THURSDAY. APRIL 22, 1954 Hensel Blast Adds To McCarthy Row WASHINGTON, April 21 (?P)—The ready-torgo public investigation of the McCarthy- Army row broadened at the last minute today to include new charges leveled against—and denied, by—Asst. Secretary of Defense H. Struve Hensel. The Senate investigations subcommittee named Hensel, a top aide to Secretary of De fense Charles E. Wilson, a principal in the long-heralded hearings which will open at 10 a.m tomorrow in a blaze of television lights and worldwide pub'' Dulles Talks Vital Issues With Bidault PARIS, April 21 (R)—Secretary of State John Foster Dulles flew into Paris today and almost im mediately held talks with French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault on the vital issues which will con front the Western powers at the Geneva conference. Dulles and Bidault will be joined by British Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden tomorrow for further talks on what the Big Three will do when they meet the Communists at the Geneva meet ing-on Indochina and Korea open ing on Monday. Frenchmen Excited Frenchmen were excited over the prospect for negotiating a peace in Indochina, where the hard-hit defenders of Dien Bien Phu awaited the arrival of French parachute troopers being trans ported.by American planes. Dulles was determined to oppose any Soviet move to turn the Gen eva meeting into a "Big Five" con ference with Red China. Dulles' view is that the Chinese Reds are in the role of invited participants and not as a big power instigator of the meeting. He has said he was going to Geneva to seek an honorable peace in Indochina and a free, united Korea. Review Western Reply Dulles, Eden and Bidault will review also the Western reply to the March 13 proposal by the So viet Union that Russia be consid ered for NATO membership in re turn for the United States being admitted into a Soviet-proposed European security system. On Friday Dulles and the other 13 foreign ministers of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization will meet in Chaillot Palace for an ex change on problems around the world. No detailed agenda was pre pai'ed for the NATO meeting, but it was expected that Dulles would be called on to explain further his proposal for a 10-nation military alliance of Southeast Asian na tions patterned along NATO lines. DickensonAdmitted Guilt, Army Says WASHINGTON, April 21 (JO The Army read into the record of Cpl. Edward S. Dickenson's court martial• today a statement by Dickenson that he cooperated with the Communists "in appre ciation" for, being released from jail,as a prisoner of war in Korea. The statement was accepted in spite of objections by the defense that it wa s obtained illegally shortly after Dickinson's repatri ation last November. Earlier, another returned war prisoner glared at Dickenson and swore he saw him push an ailing POW downstairs after the sick man asked for food. Dickenson, charged with col laborating with the enemy to get favors for himself, testified an Army intelligence officer named "Captain Bert" had lied about the manner in which the statement was obtained. Polio Vaccine Ready HARRISBURG, April 21 (IP)— The State Health Department hopes to have a supply of polio vaccine on hand by Saturday for inoculations of school children in the second grade. The drug, administered on a test basis throughout the nation, will go to children in Pennsyl vania's Centre, Clinton, Mercer and McKean counties. Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R- Wis.) .charged yesterday Hensel masterminded an Army report blasting him, and tried in other ways to discredit the committee, so as to head off a probe of Hen sel's own "misconduct" and "pos sible law violations." Hensel called these charges bare-faced lies and dared McCar thy to repeat them when senator ial immunity wouldn't protect him from a lawsuit. The controversy is over Hensel's connection with a ship supplying firm while he held high posts in the Navy Depart ment during World War 11. Wilson Supports Hensel Today Secretary Wilson called Hensel "a competent, honest man" and said ,"of course not" when asked by newsmen if Hensel did, in fact, mastermind an Army re port accusing McCarthy and aides of putting on pressure to get fav ors for a drafted associate. At least one subcommittee Dem ocrat, Sen. John L. McClellan (D- HOUSTON, April 21 (JP)—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) asserted today that "devilishly clpver plans" are being laid , to sabotage the Red-hunting efforts of the Senate investigating sub committee which he heads. • He called the Senate hearings which begin tomorow into his dispute with the Army a "tele vision show of Adams versus Cohn." Ark.), questioned whether the Hensel affair had anything to do with the charges and counter charges the group is supposed to investigate -in the ,hearings. Asked for Statement But after two closed meetings the subcommitee announced it regards him (Hensel) as a princi pal in this case - arid asked him— as McCarthy, Secretary of the Ar my Robert T.' Stevens and the oth er principals have done—to file a statement of his position. McClellan said • later •he and other Democrats on the subcom mittee came to the conclusion Hensel should be , named a prin cipal because "the accusations against him are just as serious as those against other Army people" in the case. McClellan said . the various ac cusations hurled by the McCarthy forces would add up to a conspir acy to obstruct the subcommittee, if they are proved. And he said it should be determined whether Hensel "was a part of what I would call this alleged conspir acy." Hensel said he will be available for questioning any time he's. called. Beyond that,, he said, he doesn't plan to do anything ex cept file "a simple denial" of Mc- Carthy's charges. Wilson Reports On WASHINGTON, April 21 (IP)-- Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson said tonight the mounting retaliatory capability of our air units gives full warning to any aggressor of the possible conse quences of rash actions on his part. In his semi-annual report, Wil son also said U.S. strategy is aimed at handling little aggres sions as well as big ones. In discussing the "long pull" concept of national defense, Wil son appeared to be countering criticism of the "massive retali ation" policy. Adlai E. Stevenson, 1952 presi dential candidate, for example has expressed the view this policy is not fitted to meet local aggres sions like the one in. Korea. He has raised the question whether it wouldn't leave the U.S. only two choice Touchi - ' oFt rt rnonuclear holocaust" or letting THE DAILY COLLE6IAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Reds Submit Biggest Budget For Approved MOSCOW, April 21 (7P) —The biggest budget in Soviet _history went before Parliament for ap proval today Finance Minister Arseny G. Zverev said defense ap propriations-17.8 per cent of the total—"strengthen the defense ca pabilities of our state." The defense figure of 100,300,- 000,000 rubles was almost 10 per cent less than the 1953 allotment, which in turn, was a reduction from 1952. But western observers in Moscow said it was difficult to measure a Soviet Union budget, especially defense appropriations. They said this is because the state owns and operates the country's entire economy,• and fixes its own prices on any equipment needed for the armed forces. Under an official Soviet ex change rate of four rubles to the dollar, the budget figures in dol lars would be: income $142,950,- 000,000; outgo $140,675,000,000; surplus $2,275,000,000; d e f-e ns e $25,075,000,000. Zverev accused the United States of blocking East-W es t trade, especially with the Soviet Union. The finance minister said this policy damaged Capitalist countries more than it did Rus sia. He said the Soviet Union was working not only for peace but for increased world trade. Norwegian First Lady OSLO, Norway, April 21 (IP) Church bells tolled an d guns boomed a last salute today as the nation's first lady, Crown Princess Martha, was entombed 'in the roy al crypt at the ancient Akershus ' Fortress. the Reds get away with local aggressions.. Wilson, discussing the review of the whole military situation by the Defense department and Joint Chiefs of Staff, said: "It sought a military strategy that would deter both a major war and local aggression and, at the same time, could be implemented and maintained without under mining the social and economic foundations of the nation." He wrote that: "The new long range guidelines for the military security of the United States place increased em phasis on land and carrier based airpower and on the integration of new weapons into our strategy and tactics. At the same time, they provide for the maintenance of strong, well-trained and well equipped naval forces. . . Mili tary strength is becominggreater through -the development of in creased firepower on land, on sea and in the air and through de- Supports Builder. Hits Group Studying FHA Loans WASHINGTON, April 21 (?P)—A home builders' spokesman, de nying that Federal Housing Administration loan abuses are wide spread, called on the Senate banking committee today to avoid hysteria in its housing probe, and was charged with "trying to crucify this administration." Committee Chairman Homer E. Capehart (R-:Ind) told President R. G. Hughes/of the National As sociation of Home Builders his organization should give the com mittee full support. Instead, he said, it had been warning against holding investigations in a "cir cus atmosphere." Two Charges The exchange came as the bank ing committee called industry wit nesses to tell what they know of charges (1) that builders obtained excessive loans for r apartment con struction and pocketed some of the FHA-insured money as quick profits; and (2) that householders had been fleeced by some home repair salesmen operating under another FHA loan program. The apartment loan abuses are alleged to have continued under the Eisenhower administration. Ask For More Funds Meantime. Housing Administra tor Albert M. Cole asked a Senate appropriations subcommittee for $250,000 in additional funds to fi nance the administration's own probe. He asked $lOO,OOO for a special investigation of past irregulari ties, and another $150,000 to set up a permanent investigating and policing unit under the Housing and Home Finance Agency which he heads. This unit, he said, would look into activities not only of the FHA but also all other hous ing agencies. Cole said the special investiga tion would look into each of the 7000 projects built under the mid dle income apartment program. Authority for starting such proj ects expired March, 1950, he said, but some are still under construc tion. Wants To Clear Innocent He said he wants to investigate them all to clear the innocent as well as to detect those who he said were unethical. Many of the cases may not have been illegal, he said. Revenue Commissioner T. Cole man Andrews testified yesterday that 1149 apartment builders reaped $65 million in quick prof its, largely by getting loans for more than the cost of the buildings they erected. Cole said more cases may be found. But ,Hughes told the banking committee today he thought the charges were overdrawn. "The impression that the gov ernment has lost millions of dol lars and that tenants have been charged excessive rents is, in my opinion, erroneous," he said. Store Strike Violence Results in Two Arrests PITTSBURGH, April 21 (A)— Two disorderS stemming from the 146-day old department st or e . strike resulted today in the ar rest of two men. Police charged, Leslie Williams, 28, with assault 'and battery and Francis Peitz, also 28, with mali cious mischief. Defense ployrnent of our forces in a way that will make them more readily available whenever and wherev er they are needed." In . his report covering the lat ter six months of last year, Wilson also saw "a steady increase in the military strength of the entire free world." Center Stage Now . thru May 22 Players original musical revue "PICK UP STICKS" Reds Press Near Fort In Indochina HANOI, Indochina, April 21 (W) —Vietminh besiegers squeezed Di en Bien Phu's French Union de fenders into a shrinking circle of red-dish mud about 1% miles across today. The rebels kept dig ding ever closer to the barricades in a downpour of rain. Besides tightening their band of flesh and steel around the fort in apparent preparation for one final mass assault, the Communist-led rebels were cutting down the "drop zone" by their constant dig ging. It will be harder for -rein forcements and supplies to be parachuted into the fort. Increasing Pressure Late tonight a French high com mand spokesman said the Viet minh troops were increasing pres sure against French positions in tie northwestern corner of tM for tress. Masses of Vietminh fight ers were moving slowly but stead ily toward the barbed wire de fenses, he said. But reinforcements were on the way. Huge U.S. Air. Force troop cargo transports were airlifting French parachute troops from Eu ropean and North African areas 8500 miles to bases in Indochina outside the combat zone. Some Troops Dropped Some of these troops will be dropped into Dien Bien Phu, au thoritative sources said in Paris. The Seventh Battalian French paratroop battalions usually num ber about 1000 men had been alerted since Sunday to leave. The French army _secretary, Pierre de Chevigne, said sending the reinforcements would permit the use of troops already in Indo china for quick reinforcement of heavily outnumbered Dien Bien Phu. Nixon States Indochina Plan DES MOINES, April 21 (A 3 )— America will not keep its boys out Of Indochina by telling the Com munists they .can come in there, Vice President Richard M. Nixon declared tonight. The Eisenhower administration, he said, believes that a position of strength in Asia and Indochina is the only way to avoid war. "'The purpose of our policy," the vice president added in an ad dress prepared for a state Repub lican party gathering, "is to avoid sending our boys to Indochina or anywhere else to fight. "We believe a strong policy has the best chance to accomplish that purpose." Earlier, on his arrival here by plane from Cincinnati, where he spoke last night, Nixon told news men he thought that the war in Indochina can be won by French and Indochinese troops with "the aid the United States has given and is giving." PAGE THREE