The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 24, 1956, Image 3
WEDNESD. Y. OCTOBER 24. 1956 Kiili EruE igs, Riots, Strikes t In North Africa RS, Oct. 23 (/P) —Killings, riots, general strikes Arab anger erupted across North Africa today, despread violence was the Arab reply to France's ive masterminds of Algeria’s nationalist rebellion ramtic aerial ruse last • ALGIi and bitter The wi arrest of through a d night. :nchmen were killed Meknes in. Morocco, nstrations broke out and Morocco. A 24- I strike was declared e former French pro d started to spread in ;nch security forces raced themselves for sals. ; Arab world began domatic storm. Three Fr in a clash ; Street dem( in Tunisia hour genera in both thos tectorates ar Algeria. Fr in Algeria 1 violent repr The whol raising a di] MoUel In Paris, flatly reject ocean reque five Algeria! Mollet’s nounced aft Moroccans, Rejects Request Premier Guy Mollet ed a top-level Mor ?t for release of the rejection was an :r he met with the Premier Mohammed 'oreign Minister Ah , who had flown to ’unis. Bekkai and med Balafr Paris from “Events will speak for us in the next few days,” Bekkai told re porters on emerging from the conference. He termed the situa tion “very serious.” Bourguiba Calls Conference In Tunis, Premier Habib Bour guiba of Tunisia called a special news conference and called the arrests an “abominable act.” The 23-nation Asian-African group at the UN in New York •was reported asking Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold’s good offices in seeking" release of the five revolutionaries. The five •were grabbed and handcuffed yesterday after their French pilot landed them in French-controlled Algiers- instead of independent Tunis on a flight from indepen dent Morocco. Meeting Broken Up A meeting of Morocco’s Sultan Sidi Mohammed ben Youssef and Premier Habid Bourguib of Tun isia, which had been billed as a conference to bring peace to Al geria and weld it into a new Un ion of North Africa, appeared to have been broken up. The five Algerian leaders were en route to the conference when they were diverted by the French pilot’s ruse. Arab leaders called it a kidnap ping and an act of piracy. The' Moroccan Sultan was par ticularly incensed. This confer ence was his first big diplomatic move in the Arab world. Aid to Tree Governments' Proposed by Eisenhower WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 (/P) —President Eisenhower said tonight that America has a mission to “expand the areas in which free men, free gov ernments can flourish.” He held out what could be an offer of economic aid to the Polish people in their struggle against Soviet domination. The President said the United States must “help those freedom loving peoples who need and •want and can profitably use our aid ...” Poland Used as Example In a speech prepared for the .Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners at their 75th anniversary Christ-Janer Plans To Exhibit Works Dr. Albert. Christ-Janer, direc tor of School of the Arts, has been invited to lecture and to. exhibit his paintings to the Council of Arts and Sciences, in St. Paul, Minn., next month. For a three-week period begin ning Nov. 14, he will have a joint exhibition. of water colors with Adolph Dehn, well-known Amer ican artist. Dr. - Christ-Janer will lecture Nov. 15 on “Pictures in Your life.” He will be the third speak er in'a series of five lectures on the arts sponsored by the council THE DAItY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Adloi Seeks National Aid For Poland NEW YORK, Oct. 23 f.P)_Adlai E. Stevenson tonight called for help for Poland’s bid for freedom from Russian control and again urged the United States to take the lead in "curbing this ghastly killer,”, the H-bomb. The Democratic presidential nominee started the final two weeks of his campaign with an appearance in Madison Square Garden. It was the first speech in a nonstop drive aimed chiefly at swinging big city votes. Seeks to Curb A-Bomb Stevenson related he had sug gested “long before this campaign that we take the lead in curbing this ghastly killer,” the hydrogen bomb. He termed it a matter of moral responsibility as well as national security. He said the Democrats “have broken through the blanket of warm, wet fog with which the ad ministration had planned to smo ther the country,” and had turned the campaign into a debate on policies. Stevenson expressed the opin ion that the “decisive days” of the political battle lie ahead. U.S. Should Aid Poland And he said the United States should be prepared to join other nations in offering economic aid to Poland. Stevenson, in his prepared speech, returned to his duel with President Eisenhower on the Democratic candidate’s proposal that agreements be sought to ban further H-bomb tests. Break Out of Arms- Race “Here is one place,” he said, “where we can break out of the deadly vise of the arms race . . . “I think we must make this ef fort in the name of humanity. I don’t think President Eisenhower should irritably close the door to discussion or agreement on a mat ter of such vast importance to mankind.” dinner, the {’resident used Poland as an example of a freedom-lov ing country rebelling against tyr anny. “A people, like the Poles, who have once known freedom cannot be for always deprived of their national independence and of their personal liberty,” he said. “That truth applies to every people in Eastern Europe who have enjoyed independence and freedom." Eisenhower spoke against a background of a bloodless revolt in Poland against Moscow domi nation, and demonstrations in Hungary against the Communist government there. No Substitute for Freedom Eisenhower said that tyranny, for a time, can present a picture of material accomplishment But, he said, that is an illusion that cannot substitute for true free dom of the people. Gilbert and Sullivan’s RUDDIGORE or The Witch's Curse Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. Schwab Tickets at HUB desk or Door Clark Tours Chester County COATESVILLE, Pa., Oct. 23 (.<?) —Joseph S. Clark, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, toured normally Republican Ches ter County today in a quest for Nov. 6 votes and promised that if elected he would “go to Washing ton to work hard for the people of Pennsylvania.” Clark, who ended 67' years of successive GOP rule in Philadel phia when he was elected mayor in 1951. lambasted his Republican opponent. James H. Duff, who is seeking re-election, as a man who isn't around when he has to fight for the people. Clark promised that ,he would “work hard” for the people and "work to re-establish government of the people, instead of govern-1 ment of big business.” University Record Shop Opposite Atherton Hall Be ihe first io enter contest. Do it now. Drawing To Be Held THURSDAY. OCT. 25 : Fill out and drop in box at University Record Shop \ Z NAME ’. .7777..7". .77........77 ..777V.77 .77.. .7. . .7 Z z ADDRESS .- : • PHONE • * Winners will be announced in Daily Collegian Oct. 27 : MOST THE HAVE HURRY 1N... THEY WONT LAST LONG! BUY SEVERAL! The World at a Glance Communists Reach Pact LONDON t^P) —Delegations of Yugoslav and Hungarian Commu nists announced today they will develop cooperation between their parties “on the basis of full confidence and sincerity.” They said the promotion of amity between the Yugoslav and Hungarian peoples is necessary "in the interest of peace and prog ress in the world” and called for a broadening of economic and cultural relations. ■=' The two delegations yesterday wound up a solid week of discus sions in Belgrade. NAACP Ban Continues in Texas TYLER, Tex., Oct. 23 UP) —Judge Otis T. Dunagan today issued a temporary injunction continuing a ban on operations by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Texas. Atoms Peace Agency Adopted by lAEC UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.. Oct. 23 (A*!—The International Atomic i Energy Conference today adopted unanimously a statute for a world atoms for peace agency with headquarters in Vienna. I The unanimous cote climaxed a month of concentrated debate 'and nearly two >cars of negotiation. FABULOUS SPECIAL PURCHASE EVER MADE . . Mens White Shirts $3.49 Sizes 14 to 17 - Sleeve Lengths 32 to 35 LUXURIOUS FABRIC: High count full bodied lustrous combed broad cloth. Sanforized, mercerized. Fine American cotton. SINGLE NEEDLE STITCHING: These shirts are made with fine single needle tailoring throughout. Single needle sewing in sures the strength and durability of the shirt French front for neatness. EXPERT TAILORING: • Full cut for comfort and freedom of movement One-piece pleated sleeve eliminates a seam and makes ironing easier. Split yoke—a custom fea ture, curved to fit natural contour of shoulders. STAY COLLAR: Keeps collar points down and eliminates starch ing. qnbrjG> STATE COLLEGE, PI. 600 CUSTOM-MADE Made ie Sell for 7.95 Very Specially Priced at PAGE THREE 3 for 10°°