PAGE TWO DeGaulle Proposes J : FK Preseits Pion Arms Destruction PARIS (AP)—President Charles de Gaulle called yesterday for the destruction of existing nuclear' weapons stocks, fipd urts.A a con ference of major powers on de- . struteion" — or control • of nuclear, wr•apons systems. • The French president; replying: to Soviet Premier Ktrjrushchev;! .coldly ignored the Soviet leader'si propoSal for a summit 14:inference ! on disarmament, and merely said France is ready -to discuss dell struction, banning and control. of weapons delivery ! systems: Khrushchev had proposed a dis-i armament meeting of the heads; of 18 nations in Geneva nn Marebl 14. , PERHAPS WITH Red China in mind, Dc Gaulle said discussions on nucelar disarmament should, be limited to the four nuclear, powers—Britain, France. the So-I viet Union and the United States! --and those states which might soon have, nuclear weapons at their dispfxsal. • I • The text of De Gaulle's letteril delivered Sunday in Moiscow, was! released yesterday by the Frenehl Foreign Ministry. In it, De Gaulle said that to achieve real disarma ment, nations should concentrate on •the destruction of existingi weapons stock, coupled with 'a ban on further construction of those weapons. THIS HAS BEEN a long-stand ing policy of France, which en tered the atomic race .late and is' lagging far behind the United States and the Soviet Union in the development of nuclear weapons. 'France also is behind ttritain in School Aid Recommended By Committee ATLANTIC CITY, NJ. (AP)--, The Resolutions Committee of the. Ainerican Association ;of School, Administrators proposed yester day that the federal _government ; pump an astronom , iyal . $8 billittn more a' year into the public schools. This is 10 times the amount re quested by President Kennedy,- and is by far the largeiit program ' of federal aid to education ever suggested. The administation's, current proposal is for $2.5 bil-; lion, spread over three years. THE RESOLUTION he de-' bated by the full convention of The AASA tomorrow morning. If it is approved, as expected. it will; become the basis for the associa-I lion's legislative and: lobbying; platform. The resolution calls 'for .direct; federal grants to the- states of" at' least $2OO for each of the 40 rnil- 1 lion public school pupils enrolled' ;from kindergarten through pub licly supported junior colleges. ; The states would use the moneyi as they saw fit, for such as class-i room construction and teacberi salaries. with no federal strings; attached. < I Paul D., West, superintendent the Fulton County. Ga.. public schools and chairman of the °lotions Committee, said the 5200. a pupil figure is considered an' average „need. New College Diner CLASS RINGS! MARK BUTLER Jeweler 11 . 1 EAST BEAVER Across From Post Office Pins Chamts Keys Medals Trophies THE DAILY COLLEGIAN • UNIVERSITY PARK PENNSYLVANIA IVASHINGTON (P)—President!their approval. Republicans. had denounced it as an attempt, to, Ke t nnedy asked' Congress •yester- s daj , to allow him to : kick off a ltnvade congressional authority. iAnd some saw it as a tool which 524 billion public works programlcould'be used for political, lever wiienever a -recion seems ins-:'aga in an election year. imi'nent. The request drew prompt , Kennedy previously had asked this race. icy on the disarmament issue.'l t Republican opposition. - for standby powers to 'reduce in-. ' r The French prcsident put the Here again. France 'lags behind' THE PROPOSAL, one of three come taxes subject to acon gressional veto—and an increase . - ,putlight on weapons delivery sys- the other major per.vers. - ; pats of an administration anti - ,in unemployment benefits on a ;terns and said their destruction, The French. president's letter re es.sion program, would permit permanent basis. ' • would be easier to verity. Nuclear•specified that France. would- at- the President to trigger up to $2 ; .yreaporis are' now sot nurnerous - tend a conference on destroying billion worth of public projects'' and So dispersed that i would beland controlling the delivery sys- , wljenever unemployment trends easy, for a country to glide them:ltems. This implied France vivuld:si nal the start of a recession. 1 and "thus violate any I agreement :stand aloft from any other kind .e same general feeling ex-1 !for their destruction, IDe Gaulle:of meeting. • .,, ;is that prevailed in Republican,' .;aid, 1 • 1 Britain and- the United , States opposition to grating thelPresi-1 DESTRUCT/ON OR ! limitationalready isave snubbed Khrush-;dent standby authority to -cut, c - ,? weapons delivery systems also:ehev on the iffea of a March 141 taxes," said Senate Republicaril has been a standing 'Trench pol-(summit meeting on disarmament.lLeader Everett M. Dirksen of• 11-, linois, "Congress has the feelingi that it is accessible. If the need! develops to take action to ward off a depression it could act with rctsonable dispatch." EVEN BEFORE details of the; 11)4:n were made public. ranking; niocrats in Congress had given Allies Defy Russians in Corridor BERLIN Western Big Three planes.; flying in the face of a Soviet warning of possible unpleasant consequence.i. ranged 'the Hamburg-Berlin air corridor ,again yesterday at levels which the Soviets sought to monopolize. There were no incidents. . The Soviet warning was' con tained in notes delivered- to the U.S., British . and French[ embas sies in Moscow Stinday and made public in part by Communist East 0: 811 4$ • Gr.frmany's ADN news agency. THE NOTES rejected desnandst last week by the United States,l Britain ;and France that the So-! viets halt a campaign of hara - ss-I ment they launched Feb. 7. Seven - timespow the Soviet Union•has laid claim to the righ t ` of Soviet MG jet fighters to fl alone in one or more of the three. air corridors linking Berlin and West Germany for several hours! up to 7,500 feet. NIPA Pr 2'2.24 , •::: . . ...‹.- A z .i zt :,......''''' . :S.'.t'..-- it ~`...... 4 :. ..'S''' ...' tt *.*: ' . .. , ;, : "-; A g.s.-*„. ~..*- - ,-..'WN 4 , ....-4.ktl. ~-4:,-,. "':.*:: ' •-• z:, ..-: '.- E ...: ,' .z ---1 40TONORROW and THURSDAY is - i ............. . ME ALL-TIME GROIN MOfION FithVRE G ~.... ABOUT MEI 111. MULE! . , ..• . te •• • T A T.HE •-' •It ...,...w..R. .. •• . ',, Emus= mans= iiiime ........._—......, - ULST TEM - THE --- TODAY MARK" F l - 1 2 i - rable Experiesitelma, Come into my Guest Room" said the victim to the:Wolf! Those ' w Talk" playmates are at it -via! fflefic" - -1 -NMSZX NIFAHROMM MPS STIAMT SIM PAUL NO MI num eat SMUT alifilestiffili NBGU satoscrumearEXEMlON • meta Mar tudilkia lii-lietfluallft Wise - Alltliminimend A RIOTOUS KEW TiWIST IN THE ART OF GEIitLE FERSOASIONI - FEATURE TIKES al:M3ati-5:30-T:3O-!x.30 TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1962 Soldiers Fix Dikes HAVIBURG, Germany RI German soldieri labored last night to repair North Sea dikes broken in weekend floods . that "left' 232 known dead and property dainage which officials said might total a billion marl 4--$250 million. As many as 100 persons were reported still missing as' water drained slowly from debris-strewn cities and farms. Hard-hit Hamburg , ' West Ger many's biggest city, reported 208 bodies recovered. 172 7:00-9:1. XI AT TIFFAAWS" ft~•Z~•= Sul AN ADULT. * • )
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