THEMICHIGANDAILY Laotian Rebels Attack; Sever Communists Main Hhway Tie Q Now Co ntrol Key Junction Battle Continuing; Outcome i Doubt VIENTIANE tP)-Pro-Commun- ist Pathet Lao assault troops burst through goverment defenses in central Laos yesterday, severing the main highway link between this administrative capital and the royal capital of Luang Pra- bang. The attackers fanned out to ex- ploit the breakthrough at the stra- tegic road junction of Sala Phou Koun, a government military source said, and captured Muong Kassy, a stronghold 22 miles south.: Confused government troops fled in two directions, he said, giving the rebels their biggest victory since January and a stranglehold on the Queen Astrid highway just 40 miles south. of Luang Prabang and less than 100 miles north of Vientiane. Make Stand At last report, government de- fenders backed by heavy artillery were making a stand, on high ground surrounding Sala Pou Keng, eight miles north of the road Junction and the, third key point in defense plans for the highway. Government sources insisted the battle will be in doubt for several days. They said systematic de- struction of the highway has made it useless to the advancing rebels. The government made no public announcement of the battle or casualties. The rebel radio claimed about 300 government troops were killed or wounded and "one bat- talion completely wiped out# dur- ing. month-long skirmishing that preceded the attack yesterday by nine Pathet Lao battalions. Destroy Trucks The rebels, quoted by Red China's new China News Agency, also claimed four government ar- mored cars and many trucks were destroyed, and three airplanes supplied by the United States shot down or damaged.- (It was reported in Washington. Friday that President John F. Kennedy has strongly urged Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to halt shipment of Soviet arms to the rebels before the United States decides it is compelled to launch a counter-buildup of government forces. Kennedy urged neutralizing Laos to prevent the civil war from exploding into a greater East-West clash.) Government sources said' rebel successes were due to a' massive airlift in recent weeks by Soviet- built transport planes. They also, said Soviet trucks were used to rush fresh rebel troops into the fighting. Rumors. of the rebel advance flew through Vientiane but the city remained quiet. SACRAMENTO -- Former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon, speaks before the California GOP Central Committee. Nixon has declined to run for state governor. He is holding his hand up to his ear to hear the applause from the jammed assembly hall. Nixon Declines To Enter amaign for Governor BAC Asked To Modify Procedures WASHINGTON P) -The club- like organization of corporation presidents, the Business Advisory Council (BAC) of the Commerce department, soon will be losing some of its secrecy, exclusivity, and big business flavor. The administration and, more particularly, Secretary of Com- merce Luther H. Hodges, quietly have requested several changes in the 28-year-old advisory body, it was learned yesterday. Makes Changes One change was made without asking. Ralph J. Cordiner, board chairman of General Electric Co., resigned the chairmanship. His company and 28 others pleaded guilty last month to federal char- ges of price-fixing and bid- rigging. Other leaders of the BAC now are reported to be drafting pro- posed changes in the council's op- erating and membership rules to make them more palatable to the new secretary of commerce. Hodges had serious reservations about certain BAC techniques when he took office, and he voiced some of them. Attacked in Congress Since then, he has been em- barrassed by attacks in Congress on the big business coloration of the council. This has been cited as one reason for not giving the Commerce department responsi- bility for running the pending de- pressed areas aid program. Even before the latter incident, Hodges had consulted with leaders of the council and made known his desire for some changes. The council sent telegrams on Wednesday to its 125 active and "graduate" members-a roster of many of the biggest names in in- dustry-postponing BAC's first scheduled closed - door meeting with Hodges. The telegram said the delay was needed to "work out unresolved matters affecting the BAC." Committees Terminated ByKennedy WASHINGTON (W -- President John F. Kennedy, combatting red tape, yesterday wiped out 17 inter- departmental committees. The White House said this will save $301,375 a year, but that the primary aim was not to cut ex- penses, but to "clarify and pin- point executive responsibility and consolidate governmental duties in a number of important areas." White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger told reporters: "There are going to be other committees eliminated. This is just the first action." Chop One-Third This first action got rid of more than one-third of the inter- agency groups, most of them set up during the previous adminis- tration. One of them, the Govern- ment Patents Board, was estab- lished in 1950 in the administra- tion of Harry S. Truman. Its duties will be handled by the commissioner of patents, The committees have such titles as "Special Committee on Post- Attack Indemnification Policy," the "Cabinet Committee on Fac- simile Mail," and the "Cabinet committee on Price Stability and Economic Growth." The latter committee was head- ed by Richard M. Nixon when he was vice-president. Along with it, Kennedy abolished the committee on governmental activities affect- ing prices and costs. Shift Responsibility But the abolition of these two anti-inflation committees will re- present a net loss of only one agency, because their responsibili- ties will be shifted to a National Advisory Board on Economic Policy. The latter board will oper- ate under the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers. Salinger said 32 people with an- nual salaries totaling $64,375 for part-time work will be affected by the lopping off of assorted com- mittees. He said they won't be fired, as they have regular agency jobs and will retain them. Some of the committees oper- ated with the help of people as- signed from various government departments and bureaus. Others had staffs of their own. One of the biggest was the council on foreign economic poli- cy, on which officials from the White House and the State, Com- merce, Agriculture and Treasury Departments served. Job Ref used By Hoover NEW YORK V)-Former Presi- dent Herbert Hoover won't be able to accept an invitation to head an advisory committee for the country's new peace corps. But he still wants to be "of any feasible public service." The White House announced that the 86-year-old ex-President had declined a bid by President John F. Kennedy to serve as hon- orary chairman of the committee because of his age and other com- mittments. The post has since been filled, it was learned, and chairman will be announced shortly. Report Squad To Investigate Hoff a Affairs WASHINGTON (/P)-A battery of onetime sleuths into affairs of the Teamsters Union and its pres- ident James R. Hoffa is now Work- ing in the Justice Department. There are indications they still are on the same.,trail. A well-placed source outside the department said yesterday a spe- cial unit has been established in- formally to concentrate on hunt- ing down new leads and reinvesti- gate old ones dealing with Hoffa and the Teamsters. Department officials denied any such squad has been set up, but said that a section in existence a long time--and charged with in- vestigating organized crime and racketeering in general-is being strengthened considerably under Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy. UN DELEGATES CONVINCED: To Consider China Admission UNITED NATIONS (M- - Nine out of 10 heads of United Nations question on the agenda of its reg- 3) An almost universal de delegations were reported yester- ular 1961 session starting Sept. 19. among delegates to get the Chi day to be convinced that the Gen- The interviewer, a college pro- Reds into big-power disarmarn eral Assembly will take up the fessor who has made the subject a negotiations-and -a general f question of seating Communist research project, said the follow- ing that they would boycott China next fall despite any op- ing factors were involved in the such negotiations until they position the United States may general belief that any such pro- given China's UN seat. offer- posal would fail if put forward 4) A current campaign of An expert an international re- next fall: rican and Asian countries to lations said that in recent inter- 1) Brazilian President Janio UN councils enlarged so there views, with those in charge atf 84 Quadros' recent announcement be more places for them on cc of the 99 delegations, he found that Brazil would vote to debate cils. The Soviet Union has se that more than 90 per cent be- the China-seat issue next time, notice it will veto council enla lieve the assembly will put the and British Foreign Secretaiy ment until the Chinese Comn T 'rr ^~^'-~^~^^ ^^r ha++Wa^ en^ i c ~^~^^^+A% i^^ h ~T SACRAMENTO (P) - Richard M. Nixon, California's No. 1 re- publican removed himself from the state's 1962 rac.e for governor. He told a group of Reupublican legislators Friday night and again passed on the word to friends yesterday that he Won't be a can- didate for Democratic Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown's job. The former vice-president of- fered his home state party a three-point program, and his leadership in a campaign for a GOP political comeback'next year. Avoids Mention Nixon avoided any mention of his possible future candidacy for President and didn't touch. on the governorship matter in a speech before a statewide Repub- lican meeting. But he authorized the legisla- tors to quote him on the question of running for governor: "I am not a candidate. I have no intention to be a candidate or institute a draft." In San Francisco, Roger Kent, chairman of the Democratic state central committee, said "It seems clear that if he believed he could win he would have run for gov- ernor." Sees Struggle Kent said "We will now see a death struggle between the Gold- water (Sen. Barry Goldwater [R- Ariz]) fringe and the pseudo- liberals of the Republican hier- archy for the 1962 gubernatorial, nomination." Kent predicted. Brown will run again and win. And in Miami Beach, Fla., Gold- water said if Nixon wants to be a power in the Republican party he should run for something. "Until he gets elected to some position he's just going to be a Republican lawyer," said Gold- water, and added: Names Rockefeller "If Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York is re-elected next year he will be in a much better posi- tionto win the Presidential nomi- nation in 1964." Nixon's statement didn't really surprise party leaders who hesi- tated to see him gamble his future Presidential chances on a state campaign. But it did disappoint the hopes of many Republicans. They figured he showed his strength in carrying California against a 3-2 Demo- cratic registration last November and could win the governorship easily. INTELLIGENCE STUDY: Most Talent in Physics, Mathematics' A nation-wide study of aca- demic background and personal abilities of all of the Ph.D's pro- duced in one year shows that physics and mathematics have captured most of the talent. By the same criteria, education has attracted the lowest share of top-level intelligence. The study also vindicates an earlier warning by Dr. James B. Conant that small high schools are unable to provide an adequate. academic challenge,. Every high school with fewer than 100 graduates in 1958 was found below the national norm of doctorate production. All the high schools in the largest class-size category of 800 or more students in their graduating classes were found to produce three times as many doctorates as would be ex- pected of them, according to the national norm. U.S. Supports The study was carried out by Lindsey R. Harmon, director of research, Office of Scientific Per- sonnel, in the National Academy of Sciences. It was supported by the National Science Foundation and the United States Office of Education. The report- was pub- lished yesterday in the - weekly magazine Science. It is apparent, the report said, that the physical sciences and social sciences are "the outstand- ing fields at the higher ability levels, followed closely by arts and humanities, with the biological sci- ences and education lagging far behind." The study found "that the fields of biology and education have not been able to attract their propor- tionate share of individuals of highest intelligence." Early Failure Since these fields "are certainly inherently as challenging as those in the physical sciences," the re- port concluded that "there is a failure somewhere, probably at the high school level or even earlier, to present adequately these chal- lenges to the right young people who eventually attain doctorate degrees." The study started with a list of all of the 8,930 doctorates award- ed in 1958. After eliminating about 13 per cent who had been gradu- ated from foreign high schools and those for whom no high school information was avaliable, the survey followed up the remaining 6,259 recipients. Among other important findings of the survey were these: The Northeastern states as a whole outproduce the rest of the country in Ph.D.'s by almost 50 per cent. The mountain states are 50 per cent above the national norm in the production of biological science Ph.D.'s. . The yardsticks used for the study included intelligence tests; an adjusted ranking in the high school class; grade-point averages in mathematics and science and the Army General Classification Test. It was found that one person in 3,100 of any one year's approxi- mate Ph.D. age group in the na- tion actually attained a doctor- ate. Even at the highest ability level tabulated, above the "genius" classification, only one person in five actually attained the doctor ate. The report concluded that there remained "a substantial res- ervoir of under-developed abil- ity." (Copyright 1961, The New York Times) 4' I 4-gored arrow shirt in glade green or lilac poplin 6.50 A I matching culottes 6.95 i 5 I 1uEoh V'.Wnf ivEogU . Co fOm 4- 1 I 11