THURSDAY. MAY 20, 195 E . • Hea • . . rings to Reaiume , Am . • onddy, Ike t, in.-Accord WASHINGTON;' May 19 (/P)—The Eisenhower administration threw the switches today to start the McCarthy-Army hearings rolling again next Monday. President Dwight D. Eisenhower personally called for a resumption of the televised inquiry "Let the chips fall where ,they may," he declared. with. the President's endorsement, Secretary of the Army Robert Stevens took bility on behalf of the Army for the actions that led to its head-on collision with Senator Joseph Mc- Carthy (R-Wis). In the wake of , this one-two team play; Acting Chairman Karl E. Mundt (R.-S.D.) said the tem porarily sidetracked inquiry will resume Monday. He told news men the hearings should not last more than another week or ten days. French Hit Red Forces In Indochina HANOI, Indochina, May 19 (W) —Fre.nch planes launched massive air attacks today on Vietminh rebels moving men and heavy ar tillery anti-aircraft batteries from Dien Bien Phu toward the Red River Delta. Revising a previous estimate, a Frevich high command official said the rebels could at tack in Strength within four weeks. While the bombers were plas tering the Communist-led rebels, the high command announced the arrival in Hanoi of 24 more wounded French Union prisoners from the fallen fortress of Dien Bien Phu. This made a total of 54 evacuated thus far. A Vietminh delegation source said in Geneva Dien Bien Phu's heroic French nurse, Genevieve de r7Talard Terraube, would be re leased ao me time Wednesday. However, there was no confirma 2 tion at a late hour from Hanoi and a French News Agency dis patch - quoted evacuated soldiers as saying she would remain until the last wounded are taken out. The French threw all their available helicopters and small aircraft into the task of speeding the airlift of the wounded. They hoped to step up the rate to at least 80 a day. Vietminh General Vo Nguyen Giap agreed to the initial release of 450 of the most serious cases among the 1,300 to 2,000 wounded at ' the fortress when it fell. Ike Calls Arms Shiment To Guatemala‘Disturbinf:' WASHINGTON, May 19 "(2Eo—President Dwight D. Eisenhower said today an arms shipmdnt from Red Poland to Guatemala is "dis turbing" and it would be a "terrible thing" to have. Communist dic tatorship establish an outpost' on' this' continent. Asked at a news conference for his reaction to a State De. ment announcement Monday that Communist-dominated Poland has shipped arms to the Latin Amer ican nation, Eisenhower paused, reached for a word, and replied: "Well, it is disturbing. I think that, above all, it highlights the circumstances, the background that led to the adoption of the resolution at the Caracas confer ence of the American Republics regarding communism in this country. "To have the Communist dicta- Mundt said he expected Stevens would be asked to repeat under oath today's denial that the Ar my's moves were masterminded by White House or other top of ficials. The hearings still, did not have a clear track, however. Eisenhower flatly refused to lift his secrecy order which—to his astonishment, he told a news con ference—stalled the inquiry last Monday. McCarthy, who has blasted this order as an "iron curtain," bar ring him from presenting his full case against his Pentagon antag onists, shifted figures of speech and said the order makes him play against a "stacked deck." Stevens came up, and Eisen ' 'lower registered full agreement, with a firm answer to one hither to unanswered question. That was the big question which bogged down the inquiry last Monday: Were Army officials act ing on their own, or were the White House and Justice Depart ment calling the signals, when the Pentagon charged McCarthy and aides with improper pressure to get favors for Private G. David Schine? Eisenhower's secrecy order for bade Army witnesses to talk about conversations with the White House and other officials. •McCar thy and some of the investigating senators took the position this made it impossible to fix respon sibility for the Army's acts. torship establish an outpost on this continent to the detriment of all, • the American nations, of course, would be a terrible thing, and that was the reason for the Caracas resolution." Wl:ite House permission for di rect quotations on Guatemala un der•scored the obvious concern over the arms shipment within the administration, . In New York, Colonel Hubert F. Julian; who says he is military rHE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA 30 Are Nominated For Reelection In Pennsylvania PHILADELPHIA, May 19 (JP)— Pennsylvania's 19 Republican and 11 Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives were nominated in Tuesday's pri maries to try for reelection in November. Their 30 opponents for the No vember general election include one former congressman, Daniel J. Flood, Wilkes-Barre Democrat. Less than 30 per cent of the Keystone' State's five million eli gible residents=an unusually light turnout—voted in the election that ticketed these two men for the governor's seat now held by Fine: Republican Lloyd H Wood of Montgomery. County, 56-year-old lieutenant governor. Democrat George M. Leader,.36- year-old York County state sena tor. Each swamped two opponents, Wood running far ahead as top man on the GOP "harmony" slate. hidochinese Peace Unlikely GENEVA, May 19 7 Hope of achieving peace in the jungle war of Indochina faded almost to the vanishing point at the Geneva conference tonight. . East and West suspended nego tiaions for an armistice for one day. after . devoting more than three hours to wrangling over an old dispute—recognition of the so-called "phantom governments" of Laos and' Cambodia. Pham Van Dong, the Vietminh foreign minister, spent one and a half Hours trying to persuade the West to invite delegations of the two "resistance" governments to Geneva. The West is unanimous in re garding these governments as Communist inventions with no claims to conference , ; seats. Dele gates of the Western-recognized governments of Laos and Cam bodia spoke after Dong, a confer ence source said, and restated their opposition to /bong's pro posals. purchasing agent for Guatemala, said today the U.S. State Depart• ment refuses to let Guatemala buy surplus military materials here and from friendly countries and this "iron ring" compels her to buy anywhere she can. w — A „ g1tt ,..„,„...„, r ,:,.„,,...„,„,.. .:. ~.-.,•:,,,,;..._-:., --..,•• , •. i,.•&c ~•„:„.,,..,,,,,,,:,„:„.„,„;,.7,:,,::„,.„,..„.,,,,,...„,,,.,..,,::—_,..•„:„:„. "GOLDEN MASK" Van .Heflin Wanda Hendrix Marilyn Monroe Jane Russell "GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES" sole responsi "MIAP•11 STORY" Barry Sullivan Luther Adler Senate Group Votes To Limit Insurance WASHINGTON, May 19 (JP) —The Senate Banking Committee voted today to limit Federal Housing Administration insurance on home repair loans to 85 per cent of the total loan, and to require the home owner to deal directly with the banker making the loan. The committee wrote these and other restrictions into a general housing measure it is preparing in an 'effort to end abuses under which some fast-talking salesmen allegedly have used the lure of easy loans to bilk unsuspecting home owners. The actions had the effect of putting on the bankers some of the burden of making ,certain the loans are worthwhilel but Chair man Homer E. Capehart (R.-Ind.) said this would "not have a deter rent effect on the program " Heretofore the FHA has under written the full amount of the home repair loans it insured, guar anteeing •the leaders against any loss. Under the new provision, the lender would be required to take 15 per cent of the risk on each Such loan, In addition, Capehart said, the loan documents "must be signed on the premise of the lender or in the presence of an official of the lending institu tion." s . This presumably would prevent a salesman from taking loan pap ers to a home-owner, getting him to sign before the work had start ed,. and then collecting the pro ceeds of the loan. It would also tend to prevent banks from deal ing in loans for home repairs hundreds of miles away, where they might not be aware of con ditions. French Bravery Cited LONDON May 19 (IP)--Briga dier General Christian de Cas teries was quoted in a Pieping broadcast today as saying his of ficers had elected to defend Dien Bin Phu to the end rather than heed French high command in structions to try to cut their way out and flee to Laos. • Seniors Commencement Marks the Real Beginning of Your In terest in the University . . . Not the End Take Penn State With You After Graduation JOIN -YOUR .ALUMNI ASSOCIATION NOW Special Senior $2.00 Membership . . - If You Join on or Before June 7 As ct Member, You . . . • Receive the Alumni News magazine seven times a year. • Receive the Penn Stater, a 4-page newspaper, four times a year. • Receive first priority—after season ticket hold- ers—on reserved football tickets. • Receive the Football Letter, a personalized ac count of eadh game. • Support the work of the Alumni Association which sponsor's: Class Reunions and the Alumni Institute in June and the Homecoming weekend in the fall: the Penn State Alumni Fund; 65 alumni district clubs; and many other alumni activities. Come to: THE ALUMNI OFFICE 104 Old Main ' Defense Fraud Cited 1.-y House WASHINGTON, May 19 . (M A House subcommittee said today it is asking the Justice Depart ment to investigate "possible fraud" in a million-dollar con tract for blood-shipping contain ers awarded two years ago to the Bailey Engineering Co., Ramsey, Most of the containers were de signed for a civil defense blood stockpile against atomic attack. The subcommittee also demand ed disciplinary action against mil itary officials whom it accused of showing "very bad judgment or incompetence" in awarding the contract and "serious negligence" in inspecting the finished con tainers. The subcommittee said it is turning over all of its records to justice officials with the requeSt for a full investigation of alleged changes in specifications, which it said would have saved the Bailey firm $lOO,OOO on the con tract, and other "serious derelic tions." Louis H. Bailey had boasted that the Bailey, Co. was able to get away with so many devia tions because 'he had so many friends' . . , and t h at he took shortcuts in putting the container together because no One could find out about it after the box was completed. PAGE THREE