4-- Tuesday, April 2G, 1954 THE BATTALION Page 3 diffi- is it.’ ne only trial’ ” •t. “I This on a h Dis- iiss it, oi who to try • Parr. e London Lady Dies In Climbing Fall FORT WILLIAM, Scotland, April 20—(A*)-*—A London woman moun tain climber met death today as mountaineers fear it. She perished dangling from a rope over the edge of a precipice, near the frosty top of Ben Novis. The woman, Mrs. Elizabeth Em ery, 39, lost her footing yesterday afternoon on a rock formation „ known as Tower Ridge. She slipped from a ledge which sloped off to a sheer drop of more than 100 feet. Mrs. Emery went down but a climbers’ rope, attached to her - waist and tied to a 26-year-old gird who followed soine yards behind, retarded her fall. The rope caught on an out-crop ping of rock and after swinging for a few ghastly seconds Mrs. Emery hung suspended several feet from the rock face of the mountain. For more than 20 hours Mrs, Emery hung in the precarious posi tion while rescue teams from Fort William toiled up the dangerous trails. / _ Strong men hauled up the rope this afternoon but Mrs. Emery was dead. She presumably had been dead for some hours. Apparently „ . she had suffered from shock, but death presumably was due to ex posure. It becomes bitterly cold at night near the top of 4,406-foot ' * Ben Nevis, Britain’s highest moun tain. ’ Spy’s Wife Leaves Plane In Australia DARWIN, Australia, April 20 LP) — Mrs. Evdokia Patrov, . . wife of a Soviet diplomat who . , has handed spy data over to • • Australian officials, left the plane Which was returning her to Russia today and remained in Aus- ■ ’ tralia. Mrs. Petrov .made the decision to stay in Australia and seek polit ical asylum here along with her husband after being interviewed by Australian government officers in Darwin. Before the interview, Australian police disarmed two resisting Rus sian couriers who were escorting - - her back to the Soviet Union aboard a British BOAC Constella tion. Two .32 calibre pistols in shoulder holsters were taken froin them. While the couriers were being searched, police separated Mrs. Petrov from them, and R. S. Lay- - * din, Northern Territory govern ment secretary, talked with her nearly three-quarters of an hour. Police, Soviet officials and anti- Eommunist refugees fought an eight-minute battle with fists at ■Sydney late yesterday when Soviet officials, firmly holding Mrs. Pe trov by the arms, escorted her up the ramp to board the plane. Bystanders said she was protest ing, “I do not want to go.” The dramatic scene took place at Kingsford Smith Airport where . - 1,500 struggling, screaming people attempted to halt the blonde em bassy employe’s return to Russia. Her husband, formerly third secre tary at the Soviet Embassy in Can berra, turned over spy ring data to Australia last year and asked for asylum. Weeping and bedraggled, Mrs. Petrov was pushed for 200 yards around the air strip and up a gang way to a British Constellation plane. In the crowd hundreds of per sons shouted that she had said re peatedly in Russian, “I do not want to go. Save me.” The U. S. Census Bureau esti mates that another person is add ed to the population of America every 13 seconds, on the average. THE TIME IS HUN STS'O SHORT Buy Vour SUMMER SERGE At . Z U B I K ’ S 105 . NV Main ^ >*orth Gate Guion Hall TODAY & WEDNESDAY Without extremely heavy cloth ing survival in such an exposed situation would have been miracu lous, experienced climbers said. The girl at the other end of the rope from which Mrs. Emery dan gled was Miss Arthea Russell of Templeton, England. She managed to fasten her end of the rope to jagged rocks, but she did not have the strength to pull up her com panion. Easter Holiday climbers on other paths, who were unable to ap proach, saw Mi’s. Emery’s predic ament, and hastened to Fort Wil liam for help. Numerous volun teers and a mountaineering de tachment of the Royal Air Force risked many dangers to reach the spot at night. Indochina War Unlikely By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH AUGUSTA, Ga., April 20—)— President Eisenhower and Secre tary of State Dulles evaluated “the menace of Soviet communism” to day, and the Cabinet officer later declared it is “unlikely” American troops will be sent to Indochina. Dulles said the violent battles being waged in Indochina are not creating any spirit of defeatism. “On the contrary,” he said in a prepared statement issued after an hour-long session with the Presi dent, “they are rousing the free nations to measures which we hope will be sufficiently timely and vig orous to preserve these vital areas from Communist domination.”. The secretary was referring to United States efforts to build a Pacific defense alliance . against the spread of communism. Newsmen’s questioning of Dulles about whether there is any “seri ous possibility” of American troops being sent into Indochina was prompted by Vice President Nix on’s statement last Friday. At a meeting of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in Washington, Nixon, replying to a hypothetical question, said U. S. forces might have to be dispatched to Idochina if the French pull out. He prefaced his answer by saying he regarded French withdrawal as unlikely. The vice president spoke with the understanding his remarks would not be attributed him, but what he said was traced quickly to him. His remarks touched off a storm of controversy in Congress and brought demands that Eisen hower say whether Nixon’s views represented administration policy. After today’s session with Eisen hower the first question put to Dulles at a news conference was whether he felt there is any seri ous possibility of U. S. troops going to Indochina. “I think it is unlikely,” he re plied quietly. Asked whether he was speaking for the President, the secretary said no—only for himself. He said later he didn’t think the troop mat ter had been discussed at his meet ing with Eisenhowex 1 . Garnet Horner of the Washing ton Star then put this question to Dulles: “Do you agree with Mr. Nixon in favoring the sending of Ameri can troops to Indochina, if neces- sai’y, as a last resort, to save that area from Communist domination if the French should pull out?” Dulles replied that Nixon had answered a hypothetical question off the record and that he, Dulles, wasn’t going to answer a hypo thetical question on the record. The secretary said Nixon had expressed a personal opinion and that the vice president was en titled to do that. United Nations Forms Disarmament Committee By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., April 20—OP)—The U. N. Disarmament Commission today set up a Big Power subcommittee for a new look at ways to control the hydrogen bomb and other weapons. Russia hinted she would boycott the subcommittee because Red China, India and Czechoslovakia were omitted. Climaxing a day long wrangle between the Soviet Union delegate, Andrei Y. Vishinsky, and the West ern delegates, the commission vot ed 9 to 1 in favor of a British resolution to put Britain, France, the United States, the Soviet Union and Canada on the subcom mittee. Vishinsky voted against this pro posal and the delegates of Lebanon and Nationalist China abstained. The commission earlier had voted 10 to 1 against a proposal by Vish- insky to add India, Communist China and Czechoslovakia to the subcommittee. Vishinsky was the only delegate raising his hand for that proposal and Lebanon abstain ed. Before the rush of ballots, Vish insky had warned the commission that. defeat of his proposal would create difficulties for the Soviet Union as regards its participation in the subcommittee. “Without the participation of the people’s republic of China, India, and Czechoslovakia, we cannot imagine the success of our work,” he said. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., U. 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