FRIDAY. DEC MBER 14. 1956 Allie Ato 1, in Europe Request is Arms from U.S. PARIS, Dec. 13 (/P)—America's European allies, nervous designs, today called for atomic field weapons ense. over Soviet for their de At the Canada in ssuring Russia t II Lose AF Wi Three ings Of Tra 1 sports WASHIN At least th transport pl moved from turned over agency of th, It is likely wings of m be stripped 3 •N, Dec. 13 (iP)— i ee wings of heavy :nes are being re the Air Force and o an expanded joint - armed forces_ that three additional l • - urn transports will .m the Air Force. That dis losure of how the 137-wing goal of the Air Force is being pared down cause to light today when the Defense Department issued an order es tablishing a new, single man ager system to handle the airlift requirementsof the military services. Defense transportation officials, discussing the new directive with newsmen, revealed that the three wings of heavy C 124 type troop cargo carrying planes of the 18th Air Force will be turned over to the new agency. • It also developed that the Pentagon has "under study" the plan to shift three wings of medium transports out of the Tactical Air Force and into the agency. A heavy wing has 36 planes, a medium wing 48. The new single management plan, a formal announcement said, 3s "designed to strengthen the mobilization readiness of ,the De partment of Defense in terms of airlift, and to assure greater ef fectiveness, efficiency and econ omy in airlift operations." Wheels of Justice Halt; Fountain Pen Accused WICHITA, Kan., Dec. 13 (R)— An • arresting officer, Clayton Smith, who was working in the cold in a traffic speed-check area today, radioed the car spotting officers: "Hold it. My fountain pen's frozen. I can't write any more tickets:" THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA oined the United States and at NATO would not wage a war of liberation in Eastern Eu rope, though they demanded "full freedom" for the satellites. The North Atlantic Treaty Or ganization Council _voted unani mously to give its secretary general enlarged powers to medi ate disputes among its members. Only U.S. Can Supply Only the United States is in a position to supply European coun !tries with atomic cannon and oth -1 er tactical weapons, and U.S. leg ' islation forbids their use without specific authorization from the President. The President cannot place them in foreign hands. Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson said he would g ive Ameri ca's views to the 15-nation NATO Council tomorrow. But it was doubtful that he would attempt to commit Congress to a change in the law. World War Feared The assurances to Russia came after West German Foreign Min ister Heinrich von Brentano ex pressed fears that new eruptions in Eastern Europe like that in Hungary might touch off a new world war. He said it would be only fair to tell the satellite peoples just where NATO stood so they would not build up false liberation hopes and so their Russian masters would not• have grounds for fear ing a Western attack. Declaration Endorsed The foreign ministers endorsed Von Brentangs five-point declara tion that all peace-loving peoples shall support the right of East European nations to self-determi nation and freedom, their right to decide on their own social or der, and their right to their own internal development without being influenced by military force or threats. Reuther Favors Unions For White Collar ,Men WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (W)— Walter Reuther said today the nation's 18 million white collar workers can be unionized if es tablished unions of production workers throw their full resources into the drive. Approximately 75 scholarships are awarded by the University Senate Committee on. Scholar ships and Awards to qualified students. AEC Report Shows Rise In Uranium WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (IP)— Substantial increases in produc tion of uranium were disclosed today by the Atomic Energy Com mission as it lifted the curtain on some of its secrets. It gave the first specific fi-, gures on current production and estimated reserves of uranium. This is the key material for the atomic program, whether for bomb making or fuel for atomic power plants. The AEC revealed how much crude uranium ore has been tapped from domestic sources since July 1955 and how much of it has been "concentrated" into the start-off material for ultimate production of bomb-stuff and fuel. The figures showed. for one thing, a doubling of the rate of production of concentrate in less than a year. The AEC carefully kept under its hat, however, production fi gures of any kind prior to that date. Presumably it wanted to keep from unfriendly eyes any data on exactly where the total atomic program stands. But it did disclose an estimate of total domestic reserves still in the ground some 600 million tons. Simultaneously Canada an nounced an estimated reserve of 225 million tons. Electric Supply Co. IN So. Allen Si. NEW REMINGTON IZoUf2d,de Miracle Roffiet.CcmliS • • • • • lik. s MERE'S YOUR MOEN BEARD! Whiskers grow in tiny valleys. Or r flimsy shaving methods skim along the tops of these valleys shave only the tops of your whiskers. Soon the unshaved base of each whisker will grow out and your Hidden Beard can be seen and felt. ~i i % 6 m i _ Hors HOW TIE ROLLECTRIC SETS HI Amazing Roller Combs gently press the edges of the skin valleys dawn pop up chose hard-togmat urbillrn bases right into the path of the man-sized shaving head. Each whisker is t h en sheared off closely. quickly and andonnblid SAVERegularly other trade-in make $8.50 shaver . il .. N MOB UN Action on Reds Asked by Senators UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Dec. 13 (AY)—Sen. William E. Know land (R-Calif) and Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) today ad vocated U.N. diplomatic and eco nomic measures against the Soviet Union if all other steps fail to end Soviet intervention in Hungary. The two senators, both members of the U.S. delegation to the Unit ed Nations, stated their views at a luncheon of the U.N. Corres pondents Assn. Both stressed that they were speaking for themselves only and not for the delegation. U.S. Blasted A short time later Soviet Dep uty Foreign Minister Vassily Kuz netsov blasted the United States in the U.N.'s 16-nation Steering Committee for alleged subversive activities in the satellite coun tries. The Soviet delegation appeared before the committee to seek sup port for a full General Assembly airing of the Russian charges against the United States. Peace 'Endangered' Knowland, Republican leader in the Senate, declared at the lunch eon that the whole fabric of peace was endangered by the Soviet Union's refusal to comply with ELECTRICITY MAY BE THE DRIVER. One day your car may speed along as electric super-highway, its speed and steering automatically controlled by electronic deices embedded in the road. Highwaya will he made safe—by electricity! No traffic jams ...no csalivionit ...no driver fatigue. Power companies build for your new electric living Your air conditioner, television and other appliances are just the beginning of a new electric age. 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That's why in the years to come, as in the post, you will benefit most when you are served by independent companies like this one. th ---4 WEST PENN POWER sot am I -4 4treirA> U.N. resolutions calling for with drawal of its forces from Hungary and for the entry of U.N. ob se►veis. He expressed hope that the Kremlin might yet abide by the decisions once they learn from their diplomats around the world "the adverse effect" their position is producing. "If this does not happen, he said, "I would favor sanctions." Haitian Strikes Still Continue PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (,P)— Strikes which toppled Maj. Gen. Paul Magliore's week-old dicta torship continued in Haiti today. Magliore, bowing to the "cold revolution," quit last night after three days of sit-down strikes had virtually throttled all normal ac tivity in the nation. U.S. State Department reports from Haiti said violence had in , creased, and there had been "some r 'shooting" in Port-au-Prince. ap ,parently as a result of demands 'that Magliore leave the country. Four_ persons were reported with some of the shooting direct ,ed at police and soldiers. PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers