'THE MICHIGAN DAILY Khrushchev Reviews Farming MOCOW () - Soviet leaders called for a complete reorganiza- tion of agriculture yesterday to get more food on to the tables of Soviet citizens. A communique issued after a week-long meeting of the Com- munist Party's Central Committee claimed that much had been done in the past several years but added: "The level of output of grain, meat, milk and other products is still obviously insufficient and does not correspond to the great poten- tialities of the socialist system of economy and the increased- re- quirement in products." Appeals to Farmers At the same time, Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev appealed to unpro- ductive Soviet farmers in a speech published in Izvestia to make 1962 the turning point in the solution of the country's agricultural prob- lems. The speech, which was made Friday, was the Premier's conclud- ing address to the committee, the governing body of the Communist" Party, and for that reason the governing body of the Soviet Union. A brief summary of the speech was made public Friday, pointing out Khrushchev denied a crisis existed in Soviet agriculture. The text came out Saturday night. Nowhere did he discuss publicly foreign affairs, even to breathe a word about the approaching dis- armament conference in Geneva, nor the nuclear tests held in abey- ance in the United States. These subjects may have been discussed in secret session not reported pub- licly. that surpluses were developing, but that, he said, was because millions of people in America are starving and not allowed to eat surpluses piling up in government ware- houses. Refers to America This is a new line taken in re- His only reference to the world cent Soviet propaganda intended, outside the Soviet Union was a evidently to mollify the discontent reference to American agriculture. of Russian householders without He admitted the United States was agreeing at all with the hard facts producing crops in such abundance of American statistics. Kennedy SaysFlight Shows U.S. Can Lead World in Space Race Fanfani Gets Deputies' Vote Of Confidence ROME tom)-Despite angry op- position from the Fascist right and the Communists, Premier Amin- tore Fanfani's new left of center government won a resounding vote of confidence yesterday. The tally in the Chamber of Deputies was '295-195. In winding up debate, Fanfani reiterated that Italy will remain loyal to its Western alliances and oppose extremists of right and left. He had just received a per- sonal message from President John F. Kennedy assuring him of an identity of views between the Unit- ed States and Italy. What aroused the right wing, including conservatives of Fan- fani's own Christian Democrats, was the new voting alliance with Pietro Nenni's Socialists, who once formed a popular front with the Communists. But as expected, Christian Dem- ocrats went right down the line for Fanfani on the vote of confi- dence, along with the Democratic Socialists and the Republicans. Propose Trade Conduct Plan WASHINGTON () -- The Na- tional Planning Association out- lined yesterday legislation to per- mit the conduct of foreign trade policy "as an integral part of for- eign policy"-a much more sweep- ing program than President John. F. Kennedy's. The privately supported orga- nization issued a report recom- mending that the President be empowered to apply different tar- iff policies to four different groups of countries-advanced industrial nations, low-cost manufacturing countries like Japan, underdevel- oped areas, and the Dino-Soviet plod. JOHN F. KENNEDY S. .era of progress IN ADVANCE: U.S. To Give Public Notice On Ai-Tests* WASHINGTON (A) -- The un- earthly, alarming brilliance of thermonuclear explosions presum- ably wil be one reason for the gov- ernment's decision to give advance public notice to some detonations in the Pacific test series due to start late next month. The possibility that some of the blasts may be seen at very high altitudes could mean that the flash might be seen thousands of miles away. Advance notices, of course, are issued routinely to warn shipping and aircraft out of test areas and to 4 alert populated areas against the remote possibility that some fallout could occur downwind. However, in the last nuclear tests at the Eniwetok-Bikini prov- ing grounds, residents of Hawaii were startled on at least one oc- casion by the sky-lighting of an explosion 2,000 miles distant. Pre dicts Age Of Progress For World Speaks at Dinner To Aid Democrats MIAMI BEACH P) - President John F. Kennedy said last night the orbital flight of astronaut John H.. Glenn, Jr. proves the United States has the ability to pace the world in this new area of progress. Speaking in the heartland of the United States space effort, Kenne- dy said humanity is on the brink of an age of undreamed discov- ery. "An age," he added, "which may well dwarf the explorations of; Columbus, Magellan and Sir Fran- cis Drake. Imaginative Fiction "It will be an age in which, many of the predictions of imag- inative fiction will be coming true." The chief executive, in remarks prepared for a $100-a-plate Dem- ocratic fund-raising dinner, keyed to the Florida setting his praise3 for what space scientists already1 have achieved and his claims for the future. Momentous Occasion Only last month, Kennedy said, w,,rld attention focused up the coast on Cape Canaveral. More dramatic moments - and setbacks as well-face the coun- try in the years ahead, Kennedy said. "But the flight of John Glenn and the Friendship Seven make clear that we have both the will and the capacity to lead the world." GENEVA CONFERENCE: Rush Must Negotiate With Russia, West By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Associated Press News Analyst GENEVA-United States Secretary of State Dean Rusk actually will have to conduct two sets of negotiations during the foreign min- isters meetings here this week. He must negotiate with the Russians, but even more important he must negotiate with his own allies. The Western powers are about as badly divided as they have ever been on the eve of an important meeting with their Soviet antagonists. Except for the French, the splits are not particularly dramatic but they are persistent and deep. They seem to represent a kind of ero- sion of common purpose. To Widen Rifts Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko must be expected to use every trick he can muster in his efforts to widen the rift. But Soviet policy has its own limitations, derived from its overriding hos- tility to the'West. France has pulled so far from the mainstream of Western policy that President Charles de Gaulle ruled out French attendance at the disarmament conference opening Wednesday. He refused to send an observer, which was the least Rusk and President John F. Kennedy had hoped for. De Gaulle Disagrees Thus the originally scheduled 18-nation conference will be a 17- nation conference because de Gaulle basically disagrees with the way Kennedy and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan are trying to handle Russian relations. De Gaulle does not think the disarmament negotiations will make any progress whatever, and he has always disapproved United States probing of Soviet intentions in the Berlin crisis, which is one of Rusk's reasons for coming here. De Gaulle has argued for months that since Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev started the Berlin crisis he should take the lead in set- tling it. Macmillan's view stands at the opposite extreme: He not only favors Western initiative in probing but seeks whenever possible to move negotiations along toward a summit conference. Kennedy finds Macmillan closer to him on most issues than other allies. Rusk and British Foreign Minister Lord Home are known to get on well. But British-American relationship develops friction when the going gets tough. Ready New Accelerator CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (WP)-Using They pick up speed just short of will hit a target, producing hi the fastest, most intense, most the speed of light-which is 186,- energy photons ("particles" energetic beam of electrons in the 000 miles a second. gamma radiation). The photc world, Harvard University and Variety of Experiments will be aimed at another target Massachusetts Institute of Tech- With electrons thus built up in produce mesons, hyperons a nology scientists are launching in- energy the scientists will conduct other new particles and an to the deepest puzzle of modern varieties of experiments. Some particles found in recent years. science. will be used to explore the internal The accelerator may prodi It's the strange world of particle structure of the proton - the other particles never known 1 physics. nucleus or core of the atom - and fore. The Cambridge installati Prof. M. Stanley Livingston of the neutrons-uncharged particles has a staff of 125 physicists, MIT, director of the new Cam- in the atomic nucleus. gineers, technicians and admin bridge electron accelerator, which In some experiments, electrons trative personnel. from the outside looks like a cov- ered-up stadium, told about the new project Friday. Explains Accelerator World News Roundup He explained the new $12million tional family of giant accelerators By The Associated press be se o rbee fnds- mental secrets of matter. LONDON-Diplomatic relations between Britain and Haiti W The project is supported by the reduced to a frigid charge d'affaires level yesterday as a reaction Atomic Energy Commission. protests against the activities of the Haitian "bogeymen" (4uasi-offic Particle physics probably should branch of the Haitian Civil Police). interest everybody, for it deals The foreign office announced that President Francois Duvalie with mysteries within the atom. government at Port au Prince had asked that British Ambassai And everything is made of atoms, Gerald Corley Smith be called home. including human beings. "In view of the u'nsatisfactory state of Anglo-Haitian relation Observes Phenomena the foreign office said, it is not sending a replacement for the ambase Modern scientists, "peering" in- dor, and in turn is asking Haiti to withdraw its ambassador, Colb to the strange, microscopic, invisi- Bonhomme. ble world of high energy physics, Relations have been strained since last November, when Cor are amassing observations of new Smith, a senior diplomat in Port au Prince, led a deputation of dip inom ules.They are discoveeg mats to the Haitian foreign ministry and acted as their spokesman some, nobody understands. protesting against pressure on foreign nationals. To study this unknown world * * * * within the atom the Cambridge LONDON-The youthful left-wing of the ruling Conservat scientists are hurling tiny pieces of Party last night called on Britain to give up its nuclear deterrent a atoms around a 750 - foot race support a world agreement restricting nuclear weapons to the Uni track. Sae n usa The track is a slender, hollow, States and Russia. steel "doughnut' with a vacuum * inside. MINNEAPOLIS-Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson predicted 1 Speed of Light night that Democrats will add to their "substantial majority respor Electrons already traveling close bility" in the November elections. to the speed of light are injected into the hollow doughnut. A, ring of 48 magnets focuses the flying WASHINGTON-Plans to launch the first international satel electrons in their circular path, this spring-a joint project by the United Kingdom and the Uni Eacsh magnet is 12 feet long and States-were announced yesterday. weighs 6 tons. ofThe electrons ride n the rests WALLOPS ISLAND-A National Aeronautics and Space Administ riders. Electrical fields add energy tion official said yesterday the storm which wrecked the eastern a to the electrons as they speed board five days ago also did considerable damage to the rocket facil 10,000 times around the track. here. 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