WEDNESDAY. FEBR Khrus West: MOSCOW (4 )—Soviet Premier Nikita Krushchev caus 7 tically attacked estern foreign policies on Germany yester day in a Krernlini speech. British sources said visiting Prime Minister Harold MacMillan reacted with some shock when he heard of Krushchev's remarks, The Krushchev speech wa States to Tax Out-of-State Corporations WASHINGTON (ill—The Su preme Court yesterday gave the financially harassed states broad power to put the tax bite on out of-state corporations which do business within their borders. In a 6-3 decision involving cases from Minnesota and Georgia, the court ruled net income from op:x ations within a state by an out of-state corporation may be sub jected to state taxation provided: •The levy is ;not discrimina , tory. •It is properly apportioned to local activities within the taxing states. While the ruling specifically I applied only to Minnesota and Georgia tax laws, it was far, reaching enough to cover similar laws by other states. Hundreds of corporations could be affected. Justice Clark, speaking for the majority, said: "While it is true a state may not erect a wall around its borders preventing commerce and entry, it is axio matic that the founders 'did not intend to immunize such com merce from carrying its fair share of the costs of the state govern ments in return for the benefits it derives from within the states." Hammarskiold to Plan 4 Day Visit to Moscow • UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R)— The U.N. said yesterday Secre tary General Dag Hammarskjold plans a four-day official visit to Moscow next month. A spokesman said ' Hammar skjold and Soviet leaders would discuss such matters as the Ber lin crisis, disarmament and inter national Cooperation. in outer space. Hammarskjold intends to leave New • York next Saturday. •••1.. • 'W"‘ ARY 25, 1959 chev Attacks rn Policies s described by British sources as unusual since it came right in the middle of private conversa tions between the two leaders. It was delivered during a break in the talks while MacMillan was ,on a one-day trip to Dubna, the (Soviet atom center 90 miles north east of Moscow, Krushchev apparently reject ed the West's proposal for a Big Four foreign ministers meeting on Germany. It ' would have been justified at the windup of World War 11, he said, but "now the idea is plainly obsolete." The Soviet Union, the United States, Britain and France can not discuss German unification, he contended, because "this is a question for the two German states themselves." Khrushchev repeated as "more expedient" the Soviet proposal, already turned down by the West! for a theeting of the governmenti chiefs of all nations that waged war against Hitler to work out a 1 German peace treaty. Aft& a party at the British Embassy. MacMillan motored to the country house where the two leaders are due to resume private conversations today. There MacMillan met with top advisers to work out the best at titude toward Krushchev's tough speech on Germany, the Middle East and Western policies. British officials with MacMil lan expressed surprise at the tim ing of- Krushchev's speech at a real political rally. The Moscow diplomatic colony was buzzing with reports that the talks have struck a snag. • , . • • 0 • Welcome • • • • • to • • • • •1 • . Second Semetfer -...7re.lltmen • • . : • I i • • • Smoker at Theta Ch • • TONIGHT —1 to 9 . el • • • i • - • 523 SOUTH ALLEN STREET • • • 1 • Refreshments • •, , • • R : , ,• , Z, ...>''''^ - • • APPLIED MATHEMATICS . -„, , 0iv,,, , v • ti . 4° Atsfi• 51 ENGINEERING MECHANICS ...•1,-;&,,,,,,44,4,;,°•,,,,,,t r ?r„l.4:4i„ ENGINEERING PHYSICS , .iNdr.. - s' 4-1: ,, N• 4:4,44.;•.--,,........,,A1r,w,.... ;.:........1.,,,,, :',t,.c't• ‘ Z , ';' , ) , : N;i , iiK YeA;4114:1 , --9 - • AND <-; < ",•Y: , '.>!•;',:44,11:VP:*::4-7;eia4,'.ii, - ' AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, . e'r ... ... 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' li THURSDAY, MARCH 5 FRIDAY, MARCH 6 iiiinla THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA rs and Cr 71st Birthday Observed By Dulles WASHINGTON (iP) Secre tary of State John Foster Dulles will observe his 71st birthday to day fighting cancer. The hospital again reported yesterday that Dulles was doing about as well as can be expected. In his second battle with can cer, Dulles has undergone four treatments of massive doses of X-rays of a minute or more dur ation. Doctors say this will go on for three or four weeks at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. A medical bulletin reported his appetite has improved and he is in good spirits. So far, Dulles has shown no ad verse reaction to the X-ray treat ment. Some people get fatigued and nauseated. Dulles' X-ray dos ages have been relatively light, and doctors do not rule out such reactions as they get closer to the five-minute maximum duration. Dulles telephoned his special as sistant, Joseph N. Greene Jr., to talk about State Department busi ness yesterday. The 10-minute call was reported to have touched on British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's current Moscow visit and a speech by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. The State Department had no word on Dulles' birthday plans beyond his usual daily trip to the X-ray room in a wheelchair. There was a possibility that Presi dent Eisenhower might visit - him. Eisenhower has called on Dulles four times since he entered the hospital Feb. 10. The State Department is shak ing down into its new method of operation. Virtually a one-man show since Dulles took office Jan. 21, 1953, the department is now trying a pattern which could con tinue indefinitely, PicsOinle' , `,„;(V .41? ,40)', 3 £•• mu rKA " , ,ez • .000.44puraie-,4*ffn/ - Senate Probes Into Slaying WASHINGTON (W)—A Chicago•wielding by hoodlums trying to tavern operator virtually blew push reluctant gambling machine off the head of a thug lying in operators into line. wait to kill him during an under- McShane said an organization world drive to shake down pin- known as Chicago Independent hall machine operators, Senate Amusement Assn. Inc. hired investigators said yesterday. three musclemen—Mastari, James The Senate Labor-Management Rini and Alex Ross—to pressure Committee was told the tavern amusement machine operators to operator, Willard Bates, himself join the association and pay dues was blasted to death a few days of $1 for each machine. after slaying Frank Mastari. Handcuffed together, Rim and Investigator James P. Mc- Ross were brought before the Shane testified the shootings oc- committee. They refused on Fifth curred during the summer of Amendment grounds to say if they 11957. He said they came amid a were involved in the Bates inci wave of acid-hurling and axe- dent or other violence. THE PEN IS MIGHTIER THAN THE SMOOCH Back in my courting days (the raccoon coat was all the rage, everybody was singing Good Morning, Mister Zip Zip Zip, and young Bonaparte had just left Corsica), back, I say, in my courting days, the standard way to melt a girl's heart was to write poetry to her. I don't understand why young men today have abandoned this gambit. There is nothing like poetry for moving a difficult girl. What's more, poems are ridiculously easy to %trite. The range of subjects is endless. You can write a poem about a girl's hair, her eyes, her lips, her walk, her talk, her clothes—anything at all. Indeed, one of my most effective love lyrics was called To Moud's Pencil Box. It went like this: In your dear Mk leatherette pencil box Are perm* of yellow and red, And if you don't tell me you lore me soon, I'll hi/ you on top of the head Honesty compels me to admit that this poem fell short of success. Nothing daunted, I wrote another one. This time I pulled a switch; I threatened myself instead of Maud. Oh, Maud, pray stop this drivel And fell me you'll be mine, For tny sweetbreads they do shrivel And wind around my spine. My heart doth close its beating, My spleen uncoils and warps, My liver stops secreting Soon I needs be a corpse. When this heart-rending ballad failed to win Maud, I could only conclude that she was cruel and heartless and I was better off without her. Accordingly I took back my Hi-Y pin, bade her adieu, and have not clapped eyes on her since, Last I heard, she was working in Galveston as a Plimsoll line. But I did not mourn Maud long, for after Maud came Doris— Doris of the laughing eyes, Doris of the shimmering hair, Doris of the golden tibiae! Within moments of meeting her, I whipped up a torrent of trochaic tetrameter: Oh, my street and dulcet Doris! I love you like a Philip Morris With its mild and rich tobacco In its white and scarlet pack-o. I'd swim from Louisville to Natchez For Philip Morrie and you and matches Well, of course, the dear girl couldn't resist a poem like that —what girl could?—and she instantly became my slave. For the rest of the semester she carried my books, washed my ear, and cored my apples. There is no telling where it all would have ended if she hadn't been drafted. So, men, you can see the power of poetry. Try it yourself. All you need is a rhyming dictionary, a twill pen, and a second hand muse. ®1989, Hal Slkalima Let's drop rhyme and turn to reason. The reason Marlboro has gone to the head of the filter cigarette class is simple: better "rnakin'sn—a flavor that pteases, a filter that works. Marlboro—frem the makers of Philip Morris. Oteanvugm the Author of "Rally Round the Flag ,Boys!" and, "Barefoot Boy with Cheek.") PAGE THREE