PAGE TWO JFK Prods Negotiators To Resume Steel Talks WASHINGTON (A?)—President; Kennedy yesterday prodded steel industry and union negotia tors to get back to the bargain ing table by next Wednesday. He said the public interest is deeply involved in a steel'settlement. Kennedy told conference he had sent telegrams to steel ex ecutives and to David McDonald, president of the United Steel "Workers, telling them an agree ment "would ma- terially strength- cn our economy end country." Ncgolia t i o n s 'recessed last Fri , day with no time set to resume. The steel indus- tty contracts cx gire June 30. Kennedy ex- . pressed regret in his telegram that the union and companies, while! willing to start negotiating early,! had failed to come to agreement.] He said he regarded a steel pact as "symbolic as a test of our {ability to manage our economy in a competitive world." IN ANOTHER news conference statement, Kennedy reaffirmed his willingness to negotiate for a nuclear test ban treaty even after the United States resumes atmos pheric testing. The. President announced last Lawrence Signs $1 Billion Budget Harrisburg <#*) Gov. JLawrcncc signed into law yester day his $1 billion general, fund budget only 64 days after he put it before the legislature. The spending program was vir tually in the same form in which it was presented to the lawmakers Jan. 2. Only minor changes were made in appropriations. The eo^Muor t msde only one major change. He eliminated $9.1 million in funds added to the bud get lor additional school subsidies in a Republican-backed bill. THE ADDITIONAL funds were approved by the legislature, but the governor said Atty. Gen. Dav id Stahl ruled that the extra allo cations would be unconstitutional. _ The proposed funds would have provided additional payments to a large number of specific dis tricts. Stahl ruled that the constitution would prohibit such an expendi- BIKE REPAIRS PARTS ACCESSORIES Western Auto Satisfaction Guaranteed 200 W. Collage Are. AD 7-7892 WHY 00 SO MANY , * SMALL BUSINESSES MIL Last year, 16,000 U.S firms went odt ot business. But ~JB says Commerce Secretary m Luther Hodges, many could B have pulled through it their owners had known the ABC's of economics. In "Speaking Out" in this week’s Post he gives the two main rta . sobs for business failure. Says most Americans ate "economic boobs." ] And outlines a 3-part plan for cop | Ing with economic problems. 'ISt SwwAy Emmnlmg Friday that, this country would start' testing in the air again- by ] late April if by that time the Rus sians haye not agreed to a testj ban with an effective! inspection system. V ; | Kennedy, in reply to questions,' said-he regarded the forthcoming' Geneva disarmamentconference as extremely important. j "I am not making] optimistic) predictions about its- success, but, J could make pessimistic predic-i itions about its he said. 1 ] HE ADDED -THAT! he would! [have no objection to a discussionj ‘of other world trouble! spots, such] 'as Berlin and Southeast Asia,; .when Secretary of State Dean' I Rusk meets in advance of the dis ' armament conference .with Soviet jForeign Minister Andrei Gromyko and British Foreign]. Secretary Lord Home. ' !' *' John r. K*ini«4r Kennedy disclosed that he has sent a letter to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev making pro posals for cooperation between [the two countries in [outer space enterprises. i Kennedy, had previously recom mended international | cooperation and said last week [the United Slates would come up with con crete plans after Khrushchev had called for a pooling bf space re sources. { The President said [his letter to Khrushchev would be made pub lic After it is received in Moscow. 1 ture. The basic law stipulates that' special legislation may not be made singling out individual school units. AS IT IS NOW written, the spending program would allocate any surplus at the end of the 1962- 63, fiscal year Jto all school dis tricts. ’ The major bill in the appropria tions signed by the chief execu tive was one providing $9lO mil lion in general appropriations for the" day-to-day operations of state government The biggest other single ap propriation approved by the gov ernor will provide $2O million to Pennsylvania State University. The legislature approved most of the budget in winding up its 1962 session last week. The budget Slate Today! [3O, 3:31, 5:31, 7:32, 9:33 aTAAbtiiG OLIVIA de KAVILLAND YVETTE MIHIEUX ROSSAHQ SRAZZf GEORGE HAMILTON NOW 2:00-4:20-6:45-9:05 4 ACADEMY AWARDS! • Best Actress • Best Supporting Actress - :• Best Musical Score • Best Art Direction " i THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA ■Nominated Chaplain Gives Views on CD By DOROTHY DRASHSt (This is the first in a series of articles, on Civil Defense in which the opinions of . faculty members toill be presented. In today's article the University : Chaplain will give, his views.) L In the event of a nuclear at itack on this' country, the question lis not survival but rather the kind ■of 'life one would have to live, Luther H. Harshbarger, Univer isity Chaplain, said. " ! SURVIVAL. FOB THE sake of survival is not important if- the! [conditions - under which one! would.have to live would be “less! [than human." Harshbarger said. j But, he said, this does riot .ex cuse the attjtude of not wishing ■to survive a nuclear attack. Indi viduals should want to survive a nuclear attack in order .that a nation and a society may be re constructed, he' said. Nevertheless, the immediate personal danger posed by the threat of nuclear war is ■so re mote as to have no reality, Harsh barger said?