TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1955 Revised Security Pact Proposed by Molotov Would Abolish NATO, Keep Germany Split GENEVA, Oct. 31 (4,)—So viet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov asked the Western powers 'tonight to join in a re vised collective security paC e t with the Soviet bloc, leaving Germany divided and setting 'no deadline for abolishing the mili tary alliances of East and West. In revising his thrice-rejected security treaty, Molotov said the North Atlantic 'Treaty Organiza tion; the Western European Union and the Communist Warsaw trea ty organization should be liquid ated. But he said the Soviet gov ernment does not propose a date for the liquidation. Molotov proposed that a semi demilitarised zone be estab lished to cover both the East and West German republics and "all or some neighboring states." s. The Russians thus took an arti cle from the West-supported "trea ty of assurance" against German aggression and adapted it in ef fect to neutralize all Germany. The • Western powers proposed last week that such a zone strad dle the frontiers of a reunited Germany with Communist Poland and Czechoslovakia. While Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and French Foreign Minister Antoine Pinay temporar ily withheld comment, British Foreign Secretary Harold Mac millan told Molotov: "This whole plan is based, oh the partition of Gormany into two parts.-11•fore it can b. inv.. Stably studied we need to haws promised Soviet proposals for German rinutification.' Without German reunification there can be no real progress toward se- The Western foreign ministers earlier urged the Soviet Union to sweep aside the Iron Curtain for trade and freer contacts. Ig l i b l e o e g also offeredrideas on that subject. Dulles earlier blazed a path toward friendlier East-West rela tions by announcing the eliznina: fiat of passport restrictions for Americans traveling in the Soviet Union in eastern Europe. • "There is a solid basis for good will bdtween us," Dulles told' So viet Foreign Minister V. M. Molo tov. "It is a fact of history which should be remembered that our peoples have never fought each other." Sultan Out of Exile BEAUVALLON, France, Oct. 31 (JP)—Deposed Sultan Mohammed Ben Yousset 41, returned to France from a two-year Madagas car exile today and entered po litical talks that'could return him to his turbulent Moroccan throne within three weeks. Banda . . . Football . . . Parties .. ° and the Romantic Comedy 4 al tllitl3lol o Friday and Saturday November 5 and 6 Gat your tkkets at the HUB or at the door Center Stage at 8 Meg Decides Not to Marry Group Captain LONDON, Oct. 31 (/P)—Princess Margaret told the world tonight she has renounced her hope of marrying divorced Peter Town send. She spoke like a girl with a broken heart who has put duty ahead of love. "I would like it to be known that I have decided not to marry , Group Capt. Peter Townsend," she announced. "But, mindful of the church's teaching that Christian marriage is indissoluble, and conscious' of my duty to the commonwealth, I have resolved to put these con siderations before any others. "I have reached this decision entirely alone and in doing so I have been strengthened by un failing support and devotion by Group Capt. Townsend." Townsend—who is 40 and 15 years older than the princess— left the stately mansion alone and drove away toward the seclusion of the English countryside. Senate Unit to Probe GM WASHINGTON, Oct. 31 (W)— The Senate Antitrust and Mon opoly subcommittee -today an nounced a full scale study of General Motors. Junior Prom • 1 10 CORSAGES exquisite flowers designed for her dress BILL McMULLEN, Florist 122 E. College Ave. AD 7-4994 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Isiaeli Official Sees Molotov On Arms Sales GENEVA, Oct. 31 (EP)—Prime Minister Moshe Sharett called on Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov tonight to halt the sale of Communist bloc arms to Is rael:q Arab neighbors. Sharett went into the confer ence with Molotov resolved to tell him the Communist tactic: 1. Might touch off new Mid eastern fighting that could engulf Europe and the world. 2. Penalize Israel's policy of non-alignment, which Russia sup ports in other parts of the world. Communist sale of arms to the Egyptians is seen b, Western and Israeli diplomats alike as a bid to leapfrog Russian influence over the Baghdad alliance binding the countries along the northern tier of the Mideast. They are Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan. Britain also is a member, while the United States expects to join later. Rus sia and Israel alike have de nounced that pact. The Russians are believed also to want a voice in Mideastern affairs—possibly at a big power conference in which the Arabs and Israelis could sit in. Molo tov's immediate reaction to the Israeli protest was not disclosed. Freed American Scholar Calls Chinese Prison 'Place of Hope' HONG KONG, Oct. 31 (A))— Miss Harriet Mills, a 35-year old Fulbright scholar from New York City, emerged to freedom today and described the Red Chinese prison in which she spent 51 months as "a place of hope. A place where new people are made." She told reporters she was an unpaid U.S. and British "espion age agent" and spent consider able time in the prison with her hands cuffed behind her back and in ankle chains. She said this was because she repudiated one of her confessions. But, she added, her jailers treated her "with the utmost considera tion and courtesy. Pr i4 l ''.''. &Leave 30,11 d,.. (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.) HOW TO BE A BWOC A few weeks ago in this space I passed on some hints to college men who wished to become BMOCs. I would be remiss not to do the same for college women who wish to become BWOCs. The first and most basic step on the road to being a BWOC is to attract attention. Get yourself noticed. But be very, very careful not to do it the wrong way. I mean, any old girl is bound to be noticed if she goes around with a placard that says, "HEY ! LOOKIT ME!" Don't you make such a horrid gaffe. On your placard put: "ZUT! REGARDEZ-MOI!" This, as you can see, lends a whole new dimension of tone and dignity. Once you have been noticed, it is no longer necessary to carry the placard. It will suffice if, from time to time, you make dis tinotive noises. If, for instance, every three er four minutes you cry, "Whip-poor-will!" you cannot but stay fresh in the minds of onlookers. We cane now to clothes, a vital accessory to the BWOC—indeed, to any girl who wishes to remain out of jail. But to the BWOC clothes are more than just a decent cover; they are, it is not too much to say, a way of life. This year the "little boy look" is all the rage on campus. Every coed, in a mad effort to look like a little boy, is wearing short pants, knee sox, and boy-shirts. But the BWOC is doing more. She has gone the whole hog in achieving little boyhood. She has frogs in her pockets, scabs on her knees, down on her upper lip, and is followed everywhere by a dog named Spot. All this, of course, is only by day. When evening falls and her date comes calling, the BWOC is the very picture of chic fem ininity. She dresses in severe, simple basic black, relieved only by a fourteen pound charm bracelet. Her hair is exquisitely coiffed, with a fresh rubber band around the pony tail. Her daytime 'scuffs have been replaced by fashionable high heeled pumps, and she does not remove them until she gets to the movies. After the movies at the campus cafe, the BWOC undergoes her severest test. The true BWOC will sever, never, never, order the entire menu. This is gluttony and can only cause one's date to blench. The true BWOC will pick six or seven good entries and then have nothing more till dessert. This is class and is the hallmark of the true BWOC. Finally, the BWOC, upon being asked by the cigarette which is the brand of her choice, will always reply, "Philip Morris, of corris!" For any girl knows that a Philip Morris in one's hand stamps one instantly as a person of taste and discernment, as the possessor of an educated palate, as a con noisseur of the finer, gentler, higher pleasures. This Philip Morris, this badge of savoir faire, now comes to you in a smart new pack of red, white and gold, in king-size or regular, at popular prices, wherever cigarettes are sold. Okla shulraaa. 1955 To all on campus, big or small, men or women, the makers o/ Philip Morris, who bring you this column, extend a cordial imoitation to try ieday's gentle Philip Morris, made gentle to smoke gentle. "The Communists had a per fect right to arrest me. I con fessed from the very day I was arrested. "My arrest has been the most decisive thing that has happened to me," she said, adding that 'if she had not been imprisoned she would not have been able to see how wrong were her thoughts about the Red Chinese govern ment. She declared Americans are "warmongers" and the U. S. government "is embarked on an aggressive policy," but added, "I must snake it clear I am not referring to the broad masses in the United States." She said the Chinese government has "a genuine desire for peace." Miss Mills was one of four Americans who reached Hong Kong from Red China today. is on the way... • Wafch Page 3 PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers