PAGE TWO Kennedy Calls for Policy Of 'Flexibility, Firmness' CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (iP) President Kennedy, calling for a policy of firmness blended with flexibility, said yesterday that "while we do not intend to see the free world give up, we shall make every effort to prevent the world from being blown up " "Peace and freedom do not come cheap," Kennedy said us here, to live out most if not UAW Council Accepts Contract, Ends Ford Strike DETROIT VP)---The United Auto Workers 180-member 'Ford Council overwhelmingly _approved yesterday a new three-year labor contract with • Ford Motor Co. and agreed ".to end the 10-day national strike of 120,000 Ford production work ers. Only four delegates opposed ap proval. UAW President Walter P. Reuther then called his executive board into session to take up the problem of 25 local unions that do not have agreements with plant management on working condi tions. These locals represent 61,000 workers in key plants. Unless local settlements are completed, Ford could sfll be crippled by strikes. The board has announced it will authorize local strikes in plants where there are valid dis putes. The council's vote to recom mend ratification of the contract by rank and file .members came after a nearly four-hour session at which Reuther pleaded for ac ceptance despite opposition by a small minority of insurgents. Reuther described acceptance of the contract as enthusiastic. He said the "four who ob jected made it clear they were objecting to production stand ards and not to the national contract." Reuther brushed aside a dem onstration that was staged out side the meeting hall and de scribed it as unimportant. He said the group, styling itself the National Committee for Dem ocratic Action in the UAW. did not represent any important ele ment in the union. Reuther told Ford he hoped to have everything solved in time for work to resume Monday. FaPout Reported Not Yet Dangerous WASHINGTON (AP) Fallout from Soviet nuclear tests so far does not warrant undue public concern, the Public Health Serv ice said yesterday, although it has found radioactive iodine 131 in fresh food supplies in six U.S. cities. Surgeon General Luther Terry said his report was based on studies of milk in checkpoint cities in the southeast and that it is probable that the same situ ation exists throughout the east ern half of the country. The cities are New Orleans, La.; Atlanta, Ga.; Charleston, S. C.: Jackson, Miss.: Tampa, Fla., and St. Louis, Mo. These were picked as test centers, Terry said, when reports last month in dicated that the eastern half of the county had received substan tial fallout. Radioactive iodine is of special concern because physicians say extensive overdoses. might result in cancer or injury to the thyroid. 4EMEIIMIENTIM THESIS MULTILITHING the finest work in town FAST • ECONOMICAL COMMERCIAL PRINTING Campus Shopping Center AD 8-6794 `NEISI=I;=WW' THE DAILY COLLEGIAN UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA all of our lives in uncertainty "Our policies must, therefore, blend whatever degree of firm ness or flexibility which are nec essary to protect our vital inter- ests, by peaceful means, if pos sible, by resolute action, if neces sary." Kennedy ad dressed a throng or North Caro lina, where he accepted an lion- orary degree of doctor of !aws. The President noted that for the first time in history two opposing forces have the power to destroy each other. "This is a lime of national maturity and understanding and willingness to face issues as they are." he said. "not as we would like them to be." The country must be purpose ful, willing to face risks, deter mined to live up to its words arid ready to do its duty "undeterred by fanatics of frenzy at home or abroad," he said, adding: "Then surely peace and free dom can prevail. We shall be neither Red nor dead—but alive and free. and worthy of the tra ditions and responsibilities of North Carolina and the Unit ed States of America." The President said it was a dangerous illusion to believe this country's policies can be encom passed in one slogan or adjective —"hard or soft or otherwise." "Or to believe that we shall soon meet total victory or total defeat," he said. Party Backs Macmillan BRIGHTON, England, (IP) Britain's Conservative party sup ported with misgivings yesterday Prime Minister Harold Macmill an's decision to seek membership in the European Common Market. The decision was taken by 5,000 delegates at the party's annual conference. It gave the govern ment the rank-and-file political support it needs at home for ne gotiations which lie ahead with the six market countries. Commonwealth Citizenship DAR ES SALAAM, Tangan yika (AP) Britain is offering Commonwealth citizenship to Tanganyikans if this U.N. trust territory elects to join the British Commonwealth after independ ence in December. Now: NO ON . UNLES NJTTANY TNEATRE NOW at 72(7 1 - T IO :4 4 LANCASTER JEAN SIMIMONS FOR ADULTS ONLY No Children liter 16 Admitted Wass Accom panied By An Mutt •• • Coming Sunday: "NEVER SO FEW" •• • "And we are destined, all of and challenge and peril. Dean Warns That U.S. May Resume Tests UNITED NATIONS (IA) U.S. Delegate Arthur Dean warned_ yesterday the Soviet Union is forcing the United States to re-examine whether it will resume testing of nu clear weapons in the atmos phere. John F. Kennedy Dean told the 100-nation U.N. Political Committee the Soviet Union could not be permitted to become a member of "atomics anonymous," resuming testing of nuclear weapons at will. He declared that the United States so far has voluntarily re strained testing in the atmos phere, and has conducted only small underground tests. But he added that if the So viet Union persisted in testing in the atmosphere the United States would have to reconsider its decision not to test above ground. He proclaimed the willingness of the United States and Britain to sign a treaty with the Soviet Union "here and nr w" that would ban tests in the atmosphere, on the ocean and underground. Dean was pressing the commit tee to give priority to 'a U.S.- British item calling for debate on the need for a test ban treaty under effective international con trol. Nittany Del! home of delicious sandwiches Lox and Bagels Served Sunday Till 2 P.M. across from girls dorms 362 East College Ave. Free Parking In Rear its 811 1 2 CLAIR LEWIB West Germany May Extend Army Terms BERLIN (VP} West Germany was reported prepared yesterday to extend the service of draftees and there were indications that it will oppose any concessions to the Soviet Union in the Berlin crisis. The Bonn government stiffened its, stand against any form of Western recognition of the East German Communists regime just as Soviet Premier Khrushchev demanded recogni tion for East Germany as a con dition for a peaceful settlement of the Berlin dispute. Khrushchev declared in let ters released in Moscow that the Soviet Union would guarantee Western access to West Berlin on condition that East and West agree to two Germanys, both neutralized. He said only such a German peace treaty "can remove the danger of a new war." West German Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss told fellow Christian Democratic members of TODAY I FEATURETIME - ENDS SATURDAY 1:15, 4:01, 0:41, 9:33 COLOMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTRONY.QUINN.. Ckßi FORNANS :414 fe;;; ,* ..111( GUNS:OF NAVAROH( - ' .; COLOR ANQ citammicoes To sod* the trossndoos !as 1, so ft *am tie hatilukt ../..SlAAlft BAKER • ANINONT HArtf PAPAS. CIA SCAR JANES CAIRN can IMIIZL . «VATIttiKI I talVner STATE THEATRE, State College, Pa. )".-- :7A Nc:4l: — , -;*ae•!'ll t t 1 , 3 v :. .-4,. ...„.?„ ~,,. „„ 4..',.,.:, Ir.!. t: 1:: Also Admission 90c Show Time 8 P.M. Feature time "POOR WHITE TRASH" 8 P.M. & 11:20 P.M. "CHANCE• MEETING" 9:45 WED., THURS., FRI. & SAT. at DON tOlia UAW in mum =II Benner Pike Between State College and Bellefonte NOW SHOWING Syr? A ilol.ii i . 1 - , --L .. Dlitrlbiltily MA -1 0 Starring PETER GRAVES with 11TA MILAN, DOUGLAS FOWLEY, and introducing TIM CAREY "CHANCE MEETING" STARLITE DRIVE-IN THEATRE FRIDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1961 Parliament in Bonn that draftee in the army, navy and air force probably will serve 18 months ,in stead of the present 12 after the first of the year. The move would parallel Com munist action across the border. The Berlin sector border meanwhile seethed with unrest. East German police hurled tear gas bombs and turned power ful jets of water at a West Ber lin crowd gathered near the Communist wall in the Ameri can sector. Earlier in the day a squad of 10 East Berlin Police broke into a West Berlin house, apparently in search of one of their com rades who defected. -- Hardy Kruger