- ' The development of a . Civil Defense program recently to pro tect the United States has created a certain amount of panic, he said. THE HYSTERIA among Ameri cans of “saving their own skins” is probably delighting Commu nist leaders, Harshbarger said. Communist leaders realize that the building-of individual fallout shelters by Americans may not be a drain on economic resources whisked through the. General As sembly in record time. It was the shortest regular session ;in the Commonwealth's history.' It was limited to budget and 1 finance matters. Shafer Named for Lt.-Gov. HARRISBURG (AP) Sen. Raymond P. Shafer was endorsed by the state Republican organi zation yesterday for the nomina tion of lieutenant governor in the May 15 primary. . Prior to his selection for the nomination, Shafer had- an nounced plans to engage in a pri mary battle with U.S. Rep. D. Carroll Kearns fpr the veteran congressman’s seat in Washing ton. —NOW— Feature Time! 7:00 - 9:05 PM. Tha Thrill* of ThriUon Moem Pfc»bo««— Am Oemtt 1 Xwpk IMBit h|MMr»McaW ' • r<»» FOm triißit but it is a drain on intellectual resources, he said. .However there is a difference between building individual"fall out shelters and building-commu nity fallout shelters, he -added. From an administrative view point, he said he felt it was the responsibility of the, government to protect people who wouldn’t: have any defense against an im- : rhinent danger. There is a difference in degree ; Delegations Plan EVIAN( France (AP)—Final de tails of a peace agreement for Algeria were taken ,up by rebel and French negotiators in a guarded conference yesterday. There was speculation that the talks may take no more than four Or five days. The two delegations —, with France's led by Louis Joxe, min ister for Algerian affairs, and the rebels’ by their tough, wary depu ty premier, Belkacem Kriro—met for five hours in morning and af ternoon sessions in a hotel of this lakeside resort Strict secrecy surrounded the gathering. .French security forces stood guard. No news conferences were scheduled by either side. Collegian Classified!Ads Get Results - INTERNATIONAL FILMS "The Young and 4he Damned" This film drama concerning jiuvenile delinquency was filmed' with stunning realism in Mexico by the jfamed director -laris ’ Bunuek Bunuelj; examines the outskirts of Mexico City where adolescent gangs fight each other out of hate, fear, lawlessness j and hunger. This is a tight and penetrating treatment of desperate, poverty haunted youth. ; j. j I , i " : The New York Post commented F’Bunuel has supplied the Incisive thrust of pitiless trutij, the incident reduced to stark outline, unmodified by hiimanity, kind-intervention of the justice of human punishment... One merely feels the slow, grinding, fateful - outcome that has nothing, to do with wishes, justice, hope or. happiness.” i*” f In contrast to the stark horror of THE YOUNG A 1 DAMNED is this' week’s short subject:' the. i Charlie Chaplain in EASY STREET. This file during 1917-1918, is illustrative of the art of Ch its peak. ' J • i HUB Au THURSDAY', 3:00, 7.-00' TICKETS 50c EACH C - I THURSDAY. MARCH |8; 11,962 ■ - . . , l ! ! in the ethical code the govern ment must adopt towards I Civil Deijense and the. ethical; code tha individual adopts, he said. But it seems, he sSidi that the introduction, of a Civil Defense program does promote the ac ceptance of the inevitability of wad. Harshbarger said if fallout shelters are constructed, then it must be that' those individuals or thej government regard nuclear fallout as a real and near danger. Algerian Pciace Both French and rebel authorii tiesj are aware, of the' danger of inflaming further thej partisan emotions fanned by teirorist op erations in the North African ter- ritory. j. | ; - The Secret Army Organization is . campaigning with explosives, gunfire and death threads to keep Algeria French ,as it has:been for years, and protect the' l holdings of .the! milion European {residents. Moments are waging similar street warfare in support of the desire of most Algeria’s million North Africans for independence. In Algeria, 1 where the Moslem masses marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan, the tide of violence ebbed. COMMITTEE presents anc ■'Easy Street" itorium MARCH MX) P .M. AT HUB OE! x « ■! I , made tplin ait
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