PAGE TWO Federal Pay Raise With Postal Rate WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen- tion of the bill saying the idea ate reject( I charges of pre-elec- lof the pay boost was to attract and m m e o n re t and better talent He to . g l ove9i tion vote-buying yesterday voted 72-3 to give 1.6 million goy' th ink ir well-behooves the senator ernment workers an immediate ; from Ohio" to make such a charge. pay raise The same bill, which goes back to the House, carries a $603 mil lion-a-year, increase in postal rates starting Jan. 7. If accepted 'by the House, the new rates would raise „letter maA from 4 cents to S cents, air mail from 7 cents to 8 cents. and increase other postal rates. - - .The House had previously passed a similar postal rate bill which did not deal with federal pay- THE PAY RAMP— totaling: $l.O/9,000.000 a year, would go in two steps to one million classified ; Civil Service employes -arid 590.-; 000 postal workers. The first in -1 stallme.4 would start when the I bill is signed. - The bill fulfills mast of Presi dent Kennedy's requests for post al rate increases and contains substantially what he sought in pay raises. Sen. Olin D. Johnston.' D-S.C., who steered the -measure through the Senate, said be had! White House assurance it will! receive K. mnedy's approval if it clears the House. Johnston and his supporters beet back several attacks on both flanks of the combined postal rate-pay increase bill. Sen. Frank .1: Lausche D-Ohjo, made a couple o!, unsuccessful assaults on the pay raise side, denouncing it as a measure to buy votes m an election year. SEN. JOSEPH S. CLARK. D- Pa.; challenged Lausche's descrip- 600 Decd Expected From Barcelona Floods BARCELONA, Spain (kit--Capt. Gen. Agustin Munoz-Grandes, vice president in the FiCanco gov ernment, told newsmen yesterday after a tour of the triangular flood area -north of Barcelona he expects the final death toll to reach 600. As he spoke, the latest official casualty Itst.showed 368 dead. 445 missing, and 20X1 heapitalized with injuries.' Relief supplies and rescue ex perts poured into Barcelona from all parts of the country. 4 Lausche replied that if the gov ernment raises its pay rates, pri vate industry will do Ithe same , . and the government will be %Imre it started. THE FEDERAL' employes cov ered would get the first install ment of their pay increase next month, in the first pay period after the bill is signed. The sec ond would be in January. 1964. The Civil Service employes would receive an average iaise of 5.5 per cent in the first step, 41 per cent in the second. The postal workers, often treated more gen erously by Congress, would get 8.6 per cent in - the first step, 2.6 per cent in the second. These percentage figures 'are averages. The raises vary consid erably between grades of workers. Army Faction in Yemen Seizes tleighboring Men ADEN ( —An army faction in neighboring Yemen announced yesterday it has seized power and proclaimed the kingdom a repub lic This Red Sea country's left leaningi ruler, on the throne only a week, was variously reported arq2ssinated or deposed. THE COUP apparently.was en gineered by friends of President Gamal Abdel Nasser'S United Arab Republic. Shortly after its announcement, the U.A.R. minis ter of state, Abdel Kader Hatem, declared the opposes any foreign intervention in Yemen affairs. - • The radio at Sapa, Yernen'3 cap ital, repeatedly bfoadcast a state ment 'by the "liberal revolution ary army" that it had taken con trol. It said "those who subjected you to torture in the past have been shot and killed," but mentioned no names. An informal source in Aden said the' 35-year-old king, Imam Moammad al Badr. was slain, Wednesday night. The Cairo ra dio, which also announced the LY PRE THIS INTERNATIONALLY• ACCLAIM Rita Tashighta Maw Int Perform= Award Cum. Fite Festival 1112 ' lllhomey Sabin Wiener Best Parterssuita Sward Calms Nu Festival lOU jr - • N I • - --- r• A N ; 4 , . 1 (:) 1111111119 t . ts•N • • `, • •• • .;•-• Muer of kt: i'; Andesey Awards rineduesit b. Toler 140...10 • /11......ikr...5k sem, • AUDIENCES ARE STILL RAVING s .in LOllllOl • CARIES * NEW YORK • PITTSIIIRMI • MAMORU • and NOW STATE COLLEGE Where were sure me Wolin iriawara will add their pal - THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNksts_ir.} PARK.--PENNSYLVANIA. , U.N. Pressure Asked for Haft Of Red Tension on Berlin Wail OK'd Hike UNITED N./mass,: N.Y. Grit- British Foreign Secnttary Lord Home urged the U.N. General Assembly yesterday to pressure the Soviet Union into halting ten sions- on the ;Berlin wall. Terming the wall almost ,tolerable provo mtion to civil" Pd people," he ex pressed hope the assembly .would make clear to the Soviet Union that it •must stop artifically Creat ing crises in the divided city. He asked fot a So viet settlement with the West "which pays-due taed Hew* regard to the rights and interests oil all parties." Lord Borne made the statements in a major policy speech to the 108-nation assembly. 4lkdlai E. Ste venson, chief U.S. dftlegate, com mented outside the assembly hail coup, said Badr was deposed, not killed. WHATEVER HIS. FATE, the rebels apparently wttre intent on keeping any of the royal family from making an .escape. One broadcast called on The people to seize any - Officials of the old regime who tried to . leave the country. Badr ascended• the; throne Sept.- 19 after his father, lniam Ahmed. often a target of assassins, died of natural causes- The lather, known as "Big Turban," governed with an iron fist for Pt }tears. Nittany Dell home of delirious tandwichee • Lox ar4 .Sarved Sunday Till 2 P.M. across from girls dorms - ..-7r--;. , ! , : — errrs , •xlvw,o-1, 1 7 \ - -v1 .-1 IT FROM ;THE El BEGINNING I.at t:i , , k-,.. WO • 130 •T 0 4 V . ~. ;,;.,: ' 740 • '2O PAL :-.: M=ll An experlance that will ll:waft. foravitel A slice of Life you 1011 norm " farwil • • .7.:`,771`7'. that the speech expressed a .view point with _which, the United States is in complete accord. Lord Home declared that the only permanent solution for Ber lin lies "in the context of self determination for Germany. If this assembly is true to itself, it will insist that this principle is accepted for East Gentiany as well as the West." BUT HE ADDED that because as of now "Russia preaches self determination for everyone else but will not allow it in East Ger many, the only thing we can do is to seek a modus vivendi." Lord Home stressed that the Western Allies could not accept a settlement "which would merely "**** HIGHEST RATING!" '=ONE OF THE Y E AR'S FUNNIEST!' —N.Y. World Tele & Sui "La Belle Amerldalne Is loaded i'.7! 1604611' Ef OP/ ass esharri amower tOIP NA OMAN tia PKTrrA4OIIO OMR 1101 Melt MOE MEV OBIONSFIATIO WOE IS OE OF BE MST MEI antr AnC pen When a Frenekuta lb iaZ a ef: fo a l? For - a Ride... . "THE RUDE'S WORTIii ANYBODY'S MONEY!" ---TOME TOMORROW !FRIDAY: SEPTEMBER 28. 1962 prlovide a cloak for a Communist takeover of 2.% million free .13Z 1 pie. 'That, as I have said, is negotiable." , . !The assembly also heard a dec laration from Cambodian Foreign Minister Huot Sambath .that his country would turn to the Sovi4_ Union and Communist Cbina for ) help if necessary against:any at tack by pre-Western Thailand and South Viet Nam. He criticized the United States for km ding military aid to Cam bodiWs two neighbors. He• de dared the choice is clear—to re main neutral or, if survival is at stake, to become a satellite of the Eastern bloc. He cited Cuba as an example of such a nation. 7:00 -9:30 P.M..--- 1:30-9 0.5:40=7:40.9:15 =M!II —N.Y. Tbrus
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