THURSDAY. DECEA/ iBER 3. 1959 mis Peace Talks edwill Journey Eke PI For Gc WASHINGT< yesterday the ma beginning today, United States is peace. )N (JP) President Eisenhower declared for aim of his 22,000-mile visit to 11 countries, will be to prove to foreign peoples that the a “good partner” in the search for a just The Preside: Courts ii May As Of 2 Americans HAVANA (fP) Military tri bunals yesterday weighed the fate ef three Americans caught up in a roundup of suspected foes of Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s re gime. Accused of counterrevolution aiy activity, two face death sen tences demanded by the prosecu tion. But there was speculation that deportation, not the firing squad, awaited them. A long pris on term has been demanded for the third. The three, all pilots, are: Frank Austin Young, 38, from Miami, Fla., who returned to Cuba last September, three weeks after his release from a Havana prison on currency manipulation charges. He was accused of lead ing an armed band of rebels. He denied the charge. The prosecu tion asked the death sentence. Rafael del Pino, 33, from Miami, Cuban-born naturalized American captured last July. He is ac cused of trying to help anti-Cas tro Cubans flee the country. The prosecution asked the death sen tence Peter John Lambton, 24, from Nassau, Bahamas, London-born naturalized American captured with Young. Lambton said he came to Cuba to take pictures of counterrevolutionists for sale to American magazines. The prose cution asked a 30-year term. House Lifts Sports Bon HARRISBURG. (/P) —Blue Laws —The House completed final legislative action on a proposal exempting a number of sports and recreational activities from the Sunday blue laws. By a vote of 151-26 the House approved Senate amendments adding basketball and bowling to these exempted activities: golf, tennis, boating, swimming, picnicking and target | shooting. I TODAY ONLY! 1 ff pre-Christmas ... fi Book Sale 1 up to 207° ° FF I •Students, now is the time to get a book for a Christmas present or for required reading in your courses. • Course books incliide books in literature, phil osophy, an :hropolcgy, science, math, history and many other courses. • Best sellei DUS. STA •Books on Series. •Plus thou only i sands of paperbacks reduced today Nittany News . . . next to the Comer Room on West College Avenue OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 10 t is scheduled to leave Washington after making a broadcast to the nation about his 19-day journey. That' trip will take him, at its farthest 1 point, to four days of talks with Prime Minister Nehru of India, then bring him back to Paris for a Western summit meeting Dec. 19-21. Discussing the trip and other foreign issues at his meeting with newsmen; Eisenhower made these main points: • He has received medical clear ance from his doctors who found in a physical examination three days ago that he was “capable of doing it.” • Nehru is right in trying to settle the border dispute with Red China by negotiation and that China’s leaders are wrong in us ing force. • The President will be pre pared to discuss the border issue and other specific problems with Nehru, including hopeful signs of an improvement in relations be tween Pakistan and India. • Prime Minister Nobusuke Ki shi of Japan will visit the United States, probably in January, and is expected to bring completion of negotiations for a revised U.S.- Japanese mutual defense treaty. • Eisenhower is more hopeful now than a few months back that some constructive result will emerge from U.S.-British nego tiations with the Soviet Union for a ban on nuclear weapons testing backed up by an international inspection system. Cuba Lives Senate Cuts Increase Proposed for School Aid HARRISBURG (JP) —The Sen ate Rules Committee yesterday scaled down to 16 million dollars the cost of a proposal to increase state aid to schools. The figure compares with the 55-million-dollar estimate as pass ed by the House and 200 millions originally requested by organized teachers and school directors to help hard-hit school districts. But Senate Republicans were divided on how the 16 million dol lars could be raised to finance the boost. s include. UGLY AMERICAN. EXO IUS SEEKERS, etc. Pogo, Peanuts, Beat Poetry, Outline THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Investigators Puzzled By Plane Wreck WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. -(tP) —| Federal and state investigators!# sifted through the wreckage ofM an Allegheny Airlines plane for§ clues yesterday on why the crafts? crashed, killing 25 of 26 persons S aboard. g One of the biggest puzzles isS the role of the experienced pilotf# just before the Martin Executive}? type twin-engine aircraft plunged g into the rock-strewn slope of» 11400-Xoot high Bald Eagle Moun-S tain. David Miller, senior vice presi dent of the airlines, said there was no evidence that the pilot, 30-year-old Thomas R Goldsmith, made a wrong turn in an attempt to land at the Williamsport-Mon toursville airport during a snow storm Tuesday. “The man had flown the route since 1950,” he said. “Every pilot of our system is alert to the moun tain. To me it is inconceivable that he turned into it.” The single survivor of the dis aster. Louis Matarazzo, 35, a Springfield, Pa., textile executive, was under sedation after suffer ing an eye injury and burns ovei most of his body. sutton place will open at 1 p.m. EVERYday starting today. remember I PI (where the western auto store meets the sidewalk) K««twraim««'«m