TUESDAY. SEPTEMBE! ike Or With WASHINGTON continuing steel st union leaders to t appeal personally The President < Hu erica Heads S. Giro CHARLESTON, S C. (/P)—Hur ricane Gracie, picking up speed and power, lumbered toward the South Carolina last night, her howling 125-mile-per-hour winds churing up dangerously high tides in her advance. Residents from Savannah, Ga., northward to the Myrtle Beach- Georgetown area were warned to evacuate immediately. Grade’s leading edge of gale force winds was expected to reach NAGOYA, Japan G? 3 ) An other storm from another ocean may have killed 3400 persons in Japan last weekend. Typhoon 'Vera hit its most savage blow to Nagoya, Japan's third largest city. One hundred seventy casualties have been confirmed there—but 1000 un found bodies may lie in the city's wilderness of debris. If confirmed, this will make the typhoon that raged across Ja pan the deadliest in modern times. the coast early in the evening. The full force of the storm was expected to hit the coast some where in the 100-mile area from Savannah to Charleston sometime this morning. Meanwhile, the Weather Bureau reported a new hurricane called Hannah, was spotted 1500 miles in the Atlantic from Miami. The Weather Bureau warned that Gracie would flood coastal lands to heights of 8 to 11 feet or more above normal levels. The first signs of the storm came with intermittent rains. There was a noticeable increase in winds from the hurricane lo cated at 5 p.m. about 230 miles southeast of Charleston, moving west-northwest and northwest at 12 miles per hour. Hurricane hunter planes report ed winds in the center of the storm at 125 miles per hour with hurricane force winds—7s miles per hour or more—extending out war 100 miles in the northwest semicircle and 50 miles to the southeast. Ninety years ago, the Class of 1866 held a reunion at the Uni versity and a year later, the Alumni Association was organ ized. Alumni scattered all over the world now number 65,000. 29. 1959 iers Talks Inion, Industry ' (A*) —President Eisenhower, calling the ; -ike intolerable, summoned industry and the White House tomorrow. He plans to 'or a quick settlement. arlier told his news conference yesterday hp was ‘‘getting sick and tired [of the apparent impasse” in steel. He said emphatically the 76-day old walkout must not continue. Then Eisenhower put in tele phone calls for Roger M. Blough, board chairman of U.S. Steel Corp. and top industry leader, and David J. McDonald, president of the - striking Steelworkers Union. He arranged for them to come to separate While House meet' ings with their respective in dustry and union allies'tomor row morning. In New York, a spokesman for McDonald said the Steelworkers chief would'be on hand, ment groups were asked to pass Leaders of union and manage on the presidential bid to others on both sides. ] The industry also announced, j through a spokesman for j Blough, that it was accepting i Eisenhower's summons, which j it referred to as an invitation. 1 The stated purpose of the meet-1 ings will be to “urge both sides: to resume free collective bargain-' ing with a view to settlement of, the dispute in he interest of the, nation.” I The union walked out of bar- 1 gaining sessions in New York last Friday saying further talks were' useless. | The White House statement! about tomorrow’s conferences] made clear Eisenhower doesn’t, intend to haggle over the issues.! Earlier, lie had said he wasn’t, going to try to assess blame, fpr the deadlock. 3rd Radiation Band • Found by Satellite WASHINGTON (IP) The U.S. Paddle Wheel satellite has found a third, and previously undetect ed, band of intense and deadly radiation around the earth. It could mean added danger for the first man into space. The discovery of this new 310- mile-wide radiation band, starting about 1000 miles from earth, was announced yesterday by the Na tional Aeronautics and Space Administration. THE OAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA BARNES COLLEGE OUTLINES and famous'educational paperbacks ... average price $1.50 OVER 140 TITLES ON THE FOLLOWING SUBJECTS: i ANTHROPOLOGY engineering languages art ENGLISH MATHEMATICS BUSINESS ETIQUETTE MUSIC DRAMA - GOVERNMENT " PHILOSOPHY ECONOMICS HANDICRAFTS POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION HISTORY PSYCHOLOGY START RIQHT... bui| qour Outlines and Handbooks when . qou get qour textbooks! Algerians Ask Truce Talks With France TUNIS, Tunisia (/P) Algerian rebel leaders announced yester day they are ready to sit down with President Charles de Gaulle to discuss a cease-fire and his pormise of self-determination for Algeria. They said peace might come quickly. But France has refused to recognize the rebel government in exile and such talks still seemed remote. The statement from the govern ment in exile was in reply to de iGaulle’s Sept. 16 declaration charting a new course for the rebellious North African terri tory. De Gaulle promised Algeria’s nine million non-Europeans that within four years after fighting died down- they could vote on Al geria’s future. He listed three choices independence, integra tion with metropolitan France and limited autonomy. Ferhat Abbas, premier of the Schlow’s Inc. m FT*\< C®jj Meef your friends at Schiows Be sure to check KEELER’S front window for late text arrivals and Freshmen supplementary KEELER'S The University Bookstore inc. provisional rebel govemment.jlhe three-page called reporters together and read'Gaulle’s p'an. MONY Mutual of New York—first in America—no offers part time income opportunity under ne college student (over 21) associate underwritt program. Excellent advance career trainim Details at Student Employment office. Campi meeting October 6, 217 Boucke at 7:30 p.m. NOW AVAILABLE LO PADDLES • BEER SHIRTS • FAVOR OFFICER & CHAPTER ' Monogram lapel buttons lavqliers in stock ' Set for Big Weeke See Our Party Fay Order Now. •vJA**# wSlalk,. PUCAOO «. Ob & NOBLE EVERYDAY HANDBOOKS ON SALE AT 206 EAST COLLEGE AVE. Open 8:45 to 5:30 Opposite Old Ma books RECREATIONS SCIENCE SOCIOLOGY SPEECH STUDY AIDS response