RAGE TWO Congress Passes Minimum Wage WASHINGTON (IP) —The administration won a thump ing victory in the House yesterday when its minimum wage bill was approved by a surprising 230496 margin. Passage by the House completed congressional action on the controversial measure, to which President Kennedy had AF Announces Successful Firing - . Of Titan Missile ' VANDERBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif, (iP) A huge Titan missile thundered out of its un derground lair yesterday in a successful first test of a "hard ened" ICBM launch system. It was intentionally destroyed about 40 miles down - the Pacific missile range after surviving two periods of severe stress. Its range is 5.000 miles and more. The test pioneered an armored underground launch system de signed to enable the United States to strike back after atomic at tack. CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (/P) —A forecast of squalls in the Atlantic cast doubt yesterday on whether astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. will be able to make his pioneer flight into space this week. The prime goal was to learn if the two-stage Titan, this coun try's largest and most powerful rocket, could survive the flame and sound-wave punishment of leaving its hole. It did, and later came through another all-out buffeting 20 miles up. The Air Force, fearing either assault might be enough to de stroy the missle, said it was de lighted. The firing took place despite a 40-knot wind that kicked up visi bility-obscuring dust. Prosecution Links Eichmann To Warsaw Ghetto Uprising JERUSALEM (/P) Th e proSecution yesterday intro duced evidence in the trial of Adolf Eichmann directly link ing him ,to the tragic chain of events that led to the doomed Warsaw ghetto uprising against the Nazis in 1943. Prosecutor Gideon Hausner held back his evidence until the end of a day of testimony from wit nesses who took part in the Jew ish rebellion against numerically superior and 'better-armed Ger man troops in the conquered Pol ish capital. Hausner introduced a copy of the minutes of a meeting .Eich mann 'attended with Nazi Foreign Ministry officials in April 1942. The minutes showed that Eichmann asked Foreign Minis try representatives to consent "or to say there is no objection to extending all security police measures which may be neces sary in the interest of preserv ing public order in the Warsaw ghetto to all inmates." Agreement of the ministry was PENN STATE PLAYERS REGRET TO ANNOUNCE. THE CANCELLATION OF THEIR PRODUCTION OF THREE SISTERS For this Weekend Only! TICKET EXCHANGES made at HUB. For information call UN 5-2563 given top priority among his leg -1 islative proposals. The Senate ap-' proved it earlier 64-28. The bill boosts the existing $l - minimum wage to $1.25 over a 28-month period and brings 3.62 million retail and serv ice industry employes under the act's coverage for the first time. Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg applauded the action as a great advance in social leg islation. He said the bill will afford "long overdue protection to a large group of underpriv. ileged Americans." "This is the. first and b' step toward pr viding minimu, wage protectir to all America, whom the fed( al law can a) propriately co er," he said. Twice befog in the House sit ilar bills h gone down to de feat before a John F. Kennedy conservative co- alition of Republicans and South- , ern Democrats. Up until yester day's vote each side was talking of victory by two or three votes. Ironically, it was a combina tion of Southern Democrats and and big city Republicans that helped the administration win. Thirty-three Republicans, most of them from areas hard hit by unemployment, bolted the con servative coalition as did nearly half the Southern Democrats. The key to winning Southern support was a series of exemp tions for specific groups written into the bill during a House-Sen ate conference. These removed . certain cotton gin employes, tobacco processors, livestock auctioneers and others from coverage. required, Hausner said, because Jews of foreign nationality had 'been trapped in the _ghetto after the 1939 invasion of Poland. Hausner also submitted docu ments in which Eichmann report ' , ed foreign nationals would be 'evacuated from the ghetto. The prosecutor implied that Eichmann's request for Foreign Ministry approval of maximum security measures was, in effect, a method of clearing obstacles to permit a Gestapo clampdown on the ghetto, where half a million Jews lived as virtual prisoners. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA G-E Head Questions Price Fixing Bill WASHINGTON (P) How could sales people have fixed prices behind Robert Paxton's back while he was president of General Electric? "I must be pretty damn dumb," he replied yesterday. Paxton, who officially retires at the end of the month, told the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly subcommittee he had given sub ordinates explicit instructions "to have no truck" with deals to fix prices. But, the G-E president contin ued. his sales people evidently "went underground" and diso beyed his orders. Paxton testifies he found out about price-fixing 25 years ago and decided then "I'd have noth ing to .do with such monkey business." And, iie added, he kept his pledge. "It became rather generally knovilm that I wasn't receptive to that kind of conduct," said Pax ton, who took a leave of absence from General Electric in January. because of ill health. ' The white-haired Paxton, who has earned as much as $300,000 a year as G-E president, agreed with . Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., that it would have been wiser to grill employes about their activi ties rather than simply instruct them against meeting with com petitors to fix prices. He said, however, he .had felt it was-"sort of a womanish char acteristic" •to question people about an activity after they had been forbidden to take part in it. Food Stamp Pian To Begin June 1 HARRISBURG 'W) G o v.. Lawrence yesterday set June 1 for President Kennedy's food; stamp plan to go into effect in' Fayette bounty. The program will provide food purchase subsidies for some 7,000' households immediately and pump between $55,000 and $70,000 a week into the economy of the de- I pressed region, Lawrence told his weekly news conference. Fayette County is one of the (eight regions in the U.S. selected !for pilot programs under the stamp plan. The southwestern county is one of the nation's hardest-hit areas of chronic unemployment. Pres ently it has an unemployment rate of 29.7 per cent of its work force. The plan will provide stamps free to destitute persons with no income. FCA*I4IIIiVI 2nd HAPPY WEEK! • at 1:45, 3:45, 540, 7:90, 9:40 p.m pita Dis ,, Vhvb •• "O *Ain r dle AbSeht u ( 4, \ • I,l' nunciell Doors Open Tonite at 6:45 p.m. - :.::(v.i..- i ,r;.4,.:*::-iri All New First Run N® Double Feature! Diplomat Sentenced As Communist Spy LONDON (VP) A British diplomat who was subjected to Communist brainwashing attempts as a- captive in Korea was sentenced yesterday to 42 years in prison for spying for the Soviet Union. George. Blake, 38, the father of three children, was handed the stiffest prison sentence in modern British history after pleading guilty to espionage charges, which were not published in detail. Informants said the heavy sen tence was meant to serve as a warning and deterrent to others. Blake is believed to have given the names of eight British agents to the Soviet counterespionage ap paratus during a period of almost a decade. Even with time off for good ' behavior Blake, formerly Brit ish vice consul in Seoul, Korea, cannot expect to gain his free dom until he is SS. For reasons of national security, Atty. - Gen. Sir Reginald Manning ham-Buller declined to reveal the precise nature of the information communicated to Moscow. However, he . quoted Blake as saying in a statement: "I must freely admit that there was not an official' document of any impor tance to which I had access which was not passed to my Soviet con tact." The attorney general explain ed that Blake saw many impor- has )) ciao vy • .• • •_. SUt4O4 )S'l) Ivo p p . • • . TAXI RETURN GRATIS =e===EU= Your MOM • ... 4 _ 4_ Th e Best Handmade ("4 Chocolates Many Other Items ' P`fil • ' Gift Wrapped Sent Anywhere CANDY CANE 1 111 4 vi /14411# 1.4-1 Y MOTHER'S DAY W. College Avenue (Between the Diners) :044+++.H4+++++++++44++++++44404)4++4444.1444++++++.1•44- B'nai B'rith Hine! Foundation proudly presents DIRECT FROM BROADWAY " ROOTS ,' by Arnold Wesker London had it. New York has it. NOW HILLEL HAS IT! —With Broadway Cast —Ends Broadway Run at Mayfair Theater on May 6 "FRESH AND ORIGINAL" Watts, New York Post AWARDED "BEST PLAY OF SEASON" IN LONDON Saturday Night, May 13 II:30 P.M. Tickets on sale at the Hillel Foundation and at the HUB Admission $1.50 THURSDAY. - MAY 4. 1961 Pant secret papers but fortun ately did not get his hands on documents relating to nuclear weapons. Sentence was passed after the court under Lord Parker, the chief justice, had been in secret session only 54 minutes. During World War 11, Blake served as a translator in the navy. With the coming of peace he joined the Foreign Office where he learned Russian. At that period he always seemed to those who met him as a firm anti7Commu nist. MEM=