Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 180, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 13, 1956 Page: 2 of 6
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2-.WUrr(k«iirM(c Ammcau—THl'HSI)A\i >KH. ta, Itijk
t.
n
Suez Canal Dispute Likely Te
Go Before UN Assembly Nov. 12
By CHARLES M. MCCANN
I nited Press Staff Cormpondfttl
It seems certain now that the
^uez ("anal dispute will be brought
t«-fore the United Nations before
tlie entl of September.
The prospect is that Great Bri-
flin will raise the issue in the 11-
■ Member security council in an at-
tempt to compel hgypt to agree
~o 'international control of canal
nav igation.
But Soviet Russia would be cer-
tain to vetoe any resolution inten-
'•'d to put pressure on Kgypt.
Henre it is most likely that the
■ li>pute will gi, before the annua!
I N" General Assembly which
meet* on Nov. 12.
It seems certiin also, however,
that u btg angle in ihr question of
flee navigation through the ranul
v.ill be suppressed it possible. by
consent of all the parties involved
in the dispute.
Israel Skipping Blocked
That angle is Egypt's blockade
of shipping bound for Israel.
Great Britain ,ind r'ranee say
they will not consent to let one
man—President Gamal Nasser of
Kgypt—control the ranal. Actual-
ly, it has been under control of
one man, or one country, for more
than eight year*.
The blockade of shipping for Is-
rael has been in effect since the
Arr b-Israeli war started in May,
1948.
The war was ended by a series
of separate armistices, but no pea-
ce treaties ever have been signed.
Egypt has continued the block-
ade on the ground that it is still
at war with Israel. Technically,
only w.ir materials are banned.
Actually, the blockade affected a
of nun .-iiubtfc.t. ma-d-
ials including foodstuff*.
Action in 1951
On Sept. 1, 1951, the Seeurity
Council called upon Egypt to • nd
the blockade. It held that the bloc-
kade was not justified on the
ground of self defense.
Egypt ignored the l*N action.
Israel has protested persistently.
But none of the gre.nt powers has
wanted to raise that issue of free-
dom of navigation, and nothing
has been done.
Free passage through the canal,
in peace time and war time, was
guaranteed under the so call.-d
Constantinople convention of 1888.
Despite the Constantinople conven-
tion, the canal was barred to en-
emy shipping by the Allied pow-
ers in Worl War I and World War
II.
This was made possible, without
formal violation of the convention,
because the British navy controll-
ed the approaches to the canal
from the Mediterranean and R>-<i
seas.
A pinabble toy planed in a
small par of water will spmut and
root and make an attractive palm-
like plant.
WE SALUTE
ZOACH BELLARD
and his 1954 W
BUCKAROOS
f
WE'LL BE BACKING YOU ALL THE WAY
SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES
0
SURE BIRDIES—" the golfer keep-, hi- eve nr. the bait
while -winging, hi- head will not tilt and parakeet- remain in
piaie If he move* his head, the feathered pan take :o the air.
Nate Freeman, golf professional of the N'evele Countrv Club,
Nevele Fallv X Y . trained the bird*.
Makeup To Hake
Every Woman
A Fair Lady
By GAY PAULEY
United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK (t.P>—This year
may go down in fashion history as
the one in which they buried the
siren and resurrected the lady.
Makeup joins with fall and win-
ter clothes to stress the "I'll be
sweet and gentle if it kills me"
trend. And like clothes, cosmetics
come under the direct influence of
that certain Broadway musical hit.
No more doe-eyed makeup. In-
stead, a girl's supposed to wear the
soft blush of an early Renoir paint-
ing.
A recent meeting of the cosmet-
ics committee of the Fashion
Group, in New York, referred to
the softer, more lady-lik? type of
makeup as "the lyrical look ... a
return to grace ... it gives great
natural beauty its shining hours."
BACK-TO-STATE
IN 1956
i
I
SUPPORT THE
BUCKAROOS
By Attending Every Game-
BEST WISHES
TO COACH BELLAIB
and the
1956 COACHING STAFF
BRECKENRIDGE
Tool & Supply Co
400 E. ELM
PHONE 3.31
___J
Lily I)ache. boss of one cosmetics
company (Marie Earle) dubs it
"the pellucid look." Webster de-
fined "pellucid" as "transparent,
limpid, translucent."
Siren Is Dead
Major manufacturers said the
pink, translucent tones will be the
top ones for fall and winter promo-
lion. Lipsticks wear such names as
"bud pink," "dreamy pink" and
"petunia pink."
"The siren look definitely is
dead, the fair lady trend is in,"
said a spokesman for another
manufacturer (Dorothy Gray).
But if yours is the skin tone
which looks frankly terrible in the
pink shades, be comforted. The
manufacturers still make the tawny
shades, those with a brown-orange
hue. "Cinnamon stick" (Revlon) is
a new russet shade. Another man-
ufacturer (Marie Earle) has a
rouge called "golden paprika;"
still another company (Charles of
the Ritz) a tawny lipstick called
"talisman." One company (Alex-
andra de Markoff) features "jew-
el tones" in makeup. One of these
is "topaz," with its golden tones
starting with the foundation and
ending with the lipstick and eye
makeup.
OUR
BEST
WISHES
TO THE
0UCKAR00S
And To
COACH IELLAII
AND HIS fM STAFF
We Wish You All The Success You So
Richly Deserve
We'll Be Rooting For You
i
(Jttfhr ntj i
LET'S IACK
THE
DUCKAROOS
IACK-TO-STATE II 'S«
sietEsr
TO COACH BELLARD
And Ms Brecicenridge High School Staff
and every member of the
THE
KHilAIT NCKAIOO TEAM
m
M
y J
United Pipe & Metal Corp.
A TUCK
232 N. FRONT STREET
PHONE 386
i a * «..•* r -- jjj m 9i *
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 180, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 13, 1956, newspaper, September 13, 1956; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth135391/m1/2/: accessed May 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.