WEDNESDAY. OC • BER 29. 1958 Keatin Ike's I upport (/P) President Eisenhower joined with -11er and Rep. Kenneth B. Keating yesterday in of unity between the White House and icket in New York. NEW YORK 1 Nelson A. Rockef in a demonstratil the Republican He told two Economi Due to A In Busin Rise /41 vance WASHINGTON has advanced fas this fall, and the e ery is broadenirik. These were the principal con elusions reported by the Com merce Departmen yesterday in! its monthly revie of the busi ness situation. The department said economic' yardsticks which sually lag dur-, mg a recovery p riod "are now showing signs of improvement." Other more vol tile indicators, have been advanc ng for several months. It said t is means the business upturn ow is rather broad. A better-than-se sonal autumn increase in activit has been re flected in rising personal income and buying power, the report said. Personal income rose 11/2 billion dollars last month, to a record 357 1 / 2 billion. Most of the rise was attributed to bigger wage and salary payments. Business er than usual .onomic recov- Carnegie Tech Receives $2,800,000 for library PITTSBURGH (.P) Carnegie Institute of Technology announced yesterday the receipt of a $2,800,- 000 gift from Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Hunt for construction of a new campus library. • Hunt is senior board member of the school. He also is chair man of the executive committee for Aluminum Co. of America. The MILITARY BALL Rec Hall *Your girl, too, can be Queen of ,the Mil Ball. Enter her picture at the HUB desk from Mon., Nov. 17 through Wed., Nov. 19. te *T picture will be mailed to the Cadets at t e Virginia Military Institute, and they will choose the five finalists. e Queen will then be selected at the Mil ,Rockefeller Get in Election arty rallies, to which he rode in the rain, that by sending Rockefeller to Albany they will elect a governor just as great as the fine new sen ator he said they will send to Washington. Keating is running for the Senate. Police estimated that some 30, , 000 persons saw the President on his two motorcade trips through the city. Earlier in the day, his news secretary. James C. Hagerty. had brushed aside some pub lished reports that Rockefeller held a negative attitude about Eisenhower's current politick ing in New York. Rockefeller himself told the rallies at state GOP headquarters and at those of the -Eisenhower- Nixon National Citizens' Commit tee, that. to have Eisenhower join his campaign "really is terrific." Then turning to the President, he said: "It is an honor and a privilege to have your support." At the latter meeting, an nouncement was made that President Eisenhower will close his campaigning- for a Republi can Congress with a nationally televised speech from Balti more Friday night. Eisenhower, informed that funds had been raised to finance the Baltimore telecast, said he wel comed the opportunity to speak for the GOP cause "whatever the time, whatever the place, if it's humanly possible to be there." National Debt Goes Up WASHINGTON (Al Govern ment borrowing to help finance a record peace-time deficit—plus other things—has pushed the na tional debt to a high of $280,851,- 000,000. And it's expected to spurt even higher soon, THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Four Rescued In 2nd W.Va. Mine Explosion SUMMERSVILLE, W. Va. (W)— At least four miners survived an explosion deep in a southeastern West Virginia coal mine yester day. Two others were found dead and the fate of 11 missing men was in doubt. One miner was broucht to the surface about 4 p.m. (EST), more than five hours after the blast. Three more miners, two of them 'in critical condition, were carried out by rescuers an hour later. Earlier reports that three ad ditional miners had survived did not stand up, A company announcement late in the day said only that the bod ies of two had been found and the fate of the 11 remaining min ers was unkown. It was the second mine ex plosion in two days in the West Virginia ♦laf fields. Monday. 22 miners died when trapped gas ignited in a Pocahontas Coal Co. mine on the Virginia-West Virginia border near Bishop, about 90 miles southwest of here. The second underground blast occurred between 10:30 and 11 a.M. at the Oglebay-Norton Co. Burton mine, located about two miles off a hard-surface road be tween Summersville, the Nicholas County sea t, and Richwood, a coal mining community, Cuban Labor League To Fight General Strike HAVANA, Cuba Li?) The Cu ban Confederation of Labor yes terday promised a vigorous fight to crush any attempt by rebels or Communists to start a general strike during Cuba's presidential election. A proclamation issued by the confederation's secretary general, Eusebio Mujal, urged all Cubans to vote next Monday. Rebel leader Fidel Castro has threatened to sabotage the elec tion. U.S. Questions Intent on Test UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. VP) The United States ques tioned yesterday whether the Soviet Union actually wants to negotiate a controlled ban on nuclear weapons tests. The challenge to Moscow's sincerity was issued at the UN just three days before the st in Geneva. It came as Secretary of State Dulles said in Washington that Moscow's rejection of a one-year test suspension dimmed chances of the United States, Britain and, the Soviet Union reaching agree ment. Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R-Iowa), a member of the U.S. delegation, called attention of the 81-nation Political Committee to a Soviet resolution recommending an immediate unconditional halt to nuclear weapons tests. He said that while the Soviet Union had declared its agree ment in principle to controls for a ban on tests its position "as set forth in the draft resolution pending before this body, leaves room for doubt as to how vital it believes a control system to be. "One is compelled to wonder Piiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimilinuinninuminin Light breakfast followialg ra• DECEMBER 5 IVO Holy Communion (Episcopal Liturgy) FOR ALL CHRISTIANS THURSDAY Hamilton Hall Note: The worshipping congregation will designate the use of the offering. rt of Big Three negotiations why the Soviet resolution fails to mention either the forthcoming Geneva negotiations or the prin ciples of controls . . . I hope this is an oversight." 3 Red Scientists Win Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM, Sweden (IP) Three Soviet nuclear scientists won the Nobel Prize in Physics yesterday. The Prize for Chem istry went to an Englishman. The Russians are P. A. Cheren kov, I. M. Frank, and Igor E. Tamm, all Moscow professors. They were cited jointly for their work with high speed, sub atomic particles. One product of their research was a cosmic ray counter. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 7:00 A. M. Lounge PAGE THREE Red Ban