TUESDAY. MAY 3. 1955 The World At a Glance Fairless Steps Down as U.S. Steal Head HOBOKEN, N.J., May 2 ( JP) —Benjamih — le:"Ealiiliii Stepped down as board chairman of U.S. Steel Corp., today after 18 years of high executive posts in the world's biggest steel company and 42 years in the steel business. He told the biggest stockholders' meeting in the company's history that he would reach his Obth blithday tomorrow and "under the retirement rule which prevails in our corporation, I Tnust then step aside and surrender the responsibilities of my office to capable and younger hands." Brent to Hood Salk Vaccine Appeal' ' WASHINGTON, May 2 (Al—Chairman lkint Spence (B-Ky.) of the House Banking Committee said today he would hold hearings "as soon as possible" on Ippetils for federal controls over distribu tion of the Salk , polio vaccine. Spence said a warm cOntroVersy is developing o'er whether 'the goverhment should step in and decide who will get the vaccine first, or whether allocdtions should be left to privdte channels. Eisenhower Praises Prosperity, Freer Trade WASHINGTON, fvfay 2 (R)—Prospeiity at home and freer trade abroad are major ingiedients for a victory over comtriunism, Presi dent Dwight D. Eisenhower told the U.S. Chamber of Commerce today. If the United States adheres to the principles which made it great and at the same time works to develop international trade, Eisenhower said, "we are as certain of defeating communism as we are that we are all in this hall this Morning." Governors Told of Communistic 'Decline' WASHINGTON, May 2 (JP)—TOp administration spokesmen as sured the governors of 45 states today that cornmimieni is slipping in Europe . and Latin America. Vice President Richard F. Nixon, who recently toured the Carib bean, told the state executives that communism definitely is declin ing in the nations to the south. Faulkner, Williams Awarded Pultizers NEW YORK, May, 2 (011---Wil liam Faulkner's "A Fable" today won him his first Pulitzer Prize in literature. Tennessee Williams received his second Pulitzer dra ma award few "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." Faulkner, 1949 Nobel Prize win ner, wrote an allegory of mutiny in the trenches of the First World War. The 'Columbus, Ga., Ledger and Sunday . Ledger-Enquirer won the 1955 prize for disinterested and meritorious public service by a newspaper. For the, first time, local report ting awards went to two small town newspaper reporters, both ifi Texas. Mrs. Caro Brown of the Alice, ==M WASHINGTON, May 2 (W) Sen. A. Willis Robertson (D-Va.) said today a vote on the foreign trade bill. "boils down to one of confidence or lack of confidence in the marl in the White House." THE PERFECT PIZZA • SALLY'S, WE DELIVER AD 7-2373 Tex., Daily Echo won her award for risking her life in an expose of 40 years of corruption and ter rorism in Duval County., Tex. For local reporting where edi tion time was not a e.actor, Man aging Editor Roland. K. Towery of the Cuero; Tex., Daily Record was Riven the Prize. patirig • pi" th e Atom to Work I to college StodiNits i 16 pages dully illustrated. ) Covers atomic energy frc subs and , aircraft to plutc nium prodtiction arid atomi power plants for electricio For your free boOklet, write General Electric Co., De p' 2-119 N, Schenpctady, N. FIRETIARIN ENO "ACTIVATED CHARCOAL FILTER, TOO!" FILTER TIP TAREYTON with the Pearl• Gray Activated Charcoal Filter ii*ovadr or cgr6ll4l•4ingt& 4cAfaxerwerawr THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Austrian Rulers Near Settlement VIENNA, Austria, May 2 (4 1 )— Ambassadors of the four powers occupying Austria talked 4 1 / 2 hours today about concluding an Austrian independence treat y. Austrian Foreign Minister Leo pold Figl emerged from the con ference with the words: "The chances are good." A communique said "notable progress was made." Participating were envoys from Britain, F'rance, Russia and the United States and an Austrian delegation. ' Informed sources repbrted U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn E. Thomp son Jr., won the first round of the conference. Thompson was said to have persuaded the Russians that any delegation could discuss any of the treaty's 59 articles. Camera Club to Meet Tonight Camera Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 212 lietzel Union. CIGARETTES Yi#a , ? - 4 ODERN SIZE One study of school children showed that none of the group with normal vision failed in their ,at dies, but 37 per cent of those whb hack Visual troubles failed. he will tell you: Sin is an offense against God, it must be forgiven by God. It is God, not man, who determines how forgiveness must bt obtained. Christ plainly pointed this out when He empowered His Apostles and their successors to for give sins or to refuse forgiveness. "Whose sins you shall forgive," Christ said, "they are forgiven them; whose sins you shall retain, they are retained." (John 20:21-23). Thus Christ authorized the Apos des, and their successors, to pardon or to deny pardon as they judged the sinner worthy or unworthy. To do this they had to know what they were forgiving ...the secret dis positions of the sinner ... his sor row and v)illingness to repair the wrong done to his neighbor by his sins. 'Who could make this known but the sinner himself —and what is this but Confession? But Confession—the Sacrament of Penance —is only one of the seven Sacraments Christ left in His Church. Yes, seven— no more •ind no less! Christ's religion is not merely a message to be accepted, TREE AS A BREEZE!" Confession? Ask The Mon Who Goes There! Catholics go to Confession In a priest for one reason only: to obtain divine for giveness for their sins. But why, you ask, go to a priest? Why not confess our sins directly to God? Ask the man who goes to Confession and here's what SUPREME COUNCIL KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Religious Information Bureau 4422 LINDELL BLVD. Ti all rural highways and roads and city streets in the United States were laid end to end, they would circle the globe at the equator 138 tithes. but a life to be lived—from the cradle to the grave. 11 Christ's seven Sacraments are the answer to m a n's seven basic needs. Man is born but he needs to be reborn a Christian in the Sacrament of Baptism. He is nourished, but he needs Christian nourishment in Holy Communion, the Sacrament of the Eucharist. He grows, but he needs to grow and be strengthened in Christian life by the Sacrament of Confirmation. He is cured of disease, but he needs a remedy for sin, so destructive of Christian life, and this he finds in the Sacrament of Penance. Man lives in society which needs officials to promote the common good and for his life in the Church, he finds officials provided by the Sacrament of • Orders. He perpetuates the human race in marriage, which Christ made the Sacrament of Matrimony. And at death, he needs , consolation and strength for the last dread hour which he finds in the Last Anoint ing the Sacrament of Extreme Unction. Would you like to know more about each of the seven Sacra ments? How they can help you to meet the seven basic needs of your life? Then write today for a free pamphlet which gives important information concerning them, Ask for Pamphlet No. 5-N. ST, LOUIS 11,, 01444 PAGE *OE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers