TTfiUrt isawA I, M.AJK.UXX 10, ibvo Last Price Removed WASHINGTON, March. 17 Price control ended ridden years. .. Six weeks ahead! of Pres: of Price Stabilization struck t cals and other defense mate A-Bomb (Continued from page one) wave from the explosion saved the open-window test cars. Scientists seemed surprised at the duration and intensity of the earth shock, which oddly was not felt by other ■ observerslocated five miles away. Army Capt. Harold G. Kinne, of the Armed ForcesV: Sp e c-i a 1 Weapons Staff, blames'.the shock partly for the ruin of the first house. He thinks the mighty jar, reaching the white clapboard home, shook and twisted its frame, then the following air blast finished the job. At 1500 yards observers saw wooden stakes charred by the ra diant, flash heat of the explosion. Big cobblestones had been rolled or tossed about. But close up to the ■ blackened circle marking the edge of the fireball only 300 yards from “Ground Zero” an M-24 tank stood, with remarkably minor damage. However, a token of the awful power of the explosion was imprinted on the desert floor. The 22-ton tank had been, shov ed 50 feet forward on its tracks. Back at 1000 yards there was a pillbox. It looked like any sol diers who would have been in side would have been safe. A peek inside showed everything intact, although the earth cover ing had been partially blown away and sandbags were seared by heat. .An ’amphibious landing craft with a boat-like body but trac tors like a tank had been torn in to shreds and much of it fused or melted into mere scraps of metal. The‘.landing craft had been spot ted almost within shadow of the spiry, 300-foot tower which had cradled the atomic device, deton ated on split second schedule at 5:20" a.m. The tower itself had disappeared in the twinkling of an eye. House Group OK's New Cabinet Seat . WASHINGTON, March 17 (£>) —President : Eisenhower’s first government reorganization plan, a new cabinet-level. De partment of the Federal Security- Agency, was approved by the House Government Operations committee today' 17-12. The close vote came as a sur prise but committee members said the 12 Democratic “no” bal lots were more of a protest against a speed-up feature than opposi tion to the reshuffle itself. One Democrat joined the 16 commit tee Republicans to put the meas ure through. Tito Meets Queen, •LONDON, March 17 ident Marshal Tito, wartime. Com munist guerrilla 1 chieftain turned anti-Soviet dictator, lunched at Buckingham Palace "today with Queen Elizabeth 11. From that friendly meeting he went into a two-hour cold war strategy ses sion with Prime Minister Church ill tonight. „ The Tito-Churchill talks were atended by British Foreign .Sec retary Anthony Eden and Yugo slav Foreign Minister Koca Pop ovic. Secrecy surrounded the meet ing, but British sources have made it clear that Tito’s five-day visit —-his first to a Western nation— will include a full examination of Western defense strategy in the light of Stalin’s death and the Kremlin’s new. set of rulers. U.S. officials are being kept informed of developments. In formed .American sources said the Yugoslav leader may be in vited later to visit the United :ident Eisenhower’s target date for a free economy, the Office the ceiling from steel, machine tools, cans, and some chemi ;rials—the last controlled commodities. The controls came off the last consumer, goods last week. OPS figures' buyers will pay $3 billion more a year because of price rises in the items freed since the decontrol drive got underway ir. February. About $1 billion is from the consumer’s pocket directly. Another big chunk will be in taxes to pay for higher-cost munitions. But today’s big decontrol items, iron and steel, are not due to rise generally. OPS and industry spokesmen agree that booming output and growing competition will hold steel products in line. Helped Hold Rise The OPS order lifted from in dustry a regulatory’ harness that was imposed at a peak of panic buying on Jan. 26, 1951. That was after prices had zoomed 8 per cent in two bursts of buying, one when Korea was invaded seven months earlier, and another when Red China joined the assault. The ceilings—which OPS called “flexible” and critics called “leaky”—helped hold'the further rise to about 4 per cent on the consumer price index. Gone also are wage ceilings, which ended on Feb. 6, four days after Eisenhower branded - price and wage restraints as “unsatis factory and unworkable”; and controls on consumer and real estate credit, lifted last summer. Through April 15 OPS Administrator Joseph H. Freehill told reporters today that all but 1035 OPS workers already have been fired or handed 30-day discharge notices. The agency once employed 12,000. Because of the early clean-up of controls, OPS will return $l% million of unused funds to the Treasury, Freehill estimated. The agency will be virtually out of business by April 15 except for enforcement and pre-liquidation activity, he predicted, ana will be defunct by June 30. In Eisenhower’s inaugural mes sage he asked for an “orderly” decontrol to be completed by April 30, when present wage-price au thority expires. OPS complied by lifting ceilings in seven'successive weekly batches. Generally, the inflationary im pact has been slight. Westinghouse Workers Strike Over Layoff PHILADELPHIA, March .17 (jT>) —Some 3800 production and main tenance workers in the huge West inghouse Electric & Manufactur ing Corp. plant in suburban Les ter, walked off their jobs today in a row over a dice game firing. No work was being done on jet engines for. the air force nor steam turbines. The workers are mem bers of Local 107, United Electri cal, Radio and Machine Workers, Independent. States. The Western powers are anxious to strengthen their politi cal links with Tito, who broke with Russia in 1943. . During the day Tito appeared once in a gray lounge suit, twice in resplendent .military uniforms of his marshal’s rank, once in diplomatic gray and finally in white tie and tails for a formal •dinner late '• tonight, ' with Eden and his wife at swank Carleton House Terra'ce. Hundreds of Londoners turned out in warm sunshine to gape •and applaud. Only once—at the gates to Buckingham Palace—did boos mingle with applause. Police and secret service men;i guarding Tito under unpreceden-. ted security precautions to pre vent. any attempts on, his life by anti-Tito Communists and Fascists and Yugoslav monarchists, quick ly closed in and ordered the boo , ers to keep quiet. One man rshc.-V'd, “Go- home Tito, down I with Tito.” He was arrested and THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Controls by OPS today after two controversy- NEW YORK, March 17 (JP) —Ah, the wind it blew and the flags they flew for the Irish on parade, as they followed a line of green sublime along Fifth Avenue. Excitement grew as New York anew marked St. Patrick’s holi day, and a marching throng stepped brisk along ’mid a sea of ■hamrocks true. There were Monaghans, Corri gans, Murphys and Doyles, Dug gans, Currans, Seahans and Boyles. ’Twas a day to wring the poetry —bad though it be—from an Irish man’s soul as rank on rank they marched for six hours and 36 min utes until a sun that played peek aboo all day had already set. The official police estimate of a roaring mass of spectators lined eight deep today along the 52- block line of inarch was 1,800,000 —one of the greatest ever to pay homage to Erin’s patron saint. The sun was bright ‘as a coleen’s smile when the hours long parade started out from 44th Street at 12.04 p.m. (EST) into a man-made storm of green confetti. The ave nue’s center line had a special coat of green paint. But the brightness vanished as quick as an Irishman’s wages as the marchers leaned into a chill 15-mile an hour headwind for the 56-minute hike through the can yon of Fifth Avenue to 96th Street. Massed bands sent wave upon wave of sound reverberating against the concrete cliffs of the avenue—“ The Wearing O’ The Green,” “McNamara’s Ban d,” “Hamgan,” “Garryowen” and many another tune. All New York turned Irish for a day and the city was a garden of green—green flags, green car nations and shamrocks, green ties, and even green beer where called for. Engineer— work which may be done with the reactor are general neutron ir radiation, experiments requiring beams of neutrons, the produc tion of radio isotopes, and bio logical damage experiments. The reactor will make possible the use of short-life radio isotopes which cannot be brought to the' College from Oak Ridge or Brook haven. Plans for construction of the nuclear reactor are now being completed. The reactor will be used for research and instruction. fined five pounds ($l4). Queen Elizabeth received Tito in one of the audience rooms on the ground floor of the palace ov erlooking the terrace. More than two dozen attended the luncheon party, including the Duke of Edin burgh, the Queen’s . husband, Queen Mother Elizabeth, Princess Margaret and Churchill. The stocky, tanned Yugoslav ruler smilingly posed for photo graphs with the royal family dur in ghis two-hour visit, leaving no doubt ' that he is now Britain’s friend and ally—socially as well as politically informed British sources said the Tito-Churchill strategy talk covered a. wide range of cold war problems. Tomorrow or Thurs day, Tito and British leaders are expected to consider in detail such specific questions -as Balkan de fense, economic and military aid for Yugoslavia and the future of Trieste. AU New York Turns Irish , Honors St. Pat (Continued from page two ) Churchill U.S. Bomber Returns Russian MSG Attack FAIRBANKS, Alaska, March 17 (/P) —An Alaska-based United States Air Force plane on a routine weather mission was fired upon by a MIGIS jet fighter Sunday—and shot back—in the third inter national incident in a week involving Russian-type planes. The Air Force, diclosing the air fight today, said a long-range 850 was intercepted by two MIGs over international waters 25 miles east of Kamchatka Peninsula, 2000 miles from its Eelson Air Force Base. While one of the MIGs hovered overhead, the Air Force said in announcements at Anchorage and in Washington, the other fired upon the American plane. The 850 “returned fire but there appeared to be no damage to either craft,” the Air Force re ported. The time of the fight was reported as 12:30 p.m., March 15. The plane flew from Eielson field near here, the Air Force said. The scene of the action was located as about 100 miles east and slightly north of Petropav lovsk, Russian military base on the southern tip of Kamchatka Peninsula. At Fairbanks, the officers and crew were not immediately avail able for interviews. The Fairbanks Daily News- Miner said, however, that the plane was not a regular member of the 15th Weather Reconnais sance Squadron, which does not fly Bsos. The Air Force announce ment said the plane was “on a routine weather reconnaissance flight.” Such weather reconnaissance flights over the Arctic and to the North Pole have been made for several years. Congressman Wants Probe Of Churchmen WASHINGTON, March 17 (JP)~ Representative Jackson (R-Calif) declared today “there are Com munists in the church” and de manded a showdown on the move to oust Chairman Harold Velde (R-Ill) of the House Un-American Activities Committee over the is sue of investigating churchmen. Velde himself joined in the ap plause and in urging a showdown. He issued a statement saying he concurs with Jackson and would like to know how members of the House “feel about my fitness” for the chairmanship. While he was at it, Jackson de livered a free-swinging attack that also took in the Ford Foun dation, radio and television, Red educators, and a pair of church men Dy name. Methodist Bishop Bromley Ox nam of Washington, Jackson said, “has been to the Communist front what Man O’ War was to thor oughbred racing.” The churchman, v/ho has been a vigorous critic of the Un-Amer ican Activities Committee and es pecially of the methods it has pursued in its investigation of communism in education, hit back quickly with a statement. He said, “Congressman Jackson should know that there is no con gressional immunity from the Bib lical injunction, ‘Thou shalt not bear false Witness.’ ” “It is to be regretted that he should have used the floor of the House to broadcast a lie,” Oxnam said. CAN D Y A „.2p) N h‘'(y%U EASTER CANDY JELLY BEANS Butter, Licorice and Assorted SMALL BON BONS VARIOUS FLAVORED EGGS Between the Movies PAGE THREE Envoy Post For Russia Under Fire WASHINGTON, March 17 (JP) —Secretary of State Dulles will give the Senate foreign relations committee tomorrow an “evalu ation” of an FBI report on Charles (Chip) Bohlen, whose nomination as ambassador to Moscow is un der fire for some Republicans. Committee Chairman Wiley (R- Wis) said Dulles will appear be fore the committee tomorrow to testify concerning the man Presi dent Eisenhower nominated for the key diplomatic post. The announcement came a few hours after Sen. McCarthy (R- Wis) said Dulles was making “a great mistake in pressing” for Senate confirmation of Bohlen. McCarthy and some others are fighting Bohlen on the ground that he was part of the “Dean Acheson machine” in the State Department. McCarthy’s statement omitted any criticism of Eisenhower, who sent the nomination to the Senate, and concentrated instead on what McCarthy called Dulles’ “mis take.” Wiley gave no hint of what the FBI report might contain. The State Department has already certified that its files contain nothing of a derogatory nature about Bohlen. In his blats today, McCarthy challenged the 48-year-old Bohlen, a veteran of 24 years in the U.S. diplomatic service, to refuse the assignment to Moscow if he is “really interested in the welfarp of the country.” Red Leader Reported Sick BERLIN, March'l7 (fP) Sov iet zone President Wilhelm Pieck has pleural pneumonia, German sources said today. The anti-Red “Fighting Group Against Inhumanity” reported the plump, white-haired Commu nist leader, 77, is a patient in an East Berlin hospital. East German contacts relayed the information to the West Ber lin underground, but no Soviet zone official would discuss it. Pneumonia killed Communist Czechoslovakia’s President IClem ant Gottwald Saturday, only five days after he attended the fu neral of Prime Minister Stalin in Moscow’s Red Square. r^WAßHtßafe^ BARBARA STANWYCK BARRY SULLIVAN "JEOPARDY" THOMAS NEWTON LINDA DARNELL "BLACKBEARD THE PIRATE" DORIS RAY DAY BOLGER "APRIL IN PARIS" Doors Open—6:oo P.M.