre and some of his ministers, insisting they were swinging to ward the left the economic policy ;Pinay founded. In Pinay's stead, de Gaulle named Wilfried S. Baumgartner, 57, governor of the Bank of I France and a financial wizard in his own right. Baumgartner's fi nancial orthodoxy equals Pinav's, but he is considered somewhat ,more The switch followed days of po litical suspence which wobbled the stock market as vain efforts were made to have Pinay patch his quarrel with Debre and the Cabinet's Gaullists. ************ •••••00*•••• GETTING THE WORLD! • You're graduating in • January! You're get • • tin up in the world. • • You're probably get : tins your first real job • and you feel way up • • there. But no mailer s e how far up you" gothe • • news and events of • your Alma Mater will • always be close to you • if you have a copy of • • the Daily Collegian o handy. : What better way is • there of always being • • assured of having ban • „, ry the Daily Collegian • than to subscribe to it • • before you leave. For • • only $3.00 a semester : you can have the Dai • ly Collegian mailed to fp • • you no matter where • • you are. o So on your way up • • (to class, that is) stop • • in at the Daily Cone : gian office, Carnegie, * and buy your subscrip. • • lion to the Daily Col- I legian. • PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers