PAGE TWO Anti-U.S. Hares in HAVANA (4))—Every anti-U.S. word Fidel Castro utters in New York is being magnified in Havana into the bitterest anti-American campaign in Cuban history. Maj. Raul Castro, acting prime minister in his brother's absence, led off the campaign early yesterday. Mobutu Gives Rule of Congo To Commission LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congol Col. Joseph Mobutu set up a Congolese technical commission yesterday to supersede both the ousted regime of Communist-sup ported Premier Patrice Lumumba; and the shadow government of Premier-designate Joseph Ileo. Mobutu, pushing efforts to "neutralize" both Lumumba and, President Joseph Kasavubu, said; the commission will operate the government until Jan. 1. Its head : is Justin Bomboko, currently serving as Kasavuhu's chief dele gate at the United Nations in New York. He was Lumumba's foreign minister, but later sup ported Kasavubu. The commission issued a proc lamation threatening expulsion of! any foreign newsman sending out "the contradictory communiquesi of the rival parties." It accused Lumumba of trea: son and described Col. Mobutu as: "the man who has delivered us . from Communist colonialism and! from Marxist-Leninist imperial-1 ism in the true higher interests of the country." The commission said it "is alone authorized to conduct the general policy of the country, to assure respect for legality and to repre sent the Congo Republic abroad." Expect Sacrifices To Lead - Kennedy WASHINGTON (W,--Sen. John F. Kennedy told the nation last night it must expect sacrifices to preserve U.S. world leadership against the efforts of Commu nist enemies seeking to under mine the ,peace. "There is very little time," the Democratic predential nominee said. "The enemy is lean and hungry—and we are the only sentinel at the gate." In his first nationwide tele-i vision speech of the campaign, with his immediate audience the; diners at a $lOO-a-plate Demo-! cratic dinner, Kennedy said thei nation needs to mobilize under new leadership. PLAYERS TO HOLD OPEN HOUSE TEA The Penn State Players will hold their first Open House Tea tomor row in the Players' Green Room at Schwab Auditorum. This infor mal social will run from three to five in the afternoon and marks the opening of the Players' social season. Refreshments are Free Everyone is Welcome to Attend Campaign Havana He declared Fidel and the Cu ban delegation were being abused in New Uork and that this could lead to the expulsion of the Unit ed States from the Guantanamo naval base in eastern Cuba. Raul shouted to a hastily called early morning mass rally of 50,- 000 persons in the square of the presidential palace: "It's within our possibilities in a determined moment to reclaim that piece of our national territory." It was the most direct threat against the U.S. base since Cas tro took power. Castro's propaganda machine newspapers and radio—told and retold how Castro left one New York hotel for "refuge" in the Negro section of Harlem. They cited pressure and alleged mis treatment at a mid-Manhattan hotel and blamed the State De partment. They told, too, Castro's story of overcharges by the operator of the first hotel, but didn't mention that Castro was paying a still higher price for :omits in Har lem. The semi-official newspaper Revolution ran a banner head line that proclaimed: "We will nationalize them down to even their Yankee spies." It warned that abuse of Castro would brink counteraction to Americans in Cuba. To raise their impressive crowd after midnight, the Cuban regime used a new technique. It asked Castro's chain of radio and tele vision station's to summon people for the meeting.• Most of those who attended were members of well-organ ized labor federations. They heard Raul and Cuban Presi dent Osvaldo Dorticos attack the United States and U.S. Am bassador Philip Bonsai. Some quarters predicted that Bonsai soon would return to Washington, leaving the embassy in the hands of a charge d'affaires. Cuba has had no ambassador in Washington for nearly a year. New Bishop Welcomed ALTOONA, Pa. (Th About 1,000 members of the Altoona- Johnstown Roman Catholic Dio cese turned out yesterday to wel come their new Bishop the Most Rev. J. Carroll McCormick. The throng gathered outside the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacra ment as Bishop McCormick ar rived by motorcade from the air port. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Nixon Urges U.S. Stand Behind Ike 'EN ROUTE WITH NIXON (EP) —Vice President Richard M. Nixon yesterday urged all America to put partisanship aside and stand united behind President Eisenhower while regimented Communists march lockstep through the United Nations. • The Republican presidential nominee went even further and proposed a political moratorium on talk of American weakness or division that would all but gag his Democratic rival, Sen. - John F. Kennedy, on what Kennedy calls the central issue of the campaign. And Nixon promised flatly to continue some sort of spying on Russia if he reaches the White House. That was while the vice presi dent was driving to keep Pennsyl vania, with its crucial 32 electoral votes, and Michigan, with 20, in the Republican camp in the No vember election. Subscription Copies cat HUB desk ONLY F'.'' . :.r:. -. Aga - ms - Timill out today Sold at: HUB MALL DINING HALLS GRAHAMS NITTANY NEWS U.N. Session-- (Continued from, page one) section, to meet Castro at his hotel. In the lobby, Castro's leftist agrarian reform direc tor, Antonio Nunez Jiminez, greeted Khrushchev with a Latin-style embrace. Khrushchev spent 40 minutes in Castro's suite at the hotel, to which the Cuban leader had transferred Monday night after furious arguments with the man agement of a midtown hostelry, Khrushchev made another tlis-; play of Soviet-Cuban solidarity as! the delegates convened for the! momentous meeting. He strode to! the front of the empty speaker's! rostrum and grasped the Cuban; leader by the hand, for all to see. Rioting on the streets outside; also marked the opening of the, United Nations General Assem bly. There were unconfirmed re ports of injuries as police afoot and on horseback charged excit able demonstrators. Several arrests were made as: police followed orders to drive the demonstrators back and break: up their massed ranks of hun-; dreds into groups of no more than' 25 persons. DNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1960 Steelworkers and Health ATLANTIC CITY (VP) The million-member United Steel workers Union revealed plans yesterday to establish a series of hospitals and clinics in steel towns to combat rising medical costs and seek better quality health care. NOW Kirk Kirk Douglas - Kim Novak "Strangers When We Meet" BEGINS THURSDAY KfUilk.morm ifelika•Eif '' ißiNO3.lestaglaw NO ONE ADMITTED After FEATURE STARTS • 7 WARNER EPS- :••••' N NOW: OPENS 6:45 P.M. Frank Sinatra - Dean Martin "OCEANS I 1" .M!INIMIMMW