The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 09, 1953, Image 3

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    FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 195?
Ike Se . es . Rtissl4
Capable to
WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (W)-President Eisenhower said today
Soviet Russia now has "the capability of atomic attack on us" and
commands "a weapon or the forerunner of a' weapon of power far in
excess of the conventional types."
The President made the statement at his news conference in an
Eden Discloses
Western Plans
For Peace Try
MARGATE, England, Oct. 8 (IP)
—Foreign Secretary Anthony
Eden said today the West' plans
a new approach to Russia for
world peace based on guaranteeS
against aggression.
"I think something can be
worked out," Eden told a Con
servative party conference here.
He also offered Russia Big Four
talks on any level in the hope of
easing the cold war war stale
mate.
'He suggested that Britons keep
clearly in mind that Russia's neg
ative attitude rather than Ameri
can policies have blocked the way
to big power talks.
Returning to the direction of
British foreign affairs after an
illness and enforced absence since
April, Eden made this significant
reference to the West's diplomatic
plans:
"Our policy has not changed. I
am glad to restate it here. Our
firSt aim is to maintain the unity
and strength of the Western al
liance, which have been mainly
responsible for an y softening
there may have been in Soviet
intransigence."
Eden's remarks coupled, with a
statement along similar lines
made recently by U.S. Secretary
of State Dulles, might mean the
United States and Britain now
are studying a formula to be sent
to Moscow;
Truman Concerned
Over Ike's Policies
ST. LOUIS, Oct. 8 (M—Former
President Harry S. Truman to
night expressed concern over the
Eisenhower administration's poli
cies toward counteracting a de
pression. \
Here to receive the $lOOO an
nual Sidney Hillman Foundation
Public Service Award, Truman
said in a speech tonight at a
dinner in his honor the "Old
Guard of reactionaries" has
gained new strength and is striv
ing mightily to overturn many
constructive achievements of re
cent years.
"The greatest danger springs
from the attitude of those who
reluctantly, and 20 years late, -ac
cept the reforms we have made,
and then refuse to go forward to
meet the new problems we face,"
Truman said.
WAtit
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
effort to clarify seemingly con
flicting statements by various of
ficials on the potentialities of So
viet atom bomb and hydrogen
bomb developments.
Eisenhower also announced that
he has asked all members of his
administration "to refrain from
comment on Soviet nuclear capa
bilities unless they first check
their statements with the chair
man of the Atomic Energy Com
mission."
At the same conference Eisen
hower announced the appoint
ment of Assistant Secretary of the
Army James P. Mitchell, 52, of
Spring Lake, N.J., as secretary
of labor, succeeding Martin P.
Durkin.
Eisenhower did not predict big
ger defense outlays. The admin
istration will try to find ways, he
said, of adjusting the nation's de
fenses to the new kind of threat:
therefore.. there will not neces
sarily, be an increase in the gross
sums requested—there might he
shifts in priorities of the pro
grams of which the money is
spent.
The President said he was not
prepared to say how much his
military appropriatior request
will be up or down when he sub
mits his budget message in Janu
ary. As for the budget, this ad
ministration always, will seek the
goal of balance in spending and
income, he said..
The President emphasized -he
was not saying there would be a
budget balance on July 1, 1955.
Truman Decries Economic
Policies of Administration
WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 - (2?)—
The United States and Great Brit
ain , announced today they are
turning over their occupied zone
of Trieste to Italy--but Yugo
slavia angrily declared it'will re
fuse to accept the decision.
Less than an hour after the
news reached Belgrade, hundreds
of Yugoslays poured into the
streets shouting "We will give up
our lives, but not Trieste!'
But even before the Belgrade
demonstrations broke out many
diplomatic observers here failed
to see how the move would help
stabilize the tense situation.
CHARLES a CHARLES o CHARLES e CHARLES o CHARLES
124 SOUTH ALLEN ST: STATE COLLEGE,Pf
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Turnpike Killer
Hunt Sounded
In Two States
CLEVELAND, Oct. 8 (2P)—
Cleveland police issued a two
state pickup alarm today for a
25-year-old man wanted -f o r
questioning in the recent
Pennsylvanai Turnpike shoot
ings. _ . _
Homicide Capt. David E.
Kerr identified the man as
John Wesley Wable, -who' was
freed last March from his job
in an east side electrical plant
here. He said Wable had not
been charged, but warned he
might be "armed and danger
ous."
Two men were killed in the
turnpike shootings and a third
was wounded. All three shoot
ings 'occurred last July.
The pickup order to Ohio
and Pennsylvania police went
out after police had question
ed a 22-year-old blonde they
said 'was Wable's girl friend.
Kerr said the girl,, later releas
ed, linked Wable to a gun
turned over to police by her
stepfather, and to a pocket
watch found in a pawn shop.
Ballistics tests will be made
to determine whether the re
volver found here was the one
used in the turnpike attacks.
Previous, tests indicated th e
same weapon was used in all
three shootings.
U.S. Asks Red's intentions
On Korean Conference
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Oct.
8 VP)—The United States called
on Communist. China and North
Korea today to say quickly whe
ther they intend to take part in
a Korean peace conference and
when they will be ready.
Today's note informed the Reds
officially that the UN Assembly
resolution of Aug. 28 limiting the
peace conference to the belliger
ents, plus Russia if invited by the
Communists, stands without
change despite efforts to overturn
it.
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FBI Quits Suspects
In Greenietse Case
KANSAS CITY, Oct. 8 (W)—The government tonight turned pros
ecution of an ex-convict and his girl friend for the kidnap-slaying
of little Bobby Greenlease over to the State of Missouri as authori
ties seriously
. questioned whether the two had an accomplice.
The FBI, at Washington, said it was withholding a nationwide
alert for Thomas Marsh, another
ex:convict, because of inconsist
ency in the couple's statements.
Carl Austin Hall, confessed
leader of the kidnap plot in which
a $600,000 ransom was paid in
vain, has named the 37-year-old
Marsh as a co-conspirator and
slayer of little Bobby.
Held in St. Louis on $lOO,OOO
bond with Hall, a one-time play
boy who ran through a $200,000
inheritance in 15 months, is Mrs.
Bonnie Brown Heady, 41, of St.
Joseph, Mo.
The FBI didn't pin-pisint the
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AND HIS PRIDE OF R.C.A. VICTO
RECORDING ORCHESTRA
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JUNIOR
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Friday, Nov. 6
"inconsistency" but it put the fin
ger on Mrs. Heady as a principal
in collecting the $600,000 ransom
from Bobby's wealthy 71-year
old father, Robert C. Greenlease.
The FBI said it had found the
woman's fingerprints on ransom
extortion papers, showing that
she had handled them.
Even - as the Hall's story came
under close scrutiny, Atty. Gen.
Brownell announced at Washing
ton the couple would be turned
over to the state for prosecution.
BILLBOARD MAGAZINE 1953 POLL
9:00 :00-a7m.
$4.00 per Couple
semi-formal
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