THEMICHIGANDAILY__ Jome To Give Britons 'No-Nonsense' Service As New Prime Minister) Common ers Spell Future For Success By GODFREY ANDERSON Associated Press News Analyst LONDON (?)-To be successful as prime minister, Lord Home must descend from the rarified atmosphere of British aristocracy and diplomacy to the hurly-burly of the House of Commons. He must establish quick contact with the common man. Only by doing this can the for- mer \foreign secretary stand a chance of leading Britain's Con- servative Party to victory over the opposition Labor Party led by middle-class Harold Wilson in the' 1964 elections. Clothes Make the Man Home won't achieve the new image simply by taking off the ermine robe of a lord and earl's coronet." To the man in the street, Home often appears as a remote and. antiquated figure living on bor- rowed time. Many are against a prime minister from the House of Lords on principle. "After all, he wasn't elected by anyone's votes," they say. Few Against Him 1n fact, Home probably g6t the top job because few were against- him rather than because many wanted him. But-those who wanted him were those who counted-other ancient families like the Devonshires (in- laws of former Prime Minister Harold Macmillan) and the Churchills, whose backing still counts for a 'great deal in even a modernizpd Tory party. EVERETT M. DIRKSEN .. predicts aid cut D ksen Sees Cut WASHINGTON R5-)-Senate Mi- nority Leader Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) predicted yesterday that floor action will reduce the $4.2 billion for foreign aid approved Friday by the Foreign Relations Committee, and Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) did not contradict him. It seems certain that the ad- ministration bill will be forced to struggle hard to keep the au- thorization close to $4 billion, in contrast to the $4.5 billion origin- ally asked by President John F. Kennedy. Mansfield refused to predict the outcome of the debate starting Oct. 28. To Announce, Cabinet List Later Today Report MacLeod Turned Down Post LONDON (P')--Lord, Home put dowen a revolt in Britain's Con- servative Party yesterday and marched triumphantly to Buck- ingham Palace, established as the new prime minister. Then, in a fireside chat to the nation, he promised to give Britain a no-nonsense, straight-forward government in the stormy days ahead for his party. "No one need expect any stunts from me--merely plain, straight talking," he said. Mutual Understanding "I want to share all the govern- ment's thinking with you and want you to understand what the gov- ernment is doing and why." The chat was Lord Home's first address to Britons in his new role. It came at the end of a hectic day that started with conferences with his Tory rivals and the victory trip to the palace. After hoirs of tense bargaining with party rivals, Lord Home told the Queen he had support enough to form a government. To Be Announced Home's aides said he would an- nounce his cabinet list today. Iain MacLeod, joint chairman of the Conservative Party, and Health Minister Enoch Powell, were reported by some sources to have turned down jobs in Home's cabinet. Others doubted the re-. port. Informants said the two believ- ed appointment of a veer as prime minister was contrary to the im- age of a modern, progressive party. First Since 1895 Lord Home, victor in a power struggle that split the Conserva- tive Party, is the first peer to win the supreme prize of British poli- tics since Lord Salisbury in 1895. Informants said Home intended to ask Labor Party leader Harold Wilson for a delay in the reopen- ing of Parliament until he is elected to a Commons seat. But even before this could be confirm- ed as official, Wilson told a rally in Manchester the Laborites reject the request as'an impertinance." Until Home is elected to a Par- liament seat he will not be permit- ted to speak in the Commons. The election process will take about a month. Rockefeller Blasts Rival On Issues By The Associated Press HANOVER, N.H. (AP)-New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller charg- ed yesterday that Sen. Barry Gold- water (R-Ariz) had adopted po- sitions "not in the best interests of the American people" on such issues as foreign aid, the World Bank and United States member- ship in the United Nations. Rockefeller said he favored and Goldwater opposed all three. The New York governor thus added to his growing list of ma- jor issues on which he sees con- flict between himself and the Ari- zona senator. Leading Non-Candidates Goldwater and Rockefeller are considered the leading prospects at the moment for the Republican nomination for President next year, although neither has made a formal declaration. Rockefeller, while professing agreement with Goldwater on fun- damental Republican principles, chose New Hampshire audiences to hear him detail his differences on specific issues. The governor, with his wife ac- companying him, made a two-day tour of New Hampshire as he opened a bid to win support for this state's primary next March 10. Calls for Debate At almost every stop, Rockefeller repeated his challenge to Gold- water to join with him in a series of debates on major issues. Goldwater has refused on the ground that Republicans should unite and fight Democrats, not fight among themselves, but Rock- efeller is keeping up a barrage of criticism that he hopes will crum- ble the senator's opposition to the debate idea. The governor will confer with GOP leaders in Vermont today before returning to New York City. A Wild Conservative? Meanwhile, in Moscow, the gov- ernment news agency Tass took note of the fact that Goldwater is a leading contender in the United States presidential race and de- nounced him as a leader of Ameri- ca's "wild men." The agency said he "describes the ban on the launching of weap- ons into outer space as a terrible blow which the present American government has struck at national security" and added: "He speaks the sentiments of the most aggressively minded elements of the American military quar- ters." SNAIL'S PACE: Tax Cut Hopes Dwindle While Senators Dawdle WASHINGTON (P) - Chances for enactment this year of Presi- bers may be scheduled each dent John F. Kennedy's $11- later on the pending bill. billion tax cut appeared even slim- However, staff aideshnoted mer yesterday in the light of the November will not be a snail's pace at which the first month for hearings. week of Senate hearings moved. One day will be lost Nov. 1 Sen.Russll B Lon (D-a),Veterans Day, probably threet Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La), the week of Nov. 18 becaus second ranking Democrat on the the need ofhNdleau finance committee, had this com- limit nreasebha andnew ment on the opening four days of following week because of Tha testimony: "Let's not kid ourselves. Not If the public hearings do even an ounce of effort has been into December, there appear shown so far to move this bill be no chance to complete this year." other stages necessary to get 'Long and Redundant' bill to Kennedy's desk by the Long told a reporter he found of the year. the questioning of the first and Two Weeks of Voting only witness heard this week, Sec- These include voting on the retary of the Treasury Douglas in committee, expected to Dillon, "very long and redundant." two weeks; floor debate, likel Sen. George A. Smathers (D- run at least a week; and a Fla), third-ranking Democrat on ference with the House, w] the committee and also a support- would take several days. er of the bill, said the first week The committee also ran inr had been very slow but that he side issue which brought fur was hopeful the pace could be delay. speeded up drastically. This was the charge by C Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn), an that a suggested press release all-out foe of the bill, found the to Tennessee by an official of opening sessions enlightening and Democratic National Comm said many more are needed. was an attempt to bring poli Enthusiasm Dwindles pressure on him or. even purge "The actual contents of this bill in next year's election. are now being examined, contrary Keel on Deck to the debate in the House," he The official, William Keel said. "The more the bill is looked rector of research, has been ca at in detail, the less enthusiasm to testify tomorrow. The r there is for it even among its was to force postponement o supporters." appearance of Walter W. H The committee fell well behind chairman of the President's C its original schedule during the cil of Economic Advisers. first week. It had planned to hear Dillon plugged hard throug Secretary of Commerce Luther H. hisfour days before the comm Hodges and Budget Director Ker- for enactment before Jan. 1 mit Gordon in addition to Dillon. that the new lower withho) But the questioning of the rates can take effect that d Treasury secretary ran so long The House bill so provides. that both had to be delayed until The secretary said that u: later, although both filed testi- the tax cut takes effect by 1 mony. o there is a risk that the ecor 140Witnwill stop moving ahead or 140Winesses turn down in 1964. Chairman Harry F. Byrd (D-V4) turndownin_1964. announced as the hearings opened Tuesday that 140 witnesses had asked to testify. He made public a schedule for the first two weeks which would run the public hear- ings into December if they con- tinue at the same pace.$s By the week's end, the commit- O o tee said the applications had risenDO to 170. The initial schedule calls for a maximum of five witnesses on any day. In the past, the committee has heard as many as 10 or 12 A on major bills. It said larger num- U U World News Roundup By The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL-The second of two nuclear detection satel- lites maneuvered into station high above the earth yesterday to com- plete a unique space triple play in one of the United States' most skillfully executed satellite launchings. NEW DELHI-The Indian government claimed yesterday the United States has agreed to equip two more mountain divisions for CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Monday, October 28 ENGINEERING PLACEMENT OFFICE ENGINEERS Mechanical * Chemical SCIENTISTS 9 Physicists o Chemists *sMaterials PEARL NECKLACES from 34.50 tax included PEARL RINGSa Q from 12.50 tax included azt arcade jewelry shop 16 nickels arcade the Indian Army. Top American aid officials here denied it. LONDON - Kenya's constitu- tional conference ended in victory yesterday for Prime Minister Jo- mo Kenyatta's governing Kenya National African Union. His op- ponents stormed out of the last day of meetings, accusing the Brit- ish of dishonesty. MOSCOW - Soviet composer Dmitri Shostakovich has proposed an annual Russian music festival to offset those in other Iron Cur- tain countries which provide a sounding board for Western mu- sic. He wrote in the Communist Party newspaper Pravda yester- day that a music festival in Mos- cow would be "an arena of active and effective struggle with for- malistic bourgeois art." WASHINGTON-Sen. Frank J. Lausche (D-Ohio) said yesterday the United States "better act soon in recognizing the present gov- ernment of the Dominican Repub- lic," a military junta which over- threw President Juan Bosch. r. ALL DEGREE LEVELS RESEARCH * Fundamental 9 Applied--Inorganic " Applied-Organic ENGINEERING * Applied Research *Development * Production Positions available in the packaging industry. Emphasis on GLASS, PLAS- TICS and PAPER materials, as involved in processes and -products. 0-1 has 73 plants in 22 states. OWENS-I LINI WOLVERINE CLUB PRESENTS Student Air Charters to NEW YORK On *UNITED AIRLINES "THANKSGIVING VACATION" Leave Nov. 27 ............... . . . ........... Return Dec. 1 "CHRISTMAS VACATION" Fit. No. 1-Leave Dec. 20.................. Return Jan. 12 Flt. No. 2-Leave Dec. 21 .. . ............... Return Jan. 12 In lkm TnlauI t cam I