PAGE TWO Nehru Says India to Fight for Victory NEW DELHI. India (AP) Prime Minister Nehru pledged In dia will fight invading Chinese "until final victory is achieved." As he spoke yesterday the De fense Ministry announced that ,Communist troops captured the key trading and Buddhist town of 'Towing-17 miles inside India— in bitter fighting. The Indian leader. suggested possible dramaticshift in govern- Incnt policy, with the possibility of accept - ng help from "friendly notions" instead of insisting on paving cash for arms. TN _LONDON, British Prime ;Minister Harold Macmillan .told the Hcuse of Commons that Brit ain is ready to provide practical 'help to India to defend itself „against the Chinese Communists. He did not spell out What he ;meant but it Was interpreted as a readiness to supply arms. Mac millan said he is- keeping in close touo with Nehru. , strapPed for cash to ,buy weanons to match Chinese fire power, has been hesitant 'about acquiring arms on any other than a -cash basis for fear this would end the government's nonaligned status, This dilemma has . ' yet to be °resolved. according to indica tions here. • Towang. a monastery town of 7.000 Along the historic India-Ti, bet trade route . , fell as Co_mmu nists' were reported still advanc ing in a f•ve-nronged offensive along the disputed border. NEHRU SAID the Chinese have thrown more than 30.000 well. trained troop; into the attack on northeastern India alone. A De- Stein!"eck Awarded '62 Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM. Sweden (AP) John • Steinbeck. whose novels brought him wealth and-fame as a ehamnion of the underdog. won the 062 Nobel Prize for literature yesterday. • The 60-yeai'-old author ; consid erably mellowed in his writing since "The Grapes of ,Vitath" -shocked the .social conscience of The 'United States, is the sixth American to win the t literary award. The Swedish Literary Academy. in awarding him the prirw, - cited "his at one and the same txmc realistic and imaginative writings. distinguished as they are, by a sympathetie humor and a srpcial perception!" ' TONIIIINT AT CENTZR, STAGS. New College Diner Do. ." t 1 'POE 'M,Ct‘ Ton ite-6 Free Tickets iti i "Razzle McDazzle": given away THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY . PARK. PENNSYLVANIA JAWAHARLAL NEHRU warns Chinese fense Ministry spokesman ack nowledged heavy Indian casual ties since the Reds launched their offensive iSaturday bue'v..laimed "We have inflicetd heavier casual ties on the aggressors. — . Nehru, long an exponent of pas sive resistance in India's fight for St&dents DemOristrate for Cuba VIENNA, Austria IR') -- More than'.2.,ooo Czechoslovak students marched on the U.S. Embassy in Prague' in a pro-Cuban demon stration yesterday and ripped the American flag froM its staff. Anti-U.S. demonstiations in_ other world capitals, including a series - of - bombings directed at US. property in South America,: were of legs'er violence. The Czech stud6nts attack • • the embassy with stones, smash ing half a dozen windows an. chanting. "Yankee go home" an. "Cuba si, Yankee. no." A U.S. Embassy spokesrna reached by telephone from Vi enna said Czech police stood b As they roet in the moonlight, he took her in his arms and whispered, "Mary!" 'And sheiireathlessly sighed, "John!" Unfortunately his name was Freddie and hers `vas Silvia, but that doesn't Matter 'cause they still had lots-of ftin together. • " independence from Britain, set the stage for a fight to death against the Chinese, whom he ac cused of "massive aggression." Speaking to govenznent infor mation minter;, Neh r u' de clared: "I want you all to,realize the shock we suffered during the last week or so. - We :are getting put of touch with realities in a modern world. We are living in an artificial atmosphere of our own creation and we have been shaken out of it." • Hailing Winston Chnrchill as a symbol in leading Britain, to 'vic tory, from the brink of defeat in World War 11, Nehru declared In dia must take the same de''iant stand. "'THERE IS NO other way out," the Indian leader declared. "We will go on resisting knd strength- , (ming ourselves until victory is *achieved." Even as Nehru• sought to raise the fighting spirit of his nation, Defense Ministry spokesman iannounced two new Chinese at tacks on thß a northetistern regidn. one 50 miles east of Longju,•and _the other 32 miles eiist of Longju. At the nothwest epic' of the dis puted Himalayan border,- Indian troops withdrew from a ,post in the Galway. valley. as the students came from a noisy anti-A m:e rican rally. climbed on the building and tore dow•n,the flag. The odeml3ll — strators pressed on the front door in an effort to burst in but the door had been locked. . NOW . . . 