PAGE rwo Talks Collapse In Steel Strike NEW YORK (/Pj—- Fruitless negotiations in the nation's, 73-day steel strike collapsed completely yesterday. The break down heightened the possibility of Taft-Kartley law inter vention by the government to open the struck mills. The striking United Steelworkers Union said it saw no Mrs. 'K' Hopes For Return Visit to US. WASHINGTON (A>> Mrs. Ni kita Khrushchev said yesterday she’d like to come back to the United States again and she be lieves cultural exchange visits ‘‘make for better undetstanding, better knowledge of one another.” ‘ Contact; between women,” she added, "would he equally condu cive to solution of problems of the woild” Sometimes smiling and some times seuous, Mrs. Ktuushchev handled her very first news con fluence with apparent ease. .She acknowledged she was wor nod about it. And at the start she smilingly called Mrs Henrv Cabot Lodge, wife of the U.S. ambassador to the UN, and Mrs. I.lewellyn Thompson, wife of the American ambassador to the So viet Union, to sit beside her. Both women have been travel ing with Mrs. Khrushchev across country. "If you attack me too much, they’ll defend me,” she said with a smile But she needed no defense as she answered a wide range of questions about heiself and her eounlrv. Mrs. K said she doesn’t like housework—which drew applause from the 20 newspaperwomen, some of whom came from as far away as London. Farm matters, political econ omy and topics of interest to her husband seemed mostly to inter est Mis. Khrushchev. Teenagers Rob Teacher In Classroom Holdup NEW YORK m Two teen aged boys boldly invaded a fifth grade classroom yesterday and at knifepoint robbed a teacher while her small pupils screamed in ter ror. The teacher, Mrs. Betty Koffer, lost $39 in a pocketbook the two Negro youths took from her. They both were said to be about 1C years old. 16 Die in Airline Crash Over Aleutian Islands ANCHORAGE, Alaska (/P) —Sixteen persons died last night when a commercial airliner flying over the wild, rugged Aleutian Islands smashed into a mountainside and burst into flames. A search party worked its way up to the 2000-foot level on the side of an unnamed 5000-1 foot peak of Great Sitkin Island 1 Force, one Army, one Navy, and reported there were no sur- • ou.yo, as a lieutenant colonel • .. . „ , .. m the Air Force, once commanded vivois in the wreckage of the an air rescue squadron in Alaska. Reeve Aleutian Airways DC4. His wife and two children live A Navy pilot who first spotted heref and his father, 0. B. Strouse the wreckage said only the tail at Topeka, Kan. section of the four-engined air- Names of the passengers were liner was intact. The remainder!withhold by the airline and the of the plane was still burning military until relatives were no wlien first sighted. tified. The airliner, piloted by Eu- The plane was outbound from gene Strouse. widely known Al- Anchorage to Adak on a flight aska airman, carried a crew of that serves military bases and five, two civilians and nine mil- small communities of the island itary men—seven from the Air 'chain. TAU KAPPA EPSILON presents THE RED PARROT CLUB with Ditty Potter's Fabulous Four TONIGHT at 9 p.m. OPEN TO UPPERCLASSMEN THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA point, in continuing the talks as long as industry insists on work regulating concessions. The union says these are aimed at “union busting." "We axe going home," an nounced the union president, David J. McDonald. "This far cical filibuster has ended." He added that the union stands ready to resume talks if it re ceives from industry “an honest offer worthy of consideration by self-respecting steel workers.” McDonald was asked if the union would resume talks if the government requests it. *’We have never resisted a call of our government. But we see no sense m coming back to New York City. The seat of the gov ernment is in Washington. The seat of the steel industry is in Pittsburgh, he replied. Chief industry negotiator R. Conrad Cooper said the indus try still is prepared to resume negotiations Monday. “We hope that the union will reconsider its position and join with us then in a renewed effort ito break the deadlock. This has been our agreed seat of negotia tions. We plan to be here. We want to bargain and we want to reach an agreement,” he added in a statement. The chief federal mediator, Joseph F. Finnegan said: "We don’t intend to let this thing drift, in view of its impact on 800,000 souls and its impact on the national economy. The right to set the time and place of meetings is a function of the Federal Mediation and Con ciliation Service.” Finnegan indicated there might be a change of locale when talks resume—presumably in Washing ton. More than 500,000 steelworkers,! plus thousands of workers in re-j lated industries, have been made idle since the strike began July 14 The union is seeking unspeci fied wage increases, which the in dustry claims would be inflation ary. I Tito Wants to visit U.S. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia f/P) —I President Tito told U.S. Secre-I tary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson yesterday he’d like to visit the United States. France Quits UN Meeting In Protest UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (fr) —France walked out of the UN General Assembly yester day in protest against charges by Saudi Arabia’s chief dele gate that the French army in Algeria were torturers thrist ing for blood. But members of the French delegation returned at the con clusion of a vitrolic speech by Ahmad Shukairy, 51, a Palestin ian Arab who at one time repre sented Syria at the United Na tions. Shukairy referred to the state ment by French President Charles de Gaulle offering self-determin ation to the Algerian people pro vided peace is restored. De Gaulle said Algeria would be considered at peace if no more than 200 violent' deaths occurred in a year. “We know there are some bloodthirsty French colonists who are ready to step up the maxi mum figure of President de Gaulle,” Shukairy said. We know such thirst for blood is to be found in the French army itself—as evidenced by the most brutal acts of torture committed against the people of Algeria,” he added. Victor A. Belaunde of Peru, 75-year-old Assembly president, interrupted Shukairy and asked him not to use language “that, might disturb the atmosphere of! the Assernblv.” Shukairy replied lhal he-be lieved freedom of speech was guaranteed ai the United Na tions, then went on with his prepared text. Later he remarked to a report er on the French action: “I hope they walk out of Al geria.” A mountain lion was adopted as Penn State’s athletic symbol in 1907 and thereafter became known as the “Nittany I Jon.” Cl IKK FT route 2, 9“ J V MJL I Near CARROLITOWN RESERVATIQNS ARE NOT NECESSARY, BUT IF WANTED PHONE EBENSBURG GReenleaf 2-8581 LARRY ELGART and Hit ORCHESTRA SUNDAY, OCT. 4 DANCING 9-1 EST DONATION $2.00 BENEFIT . . . HOLY NAME CHURCH • Quiet Study Environment | ? ith $ Fine Food Meal Tickets Still Available. Year choice ofi I 7 days—3 meals a day 7 days —2 meals a day 5 days 3 meals a day 5 days 2 meals a day II M DINING and J4iil ROOM,NO *^9 P - Call AD 8-1330 - | Prime Minister Shot By Monk in Ceylon COLOMBO, Ceylon (JP)— A professed Buddhist medical monk whipped a pistol from his saffron robes yesterday and critically wounded Prime Minister Solomon Bandaranaike, who led this island nation into the Asian neutral bloc. The attacker was captured. He was shot in one knee by a sentry as he sought to flee the Primp Minister’s private bunga low at Rosmead Place, Colombo’s most luxurious residential area Three of his burst of" six bul lets hit Bandaranaike, damaging the liver, spleen and one arm of the frail British-educated aristo crat who was a champion of Cey- BULLETIN—Prime Minister Solomon Bandaranaike died late last night. lonese independence from .Brit ain. On a hospital stretcher, the 60-year-old Prime Minister for gave him and appealed for com passion for "this foolish man." The bullets were removed and Bandaranaike was given four pints of blood during five hours of corrective surgery. Doctors said he stood the operation well and that, although he was still in danger, his condition was satis factory. “He is still gravely ill,” a medi cal bulletin said. The shooting came Just three days before Bandaranaike was to leave for New York to ad dress the UN General Assem bly, After a speech there Tuesday, STUDENT FILMS presents 'NIGHT PASSAGE' Technicolor JAMES STEWART AUDIE MURPHY Sat., Sept. 26 7:30 & 9:30 Sun., Sept. 27 6:30 HUB Assembly Room $ Lodging 207 EAST PARK AVENUE SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1959 he was to have gone to Washing ton for talks with President Ei senhower and on to London, Bona and Cairo. Speculation on the motive for the assassination attempt cen tered around an old conflict be tween practitioners of Western style medicine and Eastern heal ing methods known as Ayur- Veda, which employ massage, hot compresses and secret herb com pound. Calvary Bapt. Church 112 W. Hamilton Ave. Services: 9:30 a.m.; 10:45 a.m. 7:45 p.m. Cars leave HUB 9:20 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. ★CATHAUM ★MITTANY TODAY CONT. From 1:30 TONY CURTIS JANET LEIGH “The Perfect Furlough” BEGINS 2 P.M. SUNDAY butte ~rm BAUDOrai JEAN GABIN A—awfiwwtw.ttN Y AsrotY»r&(jai Penn State Football on WMAJ Tune in Today at 1:25 p.m. for V.M.I. broadcast. Also listen for these: Colgate 1:25, Oct. 3 Army 1:25, Oct. 10 Boston U. 1:25, Oct. 17 Illinoii 1:25, Oct. 24 West Virginia 1:25, Oct. 31 Syracuse 1:25, Nov. 7 Holy Cross 1:25, Nov. 14 Pittsburgh 1:25, Nor. 21
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