14'RIDAY, MARCH 9, 1951 Troops Senate WASHINGTON, March B—VP)—Two major Senate 'committees today approved resolutions urging that troops be sent to Europe but calling on President Truman to get ehdorsement of both houses in following this policy: Sen. H. Alexander Smith (R-N.J.) quickly explained this re str: ction was intended to apply only, to future trap moves not 'to tip. 'assignment of four divisions already promised by Truman. One, adopted unarkimously, re quires only approval of the Sen ate. Approved , 16 to 8 The other, approved 16 to 8; is a concurrent resolution, requir ing both Senate and House ap proval. , • However, this is merely an expression-4pf Congress, without force of law. Administration for ces rallied to defeat 13 to 11 a Republican proposal to make it a joint resolution, which would become law with the P.resident's • signature. The key provisions of the reso "lutions are in two paragraphs. 0.. e, from the original sponsored( by chairmen Connally (D-Tex.)i - and Russell (D-Ga.), of the two committees as follows, reads: • Key 'Provisions "It is the belief of the Senate that the threat to the security of the United States and our North Atlantic treaty partners makes it necessary for the United States to station • abroad_ such units of our armed forces as may be pee essary and appropriate to con tribute our fair share of the for ces needed/ for the joint defense of the North• Atlantic area." And this one proposed by Sen ator Smith and supported by the coalition: "It is the sense of the Senate that, in the interests of sound ,constitutional processes, arid of national unity and -understand ing. that congressional approval should be obtained of any policy requiring the assignment of Am erican troops abroad when such assignment is in implementation of article of the North Atlan tic treaty." This article is the heart of the treaty, under which mutual help is pledged in building defenses to discourage -eggressors. Sought Atomic Secrets, Says Gov't Witness NEW YORK, March 8 (R)— One of the three defendants in the nation's first atom spy trial was accused to - day of saying in 1945 there ,was a continuing need to supply military secrets to Rus sia "even though the war was over." Max Elitcher, 33, an engineer employed by the U.S. Navy on confidential projects for 10 years until 1948, made the accusation against Julius Rosenberg, 34, an electrical engineer. Elitcher admitted Communist affiliation under cross-examina tionand said he concealed this he signed a loyalty oath in 1947. On , Trial With Wife Rosenberg is on trial in federal court with his wife Ethel, 34, and Morton Sobell, 33, a radar expert, on charges of conspiring to spy for Russia during World War 11. They face a possible death penalty. He said both Rosenberg and Sobell asked him to supply gov ernment secrets while he was employed in the . Navy's Bureau of Ordnance in Washington, but that he never did. . Asked For Plans • The witness said Rosenberg: Asked him 'in Washington in 1944 to obtain plans, blueprints and other information for pos sible use by the Soviets., , . Told him that many people were aiding the Soviets by pro viding secret information. Asked him whether he knew any engineering students or grad uates who were progressive and who would be safe to approach on the question of espionage. Told him that some interest in the United States denied in formation to the Soviets during the war and impeded their war effort. To Europe Ges Committee OK U.S. Says Reds Lead Arms Race - PARIS, Marth 8 (W)—The Uni ted States accused Russia today of forhenting the current arma ment race and said any western move now,to disarm would alarm the free peoples of ,the world. U.S. Ambassador-at-Large Phil ip Jessup made the statement at the meeting, of the Big Pour depu ties who are trying to arrange an agenda for a meeting of the for eign ministers of France, Brit ain, the United States, and Rus sia. Sitting at his right was Andrei Gromyko, Russian deputy for eign minister. One source present said Jessup looked squarely at Gron)yko as he asserted: The majority of the free peo ples of the world and those seek ing escape from bondage are alarmed by the mass of arma ments of the Soviet Union and its bloc. This alarm will increase; not diminish, if the United States, Britain, and France halt their ef forts to reach a military parity with Russia, unless there is some asstuaance from Russia that she has abandoned her aggressive policy. A short time before, Gromyko had , said that the "furious arms race of the West" was causing the world's tensions. He said the West had started the movement and that the people of the world are worried by it. This exchange was part of the fourth session of the deputies. APRIL DRAFT QUOTA HARRISBURG, March 8 (IP) State draft headquarters today fixed Pennsylvania's April draft quota at 4243 men, some 1408 less than called in March. The national quota was set at 60,000, a reduction of 20,000 un der the March call. 'SHE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA President Figures In RFC Deal WASHINGTON, March 8 (IP)— A Senate committee investigat ing alleged, influence on Recon struction Finance lending dis covered evidence t o d'a y that President Truman himself once supported a $12,000,000 loan to ,a Boston, Mass., corporation. Working through a personal diary turned over to them by RFC Director Walter L. Dunham, the 'investigators found an entry stating that John R. Steelman telephoned Dunham last year to communicate the President's in terest in a project to build a mammoth garage and 'air raid shelter under Boston corrunon. The entry was made part of the record in the inquiry being conducted by the Senate Banking subcommittee under the chair manship of Senator Fulbright (D-Ark.). Fulbright did not inquire into the circumstances of the entry beyond drawing it to 'Truman's attention and getting it into the record. Dunham testified today that a fellow director of the RFC' had tried to get him to resign two weeks ago and become "the goat" in the Senate's investiga tion of the bi g goVernment agency. The former Detroit banker told the committee that the suggest ion came from C. Edward Rowe, who is under fire himself in the inquiry. . President Truman Allied Troops Move To Halt Red Drive TOKYO, Friday, March 9 Allied troops seized jagged, snow-patched heights along the Korean battlefront Thursday, ad vancing up to two and one-half miles in a major offensive designed to forestall a powerful Communist counter-punch. Fighting in nippy weather but under clear, sunny skies, Ameri can troops paced the general advance with strong artillery and air support. Chinese retreated has tily at points, leaving burning campfires and hot food behind. In the west, 25th division troops drove through a lacework of Chinese Communist mortar and machinegun fire to gain a bit terly-contested one and one-half miles in their two-day-old offen sive 15 miles east of Seoul. This expanded t h e 25th's bridgehead four miles north of the thawing Han river. Attack Blocked In the east, U.S. Seventh divi sion troops blocked a major North Korean attack by captur ing three peaks, each more than a half-mile high in wild mountain country northeast and northwest of Panginm. The Reds had driven a five mile-deep salient in this area through the lines of a faltering South Korean division. In the center of the United Na tions front a battalion of Cana da's famed Princess Patricia's own light infantry charged with fixed bayonets up the steep 60- degree slopes .of a hill, only to find that Chinese resistance there had collapsed overnight. The Canadians were flanked by meet the new OXFORD Vail lleusell • "the world's smartest shirt " s PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. I • • - - _ _ _ _ _ •.I Van Heusen PRODUCTS exclusive with HUR'S MEN'S SHOP E. College Ave. British, Greeks, an d American First Cavalry division troops on their left and U. S. Marines on their right. Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgwax's command acknowledged that his U. S. Eighth army was engaged in a major offensive. Censors had not allowed frontline correspon dents to - call it, even a general at tack until more than 24-hours after the jumpoff. Kentucky Senator Dies After Crash Of Truck, Auto WASHINGTON, March 8. (?P)— Sen. Virgil Chapman of Ken tucky died on the operating table at Bethesda Naval hospital today seven hours after his automobile collided with a big trailer-truck in a fashionable residential sec tion of Washington at 3:20 a.m. E.S.T. The 55-year-old Kentuckian, a Democrat, was a veteran of 25 years in Congress. His death reduced the Demo cratic majority in the Senate to a one-vote margin, 48 to 47. Van. Chick Oxford ... not a stitch in sight on collar, cuffs, clean-cut front - $395 Oxford Circle ties, $1.50 PAGE THREE a ~:,.:~. State College