± xon, Kennedy In Midwest, Pennsylvania Republican Denounces Democrat Claims Candidate Desires Recession $AVENPORT, Iowa MA - Vice- President Richard M. Nixon de- clared yesterday Sen. John F. Kennedy is betting on a reces- sion but that the American peo- ple are going to show Nov. 8 they don't agree with him. The Republican presidential nominee toured normally Repub- lican downstate Illinois, accusing his opponent of making "the most disgraceful, irresponsible statement of the campaign on the nation's economic health." The Vice-President is devoting yesterday and today largely to an all-out effort to capture Illi- nois' 27 vital electoral votes. His schedule brought him to Daven- port last night for one Iowa speech. Economy Slipping The Democratic nominee said in Detroit Wednesday that the econ- omy appeared to be slipping into a third recession in the last eight years. But Nixon said the same news- papers which reported this state- ment also carried stories that new car sales were running at a rec- ord high in early October. This means, he declared in Dan- ville, Ill., that "Americans who ought to know are not betting on recession. I say the American people have got a lot more sense than Sen. Kennedy." Recession Bet At Mattoon, Ill., the Vice-Pres- ident said "Sen. Kennedy is bet- ting on recession but the Ameri- can people are betting on pros- perity. "Sen. Kennedy is wrong and the American people are right, and that's why they are going to defeat him." Nixon said "there is no real reason, other than opposition gloom talk, why the economy should head into a recession." Nixon's party left his special train at Carbondale, in southern Illinois, yesterday after five days of touring through five of the key cities in the election. He went back to airplanes at Carbondale. RICHARD M. NIXON "". sees prosperity NOBEL:, No Prize For Peace OSLO ()-There will be no 1960 Nobel Peace Prize. The Nobel Committee of Nor- way's Parliament announced this decision yesterday and set aside the prize money for next year. The amount of the sequestered prize was not disclosed. The 1959 award was $42,650. It went, to Philip Noel-Baker. No Award The Peace award has now been passed up 17 times since the No- bel prizes were launched in 1901 from a fund established by Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite. In three of those years, the early World War II period of 1940-42, there was no prize for peace or any of the other cate- gories-physics, chemistry, medi- cine and literature. The Norwegian parliamentary committee, charged under Nobel's will with awarding the peace prize, has never given a reason for not doing so and didn't yes- terday. Prize for Peace The will provides that the prize is to go to "one who has done most or best furthered the- broth- erhood between peoples or done, the most to abolish or reduce thei standing armies, or for the estab- lishment and extention of peace congresses." Nine Americans have been so honored. The first was Theodore Roosevelt (1906), the last was Gen. George C. Marshall (1953). The 1960 Nobel prizes for medi-I cine and literature have been awarded and winners in chem- istry and physics are to be named next Thursday. The prize for medicine went to Sir Frank MacFarlane Burnet, an Australian, and Dr. Peter Brian Medawar, a Briton. The literature prize was awarded French poet Saint-John Perse. Senator Hits GOP Stand On Jobless Says Democrats Act On Unemployment WITH KENNEDY IN PENN- SYLVANIA () - Sen. John F. Kennedy struck heavily yester- day at Vice-President Richard M. Nixon's stand on unemployment. "The Democrats gave you ac- tion,"'he said. "The Republicans gave you a lot of fancy arithme- tic. And you can't put people to work with arithmetic." - Kennedy chose this sensitive issue as he started an intensive four-way drive to try to nail down Pennsylvania's 32 electoral votes. Tours State He toured Northeastern Penn- slyvania, much beset by high un- employment and hit hard in the pocketbook by the financial ail- ments of the hard coal industry. In a speech prepared for de- livery last night in Scranton, Ken- nedy charged that since 1956 three Democratic bills to aid de- pressed areas were killed by Re- publicans in Congress or vetoed by President Dwight D. Eisenhow- er. If he is elected Kennedy prom- ised, such a bill will be passed and signed next year. He quoted Nixon as saying in a free econo- my you can't have full employ- ment "and that unless the num- ber of jobless tops 4.5 million it is not a significant issue in the minds of many people." Wants Full Employment "Mr. Nixon says you can't have full employment," Rennery said. "I say we must have full employ- ment." Starting his grinding 15-hour day in Bethlehem, Kennedy also charged the Republican adminis- tration has had two recessions in six years and that a third is start- ing. In Scranton he said "most economists now agree that anoth- er recession is underway. The Vice-President has denied this, of course, but the figures speak for themselves. , The gross national product has fallen. Business is at a lower level than six months ago. Steel is at barely half capacity, home building at two-thirds. Un- employment has been at recession levels for months. "I am sure that the people of Scranton and Pennsylvania do not want to thrust their economic fu- ture to a political party which now threatens its third recession in just six years." Kennedy's unemployment - re- cession theme was reflected in the homemade signs held up by the crowd at a speech at Mora- vian College in Bethlehem. Many spoke of a higher cost of living. One said "Nixon says $1.25 an hour is too much. Could Mr. Nix- on live on this?" Much of the territory Kennedy traversed is traditionally Repub- lican. The intensity and scope of Ken- nedy's Pennsylvania tour gives some indication of the value his strategists place on its 32 votes and also of its possible closeness. Southerners Attack Youths Durin, Sit-In JACKSON, Tenn. WA')- Angry white persons broke up a Negro sit-in at a lunch counter Thurs- day, hurling eggs and insults, spraying the Negroes with insecti- cide and finally hustling them outside. The five Lane College students, two of them women, did not resist when they were pulled from their stools at the Woolworth's lunch counter and pushed out the door. The sudden eviction ended a situation that had' lasted more than three hours, becoming more tense as the minutes dragged by. About 100 white persons had clus- tered near the Negroes. COMING NOV.10 WORLD'S FAIR -Last day Today- UNION The Folk Arts Festival JOSH WHITE . THE WEAVERS ODETTA.. .. TONIGHT . . . . FEB.25 . . MAR. 24 PETE SEEGER .."APR. 14 ANN ARBOR HIGH Good seats available at the door for JOSH WHITE. Save your ticket stubs for a 25c dis- count on the Weavers, Odetta, and Pete Seeger. Pick up a pack and take a crack at experting the big game ,If you are the only one to come up with the correct half-time and fi scores, the first prize jackpot is all yours. If there are ties, you share the money. The same applies to winners of the second and th jackpots. Enter as often as you like ... and to make it easy, use the backs of packs* as your entry blanks. So each time you finish a pi ..akea yack at te b igmoney IT'S yours .. . r/ The Right To Vote- t.O Your Privilege and your responsibility NOVEMBER 1,1960 Presidential Preference Poll