The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 21, 1960, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Khrushchev Claims Reds
Have Nuclear Submarines
MOSCOW (?P)—The Soviet Union, like the United States,
has rocket-carrying nuclear submarines, Soviet Premier
Khrushchev said yesterday.
Khrushchev made his first public challenge to U.S. claims
of a monopoly in nuclear submarine construction near the
Nixon, Kennedy
End Debates
On TV Tonight
NEW YORK (AN The fourth
radio-television debate between
the Iwo major presidential candi
dates will be limited to one hour
tonight.
The debate will go on the air
at 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
It will be broadcast and televised
by ABC, NBC and CBS, and
broadcast by the Mutual network.
On the air, Nixon will stand on
the left and Kennedy on the right
of a foot-high stage, each pro
vided with a podium and stool.
They will face a panel of four:
radio-television newscasters '—
John Edwards of ABC, Walter
Cronkite of CBS, Frank Singiserj
of Mutual, and John Chancellor'
of NBC. Quincy Howe of ABC
will serve as moderator.
There will be no live audience,l
except for three news pnotogral
phers and three reporters.
Nixon will open the program!
with an eight-minute statement,f
after which Kennedy will be al-;
lowed a similar period.
The next half-hour will be de
voted to questions and answers
from the panel—with each can
didate having 2 1 / 2 minutes to re
ply, and 1 1 / 2 minutes to comment
on an opponent's answer.
The final 10 minutes will be
divided equally between Kennedy
and Nixon for closing statements.
Starlite Drive-In Theatre
Benner Pike Between
State College & Bellefonte
FRI., OCT. 21 - SAT., OCT. 22
"Bens Are Ringing"
In cinemascope & Color
Judy Holliday - Dean Martin
Feature at 7:30
also
"The Little Hut"
In Color
Ara Gardner David Niven
Stewart Granger
Feature at 9 :50
end of a wide-ranging, two-hour
and 20-minute speech before
15,000 cheering Moscovites.
It was his first address since
he returned last Friday from
his desk-pounding visit to the
U.N. General Assembly in New
York.
The premier assailed colonial
ism. militarism and brinkman
ship, all of which he blamed sole
ly on the West.
He declared the question of
divided Germany must be solved
in 1961 and proposed a summit
meeting after the American presi
dential elections to tackle that
and the Berlin problem.
He described the current U.N.
assembly session as perhaps the
most important since the United
Nations was formed 15 years ago.
and said it was worthwhile and
necessary for him to attend.
He suggested chiefs of state
and government should take
part regularly in the assembly's
work and called for an extra
ordinary session next March
and April to seek an agreement
in principle on general and
complete disarmament."
He said Soviet proposals on dis
armament are completely realis
tic. He denounced Western propo
sals before the U.N. General As
sembly as designed to cover up
an arms race policy.
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Reds Press
Disarm Plan
Agreement
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R')—
Communist nations kept up their
fire in the United Nations yester
day by renewing charges that the.
United States and its allies are
trying to stall progress toward
East-West agreement on disarma
ment.
Foreign Ministers Adam Ra
packi of Poland and Vaclav David
of Czechoslovakia both accused
the West of stepping up the arms
race.
Rapacki proposed a special ses
sion of the UN General Assem
bly next spring if there is no
agreement by then on a treaty to
end tests of nuclear weapons.
This is the first time the Com
munists have suggested putting
suspension of nuclear tests before
a special session.
Both Rapacki and David ap
pealed for unanimous support of
a Soviet resolution on complete
and general disarmament.
Chang May Plan U.S. Visit
SEOUL, South Korea (4 3 )
South Korea's Premier John M.
Chang may visit the United
States in early 1961.
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New Ambassador Arrives
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(JP) 7 -- Roy Rubottom, the new
U.S. ambassador to Argentina,
presented his credentials to Pres
ident Arturo Frondizi yeSterdaY.
. • ChE, EE lE, ME, Eng Sci (BS, MS)
e ChE, Chem (BS, MS, PhD)
e EE, ME (BS, MS) C.C.
• lE, Math, Eng Sci (BS, MS)
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1960
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