PAGE IWO U.S. Pol[cy Firm On Red ,hirvii—JF WASHINGTON UPS—President Kennedy declared yes terday the United State. - .; still firmly opposes letting Chinese Communists into the United Nations or any of its agencies. Ills statement was read to newsmen at the White House by press secretary Pierre Salinger when Salinger was asked !whether there had been even the 1 x :shLthtest change in U.S. policy Choll inla l PAPS i i-I n S: n this point : ger said probably the best Tway to answer was to rend a !Nl:dement Kennedy had prepared 1 Bet K and Al in Soviet Session mose.,„ ('P) ---- Premier. Chou En-lai of Red China ex-, chan, , ;cd sharp words with So viet leaders at the Soviet Com munist party congress in the. Kremlin yesterday and then' launched a bitter attack on', President Kennedy. Reports of the affair, channeled out last night through tindkclos ahle sources, indicated the confu sion of Communist tongues got so pronounced at one time that So Viet Premier Khrushchev told the audience of 4,500 party delegates; to quit applauding Chou. Some friendly oil was poured on the troubled waters by Chou before he ended his criticism of Khrushchev for his attack( Tues day on Albanian Communist leaders. At the end he and Khrushchcvl shook hands in front of the andi-; ence, which applauded stormily.! The Chinese premier's speech came at the end of a day largely devoted to. attacks on old Stalin- isk aril so-called antiparly people hi the Soviet Union. Particular fire was turned on former Georgi Malenkov and an old party warhorse, former Dep uty Premier Lazar Kaganovich. Details of Chou's attack on Kennedy were not immediately learned. But he pledged Red China's support for the Soviet foreign policy and its Communist party prograin tvhile chiding Khrush cllcv for his attacks on Albania He warned delegates to the 22nd Soviet Communist party congress—which Albania is boy- coating—that open disputes be tween Communist parties only aid enemies of the Eastern bloc. All disputes among Communist parties should he settled by ne gotiation, lie declared, according to informed sources. Western newsmen were barred from the congress yesterday for the first time since it opened Ttwsday, but Chotes speech was reporte - d by the official Soviet news agency Tass SPLENDoIia 411 MASS AN ELIA KAZAN PRODUCTION WRITTEN BY WILLIAM !NI NATALIE VOOD , Au . D . ;E A ; c.B,Nß,Gsiir,t WARREN BEAITY for hi; news conference la.it weekl in ease he was asked about the situation. Nobody asked him then. The statement said: "The Unit ed States has always considered the government of the Republic of China the only rightful gov ernment representing China and has always given full support to the position and to all the rights of that government in the United Nations. Therefore, the United States firmly op poses the entry of the Chinese Communists into the United Nations or into any of the corn ; portents of the United Nations." When the question came up yesterday Salinger was told there had been speculation at the Unit ed Nations on whether explora tion of U.S. relations with Outer 'Mongolia meant a softening of opposition to seating Red ,China in the General Assembly. The Soviet Union's persistent, battle to seat Red China - is linked closely with U.N. applications by Outer Mongolia and Mauritania. After shelving the issue for 10 years, the General Assembly has voted for a full debate on admit- ling Red China. The United States for the first time supported the move for debate. Stress of Rocket Blasts May Affect Astronauts LOS ANGELES (AP) The stresses of blasting into space ;could turn future astronauts into temporary epileptics, a brain re search reported yesterday. I Scientists at UCLA's Brain Re search Institute have introduced animals to rocket forces such as those experienced by U.S. Mer cury astronauts Afan B. Shepard Jr. and Virgil 1. Grissom. The animals have become epileptic. PENN STATE PLAYER R E. 8 E N T Saroyan's THE CAVE DWELLERS Center I Stage Season Ticket $4 TECHNI WARNE THE DAILY COLLEGIAN UNIVERSITY PARK PENNSYLVANIA 'Stevenson Coils For Test Ban UNITED NATIONS, N. Y (!P)—The United States de-' Glared yesterday that unless nuclear test ban treaty is. signed it must prepare to take) all steps needed to protect its security, including tests in the y ; atmosphere. U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Ste-, venson delivered that warning to, the U.N. Assembly's main Politi-1 cal Committee, He challenged the Soviet Union to sign a treaty at, once. "I pray we do net lose anoth er chance to meet this challenge of our time and stop this death dance," he declared. Just before Stevenson opened debate on the test ban issue six nations most liable to be affected 'by fallout from Soviet tests made known their intention to put U.N. ;pressure on Premier Khrushchev to call off plans for testing a 50- megaton bomb. The six—Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Sweden, Canada and Japan—were reported ready to demand priority in the com mittee today for a resolution expressing concern over dan ger to world health from such a big bomb test. It contained a solemn appeal to Khrushchev not to test the bomb at the end of the month, as he has an nounced he plans to do. A Canadian delegation spokes man denied, however, that Cana da had agreed to co-sponsor the resolution. He said Canada still had the matter under considera tion. Stevenson said the United States was prepared to join Brit ain and the Soviet Union at the negotiating table now, "But until there is a treaty and tests can be stopped," he added, "the United States, as a responsi ble nation, must prepare to take all steps necessary to protect its own security and that of the. world community." What does the word mean to you? Perhaps it suggests a style of music or a vague span of years somewhere in the past, or both. In many minds today it's a motley term compounded of one part nostalgia, one part early jazz, and five parts tricked-up corn in the catchall category of "honky-tonk." Actually ragtime began as a definite style—a well-delin eated new approach to piano music. And it can be dated accurately, from its ground swell in the early 1890's, to the first published rag in 1897. From there it rocketed to popularity in America and then in Europe, first with the professional entertainers and then with every parlor piano plunker who could master its tricky but exhilarating syncopations. It wasn't all ragtime in those years any more than popular music today is all jazz. But ragtime got people excited; ragtime quickly became a national issue. In 1909 Joseph Hofmann, the eminent Polish-American pianist was asked, "Can the playing of ragtime prevent one from becom ing a good musician?" His reply: "Can one who aspires to become a good musician bear the agony of playing ragtime? No!" But Thomas Preston Brooke, a prominent conductor said, "Ragtime is no fad as many have declared, and will not die out. It pleases the God-given sense of rhythm, and will endure as long as warm blood flows in human veins." The arguments forgotten, ragtime went on to become the bedrock of popular song and the rhythmic backbone of jazz. Without the freedom and vitality of ragtime our popular music might never have popped from the ooze which was the pallid ballad and warmed-over European music hall ditty of the 'Bo's and early '9o's. But ragtime, the happy music, saved the day. And one can ponder the co-incidence that ragtime ap peared during those lusty years between the Gay '9o's and the First World War—surely the happiest and the most optimistic years of our national life. Music of this colorful era is best presented on its own terms, showcased amid the manners and customs, the fashions and modes of the time. Fortunately a forgotten entertainment of the time helps to make this possible. HEAR MAX MORATH AND HIS RAGTIME REVISITED Schwab Aud. October 21 Planeloads of Algerians Sent Home From Paris PARIS (AP)—Planeloads of Al- darmes, took stern measures gerians, many of them nursing prevent any new turnouts by A bandaged wounds, bruises anckgerian nationalists. scars from battles with police in! The first two deportation Nigh anticurfew demonstrations, werelcarried 15 , 1 passengers plus shipped home yesterday as l riot police guards. French authorities started ado The deportees were bound ft portation airlift. !Constantine, in eastern Algeri, Security forces, reinforced by ; where they will be taken to force about 3,000 riot police and gen-lresidence in their native village N M,„., a p., Carroll E ker , t•- . ~,,...„, 4,, ,i, • : rid $` • ' ,N ''''':•%",•';'l ,a • • 'fi ..•• ei -",,,i, u S n -,, • to f k-: ,i the to starrms • 4 , .': '''::': JAMES SHIGETA , s.. x , ~,,, , , 4 .4 ,4 V ': ' ...., : .• : 3 '.. ( ::,.... 4 .... i t ' ' S _,,,, Feat: 1:30, 3:31, 5:32, 7:33, 9:34 No Shoe Repair Job Too Tough • • . Too Small Girls! Get your shoes dyed now to match that dreamy Junior Prom Dress any shade you can possibly imagine. You'll be the belle of the ball[ Keep Your Shoes Repaired . . . Stop In Today CAMPANIS SHOE STORE and REPAIR 348 E. COLLEGE AVE. PHONE: AD 8-8172 WHAT IS RAGTIME Admission $l.OO TICKETS AT HUB DESK FRIDAY. OCTOBER 20. 19 STATE THEATRE 4405, B.P.M.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers