— Let The Neutral Nations Prove Themselves — U. S. Senator Hugh Scott has proposed “a thorough over- hauling” of U. S. foreign policy on neutralist nations. The Senator's proposals appeared two days before Congress was to reconvene in Washington. His recommendations were made in an article written for “The Shingle,” ‘the publication of the Philadelphia Bar Association. The Senator declared that “national leaders who fail to distinquish between the principles of freedom and the principles of Lenin seriously undermine the strength of the free world.” He recommended that the U. S. offer the world an “Alliance for Liberty” whose members would “pledge allegiance in joint covenant to the ultimate freedom of mankind.” The Senator wrote: “The Trouble With Harry, according to the motion picture of that title, was that he was dead. And the trouble with American foreign policy today is that parts of it are dead and our Government has not yet devised new and dramatic policies to deal with conditions around the world. : “Many of us in Congress believe that the American policy of dealing with neutralist countries needs a thorough overhauling. “Neutralist is the not wholly accurate term applied to certain nations which refuse to identify themselves with either the free or the Communist countries. : The would-be leader of the neutralists is India. Other mem- bers of this bloc include most of the Arab countries, ‘several nations in the Far East and Africa, and such Red bedfellows as Yugoslavia and Cuba. “These countries are not meutral in the sense that Switzerland is neutral because of its long history of non- belligerence, or in the sense that Finland is neutral be- cause geography forces it to look down the barrels of Russian cannon. But rather the neutralists fancy them- selves as a ‘third bloc’ or ‘third force’ of nations which attempt to act as counterweights in the East-West struggle. “In a world of peaceful competition between peace- loving nations there would be room for this sort of Venetian diplomacy. But in a world where barbed wire separates slave states from free nations, national leaders who fail to distinguish between the principles of freedom and the principles of Lenin seriously undermine the strength of the free world. | 72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER TE Oldest Business Institution Back of the Moun tain TEN CENTS PER COPY—FOURTEEN PAGES Hennebaul IsIn . &rave Condition Kin At Bedside Rehabilitation Drive During First Week Raises $1,000 : The condition of Fred Hennebaul, 10 critically. injured. Liake-Lehiman wrestler who is in’ Geisinger Medical i Center with a broken neck, is grave. y “We almost lost him yesterday,” : his father Walter told The Post yesterday morning after an all- ! night vigil at his son’s bedside. Wg has developed a bleeding + r from the stress of his injur- 4 ; ies, and = physicians hesitate to operate except as a last resort. Fred’s spirits have also taken a oe dive and he is under heavy sedation. Mr. and Mrs. Hennebaul returned to the Center early yesterday morn- | ing and have been with him since. Mr. Hennebaul said that he and | A his family are exceedingly grateful | for the outpouring of consideration I on the part of the community and ©, Fred’s friends. “I tell him how everybody is plugging for him and ‘+i that he must pull through.” Friends are sending hundreds of | cards to the injured boy to buoy up his spirits and his coaches and | teachers are keeping constantly in touch with developments at Dan- | ville. : de Meanwhile, Richard Williams, Harveys Lake, chairman of the Fal Hennebaul Recovery Trust Fund, reports that $1,015.54 has : been raised to date to aid Fred and his family. “It will be a long ha if he pulls through,” Mr. Wil- liams said yesterday, “and we'll need | { $5,000. maybe $10,000. Doctors can give no idea of the costs of his complete rehabilitation.” We have received $414.49 from contributions g from Lake-Lehman school students and faculty; $207.25 from commun- ity contributions, and $393.80 from clubs and organizations; but our campaign is barely started. Checks should be mailed ito the Fred Hen- " nebaul Trust Fund in care of Lake- Iehman Schools, Lehman, Pa. Please don’t wait for a solicitor to call?” Mr, Williams said - Bob Bednar Jered the services of his Midnight- er’s Orchestra to play for a Fred . Hennebaul Fund Dance, Thursday night at Lake-Lehman High School. All proceeds from the Boxing Show in Wilkes-Barre on January 29 will also be turned over to the Fund. | Sweet Valley Organizes "Michael Adams, Ross Township School Director, and the Fund sub-committee of five district committee, said yes- ' terday that Ross Township is well organized and a door-to-door solic- itation is underway there. Contain- ers are in all business places; chur- (hes and organizations will be con- tacted and probably a minstrel show will be produced. On the committee are Mrs. Myron Moss, Mrs. Hazel Crockett, George Wesley, Sr., Paul Crockett, Mrs. Jean Mrs. Keppie Hoyt, Mrs. Jane Gray, Mrs. June Mingus and Mr. Seward. The Five District Committee will meet next Tuesday night at Lake- ‘Lehman High School. f Wilkes-Barre has called and of- | chairman of | the | Marie Pall, | Girl Hurt In Head-On Crash Ned Eyerman Charged With Reckless Driving | Ned Eyerman, 32, a disabled vet eran of the Korean War who with his wife and two children lives on | Grandview Avenue in Goss Manor, {is charged with reckless driving | with a recommendation for: revoca- | tion “of "his driver’s license | follow- ing a head-on collision Saturday night at 11:30 on Memorial Highway | in Kingston Township. | Eyerman, driving toward Dallas in a Chevrolet station wagon crashed | head-on into a 1956 Ford Sedan | driven by Guido Decinti, 21, 490 | South Grant Street, Wilkes-Barre, | who was accompanied by Patricia | Falchek, 21, Scott Street, Plains. Miss Falchek was taken to Nes-' | bitt Hospital with head and knee | injuries by a passing motorist Wil- | iam Bergstrasser, 54 Jones Street, Wilkes-Barre. ? Both cars had to be towed away. I" Tt was the fourth crack-up Eyer- | man has had within a year. | { Legion To Hear About Erie Home Concerned over what has been called “a disgrace, a rat-hole and a pig pen’, Daddow Isaacs Post, American Legion will hold a special meeting tomorrow night at 9 to hear more about conditions at the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home at Erie. Commander Edward Buckley, Past Commander Thomas Reese and Representative Fred Shupnick visit- ed the home last July to study at first hand the conditions there. Commander Buckley has called the meeting to inform members of the Post on conditions underlying the present debate in the Pennsyl- vania Legislature concerning what is to be done about the Home. The current debate springs from an item in Governor Lawrence's | Budget which calls for money to repair the Home. | The Home has been used for | many years to care for Pennsylvania | veterans who are disabled, aged or indigent. Buildings have fallen in to disrepair and there is now a ques- tion whether the Home should be rebuilt, discontinued, or the wveter- ans cared for elsewhere. Commander Buckley has placed Bernard McDermott and Tom Reese in charge of the committee which will Skopic, Roland Spencer, Leonard Dougherty, Arthur Garinger, Regis Brice, Elsie Boehme, Gus Shuliski, Richard Fuller, | George Cave, Leonard Harvey, Har- old Brobst, James Davenport, Mart- lin McEnrue, Lewis Reese and Shep- | hen Hartman. At the meeting Friday night Sena- | tor Harold Flack and Representative | Fred Shupnick will enlighten the | committee on what future plans for the Home might be. } { Toastmasters To Debate Toastmaster International Mountain Club 1553 will meet To- | night at 8:00 at the Back Mountain Library Annex. Anyone interested | in public speaking is invited to at- | tend, Fah , / PAY Northeastern citation and plaque tion for outstanding service to the Future: Farmer of America” ceremonies in Harrisburg last week during Show. “For years a considerable body of opinion in the United States urged us to understand and accept the position of the neutralists. Most of these countries, being newly independent professed to think of freedom in its purest terms and criticized the major powers for compromising on certain issues. Their concern about the immense nuclear power which four big powers possess was natural. “But many Americans disregarded the fact that some neutralist leaders played both sides against the mid- dle for their own natignal or personal advantages. Some Americans were bluffed by those neutralists who threatened to turn to the Soviets if we did not provide them with financial help. ] “Many people overlooked even the one-sided neu- tralist reasoning on atomic tests. For three years neither we nor the Russians tested nuclear weapons and we met regularly with the Soviets to reach agreement for a per- manent ban on testing. But the neutralists castigated the U. S. for insisting that before there could be a per- manent agreement there must be adequate inspections to be sure that no one was cheating. “Suddenly last summer Nikita Khruschev announced that he would resume above-ground nuclear tests. The day he made this announcement, the heads of 24 neu- tralist nations were meeting in Belgrade. The world waited to hear what they would say. “Their opportunity for leadership had arrived. The uncommitted people of the world had an opportunity that had not been theirs before—and may never be theirs again. One of the armaments race which the neutralists in prior years had decried in speech after speech. Soviet nuclear fallout would soon fill the atmosphere. “This was a time for greatness. A unanimous declar- ation condemning the Soviet action could have galvanized public opinion around the world like nothing had done since the end of world War II. But there was no great- ness at Belgrade. Some neutralist leaders spoke briefly of their regret. Others said they understood why Russia had to take this action. This sounded to a dismayed free world like Tweedledum who said to Alice: ‘I am very brave generally, only today I happen to have a headache.’ “When the gathering of neutralist heads of state’ adjourned a few days later they issued a curious declar- RRR THE DALLA ation. It called for peace, but said not a word about the Sovient Union's nuclear testing. = “It criticized the United States for maintaining its naval base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, but said nothing about Soviet enslavement of Hungary and other Eastern European nations. : “It demanded the evacuation of French armed forces from Tunisia, but not Chinese armed forces from Tibet. “What little idealism there ever had been in neu- tralism died suddenly last summer in Belgrade, and it is incumbent upon our Government to re-evaluate our policies toward neutralists and to deal more realistically in the interest of the free world. “From the end of World War II until March 31, 1961, the U. S. gave and loaned more than $6 billion to the 24 neutralist countries. The following table gives the totals of loans and grants: Yugoslavia... Wie nies $2,081,000,000 India... fan iil nd og 1,906,000,000 Indonesia... ole 479,000,000 United Arab Republic ......... 346,000,000 Cambodia. ...... 5. 8. EE 257,000,000 Moroceo: Ji .5 imal ir 168,000,00 Tunisia 0. aa ae 142,000,000 Afghanistan... 000 Lanse 116,000,000 Lebanon 06 conic dlr abl ssa 83,000,000 Ethiopia brid 0A rasa 79,000,000 Burma (00 A ed Ne 73,000,000 Iraq a a SE ee ; 63,000,000 Ceylon uid. nade sa he 63,000,000 Cuba iis he ee sm 54,000,000 Sudan: G00 Te 31,000,000 Nepals =. or Ca a i 27,000,000 Saudi Arabia 0 el an 27,000,000 Congo’ Republic)... +. ohh dl 19,000,000 Yemen... 0 0 OA 10,000,000 CYTE kt Cn Gs al 7,000,00 Somali Republic... . «Law 7,000,000 Ghana. iano RE ay 5,000,000 Guilnea: Jr lane Sani role 2,000,000 Mali .. (figures not available) . Total (oi 6,051,000,000 aid, now is blaming the West for all international ten- “Tito of Yugoslavia, who accepted $2 billion in us sions and wants us to accept the Russian ‘solution’ for West Germany and West Berlin, which could only mean certain capitulation in Europe. ; “India, which also has benefited by some $2 billion in U. S. aid, has almost an unbroken record of voting with the Red bloc at the United Nations or abstaining on issues which might embarrass Moscow. “Nasser of Egypt, the frustrated fuchrer of the Pharaoh’s land, has received $346 million from the U. S. - But just last month an American correspondent reported from Cairo: ‘Most observers and, one might safely say, most Egyptians are unaware of the extent of United States aid since the Nasser revolution of 1952. “If our hope had been to encourage freedom that : When neutralists call for liberty and self-determination, they mean ‘for members only.” We cannot have a national policy that disregards all the hope has been in vain. other people on the earth. “The United States should now offer the world an ‘Alliance for Liberty’ dedicated to the principle that all people have the right to be free and that all nations have the right to be sovereign. We should invite likeminded nations to join with us in this Alliance, not to accept our economic or our political system, but to pledge allegiance in joint covenant to the ultimate freedom of mankind everywhere. vig He “Great cracks and fissures are opening within the Communist bloc of nations. cockpits of Marxism, but it is conflict over what kind of Communism is to rule the world. They are back to their old games of rewriting history, tearing down statues, Perhaps by the time this article appears, the ‘secession’ of Albania from Russia may have opened up new cracks elsewhere in the system. and now exhuming graves. “Now is the time for the free world to show its greatness. When people are asked to choose between our way of life and the Communists they must know that we will share our strength with them if they go with us. Our loyalty to liberty is our most persuasive and ‘com- pelling argument. We will not compromise it. “As President Kennedy has suggested, our Treatment of nations who share our views in times of crises should differ considerably from dealings with the others. “Neutralists for profit or power are not natural allies of activists for freedom.” There is fighting in the 7) POST MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Charles Leng Receives F. F. A. Citation Charles H. Long, outstanding |Lehman Hi Pennsylvania farm at the Pennsylvania Farm An honorary member of Lake- include Richard Staub, Peter | William O’Brien, Back Northeast District Band at Hones- Selected for membership -in the Wardell. Mary 7 Ten students from Dallas High ces College, Standing are William Welch, band | music for six weeks, dale today, tomorrow and Satur- leader Lester Lewis, and William themselves with the scores. | day, reading from left to right, | Cooper. i seated, are Thomas Pierce, Bennett, Judy Williams, and John [School tried out at Will | | | gh School’s Blue Ridge | Blue Ridge Chapter of Future Farm- Sweet Valley citizen and prominent | Chapter Farmers of America, Mr. |ers., Long has cooperated with Future implement dealer, was awarded a |Farmer Chapters in Dallas, Lake- “in apprecia- | Lehman and Shickshinny in wvari- ous shop projects and through the Pennsylvania State Extension Serv- ice Schools. For the past thirteen years he has given a gold wrist watch at Commencement time to the outstanding senior member of |ing with F.F.A. groups. Tapped For N. E. District Band Another who received an Honor- ary Keystone Degree at Harrisburg last week was Earl Lorah, formerly of Sweet Valley, now of Tunkhan- nock where he heads the Wyoming Conservation District, and has taken an active part as judge and adviser for public speak- County Soil October 15. Winners have had Larry Weid, Wilkes College director, will conduct the District | ~ (Continued on Page 6 A) familiarizing Third New Unit Opens In Dallas Shopping Center Stanton TV Moves From Trucksville; Opens This Weekend Third of the new units to open in "Dallas Shopping ‘Center is Stan- ette’s in Trucksville, which will Dallas « Cleaners, just across the parking lot from A & P Super Mark- et. Warren Stanton, president of the new firm, is a former Bi-County Baseball League pitching ace, “a graduate of Dallas Township Schools and Washington Engineering Insti- tute where he trained in electr- onics. Mr. Stanton has announced a three-day Grand Opening starting today and extending through Satur- day from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. There will be door prizes and fav- ors for all who attend, with a boy’s bicycle and a girl’s bicycle as well as a half dozen electric raz- |ors to be awarded during the three days. The firm which has as its sec- retary Mrs. Marilla Stanton, and as its treasurer, Alfred Wendell, | will handle the famous Dumont line of black and white and color tele- vision; a full line of all Hot Point White Appliances as well as Du- mont Hi-Fi equipment .and the famous Bell Hi-Fi components. It will have complete shop on road service for all makes of TV and Hi-Fidelity sound systems. After graduation from Dallas Township Schools in 1942, Mr. Stanton spent 2% years Coast Guard in War Radio operation. He then attended Washington Institute for three years and has had ten years of technician and service ex- perience before purchasing the Guy- ette business. He is a member of Dallas Rotary Club and was Sunday School Sup- evintendent at East Dallas Metho- dist Church for five years. His wife, Marilla, is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Martin of Kunkle. They have two boys, Bob and Carl. Mr. Wendell is a graduate of Westmoreland High School in the class of 1958 and has been inter- ested in electronics for a number | of years. His wife is the former Bonnie Cavill of Harveys Lake. Associated with the firm are Bill Lawler, road technician, Steve Martin, bench technician and Wil- lam Zeek. The firm has been appointed Du- mont parts distributor for North- eastern Pennsylvania. In fact Stan- ton TV, and its predecessor Guyettes, is the oldest Dumont dealer in northeastern Pennsylvania. The firm has a new telephone number not listed in the Directory. Mr. Stanton would like to have | all his customers paste it in the | book, OR 4-7101. IS & H Green Stamps will be given lon cash purchases. | Ga their | : : . | Executive Board Tonight Executive Board of Dallas Junior High School PTA will meet tonight at 8, at the home of Mrs. Carlton Davies, President. 2 band | ton TV & Appliances, formerly Guy |; open today next door to the New TWO EASY TO REMEMBER “Telephone Numbers ORchard 4-5656 OR 4.7676 REV. WILLIAM C. WALZER The Rev. William C. Walzer, Ph D., Associate General Director of the Commission of Missionary Education of the National Council of Churches, will be the speaker at the morning worship service, Sun- day at 11, at Shavertown Metho- dist Church, Rev. Walzer will also be the speaker at the Family Night Supper to be held in the church social rooms. A native of Rochester, N. Y., Rev. Walzer is a graduate of University of Rochester (A.B.Cum Laude and M.A.) and of Colgate Rochester Divinity School and of Syracuse School of Journalism. He has travelled extensively in the United States and in 1958 vis- ited churches in Hawaii, Korea, Jap- an, Hong Kong, Philippines, Thai- land, Turkey and Europe. He is the author of two study books: “Great Protestant Leaders” and “American Denominations’. He has served a number of pas- torates and held a public relations position with the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church. The Commission on which he serves | publishes more than one million: copies of books on the world wide mission of the church under the trade name of Friendship Press, a co-operative venture of twenty-sev- en denominations to foster world | understanding. | Rev. Walzer and his wife live in | Garden City, L. I. They have two | daughters and a son. Mrs. Garey To Attend Conference In Poconos | Mrs. Willard Garey, Maple Hills, Lehman, executive secretary of College Misericordia Alumnae, will attend a conference of Middle Atlantic States, District 2 of Ameri- can Alumni Council at Pocono Manor January 23 to 26. On Wed- nesday of that week at 4 p.m. Mrs. Garey will be chairman of a sum- mary session — Institutions with | Less than 10,000 Alumni. Chair- | man of the conference is Theodore | Siekman, director of Alumni re- lations at University of Buffalo. { Coolbaugh Buys Trailer Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coolbaugh have purchased a trailer and will live at the White Birch Trailer Camp until July when he will leave for | to be Go To Colorado In Early June Key Club To Take Part In Kiwanis 47th Convention The Back loi webved “fattfal week with receipt of an invitation to Dallas Kiwanis Key Club Drill Team to participate during the Forty-Seventh Annual Kiwanis Int- ernational Convention in Denver, Colorado, from June 10 to June 14. A telegram from convention of- ficials was received Monday by Al- fred Ackerson, District Governor of the 15th Pennsylvania District of Kiwanis International and a member of the Dallas Club. The invitation is the direct result of the Drill Team's fine showing at the Kiwanis Convention held last year in Wilkes-Barre and its out- standing showing in competition at Phillipsburg, N. J., Wellsboro Flam- ing Forest Festival, Hazelton Mum- mer’s Parade; Sayre, Windsor, N.Y. and Norwich, N.Y. : Last July, Jerry Gardner and Mr. Ackerson as delegates of the local Club to the International Conven- tion in Toronto, discussed the pos- sibility of the Drill Team's partici- pation during the Colorado Conven- tion with members of the Denver group arranging the Convention. The invitation was announced to the thirty-two boys in the Drill Team by William Wright, general : chairman, Tuesday morning at a pre-assembly meeting at Dallas Sen- ior High School. The boys received the news with silence until its significance dawned on them—then they cheered. * 9k Tentative plans call for the team in Denver for three days, the trip out and back will require two days each way making a total of seven. days. i As now planned the trip will be made by rail with a special car for the boys, local delegates to the Convention and any others who want to accompany, them. It is { be housed in the homes of parents training with the Oakland Raiders | professional football team. i i « mL anticipated that total costs of the trip will be $4,500. About $2,300 of this amount is already assured. The remainder will be raised through a Key Club Car Wash Day. a pan- cake dinner and other fund raising = | activities. As now planned the boys will of Key Club members in the Den- ver area where there are mow six Key Clubs. There will be visits to the Air Force Academy; entertain- ment on the way out and back, and possibly a day in Chicago and other side trips. Director of the Key Club Drill Team is George McCutcheon, head = | of the Guidance Department of Dallas Senior High School, and chairman of Key Club activities for Kiwanis Pennsylvania District 15. Some idea of the size of the Convention before which the team will appear may be gained from the fact that there are 35,000 Kiwanis Clubs with some 18,000 delegates attending the convention. Members of the Kiwanis Club committee for the trip are: William Wright, chairman, Frank Kreigh, | Merrill Faegenburg, Paul Laux, George Thomas, Robert Maturi, (Continued on Page 6 A) = —_~