Norstad Announces Plan To Create Nuclear Force: NATO Seen As Another Atom Power De Gaulle Adamant On National Identity For French Battalion PARIS (P)-Gen. Lauris Norstad yesterday announced plans to create an international striking force within the North Atlantic Alliance. The American ' commander of the allied powers in Europe said the force would be built around a small nucleus of men provided by the United States, Britain and France-the Alliance's three nu- clear powers. The project would start with each nation contribut- ing one battalion, making the force the equivalent of a regi- mental combat team. Armed with conventional as well as nuclear weapons, the new force may eventually include as many as eight of the Alliance's 15 mem- bers, Norstad said. In Washington, the U.S. State Department indorsed the project. First Step.. Some observers saw creation of the force as a first step toward NATOr becoming the West's "fourth atomic power" British government sources in London said NATO defense ministers will debate this at a meeting later this month. The fourth power idea has been put forth in some Western circles as the answer to the high costs in the process of individual nations making their own atomic weapons. Discussion of this idea has in- creased since France tested her first atomic device in the Sahara Feb. 13. Norstad, himself has spoken of the fourth power con- cept and repeated it today. Norstad said the new force will be integrated and under one com- mand. This indicates a shift in SNOWBALLING SURPLUSES: Collapse of Farm Program Seen WASHINGTON (A')-Six years ago a tall, bespectacled man named Ezra Taft Benson tossed Congress a barbed question. "At what point," he asked, "will the 140 million Americans who do not live on farms rise up and demand outright elimination of all aid to agriculture?" Mindful of a long and costly failure to solve the nation's farm problem, Benson didn't expect an answer. Nor did he get one. If he seemed hopeful then of prodding Congress to stem the multi-billion-dollar flow of farm subsidies - and curb the huge crop surpluses stimulated by fed- eral aid - Benson today has few such illusions. Taxpayer's Burden Steeled to political realities by seven years in office, the 60-year- old Secretary of Agriculture can only shake his head, ruefully, at the never-ending paradox of U. S. taxpayers staggering under the burden of mountainous farm sur- pluses in a hungry world. President Eisenhower, in a spe- cial message to Congress on Feb. 9, urged the lawmakers to "act swiftly' 'to halt snowballing sur- pluses. Eisenhower said it is now cost- ing the nation's taxpayers $1,000 a minute to support wheat prices alone, and he warned Congress: "If our government does not act quickly, the danger is very real that this entire program will collapse under pressure of public indignation." Could AdJust Production Benson believes that if farmers were left alone, without federal interference, they would quickly adjust their crop production to conform with the law of supply and demand. "We must get the government off the backs of farmers and elim- inate ineffective acreage controls and artificial price-fixing carried over from days of war and de- pression," the secretary said. But some farm leaders contend that if price supports were scrapped it would drive food prices sky high and cost the Amer- ican housewife far more than the tax bite of federal price supports. "Mr. Benson's only solution is to let farm prices go down until enough farmers are starved off the farm so that production will adjust itself to demand," says Rep. Harold D. Cooley ()-N.C.), chairman of the House Agricul- ture Committee. Cooley Replies When Benson, testifying on Capitol Hill ,insisted that 80 per cent of the nation's farmers want more freedom and less federal "regimentation," Cooley replied: "The farmers were free in 1932 and we had starvation prices." To Benson, the overriding con- cern is the apparent futility of spending billions of dollars on what he regards as a hopeless cause. "Agriculture is undergoing a technological revolution and it is irreversible," he said. "It cannot be controlled by government man- date." But farm-belt l a w m a k e r s, spurred on by farm pressure groups, seem as determined as ever to keep the federal aid pot boiling. Ilusory or not, many politicians still regard the farm vote as pow- erful enough to tip the scales in a close election. This is true de- spite the farm population decline SUMMER JOBS IN EUROPE 3000 Positions open in all fields ASIS ALL-INCLUSIVE PACKAGE FOR MEMBERS ONLY $329 " Summer jobO round-trip air fare " orientation course " health and accident insurance " social recep- tion" first night accommodations " sightseeing trip " postal service " information on inside Europe, etc. For more information write to: American Student Information Serv-, Johnstr. 56a, Frankfurt/Main, Germany from 32 million in 1920 to 16 mil- lion today. On the other hand, some poli- tical bigwigs are beginning to think the importance of the farm vote may be exaggerated. They see the voice of the city becom- ing ever more potent and city dwellers taking a dim view of paying tax dollars to provide whopping farm subsidies. The government, said Benson, has lost more than 20 billion dol- lars since 1933 in attempting to stabilize farm prices and income. Cost Four Billion This year alone it will cost nearly four billion dollars for various farm subsidy programs. Yet farm prices at the end of 1959 sagged to the lowest level in nearly two decades. Through the years, under Dem- ocratic and Republican adminis- trations alike, critics have as- sailed the federal farm program as 'cockeyed . . . bankrupt . . . a colossal failure ... outlandish ... crazy . . .ruinous. . . this terrible mess." Name Seven For Primary SALEM, Ore. W-)-Seven Demo- crats were named to the free-for- all Oregon presidential primary in May. They are: Sens. Hubert Humphrey of Min- nesota, Lyndon Johnson of Texas, Estes Kefauver of Tennessee, John Kennedy of Massachusetts, Wayne L. Morse of Oregon, Stuart Sym- ington of Missouri and Adlai Stev- enso.. . Morse and Humphrey were en- tered by petition, the necessary 1,000 signatures for Humphrey Le- ing filed yesterday. Candidates so entered cannot withdraw. The other five were nominated for the ballot today by Oregon Secretary of State Howell Appling, Jr., under a new law requiring all nationally recognized candidates to be named. They can withdraw only by filing a statement dis- avowing candidacy by March 14. EZRA TAFT BENSON ...urban protest Benson himself calls it "the mdst costly, irrational, hodge- podge program ever patched to- gether .. . a serious threat to the solvency of our country." But when Sen. Homer Cape- hart (R-Ind.) last year offered a Senate bill to wipe out all farm supports and controls after 1960, he was snowed under by a 69-5 vote. Baffles Average Intelligence In some of its apsects, the farm dilemma baffles the average intel- ligence: Item : the government pays farmers, via artificially high price supports, to grow more food than we can eat and then adds to the taxpayers' expense by putting theexces s food in storage with little chance that it will ever be used. (The government now has 235,- 000 huge storage bins scattered in 23 states. In addition, it uses 225 idle merchant ships to store 43 million bushels of surplus wheat. Storage fees run more than a billion dollars a year.) Item: Livestock growers, who have consistently refused federal price supports, are the most pros-, perous segment of American ag- riculture today. Wheat and cotton farmers, with the biggest price supports, are in the worst trouble. Iran Faces Student Emigration By BEATRICE TEODORO Recently the Shah of Iran ap- pointed his son-in-law, Ardeshir Zahedi, as Iran's new ambassador to the United States. This appointment follows Za- hedi's excellent work as the Super- visor of Iranian Students, a post he will continue to hold while in the U.S., said Manoochehr Vara- steh, visiting professor from the University of Tehran. Varasteh, librarian to the Shah, is a personal friend and colleague of the new ambassador. One of Zahedi's chief programs as supervisor has been the re- organization of the system under which Iranians studied abroad. He was faced with the problem of in- creasing numbers of students who wanted to remain in their country of study because they could more easily find jobs. Important for Iran This problem is a very im- portant for Iran, Varasteh said. The country has a population of 22 million, and there are 15,000 students abroad. If the majority of these students should decide to remain outside of Iran it would mean a tremendous depletion of the human resources, he noted. Under the reorganized system, Zahedi plans to have a job avail- able for each student as soon as his term of study abroad is fin- ished. He has records of each student outside of the country, including the specialized field of study, and provides a job for the student immediately after he returns. An- other of the features of 'the pro- gram is increased government housing for the students. Internal Problem The internal problem that forces students to leave the country is also important, Varasteh contin- ued. Iran needs engineers in all fields, particularly in petroleum. However, it does not have enough universities to train such people. If this need can be fulfilled in- side the country, he concluded, fewer students will be forced to go abroad for their education. in OPEN STOCK BOYCE PHOTO CO. 723 N. University WASHINGTON (M)-Sen. Rus- sell B. Long (D-La.), whose father Huey P. Long was a mighty fili- busterer, helped yesterday to carry along the southern fight against civil rights legislation in the Senate. The present-day senator, while a less flamboyant man than the fabulbus Huey, went into action twice. Heavily outvoted on the first effort, he was ready again with a formal speech when the voice of Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D- La.) surprisingly faltered. This was the third day of around-the-clock sessions aimed at smashing the Dixie filibuster. The Senate took a 15-minute re- cess ' this morning for the first actual break since continuous sessions began at noon Monday. No Sign of Weakening With no sign of weakening on either side, it appeared the dead- lock and the continuous sessions would run well into next week and maybe longer-probably with a break over Sunday. Republican senators set a par- ty meeting for this afternoon, and the likelihood was that they would discuss civil rights strate- gy. Ellender's voice, after hours of strong speaking, grew weak to- ward noon, when the time ar- rived for the daily prayer by the chaplain. He did not resume the floor after the prayer and other daily, routine had been attended to, but gave it up to Long. Long keyed his speech to a fa- miliar southern charge - that the senators pressing for a new civil rights law are interested more in Negro votes for them- selves than in protecting Negroes' rights. Handles Laws Like Gambler "Patriotic Americans in the South," Long said, "are sick and tired of a Supreme Court which handles the Constitution and laws of the nation like a professional gambler working with loaded dice. "They will have an equally poor opinion of this Congress if it should make the mistake of yiel ing to the pleas of those who suE gest that, for the benefit of gair ing votes in certain of the larj populous states of the north an east at the next election, the should pass legislation to crea ill will and hatred among ti people of this nation." Long had made only a sms part of the speech when he yiek ed the floor to a non-filibustere Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo. who wanted to make a lor speech on national defense. The arrangement was the Long could resume the floor whe Symington finished. Defeated on Proposal Early yesterday morning Lor was overwhelmingly defeated C a proposal that the Senate upho the right to advocate legal resis ance to forcible integration c the races. On motion of Sen. Lyndon 1 Johnson of Texas, the Sena Democratic leader, the Senat voted to kill that 64-8. DIXIE FILIBUSTER: Long Fights Civil Rights Legislation the pucci shirt fashion, 5.98 Our pucci shirt sets a new fashion pace for all your casual separates with its colorful Italian print. A hand-washable blend of 60%0 rayon/40% silk in vibrant tones of pink, coffee, turquoise, blue, or maize on white. Sizes 30-36. jf v I. 'C' ( P LOWER LEVEL Second Front Page Thursday, March 3, 1960 Page 3 49 w4 4eftd myij 4Ct4and 4/tiirt4 to A&P CLEANERS LAURIS NORSTAD ... announces NATO plans position by President Charles de Gaulle, who has balked at inte- grating France's air forces and Mediterranean naval squadron. De Gaulle Insists De Gaulle has insisted that his forcse committed to NATO should retain their national identity while still cooperating within the alli- ance. This has posed serious prob- lems for Norstad, who argues that integration is particularly vital in the area of aerial attack and de- fense, Norstad said today he is very optimistic about arriving at a solution to the air integration question. The Supreme Commander gave these details of his plans for the nuclear task force: Each of the Western big three nations will be asked to contribute a battalion, to make a force total- ing between 2,500 and 3,000 men. Later two more nations will be asked to add a battalion each. Eventually the force could be built to divisional strength, with up to eight nations contributing. 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