WEDNESDAY, JANumm 1 'O. ,1`1.7., Hamm • sc e S - A .;•e. 7* .1. NEW DELHI, India, , Jan. 4 (k)—Dag Hammarskjold was described by the Hindustan Times today as "unfortunately too Dulles-minded." It advised the UN secretary general humility is the only attitude that can bring ,success on his mission to Peiping. The influential English-language publication, often termed Prime Minister Nehru's favorite newspaper, loosed its blast as Hammarskjold neared his jour ney's end in Red China. He is seeking the release of 11 impris oned American fliers and other UN personnel. A political columnist of the Hindustan Times wrote that Ham marskjold's consultations with Premier Chou En-lai's Red gov ernment "will be successful only if he observes humility and, in stead of trying to justify on its merits the case for release of the U.S. airmen, asks for the gesture in the interests of international peace " Con g ress (Continued from page one) vision networks will carry the ad dress. Informed sources said the presi dential message will contain few surprises_ They said, however, Eisenhower will stress a new de fense concept calling for man power cuts in the armed forces, balanced by new weapons and closer links with this country's al lies. , The House will go through the formality of electing a speaker to morrow but, with Democrats out numbering Republicans 231 to 203, the election of Rayburn is a fore gone conclusion. Rayburn, who will be 73 Thursday, already has served as speaker longer than any other man in history. The GOP senators chose Sen. Styles Bridges (R-NH) chairman of their Policy Committee. He succeeds Homer Ferguson (R- Mich), who was not reelected. Sen. Eugene Millikin (R-Col) Was elected chairman of the Con ference of Republican Senators, with Sen. 'Milton Young '(R-ND) as. secretary and Sen. Leverett Saltanstall (R-Mass) deputy floor leader or whip. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) was reported in line to be chosen later as chairman of the Republi can Senatorial Campaign Commit tee—with White House assent. Goldwater is an outspoken sup porter of Sen. •Joseph R. McCar thy (R-Wis), who has split with the administration over ways and means on combatting communism at home and abroad. The Arizonan quickly came to President Eisenhower's defense, however, when McCarthy accused the President Dec. 7 of displaying a "shrinking show of weakness"' over Communist China's jailing of 62 American airmen on "spy" charges. UCA Discussion Tonight The University Clu•istian Asso ciation will hold an informal dis cussion, "Review and Preview," at 7 tonight in 304 Old Main. The discussion will include an evaluation of the CICA program this semester and plans for next semester's program. Elections Committee Th e All-University Elections Committee will meet at 7 p.m. &- morrow in the Student Govern ment room in Old Main to review the past election and begin plan ning for the election in April. Sharpsh*oter Hahs Rylbe.ry With Split-Second Gun He, ing NEW YORK, Jan. 4 (JP)—A re ti d police sharpshooter, wh o fires from either hip, chanced up on a bank holdup yesterday and foiled it with three shots. The lone, would-be bandit was slain before he got a dime. A guar( and a customer w ere slightly wounded. The decisive, split-second gun play in Manhattan's garment dis trict—one of the world's most congested areas--brought several thousand curious persons converg ing on ' a New York Trust Co. branch. It is three blocks below Times Square. The ex-cop was. William Rettig, 61, who retired from the force 10 years ago this month with a repu tation as a crack shot. He is a mes senger for the Franklin Savings Bank, four blocks away from the New York Trust. He happen^d into the New York Trust on an "Expert Judgment" "It is presumably to make such a gesture easy that Nehru criti cized the Unitad Nations for pass ing expert judgment in taste," the columnist said. Although not commenting edi torially, the Statesman and the Indian Express both reported Neh ru had advised Hammarskjold not to limit himself to the airmen is sue if he wanted the Peiping talks to succeed. To Confer with Chou • The secretary general expects to confer with Chou concerning the conviction and imprisonment of the flier§ and others.on charges of spying. The airmen were shot down in the Korean War, when Red China was fighting the United Nations alongside Communist North Korea. in Moscow today the Soviet . armed forces newspaper Red Star issued a new attack on the im prisoned Americans: It said: "These spies who were• caught with the goods received ,their de served punishment. It seems their American bosses should keep si lent, but their impudence is so great they complain in the UN." Ladeiinsky Case Propose WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 (JP)—A gr-,up of Jewish leaders yesterday called on Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, in the interest of "civil rights and civil liber ties," to reopen and reconsider the case of Wolf Lad ejinsky. Ladejinsky is the land .reform specialist dropped by Benson from his job as agricultural attache at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, on technical and security grounds. Ladejinsky had been cleared by the State Department but Benson decided against retaining hi m, when the job was transferred to the Agriculture Depariment. The ouster led to a controversy, and the case is, now being consid ered by the White House. errand for his Own bank. The slain bandit, a nattily dressed Negro. ./as identified as Ellison Gaylord Gray, 27, of Kan sas City, Mo. He checked into a Broadway and 32nd St. hotel on New Year's. Day. A regular guard in the New Ycr7: Trust, Edward A. Kaszuba, 33, cooly risked his life to call at tention to the h..adup. With the bandit's gun muzzle in his stom ach, Kaszuba loudly assured him, "I haven't got a gun." Kaszuba was slugged over the had and shot in the foot by the holdup man, just . before Rettig . . dropped the gunman with one of two.shots. The bandit died on the spot. "Rettig probably saved my life," Kaszuba exclaimed afterwards. A stray bullet ricocheted and struck cu - tomes with only a nick in the ankle. g- • t-A-ILLCVIPaq. JIAN I r L.LILLEcgt. PENNSYLVANIA Mayor Elected in Wake of Erie Gambling Scandal EI-tIE, Pa., Jan. 4 (A')—A 37- year-old political unknown took over yesterday as mayor of Erie the wake of a gambling scan dal which brought about the res ignation of Mayor Thomas W. Flatley. The four-member city council unanimously elected Arthur Gard ne to the $7,000-a-year post. His erm of office expires Jan. 1, 1956. • The selection of Gardner to head Pennsylvania's third largest city came as a surprise to many po'itcal leaders in the county. He had been mentioned for the post but only vaguely. Gardner has been serving as City assessor—a position Flatley named him to less than two years ago. Before that Gardner had been a part-time instructor at Gan non College in &ie. Both Gardner and Flatley are Democrats. Flatley submitted his resigna tion Dec. 8 after pleading guilty to charges of violating his oath of office and conspiracy. He was one of more than 40 persons ar rested by state police in a gam bling raid last October. McLeod Loses nspect ion Post WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 (A')— Secretary of State John Foster Dulles for a second - time has re duced the authority of his con troversial security chief, R. W. E ,ott McLeod, this time relieving him of inspection power over U.S. missions abroad. Department officials said this move, effective last Friday, fol lowed a suggestion by McLeod three days earlier that it be done. It also was in line with recom m ndations last spring by Dulles' Public Committee on Personnel. Department officials empha sized Dulles' action was not to be construed as a blow aimed at Mc- Leod. He previously was relieved of his duties as personnel chief. T.n Friday's move, Dulles trans ferred McLeod's foreign - service inspection duties to Loy W. Hen derson, veteran diplomat wh o took over . Friday as deputy un derscretary for administration. Officials said McLeod wrote Dulles a memo Dec. 28 saying Henderson's appointment was a good time to consolidate the for eign service and domestic serv ice inspection functions. Meta Seg to. Meet Theta Sigma' Phi, women's pro fessional journalism fraternity, will meet at 8 tonight in 111 Car negie. e. Line HARRISBURG, Jan. 4 (Pl— General Assembly of Penn sylvania organized quickly today for its 141st regular session and heard outgoing Republican Gov. John S. Fine describe a "severe fiscal problem" facing the incom ing Democratic administration. With Democrats controlling the House. Rep. H. G. Andrews, Cam bria, was installed as speaker of the House. Senate Republicans re elected Sen. M. Harvey Taylor, Dauphin, as president pro tern pore. Both are veteran leaders. Desks of both the House. and Senate were piled high with bas kets of flowers for the colorful opening day's ceremonies, all but hiding the lawmakers sitting be hind them. Fine Sees Progress Fine, in his farewell message delivered to a joint session of the House and Senate, said that dur ing the last four years the com monwealth ha s' progressed in "every phase of government." "Our industries, our laboring people and our citizens are bet ter off today than they were four years ago," he said. "I trust this progress will be maintained." Taxes Fe]l Short .On state finances, the outgoing governor said revenue from some taxes fell Short of estimates and the cost of education and relief mounted above budget allocations, all adding up to a prospective de ficit of GO million dollars in the present biennium. "Of course, fiscal problems be come increasingly grave by the r - cpos9d lapse of the sales tax," he said, referring to the Demo- Con loess tit Report fro WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 (IP)—Herbert Hoover will send to Congress tomorrow a prospectus of the forthcoming new Hoo ver Commission proposals for shrinking the size and cost of government while improving its efficiency. The 80-year-old. Hoover is expected to notify Congress, immediately upon opening of the session, that the report will run to 17 or 18 installments. The first is due by the end of this month. Thereafter the recommendations of the 2-member commission, some of them certain to be loaded with controversy, will begin reaching the Capitol at the rate of nearly one a week until May 31. By then, Hoover hopes to have laid down a blueprint for action by the Congress and the White House to reduce by a third or a half the number "of independent federal agencies. and for elimi nating many of the estimated 1,500 activities in which govern ment competes with -private en terprise. The report will continue the work of the first Hoover Com Mi ssion, which since 1949 has result ed in 58 public laws, 39 presiden tial reorganization plans, hun dreds of executive orders, and prospective savings estimate& by some at four billion dollars a year. Tomorrow's "interim" report, commission officials said, will be a noncontroversial outline of the commission's plans and a progress report on the studies of .its 14 task forces in nearly every federal activity. These range from public power policy and civil service practices —topics already' scheduled for a critical look by the Democratic. Congress—to an inquiry headed by Gen. Mark Clark into intelli gence activities here and overseas. The. commission can, and prob ably will, explore whether the government should sell power to consumers, provide hospital ser vice to nonveterans, serve meals, make rope and paint, smelt tin and lend money. The section most nearly com plete, and scheduled for iss.uance in three or four weeks, is tiled "paperwork management." In this, the commission may— or may not—recornmend the elim ination of income tax returns for some 35 million taxpayers. The proposal, which, would not of course excuse these millions from paying taxes, is known to have been under study by the paper work task force. Describes Funds cratic campaign pledge to drop that one per cent levy when it expires on Aug. 31. It produces about 100 millions in two years. '55-'57 Budget Fine, without discussing it in his farewell message. has esti mated the state's 1 1 / 2 billion dol lar budget for 1955-57 will be 350 millions out of balance through loss of the sales tax revenue and increased costs of education and other state services. That gives the 1955 assembly the hard choice of raising taxes or cutting costs. There have been advance indications there will be some of both. Democrats, too, showed their awareness of the situation as Sen. Continued Work Headed by Clark Players Present . . . - 1 1 1 ::Jt . orn ils urewil I _ ... Center .S . age ai the TUL-1 Friday Nights, Jan. 7, 14 Tickets at Student Union "I,zioceive H**ver ,3 z O V" 6, " 4,4 tr), x, ?i i' 4 f ~,- ~,., , 4 , ~ , ~,,,.... c „ , <,....z, , .44'‘.% 4As'•,, •,' 0 " V ' L. ? -~, •0 , ,b,- 1,,, f * ,A • . ;Zi: ,'lr'ZS7,4i..f\P ‘:..f;',,k I' 4,lAvis , ~,, Herbert Hoover "Government Proposal" Mendes-Frco.nce, Menauer ','eet BONN, Germany, Jan. 4 (IP)— The . Foreign Office said yester day French Premier Pierre Men des-France plans to meet West German Chancellor Konrad Ad enauer within the next two weeks. They probably wlil discuss 'once again their accord on the Saar, which has proved unpopular among the Germans. German sources said it is most likely that Mendes-France will stop off in Baden-Baden—near the Black Forest resort where Ade nauer will be staying—on his way back home from a three-day state visit to Italy ending Jan. 13. While in Italy, Mendes-France is expected to discuss closer French-Italian economic ties and the technical aspects of carrying out the projected rearmament of West Germany within the West ern European Union. France insists - on acceptance of the controversial French-German agreement to Europeanize Ger man-speaking Saar territory as part of the package of treaties linking West Germany to the WEU and th e North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Dee , f j c r'l.i":3li g rn ir ...: \`‘.6l-4. ;.::\:-4 .4. Joseph M. Barr, Democratic state chairman. said the incoming ad ministration of Gov.-elect George M. Leader faces a "tremendous challenc." Leader Faces Problems" "I do not know of any governor who was ever confronted with the problems that await George M. Leader when he takes office Jan. 18," Barr said in a Senate speech. Leader will have a divided Leg islature—with Republicans con trolling the Senate and his own party ruling the House—the first time this has happened since 1940. Democrats hold a 111-99 edge in the House and Republicans a working majority of 26-24 in the Senate. PAGE THREE