The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, December 14, 1956, Image 3

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    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.
Your food will cook in seconds instead of hours. Lamps
will cut on and off automatically to lit the lighting needs in
your rooms. Television " ISCree Ifib " will hang on the walls. Ai
electric beat pump wilt use outside air to cool your house in
summer, heat it in winter.
You will need and have much move electricity than you
have today. Right now America's more than 400 independent
electric light and power companies are planning and building
to have twice as much electricity for you by 1965. These
companies can have this power ready when you need it because
they don't have to wait for an act of Congress—or for a cent
of tax money—to build the plants.
The same experience, imagination and enterprise that elec
trified the nation in a singk lifetime are at work shaping your
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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