PAGE TWO Talks on Laos to Begin; Result of Joint Appeal LONDON (/P) A long-awaited appeal for a cease-fire in Laos was issued today by Britain and the Soviet Union as a prelude to what is certain to be months of hard bargaining with the Communists on the political future of the divided Southeast Asian kingdom. The appeal was directed at the torn nation's major Kennedy Meets With Sukarno On New Guinea WASHINGTON (/P) Presi dent Kennedy and Indonesia's neutralist President Sukarno dis cussed mutual problems for four hours yesterday presumably with New Guinea in the fore ground and Laos in the back ground. Sukarno was here primarily to meet Kennedy and discuss the tense situation in Dutch-held West New Guinea which Indonesi claims is a rightful part of its republic. There were strong indications that the United States is moving to use its influence to speed a peaceful settlement of the New Guinea dispute. One high U.S. official said that the United States may not have a national stake in the West New Guinea problem but "we would like to see a settlement there." It is the object of both the In donesians and the Dutch to win the support of the United States, the official added, so that in that sense this country is in the mid- We of the dispute. JFK Takes For Action WASHINGTON (/P)—Presi dent Kennedy reaffirmed last night that he takes full re sponsibility for whatever role the United States played in the Cuban invasion failure. The White House issued a state ment which said: "President Ken nedy has stated from the begin ning that as president he bears sole responsibility for the events of the past few days. He has stated it on all occasions and he restates it now so that it will be understood by all. "The President is strongly posed to anyone within or with out the administration attempt ing to shift the responsibility." There was no elaboration but the White House statement ap-, parently was prompted by sharp reaction in the Senate yesterday, to a Cabinet member's remark) linking former president Dwight] D. Eisenhower with early plan ning for the abortive Cuban rebel , landings of last week. Earlier in the day a high ad ministration official who asked to remain anonymous had made the same sort of statement to reporters. He spoke to newsmen after one of Kennedy's Cabinet officers,l. -106 South Allen Street Secretary of the Interior Stewartl 'Around the Corner from Jack Harper Custom Shop L. Udall, told a Sunday radio-TV I URJUVUN'JYraDS:42IMAII9II2I,I2/VnHaVf2/9SanNAIIMMOIYII)faVf39SHIDIArt! ACKII A RPERJ ACKII ARPP.RJACIUIdiRPERJACKIIARPERJACJACKHARPERJACKHARPER3ACKHARPERJACKIIAIiPERJA-C visit our second floor . . . step up to a Southwick suit W. College Ave., State College ar 6YIII3.IIIYII3I3YIII2,IHVIINaYftI3,IIIV.IIII3VfIIacitIVIDDIff 311T11341/IYIIIOYfB3d2IYIINDYfII3dBVIIM3Yfti3JIIYHXDVII warring faction the Pathet Lao rebels, supported and supplied by Communists, and the pro-Western government in Vientiane, backed by the United States. Although the appeal did not ask for a cease-fire immediate ly, as' the West had deinanded, it was accompanied by a request for India to call a meeting of r truce commission for Laos. The commission, headed by India, with Canada and Poland as the other two members, scheduled its first meeting in New Delhi Friday. The truce commission repre sented the second step in the Laos peace plan. The third will be a 14-nation conference on a permament political settlement in Laos, to open in Geneva May 12. The main sticking point in working out the arrangements was the timing of a cease-fire. The So viet Union wanted the talking to start before the fighting stopped, a tactic used with success by the Communists in Korea and Indo china. The British and Soviet govern ments instructed the truce corn mission first to discuss its own functions, then to report to Lon don and Moscow for "directions on going to Laos to carry out the work of controlling the cease fire." Blame in Cuba audience that the anti-Castro op eration was conceived in the Ei senhower administration and car ried out under Kennedy. Udall's statement brought a pro test from Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Il linois who said "The President ought to discipline Udall for what he said." "Such statements as this may cause unrestrained people to re ply and thus develop a page-one controversy that would not be good for the country," Dirksen told newsmen. GUYKRESCEJACKHARPERGUYKRESCEJACKHARPERGUYKRESGEJACKHARPER THE WORST LOOKING TENNIS SHOES IN TOWN Contest from April 24 through 29 PRIZES HIS OR HERS Isf—Sperry Topsiders 2nd—PF Tennis Shoes 3rd—PF Tennis Shoes Runner Up—Jumbo Roll of Surgical Tape ti Jack Harper (17 FROM SENIOR TO YOUNG EXECUTIVE OUR SOUTHWICK SUIT REGISTERS ALL THE FASHION ESSENTIALS. MORE THAN THAT- IT IS THE FASHION. THE EN SEMBLE IS RIGHT. THE EFFECT IS THERE AND YOUNG EXECUTIVES WITH A SENSE OF DRESS KNOW HOW IMPORTANT THIS IS. IT IS THIS FASHION, PLUS FIT AND TAILORING THAT HELPS TO MAKE THE TRANSITION FROM SENIOR TO YOUNG EXECUTIVE. 9 11 ) 4 0: Etta Custom Shop for Men Around the Corner from Bostonian Ltd THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Red Paper Describes Vostok Trip MOSCOW (?P) --A braking engine on Yuri Gagarin's space ship was switched on over Africa and 30 minutes later he landed in the Soviet Union, ithe government newspaper Izvestia said yesterday. Giving what it said were de tails of man's first orbital flight around the earth, Izvestia said the space ship Vostok traveled about 4,968 miles over Africa, the Mid dle East and the Soviet Union aft er the braking engine was turned on. Ten minutes after the engine was switched on, the Vostok was entering the earth's dense atmos phere, Izvestia reported. The article gave the impression that the Vostok was the same one that made two test flights in March, one with a dummy and one with two dogs. Izvestia said the space ship con sists of two main parts, a pilot's cabin described as much more spacious than a. plane's pilot com partment, and a section for the braking engine and instruments. It gave these other details: Ga garin was able to look out through three portholes covered with heat proof glass. He maintained con tact with the ground by telephone and ultrashortwave radio, and re corded observations both on tape and in a flight book. &ian at PENN STATE Evidence Disputed At Eichmann Trial JERUSALEM (/P) Opposing attorneys locked yesterday in a critical argument over evidence the prosecution wants to put on record to prove its charges that Adolf Eichrnann had life and death power to carry out Nazi Germany's "final solution to the Jewish problem?' The three-judge panel against the Jewish people will hear pleas from Eichmann's coun sel, Dr, Robert Servatius, and prosecutor Gideon Hausner be fore ruling today on admitting the disputed evidence. Servatius rose to his feet re peatedly during yesterday's session of the trial to argue heatedly against admitting as evidence sworn statements from a former Gestapo associate of Eichmann, former SS Elite Guard Maj. Dieter Wisliceny. Wisliceny has been quoted as saying in an affidavit made at the Nuernberg war trials that Eich mann told him: "I will laugh when I jump into the grave because of the feeling that I have killed five; million Jews. That gives me great] satisfaction and gratification." ' Servatius argued against intro duction of Wisliceny's sworn statements on the ground there; was hostility between the former! Gestapo cronies. Servatius also! said he was "under the impres-I sion" Wisliceny had been prom- Guy Kresge fi ,A 1 sirAvay-tvd4ivE s iz ea ,s, lIIITTA if TOMORROW you'll meet The Sauciest French Dish in Years' The Baby-Sitter With The French Touch! Last Da TOMORROW --4p4:*7:54,;:0.:. 'the NlSehtnlinCl v eti FRED PrOfeePi a ..„1 FRED MacMORIAI NANCY MON EN NW TOMMY MAK Ifo' . "N AMES BOLT RAO . MN ERRS— filA • air •76:51". • Kano • !Eo "Aiii libiSH • mcW w AO9EAI SUM • Sam*, be KlllO3. Ina! so. ikrt be SAKS VI 1411011 LAST Dean Martin, Shirley MtLeine DAY "ALL IN A NIGHT'S WORK" Mottr pritiAYLEIVE ONSior She's M-M-MARVELOUS d so nice to have around the house! Tbt RAHN ORGANIZATION presents A Kin' E. Box-RAEN momAS Productiat i tet • COLOR by DELUXE MOS. AN ADULT COMEDY 2 Fever in the Blood, Youn TUESDAY. APRIL 25. 1961 rying Eichmann for crimes ised protection for his family if he would cooperate with Allied investigators at Nuernberg. ISA SPONSORS Trade Your Used Bluebooks For New Ones At The HUB Desk She's arrows Recommended by all Husbands! Man with a Horn
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers