THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 2,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Democrats Seek Romney Support Ask Redistricting Along Present Lines; Express Fear of Defeat By The Associated Press LANSING - Michigan's Democratic congressmen asked Gov. George W. Romney yesterday .to support a redistricting plan that- while basing districts on population-will preserve existing boundaries as much as possible. They stressed that extensive revamping of the present districts could result in political defeat for incumbents' whose seniority in Congress is, in their view, vital FRANCOIS DUVALIER Haiti leader In for Life PORT AU PRINCE P) - Dr. Francois (Papa Doc) Duvalier had himself installed yesterday as president of Haiti for life. "I am happy," he told army of- ficers who went to the national palace here to take a new oath of allegiance. "I am happy that you under- stand it is necessary to join the revolutionary crowd and come here this morning to render hom- age to the constitutional chief of the armed forces in a new oath of allegiance." Duvalier likes to call himself Papa Doc to note that he has .a m e d i c a 1 degree, and bands throughout the republic were beating out Haiti's newest rhyth- mic chant: "Papa Doc forever." He got his M.D. in Haiti and did post graduate work at the Uni- versity. The president's usually low- pitched voice rose high as he told the crowd he considered himself an exceptional man, the kind of man the country can produce only once every 50 or 75 years. The ceremony began with In- formation Minister Paul Blanchet saying Duvalier was acting in re- sponse to public demonstrations all around the country calling for him to rule for life. Blanchet claimed that after these demonstrations, army offi- cers began signing appeals to be allowed to approve the popular will and take a new oath to Du- valier as life-time president. Duvalier continued himself in office as president a year ago without the formality of elections. This led to a suspension of re- lations with the United States and a cut-off of U. S. aid. Rela- tiols were restored late in 1963. Project Gemini To Fire Craft CAPE KENNEDY (R) - After months of delay, the Space Agen- cy yesterday announced the Proj- ect Gemini flight test program will start next Tuesday with an effort to orbit an unmanned spacecraft. The launching is one of two unmanned tests planned before two astronauts ride into space together in the same capsule. If no hitches develop, the first to Michigan's welfare. Six of the eight Democrats representing Michigan in Congress met with the Republican governor to discuss plans for redistricting as required by a United States District Court decision. Equal Population A three-judge federal panel re- cently ruled a congressional re- districting plan passed last year failed to meet a United States Su- preme Court ruling that districts should be as near equal in popu- lation as "practicable." United States Rep. John Din- gell of Detroit told Romney it is "a consensus viewpoint of con- gressmen that redistricting should be done with as little interference as possible with existing bounda- ries." Romney emphasized that the federal court ruling apparently established population as the principle for establishing districts. 10,000 Variance In response to a question from the governor, the Democrats in- dicated they believe the legisla- ture could permit a population variance of up to 10,000 and stay within the intent of the court rul- ing., In a joint statement, the Demo- crats called for "compact, con- tiguous districts of virtually equal population-fairly arrived at." The meeting provided the first confrontation of Romney and po- tential rival in the 1964 guber- natorial race, United States Rep. Neil Staebler, who served as chief spokesman for the group. Hare Proposals Others present besides Staebler and Dingell were Reps. Martha Griffith, Charles Diggs, James O'Hara, and John Lesinski. Earlier, Secretary of State James Hare proposed sweeping changes in state election laws and Sept. 8 as a tentative primary date to meet the apportionment crisis. In a 28-page timetable for leg- islators, Hare said the Aug. 4 pri- mary is virtually out of the ques- tion and "some change is man- datory" because of still-unresolved questions on congressional and legislative apportionment. Logical Choice He said Sept. 8 need not be re- garded as a fixed date for the pri- mary but might be the most log- ical choice. In all, Hare said, 23 changes are necessary and 14 other dates would be affected by the changes. As Hare issued his outline, House Republicans announced plans to intorduce a congressional redistricting bill of their own. GOP Bill The planr was announced by House Speaker Allison Green (R- Kingston), following an extended meeting between GOP lawmakers and Gov. Romney Monday. Green said House Republican leaders hoped to have a bill ready for intorduction last night when the House ended its Easter re- cess-which would set it up for poassible action by next week. Following a second meeting with Romney Tuesday, Green reported that the question of shifting the legislature's adojurnament date to give Republicans complete power in redistricting was discussed. By adjourning early, Republi- cans have pointed out, they could gain the 90 days needed for ef- fectiveness of the new districts and avoid the need for legislative action to provide "immediate ef- fect," which requires a two-thirds vote and therefore Democratic .upport. BUDAPEST (/P) - Premier Ni- kita S. Khrushchev declared yes- terday that "prosperity is the only thing worthwhile to struggle for."' The Soviet leader ridiculed Red China for offering nothing but revolution in its campaign for up- risings around the world in the name of hard line Communism. "If we could promise people nothing better than revolution,"' Khrushchev told 5,000 workers at' a Budapest electrical equipment factory, "they would scratch their heads and say: 'Isn't it better to have good goulash?' ''j Implies Red China The Soviet leader did not cite! Red China by name, but the Hun-j garians recognized his target as; World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The outlookI for Gen. Douglas MacArthur is, "not good" but Army doctors stillj feel there is a possibility he canj recover from his perhaps unprec- edented series of ordeals, the com-; mander of Walter Reed ArmyR Hospital announced late yester- day. * * * Committee To Review Food Costs WASHINGTON (P)- President Lyndon B. Johnson asked Con- gress yesterday to create a 15- member commission to determine why producers are receiving less and consumers are paying more for food products in the United States. Sen. Gale W. McGee (D-Wyo), chairman of a Senate commerce subcommittee already checking pricing and marketing practices of the big food chains, prompt- ly stated the new investigation could become one of the most important of the century. Johnson indicated at his ranch in Texas last Saturday that he would ask for the legislation. Bipartisan Commission Following this up yesterday, he sent letters to House Speaker John W. McCormack (D-Mass) and Senate President Pro Tern Carl Hayden (D-Ariz) asking that the bipartisan commission be set up. He said it should study and ap- praise the changes taking place in the American food industry. The letters made no reference to the spread in prices between pro- ducers and consumers. But in Texas last Saturday he had said: "We have some com- modities today where the producer is receiving 25, 30 per cent less and we have the housewife who is paying 25 or 30 per cent more To Determine Changes The commission would have five members named by the House, five by the Senate and five by the President. Their job, the Presi- dent said, would be to compile sufficient information upon which to base an informed judgment of the effect of recent changes in the food industry. the giant ideological adversary of the Soviet bloc. They applauded enthusiastical- ly. Perhaps they remembered it was Peking that gave Moscow the final push to use troops to smash the Hungarian uprising of 1956. "There are people in the world who call themselves Communists and Marxists-Leninists and at the same time say that we should not strive for a better life but make revolution," Khrushchev said. Revolution Not Enough "But what would have happened in Lenin's days when the peasants and workers were called upon to overthrow the rule of the capital- ists if they had only been prom- ised a revolution? That would not have been enough for them. Pros- perity is the only worthwhile thing to struggle for." Khrushchev, whorwas accom- panied by his wife, Nina, and For-3 eign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, then told the workers to work harder to overtake the West. He presented them a big plaster bust of Lenin. In general, the workers gave1 Khrushchev a polite reception, warmer than the one he received in 1958, two years after the ill- fated revolution. At that time, he spoke to coal miners at Tatabanya and became furious when thous- ands drifted away before he had finished.a To Counter Chinese Khrushchev and Hungarian 7 Khrushchev was in Hungary - rumors which had been previous- ly discounted-cropped up again yesterday. A Communist source said such a meeting would be held sometime next week somewhere outside Budapest. But Western experts on Eastern affairs paid little atten- tion, saying such a meeting in Hungary would lower Khrush- chev's prestige. Chinese Claim USSRBacks United States BUDAPEST ;)--A Red Chinese spokesman accused Soviet Pre- mier Nikita S. Khrushchev, al- most to his face, yesterday of co- operating with American imperial- ism and uniting with Indian im- perialism against China. He added that Soviet help to the Chinese Communist revolu- tion was "nothing to boast about." Can Hoa-nan, secretary general of the Chinese delegation to the Communist-controlled Congress of Democratic Lawyers, now meeting here, called in reporters covering Khrushchev's Hungarian trip to hear the blast. It was the first time the Chi- nese have hit hard at Khrushchev when he was physically present in the same city. The congress here has erupted into a tumultuous clash between Chinese and Russians over the issue of East-West coexistence. The Chinese accused the Ris- sians of siding with the United States and the Soviets retorted that the Chinese would never have won their revolution without Soviet help. Graduate Student Council MEETING TONIGHT 7:30 P.M. West Conference Room 4th Floor Rackham -Associated Press SOVIET PREMIER Nikita S. Khrushchev makes presentation of a sculpture of Lenin to workers of Tungsram bulb factory in suburban Budapest yesterday. Hungarian Premier Janos Kadar is at left. The two leaders are holding talks on relations with Red China. Khrushchev Ridicules Chi nese; ants Prosperity, Not St-ruggle (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of three articles on the inter- national student politics, written by a former international affairs vice- presidentof the Canadian Union of Students.) By PAUL BECKER Collegiate Press Service and Canadian University Press The international student com- munity is deeply divided. Two tendencies, which reflect the basic political division of the world to- day, are vying for domination of the student movement. On the one hand there is the International Student Conference, representing what is essentially a European tradition of evolutionary social change, and seeking "to eradicate all forms of oppression -be it colonialism, totalitarianism of East or West, imperialism, dic- tatorship or racism." On the other hand, there is the International Union of Students, representing variouus interpreta- tions of the Leninist revolutionary tradition, together with the more radical non-Communist forces ini the underdeveloped world. IUS Came First The IUS was the first postwar international student organization. Founded in 1946, in the general desire for international friend- ship and cooperation which would preserve peace, it grouped at one time the majority of national unions of students of Europe and America. It was established as a cohesive body with a policy-mak- ing Executive Committee and a permanent secretariat in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Then the IUS came to be seen as an instrument of outside forces and eventually its political view- point forced out most of its mem- bers. In the late forties, two major events raised the first doubts as to its independence: -The Czech coup d'etat, when the IUS refused to protest against the killings of Czech students who resisted the Communist party's takeover of the government. Expulsion -The explusion from the IUS in 1950 of the Yugoslav Union of Students when Tito's "indepen- dence" was condemned by Stalin. The continued silence of the IUS during more recent events such as the Hungarian revolution, its refusal to denounce the. in- vasion of Tibet and India by China, while proclaiming every- where else in the world its con- stant fight for peace and against colonialism and imperialism, have indicated that the IUS is not in fact an independent body. It presently has a membership of some 35 student organizations from Eastern Europe, China and Japan, and a number of associate members who are also participants in the ISC. Although representa- tivity is not an essential for mem- bership, it can be said that the World Student IUS does represent th, organizations of most C countries. There are i: of a significant numbe student unions of the unc countries displaying inte filiation with the IU unions see no conflict In their participation in tl Basic Principle The basic principfes of the IUS have beenr stated as being "the peace and disarmament colonialism and irmperii national independence, democratization of educ improved student living conditions." It is hardly conceivabl IUS, with a highly c unitarian structure, will come representative of jority of the students of However, since it has i tions as to its fields of and since its resources tensive, it has been very particularly in those ar students are genuinely i: the struggle for the ind and the development countries. U.S. Revie Ways To i Vietnam NEW YORKP) - Se Defense Robert McNar last night the United f studied the implications tary action against Nortl and has "considered a means of carrying it ou However, McNamara taped television progran present policy is just t4 aid to the Sbuth Vietnar ment. "Whatever the ultima of action may be, wh forced upon us by our ac we recognized that it w: a supplement to, and i stitute for, progress. wit' Vietnam. itself," McNan Both McNamara an States Ambassador Her Lodge said they believe can be won by the pres Vietnam government ur Nguyen Khanh, but th be a long struggle. Monday the Vietnan ernment, in an effort I more self-sufficient, "grass roots" training p young army officers. The move followed a which several senators, led over Communist gai Southeast Asian nation, ed for new policies-ei withdrawal or invasion Vietnam. Low meat prices cattlemen are onei areas of concern. received by of the chief Johnson's plan, if approved, would set in force "a sweeping investigation into the pricing, marketing, distribution and com- petitive practices of the giant food chains," McGee said. McGee used his own resolution for a similar inquiry by the Fed- eral Trade Commission as a ve- hicle for getting Johnson's pro- posal before the Senate and his subcommittee. The subcommittee's hearings, which have been in recess, will be resumed, he said, and will fo- cus on Johnson's plan, with par- ticular emphasis on the meat in- dustry. "The beef industry has suffered a $2-billion loss in the past two years," he said, "while the price of beef to the consumer has not been reduced at all. .." UNITED NATIONS-The Unit- party leaders met again, appar- ed Nations Security Council - -as ently to work out details on how sdummondysterayitouneetoas to counter the increasingly vicious summoned yesterday to meet today Red Chinese attacks on Moscow's onriahYemeni complaint over a brand of Communism and the So- B a rviet leader himself. Premier Janos Kadar and his i deputy nremier. Gyula Kallai. led BEIRUT-A special luxury plane was reported standing by in Saudi Arabia yesterday to fly seven of King Saud's disgruntled sons into exile following Crown Prince Fais- al's assumption of supreme pow- er in the oil kingdom. Unconfirmed but persistent re- ports said the seven sons, who had tried to overthrow Fa'sal, were being ordered to leave Riy- adh. In all, Saud has 27 sons. I ** * BRUSSELS-The ill and the in- jured had to be emergency cases to get medical attention in Bel- gium yesterday. Most of the 10,- 000 doctors in this nation of nine{ million were on strike. The strike's target was a gov- ernment revision of Belgium's state - controlled, tax - supported health insurance system, part of aI social security regime instituted 10 years ago. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Cam- bodia's chief of state, said yes- terday he cannot become a Com- munist and has no intention of signing an alliance with Peking. ? t uL IC111, %.yUU % la, IC the Hungarian side while Khrush- chev was assisted by Gromyko and Yuri Andropov, a central commit- tee member responsible for rela- tions with other communist par- ties. Khrushchev arrived here Tues- day, ostensibly for celebration of the s19th nniversary of Hungary's liberation from Nazism by the Red army. Rumors that a sum- mit conference of top European party leaders would be held while TODAY An Unusual Slide Show "FROM KEIV TO KAZAKSTAN" The USSR and the US i* t Once Again -- The Famous TCE EUROPEAN STUDENT TOURS (Some tours include an exciting visit to Israel) The fabulous, long-established Tours that include many unique features: live several days with a French family - special opportunities to make friends abroad, special cultural events, evening entertainment, meet students from all over the world. Travel by Deluxe Motor Coach. SUMMER " 53 Days in Europe $705.* ALL 1963 INCLUSIVE Tacslnin Tr t r~ tin Aailabla w 8:00 P.M. 2518 Frieze in English i J 1 a FREE Presented by Michigan Russian Circle I I i r a n s a t l a n t c r a n s p o r ia t wU n v a a u e~ Travel Arrangements Made For Independent SPEC SGroups On Request At Reasonable Prices ~TRAVEL & CULTURAL EXCHANGE, INC. Dept. C ~AV JsI 501 Fifth Ave. " N. Y. 17, N. Y. . OX 7-4129 y manned flight, a three-orbit trip, will be made in November or De- Deputy Fired cember. D p t In announcing the Tuesday fir- Sing, the National Aeronautics and "r Space Administration termedI Gemini a bridge between the ANN ARBOR (A') - Ronald W. Mercury program and the Proj- Parker, 28, was fired from his job ect Apollo Manned Lunar Land- as a Washtenaw County deputy ing Mission scheduled late in this sheriff Tuesday and then was ar decade. rested on a charge of careless use Mercury ended last May 16 with of firearms. the 22-orbit, 34-hour flight of Parker was involved in the astronaut Leroy Gordon Cooper. wounding March 23 of Nelson Two-man Gemini teams will Willis, a 17-year-old Negro from perfect many techniques required Superior Township near Ypsi- for the Apollo effort. lanti. inldigSALI. includingVOX, PARLIAMENT, ARTIA, EVEREST. . . as low as $1.59 'II UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY presents '1 Soprano of the Metropolitan Opera in Hill Auditorium FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 8:30 Program of songs by Scarlatti, Brahms, R. 1 CT 4 + I-., . our "short story" is as many fabrics as you can shake a StiCk at from 111 1 I . : . ...... i t' R P'1