WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1953 Dulles to Fly to London For Big Three Meetin4g WASHINGTON,•Oct. 13 (JP) The State Department an nounced today Secretary of 'State Dulles • will fly to Lon don for a "Big Three" foreign ministers' conference starting! Friday to discuSs the explosive Trieste situation and other 'world I trouble spots. High Yugoslav officials con tinued to yarn of serious- trouble to come if the United States and Britain go through with their de- ! cision, to turn over part of dis puted Trieste to Italy. Koca Popo vie, Yugoslav secretary of state for foreign affairs, said after- an hour's conference with Dulles that his goverment would resist I the decisior. "with all means." I In Belgrade. tens of thousands of angry Yugoslays paraded the' Yugoslays Demonstrate an Trieste BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Oct. 13 (iP)—New anti-Western vio lence attended the diplomatic furor over Trieste today. Yugo slav demonstrators beat up an American s t u d e n t, manhandled a Yugoslav who dropped into the U.S. Information Service head quarters to return a book, and ripped and burned British in formation bulletins. In letters 18 inches high, the words "E ntr a n c e of Traitors" were scrawled on the sidewalks outside the USIS and the British readirrrs b room in downtown Bel grade despite the fact Yugoslav militiamen were assigned to guard the buildings. The American student was at-. tacked when he headed into the USIS to pick up its: daily news bulletin. He withheld his name, saying -he planned to continue his studies here and feared re percussions if he was identified. A British spokesman said "a gang of thugs" raided the British read ing room, tore up a whole stack of bulletins and burned others in the street. "Give us rifles," the crowd cried. "We will beat up the Ital ian thieves. Down with Italy. Down with Premier Pella, the dog. We want Tito to be consult ed. We will give our lives, but we will never give up an inch of Trieste." President Marshal Tito has pro claimed publicly this country's determination to send its armed forces into Zone A if and when Italy moves occupying troops in to the zone. He has reinforced the 5000-man garrison in Yugo slav-occupied Zone B of the stra-, tegic territory. Freshman Riots Result in Work ATLANTA, Oct. 13 (JP)—A wild downtown outburst is going to cost Georgia Tech , freshmen the equivalent of abou't 15,000 trips between the old and new librar ies. As atonement for what bor dered on a riot last Thursday night, George C. Griffin, dean of men, pro Posed that the 1200 freshmen transfer 150,000 books the three blocks from the old to the new library. At ten books a trip, that would be about 15,000 trips but Griffin advanced what may be an easier plan. He suggested - that the frosh l form a sort of bucket brigade and pass the books along from one to another. In downtown milling around after a pep. rally in honor of the football team, the freshmen yanked down trolley car poles, bottled up traffic, marched down the aisles of a movie house and otherwise set up a diiturbance. Square Dance!, Club Person§ interested in forming a Round and Square Dance Club may sign up at the Student. Union desk in Old Main. streets in a demonstration agairist I cials said there was no certainty the decision. Cries of "give us I this topic would come up. rifles" were heard. They said the questions of top- Popovic said Dulles gave no level "Big' Four" talks—to bring immediate answer to a Yugoslav together President Eisenhower, proposal for a Four-Power con- Soviet Premier Malenkov, Chur ference to settle the Trieste issue. chill and French Premier Laniel He 'quoted Dulles as saying he —could and probably would be must %first "consult with other talked over. The idea of such governments concerned." talks has found more favor with Dulles will leave here tomor- the British than with the United row night to meet with British States. Foreign Ministei Anthony Eden The State Department's an and French Foreign Minister nouncement of the surprise Lon- Georges Bidault. He is expe`cted don conference came shortly be to remain in London until Sun- fore Russia turned 'to a new tack day. in the developing Trieste crisis. State Department officials said At UN headquarters in New Dulles may very_ well see British York, chief Soviet delegate An- Prime Minister Churchill. Among drei Y. Vishinsky demanded that other problems, the foreign min- the United Nations Security isters may also discuss the ques- Council convene "posthaste" to tion of non-aggression guarantees set up an international adminis to Soviet Russia in a move to ease tration, under a Swiss go—ernor, global tensions, However, offi- - for Trieste. Russia Requests UN Name Trieste Head UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Oct. 13 (-1 3 )—The Soviet Union brought the Trieste controversy back to the UN today with ;a demand that the Security Council name a governor for the Free Territory and make it independent forthwith. The Soviet Move in effect ca Italian peace treaty. That gave to the Security Council the responsi bility of appointing a governor and insuring the independence of the controversial area at the head of the Adriatic Sea. The council tried in vain to carry out the terms of the treaty, but had left the issue dormant on •its inactive agenda since 1949. Informed sources said the Yu goslav delegation here was not ready to raise the Trieste issue in the UN—and attempted in , vain to head off the Russians' action. Soviet delegate Andrei Y. Vish insky asked William Borberg of Denmark, serving as president of the Security Council this month, ,to convene the council. He.tacked on a Soviet resolution in which Moscow proposed appointment of Col. -Hermann Fluckiger, Switzer land, as governor of Trieste,. with full independence for the Trieste zone within three months after the governor is appointed. A U.S. spokesman said he doubted the Russians were trying, to bring about the •"peaceful set-I tlement" of the Trieste iss u e. sought by the United States and! Britain. 'Dollar Hits Record Low NEW YORK, Oct. 13 (W)—The 'purchasing value of the Ameri can dollar reached the .lowest point in its 163-year history in August, the National Industrial Conerence Board reported today., The value of the dollar dipped; to 54.4 cents in August. Kidnapers Face Death Penalty KANSAS CITY, Oct. 13 (W)— IThe kidnapers• who shot and killed a bitterly struggling six year-old boy and then collected $600,000 ransom from his parents were brought back here today to face the death penalty. Carl Austin Hall, 34, the wastrel turned killer, said he wanted to plead guilty and expected the death . sentence. It vas he who shot little Bobby Greenlease, son of Kansas City's Multimillionaire automobile de ale r, Robert C. Greenlease. Then he set out on the coldly calculated plan to col lect the ransom. But Mrs. Bonnie Heady, who helped prepare the child's lime filled grave even before she stole him away from his private school, was stoical. She once had hoped she might get off with a lighter sentence—if she were caught. Whether that meant she knew where the missing $300,000 of the ransom money is, officers could not or would not say. Half of the money was found in Hall's pos session when his spending spree in St. Louis brought about' his THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Is for implementation of the 1947 Top Secret Army papers Disarpear NEW YORK, Oct. 13 —A Sen ate subcommittee—amid hin is that a deadly maw spy plot is un folding—heard today that a "size able number" of top secret Army Signal Corps documents have dis appeared. Some of the missing documents reportedly dealt- with radar, the very heart and soul of America's defense against enemy atomic at tacks. The subcommittee has been probing the possibility of a Com munist honeycomb at Ft. Mon mouth, N. J., where the Signal Corps has a laboratory. Several civilian employes have been sus pended there in recent weeks on security grounds. The Army is conducting its own investigation of. Ft.• Monmouth and in Washington today. Defense Secretary Wilson told a news conference: "It looks like it' might be worse than just a security leak." He had been asked whether he thought espionage was involved at Ft. Monmouth or whether the whole to-do -was over security leaks. Wilson added he had every confidence Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens and other Army offi cials will clear up the case. !arrest Oct. 6, eight days after the kidnaping. But Hall says he thinks she had the money and probably lost it during a heavy drinking bout in St.. Louis after the pair - had made their getaway. Before the pair was brought back here today, Mrs. Heady told a cell mate in St.• Louis the grue some details of • the killing. Her only regret, she said, was that she, hadn't been able to get her hands on the ransom. "I'd rather be dead than poor," SAM'S 129 S. Allen St BREAKFAST' SPECIALS CEREAL, TOAST, COFFEE 25 JUICE, CEREAL,. COFFEE , 30 • 2 EGGS, any style, TOAST, COFFEE 40 with HAM; BACON or SAUSAGE ... .65 Served 7-10 a.m. • Army to Draft 23,000 For December's Quota WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 (P) —The Defense Department to day asked, for the drafting of .., 9 3,00.0 men in December for the Army. • • This was the sixth consecu tive month the Defense. De partment had issued a call for that number of men. The new draft call will bring the total drafted since the start of the Korean War to 1,584;430. Wable Denies Part in Slayings On Pa 4 Turnpike ALBUQUERQUE, N.M:, Oct. 13 (.4 3 )—Pennsylvania officers today took charge of John Wesley ' Wable ' saying they "completely disagree with his statement" im pliCating another man . in the phantom slayings of the turnpike. The • 24-year-old Ohio youth, in a statement to police today, dis closed his part as a pusher of counterfeit money. He said in his written statement the • man who supplied him with bogus money borrowed Wable's foreign-made. .32 pistol Which was used to kill two sleeping truck drivers. "There- is no other • man," • said I Asst. Dist. Atty, Joseph K. Lough gran of • Westmoreland County.; "We do not agree with the boy's! statement." . In his statement, Wable pro tested his innocence - - of charges that he is the phantom slayer who terrorized the turivike. Loughgran said Wable will leave "the first thing tomorrow" by train for Pennsylvania in the custody of Westmoreland County Detective Merle Musick and State Police Cpl. William Smith. Lough gran is leaving tomorrow by plane to make arrangements for Wable's arrival. Wable has waived extradition saying he wanted to "clear his name" of blame in the July kill ings along the turnpike. He is charged in the -deaths of truckers Harry F. Pitts, 39, Bowl ing Green, W. Va., and Lester B. Woodward, 39, Duncannon, Pa. They were shot in the head and robbed as • they slept in their trucks. Lock Haven Frosh Dies During Gym LOCK HAVEN, Pa., Oct. 13 (JP) —William K. Corbin, 18, a fresh man •at the Lock Haven State Teachers College, died today after climbing a rope in a physical edu cation class. Corbin, was declared dead by Dr. Kenneth S. Brickley, college physician. No reason for Corbin'r. death was given pending an ex amination by the Clinton County coroner. A resident of Belleville, Mifflin County, Corbin was a physical education student at Lock Haven. she said. She added that she had hoped she might get a light sen tence, maybe 25 years, that could have got her out of prison on good behavior in seven years. "That $300,000 wouldn't have been too bad for only seven Years," she said. She told, too, how the little boy had•put up a terrific fight when he finally realized he was to be killed. "Carl had to beat him with his fists, knocking out two of his front teeth. Then he shot him." Reds - Ready For Wooing . 11 i)'';olNit • • PANMUNJOM, Korea, Oct. 14 (IP) —The way was cleared today for the Communists to begin woo ing 22,300 anti-Communist pris oners, and Allied officers freely predicted trouble and violence lie ahead. After weeks of wrangling, the United Nations Command an nounced -abruptly last night it had completed the explanation center where Ft6d teams will meet the balking prisoners in the neutral zone. The Neutral Nati(Ms Repatria tion Commission immediately re quested both sides to begin by tomorrow the explanations to their nationals refusing to go home. Ineudes 23 Americans Each side must give the corn mission one day's notice. Even if the Communists reply today they cannot begin the touchy, explo sive explanations before tomor row. The UN Command was expected to wait , a few days. It has only 335 South Koreans, 23 Americans and one Briton to try to coax back home. India, as chairman of the re patriation commission, has furn ished 5.500 troops .which guard the 14,500 Chinese and 7,800 Ko rean prisoners who have refused to be exchanged. Called "Brain-Washing" The commission has ruled I these prisoners must listen to Red explanations.. Some Allied officers who had been with the captives for months said privately the captives would violently resist what they called Red "brain washing." They des&ribed the prisoners as an explosive mixture—Orientals; anti-Communists, homeless, whose instincts of self-preservation har dened in three years of imprison ment during which many were subjected to the Red terror of prisoner bosses. Violence Expected Undoubtedly many will go quietly to the explanations. Some i are Communist "plants." Others !probably have been under duress 'of anti-Communist prisoner lead ers. So far 78 Chinese and 45 North Koreans have changed their minds and decided to go home since reaching the neutral zone. Allied officers said the Indians will have to take so:ne prisoners bodily to the explanation centers And if the Indians must make this decision, as UN officers sized up the situation, the result can only be violence. Rosenberg Boys Asked To Leave Scheel NEW, YORK, Oct. 13 (A')—The Rosenberg boys' guardian said today he was going to fight to keep the boys in a New Jersey Public school which has asked them to leave. Clyde Slocum, principal of the school at Toms River, N.J.. said the boys could not attend the school any longer because they are non-residents. ENTIRE WEEK OF MUSIC ~., - 1.": - ...: 7 :•-• . . i . -' , 7:. - -,-* , -4-.4:',:t..1i'._11,.x;t4,-,•',..A.,-_-;:p,,,-.7,•-;,47.a.:x,,,,tx. 4 , -;: , !,:e 0 ,..' :. ~ 11$ 1 0 , ..., ~. 0 LA, .....1.,..., ....,,„,,,: f,, -':,••• -; . '',,i?-I;;:•4''".:...PN' .. - ::1, 't • -z.,•';,',l' rt`-,:!:'''',.:**l I:IA'Y,• ' Y --. .:;' — ;' , ' l " — '4: - T • '''' s t? , '•'''' , . - !: ItiiiEt sfd &OA I I. 4 \i. l' , EXCE Pli1)1t) . ,;.. ~,,,........,-4.4 Jr .4.r...- a-, , t --,. . '*- , *" 7-- < , :-., 4-' 1- A '' , -' ,- kT ';:elQ:•''' "r'nfoli2,9l.l"iieP vi-z:4lo'. ''''''' ' '' \. " 4 "l4 E:itaW^ - --;!:'.i".k.••••' WEDNESDAY o Penn State Blue Notes THURSDAY Old Dixie Piano FRIDAY is T.G.I.F. Session FRIDAY NIGHT • Old Dixie Piano SATURDAY • - Jerry Miller APPEARING 9:30 to 72 P.M. PAGE THREE