TUESDAY, MAY 17 Summit Round Ike, Voic PARIS (/P)--- tonal displays of At one point head and declare( It is rare that oviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev yesterday put on one of the most emo his spectacular public life. during the summit meeting the Soviet leader waved his arms above his : "As God is my witness, my hands are clean and my soul is pure." a leader of the Communist party calls on the Almighty. Transp Employ; May St A (/P)--Pres-: uill said yes-1 . Transport, ight strike PHILADELPH !dent Michael J. terday that hi Workers Union r the Pennsylvania' Railroad be fore the June 6 deadline. He indicated a decision might come soon. Here to address a strike call which would idle more than 25,000 non-operating employes from New York to St. Louis, Quill conferred with fellow union leaders. They were to decide whether the presi dent's council of the TWU's rail road division should be convened to consider an earlier walkout. Quill, through a spokesman. said yesterday morning that nothing definite had been decided. A little later, before meeting with Mayor Richardson Dilworth about another matter, Quill com mented only that "I am trying to knock some sense into the situa tion." The dispute, as explained by a spokesman, was over work as signments. Work rules. especially the scope rule which defines job classifica tions, are the chief issue in a dis pute of three years standing climaxed last week by Quill's statement that a strike was im evitable "because this is the end of the line." The TWU says it cannot com promise the work rules question lest its members be dispossessed by automation and frequent fur loughing. As for wages, the union seeks a 35-cents-an-hour increase. Present rates, under a contract continued after the Nov. 1 expiration, are $2.17 to $2.65 an hour. Congressmen Say Khrushchev Torpedoed Summit Conference WASHINGTON ,6 1 P)— Con gressmen said yesterday So viet Premier Nikita Khrush chev coldbloodedly blew up the summit conference be cause he really didn't ,want to negotiate and because he wanted an excuse to keep President Ei senhower from visiting, the Soviet Union. On all sides, _Republicans and Democratic senators and House members deplored what they said was Khrushchev's insulting treat ment of Eisenhower. Many said they had had little advance hope the summit talks would lead to much good, and also that Khrtishchev's bull-in the-shop actions, as they de- Scribed them, confirmed their misgivings. Sen. Theodore Francis Green (D-RI), chairman emeritus of the Senate Foreign Relations Com mittee, said Khrushchev "has cruelly dashed 'the hopes of hun dreds of millions that at least some slight progress toward a re laxation of international tensions could be made." _ . Senate Democratic Leader Lyn don B. Johnson of Texas said THESIS MULTILITHING MAWR friC PRINTIN E. - COLLEGE _ K' Lose Tempers; of America Blocked The subject tht triggered his arm-waving was spying. The U.S. State Department's Russian expert, Charles E. Boh len—who has known Khrushchev for years—told a news conference Khrushchev was "ill at ease—un der some feeling of tension." Pressed by reporters for details of Khrushchev's behavior at the meeting, Bohlen said Khrushchev at one point referred to "internal politics of the Soviet Union." Pes i ke The Soviet leader added that these were "important." A longtime observer of the U.S.S.R. and its leaders, Bohlen said: "It struck me that at no previous conference, have I ever heard such a reference made." PARIS UP) —President Eisen hower kept his famed temper in, !check at yesterday's summit con ference meeting. I But afterward in private he ex 'ploded with fury over Soviet Pre mter Nikita Khrushchev's tactics. That is the word from Eisen hower associates who either were ;with the President in the summit session or with him when he re turned to the American Embassy residence. "Angry isn't the word for it ,he was absolutely furious," an of ficial reported regarding Eisen 'hower's reaction in private. WASHINGTON L The So viet Union has - stepped up its lamming of U.S. Voice of America ?short-wave broadcasts, a Voice spokesman reported yesterday. Moscow all but abandoned its !jamming of the Voice's Russian 'language broadcasts after Premi ,er Nikita Khrushchev arrived foy !his U.S. visit last Sept. 15. I But, the spokesman said, since ' May 5, the day Khrushchev an nounced the USSR had downed lan American spy plane, the So iviet Jammers have been aiming their radio interference selected ly at the Voice's Russian-language 'programs dealing with the plane incident. Khrushchev's ballooning of the spy plane incident "was clearly an indication that he planned to make the summit either a sham bles or a forum for Soviet propa ganda." Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois told the Senate it is clear that the Kremlin leadership was alarmed over the effect Eisen hower's warm personality would have had on the Russian peo ple. Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa) said that in his judgement Khrushchev "has overplayed his hand." The Soviet Premier "evidently had stirred up considerable fear and fright in his own country" over the spy plane, Scott opined, and "has obviously decided the most damaging rebuttal to his posturings would be the presence in Russia of President Eisenhow er." THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Froth Circulation Meeting (This one's for real) 730 P. M. 218 HUB igns BE On Foreign Aid WASHINGTON (A')—President Eisenhower has signed, with words of gratification, a foreign aid authorization bill that gives him 98 per cent of what he asked. The White House released the news yesterday of Eisenhower's signing the $4,086,300,000 mea sure, together with a statement hi which he said Congress had shown a "high degree of respon-1 2. The Soviet boss would de sibility." ) mand a halt to fur then spy flights but would not wreck the summit Eisenhower signed the bill—a conference because of this issue. continuation of the 14-year-oldi 3. Khrushchev's public denun stop-communism program of aid;ciations of aerial spying were to American allies—Just beforeOlmed at t. improving his bargain leaving for the ill-fated summit position at the conference ta conference at Paris. . able on the critical issue of Berlin. In the wake of Khrushehev's P The bill does not provide cash•! It sun ply sets a $4,086,300,000 cell-'!arigrY outburst yesterday, these ing in comparison to the $4 174 - administration authorities ap- peared not only surprised but 980,000 top limit asked by iiseri- . hover. :somewhat startled at the turn of The actual appropriation, which' is is to be voted later, will be sub ject to strong efforts toward cut ting. Judging by the past, the total will be cut. Principal items are $2 billion Ifor military aid, $675 milion for 'defense support of allies, $7OO mil lion for economic development loans, $256 million in special ;assistance money and $172 million !for technical assistance. Telephone Charges To Be Investigated HARRISBURG (JP) The Public Utility Commission yesterday put in motion a full-scale investigation of the Bell Telephone Co.'s rate structure. The commission said the investigation will determine whether Bell should be ordered -to reduce rates for its 2,577,474 subscribers. The PUC decided on the inves tigation after studying financial reports indicating Bell's net earn ings for the year ended March 31 had risen to 6.2 per cent. When a $13,400,000 increase was granted the firm in 1956, it was based on a 5.9 per cent net figure. The difference was estimated at ! about $2.5 million. A Bell spokesman said that the company hoped the commission, in the course of any rate check. would examine "earnings peaks and earnings valleys ... together." "When they are so examined," said the spokesman, "the record shows that Bell Company's aver age earnings for the past 14 post war years have not come up to the level of earnings allowed by the PUC in any of our rate cases." Bell in recent years has spent imany millions of dollars in im proving and increasing telephone service to its Pennsylvania cus tomers. The PUG directed Bell to be ready within 30 days after official notice to meet with commission ers for a preliminary discussion The conference procedure is TONIGHT Leaders Shocked At Russian Summit Conference Attitude WASHINGTON (P) Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush chev's sudden move to wreck the summit conference yester ion leaders with wrong esti- day caught many administra, mates about Soviet intentions. The g,fim episode demons necessary it is to guess right on what the unpredictable Soviet leader will do Searching for reason, they speculated that tremendous pres sure from Stalinist elements, plus the demands of Red China's lead ers, forced Khrushchev to switch abruptly from a "coexistence" theme to a hard line. Only a few hours before Eisen hower left for Paris Satui day, two top-ranking administration offi cials had predicted privately: I.• Khrushchev would stop short of cancelling Eisenhower's good will visit to he Soviet Union. events They maintained it was still too early to tell whether Khrushchev's bitter onslaught sets international relations back to the cold war pe riod of frequent exchanges of vi olent insults. These authorities had no expla nation for Eisenhower's state- I ntent that further spy flights had 'been called off atfer the downing of the American U 2 spy plane in 'the USSR May 1. aimed at determining whether Bell should make immediate re ductions or whether formal pub lic hearings are necessary to es tablish fairness of its rates, the FTC explained. 220. A S. ALLEN ST. DeVictor's AD 8.0213 JAZZ CLUB ELECTION MEETING Wednesday, May 18 1:30 P.M. 217 WILLARD trated anew how tricky—and Charges Kill Peace Talks At Summit (Continued from page one) a stormy session of fin ee hours and five minutes. The faint hope for more ses sions rested mainly with De Gaulle. De Gaulle proposed that the American and Soviet leaders take a day off for reflection and cool ing down White Howe Piess sec retary James C. Hagerty said any initiative for resuming the meet ing would have to come from De Gaulle. Western sources said De Gaulle, in an attempt to avert complete collapse of the sum mit, would tee Khrushchev to day. Khrushchev's proposal for a postponement of six to eight months, which he said would per mit tempers to subside, could mean a summit with a new American president in attend ance. Eisenhower retires in Janu ary. De Gaulle last n!ght canceled a luncheon he had arranged for today for Khrushchev, Eisenhow er and Macmillan. Macmillan had a meeting late in the day with De Gaulle to discuss "methods of continuing the conference." , The British Prime Minister, who has regarded himself a mid dleman in efforts to ease East- West troubles, emerged looking much as if he had just been to a funeral. He went on to see Ei senhower and then arranged to meet Khrushchev. The British had not given up hope. They said that if Khrush chev would accept Eisenhower's public announcement of the can cellation of flights over the Soviet Union as a gesture, he could re- Isume the summit meetings End put himself in a flood light in world opinion. —Food consumption studies show that families spend more money for meat and meat sub stitutes than any other major group of foods. You want to do the best for your hair So give it De Victor's special care PAGE THREE