THURSDAY. MARCH USSR 0 Under \ GENEVA (JP) carry out with other under the eyes of ini But Western nej the world in the di strength. Soviet Deputy F< "Rights' Gets Ho Vote Today WASHINGTON (VP)—The House finished putting together its civil rights bill yesterday /but had to delay a vote on final passage until today. Approval then is assured. A last-ditch fighter against the legislation, Rep. John Bell Wil liams (D -Miss.), forced the one day delay by demanding a printed copy of the bill in its final form. For all practical purposes, how ever, the bill was completed Going beyond the 1957 legisla tiyn which created the federal. Civil Rights Commission, the mca-) sure provides new federal court help for Negroes who complain of being prevented from voting, | It also provides for federal pun-j ishment of persons who defy courtj orders for school desegregation by] force, or threats of force. j A roll-call vote of 295-124 late yesterday nailed in the voting section, which previously had been approved on a standing vote which did not record individual stands. The roll call found 172 Demo crats and 123 Republicans votingj for the section, and 100 Democrats and 24 Republicans voting against it. Now the civil rights battle shifts back to the Senate. In the Senate, Majority Leaderl Lyndon B. Johnson (D.-Tex.) is' aiming at a vote on passage of j a civil rights bill by a week from Saturday, April 2. Johnson’s target date could prove over-optimistic, in view of the determined battle 18 South ern senators have been putting up against the bill. Also, back ers of various proposals have been speaking at considerable length to make the bill stronger. Radiation Rocket Experiment Fails CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla (jT>)— Rocket failure mined a United States effort yesterdav to launch a radiation-study satellite into or bit about the earth. Officials said the experiment will be tried again. The four-stage Juno II booster rocket blasted off smoothly at 8:35 a.m. but the third stage—a cluster of three solid-fuel rockets —did not ignite and the Juno II and its 35.3 - pound payload plunged into the Atlantic about 2000 miles from the Cape. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration announced an hour after launching that the 76-foot rocket failed to place its payload in orbit. NASA said it re ceived no radio confirmation of third- and fourth-stage ingnition. The third-stage fizzle doomed the fourth stage. CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS 80c BUYS 17 WORDS TOM & JERRY'S SUB SHOPPES >4. 1960 fers Arms Cut Iforld Control • The Soviet Union offered yesterday to • powers a cut in manpower and weapons Iternational disarmament controllers. 'otiators said the plan still would leave irk on the Soviet Union’s true military ireign Minister Valerian Zorin presented his proposal to the 10-nation dis armament committee and claimed [it showed the Soviet position “on controls is close to that of the !Western powers." ; “We want controls from the be [ginning to the end of disarma jment,” he said. But the Western delegates said the defect in Borin's plan, as they interpreted it, was so obvious that they hoped it was not put forward seriously. If this is the Soviet Union’s last word, and not a bargaining po sition, they said, then the week old conference already is in trou ble. Bill ise This is what Zorin offered: The; demobilization of an agreed num-i ber of men and the removal of : a corresponding number of weap-l ons from a nation’s military estab lishment would be controlled and I verified from beginning to end by international inspectors. j But then came the catch, in j the Western view. There would [ i be no verification of the number of men and weapons the coun- < try had when the reduction be gan. There also would- be no ' I check after reductions were con ; eluded. | The five Western powers—the jUniled Slates, Britain, France, [ltaly and Canada—began a study of the transcript of Zorin’s re marks. They hoped to determine how much room for maneuver the Soviet delegate left himself. ; Under the West’s plan, the var ious powers first would report j their force levels and armaments. Strict verification would begin [when ceiling levels of 2.5 million [men for the United States and [the Soviet Union had been fixed, jwith corresponding lower fig lures for other powers. Crash Caused By Dynamite WILMINGTON, N.C. truction of a National Airlines plane which crashed near Bolivia, N.C., Jan. “was the result of an explosion of dynamite.” A team of experts made this finding in a report read yesterday at a Civil Aeronautics Board in quiry into the cause of the crash which killed 34 persons. The board itself will issue a re port later with it£ findings of the probable cause. The inquiry board also was told evidence indicated the blast oc curred "in close proximity to and immediately behind the legs” of Julian A. Frank, 32-year-old New York attorney who had taken out life insurance totaling more than a million dollars. The F. 8.1. is checking all possibilities concern ing Frank’s death. NUB CARD ROOM y yooo \ MARCH 24 maker af the PHILADELPHIA STEAK SANDWICH and the ever popular IS” SUH corner of S. Atherton end W. Beav.er Oven hot PIZZA... Gall AO 8-6590 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA S. Africa Blasts U.S. 'Meddling' JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (A*) The govern ment told the United States in effect yesterday to keep out of South Africa’s race troubles. The South African government rapped back at U.S. State De partment denunciation of blood jshed as Negroes, challenged the [nation’s white supremacy laws [with work boycotts after two days of violent demonstrations. The Foreign Ministry sum moned U.S. Ambassador Phiiip Crowe for a conference, then is sued a statement. The statement said the discus sion with Crowe does not mean [that South Africa is “conceding [the right of the U.S. government ,to concern itself with the domes i tic affairs of South Africa, just | [as the Union of South Africa [government does not concern it i self with riots or racial disturb ances in other countries.” [ The statement declared the State Department had criticized I police violence here without knowing all the facts “regarding (attacks by many thousands of [Bantu Negroes on a small police (force to whom was entrusted the [duty of maintaining law and or-' der.” As criticism of this week’s po-, lice violence mounted in world capitals, officers kept a tight lid on South Africa’s 11 million non whites. The Negroes’ work boycotts threatened to paralyze some im portant industrial centers. Thej weapon could be a potent one for! [the Negroes, who supply the low-i cost labor that keeps the coun-j try's economy going. Police charged militant Negro leaders “have created a reign of! terror” in Negro settlements to keep people from returning to work. Bill to Outlaw Payola Introduced in House WASHINGTON