SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1953 Red Sitdown Stops Talks PANMUNJOM, Dec. 12 (R')—A Communist sitdown yesterday abruptly halted Allied, efforts to complete explanations by the Dec. 23 deadline to former soldiers, including 2,2 Americans, resisting repatriation' after Red captivity. Whether the explanation could get s going again by switching Ifrom balky South Koreans to the Arriericans remained to be de termined. Yesterday •25 South Koreans, obviously taking their cue from the Communists, suddenly refused to face interviewers unless they could make time-consuming "counter-explanations." 30 Refuse to Answer GI Mother Puts Trust In Prayer TOKYO, Saturday, Dec. 12 (2P) —An undaunted, greying Amer ican mother put her trust today in prayer and the U.S. Congress to help her get to Korea in time to save her soldier son from be ing lost forever to life behind Red China's Bamboo Curtain. After flying nearly 7000 miles from her Alden, Minn., home, Mrs. Portia Howe got a fast turn down yesterday from the Far East Command for permission to go to Panmunjom. There Pfc. Richard F. Tenneson;' her son by a pre vious marriage, is among 22 Americans refusing repatriation after Communist captivity. "I have not giVen up hope," she said firmly, managing a smile. "I am going to stay here for a while and wait and pray. I still hope to see my son. Mother Vows to Pray "There is a great deal of power in prayer. Prayer has worked for me all the way through and I am still depending on it. And I am hoping for action in Washington that may clear the way. I met a number of congressmen who said they would try to help me." The slender woman was whisked off to the Far East Com mand headquarters as soon as she arrived here and had a private conference with Gen. John E. Hull, Supreme Allied Comman der. General Had to Refuse After the meeting, Hull's head quarters issued a statement quot ing the general as saying he had been "obli to refuse permis sion" for the Minnesota woman to go to the demilitarized zone of Korea. In Washington, the Pentagon is sued a statement emphasizing that prisoners who refuse repat riation are under the control of the - Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission and not the United Nations Command. The only way an American civ ilian legally can visit a relative under neutral control is as a mem ber of the UN explainer team, the Pentagon said. Johnson to Speak To Luncheon Club George F. Johnson, professor of agricultural extension, will speak and show slides on "Colorful Pennsylvania Through the Four Seasons" with special emphasis upon the Christmas season at the Faculty Luncheon Club meeting at noon Monday in the Hotel State College. Club members on the steering committee for the spring semester are Ernest W. Callenbach, head of the Poultry Husbandry depart ment; Hugh H. Chapman Jr., as sistant professor of Romance languages; Marguerite L. Duvall, associate professor of child de velopment and family life exten sion; Ruth R. Honey, professor of family economics and housing; and Charles J. Rowland, head of the Department of Accounting and Business Statistics. Town Men to Hear Blue Notes at Dance The Penn State Blue Notes will play for a combination dance and jam sess:on tomorrow afternoon in the Temporary Union Build ing. The dance is being sponsored by Town Council for men living in town. The dance will be held from 2:15 to 3:45 p.m. After a half hciur intermission; the jam session will be held until 5:15. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Thirty more South ' Koreans were called up today but with no assurance they would respond. If the South Koreans continue to resist, the UN Command con ceivably could switch to the 22 Americans and a Briton. These men have indicated 'they would face explainers but that they want the right to fire a big bar rage of questions at the , inter viewers. An atmosphere of frustration also hangs over the tent in Pan munjom where today negotiators round out seven weeks of talks, as far apart as ever over efforts to arrange for a Korean peace conference. Reports were that U.S. Envoy Arthur Dean may go home soon and leave an aide to carry on the talks, thus putting it up to the Reds whether they are to be broken off. South Koreans Questioned Before the latest prisoner stall, 224 South Koreans ha d run through explanation booths, all electing to stay with the Reds and be sent to a separate compound. Twenty-six others who heard explanations Thursday refused to move to the separate compound and went back into the area where prisoners are awaiting the talks. Only 5 of 30 requested prison ers showed up yesterday and they had to be tossed out when they attempted to give their own ex planations. The other 25 wouldn't even come inside. Wurfl Will Lead Christmas Sing George J. Wurfl, professor em eritus of German, will lead the 24th annual Christmas Sing at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Schwab Audi torium. The sing, sponsored by the De partment of German, is open to the public. Wurfl will read the account of the Nativity according to St. Luke in German, and George E. Ceiga, University organist, will play the prelude and postlude. The entire Chinese language is made up of words of one syllable. Each sound may have ten or more meanings and the language has no rules of grammar. U.S. -i . -'ay Examine Neat East "..' siliey KARACHI, Pakistan, Dec. 11 (EP) —Competent sources predicted to day Vice President Richard Nix on's return to Washington Mon day will signal the - start of a wide spr e ad re-examination of -U.S. policy toward southeast Asia and the Middle East. Behind this, they said, is a ques tion whether the United States is still satisfied to permit Prime Minister Nehru's India to domi nate the region or intends to build up another nation—probably Pak istan—to challenge Nehru's lead ership. The question of Indian reaction has been studied carefully, these sources said, but a final decision will be taken only after Nixon reports to President Eisenhower, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and the Department of De fense. Key U. S. officials have ex pressed strong doubts dur". - ig vis its to this area that past Ameri can policy toward Nehru has achieved even "friendly neutral ity" on the part of the Indian leader. There is a strong feeling here that a decision• on American mill- Communists Occupy Lai Chau HANOI, Indochina, Dec. 11 (IP) —The French discloc9d torl a y they have evacuated Lai Chau without firing a shot, leaving - the Thai tribal capital they had vow ed to defend to fall like a ripe plum to the Communist-led Viet minh. Only a few pro-French Thai partisan fighters were left to stand between the sleepy, palm lined town in northwest Indo china and :the bulk of a rebel di vision when the last of th e French Union garrison pulled out Tuesday. The French high command staked all upon the newly forti fied plain 'of Dein Bein Phu, 50 miles south of Lai Chau, to make good its pledge to "defend the Thai country"—the mountanious homeland of 300,000 tribesmen now almost wholly in viecminLl hands. A temporary capital has been established for Thai President Deo Van Long at Dien Bien Phu, a collection of straw-thatched huts wh i CAI French parachute troops wrested from the Viet minh three weeks ago. The President was reported to have assented to the switch. Thousands of fresh troops and huge cargoes of American-supplied war equip ment were flown in to reinforce French regiments already based on the broad plain around the village. - Vietminh division No. 316 had split its force, with thousands of troops marching northwestward on Lai Chau, at the head of .navi gation on the Black River only 30 miles from Red China's frontier, and other thousands heading southwestward toward Dien Bien Phu. Explaining th e withd raw al from Lai Chau, which a high command spokesman de c 1a r e d only Wednesday would be kept in control of French and Thai troops, Gen. Rene Cogny said cryptically: "We do not defend the town it self because it is like a mouse trap . . . The mousetrap is now ready for the Vietminh troops." French Club to Meet Le Cercle Francais, French club, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 1 Main Engineering. Winston R. Weisman, assistant professor of fine arts, will discuss French manuscript illumination. He will illustrate his talk with slides. Pre;Nacation Class Cuts Need Profs' Excuses Students desiring to be ex cused early from classes to work before Christmas vaca tion begins Dec. 19 must re ceive approval from their in structors, Frank J. Simes, dean of men, has announced. No 'ex cuses will be approved by the Dean of Men's office, he said. tary assistance to Pakistan—cer tainly a major factor of new pol icy—will be taken within weeks, if not days. Long delay in deciding whether it is wise to .build up Pakistan in the face of certain Indian opposition has had the ef fect of leaving smaller nations dangling in uncertainty, infor mants said: Nixon has behind him direct discussions with Nehru, .Pakis tan's Prime Minister Mohammed Ali and the leaders of other na tions from Thailand to Iran on the 4 1, ISRAEL By Sea By Air Literature Iteservatleaa Tlckate STATE COLLEGE TRAVEL BUREAU State College Rotel ?hone 7134 Lonetta Neasoosam Je Gettig Military Str"ngth Vital, Says Ms rshall OSLO, Norway Dec. 11 (JP)—Nobel peace prize winner Gen. George C. Marshall said today military strength is vital in the "pres ent highly dangerous situation," but that keeping up big armies in definitely is not a promising policy for lasting peace. The American soldier-statesman outlined in a lecture at Oslo University festival hall the broad I steps he believes would lead to the end of wars. Most important of these, the '7B - sponsor of the Marshall Plan declared, is "a spiritual re generation which would re-estab lish a feeling of good faith among men generally." lie called on the democratic nations to provide leadership against intolerance, distrust and "that fatal insecurity that leads to war." Marshall said that, because the United States is made up of so many nationalities, Americans have acquired a concern for other peoples' problems and a "deep urge to help the oppressed and to give aid to those upon whom great and sudden hardship has fallen." Marshall did not once mention the Soviet Union or communism. But the speech he had prepared long in advance replied directly to Communist critics and in effect to a group of young Red demon strators wh o yesterday inter rupted the award ceremonies to protest. "There has been considerable comment on , the awarding of the Nokel peace prize to a soldier," Marshall said pointedly. "I am afraid this, does not seem as re markable io me as it quite evi dently appears to others. I. know a great deal of the horrors and tragedies of war." British Party Split on Suez LONDON, Dec. 11 (?P)—Prime Minister Winston Churchill flew home today from the Bermuda conference and landed in the mid dle of a growing fight within his own conservative party over plans to withdraw British troops. from the Suez Canal Zone. The 79-year old statesman was in a buoyant mood as he stepped out of his plane. There were strong indications he had Ameri can backing for his policy in the Middle East. The Suez Canal Zone is a vital link in the defense of that area. Some 30 conservative members of Parliament have drafted a mo tion opposing the government's proposals for a g r a dual with drawal of the 70,000-man garri son with the exception of 4000 technicians needed -for safeguard maintenance of the billion dollar installations. Johnstone to Speak Professor Henry Johnstone, as sistant professor of philosophy, will discuss "Proofs on the Exis tence of God" at a joint meeting of the Young Friends and Young Unitarians at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow in, 304 Old Main. question of proper U. S. policy toward this vast area. What he intends to tell Eisen hower is a strict secret, but com petent sources in this Moslem cap ital believe he will recommend it is time to abandon the present "soft policy" in relations with Nehru. United States leaders are be lieved most nettled by Nehru's furious opposition to proposed military assistance for Pakistan so much as by his attitude on Ko rean War questions. ~.' . ,_.• , - . : ,'. . . '7 . _ ~. „ : : , : ,: , . -:. ' . 4 041.);,..4n 4 k' , :.: - :..::-..i. ~-.... , ~. ~.,,.,....-...:,,...:-...,,,,..::,-......,..-.:*.Notty ...,., . . r '• . - -..,......-,..,,5,...,,,,,, DINNERS -) a v! Special Saturday afternoon session at 2:00 p.m. evening 9:30 John Guga'saccordian plus. tUDvBArK A.G. on the piano PAGE TITREIE Divorcee Protects Ex-husband WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 (JP)—A slender brunette divorcee refused today to tell anything about the whereabouts of her former hus band, described by- Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis.) as a member of the Rosenberg spy ring and as a fugitive from the FBI. "Your refusal means that you are equally guilty with him," Mc- Carthy told Mrs. Louise Sarant, called before the Senate investi gations subcommittee in its search for Soviet radar spying at the Ft. Monmouth, N. J., Army Signal Corps laboratories. Mrs. Sarant, refusing at first to discuss her family, finally identi fied herself as the daughter of an Ithaca, N.Y., lawyer. McCarthy said after the hearing her former husband, Al Sarant, is believed to have left the country. One other witness today was a New York lawyer, Joseph H. Per coff, who swore he never engaged in espionage but then refused to say whether he ever passed sec ret government documents to Communist spies. Percoff contended McCarthy had no right to question him about "political activities" and also questioned the senator's power to make rulings with no other com mittee members present. McCarthy told him sharply, however, he already had waived immunity from questioning, so far as any spy activities were con cerned, by denying he ever took part in an espionage .conspiracy. Strickler Undecided On Political Rare WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 (IP)— Maj. Gen. Daniel B. Strickler, for mer lieutenant governor of Penn sylvania, said today he hasn't de cided whether he will enter the 1951 gubernatorial race in Penn sylvania. Strickler, 56, of Lancaster, told a reporter he has received many requests from all parts of the state that he seek the Republican nomination for governor. "As the movement grows," he said, "I realize I'll have to make a decision whether to enter the political picture or remain in Army service." He explained he would of course, have to give up his mili tary post, as did President Eisen hower, if he re-entered politics. Orientation Counselors The student orientation coun selor committee will meet at 10 a.m. today in the Dean of Men's office to discuss talks with new students entering the University in February, Harold W. Perkins, assistant dean of men, has an nounced.. ADvENTLIRE 21,t Yen c EUROPE, 60 Days, 5490 y (all expense incl. steamer) Bicycle, Faltboot, Ski, Motor, Rail. Also Latin America, West, Orient. TRAVEL T Around the World, $995 all expense. Low cost trips to every corner of the globe. Congenial groups for MI., those who wish to get „• 1 . off the beaten track r,,, , ..... - V.., 1 . . even trips for explorers. Wirtti;4 LANGUAGES, ART, DANCE, MUSIC. Sec More A i College Credit. Some s pend..ess scholarships available. Your Travel Agent or z. Students International Travel Association 545 FIFTH AVE.. NEW YORK 17 • MU 2.6544