- . Adenaner To Get S ummil Pledge tPlans On West's Arts and Letters7 By NORMA SUE WOLFE an opera and can anticipate most, Special to The Daiy if not all, of the arias. VIENNA-In America, theatre At a concert, B e e t h o v e n's and concert-goers neglect sum- "Eroica" which most American imoning actors or musicians for students discover in college, is another curtain call while worry- "old hat" to both the young and ing about checked coats, parked the old. A 20-year-old girl sit- cars, and traffic home. ting next to me found it necessary In England, the entertainer is to clasp her hands until they red- given due applause and then the dened to avoid fingering the en- audience, spontaneously rises and tire "Koncert for Clavier and Or- bursts into the impressive "God chestra" on an imaginary key- Save the Queen." board. But perhaps a book should have And only in a music-loving city been written entitled "Only in like Vienna would ushers smile at Vienna." the following note (translated in- Only here would anywhere from to German by a sympathetic Aus- 100 to 400 people wait for four trian) and usher the music-lov- consecutive hours in rain or shine ing tourist to his seat: for five-shilling ($.20) standing "I speak no German. I had a room at the opera. ticket for this concert in the bal- Only here would a group of cony, left, third row, seat number teen-aged girls give up Saturday 17. But the ticket was stolen. night dates or parties to attend "If the house is full and this an opera en masse. particular seat empty, my know- Only here would you find a not ing it would be so proves it is more than 10-year-old boy, libret- mine, and I would like to sit and to in hand, explaining the plot of listen to the performance. "Carmen" to an equally young "If someone is in the seat, it friend. may be the man who stole my Vienna may no longer be the ticket, along with my wallet and world's center of intrigue, but it money. I should then like to take is one of the few remaining cul- him outside, speak to him, and tural nuclei. . see if he would r:turn them. And when a "Wiener" (Vien- "I would appreciate anything nese) attends an opera or con- you could do to help me, as I love cert, he goes fully prepared and Beethoven's music very much." aware. He knows the basic plot of The concert was excellent..-. Second Front Page Eisenhower, Herter Urge Flexibility German Chancellor Arrives Tomorrow For Three-Day Visit WASHINGTON (AP) - German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer will get a firm pledge from United States leaders next week against any Western effort to stall Russian threats toward West Berlin by offering summit concessions. But President Dwight D. Eisen- hower and Secretary of State Christian A. Herter, officials said yesterday, also will urge their aged ally to agree on flexibility for the Western powers in their critical debate of German issues with Pre- mier Nikita S. Khrushchev next May. The 84-year-old Adenauer is due here tomorrow night. He will spend several hours with Eisenhower at the White House beginning Tues- day morning and late that after- noon he will confer with Herter at the State Department. Opposes Concessions During his three days in Wash- ington he will also talk with Vice- President Richard M. Nixon and with members of the Senate For- eign Relations Committee. He will urge upon all his con- viction that it is dangerous to offer any concessions to Khrushchev for a Berlin agreement or to display signs of weakness or uncertainty in the face of Khrushchev's threat to make a separate peace treaty with East Germany. Such a move would almost certainly precipitate a new Berlin crisis. Adenauer appeared to be in high spirits when he left Bonn by air- plane yesterday for New York and Washington. He said his trip was politically important and would involve hard work in the weeks ahead. From Washington he will fly to the Far East. Worries for Berlin Both United States and West German diplomats say that beyond question Adenauer is coming here at this time because he is deeply worried about a possible softening of Western determination to pro- tect West Berlin against Com- munist pressures at any cost. His deep concern over the future of United States-British-French policy goes back to last spring and the resignation of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles shortly before Dulles died of cancer. Adenauer and Dulles seemed to have complete confidence in each other. Neither Eisenhower's as- sumption of control of United States foreign policy nor Herter's appointment as Dulles' successor reassured Adenauer. He came to believe that the United States was shifting toward a willingness to seek negotiated agreement with Russia such as British leaders had considered. Adenauer was reported to be worried about certain concessions which Western foreign ministers offered Russia at Geneva last sum- mer for a Berlin agreement that never worked out-because neither side would compromise on key issues. Say U.S. Binds Its UN Group WASHINGTON (R) - The State Department keeps too tight a string on the United States am- bassador and permanent mission to the United Nations; two con- gressmen-delegates said yesterday. They said it would be better to allow the United States delega- tion more leeway for negotiation. Reps. Clement J. Zablocki (D- Wis.) . and James G. Fulton (R- Pa.) suggested that the State De- partment or "the machinery as such" may have been responsible last year for "our government's failure to support a candidate for the Security Council until the 11th hour-while the Soviets were suc- cessfully campaigning for their candidate months in advance." Zablocki and Fulton, Foreign Affairs Committee members, served on the United States delegation to the United Nations General As- sembly session Sept. 15-Dec. 12, 1959. "We were unfavorably impressed by the degree of control exercised by the State Department over the United States ambassador ... and the permanent mission .. ." Zab- locki and Fulton wrote in a report to the Committee. "Not only policy but also pro- cedural questions are minutely dealt with in ofilcial position pa- pers prepared in Washington." KHRUSHCHEV, DE GAULLE: Chiefs To Meet in Paris PARIS (M - Premier Nikita S. r% Khrushchev, who often laces tough talk with Russian humor, is matching wits here next week with the sharp mind and iron dignity of President Charles de Gaulle in a preliminary to the May 16 sum- mit meeting. He arrives Tuesday. The most troublesome issue will be the one which ever since World War II has stood like a specter over prospects of East-West re- conciliation-the question of Ger- many. Neither in Moscow nor in Paris is there much expectation that these two statesman, so opposed in temperament, will make great progress in easing their differences. "It will be a psychological test of strength," a French official said. The two leaders met briefly once before, in wartime Moscow Dec. 10, 1944 the French govern- ment quite evidently is going to try to soften the Soviet leader with charm piled on so thick that, if he submits to it all and survives, that in itself will be an achievement*r The program for entertainment and for a tour around the country is a secret officially, but eager " .r.> beaver preparations are under way in a dozen cities. TO HOLD MEETING-Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev wi toKhrushche will be taken on meet with French President Charles de Gaulle. next week in heads were lopped off in a bloody preliminary conference in preparation for the Summit meetix revolution 128 years before the to be held May 16. equally bloody Russian revolution. DWIGHT D. 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