SATURDAY. MAY 21, 1955 French Troops To Evacuate SAIGON, South Viet Nam, May 20 (JP)—Premier Ngo Dinh Diem won an important victory today in his drive to lessen French Influence in South Viet Nam. His deputy de fense minister announced France had agreed to withdraw its troops from the capital city of Saigon. The minister, Tran Trung Dung, said that eventually the entire 75,000-man French expeditionary force will be shift ea from the big southern cities to two or three coastal embarka tion points. Diem's government contends the troops in their pres ent concentrations have angered the Vietnamese people and fired ur Communist propaganda. Dung's announcement followed disclosure that Gen. Paul Ely, French commissioner general in Indochina and commander of tne French armed forces here, had asked Paris to relieve him of his post Comes as Surprise Dung and Ely are working out details of the troops' regroup ing. Ely's move came as a sur prise, but it obviously was an outgrowth of his clashes with Diem on military and political policies, and of American support for Diem. , Diem asked tne French govern ment last week '.o move the troops northward to the border with Communist-held North Viet Nam, where they could guard against Rea encroachment, or pull them out of South Viet Nam. Succeeds Again Announcement of the agree ment on shifting the French forc es to coastal embarkation points marked another success in Diem's determination to prove that South Viet Nam now is free, independ ent and sovereign. The victor in the recent civil war with Bing Xuyen rebels, Deim is arranging elections of a National Assembly to set up a government on a broad basis which will decide the future stat us of absentee Chief of State Bao Dai. Installed in 1949 Now living on the French Rivi era, Bao Dai was installed by the French in 1949. The Premier made a strong bid for top-level recognition a week ago when he invited the Western Big Three foreign ministers to come here soon to draw up with his goVernment a common course of action against the spread of communism In , Viet Nam. So far no replies have been re ceived, Molotov Is Russian Envoy To UN Meeting UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., May 20 ("o—Soviet "ussia is sending Foreign Minister Vassily M. Molo tov to the 10th anniversary meet ing of the United Nations next month in San Francisco. Molotov so informed the UN today. This makes certain the holding of new high-level East-West talks. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and French Foreign Min ister Antoine Pinay announced earlier they will be in San Fran cisco. The British also are expeet ed to send their foreign minister —Harold Macmillan if the, Con servatives win next Thursday's election, a Laborite otherwise. The four ministers have just met in Vienna for the signing, of the Austrian independence trea ty. They likely will confer at San Francisco on plans for the meeting of their chiefs of govern ment later in the summer. Molotov attended the UN found ing conference at San Francisco in 1945. He will come from Mos cow after talks with India's Prime Minister Nehru, who is slated to visit Moscow early next month. V. K. Krishma Menon, foreign affairs advisor to Nehru, will rep resent India at the San Francisco session starting June 20. Menon is conferring in Peiping with top Chinese Communist officials. Lattimore Trip OK'd WASHINGTON, May 20 (.41- ov(9o,LAttlznore, today won State Department approval for a trip to Europe this summer despite the fact that ,he is under federal M dictment on a '3 erjury charge. Senate Opens Highway Debate WASHINGTON, May 20 (IP)—A hot fight over America's highways-of-the-future opened in the Senate today, with Democrats and Republicans vying to put across rival plans. Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn.) in the first major speech of the debate, declared that a bill he offered would criss-cross the country with "magnificent" new superroads. "The like of it no nation has ever dreamed," he said. Republicans, scoffing that the' Gore bill would not do the job, bided their time to try to substi tute an Eisenhower measure, turned down by the Public Works Committee in favor of the Gore bill. No Senate votes are to be taken until next week. Sen. Edward Martin of Penn sylvania formally introduced the Eisenhower bill and served notice he would ask the Senate to pass it instead of the Gore measure. He praised tha admin istration bill as a sound one, de signed to mc4ernize the na tion's roads on a "pay as you use" basis and help cut down the traffic death toll. The Gore bills calls for a fed eral-state outlay of $17,941,000,000 in the next five years on the four road systems aided by federal funds interstate, primary, sec ondary and urban. Of the total about $12,750,000 would be fed eral money. The Eisenhower plan would allot 38 billions of federal-State funds to the four systems over 10 ears . Of this, 26 billions wou!el be spent on the 40,000- mile interstate system, designed to link up all areas of the coun try. Catholicism Restricted In Argentina BUENOS AIRES, May 20 (W) —Congress completed action to day on a three-point program by supporters of President Juan D. Peron for restricting the Roman Catholic Church in Argentina. The Senate passed unanimously a House-approved resolution to set up the process for amending the constitution to sepa r a t e church and State. The Chamber of Deputies ap proved 112-9 a Senate bill to can cel the tax exemption of church es and religious• organizations. 'Point three in the program was approved earlier in the current three-week session by both bodies —discontinuing Catholic religious education in the public schools. All three measures await signa ture by President Peron but this is taken for granted, since Peron had\ said publicly he would sign any actions against the church taken by Congress. Congressional approval of the program had been anticipated, since Peron's party controls all the Senate seats and has an over whelming majority in the Cham ber. There was no immediate com ment from the Roman Catholic clergy, Who had sought to rally its supporters in defense of the privileges the church now en joys. Red Envoy Refuses to Act on Taxes BERLIN, May 20 (JP)—Soviet Ambassador G. M. Pushkin re jected today a Western appeal for Soviet help in getting Communist East Germany to pare down stiff highway taxes in effect since Ap ril 1. tied only by direct negotiations between the West German gov ernment and the Eastern govern ment, which the West Germans refuse to recognize as legal. Dependent on Transport West Berlin, isolated within East Germany, depends heavily on trucks t o bring foodstliffs and consumer goods from West Ger many 110 miles away. In hiking the taxes, East Germany asserted more money was needed to keep the roads in repair. The Western ambassadors esti mated the new rates will cost West Berlin 7 to 10 million dollars a year, unless a compromise can be reached. The old tax was boosted 1 100 per cent for the largest class of Western trucks to 240 marks —557.12 for a round trip on th-. Berlin autobahn. This is a tax of about 25 cents a mile. Mao, Nehru Confer; 'Pop Music Off Key,' Ile again told the Big Three Western ambassadors the levies slapped on West Berlin's truck traffic are the sole responsibility of the East German republic. Four-Hour Meeting The ambassadors met with Pushkin for four hours in the first formal meeting of top Western and Soviet officials in Germany since 1948. They proposed that the four powers occupying Berlin appoint German experts to study the tax problem and recommend a solution. In rejecting this, Pushkin in sisted the question could be set- Formosa Expectant TOKYO, Saturday, May 21 (NA) —Amidst new reports of some thing brewing over, Formosa, the top man in Red China, Mao Tze tung, conferred yesterday in Pei ping with the foreign policy ad- Viser of India's Prime Minister Nehru. Peiping radio tersely reported . that Mao received India's V. K. Krishna Merlon and that Red Chi na's Premier Chou En-lai also was present. Ike Weekends at Farm GETTYSBURG, Pa., May 20 (VP) —President Eisenhower arrived nt his country hoine here this af ternooo for a weekend of rest. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Agree Saigon A big bone of contention is the method of financing the interstate systeni. Under the Eisenhower plan the federal government would put up 25 billion for this, raising 21 billion of it by 30-year bonds issued bya special federal corporation, whose borrowing technically would not be counted in the federal debt. The bonds would be paid , off from gasoline taxes, and other motor vehicle taxes. Democrats, including Sen. Byrd (D-Va.) have attacked this financing plan, saying it would involve heavy interest payments and evasion of the ceiling on the federal debt. Says British Conductor BATH, England, May 20 (W)-- Sir Thomas Beecham, Britain's noted conductor, today called modern music a cinch to play. There's so much discord in it, he explained that no one notices when you sound off with a wrong note. Sir Thomas, who at 76 is famed both for his baton waving and acid tongued lectures to audien ces, told the Bath Music Festival: "In old music you stand alone, alone and naked, and every note you play has got to be perfect. No one notices in modern music how many wrong notes you play. "The cry today is 'down with Mozart.' To hell with anyone who can write a tune. Give us dis cord." Auto Price, Rent Declines Reported* WASHINGTON, May 20 (JP)—The government reported today that consiumer prices for both automobiles and rents declined in April because of record production in the auto and housing indus tries. The price declines were modest but possibly sign:ficant in view of tremendous output in both industries. They were chiefly respcn sible tor an over-all slight reduc tion in the. nation's living cost 1c 7al for Apr:l. Tho. Labor Department's Eur _au of Labor Stat:stlcs sad fiat between mid-March and miC. ' p- Hi its consumers' price index a clined a tenth of one per 114.2 per cent of the 1947 , 19 av erage. _ Wadsworth Hits Russia On Attitude UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.. May 20 (IF')--1.1.5. Delegate .'ames J. Wadsworth said today there will have to be a change of mind at the top level, especially on the Soviet side, if disarmament talks are to be make any progress. Wadsworth returned from the London conference of the five power UN Disarmament sub-com mittee, made up of Britain, France, the United States, the So viet Union and Canada. He told a news conference that new instructions on major points must be handed down from the higher level. This means the sub committee will take up less im portant matters until policy deci sions are made at the expected summer meeting of President Dwight Eisenhower, Soviet Pre mier Bulganin, British Prime Minister Anthony Eden and French Premiere Faure. The London conference recessed this week after 13 weeks of ,ses sions. The Soviet Union on May 10 put up a newly phrased peace plan. It had some apparent con cessions to Western views but Wadsworth felt the Russians did not go far enough. The Russians suggested once more the creation of an interna tional control commission to check on observance of any plan for disarmament. When the higher levies went into effect, Western spokesmen denounced them as blackmail in tended to gain formal diplomatic recognition of . East Germany by the West. They also charged the taxes were aimed at weakening the West's bargaining position in future talks on German unity. Judgeship Nominations Sent to Senate WASHINGTON, May 20 (EP)— Nominations for four U.S. Dis trict Court judgeships in Pennsyl vania were sent to the Senate to day by President Dwight D. Eis en),e,,ver in an apparent effort to end the long-standing shortage of at junsts in the Keystone State. Immediate reaction from Capi tol Hill sources was that there was no guarantee the nominations would win immediate approval. The most dangerous day of the week for driving is Saturday. What'll you have? The Chuck Wagon Light up in The Chuck Wagon Good to the last drop at THE CHUCK WAGON PAGE Lowest Since 1953 Th;s is threo-t :laths of one .)er cent lower than April of last r. It is the lowest living coat since May, 1953 when the index was 114. C. The rent decline was only a tenth of one cer cent. On a 0 monthly rent this would be only a dime a month. But it was tae first time rents over the ne. - 3n. have averaged lower since tile government rolled them back in wartime 1042. The earliest ri•e viouts reduction in a free rent r- 7r -Iset. without controls, was back 1938. No Break Ev!cl.mt Mrs. Aryness Joy Wickan: ing commissioner of labor :- tics, said no break was ev:d the housing market. She said r 3 have declined in some spots o - : ar the nation for a year, be , "g balanced by increases in oth-2r spots. This was the first mc:ntii the declines outweighed the in creases. "It's just that we have a better housing supply," she said. This is similar to what's hap pened in auto prices. Dealers ha :e been, givi.ng more and more con cessions off list prices so that costs of both new and used c rs have dropped by more than per cent between March and Here again Mrs. Wiezens there was no market break. Rise in ,April Food prices rose nearly half a per cent in April. This was lari ly due to a late March freeze in Southern states. It helped send potato prices up by an average of 30 per cent, 60 per cent over last year. Prices for most fruits and vegetables increased for the same reason. Meats were about the same, but poultry and dairy prices declined. State Senator Won't Answe: Clinic Queries PITTSBURGH, May 20 (1P)- State Sen. John J. Haluska (L Cambria), militant advocate of a controversial cancer treatment, in voked the Fifth Amendment to day and refused to answer govern ment questions about establish ment and operation of the Hoxsey Cancer Clinic. First witness in an investiga tion by federal authorities of the Cambria County clinic, Sen. Hal uska opened proceedings with a five-page prepared statement at tacking the government and the American Medical Assn. In his statement, IV • 'ca, ad ministrator of the clinic, referred to the inquiry as "persecution" and "harassment." He charged the government prematurely released "evidence" to newspapers and accused it of becoming a "conscious participant in trial by newspaper." The Cambria County Democrat said the government's action against the clinic was part of a campaign by the AMA to penalize those "who refuse to conform to the AMA and their political and economic beliefs."