THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1953 Dul Ike Foreign Policy Of McCarthy Is Rebuffed WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 (JP) President Dwight D. Eisenhower today strongly endorsed Secretary of State John Foster Dulles’ re buff to Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) on the issue of U.S. for eign policy and warned against any swing toward coercion in dealing with America’s allies. Declaring that unity among free nations is “our only hope for sur vival” in the global struggle with Soviet Russia, • Eisenhower told a crowded news conference: “I am in full accord with the statements made- yesterday by Secretary Dulles in his press con ference. “I would like to add this com ment to what he said: the easiest thing to do with great power is to abuse it—to use it to excess.” McCarthy Has No Comment McCarthy had no immediate comment on the President’s state ment. The senator had previously in dicated he might have a news conference later today, but after reading a copy of Eisenhower’s remarks, McCarthy told newsmen he wanted to study it further! “Perhaps I will wait and. give out a statement tomorrow morn ing,” he said, adding that he would probably read it via tele vision. Once again the President avoided a direct, personal crack down on the controversial Wis consin senator. Like DUlles, he did not mention McCarthy by name. Eisenhower Emphatic But Eisenhower was emphatic in opposing McCarthy’s views on the proper way to conduct for eign policy-views which Dulles assailed yesterday as an arrogant, blustering and domineering ap proach. “This most powerful of the free nations must not permit itself to grow weary of the processes' of negotiation and adjustment that are fundamental to freedom,” the President said. Brand of Coercion “If it should turn impatiently to coercion of other free nations, our brand of coercion, as far as our friends are concerned, would be a mark of imperialist father than the leader! 7 ’ McCarthy had complained in a nationwide radio-TV broadcast on Nov. 24 that the administration was sending “perfumed notes.” Steelworkers' Strike Closes Can Industry PITTSBURGH, Dec. 2 (JP) — Striking CIO United Steelwork ers virtually shut off production by the nation’s two largest can manufacturers today, developing immediately a threat to the cit rus industry now at the peak of its canning operations. The strike against Continental Can Co. and American Can Co. hit 68 plants in the United States and five in Canada. Some 60 other plants, affiliated with different unions, were not affected by the walkout. Only a few of these have production units. Ed, Eng Gowns Deadline Today Today is fhfe last time edu cation and engineering seniors graduating in January may or der their caps and gowns. Sen iors in the Schools of Business, Chemistry and Physics, and Mineral Industries may sign up tomorrow and Saturday. Seniors should, know their hat size when ordering. Stu dents who will - graduate in military uniform need not or der caps and gowns. Invitations .a n d announce ments may be ordered at the Student Union desk in Old Main for 10 cents each; les Endorsed; Warns GOP Pa. Deer Hunters Kill 7 4,500 Bucks HARRISBURG, Dec. 2 (#>)— Pennsylvania’s army of more than 350,000 licensed hunters legally killed about 14,500 buck deer during the first two days of the season which opened Monday, the State Game Com mission estimated today: This figure is slightly higher than for the same period last year, a commission spokesman said. . Sixty deer have been reported killed in the Hazleton area of Luzerne County since the open ing of the season and heavy kills in north central and cen tral counties also were re ported. “Considering the lack of snow and the-presence of rain and fog in many areas throughout the state, the kill recorded from field representatives for the first two days of the season can be considered good,” the spokesman pointed out. lodge Demands CbmplefeCheck Of Atrocities UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Dec. 2 (JP) —Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. de-’ madded before the UN Assembly today that Moscow let the Inter national Committee of the Red Cross make, a free and full check of alleged Red atrocities in Ko rea. He also charged that Gen. Nam 11, commander of the North Ko rean Army, . masterminded the Koje. Prison riots last year at the same time he was carrying on truce negotiations with the UN command at Panmunjom. Soviet reaction was swift. An drei Y. Vishinsky, Soviet deputy foreign minister, denounced the chief American delegate’s pro posal for a full investigation as an “eleventh hour approach, ob viously demagogic nature.” He said the Russians had attempted to have a. commission established in 1950 to investigate American atrocities as charged by the Rus sians, but the Security Council refused to do so. Rcsdfo rdAga i nst Defense Change NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (#>)—Adm. Arthur Radford disclosed tonight the new Joint Chiefs of'Staff are flatly opposed to any sudden and drastic change in . the national defense system, believing the best plans will come by evolution. The chairman said that what the JCS has been doing is taking an interim look at the military picture while planning. a long term program. He made no mention of the new look which the administration or dered after it had named a new slate of members for the Joint Chiefs organization to succeed the former members- whose ous ter was demanded by some power ful members of Congress. In an address prepared for a meeting of the , American Ord nance Association here, Radford for the first time publicly dis cussed the objectives of the new Joint Chiefs organization. Ex-Collegian Editor .Writes for Harper's Harry B. Henderson, 1935-36 editor of the Daily Collegian, is the author of “The Mass-Produced Suburbs,” an article appearing in the November and December is sues of Harper’s Magazine. The article discusses the unique communities resulting from the huge post-war planned housing developments. Henderson is the author of “War. in Our Time,” a book pub lished in 1942, and articles in Col lier’s, Red Book, Cosmopolitan, and the Readers’ Digest. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA President Says Firm Program "s Necessary WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 (JP) President Dwight D. Eisenhower today told Republicans in Con gress—S.en. Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin . among them—that their party will stay in power only if they adopt a progressive, dy namic program enhancing, the welfare tf the people of our coun try. Without ever mentioning Mc- Carthy, the President in effect took the position that the Wiscon sin senator has picked the wrong issue for the political struggles that lie ahead. Whereas McCarthy insists Reds in-government will be a big issue in 1954, Eisenhower expressed, re newed conviction that it won’t be. Long before that, he said, the ad ministration will have made such progress in rooting subversives out that they no longer ' will'be a serious menace. Then the President laid down his own prescription for victory: Republicans should fight for the progressive, dynamic program he will lay before Congress in Jan uary. Eisenhower added, in a news conference statement plainly in tended to squelch intra-party dis sension, that he knew his senti ments-were shared by the vast majority of his close, associates both in the Senate and in the House of Representatives. “Because of this unity of feel ing such a program will be en acted,” he declared: Determined What to Say Seldom if ever since he started meeting with newsmen has Presi dent Eisenhower shown more self-possession, more datermina tion, to say precisely what he wanted to say and not' a word -be yond that. The President said he’d, want to give the matter a lot of study before saying whether the chances are good for a -meeting between the Western Powers and Russia. Allies Attempt Again To Convert Red PW's PANMUNJOM, Dec. 3 (JP) —The Allies will try to talk 30 other South Korean prisoners into' deserting communism today after drawing a blank on the first 30 they confronted yesterday. On the second day of the long-delayed Allied interviews, there were indications that the explainers may. turn their attention to the one British and 22 U.S. prisoners sooner than expected. A high U.S. officer said a time table by which the Americans would hot be reached .until all the reluctant 328 South Koreans are interviewed was not inflexible. There was little expectation in the UN Command before the start of the explanations that South Korean teams would have any better luck today. • The Koreans interviewed yes terday did no shouting and the talks passed off in a surprisingly calm atmosphere. Nearby in Panmunjom, U.S. and Communist diplomats still de bated over Communist insistence that Russia be "admitted to the Korean peace conference as a neutral. U.S. envoy Arthur Dean insists that Russia must be seated not as a neutral but as a nation fully bound by conference decis ions. The talks to arrange a time and place for the conference have made; little progress. The confer ence, designed to write an offi cial end to the Korean War; seemed far away. In the interview tents, the first 30 South Koreans to face the South Korean teams were chosen by the prisoners themselves from their camp. : The 27 men and 3 women lis tened quietly to the calm argu ments of the South Korean teams. The teams read statements prom- President's Prescription Churchill Arrives For Big 3 Session TUCKER’S TOWN, Bermuda, Dec. 2 (IP) Prime Minister Churchill bucked through an Atlantic storm aboard the Stratocruiser Canopus and