PAGE FOUR Herter Big 3 PARIS (IP)—Taking up his first foreign assignment as U S. secretary of state, Christian A. Herter arrives in Paris today to help shore up weak points in the Western front for Geneva talks with the Soviet Union. Fierier will begin formal talks with his French, British Students Asked Of Abduction Of Prisoner POPLARVILLE, Miss Ul 3 l--1 FFIT agents questioned several . itirvor college students yesterday in the lynch-mob abduction from jail of Mack Charles Packer. The students questioned were , flora Po - ail River Junior College. about five blocks from the jail where Parker, 23. a Negro truck driver. was held on a charge of raping a pregnant white woman. A dance was being held at the college Friday night and early Saturday. when eight or 10 hood ed men broke into the jail and brutally beat and kidnaped Par ker. Judge Sebe Dale—fearing leg- Native penalties—condemned the lynch mob that dragged away Parker. Dale post poned indefinitely the trial of Parker in the sparse ly peopled Pearl River County courtroom. "The floodgates of hate and Nil have been opened upon us," said Judge Dale. Truman Prof for a Day NEW YORK (Th—The politi cian turned professor yester day and the students seemed delighted. So, too, did Harry Truman. He launched a Columbia Uni versity lecture series on the presi dency. As a man who knows the job first hand, he gave his campus audience some inside peeks into the White House, along with some chuckles. "I wasn't one of the great presidents," he said, "but I had a good time trying to be." Getting fully into the academic swim, Truman also took on ques tions from the floor. And the 1,200 who packed a hall to hear him abandoned classroom decorum at the close to give him a rousing —UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT— • Quiet Study Environment • Fine Food • Lodging Applications now being taken for Fall Semester: • Room & Board by semester • Board only—by month or —by semester 1 A J u l D Rori and o e ut g 207 East Park Avenue —Call AD 8-0890— to Start Talks and West German counterparts tomorrow in the French Foreign Ministry. Diplomatic sources said those talks scheduled to last three days, will be under three gen eral headings: Berlin, German reunification, European secur ity. American and French sources professed optimism for a solid Western position before the East-i West foreign ministers talks open : in Geneva May 11. A top French diplomat said:] "We have found the basis for al generel agreement." A highly in formed American source said:l "I'd be surprised if we didn't have! it wrapped up beautifully before Geneva." The four Western ministers will work on secret recommen dations drawn up by their ex perts in meetings which ended in London last Friday. They will also have suggestions on their North Atlantic Alliance allies who studied the experts' dos siers in Paris yesterday. In addition, they may have al fresh presentation of the Soviet' i position from the Warsaw Pact; foreign ministers session, which! just opened in the Polish capital. A surprise development came from Warsaw in a communique item noting that Red China's Dep. it wrapped it beautifully before sat in as a full participant. His (government is not a member of the pact. round of applause. "It's always nice to have a sat isfied group of customers," Tru ran grinned. Then he held forth at a news l conference for journalism stu dents, at which he made these points; •He expects to be at the 1960 Democratic presidential conven- 1 tion, and will support the candi date it names. *He considers Christian Her ter, the new secretary of state, a very capable man. •He still thinks the policy of non-recognition of Red China a, good one. In the first of three addresses inaugurating the university's Wil liam Radner lectures on public law and government, Truman reminisced about some of his days as president. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Technicians' Strike Halts NBC Shows NEW YORK (4 ) )—Technicians struck the National Broadcasting Co. without warning yesterday. Its radio and television networks were knocked out briefly before supervisory personnel got them back on the air. The network called the strike unauthorized, and said it began in New York, then spread to other cities. Except for the absence of a few scheduled programs over a three hcur period, network operations appeared normal to most listen ers and viewers. The dispute stemmed from a it.risdietional struggle over video taping-in this case a TV inter view in Frame with Brigitte Bardot. Various technicians' unions con- 1 tend such taping of live shows for' rebroadcast imperils their mem bers' jobs—especially when the work is done abroad where they say wage scales are generally lower than in this country. The striking National Assn. of Broadcast Employes, and Techni cians worked the network's first TV program of the day, "Conti ental Classroom," also on tape, from 6.30 to 7 a.m. GOOD 4\ Ift • • NI ii , ( ~. 1 q,s l i 1 1::: a ' - ‘ l. 1 11 1" 3 0' • q i ilj, - 9 Q \ 4' . ~.'-:` '-'4 iw • s . We'd like to explain engineering POSITIONS GOOD LIVING STABILITY CONVAIR POMONA „ _l . 1 , r4 Panama Situation Is Watched by U.S. PANAMA (?P)—The gpvernment claimed yesterday that it had under observation an invasion force of 79 Cubans and one Panamanian who landed early Saturday on the desolate San Blas Peninsula. Three of the four Panamanians with the original force of 86 had been crowned or captured The party, including one woman, was said to be moving slowly along the eastern shore line under the observation of air and sea forces. Jose D. Ba ran, minister of government, said the National Guard is ready to demand that the invaders surrender. National Guardsmen exchanged gunfire with an advance patrol of the invasion force along the beach and may have killed one man, National Guard headquar ters reported later. The guards men suffered no casualties. Three of the invaders, two Cu bans and a Panamanian, already, had been captured and brought to the capital. They were several miles in advance of the main par ty spotted at Santa Isabel on the coast, and were rounded up with out resistance by a National Guard corporal and a posse. The Panamanian prisoner, Guil lermo Gonzalez, to 1 d newsmen that "so far as I know," the in vasion was plotted by Roberto Arias, prominent lawyer and dip lomat who broke with the govern ment a year ago. career advantages to YOU CONVAIR -POMONA in Southern California, home of the successful Terrier and Tartar missiles, offers engi neers maximum career stability and unlimited indi vidual growth. You, as a graduate engineer, can build an outstanding career in electronics and missiles sys tems at CONVAIR -POMONA., You will work with the most modern electronic equipment known. You will work with the kind of friendly, informed engineer scientist groups that are pacing the advance into outer space. And you will live where the climate and oppor tunities for spacious country living are unsurpassed In America. There are opportunities for graduates and undergraduates majoring in the following fields: AERONAUTICAL, ELECTRICAL, ELECTRONICS, and ENGINEERING PHYSICS. CONVAIR-POMONA PROMOTION FROM WITHIN assures you of continuing evaluation of capabili ties and the swiftest possible advancement in this constantly expanding organization. • t r ~►- ADVANCED DEGREES can be earned while a full-time employee of CON- VAIR-POMONA. Salaries and benefits compare with the highest in private industry anywhere in the country. PROFESSIONAL ENVIRONMENT CONVAIR-POMONA is housed In the new eat kind of air-conditioned plant. Research and Development facilities ars manned by top-level people. CALIFORNIA LIVING close to mountains, desert, seashore. Modem homes with swimming pools are within easy price range. Year•'round outdoor sports and recreation. CONVAIR/POMONA GENERAL DYNAMICS CORPORATION If appointment Is Inconvenient, forward resume at once so arrangements for your personal interview can be made. Write to Mr. B. L. Dixon, Engineering Personnel Adininistrator, Dept. 8-M, Pomona, California. X-Rays Fail. To Help Dulles WASHINGTON (A 3 )—John Fos ter Dulles, ill with cancer, is no longer getting X-ray treatments. He is receiving pain killers. The State Department made this report yesterday on its for mer secretary of state, saying that the "X-ray treatment to Mr. Dulles' neck is now completed without significant improvement in the discomfort as yet." Radiation treatment of the ab dominal area, where Dulles suf fered cancer in 1956 and again this year, were ended March 18. Dulles began receiving a series of low voltage X-rays in the lower part of the neck on April 14 after suffering pain which doctors said may have come from cancer in that area. Lincoln White, State Depart ment press officer, disclosed that the neck treatment with X-rays ended last Friday. PERSONAL INTERVIEWS MAY list Please contact your Placement - Officer for an appointment with representatives from a Division of Pomona, California TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1959
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