WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 6. 1957 Censure of Israel Termed 'lmmoral' WASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (jP) Sen. William F. Knowland (R.-Calif.) told Secretary of State John- Foster Dulles today it would be “immoral and ... unsupportable” to apply UN sanctions against Israel without giving Russia the same treatment. The GOP leader in the Senate spoke out after Dulles told his news conference the United States woulcl have to give sanctions “very serious consideration’’ if the United TIM to Make Final Decision On Constitution Town Independent Men will meet at 7 tonight in 203 Hetzel Union to take a final vote on the adoption of a new constitution for the group. The new constitution was drawn! up by a five-member committee! headed hy James Tipton, TEVT president. The committee recommended that town independent men be reorganized in the form of a council. The council members would be nominated by petition and elected by the town men. If the new constitution is adopt ed by the group tonight, it will go into effect on a trial basis this eemester, and will be put to a final vote at the last meeting of the semester. Tipton has requested the pres ence of all TIM members at to night’s meeting. Also on the agenda is a discus lion of the TIM dance scheduled for March 22. WSGA Senate to Plan Semester's Activities The Women’s Student Govern ment Association Senate win I>!an its activities for the semester at a meeting at 6:30 tonight in the WSGA room in White HalL Martha Fleming, senior in home economics from Huntingdon, will preside, over Senate meetings ■while WSGA President Daisy Zimmerman is student-teaching. 2nd Arab In Confab WASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (TP) —Crown Prince Amir Abdul Hah of Iraq, President Eisenhower’s second Arab visitor with in a week, conferred with him for 45 minutes today and asked for more arms. The President’s other Arab guest, King Saud of Saudi lair House, official guest resi- Arabia, had a quiet day at B' dence across from, the White! House. . Both are members of the Arab! League. Both are rich in oil. And both are feeling pinched because Saud and Hah are expected to! get together tomorrow. Their! meeting could have more symbol ic than practical value. I the Israell-Egypt fighting last fall! has seriously slowed the flow of j their oil to Western markets. But Saud and Hah have theirj differences. Iraq is a member of, the LLS. supported Baghdad Pact, whose other members are Britain, Pakistan, Iran and Turkey. Saudi Arabia opposes the Pact. On their concurrent visits to Washington, however, Saud and Hab already have found them selves in agreement on Eisen hower’s program to curb commun ism in the Mideast, They also agree that each of them should -get more help from the United States. Ilah noted Iraq-has been get ting U.S. military assistance since April, 1954. He aded: ‘‘But we v;ant more.” American aid officials have looked with interest at Iraq for some time. Its central location— nestled in the fabled “fertile cres cent? which curves along from the eastern Mediterranean shore to the head of the Persian Gulf —makes -it ideal for Middle East developmental purposes. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Nations called for them to force Israel out of Egyptian territory. Dulles said, however, he had good grounds for hope that such a situation would not arise. Knowiand, who is also a mem-j her of the U.S. delegation to the UN, immediately conveyed his views to Dulles and then ex plained them to reporters. ! “I do not believe the United States should support United Na tions sanctions against Israel un less the UN is prepared to apply ! sanctions against the Soviet Un lion for its noncompliance with 10 jGeneral Assembly resolutions 'relative to Soviet aggression against Hungary,” he told report ers. "A double standard by the UN that would apply sanctions to a small country that has at least ' partially compiled with the resolution of the General Assembly on the Suez-Middle East conflict, while sidestepping the question of sanctions on a ; Communist aggressor which has ! wholly ignored all the resolu tions on the crime against Hun gary, is both immoral and, in good conscience, unsupport able." At his news conference Dulles was asked by a reporter whether he favored sanctions if Israel re fused to pull out of the Gaza Strip and the Gulf of Aqaba. “Well, that is a question we could only answer within the context of a United Nations reso-j lution,” Dulles replied. “We! would not take any action in the; way of sanctions unilaterally. "If there was action by the United Nations calling for sane tions, we would of course have ' to give them very serious con siderations." Dulles went on to indicate that all this was in the realm of the future. Asks Aid With Ike WSGA to Hear Reports The Women’s Student Govern ment Association House of Rep ! rcsentatives will hear -a report Jfrom the elections committee and make additional plans for May Day at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow in 209 HUB. Instructor Wins History Award For Manuscript Dr. Clark C. Spence, instructor! in history, has been awarded the honorable mention Beveridge Award of the American Historical Society. The award, established by the late Senator Albert J. Beveridge, ! of Indiana, is presented annually [for an outstanding manuscript in (the field of Latin-American