1:50-4:25=7:00-9:20 THE SENSATION ROCKING THE NATION! The personal story behind a sex survey...hal the contro versial best selling novel. `QM 'l' DE: , iv .aralit;:i=w - m..,2 reemamcsamiggizummionimmenstos. Ho one under 16 snit' be admitted tollen accompanied . by in adult. A TRUE LOVE STORY! , at the WEST HALLS' RE. Hi* Navy Checks Ship Destined for Cuba WASHINGTON (Al—President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Klarnshchev calmed ,the Cuban crisis only a. hit yesterday with conciliatory words, The basic_con flict:remained, and the V.S. naval armada maintained ,its . quaran.- tining . vigiL • It 'was in an air of uneasy cairn that! the first_Soviet ship—the tanker Bucharest—was checked throtigh the massive Arius block ade without heirig boarded or in spected -and a dozen other Rus sian vessels apparently turned back to avoid the picketing line of Warships. I ' WORDS AND E4 l C : T lONS thud postponed any! .real show doWn over Russia's building of a nuclear missile arsenal jin Cuba. deep in the Western jElernisphere. Several hours after the Bucha reit was given clearance to re sume its voyage -to Cuba, Assist anti Secretary of 'Defense Arthur Sylvester confirmed unofficial re ports that the - tanker had not been ,boarded. • He said the ship had been un der surveillance for I an extended pe6od before it made contact with the U.S. .blockade. Sylvester said the appearance - ofl the tanker floating Orin the water and the absence any. special hatches or unusual -design convinced the Navy captain who intercepted the Bucharest that she, was loaded with roil—not a prohibited offen sive weapon item. Sylvester said the.U.S. blockad- NOW PLAYING . at 2:05, 3:57; 5:49, 7:41, 9:33 COUilatiA PICTURES mimeo DAM SUSSIUND Patna . ~ . -HEAVYWEIGHT: STATE THEATRE, Stale College, Pa. NEW Ai/ •- TAriv y TONITE 7:10-9:10 P.M. ANOTHER TOWN . . . ..\44OTHER KIND OF LOVE . . One he couldn't rec: - ` he others he couldn't escape! ; I Kirk! .1 12 weeks Int • • [Douglas . ., ; :v - V-7: * ! :••• 'another lbwri [Echetirei s , i•t ,-••• • •Cird.Charisffe Iniztarieion • • ; • KIDDIE HALLOWEEN SHOW Saturday . . . 1 P.M. pin hi a collegla-Fe. -cairB -fa le gi co Z <C 10. •ffi 0- N w - m - I- 2 z ta 0. * * IR NO *JIHuRs * NOV • * 8:00p TICKET FRIDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1962 ing ship came "reasonably close." • to the. Bucharest and there was an exchange between the two skippers. Re declined tol defitte reasonably close or to say whethr er the exchange *as by radio,' visual signal or some other method. %. • THIS. TANKER. Sylvester said. is the only Communist vessel to have .passed through the quaran tine "so far as we know." Sylvester declined to say how many Russian ships are. still bound for Cuba or s , whether any more have been sighted headed that way__ ' He refused to say how f.r. U.S. ships and planes follow craft after they turn about. Nor would he indicate where contact .with the shipg mentioned was first estab- Eshed. Asked. where the doien Soidet vessels which were reported .to have turned around were headed, Sylvester replied: "I haven't Jaw idea—as long as they don't -go to Cuba." He added that the Navy. is satisfied "they've definitely turned back." SYL VESTER DISCLAIMED any knowledge that the Russian ships may -have rendezvoused in preparation for going into a pos sible convoy forination , under armed escort of Soviet warships. Earlier this week, Secretary of Defense Robert • S..' McNamara said about 25 Communist mer chant type ships had been seen on routes pointed toward Cuba.
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