PAGE TWO JFI Says United States Must 'Trade or Fade NEW ORLEANS. La. (fl*) In the city where captains of com merce helped build America, President Kennedy called on the nation yesterday to maintain its .trade leadership among the world's tree countries. America, he said, stands at a crossroad in its foreign economic policy “tra: or fade.” “For what are moving ward is an open partner ship mong all free lions, and a gr; ual leveling trade that . will dr; the whole n< Communi wo r 1 d togetl with the strings J * fc " r ■ *■"“•** of economic self-interest.” Kennedy came south to boost his trade program, which he has termed the most important item before this session of Congress. THE TRADE partnership, he said, “will be based on what al ready .comes close to a trillion dollar economy." And it will be “specifically and initially ex pressed in terms of a genuine Atlantic partnership between the Common Market of Europe and the common market of 50 United States.” “It (his trade expansion pro gram) will produce nearly 90 per cent of the free world’s industrial French Tank Truck Explodes, Kills Moslem, Injures Others ALGIERS UP) A booby trapped gasoline tank truck hurtled driverless toward the na tive quarter yesterday and ex ploded into a searing fireball short of its mark—a crowded Moslem hillside. - One person was killed and .sev eral others were injured in the latest European Secret Army Or ganization trick tio incite Moslem tempers to civil warfare. OFFICIALS BELIEVE many Moslem men, women and chil dren would have perished but for a flaw in the truck’s booby-trap mechanism. A few more yards and the trac tor with the loaded tank trailer would have thundered into the tightly packed Moslem dwelling places. ’ • . i As it was, the explosion sent a ball Of flame rolling over houses. Japanese to Investigate Thursday's Train Crash TOKYO (A*) —Japanese legis lators moved yesterday to inves tigate a triple train crash which claimed -more than ISO lives Thursday. Both houses of Parliament scheduled extraordinary sessions for tomorrow to begin a probe of the second worst train tragedy in Japan since'the end of World War 11. A crash in 1947 took 184 lives. New College Diner 6<??VS<;C M.C N‘.C i' - '• " - ' ' lot Collegian Classifieds WORK FOR YOU r*MULKPOIRt sTI cataoci TODAY A MONDAY Yvette Mimieux George Hamilton "UfiMT ill THE PIAZZA” in Keirooolor! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK, I PENNSYLVANIA power, the lion’s share of its tech nical skills, two of its greatest markets for raw materials, and!a very large portion of the capital for investment and development.” The program will be contagious, he said, in that it will* “extend the benefits of theschew oppor tunities to the continents of Asia,! Africa'.and Latin America . . . and. finally it will pose to the) leaders, of the Communist world a direct, deep and abiding chal lenge” The President indicated that a few people and industries might be hurt, but the projected trade act contains safeguards to protect them.: ON THE OTHER HAND, the President said the nation could raise its tariffs, restrict the flow of capital, reduce commitments and • let itiP-foes slip into the gap. “Butfe this administration," Phe declared to an audience mat cheered frequently, “was not elec ted to preside over the resignation of America from its manifest des tiny." What the President’s program basically seeks is the power . to reduce, and in some cases, wipe: out tariffs on a reciprocal basis.! U.S. Fires Fourth Nuclear Te WASHINGTON The Unit ed States fired a middle-sized nu clear device in the atmosphere near Christmas Island in thd Pa cific yesterday. It was the fourth! test of the current series. cars and trees along a sparsely populated boulevard. This was the third booby trapped vehicle set off here in recent days. The blast of the gasoline tanker was one of the most spectacular attacks by the secret army, which hopes to bait the Moslems into vengeful violence that might de stroy independence for Algeria, . It succeeded in bringing crowds of infuriated Moslems into the streets, where they stoned a bus and European cars. Moslem nationalist agents and police regained, control of the mob while fighting the blaze. INDIVIDUAL PISTOL and sub machine. gun attacks killed at least another eight Moslems in Algiers. In Oran, the government ar rested 12 persons in the wake of Thursday's explosions inside the government's-own administration building. Following a warning by lhe ex iled nationalist-Algerian govern ment in Tunis to use more rigor ous measures to crush the secret army, French police yesterday sealed off a large district of Al giers where terrorist incidents have been frequent. TOB4Y at I:4S, 3:48, 5:50 aid 7:51 WORLD JO 0 TECHfWCOLOR* SNEAK PREVIEW? TONITE COME EARLY EKJOY “PUfOCCHIiQ” 4T 7:51 —HRS SHORTS —SHE4K IT RtSi STATE THEATRE, Stale Collie, Pa. State Court Turns Down Suit Petition PHILADELPHIA (AP) The State Supreme Court refused to take immediate jurisdiction i if a lawsuit aimed at forcing legisla tive reagportionment of the Penn sylvania Senate. In effect, the rejection of a pe tition by memben of the Coromit jtee of Seventy, a non-partisan j civic group in Philadelphia, means that the case must go through regular legal channels i THE PETITION fi?ed by At torney Edward G. Bauer Jn, also had asked the Supreme Court to delay a decision on its reappor tionment demand until sometime in 1963, to give the legislature a chance to realign the Senate seats according to population, j The' suit was filed: in Dauphin] County on March 30, after[ the: U.S. Supreme Cotut'.said federal] courts may order rfeanportionment if state agencies or ijourts fail to I tact. _ . COMMITTEE" of Seventy mem bers however, decided to fchal lenge reapportiomneat first in the state courts. A number of other suits, seeking reapportionment of iboth the Senate and House, have kince been filed. ; | | The .Atomic Energy. Commission: jand the Defense Department an-; nounced that the sh-Dt wasstk off about 2 p.m. EST. j This announcement said the det onation was “in thei intermediate yield range,” which means it probably was between 100 and 500 kilotons. I . Mer u.s. d Jetectiori sta-j tions have been tjlerted tp be on the lookout for a; new series of Soviet nuclear explosions.) ) ADMINISTRATIVE officials said they anticipate new Soviet tests at almost an y moment.. It is expected: that .mopt of the shots will be in tne atmosphere and that some of them at 'least will be fired primarily for; political pur poses. j Word has gone cut, informants said, to stations equipped with highly specialized : detection ap oaratua to be on the lookout for blast evidences. ' U.S. OFFICIALS! have expected; the first Soviet esjplosion. almost daily since the United States re-; sumed atmospheric! testing in the April 25. Tsey reported at the time that they believejd the Soviet>Union was, making j prep arations and that, a new series, supplementing thif Soviet | tests, of last fall, would] begin shortly. Soviet diplomats:in contact with; Western diplomats; are understood to have left the clear impression that they expected their govern- Welch Attacks Worren { CHICAGO VP) -r- Robert Welch, founder of the John Birch Society, gave 100 per cent approval yes terday to Sen. James O. Eastland's attack on the U.S.-Supreme Court. And. going farther, lie said Chief Justice Earl Wafren should be impeached. - . SNEAK PREVIEW? Railroad, Union Leaders Protest Proposed i9J-Ceni Wage Increase CHICAGO (/P) Railroad rpanagement and union lead ers, protesting against a recommended. 19.2-cent wage hike for 450,000 worker*, government policy statements yesterday to support opposite stands. • Management said the hourly wage increase by an emergency hoard Thursday, for .members of 11 nonoperating rail, unions was too much and in flationary. The unions said it;was neither inflationary nor enough to pay employees fairly. The emergency board, headed i by Labor arbitrator Saul Wallen of Boston, proposed a 4-cent-an hour pay raise dating back to : Feb. 1 and a 2Vi per cent increases amounting to 6.2 cents effective May 1. Apparently, both sides looked to President Kennedy for help. The President, who took an em phatic personal stand in the !steel wage-price dispute last month was in New Orleans yesterday for a trade policy speech. James £. Wolfe, bead of the joint bargaining; team, said the proposed pay raises wcrald add >lO5 million a year to ! operating costs of the 212 rail jroads involved. He termed it “in iflationary and not a true and rea Device jment to carry out the warning jvaice by Soviet Premier Khrush chev that if the United States test ed so would the Soviet Union, j Soviet scientists presumably are still digesting the data they gained from about 50 nuclear ex plosions last fall, .and probably need more time than they have .had so far for full analysis; j | Bum conox •ut nosssewa 1 riser cauem - hic uric LAST ' Troy Donahue • Angie Dickinson TIMES ' Rossano Brasri • Susanna Plesheiie today ''ROME ADVENTURE" in Color OPAY 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:10 m SUNDAY 2:40-5:25-8.-10 PJd. SENSATIONAL. WINNER 27 INTERNATIONAL AWARDS! D<r*ctt4 §y LUCKWO YSCOKTI • Prßducte By COHHQ3 USfiMtDO sonable productivity increase.** J*l THINS consistency demands that the administration frown up on anything that will be destruc tive of its policy of curbing in-' flationary trends,** Wolfe jsakL | la Washington, George E.jLeigh far, chairman of the unions* joint negotiating committee, said the iffected employees—those who do clerical, service and maintenance work but do not actually operate the trains—have had no increase in their real wages since 1058, during a period when real; wages fuse substantially for other work- ' fers. ; | | Terming the recommendation a failure “t® make any reduction in this 'grave inequity.** Weighty said; “The guidelines to wage de termination that have been na tionally announced in | recent months are based upon wage in creases to accord with, but not to exceed, the rise in general labor productivity in the United! States. TQ COMFORM with that pol icy would have required a wage increase much greater than that which , the emergency board rec ommends.** | . i ! Leighty said productivity of railroads has risen faster than the national average. ! - He also charged that the board's work was carried on “in lan at mosphere seriously prejudiced by the unprecedented publicity cam-, paign” of the Association of Amer ican Railroads. ! t The FUN-TIME ir life .. attend our SHOW TONITEI of yot LATE 11:38 • Show Begins 11:45 P.M. aad the "CARRY ON” Gang takes over promptly at MIDNITE in; their NEWEST & FUNNIEST HITI • ••••••••*•• AAA AAA A A Waaa'' MISS JONES YOUR UPPERS ARE IN PERFECT Shape!” DENTIST IN THE CHAIR ***** tka “CAtCT 81” Ul( SEE THIS REAL LAUGHING GASSER .. . TOHITE 11:45 P M SARINS In its realism STSHHINfi in iis impact BREATH THINS in Us «eope ' ii BROTHERS Starts WED. JEAN RENOIR'S *MCHIC ON THE GRASS" SATURDAY. MAY 5H962 i 1 Dended iKCOUMBBaT If magj
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers