PAGE TWO Rusk, WASHINGTON CAP) Secre tary of State Dean Rusk called in Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin yesterday to try to' pin down what Berlin settlement ideas the Soviets might have that would still leave Western troops in Berlin. Informants said Rusk also 'sought to make clear U.S. deter mination to keep forces in Berlin and to correct what he regards as public distortions of the Ameri can position by Soviet Foreign Minister- Andrei' A. Gromyko. ,The afternoon meeting in Rusk's office was the third in the new series of U.S.-Soviet talks, on the Berlin question. Since Rusk saw Dobrynin last Monday, both Gromyko and So viet Premier Khrushchev have is suet( statements indicating Mos cow's plans for an East German pence treaty and neutralization of West Berlin are at odds with the Western intent to keep the Corn- • munist-encircled city free. !private position would show any BUM USED FRIDAY'S meet-!more give than its public one. ing to probe whether the Kremlin's. Dobrynin was accompanied by Roberts Ousted By Army Order WASHINGTON WI Secre tary of the Army Elvis J. Stah: Jr. yesterday ordered Maj. Arch E. Roberts back to civilian life for making "improper statements" in a speech to the Dau,ghters of the American Revolution. Stahr relieved the 47-year-old Roberts from active duty on grounds he had "violated tradi-1 !banal standards of conduct" for , an Army officer. Roberts will re-' Lain his reserve commission after he leaves the "active Army on May 7. ROBERTS, declaring Stahr's order means loss - of his pension rights, said he will appeal. "I can object to these orders and do not have to consent to them," he told a reporter, add ing: "I expected a hearing and I still expect a hearing. My position has never been revealed, except to the dear ladies in the DAR, God bless 'em.° A Defense Department . spokes man said the Army plans no other Southern Segregationists Delay Bus Trip for Negroes to N.Y. NEW ORLEANS, La. 4/P)—ln sisting that more than 100 Negroes were awaiting the trip, the segre gationist Citizens Council has postponed until Monday its plan to send a busload of dissatisfied • Louisiana Negroes to New York. Officials of Negro groups inl Chicago Said knew .nothing A Negroj . woman who had been - they , of the trip and had not been con scheduled ;to take advantage ofi itacted by any Louisiana Negroes. ) the Citizeins' Council's offer of) -. bsNGELNIANN attributed the free one-vqiy transportation Northidelay in ;sending the buses 'to the failed to slim up on schedule at difficulty in getting all the Ne the Trailotays terminal. • groes together at one time. . , WHILEi NEWSMEN were in But he said two or three buses the office; of George",L. Singe!- ! would definitely ledve - Monday mann, . a council director,_ he an- afternoon for New - York ' and swered a phone call he said was Washington, D.C. from two „Negroes who wanted to leave yesterday because' - their! ' rent was up tonight. He said they Clay States U.S. Terms could leave on the 12:95 pm. bus.t , For Berlin Settlement Singelniann said several hours; - " later the tvec; had informed him' BERLIN -(AP) Retired U.S. they would not be able to leave',Gen. LUcius D. Clay said yester.. until later in the day. He said the.day the West will reject any-: indecision was hatnpering th e lhing that is a loss iri negotiations council's t4forts. -over Berlin. but must try to find -2. soniething that removes• Berlin as to identifr most of • - SINGELMANN again'a possible cause of war.' ~ • • i Clay is winding up an eight s?- Guerrillas Killed - I ' ;month - stay as -President Kenne dy'st! personal representative. He SAIGOtIc Soviet Viet Natn (tp)' ; spoke i= l rtint with ,Germany —South Viet Nam claimed yesler. editors eod for television by day its forces killed 32 Commu nist guerrillas last Tuesday in ani Clay ;declared the West will not operation 27 miles southwest of grant iliplomatic' recognition to here. Government caivalties re- the Cammunist regime of ECU ported. were two wounded. ' Germatliy. , , ' THE DAILY COLLEGIAN., UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Soviet Talk DEAN RUSK . . . probes Kremlin's position -ction against Roberts "as of to !ay." ; Propaganda Lai, THIS, LEFT the possibility of some further action later.- GENEVA VP/ The United 'the) declared yesterday it could Roberts appeared before . 19 an d never bridge the differences in a DAR convention AcAl spoke off the cuff after a. formal l Soviet bid 'to make "war propa ganda" a criminal offense in all 'speech was • denied - - clearance. In that extemporaneous- ta lk, countries. Roberts accused Asst. Secretary Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister's of State G. Mennen• Williams of; Valerian A. Zorin told the 11-na -1 leftist leanings, ' and spoke ofition disarmament conference all [Mayor Samuel Yorty of Los An- states should take legislative geles as having a Communist measures intended to "put an end 'background: . to war _propaganda poisoning the That same night, the Vmy sus- international atmosphere." pended Roberts pehdin nvesti- BUT U.S. AMBASSADOR Ar gation. . - i . Ithur H. Dean said the United ROBERTS HAS been stationed States could never accept such: an at Ft. Lee. Va. He was in the corn- idea which would violate the cpn mand of ex-Maj. Gen. Edwin A. stitutional rights of its citizens Walker at the time Walker got to freedom of the press, speech into difficulties in Germany last an d assem bl y . year. The Army relieved Walker ofi "We are profoundly. conviniced Ibis command on a finding he had l that the answer to v.-itr propagan information within and I made derogatory statements about is more prominent ,Americans and for his across national frontiers, increased ;troop indoctrination methods. In understanding, and larger areas the upshot of that, Walker re- of freedom for all," Dean said. 'signed from the Army. He is now "The farthest . our government a candidate for governor of Texas. can go in this field is to encourage —...--f self-restraint." , Zorin rejected the AMerican,po - He said dissemination ot more foreign information behind the Iron Curtain would -merely, create more opportunities for war propaganda. Thr .stf ,1(1.1 ;roes he said hid already taken advantage of the council's offer. Besides the Louis Boyd family of 10 whieh!went to New York last weekend,' Singelmann says that 103 Negroes went to Chicago and One to Washington. D.C. an embassy counselor. Georgi M. Kornienko. It was the first time in the three meetings vith Rusk that Dobrynin, brought ap aide. X 0 eOIoaritENEMISPiIE re - sponse was expected immediately because the Soviet ambassador had to report back to Masco~, and Rusk leaves Saturday (in a two week global trip. . Rusk was described tts encour aged by Khrushchev's :and Gro myko's having seen "glimpses of hope" for a peaceful settlement of the potentially explasiv4i issue, by their willingness to keep (In 'talk ing, Sand by their trttating the question separately frost the cur rent row over \ U.S. nuclear tests. BUT KHAUBHCHEV: speaking earlier to • American publisher' Gardner Cowles, declzred: !The main question remains , . It is the presence of western occupation forces in West Berlin to which we cannot agree." Gromyko, did not deviate from their publicly but dnd sugges there are: ways to narrow the gaps between the U.S. and Soviet positions. • Rusk said at his news con ference - Thursday that Western troops are in West Berlin to Stay and '`we will , not treat that ques tion as •a negotiable pi.roblem." le question of war propaganda —one of the side issues of dis- New College Diner bwhltoN- Betvween;tl,riMoyio. aillnurnmnTinnuimmunmunimminimunminEi RADII:01110NC) " SERVICE ' - 1 7 & s• 72-. deliverD 8.6021 pick- u p A = = s. - TELEVISION .-1 , '= SERVI.E. • E I = = 1i ' CENTER =i 232 S. All ay St. = fIMMUMIIIIIIMIIIIIIMMIIIIII6IIIIIII2IIIIMRIMIIit * atuaTawni* PLAZA NOW SHOWING James Cagney Horst Bur.hols , ONE, TWO THREE- vrViii -- Adam - FnuM u , . • ss • . As ..,, . . _., Bsine4 K ennedy , ~ To Couder High._ .agei 1 i • NEW YORK OFl—Buitin,'e.cir their contract _talks with steel' tossed. the anti-inflation ball companies. squarely into President Kennedy's The USW got a 10-cent-an-hour hands' with a demand for the package of fringe 'benefits about same pressure against hither a month ago. The ,benefits then wages that he exerted against tried to raise prices but were higher steel prices, • beaten down in a campaign: dr.=. rected from -the White House. The challenge came from the, I nation's railroads, many of their THERE WAS a stunned. silence ailing;financially and feting wage in many areas 'of the blisine93 dernaruis froin about 500,000 aft world after the President's .blast train 'employes. 'against steel. leaders. In recent "THERE CAN BE no justifiea . days there has been sharp criti cis ic ii of the __F t re-sident's action. Lion for expansion of fringe bene- , " ts of b us iness , fit, or wageiincreases," the West- •- "" se gT en i d it : ' would . 11 seem, wciul ern Carriers Conference Cotrunit- railroads. 41 , rank near the top of the list in tee sand ThUrs d a y. referrin g —ho ' of a sympathetic hearing in 1 1: 1= i rs a presidential fact-finding might - recommend a wage th White House. I 1 hike.l -• . Indi rectly. the Preiident showed. Said Committee Chairman J. . a keen awareness, of their plight Wolfe: "The administration m tin his recent transportation mei:- sage to Congress, urging an need step in and tell the employes such a wage increase- can not be e ing of regulatory hobbles of rail carriers. effective without destroying'r ' I partly destroying ncininflatia - MOREOVER.. railroads have ary policy of the administartio rn " Pxnerienced dismal earnings in late years. One Eastern line; the SOMEWHAT SIMILAR vie N" v Haven Railroad, slipped in 'have been expressed by leaders t o bankruptcy last year after a in the aluminum industry, soon tof lo g downhill slide. Other big start bargaining with unions on latroads in the East are skating on Inew wage pact. I !perilously thin financial ice. In. effect, the President was; ' •As a group, railroads in 1961 called upon in both cases to clanipimade their poorest profit showing down harder than-he did on th eisince 1946, clearing less than two United Steel Workers Union Sniper cent on capital investment. Af Idea Rejected lannament-was referred back 1.43 'the conference. CONFERENCE SOURCES said! Western and nonaligned delegates smiled when Zorin, seeking prove his point, waved a copy of a release by the "American Mo tional party" containing an ap peal for an immediate declaration of War against the Soviet Unian.i American officials said they never -heard of this party or its , publication. After - the weeks pf __ more lan six weeks 'pi fruitless negotiations, the confqr-, ence went into a four-day rece s. • • Pa. School Integrated COATESVILLE, Pa. OP) The Coatesville school board initiated plans Thursday night to racially integrate the all-Negro Janies Adams elementary school in the fall term. The school will be opera under a plan, that will result interchanging- _its students w pupils from the nearby Terry e mentary school, which has a ra of about 26 white , students every Negro child. TIIAUII4 NOW- Feature legrhis 2A54:45-7:05-9:15 HE USED LOWE LIKE .1111110111 1 USE IMIONEW! metro-Gcsowyn-mover PAUL lEVVIWaI GERAUNG FYGE fflf=s WILLIII44II I tot 4 4 cop • • , .I. • ••I SHIPLEY ?TT•EI tour WEIN atomikscon inTRoeOIOR .. : :I : 1V 1 !.''.:TA-Ni.1%.: • NOW SHOWING • at 2:05-3:55 5:45-7:35-9:25 toevit-thay ! . C.%126 Romp. —Saha-Jar Rimiew mcgrtaa gearigniull 71U I • ;SATURDAY. APRIL 28. 1962 Macmillan, JFK Outline Discussioni 1 WASHINGTON (4')—President Kennedy welcomed British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to Washington with full military honors yesterday and declared Heir policy talks would range aver all the world trouble spots. ii Macmillan, replying, said he was "grateful • for the chance to be here, especially at this time when, although . there is much Incause for afixiety there is also uch need for patience and firm ness combined. I Both men noted that this will be their fifth meeting since Ken nedy took office in January last lyear,, Macmillan said he was reeased that; such discussions are coming normal. I , . The, two men reviewed the 'massed ceremonial troops under bright sun, then exchanged a formal welcome and statement of thanks before boarding helicop ters for the White House. STATE LAST ' I DAY! "JESSICA " AT - 1:30, 3:31, 5:32.7:33, 9:34 Starts SUNDAY WIWAIIa KIM `HILIEN • MAK " p Clrl 4errr nail *rum itnunne *ll t 4.`eTirtel" memo c . MOND pi , RINSER ACOUMMPCTURES MEAN TECallanar ClNeluto-SCXPE SUNDAY - 2:10, 5:44. 9:18 Metro ; Goldwyn Mayer presents A Euterpe Production 4t• VI • • •••• •• • • • • • Mara• : ir!", i t t --Ex• ••=.• • • 1 1 0 ‘ 7;71( ;1: • rm•;;-° • • In CossmaScove owl IigETRM:oWIe • ••O • • • SUNDAY at 2:10.5:44.1:11