The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 26, 1961, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Senate
Try to
WASHINGTON (/P) —Senate leaders sought vainly for
adjournment yesterday on the congressional merry-go-round.
They drew an unwanted brass ring giving them another day’s
ride, at the least.
Senate Democratic Leade
Official Claims
Dag's Approval
LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo
(AP) —A U.N. official said yester
day Dag Hammarskjold approved
the recent military operation
against secessionist Katanga and
the troops’ orders came from U.N.
headquarters in Leopoldville, not
from the Congo government.
“It would be wrong to assume
that we acted in Katanga without!
the approval of the secretary-gen-!
eral," Michel Tombelaine told a
news conference. “There were so
many cables at the time that I
could not say who signed the ac
tual go-ahead.”
Tombelaine, a Frenchman, is
second in command to Conor {
Cruise O’Brien, an Irishman, inj
the civilian U.N. setup in Elisa
bet hville. Katanga's capital.
Me denied that O'Brien, whom
Katanga President Moise Tshombe
has accused of trickery, was per-j
sonally responsible for the U.N.
troop movements Sept. 13 that set 1
off an eight-day war.
Hammarskjold arrived in the
Congo that day.
Disarmament-
(Continued jrom page one)
to states that do not now own
them.
“Fourth, keeping nuclear weap
ons from seeding new battle-'
grounds in outer space.
“Fifth, gradually destroying
existing nuclear weapons and con
verting their materials to peace
ful uses; and
“Finally, hatting the unlimited
testing and production of strategic
nuclear delivery weapons, and
gradually destroying them as
well.”
These points were elaborated in
a 2,700-word "declaration on dis
armament” containing a three
stage U.S. outline program for
"general and complete disarma
ment in a peaceful world”.
The third point had never been
proposed formally before. It
would bar the United States, the
Soviet Union, Britain and France
from handing control over any
nuclear weapons to countries now
without them. j
U.S. sources said that whereas
the United States, had previously
put forward each stage of its dis
armament proposals as a package
on a basis of ta’ke it all or leave
it, that government now is will
ing to single out the part about
no nuclear weapon transfer, or
any other part, and sign a separ
ate agreement on that.
Cerv Lost for Series
NEW YORK (AP) Outfielder
Bob Cerv was lost yesterday to
the New York Yankees for the
World Series due to an impending
operation and he was replaced by!
Jack Reed on the Yanks’ list of:
series eligibles.
DINE AND DANCE —; — “
Luncheons Dinners Pi;
TONIGHT and THURSDAY
PIANO PLAYER
WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY
COMBO
Your Favorite Beverages
Leaders
Adjourn
r Mike Mansfield of Montana
announced today’s session will
start one hour earlier, at 11 a.m.
instead of the usual noon, in hope
of winding up the session tonight.
Mansfield gave up any thought
of adjourning last night after he
was blocked in an effort to speed
action on the last big bill await
ing disposition—a sl-billion sup
plemental appropriation measure
financing scores of miscellaneous
government programs.
Sen. Winston L. Proui, R-Vt.,
objected when Mansfield asked
for unanimous consent to waive
j the rules and bring the bill up
I immediately. Under the rules
! the bill could not be considered
until today.
Under that schedule, adjourn
: merit late today would be the
i best the leadership could aim for.
I While the supplemental money
j bill held the key to adjournment.,
there were other items remaining
J to be disposed of.
One of these was the foreign aid
appropriation bill which has
passed both the Senate and House
but in differing amounts. Senate
and House conferees were trying
to compromise the difference.
Another last-minute money
gap apparently was closed when
Senate and House conferees a
greed on a public works meas
ure carrying funds for flood
control, navigation and recla
mation projects.
The bill also carries money for
the Atomic Energy Commission.
The House had voted $3,602,701,-'
380 and the Senate raised the fig
ure to $3,940,920,800,
Luehke Reports
Faith in US.
BERLIN (AP)—President Hein
rich Luebke was reported to have
told Gen. Lucius D. Clay yester
day that the German people have
full confidence in the firmness
of their Western Allies on Berlin
and Germany.
At the same time, informants
in the West German capital of
Bonn said Soviet Premier Khrush
chev has indicated he may noti
rush through his separate peace
treaty with East Germany.
Bonn informants said Khrush
chev told Belgian Foreign Minis
ter Paul-Henri Spaak in Moscow
last Tuesday he is not commit
ted .to sign a treaty before the
year runs out.
Bonn officials received this
news with surprise. Khrushchev
previously had stated many times
he would sign such a treaty by
the end of the year.
But in this connection political!
observers in Berlin noted that the!
East German propaganda ma-l
chine no longer refers to any datej
in demanding conclusion of a Ger-'
man peace treaty and the turning
of Berlin into a free demilitarized
city.
ID Stamps for Germans
HOF, Germany (AP) East
German police, ordered all border
area residents to report for new
stamps on their identification
papers. They also ordered neW|
registration of motor vehicles.
for dancing
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Adenauer Thinks
About Retirement
At End of Term
LONDON (#>) Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer, 85, told a
British TV audience last night
he is thinking of retiring, “I
have no intention of having
four more years. I have had
enough,” said the West German
leader.
The chancellor was featured
briefly in the TV news program
“Panorama,” broadcast weekly to
a British audience of millions.
He made his reference to re
tirement after being asked how
long he would stay in office if
re-elected chancellor. ,
Interviewed on the same pro
gram, West German Defense Min
ister Franz Josef Strauss said
many people thought it would be
a good thing if Adenouer estab
lished a new Cabinet and guar
anteed a transition to another
chancellor who would —“accord-
ing to firm conviction”—be Eco
nomies Minister Ludwig Erhard.
Adenauer and Strauss expressed
their views in prerecorded state
ments.
The chancellor was busy in
Bonn working out prelimin
aries for the possible formation
of a national coalition govern
ment in West Germany,
His Christian Democratic party
lost its Bundestag lower house ma
jority in the Sept. 17 general elec
tion and must find outside support
to stay in power.
Program officials who arranged
for the recordings were not im
mediately available, but a BBC
spokesman said he believed they
were made “only a few days ago
—that is, after the West German
election.”
Carzo Named to Committee
Dr. Rocco Carzo, Jr., assistant
professor of management, has
been appointed to the Acquisitions
Commi.tee of the Academy of:
Management.
Now at the C00L... C00L...
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Cathavm
at 1:30 - 4:00 - 6:30 - 9:00
SHEER DELIGHT
Jfann£
PRODUCTION \7
TECHNICOLOR’ bwWARNER BROfc
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USTINOV • DEE # GAVIN
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SATURDAY
NIGHT
ACCORDION
MEYERS' RESTAURANT
238 W. College Ave.
Ford Offers UAW
Same Deal as GM
DETROIT (/P) Ford Motor Co. offered the United Auto
Workers yesterday virtually the some economic package on
which the union settled with General Motors Corp.
UAW President Walter P. Reuther conceded Ford’s offer
follows broad outlines of the GM settlement, but added
“the details are not satisfactory."
Reuther declined to discuss spe
cific details with which he was
unhappy, but said; “There are
several things the Ford Motor Co.
can do, ought to do, and we will
insist they must do.”
With final wrapping up of
a GM agreement Sunday night,
the union reiterated it expected
an improved offer from Ford,
and it has International Execu
tive Board authority to strike if
demands are not met.
The Ford offer —second in the
Big Three 1961 negotiations in
the auto industry—came yester
day as GM slowly picked up head
way in car production after aj
crippling two-week strike. j
Ford’s offer, covering 165,000!
hourly paid workers in 85 plants,;
was made to a union negotiating!
team headed by UAW President:
Walter P. Reuther.
Malcolm L. Denise. Ford vice
president—labor relations, pre
sented the company's proposal
in documented form.
In an accompanying letter, Ford
made its offer contingent upon
“peaceful conclusion of new
agreements—national and local—
within the next two weeks and
ratification within a mutually
agreed upon time thereafter."
Ford, in line with the GM
settlement, offered to continue
the annual wage improvement fac-.
tor and cost-of-living allowance.
HOME and FAMILY
ADULT EDUCATION AND
RECREATION COURSES
State College Area Schools
College of Home Economics
State College Park and Recreation Board
Registration: Jr, High Auditorium
Wed., Sept. 27 7:30 - 9:00 P.M.
Thurs., Sept. 28 7:30 - 9:00 P.M.
Fall classes begin week of October 2
HOME AND FAMILY LIVING PROGRAMS
Understanding: the Pre-school Child—Tbura.
Keeping Trim—Tue*.
Contemporary Housing Trendi—Mon.
Decorating Ideas for the Home—Tues.
Prenatal and Baby Care—Tuea.
Family Money Management and Consumer Buying Wed.
When Should You Call Your Lawyer?—Mon.
Flower Arrangement—Wed.
CrafU for 6 to 8-year olds—Tuea.
Gourmet Cookery—Tuea.
Introductory Clothing—Mon. dr Tuea.
Intermediate Clothing—Mon.
Advanced Clothing:—Tuea.
Taiiorimr—Bishop Method—Wed.
Advanced Tailoring—Thurs.
Social Usage—Wed.
Landscaping for the Homeowner—Tue*.
Craft* for the Home—Tuea.
Millinery Workshop
Furniture Refinishing and Repair—'Thurs.
ADULT EDUCATION AND RECREATION PROGRAMS
Amateur Radio—Tue*. and Thura.
Bridge—Mon.
Ceramics—Mon. and Wed., and Tuea. or Thura.
Chess—Toes.
Investing in Stocks (For Beginners)—Wed.
Jewelry—Thurs.
German—Beginners (Oral Approach)—Tues. and Thura.
German—lntermediate (Oral Approach)—Mon. and W'ed.
Spanish—Beginners (Oral Approach)—Mon, and Wed.
French—Beginners (Oral Approach)—Tues. and Thura.
Leather Craft—Wed. or Thurs.
Metal Craft—Tues.
Oil Painting—Still Life
Beginners—Mon.
Intermediates—Tues.
Advanced—Wed.
Shorthand—Beginners (Gregg Systemi -Mon. aid Wed.
Shorthand—lntermediates <Gregg System)—Tues. and Thurs,
Social Dance—Mon. or Wed.
Square Dancing—Mon.
Typing—Beginners—M»n. or Wed.
Typing—Advanced—Tuea.
Woodworking—Tuea.
Effective Speech Training Course—Mon.
To be announced: Women’s Sport's Night, Men's Volleyball
and Basketball Leagues, Adult Driver Training, and Fallout
Shelter Course.
For further information call:
Margaret Jane Brennan UN 5-7322 or
John Diitmar AD 7-4971
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1961
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