FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 9. 1962 1 jiiiiiuiiii Behind the News Arms] Israel I And the Arab World E It has recently been an-! nounced.that the United States J E would soon provide Israel with; E major military aid in the form j = of; ground-to-air missiles. That '■ E, step, when taken, will consti s= tute a new and important iriilk- E stone in the Cold War- and as E bound to bring grave conso le quences for the- future well- being of that entire region. | E . For more than a decade, the. E United States had ' refrained = from acceding to the pleas of E Israel dor-just such weapons. E The ground given for refusal = was that there existed between s Israel and the combined Arab E states a military. balance that E presented, the best h'ope for s deterring aggression in that ex- EE" plosive area. : | Reason for Switch That balance, it is now ex plained, has been upset by So viet deliveries of fighter and bomber aircraft to the Arab side—hence, the need to check the imbalance by strengthen ing. Israeli defenses. j E TJiis constitutes admission iof = a view that the preservation 'of E military parity in the Middle 2 East is the way to avert ag = gression and war. This policy, = if consistently applied, woiild E mean that each additional in- E crement of Soviet arms in the s area would • elicit an . imnie -5 diate and corresponding Amer- E ican increase in her shipments = of weaponry to the opposing E side. | These unfolding events pre? sent us with -an interesting case, study of American atti tudes in the Cold war, for the pattern that is now being pur sued in the Middle East has lately exhibited itself most’ 5 catastrophically over Cuba, 5 but also elsewhere. This' deadly = pattern is the unabashed re- E sort to force and the extension 5 of -balance-of-terror strategy s outside of the original U.S. jvs. E Soviet Union posture. / ! Toward a Solution The issues that divide Israel and her Arab neighbors are|by no means incapable' of gradual,! peaceful solution. There are j indications, for example, jof constructive thinking with ire-' nimiHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll! WORKS OF till DEPT. FACULTY 1 >4 SCHOOL OPENING NOVEMBER 11 i[> H In the HUB Until Nov. 29, 1962 PUBLIC RECEPTION 3 P.M. : V ' ' 1 r* > ’ v-- ! ' iiiiitiuiiittiuiiuiiiiiiimiiiiimiuiiittnitt By CHARLES K. KRANTZ Instructor in History ' gard to refugee resettlement and rehabilitation. And the se- curity of Israel rests ultimately not upon mere possession. but s on the solution of the large E political arid social problems E that beset Middle East. E ‘I - ■ • The greatest threat to Israel would issue from a'-'pan-Arab- ist plans have so far shown E themselves incapable of reali- ~ zation, butif any measure is S calculated'to foster a new anti*- 5 Israeli coalition, it is conspicii- = ous •• Israeli military aggran- E dizeffient. i E But, it may be = ought not Israel to be 'fully = armed for her self-defensel = The answer resides in an anj E alysis of the meaning of securj = ity in any particular instance} E Security is not always <o be E equated with the fullestj post E sible military preparedness. , | If that equation were j true) E we should all grow more joy-* E ful and bask in ever-gi*eater = security with every refinement E and expansion of the arms E build-up. Patently, that dqes E not happen. And for good rea- = son. For a build-up adds to the E momentum of fear, suspicion E and lastly panic, cancelling out E any increment of security that = a rise in arms might be ex- E pected to yield. , ! i E Meaning of Commitment = In conclusion, a United E States commitment to preserve E military parity in the Middle, E East would expose her to'the. E necessity of boosting the Arab j E defense posture against Israel,! E in' the event of the latter be-; coming more powerful than the E "combined Arab states. i E Of the hazards of slich ma- E neuvers; there is no .end. Such = a policy would only retard, E but could not ultimately avert, E the outbreak of large-scale vio- = lence. The application of mili- E tary approaches to political E problems grows daily ; niore E hazardous, and it is therefore imperative that the pattern of E deterrence be arrested instead E of expanded. •; ; E And it is for this reason that 5 the American decision to feed :E the arms build-up in the!' Mid- E die East gives one little I cause = for rejoicing. 1 E iiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiir |-r ■iT'Txsr ‘v RECENT OF THE ARTS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK, • PENNSYLVANIA .-Ml:.}*. I ' & v I i ! ! , & I J- ’ Dame Judith to Play Medea Tonight By ROCHELLE MICHAELS Dame Judith Anderson, though born in Australia, has become one of the most well-known actresses of the American Stage. She will appear at 8130 tonight and tomorrow night in Schwab in her two most famous roles. "Medea” and “Lady Macbeth," sponsored by the University Art ists Series. All student and gen eral admission tickets are distri buted for both performances. ' The first ciassical role Dame Judith ever played was the queen in Sir John Geiglud : s production of "Hamlet.'’ The following sea son she appeared as Lady Mac beth, the role which .she has re created in six separate and high ly praised productions. DURING) World War 11. Dame Judith abandoned. her Commer cial theatrical career to appear oefore Ajliod troops at the various European battlefronts. After ths war.- she-made her first performance in the Robin son Jeffers’ version of Euripides' •‘Medea.” which he had written especially for: her. The title role of this .play won her international acclaim, including praise from Sara Bernhardt, the actress to whom she had most often been compared. Dame Judith has also- made several motion pictures including “Rebecca,” “Cat on : a Hot Tin Roof’ and “King of Kings.” Her television appearances include “The Bridge of San Luis Rev,” "The Cradle Song,” “Moon and Winners Selected Arthur Wick (sth - business ad ministration - Wexford) and Betty Jane Sauer 1 (,10th - liberal arts - Aakron, Ohio) Tuesday were named co-winners of last week's “Guess When They’ll Score” foot ball contest. The contest, sponsored jointly by the State College Area Cham-; ber of Commerce and» The Daily Collegian, was decided on a field goal kicked at 10:05 of the first quarter of the Penn State-Mary land game. Both Wick and Miss Sauer correctly predicted . the exact time of the first score. The prize is an all-expense paid trip to the Penn State-Pittsburgh game at Pitt Stadium on Nov. 24. AUTO Prestone .1.55 gal. Rust Prev 79c Radiator Flush. 79c De-1cer....... 63c | SPORTING GOODS ii. . ! Ammunition Weight Lifting & Exercising j -12 ga. mag: 4]40 Now 2.64 110 lb. Sat 30.95 Now 17.65* 12 ga. High Sp 3.50 Now 2.10 j 16 ga. High Sp 3.25 Now 1.95 50 lb. Dumbell* . . 15.95 Now 12.76; 20 ga. High Sp 3.05 Now 1.83 C ablo chwt p uH 400 Now 3.20 Super X 30-06 4.75 Now 3.59 Super X 32 Sp 3.85 Now 2.90 Hand Grips 1.60 Now 1.20 • .All Guns & Ammunition at Dealers Cost • .4 BRAND jf DISCOUNT V 2 Way Between State College & Bellefonte on Benner Pike DAME JUDITH Andersen is pictured as she will appear in one Of the scenes in the University Artists Series' presentation ,'at 8:30 p.m. in Schwab. Dame Judith will appear in scenes frdm Shakespeare's "Macbeth" as well as Euripides' "Medea.” Sixpence.” as well ns “Medea.” 1 to Dame Judith in*this production, IN 1960. Queen Elizabeth II of j appeared with the netrefcs in England knighted her Dame Com- j "Hamlet. mhnder of the British Empire, one | Roerick is a playwright-tin nod ol\ the few actresses ever to have [actor who has .done extensive received this title. [ writing and acting for both telc iWilliam Roerick, leading actor I vision and Broadway. I 1,425 Coed Rushees to Attend Sorority Open Houses Sunday jSome 1.425 rushees will put ajide studies -weekend to concentrate orT'the first event of sorority rush to be held on Sun day. ; ftushees will attend open houses in 27 sorority suites • this Weekend and-next. Groups of 30 girls will visit each suite for 15 minutes with a 10-minute break between visits. . ! RUSH ACTIVITIES will then be temporarily put. off until the beginning of winter term when tjushees will face al hectic week of chatter dates, hermuda junction, ,-lnd coffee hours.) Final ribbon ing 'ceremonies wiill be held in the sorority suites Jan. 14. During this week all contact between sorority wbmen and rush PHOTO K!35-20exp. FILM 2.29 BMM MOVIE FILM 2.79 Brownie Cameras ft Projectors Polaroid Cameras A SHORT DRIVE TO SAVE PAGE THREE ees will be governed by thciPan hellcnic strict silence regulation which limits contact to the Penn State "hello." . j Any other academic or jwcial contact must be approved lijy the Panhellcnic Office. Any wpman student participating in j rush whose membership in an activity makes it necessary for hpr to .converse with a rushee or sorority woman must obtain a pemnilssion slip from 129 Grange and teturn it there no later than Nov. )16. FOLLOWING ribboningj any sorority who has not filled its quota may extend an open bid to any woman who nap not pledged a sorority or has daipped out of rush. RECORDS i: 45RPM 20 fer 100 33!4 Stereos .. 1.49 IV/i Mono .... 99c 9 •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers