PAGE rwo China Readies Welcome for X' TOKYO (/P) —Red China expressed delight at the results of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's American tour and readied a welcome for him in Peiping yesterday. “The Chinese people rejoice m comrade Khrushchev’s success,’’ said the official Peiping People's Daily. Immense .delight was reported by Ta Kung Pao, another daily reflecting of ficial views, Radio Peiping said. %' Consents _ . a „ ■ j The Soviet Premier left Mos-| IQ g er | m icilks cow bj an *-° r thc iotb anmver -' , sary of his most powerful Asia Prmmoi^k.™Kh, ( usla"hev S °pub- * celebrated tomorrow.; liely confirmed yesterday h.s, H * d ,?P alture was; only .'.O hours agicement with President Eisen-? nd n V T nl^ e j of ? 1 - ro^uimn £ huwei that negotiation-, on the 1 * 1001 * ke United States, future of Berlin wilt lie conduct-! The visit to China gives ed without a time limit j Khrushchev a chance to fill in US. officials said this agree- Mao Tze-tung, chairman of the merit ended the Sowet tlueat to| Chinese Communist Parly, on West Beilin. I details of his 13-day visit lo the This is also the agreement] United Stales and perhaps to which, so fai as Eisenhower is caution the Peiping hierarchy ! concerned, cleared the mad to a] against rocking the boat with I summit conference on Beilin and fresh military adventures. I othei cold war ptoblems. Such a Relaxation of tension was the' conference may be held late tllls .avo\vod aim 0 f Khrushchev's trip yea. oi caily next yeai, possibly; lo , h(? United States> w hich the n i . i .iPiemier called very successful, the State Department reportedl „ . ~ . „ „. . ’ to ambassadors of the other 14,, B(,fo , re takin S off for Peiping North Atlantic Treaty endorsed as correct President, ye-tei day on the Khi ushchev-Ki-' Elsonho ' v P r s . news conference, senhower talks which ended a t account of their agrement on Bei- ; Camp David, Md,, Sunday. ]" n I Eiench envoy Herve Alphand' We have indeed agreed that said he understood the Camp Da-the negotiations on the Berlin virt agreement made no change.question must be resumed and whales or m the rights of the Unit- that no time limit should be set ed Stales, Britain and France to for them, but that they must not keep their tioops as a protection’bc protracted indefinitely," the for the 2> 4 million people of West Premier told a lass news agency Berlin, correspondent Reds Stage Walkout UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. laya to put the Tibetan issue /-n, a lu.i ' before the Assembly for full* (/P) _ A mass Soviet bloc* scale debate . walkout m the UN General 1 Those two nations said in mak- Assembly vesterdav set the * n - the ™l u « st «‘ e re is “pnma • facie evidence of an attempt to stage lor bitter debate on destroy the traditional way of life* charges that Communist China! 0 * the ' Tlbet ;? n pcop!< f and their ’i . . religious and cultuial autonomy.; is 11 % tug to desit o\ the Tibetan “in sucb circumstances,” theyi people's way of life. ladded, “the United Nations hasi r.„ , , . , iboth a moral obligation and a" tirin and its eight ’ satellites left! le6a i,t* ghl to dlscuss the situation.; the Assembly lust betore the , T* 10 9° ve fn*nents concerned speech ot T. F. Tsiang. the Na- 1 furi J>f r consider that this As tionalist Chinese ambassador. i sembly has a duty to call _ for “From this rostrum, as repre- restoration of the religious sentative of China, I declare that, and c, V of the people Fiee China condemns the Com- °* T,bet - inunist atrocities in Tibet and. The Soviet walkout indicated a welcomes any proposal to examineistrong fight in the committee. But them in the present session of the; Iceland and Malaya—who have Assembly,” Tsiang asserted. the support of the United States The Assembly's 21 - nation —were confident they would win Steering Committee was expect- enough votes to assure a recom ed to act, probably today, on mcndation to the Assembly that' the request of Ireland and Ma- 'it consider the Tibetan issue. ! • Quiet Study Environment • Fine Food Meal Tickets Still Available. Your choice of: 7 days 3 meals a day 7 days —2 meals a day 5 days 3 meals a day 5 days 2 meals a day i /! / / fit) DININO and \ J4iii ROOM,NO • Lodging 207 EAST PARK AVENUE - Call AD 8-1330 - THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA [lke to Take Vacation In California WASHINGTON OPi Presi- being oiled yesterday in the likely dent Eisenhower will f]v to advent President Eisenhower is un- Southern California hideaway to- a b;e to win agreement from union day for an 8-day golfing vacation, j and industry leaders to end the hoping the crisp desert air will 77-day-old steel strike, chase away his stubborn cold. Action to invoke emergency The President will stay at the provisions of the Taft-Hartlev home of his frequent companion Taw, with an 80-day cooling-off and old friend, Washington busi-jperiod. may come quickly if Ei nessman George E. Allen, oi La;senhower’s separate talks Quinta. The two often are togetherlWednesday with negotiators from for vacations, golf and bridge.; both sides do not break the dead- They own farms a couple of milesjlock aP P^^ ea i Ge f ttySb # re ’ u Pa \ , J The President took a direct ' i»J!Jo kLJ!in Eisenhov. ei tOjb and j n the situation Monday. - e e , lei f tC H rno 2 n Xr tbe |say in g he was getting sick and ?e?lh'ner- of the impLe Which deep pilm Win»- Alrnorf ? on ened last Friday when the United irrwlps fmn fa n ’Hv* L r Steelworkers of America broke imites from La Quinta, by sor 6, off industry .iabor talks in New ! Eisenhower told his news con- X on h' roun ds they were get ference Monday he picked up the tin ® no place ’ beginnings of the cold early this In advance oi Eisenhowers! month during his trip to Europe meeting with the rival sides, some ,and hasn’t been able to shake it. federal officials said they doubt | Reporters who see the Presi- even his personal intervention ident often didn't notice it until will bring the industry and union Monday, when the President'any closer together, sounded hoarse. i Rocky Mountains Hit by Snowstorms DENVER, Colo. {PP) A fat.' wet snowstorm swirled out of the 1 Rocky Mountains yesterday fall ing on the eastern slope like a; heavy destructive arm. Tree limbs] cracked like rifle shots under the weight and power and travel were disrupted. ’ The lead-heavy snow ciippled I the area from Cheyenne, Wyo., to ;Pueblo, Colo, a distance of 250 j miles along the base of the moun i tains. 1 At the beginning of this cen jtury, on the average day, 15 mil [lion newspapers were purchased. ! Today, 57 million newspapers are j purchased on the average day. § CX2 1 Send the Collegian The Daily Collegian Box 261 State College, Pa. Send To: (please print) Street City State ( ) Payment Enclosed: { )$3 semester ( )$5 year Make checks payable to The Daily Collegian ( ) Bill: Name (please print) Street City IMMIMMIIIIIIUmiHIIIIMMIMtHfMIWMmiNiIiIMtIIMIMHMMHIIIMMIIMtMmimiIimtiIKMIIt Ike May Use Legal Force In Steel Strike WASHINGTON GPl—The gov- ernment’s legal machinery Nelson, Industralist, Dies in California LOS ANGELES UY> Death] ended the career yesterday of 'Donald M. Nelson, whose indus- 1 1 tual know-how helped whip the Axis m World War 11. ! Nelson. 70, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in a hospital where ‘he had been under treatment I more than a month. He suffered a similar stroke last month. _ .. . . , Jl&Ut&i AihERToH-vJT. . . • *'' ■ " KATf. coins; ■..•:••• ' OPih * OAFS •• i* AfSi'KVATiOS* •/ -V.s'TC.4>:.'A.', ‘ & iOOGJ,f/. ' - ."sUNb>'Vs'. ; J2 10 ' ''' BIG issues a TODAY! Mail or bring to Col legian Office in Car negie or Call UN 5-2531. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 1959 Cochran Resigns Post Dr. Robert G. Cochran has re signed as director of the Nuclear Reactor and associate professor of nuclear engineering to head the Department of Nuclear Engi neering at Texas A. and M. Col lege, College Station, Texas. Now: 2:12, 4:06, 6:00, 7:45, 9:40 Ernest Borgnine " The Rabbit f-AMniwrEDEUmisfi NEWS CARTOON ★NITTANY NOW—DOORS OPEN 6:45 GARY COOPER AUDREY HEPBURN MAURICE CHEVALIER “LOVE IN THE AFTERNOON”