WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1955 U.S. Navy Completes North Tachen Evacuation TAIPEI, Formosa, Wednesday, Feb. 9 (EP)—The U.S. Navy an nounced the last Chinese civilian was removed yesterday from North Tachen, whose garrison was reported ready to leave only a scorched earth - behind. Reports from the U.S. 7th F : for the second straight day fired ' on U.S. carrier planes but no damage was reported. A Jap dis patch said' the Reds on Yikiang shun, eight miles north of the Tachens, fired on two planes Mon day night and one Tuesday. Otherwise, the Chinese Com munists from nearby island posi tions still made no attempt to interfere in , the withdrawal, which was moving in such high gear that some authorities expected it to be completed by Monday at the latest. The Communists are expected to move in shortly there after. Craft Boarded The residents of the North and South Tachens, 200 miles north of Formosa, crowded aboard Chinese landing craft and U.S. transports while carrier fighter planes flash ed overhead on patrol. • Most of the 15,000 civilians are on South or Lower Tachen. Most of the 15,000 Nationalist regulars and guerrillas are on North Ta chen. U.S. Denounced Peiping radio, heard in Tokyo, again denounced the U.S. partici pation in the withdrawal. Quot ing the official People's Daily, Peiping declared the "U.S. gov ernment must be held fully re sponsible for all the consequences resulting from 'its direct partici pation in Chiang Kai-shek's mili tary operations and its occupation of China's islands." Nationalist officials predicted the Chinese Reds now woulc. not interfere in the Tachen operation —if they ever intended to—be cause of uncertainty over the up heaval in Moscow. where Premier Georgi M. Malenkov resigned and was succeeded by Marshal Nikolai A. Bulganin. IFC PanHel Ball eet said Red antiaircraft gunners Senators Propose Turnpike Extension HARRISBURG. Feb. 8 (/P)—A cluster of 17 senators—both Re publican and Democratic—today proposed a new extension of the Pennsylvania Turnpike to run from Stroudsburg to Sharon. The bi-partisan bi" would au thorize the Turnpike Commission to make surveys and decide then on the exact route. The extension.paralleling some what the present east-west Turn pike main stem in Southern Pennsylvania eventually would link with the Ohio Turnpike. . Another east-west extension was proposed earlier in this ses sion to stretch from Erie County eastward through the northern tier of counties below the New York border. Defense Pact OK Asked WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (R) The Senate Foreign ' Relations Committee voted 11-2 today for ratification of the Formosa de fense treaty. The pact commits the United States to recognize any Commun is attack on Formosa or the neighboring Pescadoies islands as "dangerous to its own peace and safety" and to meet it with mili tary power within the limits of the U.S. Constitution. Congress has already author ized President Eisenhower to figh'. if necessary to defend For mosa and "related positions." Un der this special authority he has Get Your Date Now! Friday, April 1 $5.00 per Couple Tickets at Student Union Desk "The Best Dance o THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE REC HALL 9:00 -1:00 Tougher Policy By Reds Seen WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (. I P) Russia's swift change in command impressed some U.S. legislators today as likely to mean an even tougher Red policy toward the United States. Others thought they detected signs of turmoil within the Soviet Union. Some said they Just didn't know what it meant for the fu ture. In Rwsia, as Seri. Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) pointed out. "the unexpected is always • happening." Chairman Walter F. George (D- Ga) was one of those who thought the accession of Defense Minister Nikolai' Bulganin to the premier ship with Communist party boss Nikita S. Khrushchev as his spon sor, "looks like a tougher policy, both in Russia and abroad. George noted that the deposed Georgi Melankov was "more even ly disposed if not more friendly to the West." British Warn of War LONDON, Feb. 8 (1?) The prime ministers of the British Commonwealth warned today that an atomic war would "bring ruin upon the human race" and pledged their nine nations "never to embark upon aggression." assigned the 7th Fleet to cover Nationalist Chinese evacuation of the Tachen islands, a redeploy ment which officials say will stieA,gthen defenses of Formosa. Sen. Walter F. George (D-Ga), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, anticipated the Sen ate would want to debate the For mosa treaty at length, but he said he hoped it would be approved by Thursday. A two-thirds vote is required for ratification. Sens. Wayne Morse (Ind-Ore) and William Langer (R-ND) vot ed against the pact in committee. Morse has denounced it as a "war treaty" which would recog nize the sovereignty of Chiang Semi-Formal PENNSYLVANIA Over Billion Asked For Schools by Ike WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (W)—President Eisenhower outlined to day a three-year attack on the nation's school shortage which would throw $1,100,000,000 of federal money into emergency construction. He said the program would preserve "the responsibility of coin• munities and states in educating our children." Sen. H. Alexander Smith (R-NJ) and Rep. P. Freylinghuysen (R-NJ) immediately introduced bills to put the President's pro posal into effect. The Eisenhower plan is aimed at assisting school districts in three categories: 1. Those which are able to is sue building bonds but which cannot market them at reasonable interest rates. 2. Those which have issued all the bonds they are legally permit ted but which still have some money available. 3. Those which are flat broke. For the first group the Presi dent's plan would do this: The federal government would appropriate 750 million dollars over a period of three years to help states buy bonds which could not be sold at an interest rate of less than 3YB per cent. The fed eral governmen: would buy from 50 to 80 per cent of a state's total bonds, depending on the state's per capita income. The federal funds would be repayable in 30 years. To help schools in the second category, states would set up school building authorities which would erect schools and rent them to local school districts. The federal government would join on a 50-50 basis to provide enough to make annual payments on bonds issued by the state authori ties to build the schools. Rents from local districts would be expected to pay off the bonds in 30 years. The buildings would then become the property of the local districts. Kai-shek's government over For mosa and involve the United States in Chiang's ambition to re conquer the Chinese mainland. the Year" House Votes To Continue Draft Law WASHINGTON, Feb. ' 8 (A')— The House voted 394-4 today to continue the draft four years be yond June 30. It is currently tak ing about 11,000 young men each month. The legislation, asked by Dwight D. Eisenhower, now goes to the Senate. The same international pressures that helped to sweep it to passage in the House will be pushing it there, but the Senate is expected to take more than the one day of debate the House held. The four House members who voted "no," all Republicans, were Ushe: L. Burdick of North Dako ta, Clare E. Hoffman of Michigan, Noah M. Mason of Illinois and Wint Smith of Kansas. Uncertainties of the Formosan situation and the designs of Rus sia were in the background as the House debated. Chairman Carl Vinson (D-Ga) of the Armed Services Committee, successfully resisting a move to limit the draft extension to two years, told the House: "We're about as close to shoot ing as has ever 'happened in the history of This government. In 1951. we had trouble in Korea. In 1955, we have trouble in the Formosan Straits." Bill Finegan and Eddie Sauter PAGE THRte