THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Es soviets Supply Modify Fighters Position, I Predict Senate Rules Fight to India .1 MayUtilize n I I ti New Planes :Aainst Reds Six Crt To Arrive In Mid-December NEW DELHI (JPW-Reporting a slight shift in Soviet attitude, Prime Minister Jawaharal Nehru said yesterday the Russians will send MIG-21 jet fighter planes for India's possible use in the unde- clared border war with Red China. The prime minister told a closed session of a consultative commit- tee of Parliament that a number of the jets would arrive in mid- December. India put in the order for the jets long before the Red Chinese opened an offensive Oct. 20 on two fronts in the Himalayas along India's northern frontiers. Six jets - were believed to have been ordered for December and six more for delivery at an unspecified later date. Reported Renege The Russians, faced with wound- ing their Chinese ally, were at first' reported to have reneged on the order. Moscow newspapers sympa- thetically supported the Red Chi- nese in their drives to occupy dis- puted border areas in the Himal- r ayas. But Nehru told the meeting there had been a shift in Krem- lin thinking in India's favor. Com- mittee members did not elaborate on what Nehru had to say about this. There was speculation he was basing his remarks on editorials in Soviet newspapers which have taken a more neutral attitude re- cently. Seize Area The Chinese iave seized all but 500 square miles of a 15,000- square-mile zone on India's north- west border in the Ladakh area. Military activity was building up there around a strategic airfield at Chushul. India has flown light tanks into Chushul to counter a Communist tank and troop buildup in the re- gion. The Chinese troops were re- ported carrying Russian-made AK- 47 automatic rifles. The United States has sent India M-14 auto- matic rifles. The Indian defense ministry reported the Red Chinese launch- ed new attacks over the past two days in the northeast frontier, 1,- 400 miles from Ladakh. Hold Position A spokesman said, however, In- dian forces held their positions and repulsed the advances. He said the attacks were carried out around Walong, 15 miles from the Burma border, and at Jang, just outside the Chinese-held town of Towang, near the Bhutan border. Both towns lead to easier inva- sion passages down into the plains of India's Assam state. Indian commanders were report- ed confident they could hold the line in the northeast front. At Ladakh both sides were pois- ed for a possible showdown fight for the Chushul airfield, used by Indian forces to receive supplies that include arms from the United States and Britain. France and Canada have an- bounced they intend to send transport planes and helicopters to the Indian forces. 'Nehru told a meeting of civil servants that India has started manufacturing its own automatic weapons and that they would be available in large quantities by next month. He told a parliament session earlier that there were no plans I to produce nuclear weapons. JAWAHARAL NEHRU NIKITA S. KHRUSHCHEV Soviet planes reverses position UAR RADIO: Saudi Arabian Reports YemniPre'mier Dead SARIO (M)-A Saudi Arabian prince said yesterday Prince Saif Al-Islam Al-Hassan, prime minister of the royalist regime fighting Yemen's revolutionary government and former Yemeni delegate to the United Nations, is dead of a wound suffered in battle. Independent confirmation was lacking. Theinformant was Prince Abdel Mohsen Ibn Abdul Iziz, brother of King Ibn Saud, who defected Thursday to the United Arab Re- World News Roundup public. The United Arab Republic backs the revolutionary govern- ment of Brig. Abdullah Sallal in Yemen; Saudi Arabia backs royal- ists under the banner of the de- posed Imam Mohammad Al-Badr, Hassan's nephew. II By The Associated Press HYDE PARK-Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt was laid to rest beside her husband yesterday as rain fell upon the rose garden of his an- cestral estate high above the east bank of the Hudson River. * * * RANGOON-Burma is to get about $10.5 million worth of Amer- lean agricultural products under a new agreement with the United States. This neutral nation will set aside 50 million kyats, the local currency, in payment. The United States wIll use the kyats to provide Burma grants and long-term loans for economic development. * . ** BELGRADE-The chief of the Chinese delegation at the Bulgar- ian Communist Party Congress at Sofia attacked Bulgarian Commu- nist leader Todor Zhivkov yester- day, the official Yugoslav news agency Tanjug reported. The re- port said Vu Shu-Chuan, the Chi- nese chief delegate, "accused Zhiv- kov of one-sided treatment of re- lations of the Bulgarian Commu- nist Party with the Albanian Com- munist Party." * * * LIEGE-A 12-man jury, all par- ents but one, acquitted a young mother, three relatives and their family doctor yesterday in the mercy killing of an armless, 8-day- old thalidomide baby. * * * SOFIABulgaria-Georgi Zan- kov, Bulgaria's Deputy Premier, who was ousted last Monday, was reported placed under house arrest yesterday. He was the second Bulgarian Communist party leader who has been confined under guard, after denouncement on charges that he was an advocate of the personality cult and Stalinism." A Yemeni Royal radio broadcast recorded in Amman, Jordan, said revolutionary and UAR troops in the Madad area have yielded to the Imam's forces and the royal- ists are now in full control of the Red Sea nation's eastern moun- tains and northern regions. Tribesmen were reported con- verging on Badr's quarters to express allegiance and loyalty. The Yemeni Royal radio added: "In spite of Napalm bombs drop-" ped by UAR planes, loyal tribes- men and villagers are determined to fight and defend their country against UAR President Gamal. Abdahl Nasser, whose Communist plot is to wipe out Islam and im- pose atheisni and Red Socialism in Yemen." A delegation representing the revolutionary government of Ye- men conferred in Moscow with the Soviet Defense Minister, Mar- shal Rodion Y. Malinovsky. Yemen has previously obtained arms from the Russians and pre- sumably military aid is a subject of discussion. The delegation is headed by Mo- hammed El Kaid Self, minister of state for presidential affairs and information. Rolvaag Leads. In Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS UP) - Lt. Gov. Karl Rolvaag, a Democrat, took a 139-vote lead over Republican Gov. Elmer L. Andersen yesterday in their battle for the Minnesota gov- ernorship on the basis of new er- rors uncovered in Minnesota's two biggest counties. The Minneapolis Star reported two tallying errors whose net ef- fect is to shift the lead from an earlier 51-vote margin for Ander- sen to 139 for Rolvaag. Hesse Vote May Reflect Controversy FRANKFURT (P)-The people of Hesse will choose a new legis- lature Sunday in a state election watched throughout West Ger- many as a general trend-setter. Controversy about federal action against the magazine Der Spiegel heated the campaign. Hesse is one of 10 states mak- ing. up the Bonn republic. The legal action against the Hamburg news magazine, whose publisher and four editors are in jail on suspicion- they committed treason by publishing military sec- rets, has aroused widespread criti- cism of the federal government in Bonn. Der Spiegel has been a leading critic of Chancellor Konrad Ane- nauer and his Christian Demo- cratic lieutenants, particularly De- feAse Minister Franz Joseph Strauss. In the wake of thp action against the magazine more than two weeks ago, most independent newspapers have joined the oppo- sition socialists and elements of the Free Democratic Party, a coal- ition partner of the Christian Democrats nationally, in express- ing concern for freedom of the fress. Spiegel mastheads, clipped from cover pages, have been pasted over Christian Democratic elec- tion posters in several Hessian towns. Speakers of the Adenauer party were heckled. Students stag- ed protest demonstrations. S o m e Christian Democratic party officials have privately voiced fear that the controversy will mean a setback in their efforts to unesat the Socialists, who have run Hesse for the past 16 years. McGhee To Go To Congo Talk WASHINGTON M - Undersec- retary of State George C. McGhee will fly to Europe next week for conferences with British and Bel- gian officials on further efforts to unify the Congo. McGhee will leave Monday afternoon for Brussels and Lon- don, the State Department said, and may visit other capitals. "Among subjects to be discuss- ed," the announcement said, "will be his recent visit to the Congo and progress toward Congolese reconciliation." It is understood that United States and United Nations officials are studying ways of bringing eco- nomic pressures to bear on seces- sionist Katanga province in a fur- ther effort to persuade Katanga President Moise Tshombe to ac- cept a draft constitution for Con- go consideration. Katanga is the wealthiest prov- ince of the Congo. United States officials contend the income from its mineral riches must be shared by the central government at Leo- poldville to assure the country's unity and economic base. McGhee visited the Congo last month. and consulted with political leaders. Officials said that he also conferred in New York Friday with UN Secretary General U Thant. By JOHN CHADWICK Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON-A long-stym- ied, bipartisan drive for a change in Senate rules to make it easier to choke off filibusters appears to have been given a big boost by the results of last Tuesday's elections. A move to revamp Senate Rule 22, requiring a two-thirds major- ity of senators present and voting to shut off debate, is expected to churn up a bitter battle right at the outset of the new 88th Con- gress when it meets Jan. 9. A fight over the issue has mark- ed the state of each Congress in recent years. Southern senators who have banked on filibusters to block civil rights measures have led the opposition and consistently succeeded in forestalling change. Shun Changes In January of 1961, when the President John F. Kennedy Ad- ministration was just coming into office, the Senate shunted aside proposed changes in its anti-fili- buster rule by the narrow margin of 50 to 46. The key to tipping the balance the other way apparently rests with a handful of newly elected Democratic senators-Thomas J. McIntyre of New Hampshire, Birch Bayh, Jr. of Indiana, Daniel B. Brewster of Maryland, Gaylord A. Nelson of Wisconsin, and Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii. They will take the seats of senators who voted with the ma- jority two years ago and could provide more than enough votes to reverse the outcome. One Switch The only likely switch the other way as a result of Tuesday's bal- loting was the defeat of Sen. John A. Carroll (D-Colo) by his con- servative Republican opponent, Peter H. Dominick. Carroll had supported those fighting for a rules change. The anti-filibuster forces might pick up an offsetting vote, how- ever, if Democratic new frontiers- man George S; McGovern finally wins the still-undecided Senate race ,in South Dakota. On the vote in the 1961 rules battle, the late Sen. Francis Case (R-SD) was among four senators who were not recorded. But, as seems likely, if South- ern senators mount a filibuster, against a rules change, there is always the question of whether the issue can be brought to a vote. Leaders of the move contend that at the outset of a new Con- gress a filibuster against a change in Senate rules can be halted by majority vote-that the two-thirds rule does not apply-but this posi- tion is sharply challenged by the Dixie forces. Notice that a battle is in the making was served on senators in the closing days of the 87th Con- gress in separate but similar let- ters sent out by Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn), and Philip S. Hart (D-Mich) and Republican Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel of Califor- nia, Jacob K. Javits of New York, Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, Clif- ford P. Case of New Jersey, and Kenneth B. Keating of New York. They advised colleagues they will move to modify the present anti-filibuster at the opening of the 88th Congress and contended this is essential to obtain action on "meaningful civil rights legis- lation." Study Claims Wage Hikes Close to Limit WASHINGTON (A') -The gov- ernment made public yesterday a survey of 1962 wage increases showing that labor unions are sticking fairly close to the limits prescribed by President John F. Kennedy to help keep down infla- tion. The survey reported that major collective bargaining agreements concluded up to Oct. 1 and cover- ing about 3.1 million workers pro- vided pay increases that aver- aged about 3.2 per cent. This included large groups of workers, such as in the steel and aluminum industries, for whom new labor contracts were negotiat- ed lacking any increase in wages but including substantial gains in other benefits such as pensions, vacations and so on. When only those settlements providing wage increases were con- s dered the average pay raise was 3.4 per cent of estimated straight- time average hourly earnings. The data strongly indicated that wage settlements, on the whole, have been staying right within or just a bit above, the level con- templated in the guideposts set forth by the Kennedy administra- tion early this year. These guides called for limiting wage gains to gains in productivity. Bearing on the success of their move not only will be the changes in the membership of the Senate but also the position taken by Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, who also is chairman of the Senate Rules Committee. Two years ago Mansfield made the motion that carried 50-46 to refer proposed changes in 'the anti-filibuster rule to the Rules Committee for hearings and study. In this he had the support of Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill), the GOP leader. PAID ADVERTISEMENT Ui. of N. Campus Tour Representative Mrs. E. Strachan, housemother, for the ninth consecutive year has been appointed campus represent- ative of "Howard Tours, the orig- inal college and travel program to the University of Hawaii summer session and Pacific; 1963 applica- tions are being accepted now by her at 1415 Cambridge St.; tle- phone-NO 5-7953. Next summer's tour of 56 days to Hawaii costs $589, plus $9 tax, from the West Coast. This price includes roundtrip jet between the West Coast and Hawaii, campus residence, and the most diversified itinerary of dinners, parties, shows, cruises, sightseeing events, beach activities, and cultural entertain- ment; plus all necessary tour ser- vices. Waikiki a1pa r t mn e n t living, steamship passage, and visits -to Neighbor Islands are available at adjusted tour rates. Steamship travel, however, will be ata prem- lum. Therefore, interested travel- ers should apply early to protect their reservations. 1963 will be the "pig Summer in Hawaii" because this Is the bi- ennial year of the world famous- Trans-Pacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii, with every- body sharing in the extra fun and added excitement. In addition to Hawaii, Howard Tours offers a 67 day study pro- gram to the Orient and another study tour of 45 days around South America. Both are San Francisco State College summer session study tours offering six upper division university credits. College men and women may call Mrs. Strachan for further infor- mation. B I STUDENT: MO VEMENT in a dliscussion including INTEGRATION, SEGREGATION, VOTER REGISTRATION El E II PERFECTLY PROPORTIONED FROM HEEL TO TOE 9.98 L .. ' ea . P 1 l iL si .4f - - -AM< I I