THE MICHIGAN DAILY President Orders Control Of ArgentineProvinces 'Constitu tion Vote' In Fall Questioned By Mark Blucher Four law professors expressed opinions on the legality of pre-- senting the proposed constitution to the voters this fall while dele- gates discussed the effect of the Supreme Court decision in re- turning Scholle versus Hare (re- apportionment case) to the state's high court. Dean Alan Smith, Prof. Paul Kauper and Prof. William Pierce, of the Law :School supported the interpretation which would pro- hibit : November vote. Prof. John Galvin of Wayne State Law. School said 'that word- ing in the present constitution is so unclear and a vote could be taken in November. Abide by Opinion Secretary of State James Hare has said he would abide by the attorney general's opinion that the vote must await the spring elec- tion because of the wording in the amendmente under which the con- vention was called. Stanton Faville, Chief Assistant to the Attorney General com- mented that the Convention could go to the state Supreme Court and order Hare to issue election bal- lots. "A precedent was set for this in 1908 when a similar action was taken." . The return of the Scholle versus Hare case caused no great com- motion among delegates to the convention. No Change Majority Republicans said it didn't change their plans at 'all. Democrats.said that the decision should make a difference but that it probably would not. The convention yesterday adopt- ed a plan for a seven-member State; Supreme Court, elected on a statewide basis, after delegates voted down ai proposal to elect Justices from districts. The reduction in manpower was recommended because of the con- vention's action yesterday in creating a new court of appeals, which delegates said would ease the work load. MILITARY LEADER-The insistence of Gen. Raul Alexiandro- Poggi (left), army commander and chief, and Adm. Augustin R. Penas, chief of naval operations have lead to Argentine President Karl Maria Guido's annuling of state and local elections yesterday. Congressional elections in which Peronists won a significant minority are still valid. Reds- Orbit New Sputnik To Study Atmosphere By The Associated Press Labor Union May Strike Nationwide Guido Relents Under Military Pressures BUENOS AIRES (4)-President Jose Maria Guido ordered federal control over Argentina's provinces yesterday, wiping out election gains by followers of exiled dic- tator Juan Peron. The giant general confederation of labor lashed back last night witli a call to its 3 million mem- bers to stand by for a nationwide strike, but set no dates. Guido bowed to military pres- sures and issued his anti-Peronist decree after resisting demands of Army and Navy- bosses for more than three weeks. His hand was forced when generals in three provinces took over control from civilian governors. 'Military-Type Dictatorship' The labor confederation, largest workers' organization in the coun- try and a bastion of Peronist strength, declared "the democratic and constitutional form of govern- ment has been replaced by a mil- itary-type dictatorship." The union had already threaten- ed a general strike for May 1, the date Peronist candidates were scheduled to take office, if Peronist leader Andres Framini was not allowed to assume the governship of Buenos Aires province. Erase Victories By annulling the March 18 elec- tions, Guido erased the victories by Peronists who elected five gov- ernors of their own and supported four more successful candidates for the provincial posts. The president's decree did not mention, however, the national congressional elections March 18 in which Peronists won 47 seats! in the chamber of deputies. The announcement of the presi- dent's action was made only min- utes after the news that three generals in Entre Rios, Santa Fe and Corientes provinces had asked, the elected governors in those provinces to step aside to permit. military control. Cost of Living Reaches Peak Explores Meetigs NEW YORK {AP)-An American publisher said last night that So-, viet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has reversed his policy on a sum- mit meeting with President John F. Kennedy and now agrees that the two should meet again only if3 there is prior agreement on crucial issues or if war threatens. Khrushchev disclosed his stand last Friday in a two-hour 50-min- ute interview at the Kremlin with Publisher Gardner Cowles. Cowles released the Soviet government's translation of the interview text last night. CIn a discussion that ranged fromi Communism's ultimate objectives to current disarmament talks in Geneva, the 68-year-old Russian leader expressed hope that major warfare could be avoided. Support Wars But he voiced support for what he called defensive and national- liberation wars. And he made it clear he had little expectation of any quick world disarmament agreement. Khrushchev told. Cowles that he had gained a "favorable im- pression" from the American President when he met him i their first personal encounter in Vienna last June. In a TV address to the Ameri- cnpublic two days after that meeting, Kennedy had said: "I will tell you now that it was a very sober two days." Khrushchev gave his appraisal of the meeting when Cowles asked if he thought it would be useful "If a summit meeting were held in the near future or if you, for ex- ample, invited President Kennedy to the Soviet Union to discuss matters with him?" Noting that- he always believed such contacts are useful, Khrush- chev replied: "Favorable Impression" "The conversations I had with your President in Vienna left a favorable impression on me. True, we differed with him in our ap- praisal of the situation and did not reach agreement on questions which require their solution. But at any rate, as a result of that meeting we now, apparently, un- derstand one another better, and have a clearer picture of the ques- tions it is necessary to settle." Khrushchev said that if a sec- ond meeting with Kennedy ended up the same way it would give no one any satisfaction and would prove a sore disappointment. "It seems to me, therefore," he went on, "that we shoud first reach some agreement on the questions on which our common decision is required now to avoid a conflict and war., And meeting at the summit would perhaps be a pinnacle of such agreement." "This," a d d e d Khrushchev, would be the best way." By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Official State Department sources expressed op- timism about Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko's statement yesterday that hopes for a Soviet- American agreement on the Ger- man question hinge on three tough issues. They said it would be possible, but that quite a few obstacles re- main to be settled. Gromyko told the Supreme So- viet, the Russian parliament, that these hopes were based first of all on American understanding of the importance of giving neither East nor West Germany nuclear weapons. Non-Aggression He added that there is Soviet- American "understanding in prin- ciple" of the need for a non- aggression pact between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries and the Warsaw Treaty powers. Thirdly, he. said recent United States declarations make clear there is no objection to tying con- tinued free access to West Berlin to respect for the sovereignty of East Germany. United States officials disputed any inference from Gromyko's statement that agreement has been reached on a non-aggression treaty between the North Atlantic Alliance and Warsaw Pact na- GROMYKO SPEECH: Express Optimism on Berlin tions, or on barring nuclear weap-. ons from East and West Germany. Note Basis On this basis the state depart- ment authorities stated that: " While the question of non- aggression between the NATO and Warsaw pact has been discussed in the United States-Soviet talks on Berlin, what the United States has in mind is something like a parallel issuance of statements by the two groups. This would not in- world News Roundup By The Associated Press DETROIT - Officials of the Detroit News and Detroit Free Press will meet at 10 a.m. today with representatives of the Inter- national Typographical Union 10- cal in an attempt to resolve a dis- pute which has left this city with- out a daily newspaper since April 15. * * * WASHINGTON - A prospective great battle over literacy tests for voters was delayed yesterday when leaders were unable to round up a quorum. * * * ORAN - Troop reinforcements began to mast on the outskirts ( rebellious Oran yesterday to brea the resistance of the defiant Eurc pean settlers. Official sources in dicated, however, that it may I some time before Oran commandi Gen. Ralph Katz throws his me into action against the city European quarter held by tl terrorist secret army organization * * * WASHINGTON - Secretary i Commerce Luther H. Hodges sai esterday the administration woul no" feel compelled to try to it fluence wage-price decisions i industry except where basic com modities were concerned. volve signing a "pact" or any oti act which might imply recogr tion of East Germany, permane approval of present Europe boundary lines or permanent diF sMon of Germany. ! Withholding atomic weapo from non-nuclear powers is oft-stated United States ,olic Any agreement with the Reds this score would not be a d crimination against America's al West, Germany. Do you want to be an Orientation MOSCOW - The Soviet Union orbited 'its 'third instrument- packed Sputnik in five weeks, fully reported the communications fail- ure of the American moon rocket, and agreed to a joint United States-Soviet 'weather watch in- volving satellites. The Cosmos III, orbiting the Earth every 93 minutes, carries in- struments to investigate radio transmissions, the Earth's radia- tion belts, the planet's magnetic fields and cloud formation. Tass, the Russian news agency, also carried detailed reports of the communications breakdown aboard the Ranger 4, launched Monday. (In Washington, United States officials said that the rocket, knocked off- its planned orbit by the failure of a timer to activate its electronic brain, would either hit the dark side of the moon Thursday morning or miss and burn up upon its return to the earth's atmosphere.) The joint weather watch, an- nounced Monday in Washington, would involve joint earthbound weather observations and correla- tion and the launching of weather satellites and ,the international dissemination of data gained from them. The agreement is an outgrowth of a United Nations resolution calling for a peaceful outer space cooperation and an exchange of messages between President John F. Kennedy and Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev toward this end. In response to the United Na- tions resolution, two meteorolo- gists-Dr. Harry Weler, Director of Research in the United States Weather Bureau, and Dr. Viktor A. Bugaev, Assistant Director of the Hydrometeorological Serviceof the Soviet Union-met at the headquarters of the World Mete- orological Organization in Geneva last month to draft a cooperative plan for such use of weather satellites. Dr. Wexler, disclosed 'today at a news conference that, with the help of other scientists, a plan had been drafted. It calls for expanding and im- proving global observation of the weather by both conventional means and by the new methods made possible by the development of weather satellites. 'Train' Plan Draws Critics NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A pro- posal by the Citizen Council of Greater New Orleans to send a "freedom train" north carrying 1,000 Negroes on a 'free one-way ride away from segregation drew protest and defensive comment. Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D-La.) called it merely a "freedom riders" in reverse while northern political leaders, and representatives of the National Association for the Col- ored People and the Congress of Racial Equality descried the scheme as a "cruel hoax" and a violation of "every fundamental concept that we believe in as a people." Leader?. Deadline For Signing Up For Interviews *. . Friday, A pril 27, 5 P.M. MEN: Michigan Union Student Offices WOMEN: Michigan League Undergraduate Offices With beau -manners tha secretary, th Boss, yet hav on Spring soc {~ da b '. a ..M+. tful office t flatter the at please the e 'no cur'fe'w '~ cializing-. We show therm in cotton ~nd arnel cord-seersuek- er - linen -- blends and knits from1 14.98 . . . to silks fron 29.95... Tiny, toll; and in-between sizes. SABOVE is cotton knit costume Spring clearance s pcial at LEFT is cotton and dacron Plain wash-n-wear costume at 22.95. - A . a .. .sa- . 500 YDS. FROM UNION Ann Arbor's most deluxe and spacious opts. Ready for June and Sept. occupancy Completely air conditioned for three or four If you are responsible people- applications now being accepted PHONE NO 3-6357 WASHINGTON WP- Higher spring season prices for women's and girls' clothing helped push the nation's living costs up to a new peak in March. The labor department reported yesterday its Consumers Price In- dex rose two-tenths of one per cent to reach the record level of 105.0 per cent of the 1957-59 average. 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