TUESDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1954 Adenauer Pledges Action on Pacts BONN, Germany, Oct. 25 (TP) —Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to night quick action to get'ratification of the Paris agree ments to make West Germany a partner in European defense. He made this pledge in a broadcast on the eve of his departure for the United States to. discuss West Germany’s new role in Europe, with President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. Adenauer said he will bring the agreements before Parliament as soon as he gets back. He arrives in Washington Wed nesday ,morning and. is due back in Bonn about Nov.-4. Adenauer told listeners to . the Northwest German Radio the new pacts guarantee. “we Will succeed in saving peace in Europe and the world and finally achieve German reunification.” The Chancellor toid the Ger mans these ' were the gains achieved at the Paris conference: • .1. After ratification, West Ger many will regain full authority over internal and foreign affairs. “The occupation period is ended, we are free,” he said. 2/ The seven-nation West Euro pean Union contains elements for integration of Europ e—“and thoughts of such integration have in no way. be,On given up.” 3. In joining NATO, the federal republic will become part of “the most powerful defense organiza tion .over known in history. 4. The wish for a French-Ger man reconciliation can be devel oped now that confidence has re placed mistrust and “nevermore shall the' two people tear each other to pieces in senseless war.” 5. In the Saar settlement both sides had made concessions to reach “a feasible,compromise 'hat every good German can support.” The last point was apparently the Chancellor’s answer to the storm of criticism leveled at the Saar accord by both his Socialist opposition and members of his own coalition. German critics of the Faris “package deal” have charged it will make German reunification more difficult, if not impossible, to achieve. Adenauer tonight retorted that reunification had “won powerful allies” in Paris. Earlier, Adenauer told reporters the Paris agreements give West Germany more power than would have been obtained under the re jected European Army pact. ike Loses Fight for Job Ruling . WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 (JP)— The Eisenhower administration today lost its fight for a Supreme Court ruling that'the President has broad powers to remove fed eral, jobs from Civil Service classi fications and make the holders subject to summary firing. Attorney ■ General Herbert Brownell had asked the high tri bunal to review and overturn a Court, of Appeals decision here holding that the White House lacks such authority. “Palpably,” Brownell said in his appeal, “the decision has a significance which goes far be yond the particular facts ... It places a broad limitation upon the capacity of the chief executive to manage the federal establish ment in the manner which-he be lieves will best promote effective administration.” Worker Fired The government worker specif ically is Leo A. RotH, a Justice Department lawyer who was fired from his' $lO,BOO-a-year job on July 31, 1953. ' The Appeals Court ordered Roth reinstated, but this was not done pending the, outcome of Brownell’s appeal. There was no immediate com ment from the Justice department or* its next move. Both is entitled under the Appeals Court decision —whicl* the Suprerne Court today left in effect—to back pay from the date of his dismissal, less any money he may have earned in private ’employment. The issue involved in the ap peal was whether the President may reclassify jobs from the class ified, of protected, status to the non-classified, or unprotected, sta tus. This was done in the case of Roth, whose .job was reclassified to the unprotected status, by an executive order. Injured Student Reported Improved- Marilyn Haarlander, seventh se mester Spanish major, is resting well in the University hospital, reported hospital officials yester day. Miss Haarlander fell down a flight of stairs yesterday in En gineering D. Her hip was injured in the fall which occurred at 8:50 a.m. X-rays and a blood count were taken and she will remain in the hospital until the reports are ob tained. At present Miss Haarlan der is unable to walk. Hosptial officials believe her in jury to be a severe bruise. Defense Plans — (Continued -from, page one ) fated plan for a European De fense Community. He said British and American declarations of intention to take part in a European .defense sys tem broke the long deadlock over Germany's role in postwar Eu rope. The. secretary said collapse of the EDC idea had -cast a pall of gloom over the Paris talk.. But, he said from the moment that the British and Americans declared their intention, “All of us felt we were bound to succeed.” UAUf Offset NUn Printing in State College • • Commercial Printing 352 E. College Ave. The famous St. Cyr Military Academy of France celebrates its 150th birthday this summer. Unidentified NICE, France, Oct. 25 (/P)— While rescue planes of three countries swept the skies from Corsica to the French Alps for a U.S. Air Force C 47 missing since Sunday afternoon, a second—and, A search, for the wreckage was not successful tonight. Capt. ■ Donald Peterson of the U.S. 12th Air Rescue Group, said , tonight he believed the missing C 47 must have hit a mountain. Otherwise it would have had lime to. sand . a last distress message, he said. 'American plane, 'carrying 16 pas ’sengers and a crew of 5,' which .first saw the wreckage of the sec ond plane off the northern tip of Corsica. They thought they, had found the object of their search, unidentified two-engined air craft plunged into the storm swept waters of the Mediterran ean today:' It was searchers for the missing But a workman near Bastia, in Corsica, reported he saw a plane fly Ipw over the coast and plunge into the sea shortly after noon. This appeared to eliminate the wwm*m Nancy Gates Frank Sinatra "SUDDENLY" THE. DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA State Has First ilnarinoimced A it Raid Since War HARRISBURG, Pa., Oct. 25 (JP) —S ire n s sounded throughout Pennsylvania -tonight for a ::I§'- minute practice air raid, flielon'g est in the history of the state and the first .without "warning., since World War 11. ' ” The red signal sounded, at-7:50 p.m., one hour and ten minutes after Civil Defense personnel were alerted the test was coming soon, The all clear sounded at 8:05 p.m. Hundreds of shoppers in down town Harrisburg took cover as the first alarm sounded, with police men arid Civil Defense personnel giving directions to the nearest shelters. Traffic, in center-city Harris burg was brought to a standstill within a minute after thfe sirens began screaming. Few pedestrians needed to be told to take cover. Police in the Capitol City al lowed only mail trucks and postal department personnel to continue their rounds during the raid. 1000 London Dock Workers Resume Jobs LONDON, Oct. 25 (A 5 ) —More than 1000 stevedores returned to work today, but about 43,000 con tinued the strike which is tying up an increasing number of ships arid threatening the economic life of this maritime nation. Some of the stevedores who re turned to work in London begari unloading a banana ship, the first vessel to discharge it? cargo here since the walkout started 22 days ago. The strike spread today to Man chester, where 500 of the port’s 2300 dockers quit work. Other ports .affected include Liverpool, Southampton, Birkenhead, and Hull. Most of the dockers are striking against the orders of their union officials. While the Cabinet heard l a re port on the strike, the. Churchill government completed plans for ordering troops to unload ships that are glutting the rnain ports. The government has hesitated to use troops, hoping the strike will end soon. A. D. Leigh, secretary of the London Chamber of • Commerce, said one London factory will have to close down if the strike con tinues tomorrow and that other shutdowns may follow. Plane Crashes In Sea possibility that he saw. the U.S. Air Force plane because that craft had only enough fuel to keep it in flight. until just before mid night last night. Three ships of the U.S. 6th Fleet were dispatched to the area where the wreckage was spotted. . Meanwhile a ground rescue party was climbing Mt. Mounier, about 30 miles north, of Nice. Vil lagers at the foot of this mountain reported to police that they heard the roar of airplane engines last night, then an explosion. The whole area was lashed by storms yesterday and several inches of %OBrnm D &°£? "'••■iiiiihi' g 3 p.m. Walt Disney's VANISHING PRAIRIE —ALSO— "WILLIE THE OPERATIC WHALE" Sterling Hayden CinemaScopd "BRIGADOON” Gene Kelly Cyd Charissd Communis!' Poland Claims Field Freed VIENNA, ..Austria, Oct. 25 (#>)—Communist-ruled Poland an nounced' fc&ay it has freed Cleveland architect Hermann Field, one of four members of the Field family who disappeared in turn behind the Iron Curtain in a five-year cloak-and-dagger drama. Twelve hours after the announcement was broadcast by Radio Warsaw, a U.S. Embassy spokesman in Poland said in a telephone interview ‘'We still don’t kn.Q'vyhis whereabouts.” But the release of Field apparently was no surprise to Washington Vienna! experts on affairs Jbe hihd the Iron Curtain said to night they had doubts that Field would ever return to the West, even though he may have been released from a Red prison. These, sources' based such speculation on the point that apparently Field's release was not the result of an agreement with the United States; and that the Communists may have reasons of their own for turn ing him free. Warsaw’s broadcast said an of ficial investigation had shown that Hermann Field, now 44, was the victim of a “frame-up by an American agent” in the Polish security service, and that there fore he has “been released and full satisfaction has been given him.” Polish Police Official This referred to the defection from Poland of Jozef Swiatlo, a too official of the Polish secret police. Swiatlo appeared at a news conference in Washington Sept. 28 and said Hermann Field had been arrested and held In a prison at Miedzeszyn, outside Warsaw. Swi atlo, who said he had been Field’s jailer, surmised that Noel Field apd his wife, last reported held in Budapest, Hungary, probably were dead. The Fields’ adopted daugh ter is believed a prisoner in a la bor camp at Vorkuta, in Russia’s far north. “Polish authorities,” the official Warsaw communique said, “last ■year ordered an investigation into a number of legal cases which revealed gross violations of the law. In the- course of the investi gation, authorities unmasked ah official of the Polish security ser vice as an agent of the American espionage system.” Swiatlo Is Agent : It ■ identified the “agent” as Swiatlo, who fled Poland last' De cember. The broadcast said Swi atlo was responsible for the ar rest of Hermann Field and others, adding that Field now has been cleared of all charges against him. Those charges never have been specified. snow covered the mountain peaks. IJ.S. Air Force headquarters in London said all aboard the miss ing C 47 plane en route from Rome to, Lyon, France, were assigned to the, 406th 1 Fighter Interceptor Wing based at Manston in south east England. Ah unconfirmed report here said the chief pilot, before taking Vishinsky Hits Allied Agreements UNITED .NATIONS, N.Y., Oct. 25 (/P) —Russia’s Andrei Y. Vish ins'ky today lashed at the London and Paris agreements on West Germany and said they were lead ing to new threats instead of re laxing tension. “I say you can’t have new pacts which make for aggression while you are supposedly seeking dis armament in the UN,” Vishinsky declared near the end of a long speech on disarmament in the UN Assembly’s Political Committee. The Soviet deputy foreign min ister added that the Germans al ready “are dreaming of revenge and retaliation.' The immediate neighbors of West Germany will be the first to suffer from that.” He lashed out at the agrements on West Germany shortly after Moscow had set the pace with a quick attack on them. But at the same time, Vishinsky told the UN that the Russians had come closer to the West with their new look on disarmament and .challenged the West to make similar moves for agreement. India’s V. K. Krishna Menon, meanwhile, circulated to the dele gates a resolution calling on the UN Disarmament Commission to study ways and means of estab lishing an armament truce pend ing agreement on a disarmament convention. Menon also proposed that the General Assembly, scheduled to adjourn in December, recess in stead so it can come back into session quickly if the Disarma ment commission makes a report requiring fast action. India previously has called for a standstill agreement on further production of atomic and hydro gen bombs until the powers have worked out an agreement on a control system and measures to eliminate the bombs. University instructor Involved in Auto Crash Cars operated by Wesley P. Winter, instructor in industrial engineering, and Duard C. Cisney, Lewistown RD 2, collided at E. Fairmount Ave. and S. Allen St. yesterday afternoon. State College police said Win ter cut too short, as he turned onto Fairmount Ave. from Allen St. off—from Rome at about 2 p.m. Sunday had presented a flight plan “full of errors, especially concerning the heights of moun tains.” PAGE THREE