The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 31, 1963, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE TWO
Macmillan Hits DeGaulle
For Dominating Europe
LONDON (AP) Prime Minis
ter Harold Macmillan accused
President Charles de Gaulle last
night of setting out to dominate
Europe and of trying to set the
clock back.
“They seem to think that Eu
rope can live alone without
friends and without allies,” the
prime minister told Britons in a
television address.
HIS SPEECH capped a day of
repercussions here and abroad on
France’s veto of British member
ship in the European Common
Market. Macmillan said France's
action plunges the six-nation com
munity into serious crisis, but he
expressed confidence obstacles
eventually will be overcome by
"the need to unite ourselves."
"France, or at least the present
government of France,’’ said
Macmillan, “is looking backwards,
not forwards."
IN HIS ADDRESS, seen and
heard also in France, Germany,
Denmark, Belgium. Sweden and
Italy, an unsmiling Macmillan de
clared that: “What happened at
fAT AT THE SIGN OF THE LION
4 Sensational Double A
l?8EltaJ NGMAR
:
of the most
SAT. Continuous
i THE I
I CATALINAS 5
• Ploy at THE WAYSIDE |
O 0
• Tomorrow Night #
| 10:00 to 1:00 |
0 A
£ Dancing and Drinking
in a crowded, smoke-filled room. £
foOOO>OOOOO>OOOOWMQM*
{■■■■■inßnHnßamMnHßMHaMncgn
Brussels yesterday was bad—bad
for us, bad for Europe and bad
for the whole free world.
“A great opportunity has been
missed. What we and our friends
were frying to do at Brussels was
something very creative and at
tractive and dramatic."
"We must cooperate with the
rest of the world," he said, “with
the United States in an equal and
honorable partnership, and that
is why we in Britain are de
termined to stand by the Atlantic
alliance."
WITHOUT REFERRING to De
Gaulle by name, 'Macmillan
warned of the consequences to
Europe of disunity. The two world
wars, he said, “have generally
been brought about by the at
tempts of one nation, or some
times of one man, to dominate the
whole of Europe; to create a kind
of sham United Europe, not by
agreement.or by partnership of
cooperation, but by power."
"SPRING" at 6:45-9:55 PJ4.
"DARKLY" at 8:20 P.M. Only
THt DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA
McNamara Sees Arms Need
WASHINGTON (AP) Secre
tary of Defense Robert S. Mc-
Namara said yesterday the
United States must build a flexi
ble force of strategic weapons
that can absorb the first blow in
a nuclear war and hit back at
Soviet military bases or cities.
“By building into our forces a
flexible capacity, we at least
eliminate the prospect that we
could strike back in only one way,
namely, against the Soviet target
system including their cities,” Mc-
Namara told the House Armed
Services Committee.
"SUCH A PROSPECT would
give the Soviet Union no incentive
to withhold attack against our
cities in a first strike,” he said.
“We want to give them a better
alternative. Whether they would
accept it in the crisis of a global
nuclear war, no one can say.”
As things stand now, McNamara
said. U.S. strategic power is suf
ficient to take the first blow “and
stjjl destroy the Soviet Union.”
And he added an increasing
share of the nation's retaliatory
"May Win The Oscar
For Greatest Movie
Of The Yearl" l.a. .h«,m
Examiner
1:90-3:30-5:20-7:20-9:20
Herman Melville's
BILLY
BUDD
CINEMASCOPE
Starring
ROBERT RYAN
PETER USTINOV
MELVYN, DOUGLAS
and introducing"
TERENCE STAMP
forces will be intercontinental fighters since last July, he said,
ballistic missiles in dispersed More than 60 Soviet fighters al
and hardened sites—“all with a ready were there.
very high probability of survival
under nuclear attack."
He also commented that the
Soviet Union now has about 17,000
military men in Cuba. The Rus
sians have put up about 12
surface-to-air missile sites and
sent in about 40 MIG-21 jet
Scranton Rejects Amendment
HARRISBURG (AP) Gov.
Scranton said yesterday he will
not encourage passage of a pro
posed constitutional amendment
that would allow him to succeed
himself.
The governor expressed surprise
that House Republicans had intro
duced the proposed amendment to
knock out the present restriction
of a single four-year term for
chief executives.
“If this is an effort to try and
help me, may I say to you that
I’m in my first month of my first
MARRIAGE ANALYSIS BOOK
—MARRIED,
NEW TEXT NEED ADJUSTMENT
BADLY!
Ten gorgeous babydolls from Alpha Xi Delta sorority
and ten town Independent Men are making an adjust
ment, not in their marriage, but in their educational de
velopment by participating in the Student-Faculty Dis
cussion held last night 7:00-8:30 in the Alpha Xi Delta
suite. The topic of their discussion was The Psychology
of Language. The students discussed how the wording of
language influences how you react and what .you read.
The guest from the faculty was Professor Hanson with
whom those participating had the opportunity to become
acquainted on an informal level.
This is only one of the number of discussions scheduled
by TIM council to be conducted this term. The purpose
of these discussions are primarily to bring some of the
distinguished personalities represented on this campus by
members in our faculty before the-students on an easy
chair leyel. On February 20th, Dr. Kopp from the German
Department will come before ten girls from Alpha Gamma
Delta sorority and ten men from town to enter into a
discussion on East Berlin with a movie portraying life
on the ea3tiside of the Berlin Wall. There are still a few
vacancies open to interested town men. Those interested
in actively participating in thi3 discussion or other Student-
Faculty discussions which are scheduled in the'-future
should sign the sheet at the HUB desk' or call Bob Hauck
at AD 8-2096. - :
Those students who participated in the discussion last
night at Alpha Xi Delta sorority in Simmons with Pro
fessor Hanson were;
Betsy O'Hara
Bee Deßolt
"Lois Yeakel
Carol Rupp
Karen Ward
Barbara Fortunet
Ann DiFelice
Elaine Spreckelson l
Diane Lamb
Ronna Bean
THANK YOU, PROFESSOR HANSON
THURSDAY. JANUARY 31, 1963
HE TOLD NEWSMEN “without
question" the Soviet Union has
taken all its offensive weapons
out of Cuba.
For U.S. defense, McNamara
called for urgent development of
a new antimissile missile called
the Nike-X.
year of being governor of the state
of Pennsylvania and-find plenty to
do right here without thinking
about 1966," Scranton said.
Asked, at a news conference
whether he would hinder or en
courage passage of the proposal,
Scranton said:
“I would certainly not do any
thing to encourage it, if, it is
meant for me personally.”
Scranton said he felt proposals
for a constitutional convention to
rewrite the state’s 88-year-old ba
sic law stand a better chance now
than ever.
WANTED:
ONE USED
NOW; CANT AFFORD
Rodger Riggs
Richard Stein
Bill Welsh
Mike Sobol /
Ron Huslin
Sam Metz
Jim Simonettl
Larry Richman
Robert Stewart
Edward Stone
Lynn Brant