PA GE TWO Ike Challenges Dems To Top Farm Plan V,'ASIIINGTON (4 1 )---President Eisenhower presented his el•ct:on year farm program yesterday and challenged the benloci anc-controlled Congress to come up with a better solution to the critical wheat surplus problem than he pro prhed. I v. 1:1 approve any constructive solution,' Eisenhower said. Thus, a 5 expected, he modi fied past administration insis tence that the wheat crisis be met by lowering price supports and elmininating production controls But in his special message, the Piesident stressed it is imperative' for Congress to move promptly to deal with a situation that is cost ing the government $l5 million every day -- $lOOO a minute to stabihre wheat prices and income. Without prompt action by both Congress and the govern ment, he said, "This entire pro gram will collapse under the pressure of public indignation and thousands of our farming people will be hurt." 22 Senators Ask College Loans Fund WASHINGTON Twenty t ~ .ertfoi., Tuesday Introduced I , gislation to si•t up a $125 nul lion revoh ing fund for loans to colioge, for cla•,%ruorns and lab of a torp?.. ,molar pr ogram was included in two housing bill. passed by Congress last year but vetoed by esident Eisenhower. It was omitted at his request from a third housing bill which he signed. Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D.-Pa ), chief sponsor of the measure, said the program would be identical with the college dormitory loan plan, which he called "an out standing success." The loans would be at about 3 1, 2 per cent interest, the same foi the dormitories. The Piesi dent has asked that the dormitory loans he ended Clark said it was estimated that the number of students seeking to enter college in the next 10 years would double. Eisenhower's message was 1 gen erally welcomed by Republicans l including some who had opposed his previous proposals. Many ofl the GOP legislators said the Pres ident has put the problem where it belongs, up to Congress. Some Democrats called Eisen hower's proposals disappoint& ing. But Chairman Allen J. El lender (D.-La.) of the Senate AgricUltme Committee said the message "casts a ray of hope that we may soon enact wheat legislation." However, Ellender said, if there, is to be any real cooperation be d.ween Congress and the adminis-, tration in enacting wheat legisla tion "it is necessary that we ob itain the active support" of Sec- MacArthur Improving Iretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft NEW YORK Gen. Doug- Benson. la, MacArthur continued to show, Benson has been under partic improvement yesterday at Lenox,ularly heavy fire since Eisenhow- Hill vat where he is undeer last year vetoed a bill that twatment for a prostate condi-(would have required wheat grow tion The 80-year-old general en-!ei s to cut their planting in re teted the ho , ,pital Jan. 29. i turn for higher price supports. "This bin is one means of pro viding some help to our colleges and universities in their expan sion efforts, and providing it quickly," Senator Clark said. Segregation Protest Spreads in Carolina CHARLOTTE, N.C. (IP)—A passive resistance movement by North Carolina Negro stu dents against segregated lunch counter service spread to Charlotte yesterday guided gently by a oung ministerial student. `I have no malice, no jealousy, no hi tied, no envy,' said Joseph Charles Jones, a Negro graduate student at Johnson C. Smith soy "All I want is to come in and place my order and be served and leave a tip if I feel like it." As other Negro students had done earlier in Grennsboro, Dur hm and Winston-Salem, the 150 demonsti atnrs in Charlotte filed quietly into the eight downtown stores and took the lunch counter seats. Thtn e era. no boisterowmess among the well-groomed students and nn protest when waitresses Ignored thew presence. In Greensboro, where North Carolina A&T College students Repairs Car Radios 1 Television Phonographs + Radios television • service center-, -71. Y. at State College TV 232 S. Allen St. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA have agreed to a 2-week cooling off period in their demonstra tions of last week, variety store lunch counters remained closed. In Durham and Winston-Sa lem, where North Carolina Col lege and Winston-Salem Teach ers College are in the second day of their protest, the lunch coun ters closed Monday when the demonstrators arrived. Another ,one in Winston-Salem closed ;Tuesday when the strike spread Ito a Walgreen drug store T.I.M. and LEONIDES present the BLUEBOOK BOUNCE a Rocking Fabulous Modern JAM SESSION Sat. Feb. 13, 15 HUB Ballroom Adm. 2 bluebooks "2 bits" Gen. Twining Rejects Missile Plan WASHINGTON (EP) The Cotton of New Hampshire came nation's to militar chief to Burke's support, urging Pres y p ident Eisenhower to accept the yesterday opposed the Navy's admiral's proposal to spend an- newproposal to thrust the other $975 million to build six , additional Polaris subs. Polaris program forward by "If you want terrific striking building six more of the missile:re c r ot a t t on m s i a nl i Tu m m a co s s i t 3 — ee tlis fo i r s firing submarines than pres ent i the Senate. plans allow. Under questioning, of tripham- - . Gen. Nathan F. Twining, chair- mer intensity at times, Tl.vining man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.'testifzed he doesn't go along with rejected the plan yesterday after Gen. Thomas S. Power's view that proposal was disclosed by;that Powers' force of long range Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, chief of naval operations—and from the, airborne should be put on 24-hour airborne aleit as soon as possible, same forum, a hearing of the Sen and that more money should be ate Space Committee and Pre- spent now to get ready, ' paredness subcommittee Twining contended the im• But Republican Sen. Norris I portant thing is to be capable Di Tells Of $15,000 Payola Take WASHINGTON (IPA A for mer disc jockey who figures he used to earn around $40,000 a year told yesterday how he picked up more on the side. He kept an eye out for "good records" produced by certain compadies and in return for his consideration collected $15,500, for example. in one 2-year period. The testimony came from Jo seph Finan, who was fired by Cleveland radio station KYW on Dec. 3 during last year's exposure of payola scandals—the slipping of undercover money as an in ducement for plugging certain records over others. Finan told a House subcom• mittee investigating payola the $15,500 figure of outside income was for 1958-59. The subcommittee is looking into payola on the grounds the inducement system deceives the public as to a record's worth or popularity, and maybe a law is needed. Finan, 30, told the congressmen his total income from radio and TV was around $38,000 to $40,- 000 a year before he was fired— unjustly, he maintained. He swore that only in the ' case of one firm—Big Top Rec ords—had he agreed to play specified records over the radio record program in exchange for payments. Big Top paid him $450 for promoting three rec ords, he said. Finan said that in the rest of the cases in 'which he received outside money he agreed only to give special consideration to cer tain records. —The first newspaper to use cartoons regularly was the New York Evening Telegram under James G. Bennett. PRINTING Letterpress • Offset Commercial Printing 352 E. College AD 8.8794 Voting Rights Considered On State Levels WASHINGTON (iP) Protec tion of voting rights must in clude the right to vote on the local judges who enforce the laws and the boards which set school pol icies, the Justice Department said yesterday. The House Judiciary Committee heard Deputy Atty. Gen. Law rence E. Walsh denounce "Jim Crow at the ballot box" in state elections Then it voted to conduct hear ings on the Eisenhower adminis tration's proposal for federal vot er referees who would act on com plaints of discriminations in state as well as federal elections, The decision to hold further hearings was a victory in a sense for Southern members of the com mittee, who oppose federal civil rights legislation as an encroach ment on states' rights. But Chairman Emanuel Celler (D -N Y) indicated the committee will not spend more than about a week on the Eisenhower proposal. For CLASSIFIEDS Call UN 5-2531 # CATHAUM HELD OVER! Feat.: 12:45, 2:54, 5:03, 7:12, 9:31 3 CART GRANT". TONY CURTIS OPERATION i l, PETTICOAT': ..7,,r o ggi i „,, ,:•, 0 1 4 .14111111R m 02111E11. »la war , q A li, fill! , . «7)4 1 MIMI *le AWN!! NM ItlAnklgiltiMil r ,,- * NITTANY NOW: Doors Open 6:45 P.M. AMIL.n n AV I AN Il i 1 A_ ..._. )L kl , kit" liligi Filot (1 0 ' tut I * _ . l. 4.° i lia Vi i - ; - 1 7) I 1 leffne 1 ~MO„_ .........-• ..........Lowc , • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1960 of mounting such an alert, If and when a need arises. "What's in the budget will take care of that." he said. And the onetime Air Force chief, blushed aside as exagger ated, a claim by Gen. Lyman Lemnizer, the Army's chief of staff, that U S capability to air lift hoops and equipment to deal with any limited war is woefully inadequate. However, Twining indicated he did not favor the drastic cutback in the piogiam to produce the 870 bomber, a 2000-mile-an-hour plane intended to replace the slower 1352 bomber now making up thy, country's long-range strik ing arm. Congress Spots Secrecy Leaks WASHINGTON (P) Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois hinted yester day at the possibility of a Senate probe of reported leaks of secret testimony by Central Intelligence Dneetor Allen W. Dulles. "I think it is something that merits further attention by the Senate," Du ksen said in a speech. Later, Dirksen told newsmen that the concern over leaks of military information from closed ;door congressional hearings had been discussed at a morning meet ing between Republican House and Senate leaders and President 'Eisenhower. The Illinois senator said he also was concerned that some generals were talking too muck in public. Dirksen described Eisenhower as "intense but not mad" about the situation. LOBSTER HOUSE Crabmeat au gratin in Casserole TAXI RETURN GRATIS LISTEN TONIGHT at 10:05 BLAINE HARVEY "GROOVOLOGY 54" WMAJ-1450 "Music for Your Listening Pleasure"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers