BULLETIN 
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Sept. 27--The U.N. Steering Committee tonight  Soviet objections and voted to shelve for another year the question of seating  China in the world organization. Vice-President Says Kennedy Is Inconsistent 
CHARLESTON, W. Va., Sept. 27--Vice President Richard M. Nixon, accusing John F. Kennedy of untruths about hungry Americans, said today the best hope for  for distressed areas of West Virginia lies in a Republican election victory. He went after Kennedy on grounds that his Democratic rival talks differently  different parts of the nation.  Nixon tied this in with the civil rights issue--an  on which he once more called for progress before a Dixie audience. Nixon said that special legislation to help distressed areas was fathered by the  administration, not Congress, and that for years the administration  unsuccessfully to get sensible legislation through the Democratic controlled .  Rejects 'Acceptance' of Status 
WITH KENNEDY IN OHIO, Sept. 27--Cheered by thousands on Ohio streets  roadsides, Sen. John F. Kennedy vowed that a Democratic administration "will  accept as a final solution" the Soviet enslavement of Eastern Europe. At Lorain, Kennedy accused the Republican party of mere "pretense" in its 1952  of "liberation" for the peoples of Eastern Europe. Khrushchev Makes New Talk Proposals 
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Sept. 27--Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev proposed  to bring neutralist nations into renewed disarmament negotiations.  The United States received the proposal . But strong neutralist pressure to bring a fresh start to arms talks was  by a proposal from President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic that President Eisenhower and the Soviet premier get together to clear the  for resuming negotiations.