TUESDAY. S PTEMBER 16. 1958 Will UN On Crisis UNITED (?P)—The which mee edly will b, grips with NATIONS, N.Y. .N. Assembly s today undoubt- asked to come to I Ihe Formosa crisis. o the 81-nation As :ct both U.S. Seere• - Dulles and Soviet ster Andrei Gromy their rival positions eneral policy debate 1 of the session. Delegates sembly exp:l tary of Stat.; Foreign Mini ko to presen during the at the outse' The threat. shore islandsj su tended t issues to be three-month These Inc of war over the off of Quemoy and Mat- I overshadow other taken up during the session. ude the question of U.S. ses Supersonic Jets Ister Formosa Might To B TAIPEI, Fbrmosa (iP) —The United States bolstered its air might on Formosa esterday with a swift nuclear air strike force and a contingent o deadly FlO4 Starfighter jets. The flee of supersonic planes swept onto Nationalist airstrips as U.S. and ' ed Chinese diplomats sat down in Warsaw in an attempt to bring peace to explosive For mosa Strait Nationalist cargo planes carried out another supply drop to Little Quemoy. It was the second in two days. Another ship convoy was reported assembling in the Pesca dores for a trip to Quemoy, the hard-rock Nationalist garrison cut off by a Red artillery blockade. The U.S. air strike force is sim ilar to the one sent to the Middle. East in July. Generally referred to as a "small war deterrent," it includes FlOO Super Sabre Jets, R 866 destroyers, RFIOI Voodoo reconnaissance planes, Cl3O Her cules turboprop cargo planes and KB3OJ tankers. THE PENN STATE JAZZ CLUB Listen to "Jazz Panorama" Every Wednesday Night from 8 to 9p.m. on WMAJ and WDFM A SPECIAL SHOW FROM 9 to 10 p.m. this Wednesday on WMAJ and WDFM Meet Today seating Communist China, the still unresolved problem of get ting U.S. and British troops out of Lebanon and Jordan, rival Soviet and U.S. proposali on control of outer space, and the almost four-year-old Algerian revolt. Dulles worked yesterday on the, speech he will deliver to the As sembly Thursday. He will outline U.S. policy as presented previous ly by himself and President Ei senhower on Formosa. The United States has said it will fight if necessary to oppose Communist attempts to seize by force the Chinese Nationalist islands of Qu'moy and Matsu. The Soviet Union has not made The force left the West Coast of the United States Aug. 29.; Meeting for Old and New Thursday, September 18 Room 121 Sparks • Unreleased tape-recordings of the Stan Kenton 40-piece band will be featured at this meeting. THIS WEDNESDAY THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA in Formosa Attention Freshmen ! ! any formal move yet to put the situation before the Assembly but Moscow radio declared the U.S.S.R. would press for full dis cussion of the Formosa issues. "The whole world is alarmed by the threat a war provoked by adventurist policies of the United States in the Far East." the broadcast said. Gromyko is expected to fight hard again for admission of Com munist China to the United Na tions, But the United States is confident the Assembly will vote —as it has done in the past—to defer for another year the actual placing of the issue on the agen da. Soustelle Misses Death hi Assassination Try PARIS (JP) Algerian nation alist assassins sprayed bullets at French Information Minister Jacques Soustelle yesterday in the heart of Paris. They missed him in two tries. Shattering glass from his auto mobile windows scratched his face and a bullet passed through his coat. But Soustelle, a former gov ernor general of Algeria, ducked in the car and, when the firing died, down, ran for as building. ONLY U.S., Chinese Reds Meet on Formosa WARSAW, Poland (W)—United States and Chinese Com munist delegates gingerly opened diplomatic maneuvers yes terday aimed at silencing the guns now booming in the far Pacific. U.S. Ambassador Jacob Beam told newsmen he hoped the talks would have con structive results. Communist China's envoy, Wang Ping-nan, said he was looking for ''fruitful results " Except for these platitudes, neither man bad anything to say about their two hour and 50 min ute talk in a gold hung room of the 18th century Mysljewiecki Palace—former hunting lodge of Poland's kings. Diplomats had expected the ses sion would be only a relatively brief establishment of contact and expressed surprise at the length of the meeting. It was taken by some to indicate that the two men had such definite instructions from their govern- AD STAFF MEETING When—Tonight at 6:30 p.m. Where---9 Carnegie Advertising Accounts wilt be Assigned Those not attending will he dropped! Members at 7 p.m. The jazz Club has brought name jazz stars to the University including the Four Freshman and Chris Connor. TED HEATH and STAN KENTON will be presented here this semester in concert and Club members receive special rates for concert tickets. ments that they were able to plunge immediately into the core of the problem. Little Rock is Quiet As Schools Stay Closed LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (~ P )—Gov. Orval E. Faubus and federal offi cials maneuvered secretly in Lit tle Rock yesterday and the city's four high schools, closed by the struggle over integration, were empty of students and deserted by spectators. No disorders broke out on what was to be the opening day of school. DAILY COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers