SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 11. 1961 . , ~ , , , -rr | .1 i • I# „„ I RICHMOND, Vn. m The MOSCOW (/P) Western dor Llewellyn Thompson, to Bnt- should turn over access control Khrushchev himself saw Kroll.i jn K . t of Wednesday night’s Im -0 airt’s Sir Frank Roberts or Mau- to the East Germans? In that case, but what was said is still shioud- nerial* Airlines Constellation crash diplomats assessed the new So- r j ce D e jean of France. Neither they said, nothing would have ed in mystery. Khrushchev billed 77 persons "didn’t Viet proposals to work for ais West German Ambassador Hans been changed substantially. now flown off on a barnstorming seem likL , iiarc) i y anything.'’ Run fn„r Rarlin roll involved. Western sources said the ideas t< ? ur ,, centrai Asia and ttie vn ' aid H. Conway, surviving pilot, Satisfactory fou -pow er gut they were informed about were somewhat along the lines fi in ' anc * s - said ycs terday. solution as “probably a serious the proposals andj tossed out earlier The significance of the proposals Conway said his craft wa« limp nnnmarb” met Jn. Kroll's in conversations is m providing new evidence that in{ , in f( ; r an emergency landing appioacn. 'office Tor-discus- between Belgian Premier Khrushchev is willing to at H„'hmond’s Byrd Field with But they had serious reserva- jS: ,jori. The West Foreign Ministerinegoliate on Berlin instead of , wo of , jtK fcnu . L ,' n j, nK , s ou t, an . lions and were agreed deep prob-.jG errnan ambass- Paul- Hen r i! letting things get out ol hand in) o( | lt . r losing power fast and a ing is necessary about just what w in fly Spaak and Prc-jdemonstrations of force at the wallj b{j)ky nov - cw h C el. Soviet intentions are. 'home shortly to mier Khrushchevjdividing the city, as happened last; r ‘ f , nn .int p,mes Among other things, thesei give Chancellor here as well asjmonth. ! r C , | ‘ y foueht to ket o'tlu air sources expressed fear that sug-|| o'nrad 0 'nrad Aden- in the talks U.S • Sliirill gestions-leaked in the earlyj a u er a fill-in be- Secretary of ra rl B t waked Vh hours yesterday morning-might f6re - the latter State Dean Rusk woodlandtwo nnle.s short of the be meant to divert attention from meets President had in Washing- airfield the current explosive situation in ißenned y in ton and New ‘ ’ .■ , Berlin or to stir up public pres-) Washington. York with Soviet Only Conway and the flight sure to push the Western powers) Q n surface Foreign Minister engineer, William Poy Hue's, Jl, to the negotiating table. ! , ’ Andrei A. Gro- of Miami, survived _. „ .. .. „ ithe new propos- mvkn Briefly, authoritative sources , ~ , myKO. said the Soviet Union has left | a^s would release Despite Wash- Britain, France, West Germany the Allies from ington s hints to and the United States know that learlier demands the contrar y. it is prepared to make a new !that they deal Thompson is not agreement on the status of with East Ger- currently engaged West Berlin. • I many, and East in sounding-out When the Western Allies are Germany alone, operations on the come from West German Chancel satisfied that their rights of access on access rights Berlin problem. 1 j or Konrad Adenauer who is ex and the liberties of West Berlin to Berlin after a NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV x Gro , m y«° C ° n *!pected here Nov. 20. are guaranteed, they would makepeace treaty had change in Berlin policy? ferred Thursday some sort of declaration respect-given that coun- cnange in aeri i poucy. Wlth East Ger-, Adenauer s Moscow envoy, Hans ing the “sovereignty” of East try sovereign rights. . ' |man Foreign Minister Lothar Bolz.jKroll, has been-the only Western Germany. The Russians consider Yesterday afternoon, however,[lt appeared he told him East Ger-jdiplomat to confer with Khrush it essential that West Germany be the diplomats were asking: Whatjmany. was going to have to wait . latelv bound by such a declaration. if negotiations found the Soviet some considerable time for the S 1 •■ • No such proposals have been Union merely holding to its posi- peace treaty promised by the end h-ioii \s ill report to Adenauei made directly to U.S. Ambassa- tion that a Berlin settlement of the year. before his Washington trip. Nehru Proposes Delay Kee P ! r „ . . . ' U.S. Prisoners He noted that the assembly j ; had approved a voluntary mora- j KHANG KHAY, Laos (/ P; —! torium, but added "No one im- ; Laotian Communist chief Prince < agines that voluntary moralor- jSouphanouvong said yesterday the ium is going to solve this ques- six or seven Americans captured lion." 'earlier this year in Laos will not He said his reaction to nuclear be released until a coalition gov tests was strong—“l think that eminent has been formed. j they are basically evil. | prisoners include Maj.j General reaction to the 37-min-. Lawrence R. Bailey, assistant mili-I ute speech was favorable, but tarv attache of the U.S. Embassy j some delegates said they had|i n 'Vientiane. NBC cameraman' hoped for more concrete propo- ! Grant Wolfkill. and several mem-! sals. jbers of the U.S. Military Assist-j Adlai E. Stevenson, the chief iance Advisory Group and heli-: U.S. delegate who listened j copter pilots. i closely as Nehru spoke, com- j Souphanouvong said if wari mented that the idea for a co- \breaks out they will remain pris-j operative year was a good one. loners until it is over. but not new. He said the United ! j Slates has Wn cooperating with i 11111 111 111 111 IMI 111 1111111 111 1111 Eil 1111 other nations for years. ;E p CrnDn Uf\n = Nehru asserted that little was.s RCUUKL/ Hwi being said in the world about co-'E with the S operation ‘‘but much is said about;;- “nS” declared the fature off SCOtsborO BO )fS | the United Nations is closely as-'s sociated with the outcome of its|= TONIGHT E ; operation in the Congo. ‘‘The|= S Congo has become a symbol, a!E ' :o ° P ,m ‘ touchtone of sucess,” he said. 1= A*liviicei«w r» 00 —I He expressed confidence that;; MOlTiission rree s-j the crisis over Berlin and Ger-|s at the E many can be settled “withoutjE uhi.i r ni , n J M t! A n E bringing discredit or dishonor to'= Foundation any nation.” 7miiimiiimmmmmuumimmuii~; UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (/P) —Prime Minister Nehru of India proposed yesterday that the United Nations declare a moratorium on the cold war and set aside a year for co operation in all fields “political, cultural or whatever.” Nehru made the suggestion in & wide-ranging speech to the TJ.N. General As sembly. He came to New York aft er talks with President Ken nedy in Wash ington on critical international is sues He called upon world statesmen to devote their full strength to tdying to avoid the terror of nu clear disaster instead of thinking about “burrowing under the earth and living like rats in a hole.” On the specific issue of banning nuclear weapons tests, he said a treaty providing effective controls is necessary—an issue upon which he and Kennedy had previously announced agreement. Monkey Dies in Missile CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (/P)— Goliath, a tiny squirrel monkey, died in the explosion of an Atlas missile yesterday. There was a possibility the fail ure could delay this nation's plan to send a chimpanzee into orbit next week and an astronaut later this year. But officials said that no plans have been changed, pending careful study of data. The missile shot off course and erupted 30 seconds after it was launched. JFK Picks Expert Panel WASHINGTON (AP) Presi dent Kennedy has picked a six man panel of statistical experts to see if the government’s employ ment figures can be made more useful and reliable in combatting joblessness. I PROJECT JOEY | - HELPERS - l Meet at the HUB I : Desk at 12:45 J : TODAY i I 3.5.J1. i ?••••••••••• it •*•••••••• THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA University Creamery Sales Room Dairy Products Ice Cream Pasteurized Milk Chocolate Milk Butter Milk Creamery Butler Brick Cheese Cheddar Cheese Cottage Cheese Irappist Cheese Grade A Large Eggs Officials ' stressed that there were earlier indications, now that the Soviet party congress has endorsed his peaceful co existence doctrine, that Khrush chev became more understand ing toward the western position than he was before. What Washington is now wait ing for is some kind of official word on Moscow's four points. It might come through normal dip lomatic channels, or it might mmmmmmmmmmm EVERY COLLEGE STUDENT needs this book to increase his ability to learn An understanding of (lie truth contained in Science and Health with Key to the Scrip tures by Mary Baker Eddy can remove the pressure which con cerns today's college student upon whom increasing de mands arc being made for academic excellence. Christian Science calms fear and gives to the si mlcnt the lull assurance he needs in order to learn easily and to evaluate what he lias learned. It leaches that God is man’s Mind —his only Mind —from which ema nates all the intelligence he needs, when and as lie needs it. Science and Health, the text book ol Christian Science, may he read or examined, together with the Bible, in an atmos phere of epiiet and peace, at any Christian Science Reading Room. Information about Sri-, cnee and I Icalth may also he ob tained on campus through the Christian Science Organization at 133 West Beaver Sunday Service ll a.m. Sunday School 11 a.m. (for young people up to age 20) Wednesday Evening 8 p.m. Reading room open daily Monday Evening 11:30 lo 3:30 7 to 9 Open to all PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers