PAGE IWO Rebels Give Up In Venezuela CARACAS, Venezuela (/Pi Rebels led by a disgruntled Venezuelan general crossed the border from Colombia yes- ( terday, seized the mountain city of San Cristobal and attempt-!' ed to touch off a nation-wide revolution. Thev failed. j Rockefeller's Plans Stay Unchanged WIU.IAMSPORT, Pa. i.4»i Neu Yoik’s Gov. Nelson Rocke-i fellei .said yesterday lus visit to this north central Pennsylvania region in no way means more than! a campaign boost for his one-i time college roommate. •'There has been no change in] mv plans,’’ he told newsmen when asked if his appearance here meant more than help for Her man Schneebeh. Schneebeh, a Williamsport auto-! mobile dealei, is the Republican! candidate for Congress in a spe-! cial election to fill the 17th Dts-i tnct seat left vacant by the death 1 of Rep. Alvin R Bush, long tune GOP leader. Bush died last De cember “I was invited in by the state committee,” said Rockefeller. ‘I was glad to come in and help out Herm Schneebeh. He was my college roommate at Dartmouth and be is the kind of man we ought to have in politics." Rockefeller ai rived in his per sonal plane. The weather was sunny Despite Rockefeller’s disclaim er. political observers still watch ed fin signs that the governor, might b' 1 willing to challenge Vice Purulent Nixon for the GOP piesidenlial nomination. U.S. Flunks Airlift Test WASHINGTON \P) - Air Force and the Army agreed yesterday that the United States flunked last month's test of its ability to airlift large numbers of com bat soldiers to distant trouble spots. Lt Gen William H Tunner, lie.-ui of the Mihtaiv Air Tians poil Servin', said the Puerto Ri e.m an lilt test demonstrated that 90 per cent of MATS’ fleet is ob solete ‘The piesent force,” he told a House Aimed Services subcom mittee, "cannot meet the time limitations established for the an hft of Ainu foices" Gen. Bruce C. Clarke, head of the Army’s Continental Com mand, joined in Tunner’s con clusion. "The limitations of the major ity of the present MATS aircraft senousli limit the sire of U.S HOUSE j ) SEASHORE DINNER (j } Includes Oysters. Scallops, ( ) Fish and Deviled Crabs <j ) TAXI RETURN GRATIS ( Sfarlife Drive-in Theatre KOI TF 543 BETWEEN STiTK COt LEI.K mnd HELLKFONTE Thursday - Friday - Saturday I*t Feature . . . "FIVE GATES TO HELL” In Cinemascope with \e\ille Brand « Dulorea Micheal< 2nd Feature . , . "BLUE DENIM" with Carol Lvnley • Srandaii DeWilde Showtime 7:30 P.M. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN bIAIE COLLEGE PENNbYLVANIA The armv said the rebels were hue brought up the religious issue 1 bottled up within hours and a m speeches elsewhere this group of 300 surrendered at first There was some doubt as to the contact with loyal fighters. , vote-getting value of Kennedy’s Leaders of all sorts —political, campaign visit. To a great extent,, labor and military—gave a mas- 1 ," 1 ® audiences were too young toj sive show of support to President y°te for Kennedy or anyone else Romulo Betancourt’s moderately m the ¥ a y 10 presidential prefer leftist government. i en £. e pla ? ary - . „ „ Betancourt told the nation that; Humphrey (D.-Minn ) will be on *^ tbe IC i_ be s refused to surrender t ] le jj a [| 0 t as uval candidates for shortly he would put down this favor of Mountain State vot , criminal adventure without nesi- crs :tation ” He declared the govern-! fhe result will not be binding ment was sure to win. ion delegates to the Democratic Foreign Minister Luis Azcaya 'National Convention. 1 charged the insurgents were j At Oak Hill, Gauley Bridge and! : backed by Generalissimo Rafael (Montgomery, three of the first; | L. Trujillo, dictator of the Do- 'five stops. Kennedy spoke in high I j minican Republic and an old school gymnasiums. The audi-J [ foe of Betancourt. Officials have ences consisted of the student | often linked him with anti- body in each case, with adults fill government plots here. mg the space left over. . "The hands of Trujillo are via- [ Kennedy s re ible in this.” said Areava. “Vene- . I " ar *“ l n ‘ h ' s ab ? at ruela will take energetic and cate-l the food that ,s djstnbuted m the gorical decisions against this mon-!™‘j in ,£, f lS »r nant" H C ster of the Caribbean.” : said , four milho , n Amencara de " IT , , . „ ;pend upon surplus food distribu • Under the command of Jesus by the Department of Agri iMana Castro Leon, a former air> cu^ure force general who has been agi-i "But what kind of food'is it?” tatmg against the government for he asked. “Flour, rice and corn almost two years, the rebels meal sometimes some butter, moved aeioss the border from Co-'cheese and dry skimmed milk— lornbia at dawn. land more rice and corn meal.” How they managed lo organ- | That diet, said Kennedy, “is not ixa in that country, a friendly the basis of a decent existence.” neighbor to the west, was not | The biggest crowd Kennedy clear, but the mountain areas faced was at Montgomery High provided excellent cover. | School. Mayor D. P. Brown esti- The rebel force proceeded 20 mated there were between 1500 miles beyond the border to San and 1800 in the gym. About one- Cristobal, a coffee center of about fourth of them were adults. 50.000 people in the Andean foot-! Humphrey followed virtually lulls, 385 miles southwest of Ca- the same itinerary as Kennedy on racas. They seized the barracks a tour the week before last of the military garrison. The 400 soldiers thus were neutralized forces which can be deployed to distant overseas destinations in acceptable periods of time." said a joint report presented bv the two qeneralc. Tunner and Clarke were called on by Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (D - S.C ), chairman of a special sub committee investigating U.S. air lift capacity, to evaluate last month’s exercise. It was the largest peacetime airlift test ever conducted by the United States. i The goals set for the operation weie all successfully met. Tunner said, except that it took 4000 more flying hours than had been planned Asked by Rivers why he felt the test proved U.S. airlift ca-i Ipacitv inadequate, Tunner re 'phed. ‘‘Because it took so many airplanes and so much effort to do such a small job.” j Further, he added, five months' of intensive planning preceded the; exeicise. another factor not con- ! isistent with actual emergency; conditions. ' I arithony Perkins w Jane fonda Kennedy Speaks In W. Virginia MONTGOMERY, W. Va. (fl>> Folks m the stiongiy Protestant coal mining sections of southern iWest Virginia got their first look lyesterda}' at Sen John F. Ken inedy fD-Mass ), a Catholic who Britains Seek Device For H-Bomb Boomerang LONDON -f/P) A London newspaper, the Evening Stand ard, reported last night that Bri tain is working on a radar device that would turn the H-Bomb into a boomerang. The device would explode ene my rockets over the country which fires them and thus turn the bomb into ‘‘the most devastat ing boomeiang in history,” the newspaper said. In. Washington Pentagon scien tists said thev could recall no de velopment similar to the device described by the newspaper. I ★ NITTANY NOW—DOORS OPEN 6 PM. Feature: 6:10, 7:50, 9:30 she lived TnThe LIMELIGHT ... & LOVED IN THE SHADOWS! *A novel mystery that KA HWn pulls no punches.* -Time Magazine SfcAPM'IISie "SUPERIOR" N.Y. Post From WARNER BROS.fi South African Police Arrest 700 Negroes JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (/Pi —Police and soldiers backed by armored cars arrested 700 Negroes yesterday in raids on native settlements outside major cities on South Africa’s cape peninsula. More than a thousand have been seized in the last 48 hours. The raids are part of the strike called by the outlawed Afri can National Congress protesting the government’s strict apartheid laws. Failure of the strike brought demands from liberal white i groups for an end to emergency regulations permitting raids on Negro settlements without search warrants and detention of hun dreds in jail indefinitely. Lands Minister Paul Sauer, acting government head, said Tuesday South Africa would "reconsider in earnest and hon esty her whole approach to the native question," But in a statement to Parlia ment yesterday, Foreign Minis ter Eric Louw rejected anv basic I changes in government policy, in cluding racial segregation. He al so turned down suggestions for a coalition government with the op position United Party which pro posed easing the Negroes’ lot If there is any change. Louw said. Prime Minister Hendrik V. Verwoer will make it. Ver woerd, recovering from two bul- Berlin Strategy Planned BONN, Germany (/P) —Author- itative sources said yesterday the Western powers are in general agreement to leave the initiative on the Berlin issue with the So viets at the summit conference. CAN YOU SEE YOURSELF IN THIS PICTURE? General Telephone Company of Pennsylvania offers unusual oppor tunities for outstanding graduates capable of rapid advancement into responsible management positions. • ENGINEERING: E.E., M.E.. C.E. for application engineering, structural de sign, transmission, circuit application. • BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: For administration, supervision. • ACCOUNTING: For income tax, cost, IBM. Interviews: Friday, April 11 (Make Appointment at Placement Office) GENERAL TELEPHONE America's Fastest-GrovHng Telephone System mURSDAY. APRIL 21. 1960 drive to squelch an abortive let wounds inflicted by a whits assassin April 9, probably will be well enough lo lake full charge of the government with in a week, "even though ho v might have io do so from hi* bedroom,” Louw declared. Louw also said the govern ment’s decision to discuss its ra cial problems with U.N. Secre taiy-General Dag Hammarskjold is not a departure from the view point that there should be no in terference in the domestic affair* of member states of the U.N. NOW PLAYING Feat, 1:30, 3:32, 5:28. 7:30, 9:32 . UUMMfICMKSmWi jS/jbl zona, too Kooucma v* ®ur Man ( In Havana V Alec Guinness ■— - 1 Walter A. Swanson Penn Slate 'SU Division riant Engineer
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