The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 18, 1961, Image 5

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HE BATTALION
Thursday, May 18, 1961
College Station, Texas
Page 5
World Troubles May Bring JFK, Mr. K Together
Jest Sees Trap In Soviet
’lan For A Neutral Laos
GENEVA (A?)—The Soviet Un-
n proposed Wednesday an inde-
tndent and neutral Laos free of
1 foreign troops. The Western
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Lunch 45(i
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powers quickly spotted a Com
munist veto as a potential trap
in the Soviet plan.
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
A. Gromyko submitted his pro
posal to the international confer
ence on Laos shortly after Secre
tary of State Dean Rusk intro
duced an American plan.
Both plans envisioned a neutral
policy for Laos and evacuation of
all foreign troops to end the iso
lated nation’s role as a pawn in
the East-West cold war. But Ab
ram Chayes, U.S. State Depart
ment legal adviser, said Gromyko
has introduced “a double-barreled
type of vdte.”
Rusk promised that all Ameri
can troops would pull out of Laos
if foreign Communist forces ad
vising the pro-Communist Pathet
Lao rebels also would leave.
U.S. troops now consist of a
small training mission of about
300 men.
The size of foreign Communist
forces is not known but may be
several thousand men.
Meanwhile, a dispatch in Prav-
da, the Communist party newspa
per in Moscow, for the first time
admitted Soviet plans were air
lifting supplies to pro-Communist
forces in Laos.
Pravda correspondent A. Filip
pov told of meeting a rebel deputy
premier and Capt. Kong Le, Lao
tian paratroop commander who
overthrew the pro-Western gov
ernment last August, at a small
airfield on the rebel-controlled
Plaines de Jarres and said: “They
have come to meet the Soviet
Aeroflot planes which under the
agreement between the (rebel)
Laotian and Soviet governments
are to bring in fuel and food.”
Secretary of State Rusk also
told the conference here that the
Pathet Lao rebels were violating
the cease-fire in Laos repeatedly.
Johnson Inspects Honor Guard At Saigon
Vice President Lyndon Johnson was given guard of South Viet Nam’s President Ngo
a full military honor ceremony upon arrival Dinh Diem, at the Saigon airport. (AP
in Saigon. Here he inspects the picked Wirephoto)
Kennedy - Khrushchev Meet
Possibility In Early June
By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON LP) _ An offi
cial announcement of a Kennedy-
Khrushchev meeting in Vienna
June 3 and 4 is expected before
the end of the week. Authorities
indicate the announcement will be
made Friday.
Administration officials said
President Kennedy wants to dis
cuss informally with Soviet Pre
mier Khrushchev a wide range of
cold war problems with heavy em
phasis on his belief in the urgent
need for agreement on a treaty
to ban nuclear weapons tests.
Returning today from a visit to
Canada, Kennedy now has about
10 days in which to prepare for
the meeting and for conferences
with French President Charles de
Gaulle at Paris May 31-June 2.
The White House and State De
partment were formally silent on
completion of arrangements for
the Kennedy-Khrushchev meeting.
But a number of developments
Wednesday gavq support to re
ports Kennedy and Khrushchev
have substantially agreed to get
together.
At Ottawa, White House news
secretary Pierre Salinger disclos
ed that Kennedy had discussed the
prospective Khrushchev meeting
with Prime Minister John G. Die-
fenbaker. That was the first pub
lic word from the White House
beyond Salinger’s earlier state
ments this week that there were
no plans for such a conference “at
present.”
Undersecretary of State Chester
Bowles told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee yesterday
that the President had a confer-
of our tow food prices!
-GROCERIES-
S'/z-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Potted Meat 2 Cans 22c
24-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Beef Stew Can 37c
No. 21/2 Cans—Libbys, Sliced or Halves
PEACHES 2 Cans 55c
No. 2 Cans—Libbys
Mint Pineapple Chunks .Can 39c
46-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Grapefruit Juice Can 29c
46-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Tomato Juice Can 29c
303 Cans—Libbys
Cream Style Corn .... 2 Cans 37c*
303 Cans—Libbys
Garden Green Peas .. 2 Cans 39c
303 Cans—Libbys
Whole Kernel Corn .. 2 Cans 37c
Folgers
COFFEE .... 6-Oz. Jar Instant 79c
Folgers
COFFEE 1-lb. Can 69c
CRISCO 3-lb. Can 75c
White Delsey
Bathroom Tissue .... 4 roll pkg. 49c
No. 2'/ 2 Cans—Golden Treat
YAMS 2 Cans 49c
No. 21/2 Cans—Hunts
Fruit Cocktail 3 Cans $1.00
14-Oz. Bottles—Hunts
CATSUP 5 For $1.00
7-Oz. Cans—Planters
Cocktail Peanuts 3 For $1.00
-FROZEN FOODS-
LIBBYS
Cream Style Corn
Cut Okra
5
Mixed Vegetables
10-Oz.
Butter Beans
Pkgs.
Green Peas
Yellow Squash
$1.09
-MARKET-
Deckers—Tall Korn
1-lb. 49c
Sliced Bacon
Wisconsin—Medium Aged
Cheddar Cheese
1-lb. 59c
Hormels—Dairy Brand
All Meat Franks
1-lb. 49c
Hormels
Sliced Bacon
1-lb. 57c
Loin Steak
1-lb. 79c
T-Bone Steak
1-lb. 79c
Pin Bone Loin Steak ...
1-lb. 69c
Meaty Short Ribs
1-lb. 39c
Fleischmann Corn Oil
OLEG
Lb. 39c
Bordens Biscuits 3 Cans 25c
-PRODUCE-
Grapefruit 5-lb. Bag 25c
Avocados
2 For 25c
Cabbage
Lb. 5c
Yellow Squash
2-lbs. 25c
Home Grown—For Eating or Jelly
Metley Plums Pound 10c
Bushel $2.50
SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, MAY 18 - 19 - 20
CHARLIES FOOD
MARKET
NORTH gate
—WE DELIVER-
COLLEGE STATION
ence with Khrushchev “under con
sideration” and that the final de
cision was up to the President.
Press dispatches from Moscow
quoted Western diplomats there
as saying that a meeting was cer
tain and predicting that it would
be held at Vienna June 3 or 4.
Information available here was
that according to plans already
developed the President would ar
rive in Vienna from Paris June 3
and remain there until sometime
June 4. The time schedule appar
ently would allow for several long
talks between him and Khrush
chev.
Cuba Wants To Make Deal-
Prisoners For Bulldozers
KEY WEST, Fla.—UP)—Prime
Minister Fidel Castro has offered
to trade more than 1,000 prisoners
of the April 17 invasion for -500
American bulldozers.
The startling swords-for-plow-
shares offer Wednesday night
evoked wild cheers from several
thousand peasants assembled at
the rancho boyeros agricultural
fair near Havana.
If the prisoners are not ran
somed, Castro said, “they will
work hard, building trenches and
fortifications, so that they will
have to earn the bread they eat.”
Referring to President Kennedy
—whom the Cubans have charged
with direct responsibility for the
invasion—Castro said: “If they are
his friends and he loves them so
much, let him send 500 bulldozers
and we will send them back.” He
added that captives charged with
committing crimes during the
Fulgencio Batista regime would
not be returned under any circum
stances.
Earlier, Castro told his audience
that “agricultural production must
be increased at all costs.”
Dwelling at length on Cuba’s
shortage of pork and pork prod
ucts, he said, “Every pig that we
have must be preserved and fat
tened. Let us put off for a while
those pig roasts we all like so
much.”
Castro then added that “Napo
leon tried to exchange prisoners
for swine, but we want to be more
polite to the Yankee imperialists.”
Castro said the work of his revo
lution is just beginning and its
task is “to provide food, clothing,
shoes, medicine, education and re
creation for the while people.”
“There is much to be done,” he
said, “and you must respond to
this new situation and feel en
thusiasm for production and work.”
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