PAGE TWO U.S. Expects Soviet Reply to Cease-Fire WASHINGTON (A) Any further delay in a Laotian' cease-fire agreement, a State Department spokesman said' yesterday, "would be a matter of very serious concern." This assessment came from press officer Lincoln White after Secretary of State Dean Rusk told reporters he expects' a Soviet reply "within a very Wan Needs Alcohol In Jet Age LONDOF (IF) An eminent British physician yesterday said he is convinced that man must have alcohol or tranquilizers lo survive in today's jet age. "The use of these drugs is ne cer,sary for man's continued ex istence in our so-called civi lized world," he said. "If he did not take them he would commit suicide when things got too bad for him." The physician Dr. B. G. .B. Lucas was elaborating in an in terview on remarks he made in a lecture before the Royal Institute of Public Health and Hygiene. In the lecture he said: "Modern man cannot do without drink and drugs to survive. He takes drugs to overcome his mind and his prohiems." By drugs, he said, he meant al cohol, sedatives and tranquilizers. Explaining his startling views to reporters, Lucas said that civi lization has produced many drunkards hut few teetotalers who were geniuses. He said he could name only Albert Einstein and Albert Sch weitzer. IL Cecil heath, secretary of the United Kingdom Alliance for the Suppression of the Liquor Trade, took immediate exception. "Geniuses who have been tee totalers?" he asked. "Flow about Thomas A. Edison, Henry Ford and George Bernard Shaw?" 7 ateei 3 Pizza & Sub Shop 15" Subs 21 Ingredients Pizza 10" - 12" - 14"' Oven Hot Delivery To Your Door AD 8-0596 400 W. Beaver Ave. LIMITED NUMBER OF TICKETS LEFT FOR IFC-PANHEL JAZZ FESTIVAL - AT HUB DESK ew days" to a British proposal for an immediate cease-fire in Laos. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana called the situation "still delicate, danger ous, and a long way from set tled." Mansfield spoke in the wake of overnight reports, confirmed by the State Department, that the Soviet Union had increased its flow of arms and other sup plies to rebel forces in Laos. The British proposed several weeks ago, with U.S. backing, that the civil war in Laos be halt ed immediately and that an inter national conference be called to work out a permanent settlement. A Soviet reply had been expect ed momentarily during last week's Washington talks between British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and President Kennedy. It never came. Rusk emerged from a closed door session with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Tuesday and fold newsmen: "I don't know, in view of all the circumstances, that there has been undue delay." Asked whether the United States had stepped up its supplies to the Laos government, Rusk re plied: "To a degree." At the State DepArtment, White said the United States is con cerned about the stepup in Soviet arms deliveries to the Communist led Pathet Lao forces. He said "some increase," as he described it had developed over the past three d- . § or so. "A DAY IN WASHINGTON" Sponsored by Young Democratic Club Young Republican Club Meeting: THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1961 111 BOUCKE 7:30 P.M. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Kennedy Says U.S. Must Aid Latin Nations WASHINGTON (P) Presi dent Kennedy said last night "if we don't move now" to aid Latin American nations, Cuba's Prime Minister Fidel Castro "may be come a greater danger than he is today." The President also asserted that Latin America "is in a most criti cal period in its relations with us." Kennedy made these remarks in a taped television interview. The subject of Latin America came up in discussion of the roles of some of the President's aides. The interviewer, Ray Scherer asked about Arthur M. Schles inger Jr., author and Hafvard professor of history who recently joined Kennedy's staff. Kennedy noted that Schlesinger toured several Latin American countries about a month ago and has reported to the President on some of the problems dealing with the Cuban situation. Three Sisters by CHEKHOV Weekends: April 14 - May 20 CENTER STAGE SOLD OUT OPENING WEEKEND! Tickets for any of the other performances may be reserved by calling UN 5-2563 or stop ping by at the HUB Desk. Tickets are also sold at the door on the evenings of per formances. London Anticipates Powers' Release LONDON The London Daily Mail said last night U 2 pi lot Francis Gary Powers will be freed from a Soviet prison in the next few weeks and will choose to stay in Russia. The Mails Moscow correspon dent John Mossman reported: "I understand he would like his wife, Barbara, to join him, and r i it hi y Another ENCORE WEEK Hit! TONITE . 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APRIL 12. 1961 she is anxious to come here." The Mail said Powers probably will walk to freedom May 1 exactly a year after his recon naissance plane was shot down. ATE Now METRO-GOLDWYN•MAYER reseft EDNA FERBER'S CIMARRON CINENASCoes METROCOLOR A o"ta . ic. r. . • • # J • Fealuretime 1:15, 3:57, 6:39, 9:27
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers