CH 2. 1957 SATURDAY. MA Mid-East Plan Omits Sanction UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Feb. 26 (IP)—The United Stites is working on a Middle East proposal designed to get Israeli forces out of E gypt and the Gaza Strip without imposing sanctions on lirael. American ources said chief delegate-Henry Cabot Lodge is trying to work out a proposal not so drastic a resolution put up by six Asian-African countries, last week. This Asian-African res olution calls for punishment sanc-1 tions of Israel for not withdraw ing. _ Fight Police Arabs Cairo For A CAIRO, Feb. 15(H) Palestine A bittered .veteran want to fight t battled Egypti: ban Maadi toda for arms and : 108 (,tP) About ab soldiers, em . from Gaza who L e Israelis again, i police at subur b, in a vain quest :. unition. Witnesses said five of the Pales tinians were killed, several wounded and more than 20 ar rested before their raid on the Maadi police station collapsed un der a counterattack of the officers who were reinfbrced quickly by 100 military police. • Cry fon Arms One report said the raiders shouted slogans against President Nasser as they attacked, but this could not be confirmed. Their main cry was for arms. The police clamped a tight lid of secrecy on the incident and said only that "the trial will be secret." They confiscated film of a photographer for the newspaper Al Shaap. A rumor of a similar outbreak in another 'Cairo suburb, Heliopo lis, appeared unfounded. , Order Maintained The 100-man MP detachment moved from, Cairo to Maadi, a fashionable area which is the resi dence' of- many- Americans, and parked in trucks at strategic points to. maintain order. Shortly after the riot flared, Maadi was back to normal. Traf fic circulated as usual. There were no visible repercussions in Cairo, where Nasser was host at a four power Arab summit conference that has Israel's continued occu pation of Gaza and the Aqaba Gulf coast among its topics. 'Draft-Dodging' Dispute Settled WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 (A ) ) --I Tlie. squabble that saw Secretary' of Defense Wilson aim his "draft-1 dodging" barb at some National, Guardsmen was settled today. All sides agreed on a compromise training program. The Army and the National Guard Assn. reached "full agree ment" on postponing until Jan. 1 the Army's plan to require six months of active duty training of new Guard recruits below the! draft age of 181/2. Adding its approval was a House Armed Services subcom mittee headed by Rep. Overton Brooks (D-La). The subcommittee helped smooth over the controver sy which reached apeak last month when Wilson , declared - that some "men enlisted in the Guard during the Korean War to •escape .the draft. The full Armed Services .Com mittee is expected to approve the compromise at its next meeting, probably next week. No new leg islation is required to put - the program into effect The Air National Guard's pres ent 11-week training program would not be affected. Under the new plan, the Na tional Guard would be able dur ....."--.----iT, ...„......,....„_. , ~..... , ia -,,, , 4,-..: -:-: ' ;,.. L ip ; i i•i1 , ,.....i11. ;., -.:_e• - • : - - - -, - f ,: . _-__,..... 1::; ! ':- - -' .. ": 7 : 41 s. , .:•, , ‘W •''' .' , '''. - - • ' ' '. -: ' - -- ': r,.:' ' • ' "*.--P-. - t - '• i . A.'A ` l - . .. • : • '''' • *-.. - • b., 6 0 14 tar. ....i ---‘ " ! .- • - Aili fl: it, jilt 7,....„ ..0• ..-.. ••;.% .:' - ,- - - 7 2- .- - ;:-- -,.-. • - . - - Inc ..- . ' a il • - - 0-4dge tir 40 , 4 „ ..... -0.,---.., . ..,._- „,,,r. ...,,... ._,....,...„-„.....,:. ”, • --, .... - -2.7 ~-...- - - - 2 ',.- 4.---7 3 ,,,,, , ,:-_,:- - , , THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Two-Fold Plan Lodge was represented is at tempting to find a resolution that will get a two-thirds majority in the Assembly and will be in har mony with the. U.S. position. The American view was said to be two-fold—to obtain immediate withdrawal of Israel and to bring about conditions that will ir.sur• no .return to the previous %Rua don. The U.S. resolution is likely to include a number of ideas ad vanced by Lester B. Pearson of Canada. It Will not •mention sanc tions in the drastic way the Asian- African resolution did. There was no indication just how it will try to meet the views of those who demand penalties on Israel. Time Limit One report was current that the resolution would contain a pro vision that if Israeli did not com ply within a certain time limit the Assembly would consider penal tiei. Pearson presented what he call ed a constructive compromise, and drew immediate criticism from the Soviet Union and Syria. They called it pro-Israel. Pearson presented his proposal as the Assembly went through an other round of somewhat mean elusive debate on the Middle East crisis. The four points were: Formal Pledge 1. Israel and Egypt should make a formal pledge to observe scru pulously all the provisions of the 1949 armistice agreement_ These established the demarca tion line, prohibited any form of aggressiva action by either side and established Egypt's adminis trative control over the Gaza Strip without giving Egypt any rights of territorial sovereignty there. 2. Secretary General Dag Ham marskjold and Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, commander of the UN Emergency Force which was cre ated out of a proposal by Pearson last fall, should arrange with Egypt and Israel to deploy UN forces along the armistice line. Truce Supervision The assignment would be to as sume certain duties of the truce supervisory 'organization in the area, to prevent incursions, raids and retaliatory attacks across the armistice line and to maintain peaceful conditions on both sides of the line.. 3. It should be agreed and af firmed that there should be no in terference with innocent passage or any assertion of belligerent rights in the Straits of Than or the Gulf of Aqaba. Israeli troops shoruld be followed on their with drawal from the Sharm el Sheikh area of the Gulf of Aqaba by UN forces. 4. UN Emergency Force should be used in the Gaza Strip and a UN Administration, to be ar ranged for by a UN commissioner for Gaza, should gradually replace , the Israeli civil administration in the Strip. ing the rest of this year to recruit youths 17 to 181/2 with the under standing they would take only 11 weeks of active duty training. But the recruits would have to sign up in time to complete the training by Jan. 1. Senate inquiry Ties Gambling To Teamsters • WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 (.45 Witnesses at a Senate inquiry to day linked the Teamsters Union with gambling and gamblers in Seattle and Spokane, Wash., and organized vice in Portland, Ore. One witness swore that Local 690 of the union in Spokane loaned more than $50,000 to saloon keep ers and gamblers in the two Wash ington cities. Tiara:lon Ply Another testified that Dist. Atty. l William M. Langley of Portland told him after a successful pri-, mary campaign that Langley and his family were going to take a vacation in California and "the teamsters are going to pay for it." The first day of what Chairman McClellan (D.-Ark.) promised will , be a "stupendous" investigation of gangster infiltration of labor unions a lso produced evidence that the Teamsters Union paid for airplane trips ea Spokane gamb ler, a race horse trainer and a jockey. Langlsy Promise James Elkins, a self-styled Port land gambling operator, told the senators he_ received a promise of protection from Langley after helping to arrange for secret sup port of Langley by the Teamsters Union in the 1954 election cam paign. The testimony about the loans from Local 690 came from Albert J. Ruhl, the local's veteran sec retary-treasurer. Ruhl reluctantly conceded he was afraid of retalia tion from Dave Beck, boss of the IVz million member union, be cause of his disclosures. - Earlier, a newspaper reporter testified that racketeers and hood lums who rose to power in the union combined to take control of vice in Portland. Dairyman Strike Grows Violent NEW YORK, Feb. 26 —A two day price strike by a small group of dairymen grew in violence to day in the tri-state area that sup plies New York-City. Thousands of tons of milk were dumped. New York and New Jersey or dered out extra state police to , check the gunfire, fist fighting, dynamiting and milk contamina-i tion that marked the strike. There were a number of arrests, but no serious injuries_ Meanwhile, New York house-. wives encountered no difficulty ini buying milk. Ten million quarts al day are brought into the city and the strike cut off less than five; per cent of the flow. New York gets its milk from; dairy-centers upstate and in New! Jersey and Pennsylvania. Only an estimated 3,500 out of 45,0001 dairymen in the area were offi- , daily on strike. Forty-eight of the areas' 381 milk collection de pots were affected. The New York,- New Jersey -! Pennsylvania milk strike began! Sunday. 12E3E1 Peron Said Regain of BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Feb. 26 (iP)—The men who helped topple Juan Domingo Peron in September 1955 today charged he is directing a subversive Latin-American network designed to restore him to power. They said seized document, prove that if Peron did- take over again in Argentina he would advocate coexistence with com munism and threaten the Western Hemisphere's anti-Communist al liance. . Sscrot Docuaunds Authorized officials of the pro visional government, who cannot be identified, showed reporters heretofore secret - documents to back up their ch.rgits. Some o the documents quote Peron as saying international communism will dominate the world. The collection included docu ments sent by the Argentine gov ernment in a protest to Venezuela that Peron is allowed to conduct subversive activities from his po litical refuge there. Collision Responsulde An automobile collision last Dec. 24 unmasked the Peron plot ting, officials said. Province police, near the Bo livian border, conducted a routine check. In one car they found quan tities of Peron propaganda re vealing the existence of Peronist commands in Bolivia. This led to the arrest of 48 Peronista plotters in Argentina. From that chance discovery, of ficials have built up this picture of Peron's machinery: Caracas Headquarlus 'The career soldier and general who organized labor in his sup port as dictator, has set up com mand posts in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay and Brazil which he directs from Ca racas. Exiled Peronistas smuggle his Poland Appeals for U.S. Aid WASHINGTON. Feb. 26 (JP) Communist Poland today appealed formally for United States eco nomic and financial aid. This done, a top Polish official said he was "very much satisfied at the way the discussions started." A five-member Polish delega tion opened talks with a U.S. gov-, ernment group. REMOVAL SPECIAL AT MUR'S ELGIN WATCHES *MEN'S regularly $45.00 NOW $32.50 regularly $79.50 NOW $59.65 regularly $37.50 NOW $28.15 LADIES' regularly $37.50 NOW $28.15 regularly $59,50 NOW $44.65 - LADIES' 14 CARAT WHETS GOLD DIAMOND regularly $lOO NOW $75 All OTHER WATCHES IN OUR STOCK REDUCED 25% to 50% ALL SALES FINAL - • FREE ENGRAVING ON WATCHES • WE ARE MOVING TO A NEW MODERN STORE LOCATED AT 220 S. ALLEN ST. ON OR ABOUT MARCH 31st. COME IN NOW AND SAVE! 'All Prices Include Federal Tax ...A A CvlAßie r e , c es - 4114 r A Gift Engraving from MUR'S Done Is A On Quality The Gift r e4a: Premises S. ALLEN ST. In Our STATE COLLEGE STORE ONLY PAGE THREE to Want Power orders, propaganda and money into Argentina. • A network of amateur radio op erators relays Peron's orders in eode up and down Latin America. Cripple Economy The aim, as set forth in the documents, is to cripple the econ omy. The Aramburu government received a 100-million-dollar loan from the United States to rebuild the railway system. Hence, say e-efficials, the sabotage on rail The United States has taken a hands-off attitude on Peron's al leged. activities. But it is known the United States is keeping a dose eye on him because of U.S. interest in hemisnhere peace and Argentina's economic restoration. LEARN COLLEGE HEBREW , AT CAMP THIS SUMMER Annual accelerated course in modern- Hebrew for college students and graduating high school seniors, at beautiful 73 acre coed camp in New York's Hudson Valley; complete sports facilities. 7 week make, July-August, Inn; including room, board, tuition (some scholarship help available) write: ULPAN, Student Zionist Organization 342 Madison Avenue, New York 17