or American history. The first prize carries an award of SlOOO while the honorable men tion provides for publication of the manuscript. The paper by Dr. Spence is titled “English Investments in the [American Mining Frontier” and ; is concerned with the period 1860- 1900. The manuscript is a revision of the dissertation that Dr. Spence had submitted at the University of Minnesota for his doctor of philosophy degree. Dr. Spence is a graduate of the University of Colorado where he received both his BA and MA degrees in history. He was ap pointed to the University faculty in 1955 and his primary interest is in the history of the American frontier. This Guy Has Troubles | TURIN, Italy, Feb. 5 OP) A j soccer fan is asking a court to istop the scrapping of 178,499 old telephone books until he can leaf through their 235 million pages. He left a football pool ticket worth $3,300 in his 1958 directory [and the phone company picked the book up while he was out. Committee Finds Beck MIAMI BEACH. Fla.. Feb. 5 OP) Dave Beck, Teamsters Union president sought for questioning by Senate labor rackets investi gators, today was located in Nas sau, Bahamas, with air tickets for Europe. FRIDAY, FEB. 15 Schwab Auditorial'.' 8:00 PJd. Admission Free WORLD WIDE PICTURES,; prsMoia /'Sjlijjrs Explosions in Reno Kill 2 ' RENO, Nev. Feb. 5 i'.-P) Three, had been fc»md by nightfall, fiv* shattering explosions from a leaky ihours after the -blast, gas line, followed by a four-hour j Fire Chief Carl Evans said fire, today destroyed a business! more bothes «ugbt be found when block and the Elks Club in Reno.(it was pcssrfele to seaivh the hot killed at least two persons and] ruins ©f the l*ve -dt-Mreyed struc injured about 40. ,tures. Ten business establishments! Tonight State Arijt. Gen. Ja"mes were wiped out and glass from ; A. May and a National Guard shattered windows littered a widelcontingent leek over policing to area - jkeep out curiosity seekers and Twelve blocks were evacuated [prevent persteie looting of stores. ;for fear of further explosions. Mr,. M*trln Pringle, superin ( Although witnesses told of see-itendent of nurses at Washoe ing bodies all over the street with! County Medical Center, estimated i“man.v'’ dead, only two bodies'the number of injured at 40. I (Author #/ J?#y +4+.) THE DRESS PARADE What will the American college student wear this spring? Gather round, you rascals, and light a good Philip Morris Cigarette, and puff that rich, natural to bacco, and possess your souls in sweet content, and listen. As we know, college fashions have always been casual. This spring, however, they have become -mohoohifu The object is to look madly improvised, gaily spur-of the-moment ! For example, girls, try a peasant skirt with a dinner jacket. Or matador pants with a bridal veil. Or Bermuda shorts with bronze breastplates Be rakish I Be impromptu! Be devil-take-the-hindmest 1 And, men, you be the same. Try aa-epcm rape with sweat pants. Or a letter-sweater with kilts. ®r a strait jacket with hip boots. Ee boldf Be daring! -Be a tourist attraction! and'finis Sim whfaimf But all is not innovation in college fashions this spring. In fact, one of the highlights of the season turns time backward in its flight. I refer to the eeraeboek of the powdered wig. This charming accoutrement, too long neglected, has already caught on with style-coaeeious students all over the country. On hundreds of campuses- rock-ami-roll is giving way to the minuet, and patriot io undergraduates are dumping British tea into the nearest harbor. This, of course, does not sit well with old King George. For that matter, a lot of our own people are steamed ■ up too, and there has even been some talk of revolution. But 1 hardly think it will come to that ? mean, hew can we break with the mother country when we are dependent on her for so many things linsey-woolsey, misie bails, taper snuffers, and all like that? She, «atbe other hand, relies on us for turkeys, Philip Morris; Cinemascope, and other valuable exports. So I say. if Molly Pitcher and - those other Bryn Mawr hotheads will calmdown, we may yet find an amicable solution for our differences. But let not our British cousins mistake this willingness to negotiate for weakness. If fight we must, then fight we will! Paul Revere is saddled up, the xude bridge arches the flood, and the ROTC is ready! But i digress. We were smoking a Philip Morris Cigarette —O, darlin’ cigarette! O, happy smoke! 0, firm! O, fresh! 0, fragrant! O, Inog-siae! 0, regular! 0, get some! - and talking of new spring, fashions, let us turn now to the season’s moet'irtxikißg new feature: pneumatic underdrawers. These inflatable rubber gar ments make every chair an easy chain Think- how wel come they will be when you alt through.a long lecture? They are not, however, without certain dangers. Last week, for example, Kimhaud Sigafoe*; a University of Pittsburgh sophomore, fell out ef an 18th etery window in the Tower of Learning. Thanks to his--pneumatic underdrawers, he suffered no injury when he strack the sidewalk, but the poor fellow is still bouncing and it ia feared that he will starve to death. Fashions come, fashions go, kit t y car ofttr yomr I ha Philip Morris Company, sponsors of tbit colnmn, bring, yon ihm tastiest, pleasingeil cigarette yens money «** t»y Phitip Morris, of corrisl PAGE THREE CWo>9WW,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers