The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 07, 1959, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1
U.S. S
Dime
WASHINGTON
a double-barreled
violation and said
chances of success
State Departme'
Allies Acc
Of War Pi
LONDON (iP)
Union asserted yes
western allies hope
Thailand, Pakistan an
pines "into bases for
missile-nuclear war,
fraught with mortal
them."
In a commentary of the meet-;
ing of the Southeast • sia Treaty' ,
Organization in Welli gton, New ,
Zealand, the official oviet news
agency Tass described SEATO as
"an aggressive bloc •Ireated as a
tool for preparing war in South
east Asia."
The statement declared a main
purpose of the meeting is to unify
SEATO, the Baghdad Pact, and
the North Atlantic Treaty Organi
zation.
The commentary, broadcast by
Moscow Radio, added: "T h e
SEATO Council meeting will en
gage primarily in drafting stra
tegic plans with the object of
stepping up the war preparations
of the SEATO member states."
March Shows High
For Job Picture
WASHINGTON (fn—The gov
ernment said la s t night that
March improvement in the na
tion's job picture was the best in
years. The over-all economy was
reported to have registered a new
hieh during the first quarter of
1959.
President Eisenhower and his
Commerce and •L ab or cabinet
members issued a series of glow
ing predictions promising that
data to be.issued in a day or two
will demonstrate business is even
better than had been anticipated.
Eisenhower started out the
round of happy predictions. He
promised a new jobs report today
will be gratifying and hinted at
a substantial cut in unemploy
ment.
Then, Secretary of Labor James
P. Mitchell arranged for the La
bor Department to put out the
job data today at an unprece
dented news conference.
Men Who Think for Themselves
Eat Morrell's Pizza
We Aiso Cater To
i
Men Who Don't Think or Thenoiehros
We Will Bven Serve
Men, Who Don i t Think
7" Pizza 40c
iI" Pizza 75c
13" Pizza 100 c
,'
For Carry-Ou Service
Call AD 84381
Open Till 12 p.m.
Morrell's
a name in State College
for 33 years
112 S. Fr Icier
ys Soviets
neva Chances
(JP)—The United States fired yesterday
ejection of Soviet charges of air space
Moscow, not Washington, is dimming
t the coming Geneva talks on Germany.
t press officer Lincoln White denied
"as strongly as I possibly can"
Moscow's accusation Sunday that
the United States deliberately
flouted Berlin's air corridor rules
by a high altitude plane flight
March 27, The Soviets said this
was done to wreck prospects at
the Geneva parley starting May
11.
used
JEM
he Soviet
erday the
to convert
the Philip-,
n eventual
which is
danger to
"The question of who .is try
ing to wreck what is deter
mined, it seems to me, by the
actions of the Soviet Union and
not of the United States," White
said. He issued two American
versions of air plane incidents
in different parts of the world.
He released a State Department'
note turning down a Soviet com
plaint of March 5 that U.S. Air
Force planes had violated Soviet
airspace last November.
The U.S. note, dated March 25, 1
repeated earlier protests that So
viet fighters had fired on an ,
American plane over the Baltic
,Sea and had simulated attacks on
]Japan'
U.S. plane over the Sea of
]Japanb.
ft said the U.S. craft—which
were not hit—were in inter
national space more than 60
miles from the nearest Soviet
territory.
Washington's note said the So
viets were the ones straining re
lations between the two coun
tries. White said this note was
finally made public because of
Moscow's drumfire of accusa
tions that America is provoking
a bad international atmosphere.
DeGaulle 111 With Grippe
PARIS (IF) President Charles
de Gaulle is down with the grippe,
his office announced Monday
night. He has been forced•to post
pone for a week a tour of the
province. A spokesman said de
Gaulle, 68, had a slight fever.
Impatience B'amed
LARAMIE. Wyo. (Al Police who
picked up a teen-age boy in a
stolen taxicab asked him why he
did it. "I called for a cab and
waited .45 minutes. They didn't
come so I went to the taxi stand
and took one," he replied.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN!. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Summy's Billiards
North on 322
IF-A
Open
Mon-Thurs 3 to 12
Fri-Sat 12 to 12
Underneath the Victory Diner
Take the sky road for
TOGETHERNESS'
33 1 / 2 %
DISCOUNT ON GROUP TRAVEL!
10 or more traveling together
Save Have 5 full days of fun!
8 FLIGHTS DAILY
NEW YORK • WASHINGTON
PITTSBURGH
DETROIT
For reservations see your travel agent or colt
1/i-ijirirrill
I, :, ,- lt - 1 . ~-; e ,2",-,...)
Egyptians Report Red Ship
Carries Armed Men to Iraq
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS foreign legion units to enroll non-
Egyptianlraqis for a fight against pan-
Said authorities in Port;
A
reported a Soviet ship with!rab nationalist followers of the
IU.A.R.'s leader, President Gamel
855 fully armed men of Kurdish!Abdel Nasser.
origin sailed through the Suez
Canal last night, bound for tur
bulent Iraq. Such a landing would
raise a new and significant Com
munist threat in the sensitive oil
producing areas of the Middle
East
The report passed through
the censorship of Egypt, now
engaged in a violent propa
ganda war with Iraq. The sket
chy account provided few de
tails. But if the report is true,
it could foretoken a new cold
war explosion over the Middle
East.
Observers in Port Said de
scribed the armed men aboard the
Soviet ship Gruzia Georgia as So
viet subjects of Kurdish origin.
There are many Kurds in the
southernmost regions of the Soviet
Union.
The same sources said they
believed the Kurds were being
shipped to Basra, Iraq's main
Persian Gulf port, under a pre
text of being repatriated to
their country of origin.
They would be given Iraqi na
tionality immediately upon their•
arrival, possibly for use as sol
diers in the armed forces of leftist
!Premier A b d e l Karim Kassem,
the sources added.
This report follows accounts in
the press of the United Arab Re
public (E gyp t and Syria) that
Iraq's Premier Kassem had formed
Four Students Get
Wilson Fellowships
Woodrow Wilson Fellowships
have been awarded to four stu
dents who intend to prepare for
college teaching careers.
The four winners are all from
State College. They are: George
Flem in g, graduate in physics;
Guido Moeller, senior in physics;
George Sellers, senior in geophy
sics and geochemistry; and John
Wall, senior in education.
The Wilson Fellowship program
supports scholars in their first
year of graduate study by paying
the full cost of tuition and fees
-Aus a living allowance of $l5OO.
The 1200 Wilson Fellows named
were chosen from 7000 candidates
in the United States and Canada.
now hear this
now heir this
now hoar this
z/X3
3. GUTFNIMIG, bookmaker, says: "If
you want hair that's neat, not greasy,
you're just the type for Wildroot!"
Just a little b,t F-41
of
a Vi nd i 1 . d .. r \N " O t W ! •
If waiting five months for delivery on
a fraternity composite doesn't faze you,
then read no further. If, however, you
find yourself privately wishing that the
men's room had a closet where the
composite could be discreetly hidden
from the eyes of visitors . . . and
your artistic nature rebels against the
amorphous look of the finished product
. . then hear this
Every second year, between sororities,
we try to find time to do , few fraternity
composite
This fall (or sooner) we hope to be
able to -do eight. Our selection will
be based on houses applying before
April 15.
Hop up a flight and get the details
bill col-oman
.;
I V if
1 x
I:
, 4Y ,",'MrArear" ,l l 4l , l a -, ZI' VTACKren...l:l4*lt•rapfirrN
PAGE THREE