WEDNESDAY. MARCH) 23. 1960 House Adopts e' Plan 'Refer WASHINGTON i tion’s voting referee and moved toward t The vote, 199-104 the long congressior Herter Vie Summit Ta As # A Gar WASHINGTON (JP) of State Christian A. ceded yesterday the su: ing is a gamble and not optimistic it will j progress toward sett West disputes, But in this era of weapons “there are chances for miscalculation, of mis understanding to risk .faking the position that we will not sit down and talk with anybody,” Herter told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Discussion of the coming sum-' mit meeting overshadowed Her ter’s main reason for appearing —to urge approval of President Eiseltower’s $4,175 billion foreign aid program. Under sharp questioning by Sen. Albert Gore (D.-Tenn.), Herter *aid Eisenhower is going without a formal agenda to the May 16 meeting in Paris with Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev and British and French leaders. But Eisenhower is ready to dis cuss the Berlin stalemate, Ger man disarmament or other issues, Herter said. The most that could come out of the talks would be some high level instructions to foreign min isters which might later produce a limited agreement, he said. South Africans Continue Rioting JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Negro rioting against South Africa’s white supremacy laws erupted again yesterday. Negroes burned buildings near Cape Town, then stoned firemen who fought the blazes. Police fired on the mobs for the second day in a row. New casualty figures were com ing in, but there was no firm esti mate of how Jar they would rise above Monday’s toll of at least 66 dead. This is a police figure admittedly incomplete. There were also several hun dred injured. None of the reports mentionel any whites killed in the out breaks that erupted during what had been planned as a nonviolent protest against the passes Negroes must carry day and night. Thousands of police enforced an im 1 Invites PhD . Degree Candidates ill electrical engineering, mathematics, physios, mechanical engineering, statistics and physical chemistry to meet Messrs. G. C. Anthony, G. E. Brock and G. E. Simaitis Representatives of IBM Research and Development Laboratories on march 28, 29 & 30 For appointment, please contact The Placemen. Office fP) The House adopted the administra section of the civil rights bill yesterday arly pasage of the whole measure, could mark the beginning of the end of al battle over civil rights which began An announcement shortly after in earnest more than a month ago its launching reported that all However, the House adjourned objectives were met and that at 4:31 p.m. without getting to a nose cone landed in the in final vote on the bill. It may come im P ac t area in the South today. Atlantic. The voting section is the key Titan covered the 5000- one in the bill, most members " 1I e for the firs time on agree Feb. 24 The only Titan launched , ' ~ ... , , , 'since then fizzled in flight when li would provide for federal seco nd stage failed to ignite, agents, called referees, to be ■ The success probably will re appointed by federal judges to i !eve some 0 f the pressure ex oversee registration, voting and er t ec j 0 n th program by a rash vote counting in areas _ where of troubles that have plagued the systematic discrimination Titan in the last 10 months, against Negroes is found. It Propelled bv the 300,000 pounds would apply to stale and local iof th ‘ us! generated by its first elections as well as federal, stage engine, the 9-foot rocket The administration asked for rose smoothly fiom its pad and the referee plan, and its backers streaked across the sky. Two min contended it was necessary to per-lutes later, the missile’s huge 41- mit all qualified citizens to voteJfoot second stage ignited with a They said it had been established puff of fire visible to ground ob that in some Southern areas Ne- servers. A/S ks ible' -Secretary herter con-, imit meet said he is, leld much’ ing East- >ushbutton too many groes had been clearly prevented The Titan has a potential range from voting. of 9000 miles, but yesterday’s mis- Opponents, most of them South-'sile was not fully fueled and was erners, argued that the proposal programmed for the shorter would mean unconstitutional fed-: range. ;eral interference with local af- 1 The Air Force plans to test Ti ‘fairs. They charged it was pushedltans at an accelerated rate in or primanly to attract political sup- der to make up for time lost be port from Negroes. cause of setbacks. The United Similar legislation is pending States hopes to have the missile in the Senate? which has appeared. to Jo ' n . 'ts defense arsenal ■to be awaiting House action be-'i!?™ 1 ,/? 81 / P ca j ?} Ifore pressing for final passage.iirJ[v, ian -n n< u 'The Senate might adopt the House! 1965. Each will have 10 • bill so as to bypass its Judiciary| lmssues Committee which has not cleared jcivil rights legislation in this Con gress Russia Will Accept— | (Continued jrom page one) ] speech by French Delegate Jules , Moch. ! Moch said France believes that something more comprehensive 1 than a suspension of atomic and, hydrogen weapon tests is needed j to open the road to nuclear dis-i armament. I uneasy truce on the Negro quar- State Department said the Unit ter of Sharpeville in the coal min-' e d States "cannot help but re ing district south of Johannes- grei t h B tragic loss of life re burg. Sharpeville was the scene of suiting from the measures taken Monday s major riot where at aga inst the demonstrators in least 50 Negroes died. South Africa." The new outbreaks centered. ~ . , . XT around the black settlement of T ® L '^ ng . n ‘, ght ’ Negroes in ;Langa, outside of Cape Town, e *° a *. ea f* elg^ where at least six Negroes were bondings including churches, the killed Monday. jlibrary. a recreation hall, a re j Resentful Africans hid in the; ce R tl ? T n centei , an office building bush around their villages. One Negro settlement workshops, police patrol near Langa was am- ree lights were smashed, bushed by a number of Negroes ; The battle between the police A police sergeant opened fire and! an d the mobs was waged by the wounded one of the attackers. [light of the fires and the piercing The situation also set off a po-! beams of searchlights, litical uproar. Opposition parties i The riolers first stoned the demanded a searching investiga-. firemen, who retreated and re tion of the violence. The Johan- j turned later under police escort nesburg Star said South Africa's i to continue fighting the blazes, world standing is being under-] Reports of rioting also came mined and demanded “an end to from Nyanga West, another Negro this drift to disaster.” j settlement near Cape Town. Po- The police violence also lice fired on Africans who tried brought extraordinary denunci- to set fire to an electrical depart tttion from Washington. The ment building, the reports said. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Air Force Fires Titan Successfully CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) —The Air Force successfully fired its Titan intercontinental-range missile yesterday over a 5000-mile course for the second time. State to Start Study On Hospital Insurance HARRISBURG f/P) Insur ance Commissioner Francis R. Smith reported yesterday the state will soon embark on the na tion’s most intensive study of hospitalization insurance. Smith said the proposed survey is “ready to roll.” Its principle aim is to determine cost of main tenance and operation of hospi tals. K Arrives in Paris For 12-Day Visit PARIS (/P) Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev flies into Paris today for a presummit visit. His every movement throughout France for 12 days will be protected by police and soldiers. President Charles de Gaulle will personally greet Khrush- chev, the first government chief, of Russia to visit France .since ;Czar Nicholas II called here with .Czarina Alexandria Oct. 6, 1896. I Until Khrushchev’s return to! [Moscow, Apnl 3, they will have 1 ,a dozen hours of conference on .such delicate subjects as disarma ment, nuclear standstill, Beilin! ,and German reunification. i I About 200,000 of France's live | million who vote Communist i expect to help welcome Khrush | chev at his last important meet j ing with a Western official | before the East-West summit | conference opens here May 16. , During his 12-day stay, he will .make a quick tour of 17 French (cities and town' Despite its po litical importance, many French [men treated the visit almost as !a part of the spring’s entertain ment. "I am going lo show you something you never expected to see.” said a taxi driver, and he swung his cab over by De Gaulle's Elysee Palace. "Voila, the hammer and sickle Hying over the Elysee Palace." President Eisenhower and Brit ish Prime Minister Harold Mac millan already have had official meetings with Khrushchev. De Gaulle forced postponement of a summit conference last fail so he would not have to go into the conference in a position less elect than theirs. A Foreign Ministry spokesman said France will keep its allies in formed through diplomatic chan nels of the subject discussed. U.S. Hits Jailing Of Catholic Bishop WASHINGTON ffPl—The Unit ed States yesterday strongly pro tested the imprisonment of Catho lic Bishop James Edward Walsh] by Communist China as “system-] atic persecution of religion.” The protest was delivered in] Warsaw by U.S. Ambassador Ja- 1 cob Beam at a meeting with Chi-j nese Communist Ambassador Wang Ping-nan. , State Department press officer] Lincoln White said the accusa tion that Bishop Walsh was a spy] for the U.S. government is totally i false. Walsh, of Cumberland, Md., was sentenced to 20 years imprison ment on March 18 for allegedly plotting espionage and counter revolutionary activities against the Chinese Communist regime. Sukarno Plans to Start 2*Month Tour, April 1 JAKARTA, Indonesia CAP) President Sukarno plans to leave on his two-month tour of the Mid dle East, Europe, Latin America and Africa April 1 or 2, mfoi Pl ants said yesterday. He also is ex pected to make unofficial trips to San Francisco and Cuba. Bar-B-Qued Chicken It’s ihe newest delicacy for the Penn Stale students - • and you 100 Facullyi WE DELIVER AD B*lol6 HerSocher Bar-B-Qued Chicken Take-Out 227 E. Beaver AD 8-1016 TOP POPS - OLD and NEW LIVE ACTS FR!., MARCH 25 8:30-12:30 fiajllliiuuill'!..,!! A, 1 : '!!!>' n'AAU' I'l'MiJ’! : 11.-lta! t lIJIKMtt'tJI Pa. Democrats Have Big Block For Convention HARRISBURG (/P) Gov. Da vid Lawrence said yesterday ; Pennsylvania’s delegation to the [Democratic convention could be a ipotent factor in picking the par ty’s presidential nominee if the [bulk of the delegation sticks to gether. [ “It would be potent if we have a big block of votes going for one [fellow,” Lawrence told his weekly I news conference. Howevei, he again refused to predict what the 81-vote dona tion might do. "No doubt, there are people on there that might vote foi any one jof the candidates,” the governor said. Lawrence played down his own influence on the delegation and on the convention. It is greatly exag gerated, he said, in referring to a statement made by Sen. John F. Kennedy in Pittsburgh last week end. Kennedy was quoted as saying Lawrence’s decision would be of ■extreme importance to the sena tor’s chances to win the Demo cratic nomination. The governor also said he had nothing to do with bringing Sen. W. Stuart Symington to nearby Meehaniesburg for an April 4 speech. In fact, Lawrence said, he has not yet been invited to at tend the meeting with the un announced presidential hopeful. [New Research Program ;On Graphite to Begin A grant from the Charles Pet tinos Graphite Corporation will jbe used by the Department of (Mineral Economics to conduct natural graphite market research. ! The research program, foe which background study is now being done, will begin in early summer under the direction of Dr. J. J. 'Schanz, Jr., associate professor of mineral economics. [lobster house 1 COBSTEH TAIL l With Drawn Butter \ *nd f'tfor ) taxi return gratis TRADITION Duffy’s Tavern is a mere four miles away from Stale College and it’s worthwhile going out. You’ll see why it has been a Penn State tradition for so many years. Don’t be worried about dress, either it’s informal. Your favorite beverages ore served. Duffy’s In Boalsburg, 4 miles east of State College on Route 322 (turn right at the Texaco Station) i 'l’lj.hiuntib’ ’iM.ir’UKfttttiu ww.iitiwmiih'ij'. •.» RECORD HOP WARING LOUNGE PAGE THREE DONATION 25c | 2
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers