The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 29, 1959, Image 5

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    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.
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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
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Details at Student Employment office. Campi
meeting October 6, 217 Boucke at 7:30 p.m.
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