TUESDAY, D CEMBER 4. 1956 Brit Tro in, France Call ps From Suez LONDO treat today pressure fr. two agreed without del "Home I , Dec. 3 (A))—Britain and France sounded re for their military forces in Egypt. Yielding to m the United States and the United Nations, the to get their troops out of the Suez Canal area 1; y. y Christmas" was the watchword in British- • Admit d Cases Soviet Is°lot: Of De nation BUDAPES (W)—A gov admitted for that Hungari ed to Russia "isolated cas e , Hungary, Dec. 3 I-rnment spokesman the first time today ns had been deport lby Soviet police—in s.s• But Istvan! for the Boyle. dar regime, .1 were stop. • . those deport ; turned to Hu: Contin! Szirmai, press chief -imposed Janos Ka eclared deportations two weeks ago and • • all had been re , gaiy. ed Uprisings He denied fighting with rebels was continui g in Hungary, but conceded th t "scattered armed bands" were still at large, that "criminals" •till presented a se curity problem in Budapest and that sullen Hungarian miners were..digging only a third of the coal they produced before the revolution. These admissions and denials were made l)y Szirmai at a dra matic news conference with five Western reporters who questioned him for two hours in the Parlia ment Building, still ringed by Russian tanks. It was the first time Western reporters had been able to get in to see a high-rank ing member of the Kadar govern ment. UN Secretary to Visit Hungary On the proposed visit of UN Secretary General Dag Hammar skjold to Hungary, Szirmai said, 'The Hungarian government asks for patience on this question, which is still under considera tion." The government has agreed to the visit but has set no date. As to Josef Cardinal Mindzenty, who has taken refuge in the U.S. legation, technically American soil, Szirmai said, "As far as we know, he is not in Hungary and therefore we cannot discuss him." 16 Year Old Murderer To Receive Examination BROOKVIT.T.r, Pa., Dec. 3 (JP) —District Attorney William Mc : - Knight said .tonight that he will ask the Jefferson County Court to order a mental examination for a 16-year-old boy charged with murder in the shotgun death of the lad's 38-year-old mother. The boy is Samber Lavella of Crenshaw. McKnight said Lavella pleaded guilty to a murder charge last night a few hours after he told police he shot his mother, Mrs. Frank Lavella, during a fit of anger at the Lavella home on Saturday night. Military men— December 7 is fast approaching and if you haven't purchased your tickets as yet, there will b = sales at the HUB d ; sk all this week. French barracks on the cana] No Date Set The two governments set no date, but UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold expressed hope in a statement issued in New York that the withdrawal will be completed and UN police will have taken over full control of Port Said within two weeks. At the same time Britain ad vised Israel to clear out of the Gaza Strip as well as the Sinai Peninsula territory it captured in a lightning war launched Oct. 29. Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd suggested that the Gaza Strip, which the Israelis regard as his torically a part of Palestine, should be made a responsibility of the United Nations. Israel Has Withdrawn 3 Brigades The Israelis announced at the weekend they have withdrawn three brigades—p e r haps 12,000 men—from Egypt and pulled back the rest of their units to points more than 30 miles east of the canal. Further withdrawals, they said, will depend on political de velopments. They manifest no in tention of giving up the Gaza Strip, where they are already re vamping local governments. None of the three nations has disclosed how many troops it has in Egypt, considering that a top military secret. Police Force Grows The UN police force, command ed by Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, slowly built up strength. The ar rival of 742 Yugoslav troops at Ballah, Egypt. today brought the roll to 216 officers and 2,251 en listed men. Parallel pull-out announcements in London and Paris put Britain and France back in step with the United States and thus bridged a dangerous rift in the North At lantic Alliance, which was forged to prevent a third world war. Fire Explosion Kills Seven NEW YORK, Dec. 3 (W) A fire-triggered explosion shook lower New York City today. and rained destruction _ over a broad Brooklyn waterfront section. Of fiicals said from seven to nine were killed, and at least 200 per sons injured. Damage from the disaster which came with a sudden fury of flames and a bomb-like blast on a big Brooklyn pier, was estimated at more than 10 million dollars. - - - - Police earlier reported 14 per sons killed, but as the checking of the mass of casualties proceded, they revised the figure. down ward to "at least seven dead." The city's fire commissioner said nine and possibly more perished. COMPANY HALT! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Ike, Wilson To Discuss New Budget AUGUSTA. Ga., Dec. 3 (A') President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson will confer Friday on Pentagon plans reportedly calling for 38 billion dollars in military spending in the new fiscal year. That is a two billion dollar in crease over estimated defense outlay for the current year, which ends next June 30. Most of the expected hike is being attributed to the rising cost of weapons and equipment_ Eisenhower Will Extend Stay In announcing plans for the Friday session, Eisenhower's va cation headquarters said present indications aro he will stay on at Augusta longer than the two weeks he had planned originally. James C. Hagerty, White House press secretary, forecast the ex tended visit after disclosing in definite postponement of Wash ington meetings Eisenhower had s c duled with congressional leaders Dec. 13-14, for discussion of the President's legislative pro gram for 1957. Congress to Get Budget The administration's over-all budget estimates for the new fis-1 cal year will go to Congress about) mid-January. Hagerty said plan ning for military spending has reached a near final stage. Under the reported 38 billion' dollar miiltary spending program,l the allotment for the Air Force is believed to be about 19 billion, the Navy's about 10 billion and the Army's about nine. Exchange Program Suspended by US WASHINGTON, Dec. 3 (1F). The United States, in protest against Soviet strong-arm tactics in Hungary, has suspended its new program of cultural ex changes with Russia. State Department officials said President Eisenhower personally aproved the move. They repre sented him as feeling that visits of Russian leaders here and Americans in Russia should not be resumed until the Soviet Un ion has demonstrated it believes in the right of neighboring coun tries to coexist under govern ments of their own choosing. The State Department said the few exchange programS arranged with Soviet. satellite nations would continue. Borough Hotel Changes The first hotel in• State College, a small frame building located on the site of the present State Col lege Hotel, was built in 1878. It costs so little to wrap lovely Christmas gifts with these extra yahoo gift wraps 4 4 Corn* in soon to select yours. McLANAHAN'S Hungary Bars UN Observers UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Dec. 3 (A) The Red Hungarian gov ernment bluntly repeated today its refusal to admit UN observers but unlocked its doors to receive Dag Hammarskjold "at a later date appropriate for both parties." U.S. Chief Delegate Henry Ca bot Lodge Jr., told the UN As sembly this reply from Budapest to UN efforts to get observers and the secretary general into Hun gary was not satisfactory. Ham marskjold said nothing. Lodge and 13 others are spon soring a new resolution with a new demand for the admission of UN observers. He said Hammar skjold must be allowed to go ! there soon and with freedom of action. He pointed out that the new resolution carried a Dec. 7 deadline for the Reds to agree to accept observers. Lodge said the UN is confront ed here "by a demonstration of icomplete contempt—for the pro visions of the charter and a cal lous disregard for human de- I cency." Fraternities Forbidden Fraternities were forbidden at the University prior to 1887, when the ban was removed. There were nine fraternities in 1905. 2 7cicicievmligiceeewilewwm. • ; For a Xmas Gift that is sure to please any child stop in and see our toys that are constructed for certain age Ilevels—then you can't go wrong. I w Many different types of stuffed animals 1.98 up !V . If Play school educational toys for different age groups 1.25 up Child guidance toys for different age groups .... DoNs with a compleie line of wardrobes ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF CHILDBENS' CLOTHING MARGARET'S SHOP Next to Kaye 's Korner 111 Hunters Die While Hunting Eight }minters died in the fields Monday—apparently all of heart attacks suffered while hunting on the opening day of Pennsylvania's two-week buck deer season. You Don't Have Y To Be An ELK And BUCK The Crowds When You SHOP STATE COLLEGE "wa.3.36.1101111M1UM30* lIM Sheen and Hall Sheen Ribbon curls and sticks together when ;stoned . . . 220 feet ks 4 colon f, green, white end gold) in a 'enient home dispenser, only $l. PAGE THREE lipitv.igivreimcmycs2 1.00 up 1.9$ up
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers