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I • Operates for only about IOC g, ~ 9 a week! r?" & • Convenient fingertip control I ■ • Combines famous Zenith l_| p A E3l KI fl Ain I Quality with maximum ntHIAIIvU AAILS performance and economy! Ask about 1-Year Warranty and 5 Year Service Plan. A modal for every type of electronically correctable hearing loss. Come in or Call for free demonstration *Manvfocfvrer's svsyeiled rtf.il price. LOCATIONS I TO SERVE YOU | AUDIPHONE WASHINGTON CO. INC. 716 14th Street N.W., Washington, D, C. RE, 7-0504 MARYLAND HEARING AID CENTER Suita 314 Eig Bldg., 8641 Colesville Rd., Silver Spring, Md. JU. 5-0237 VIRGINIA HEARING AID CENTER Suite 208 King Building, 815 King St., Alexandria, Va. OV. 3-2524 oldest tn the catholic enuren. The Right Rev. Alban Boult wood, abbot of St. Anselm’s, will preside. The new brick and concrete addition will provide living fa cilities for 25 monks. The structure will contain a library, small chapel, several large pub lic rooms, guest rooms, visitors’ parlors, offices, work rooms and a recreation room. . St. Anselm’s, elevated In status last fall, is the first and only abbey in Washington. Plans call for the construction later of an abbey church de signed by Architect Philip John son of New York. Traditionalists Seen Reversing Khrushchev * By EARL V. VOSS * Star Staff Writer Soviet Premier Khrushchev has been defeated by Com munist Party traditionalists in his drive for more genuine decentralization of farm management in the Soviet Union, analysts here believe. The Central Committee meeting on agriculture in Moscow, whose published pronouncements have been studied by Government experts, actually marked a retrench ment to more centralized con trol. it appears, even though some of the “trappings” of de centralization have been em-l phasized. This is a setback for Premier Khrushchev who had advocated assigning greater control at the local level in the hope of im proving Soviet farm efficiency. Experts regard this develop ment as additional evidence that Premier Khrushchev’s power can frequently be checked by his presidium. A series of policy decisions have gone against Premier Khrushchev’s publicly stated positions in the last few years. He had advocated greater al locations of resources to con sumers, but settled for a token increase. He had pressed for "democratization” in organiz ing the party apparatus, then settled for less. Some experts believe Premier Khrushchev also had strong arguments inside the presid ium over military policy, par ticularly Berlin and nuclear tests. Early in 1960 he was em phasizing cuts in conventional forces and concentration on strategic forces but he has backtracked since and heated up the Berlin crisis again. Others believe the Soviet leader bowed to pressure in resuming nuclear weapons tests. In these Inside arguments over broad policy, however, ex perts here have not discovered any consistent opposition group. Premier Khrushchev himself has shown an ability to change his mind to ride INTERPRETIVE REPORT ■ with the majority, which marks him as a different personality than Stalin, observers here say. The Central Committee meeting on agriculture, for in stance, made no significant al location of incentives for farm ers. Premier Khrushchev had hoped to increase their incen tives. but still found himself able to support the program. Instead of minimizing central government and party control at the local levels, as Mr. Khru shchev advocated. Communist Party traditionalists have pushed through a program for setting up new production management administrators in the provinces and smaller dis tricts. The job of these ad ministrators, either committees or individuals, is to see that directives from Moscow are carried out. In each of them is a “political officer” or Com munist Party man. Political officers are also back at the production centers which replaced the old ma chine-tractor stations. All these are traditional trap pings of the Communist system which Premier Khrushchev tried to minimize, in the hope that the farmers in the vast Soviet Union would develop enough interest in their jobs to increase agricultural produc tion. Now that the traditionalists are reasserting themselves, and since there are no sizable re source allocations to permit a large increase in farm mech anization. THE SUNDAY STAR Washington, D. 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