WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1953 Anti-Rod: Captives MairßOmain...Silent PANMUNJOM, Oct. 28 (W)—lndian officers expressed doubts yesterday that "explanations" for anti-Communist prisoners ever would begin again 'on a large scale. The deadlocked Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission was meeting again today in an atmo sphere of paralysis and frustration, but no hope w:is held out by ti - 4 , Indian chairman that any solution will come out of the session, described as routine, So far, no way has been found • to break the impasse caused by' . the violent refusal of anti-Com- . munist North Korean prisoners C t Q lernen . Small Fry Invade to face Red interviewers, arid the , Communist demand that they bel Homecoming Game in by force If necessary =Or for The five-member commission is ' 1 _ STATE COLLEGE, Pa., Oct. still split two to two on the issue, 27M—Penn State has found a Tom, with the Red Czechs and Poles in- leak in its football ticket line sisting ,on North Korean inter- P 'ice .Props defenses. views and the Swiss and Swedes • Last Saturday's homecoming refusing to allow the use of -force. WASHINGTON, Oct. 27 (g.)-- ;:me with Tex a s Christian • Second Week of Split Secretary of Agriculture Benson Sew a 30.000 capacity crowd • The fifth member, Lt, Gen, K. capped a two-day demonstration I Beaver Field. S. Thimayya of India, pot 01 / 1 31 of cattle growers clamoring for Alumni Secretary Ridge Ril frowns on the use of force against I price props by, asserting today - .7 reported today: that prisoners, but has demanded a the nation's livestock Indus- "Hordes of local small fry I unanimous decision if even mildly !try— is "overwhelmingly opposed'? came over the fence When - the forceful tactics are to be used, 'to rigid supports. I cops were at attention for the Today marks the 11th day of the split, which has carried the based Benson told newsmen he Star Spang".ed Banner." commission's work past the one-ithe statement on a stack of letters . , third mark with only 921 of 22,963 and telegrams expressing oppo prisoners he 1 d in the NNRC's sition to price supports. which i 3 ree rti ease Is .. North and South camps being i n _ , were urged by a "cattlemen's caravan" sponsored by the Na- ' 1 "• terviewed. A - Init . Witness Only 56 of the original 90 days tional Farmers Union. remain for trying to coax reluc- • The union's general 'counsel is tant prisoners to return home. (Charles F. Brannan, who was sec-1 '' c... T 'gal Onens Even if the Red interviews began , retary of agriculture under Presi- ! I') y today, the Commun!sts would dent Truman, i KANSAS CITY,. Oct. 27 (WP)— to explain their case to at Benson told reporters that the • ~, federal grand jury today heard least 400 prisoners a day to work 'Washington delegation "didn't ; ' through the whole roster of one- present a plan" in its demand for , a grim multimillionaire tell his timeof the kidnaping and time Communist soldiers. ; government emergency aid to story of of his 6-year old son, I.Less slaying ~ merci- Asian Neutrals ;take cattle growers off the hook Privately, many of the Indians ;in the squeeze between high feed Bobby Greenlease. now say they believe the Corn- costs and falling livestock prices. The father, Robert C. Green munists are obstructing the corn- , "They just said they wanted lease, 71, was the first witness as mission to avoid the humiliation I price supports under cattle," h e the government presented evi of . being scornfully rejected by I said. dente it hopes will bring death nearly 98 per cent of their former During ' a bu s y clay, Benson Ito two confessed kidnap-killers, soldiers. ; , scoffed at any idea he might re- !Carl Austin Hall, 34 k ' and his girl U.S. Envoy Arthur Dean de- sign and contended that most of ; friend, Mrs. Bonnie Heady, dared that Communist insistence 1 the problems plaguing cattlemen I There was hope, too, that some on inviting. Asian • neutrals might ' are already on the way to solu ' light might be shed on the miss make it impossible to hold a Ko- tion. ing half of the $600,000 ransom rean peace conference. I paid even though his son lay in a However Dean appeared opti- i 1 . - lannah Sees shallow grave in Mrs. Heady's mistic, at least outwardly, that , - flower garden in St. Joseph, Mo. somehow the gulf ' between the , Police Lt. Louis Shoulders of UN and Red positions would , be . St. Louis, who arrested Hall and bridged so that the conference I x I '‘ ' , l i I item! ry CUTS later resigned in 'the furor caused could be held. by an investigation of his hand- Reds Want Conference 1 WASHINGTON, Oct, 27 (JP)—' ling of the case, was here to testi- He 'emerged from a fruitless Assistant Secretary of Defense fy. Earlier he had said he would session of two hours and 15 min- John A. Hannah said today that not answer questions before the utes and told newsmen that if 'Army and Navy manpower may jury because he would not identi- Communists "persist in their all- 'be cut next year and, that the Air fy informants who, made possible or-nothing attitude, the onus of 1 Force will remain at approxi- the arrest of Hall and Mrs. Heady, not having sa political peace con-Irnately its present strength. and the recovery of almost $3OO,- ference will be squarely on their I, Hannah added that the final 000 of the ran s o m money on shoulders." E force levels have, not been deter- Oct. 7. Dean added, however, that he ;mined and that' the decision would Greenlease was before the jury still thought the Reds wanted aI be made after the chiefs of staff I about 3Q minute's and told report conference and it was too early in I decide how many men they can ,ers only that he "had identified the preliminary discussions to cut from the number now used I some things." He did not go into draw conclusions. ' . Ito back up combat units. I details of the stor y of Mrs. The original target date for the I The ••services plan to end the Heady's duping the nuns at Bob- Korean peace conference passed , current fiscal year next June 30 by's private school, or how the today. The armistice agreement ' with the following strengths: child was taken to a suburban "recommended" that the confer- I Army 1,423,000; Navy, 742,500; , area and shot to death as he strug ence begin three months after the Marine Corps, 234,000; and Air ' gled to escape, truce went into effect July 27.lForce, 960,000. fore the jury before it recessed for ' lunch. They were Eugene Pond, Kansas City chief of de tectives; Willard Creech, the cab driver who drove Mrs. Heady to and from Bobby's school and a parking lot where Hall waited; the nun who released Bobby from the school, and an unidentified FBI agent. New Evidence Is Found In Babysitter Search LA CROSSE, Wis., Oct. 27 (il 3 )—Discovery of feminine under clothing similar to that worn by missing baby sitter Evelyn Hartley was announced tonight by Dist. Atty. John Bosshard directing the search for the 15-year-old girl who disappeared Saturday night. The of allied items, Bosshard said, have been taken to State Critne Laboratory at Madison for analysis to determine whether the stains are blood. He said the two items were found about noon to day on the Burlington Railroad right of - way below a highway overhead two miles southeast of La Crosse, The area, Bbsshard said, had been searched yesterday but noth ing was found. Another search today disclosed the undercloth ing in a "conspicuous Place." "It' looked like they might have been thrown from a car and blown under the bridge," Boss hard said. Bosshard revealed also that a _"r ath e r- large stain of blood" had been found on. High way 35, 14 miles south of La Crosse. He said the crime lab oratory was ;testing the blood but that no results had been obtained. The bloodstain was discovered about 12 miles further south of, LaCrosse than the underclothing and along the same highway. Blood stains were found Satur day night on the grounds of the home of "Vitt° Rasmusen, whose 2-month-old baby Evelyn was tending so the .Rasmusen's could attend a football game. 'Additional blood and what was believed to be fragments of the red slacks the girl was wearing were found on the basement , window well of a neighbor's home. Twelve fifth semester men were tapped by Blue Key, junior men's . hat society, yesterday in front of the Lion Shrine, The men are Steven Babcock, John Beiler. Harry Blanset, Thom as Brasher, Ross Clark, Angelo Collora, Marshall Dawsey, Otto Hetzel, Harry McElroy, Alan Pomeroy, Andrew Stavres, and John Wolfringer. • * SIT UNDER OUR TREE... ENJOY YOUR MORNING BREAK WITH • HOT COFFEE • DOUGHNUTS THE CHUCK THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. 'PENNSYLVANIA Blue Key Tups Twelve In Front of Lion Shrine WAGON 200 E. COLLEGE Five Power Favored by WASHINGTON, Oct. 27 (P)—Secretary of State Dulles disclosed today he favors convening a five-power conference as soon as pos sible to discuss the rival claims of Italy and Yugoslavia to the Trieste territory. He also indicated significant conference take place before all the American and British occu pation troops pull out of Zone A of the territory. The secretary's remarks seemed to place the United States to some' extent on Yugoslavia's side in the bitter dispute over the Adriatic' port area. The Italian government has stated repeatedly that it will re fuse to join the United States, Britain, France and Yugoslavia in any conference until it has mili tary and, civil control of Zone A. Dulles said at a news confer ence that the sooner a five-power parley is held the better it will be for Western plans for defend ing southern Europe against pos sible Communist attack. Nowhere did Dulles imply that the United, States and Britain were backing down in, their deter mination to give Italy full admin istrative authority in Zone A. His words, however, made clear the two governments will move cau tiously in pulling out their forces. 'ln answering news conference questions on other international problems, Dulles made these other points: 1. The Unit e d States has no plans for withdrawing any of the present six divisions of troops now stationed in Western Europe. 2. No large-scale allocations of American economic aid fun d s have yet been made to Arab countries out of available foreign aid money. 3. The 'United States has made no effort "in the slightest degree" to apply pressure against France to prevent any possible withdraw al of French fighting forces from. the Indochina battle front. 4. Dulles anticipates no long delay in approval of the for r;- standing plans for a five-nation' European d e f ens e force w4iic4, will include West Germany. Carney Predicts Nuclear Fleet PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 27 (JP) —Adm. Robert B. Carney, report ing tonight that first tests of an atomic engine for a submarine have exceeded expectations, en visaged a whole fleet of nuclear powered warships, including car riers and battleships. In an address prepared for the Military Order of The World Wars, the chief of naval operations spoke of the advantages of a fleet using nuclear energy for power at a time when oil supplies may be scarce or inaccessible. The Navy now is building two submarines with atomic power plants, but Defense Secretary Wilson has shelved the plan to build an experimental _ atomic power plant for a big aircraft carrier. He told a news conference in June that while he approved the submarine program, construc tion now of a nuclear powered flattop "isn't a practical and effi cient thing to do." Nychology Test Scoi.es Available Freshman women may have ti: results of the Orientation Week psychology tests interpreted by making an appointment th i week at the Psychology Clinic, basement of Woman's Building. • Freshman men may obtain test results beginning Tuesday. The clinic is open daily from 9 am, to 5 p.m. • NEWMAN CLUE • • TURKEY TROT Sunday Afternoon November Ist SIGN UP . . . Old Main Bulletin Board West Dorm Desk Church Meeting Dulles y that he would like to see the New York Milk Supply Dwindles NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (JP)—New York, beleaguered by a two-day milk strike, was all but out of fresh milk today. Mothers by the thousands stormed depots for a final ration for their babies. Restaurahts scratched milk from their menus. Store coolers were empty of it in New York, Long Island, Westchester County and northern New Jersey. Women posed as pregnant to get it. An estimated 12 million people were affected. They normally use more than five million quarts a day. A bright spot in the picture was a large supply of powdered and evaporated milk in stores. Mayor Vincent Impel'Uteri was ready to take a hand in trying to break a wages-hours deadlock between 13,000 striking AFL teamsters and 200 milk firms. The strikers deliver milk to homes and stores, or work in plants that pro cess it. The strike was costing dairy men $250,000 a day. Negotiations between the team sters and the companies were tightly deadlocked, although talks were still going on. The union asked a $l5 increase in wages that now range from $B2 to $125 a week, plus a five-hour reduc tion in the 40-hour week. Hospitals and schools are ex 3mpt from the strike. a About 400,000 quarts of more than the daily supply of most American cities—was due to be dumped tomorrow, unless the strike ended in time to pre vent its spoilage. Some 50,000 upstate New York farmers were diverting their milk to cheese and other products. Some were being forced to dump theirs. iil l iftWit ER thtid,-- RED SKELTON IN "HALF A HERO" with JEAN HAGEN .• ROCK HUDSON PIPER LAURIE IN "GOLDEN BLADE" Wildest Africa . Iv Never Before Filmed! 'BELOW THE SAHARA' PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers