The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 01, 1960, Image 3

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    SATURDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1960
Ike, Macmillan to Confer
About UN Developments
WASHINGTON (1P) British Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan will fly here from New York today to talk with
President Eisenhower about the . East-West crisis in the
United Nations.
One of the principal problems before the two Western;
ileaders when they meet at thc
'White House tomorrow morning ,
undoubtedly will be the heavy
neutralist pressure developing in
the U.N. General Assembly for a ,
face-to-face meeting between Ei- 1
senhower and Soviet Premier
Khrushchev.
White House press secretary
James C. Hagerty announced
the meeting between Eisenhow
er and Macmillan, together
with Prime Minister Robert C.
Menzies of Australia. Hagerty
said Eisenhower has wanted to
have a talk with Menzies, and it
was decided this could be com
bined with the session with
Macmillan.
Hagerty's announcement was
made at Denver, where Eisen
hower yesterday attended funeral
services for Mrs. Eisenhower's
mother, Elivera Doud.
The President is due back in
Washington this afternoon.
Some hours before the meet
ing of the President and the
prime ministers was formally
announced, five leaders of coun
tries which are not aligned with
either the Western or Soviet
power blocs presented a reso
lution- at the United Nations
calling for a renewal of person
al contact between Eisenhower
and Khrushchev.
Both British and U.S. diplomats
privately said they did not believe
Macmillan would bring any pres
sure to bear on the President to
meet Khrushchev. Nevertheless.
Quarrel Splits
Laotian State,
Brings Chaos
VIENTIANE, Laos (/11—A quar
rel that could split the Laotian
government wide open erupted
yesterday between neutralist Pre
mier Prince Souvanna Photnna
and Capt. Kong Le, the August
coup leader who put him in pow
..
er.
The splintering made the situa
tion begin to resemble the chaos
in the Congo.
Kong Le refused to recognize
cease-fire orders and said his
troops will pursue their campaign
against the rightist forces of rebel
Gen. Phoumi Nosavan despite
peace talks under way at Luang
Prabang, the royal capital.
The captain displayed no such
militancy toward the Communist
led Pathet Lao. a rival group in
Laos' three-cornered civil war.
"We will keep fightingfighting until the
Phoumi men surrender. Souvan
na is too soft," Kong Le said.
"Souvanna is the head of the gov
ernment and should be respected,
but if 'he does not lead the peo
ple in the right direction they
should throw him out."
;U.S. officials were reported well
Lemnitzer Gets ; aware that the British prime
minister, long an advocate of sum-
Twining's Post Imit diplomacy, would very much
like to see a renewal of contact
WASHINGTON UP) The na-; if it were poss ibl e.
tion's military forces bade an of-I
fectionate . ceremonial farewell Dems Map Final Plans
yesterday to Gen. Nathan F. Twi
ning.
Twining, 62, one of the last of
the great World War II combat
generals to retire from active;
service, turned over chairmanship!
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to Gen.
Lyman L. Lemnitzer, 61.
Gen. George H. Decker, 58, presidency.
moved up ta - succeed Lemnitzer! Aides said that under present
as Army chief of staff. ;campaign plans, Kennedy's Hyan-
Twining retired to the thunder;nis POrt respite will be his last
of a 19-gun salute after three ;prior to the Nov. 8 election. The
years as the nation's top military senator leaves for Chicago early
officer. Itoday.
Murphy's is headquarters for
Official Penn State SOUVENIRS
Men's and Women's fleece lined Sweatshirts
$2.98 SMALL, MEDIUM, LARGE
Z4.t.(likw‘TA‘mee.
THE COMPLETE VARIETY STORE
HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (JP)
Sen. John F. Kennedy took a
rainy day off from his presiden
tial campaign yesterday while his
staff mapped plans for a final
drive to Election Day and slapped
back at Vice President Richard
M. Nixon, GOP candidate for the
131 S. Allen Street
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Castro Hits
Presidential
Candidates
HAVANA (IP) —No matter ,
which candidate wins the U.S.
presidential election, Prime
Minister Fidel Castro made it
a certainty yesterday that he
will have no friend in the
'White House.
Castro used a television panel„
show as his stump for assailing:
Richard M. Nixon and John
Kennedy. He called them "cow-;
'ardly hypocrites."
The original purpose of the'
panel show was for newsmen to
discuss Castro's visit to the Unit
'ed States and the U.N. Castro;
walked into the television studio,
unannounced and took over.
; If Soviet' Premier Nikita
I(lirushcliev spent six months in,
the United States he could draw,
more votes than Kennedy, CL.stro!
told the laughing panel.
Castro—who is 34 and 'sprouts !
a growth of chin whiskers—called
Kennedy, 43, and Nixon. 47, "two
'ignorant, beardless kids," and
"puppets who are toys of the,
'great interests."
The biting attack on both U.S.
; presidential candidates was a con
tinuat ion of an earlier Castro
!blast in the United States in New
York last Monday.
That first attack was cut off by
a sharp reprimand from U.N.
General Assembly President Fred
erick H. Boland of Ireland in front
of the full 96-nation gathering.
Castro found nothing good
about Nixon or Kennedy.
"They are incapable of standing
before a tribune to utter a single
Itruth," shouted Castro to his tele
vision audience.
GE Workers to Strike '
NEW YORK VP) A nation-I
wide strike against the General
Electric Co. was called by the
International Union of Electricals
Yorkers yesterday to start mid-;
night tonight.
FRENCH 1-2
Objectives of Adjectives
Prof. Amour
A broad study of the adjective bon in syntax with ban soir, bon ami and
bon grooming. Lecture on bon grooming with 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic
illustrating the fact that 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic replaces oil that water
removes. Examination of adverse effects nn hair resulting from drying
action of water compounded by hair creams and alcohol tonics. Exhibi
tion of how bad grooming puts you out of context with the opposite
sex. Special emphasis on how 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic keeps hair neater
longer and attracts women as Paris does tourists. Homework drills on
Saturday evenings stressing plurals rather than singulars. Course aims
at getting along in any language ... especially the language of love.
West
With
Halts Trade
East Germany
BONN, Germany VII)----The West began a reverse squeeze
on the Communists in the Berlin dispute yesterday by order
ing a halt in its trade with East Germany. It could bring
sharp repercussions.
The action threatened to wipe out 11 per cent of the total
trade of the Soviet Union's East
German satelite, but authorities
here said the act was essentially
More countermeasures to Com
munist pressure on Berlin were
reported in the works, but
Western officials said they
would remain mum about what
was planned in order to keep
the Soviet Union and East Ger
many guessing.
"They haVe been trying to chop
away at our rights in what has
come to he called the salami
method." one high-ranking West
ern official said. "Now we are
going to do some salami slicing."
Felix von Eckhardt, pr es s
spokesman for Chancellor KOnrad
Adenauer, announced the action
and called it a reprisal against
Communist restrictions on travel
in Berlin and the East's renuncia
tion of the four-power occupation
status of Berlin.
It involved notification to
East Germany that the Ade
nauer government was exer
cising its option to cancel the
trade agreement with East Ger
many effective Jan. L 1961.
The move was potentially ex
plosive. When rumors of a possi-
Lutheran Student Communions.
9 A.M.
9:20 A.M.
10:40 A.M.
Sunday, October 1
World Wide Communion Sunday
AT GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corner of College Ave. and Atherton St:
ble Bonn trade embargo began
circulating a few weeks ago, East
German officials replied with a
veiled threat to slap a blockade
on Berlin.
"We have the longer lever,"
Heinrich Rau, East German dep
uty premier, said. Berlin lies 110
miles inside Communist territory
and West Berlin is dependent on
transport for its life.
Adenauer's economics minis
ter, Ludwig Erhard, had op
posed a trade embargo for fear
the Communists would retaliate
with a blcckade similar to that
of 1948 and that NATO forces
might be needed to keep access
open into West Berlin.
But first Conmumist reaction
was cautious and most Western
authorities in Bonn said privately
they did not believe the East
;would respond with anything so
dramatic as a blockade.
Pi Beta Phi
Arrowcraft Sale
Oct. 6 2.8 p.m.
202 S. Allen St.
State College Women's Club Bldg.
PAGE THREE