landed in Bermuda’s sunshine today to attend the West ern Big Three conference he hopes will bring the world closer to lasting peace. ' Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Lord Cherwell, former chief of Britain’s atomic energy development work, were in Churchill’s party of 28. Premier Joseph Laniel of France took off from Paris in an Air France Constellation a few hours later with his foreign minister, Geroges Bidault, and a 19-man delegation for the talks opening Friday at the Mid-Ocean Club. The French will arrive tomorrow. Others to Arrive Friday President Dwight D. Eisen hower, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and nine other American officials expect to get in Friday. Five days of discussions of world problems are slated at the club, ringed by barbed wire and heavily guarded by British and American service men. Rus sia’s suggestion for a Big Four foreign ministers’ conference in Berlin looms as a major topic- An authoritative source said the President hopes to win France’s ratification of the six-nation Euro pean army plan, to include West German troops, with an assurance the United States ■would maintain its present “combat effectiveness” in Europe. Churchill Host Churchill, 79 last Monday, is the host for sessions which it is esti mated will- cost Britain 80,000 pounds ($224,000). He looked pink and cheerful as he. stepped from the silvery Canopus, a U.S.-built British Overseas Airways plane that carried Queen Elizabeth ll'to Bermuda at the start of her world tour earlier this month. Gov. Sir Alexander Hood and U.S. Consul Gen. Robert B. Streeper greeted him. The plane had breasted bitter gales today along the route from Gander,. Nfld., to the U.S.-leased Kindley Field air base here. The Canopus flew much of the way above 20,000 feet. Churchill and his associates left London last night just before mid night.- They spent an hour at Gan der early today for refueling and a check on the plane. The storm, which buffeted small craft along the Canadian coast, was one that hit Bermuda yesterday with a rec ord rainfall of ZVz inches in an hour. ising promotions, rewards, medi cal treatment and pardons for any crimes. “Now you have to choose your future very carefully,” said the explainer. “One door leads to darkness, dictatorship and suffer ing; .the other door leads to free dom.” With little argument, and with only aii - occasional reference to “American imperialism,” the pris oners chose the door back north. 5. Pugh 4m lilli PAGE TTTREB Huge Strike Over Wages Hits Britain LONDON, Dec. 2 (TP)—Th«? big gest industrial strike since 1926 hit Britain today. It was a 24- hour token walkout to support demands for a 15 per cent wage boost. Union officials warned that a protracted work stoppage may come later. Spokesmen for the massive Con federation of Engineering and Shipbuilding Unions said up to two million of their 2% million members joined in the one-day “show of strength.” Industry spokesmen estimated the strike would cost Britain 10 million pounds ($2B million) in lost production. Almost every line of industrial activity from cars and ships to aircraft and clock-making was slowed or stopped dead. Public services-t ransport, utilities, health and food—were unaffected. Government plants such as ord nance factories also were ex empted. . The National Union of General and Municipal Workers, one of the confederation’s 39 affiliates, said it would consider asking the con federation next week for a vote on whether to start a regular strike or submit the wage de mands to arbitration. A union spokesman told report ers a decision to strike would be “the real McCoy.” The confederation’s executive committee is to meet Dec. 10. Powerful interests on the com mittee have in the past opposed any idea of a “stick-it-out” strike except as a last resort. Gommunists who hold posts in many of the affiliated unions have demanded strike action for months,- but their demands have been more than offset by a ma jority seeking a more cautious approach. Nehru Holds Lorsg Talk with Nixon NEW DELHI, India, Dec. 2 ( JP ) —Prime Minister Nehru had a two-hour talk on world affairs tonight with Vice President Rich ard Nixon. Authoritative sources said the Indian leader gave Nixon little reason to expect any closer Indian-American political align ment. The Prime Minister outlined his position in favor of recogniz ing Communist China as a domin ant Asiatic power, the sources said, and expressed belief the Uni ted States policy of containment is being carried too far around Russia. These views already have brought sharp criticism of Nehru by Sen. William Knowland (R- Calif), the Senate Republican leader, and other influential Americans. For Your Holiday Party Serve These Delights From Cjlenn 3 Pastry Shop 233 S. Allen Si. - Phone 3121
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers