TUESDAY. APRIL 1 Saue For \ JOHANNESBI chief of the Natio terday as govern; Minister Hendrik carry on Verwoer 17-Day Cabinet Topples; Italy ! Faces Crisis ! ROME (aP) The ghost of fas cism toppled Premier Fernando Tambrom’s 17-day-old govern ment yesterday plunging Italy into one of its gravest political crises since World War 11. The 58-year-old Premier and his all-Christian Democrat Cabinet re signed under pressure from his own party. He did not ask for Fascist back ing but refused to reject it when 24 Fascist votes proved decisive in a confidence vote in the Chamber of Deputies Friday night. Over the •weekend three Cabinet ministers resigned rather than accept Fas cist support. The central directorate of the Christian Democrat party met Monday morning. A communique said in effect the memory of Be nito Mussolini’s Fascist regime— which once imprisoned Tambroni —was still a bitter one." A Cabinet meeting was held yesterday afternoon At sundown, Tambroni handed his resignation to President Giovanni Gronchi. French Premier I nspects Algeria ALGIERS ( IP) Premier Michel Debre of France told Moslems in the Kabylie Mountains yesterday that “peace, prosperity and fraternity” are in sight in Algeria. The Premier traveled to the heart of the rebel-infested area to start a three-day inspection and fact-finding tour of central Algeria. The area is H| ~— stronghold of nationalist senti-j' erns resettled from battle zones. men t. | At one point he said: "There In Tizi-Ouzou, Debre laid the] is nothing more here but the cornerstone of a new administra-j road of hope. The days of peace, tive building. Addressing a small! and * raicrr ” ty are ' n lems, he said military pacification) 'j IS th 2n aS m C i°« lSldel ti 01016 to end the nationalist rebelUonP®* 1 *k i V- a aTa will be accompanied by political ee^s f before scheduled and economic transformation. Algerians This has been a cornerstone of t o , name local administrative coun- President Charles de Gaulle’s Thus f „ bolh Eurep€an , and . x . A .... Moslems appear hostile to the He vowed that the military ; elections, action will soon be replaced by j Debre’s trip to the Kabylie re-) purely economic and social el- )gj on was interpreted as an effort: forts which will last for many | to sound out pre-election senti generations. j ment in that troubled zone. In-! The Premier spoke in the same formed sources said some govern -lone when he visited newly con-iment officials have been encour strucled villages in Bouria andlaging diehard Moslem nationalists Pale.stro regions by helicopter, jto run for office, promising con- The villages mainly house Mos- cessions to Algerian nationalism. Steps In erwoerd Segregation ! Found En JRG, South Africa (/P) —Paul 01iv r er Sauer, Pa. Housingj malist Party in Parliament, took over yes- WASHINGTON (/P ) —An nent leader in place of wounded Prime advisory committee to the F. Verwoerd. Sauer promptly pledged to Federal Commission on Civil ”s apartheid policies, (Rights says “housing discrim ' Sauer, 62, is Minister of Lands! ination exists clannelv in in the Cabinet. He takes over the ~, . „ j „ , T , , .. . helm as senior member of the P enn sylvama. ; But Lloyd cautioned against an -1 Cabinet, but will not serve as act-1 Almost one million of the state's tlcl P atln S mat the summit talks hng prime minister, Foreign Mm-'11,327,000 people are affected, We^friv^ec 16 e ” d ister Eric Louw said. But Sauer,said the Pennsylvania Advisory diJ livalnes. will preside at Cabinet meetings Committee in a report to the com- Secretary-General Paul Henri- Sauer told Parliament the gov-'^'f ion on discrimination in the, J/,, 1 ernment will continue on its reg-f tates ‘ rhrUU J & 4 rtlr Y ular program and Verwoerd’s' Negroes are the chief group in-’ ,e , nri lan A ‘ Herler course, adding “the rest of the volved, the committee said, “but Spaak avoided predictions on| Cabinet will see that peace and housing disciinunation is also,** 1 , 6 fmal outcome of the East order are maintained.” practiced against Jews, Italians, , es * P al '* e .V- He served notice "As far as Parliament is eon Pu«to Ricans, and other Western allies will never ac r».f ,h„. , U 1 r b,°,„v happened," S.„„ dedered. l° B 'bS SCSS/il;’ Spffk co, ra del .1,,t Even as Sauer spoke South Af- low-rent housing projects built men * —father than the future of rica’s white police and courts con-j with federal subsidies -tinued to take sharp action to' ‘‘Voluntary solutions have met e* ay quell racial strife and continuing with some success in specific in- S Kor6£in^ Negro work boycotts against stances, but educational tech-i iwivmiij j ,white supremacy laws. niques have been found to be n* ■ a • « I ; Verwoerd continued to show j ineffectual m the absence of legis- ft lOf MOOB7IST progress in a Pretoria hospital lative support and enforcement.”j 3 ifrom two head wounds inflicted! The committee also found “large r! ,• r* I 'Saturday by a wealthy whiteiscale” discrimination in employ- £|©ff|Ori B IXIIIO farmer. An anti-government news-!ment practices and scatteied dis-i paper suggested he may havelcnmination at resorts, motels and! SEOUL (/Pl—Anti-government been injured more severely than'hospitals, Hots broke out in the southern] ihis doctors admit. ]port of Masan last night One | Tha Hand Daily Mail *aid the TTCf ,irJasye | rioter was reported killed and 12; ! two bullets "may have caused ! I “vJITI <Jf UUI6S other South Koreans were injured! ] damage which could impair his j (seriously, including 9 policemen 1 speech, his sense of balance, his f'inf&r f*GlaC ' The violence grew out of bloodv I hearing and possibly his mental ’fighting on election day March 15, I stale for some time." J CHICAGO UP) - Evidence that! when po ’! ce shot d . own a ! l6ast la cell switches from a normal t demonstrating, la cancerous state in one fast jump,?® w la * *bey cSheo election ’after being egged on for a long!* rauds - . , ... •, , |time was reported by a research' Reports from the city, 220 miles; |team yesterday south of Seoul, said upwards of| ! The medical search for the ex-I*-000 1 *- 000 persons launched a violent; lact moment of origin in cancer dcn 1 10n I stra * , ° l ? when word got out was made by Silvio Fiala, Anna ** la * ** le body of a 16-year-old Fiala and Walter Glinsman of the! student . missing since the elec-l department of pathologv. Colum- tlon da y disorders, was found bia University. * floating in the bay with a bullet; At the critical stage in the de- 111 **\ e bead velopment of tumors from normal 1 Led by high school students, tissue, certain cells discard their ;demonstrators stoned public! assigned role in serving the or-! buildings, attacked two police ganism and become will-of-the stations and wrecked a jeep of wisp cells with no function except the Masan police chief. News re [rapid multiplication. ports said the police held their ! The researches sought to de-|Lre until 9 p.m., then opened up ternnne why tumor cells are able]when the crowds refused to dis to multiply without restriction in- perse. j ;side the body. Normal cells are! Despite the show of force, late subject to the control of the or-1 news reports estimated from !ganism and multiply only to re- 3,000 to 10,000 Koreans demon place the cells that are worn out strated until shortly before mid dunng the life process. night. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA FULLINGTON AUTO BUS CO. BUS SCHEDULE STATE COLLEGE - TYRONE - CONNECTION TO ALTOONA Lv. Stale Sol. 9:30a.m. 12:15 p.m. 5:15 p.m. Ar. Tyrone 10:15 a.m. 1:15 p.m. 6:10 p.m. Lv. Tyrone 10:15 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 6:10 p.m. Ar. Altoona 10:50 a.m. 2:00 p.m. 6:50 p.m. Train Connections Going Home WEST EAST Tyrone 1:34 P.M. Altoona 12:04 P.M Tyrone 7:28 P.M. Tyrone 2:35 P.M. Return Trip West East Lv. Altoona 9:30 a.m. 2:15 p.m, Ar. Tyrone 10:10 a.m. 2:45 p.m. Lv.Tyrone (0:15 a.m. 2:45 p.m. Air. State College 11:15 a.m. 3:45 p.m. Lloyd Sees Easing Of Western Tension WASHINGTON (/P) British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd predicted yesterday that next month’s summit meet ing will ease dangerous European tensions. Lloyd spoke out confidently as Western foieign ministers began gathering for three days of pre-summit meetings they hope will forge a solid Allied front. PAGE THREE Berlin, Get many and East-West relations fieneially—looked like the main discussion topic at the summit. But he disclosed that a team of Allied diplomats had come up with what he called "some ideas" they wanted the West ern summit chiefs to offer So viet Premier Nikita Khrush chev in the field of East-West relations. Spaak did not disclose what these ideas weie. Top administration officials re ported some differences lemam in the Allied camp. Buildings Approved HARRISBURG (fP) The Gen eral State Authority yesteiday ap pioved an adjustment in a pro posal to build education and hor ticulture research buildings for Pennsylvania State University. is “ . ! if/ ' J '■/ / / / f • ' * 8* f ’»i / I ; *./ I<. / ]j | .? | f really gone with > seamless stockings
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers