THE MICHIGAN DAILY J.S. Claims Sov Blocking Peace KENNEDY PLANS: Cabinet Posts Pending WASHINGTON (P)-President- elect John F. Kennedy pushed into the final stages of lining up his cabinet yesterday, with key conferences and key appointments in the immediate offing. The names of four men men- tionzed prominently for cabinet or subcabinet posts were posted on Kennedy's schedule for to- day. Today, Kennedy will confer in-' dividually with Gov. G. Mennen Williams, former secretary of de- fense Robert A. Lovett, Gov. Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut, and Rep. Stewart L. Udall (D- Ariz). Williams Speculation Williams was listed for break- fast with the President-elect at welfare, as well as a subcabinet post in the State Department; dealing with Asian and African affairs. A budget director or someone+ to handle liaison on the budget+ for the time being is to be named by tomorrow. And the announce- ment of an appointment for some top post in the new administration will be made Saturday at Palm Beach where the President-elect will fly tomorrow. Assorted Problems This rundown came from Ken- nedy's press secretary, Pierre Salinger, on a day that found Kennedy giving attention to such assorted problems as minimum wage and school legislation, pro- Kennedy's three-story red brick blems of the transportation in- home in Georgetown. He has been dustry, unemployment, and the the subject of speculation in con- role of regulatory agencies in nection with the, position of sec- government. retary of health, education and Lovett is coming in for lunch. He LUXURIOUS IMPORTS FROM ENGLAND * i GENUINE HAND TURNED SCUFF WITH NON-SKID LAMBSKIN SOCK LINING. BEAUTIFULLY MADE FROM PERSIAN LAMB SKINS IN BLACK, WHITE, BLUE. Van Boven Soes, Inc. 17 Nickels Arcade §I served as under sec as well as a secret under President Ha His name has crop conjectures abouta or the other of t ments. Ribicoff was one and most ardent President rooters.I in talk for attorn for the next supr cancy, but more1 late in speculation of welfare. Udall might get secretary of the a westerner and t goes to a westerne World oun By The Assoc PARIS -The yesterday rejected P les de Gaulle's a force bill for a secc The vote was It now goes back t Assembly, the dom: a third and final today. Premier Michell will make the issu fidence in his gove opposition probabl a censure motion, previous occasions. CAPE CANAVER header space rocks malfunction and % destroyed in fli frustrating a Uni to hurl a pair of orbit around the e A reliable source concern lest piece may have fallen could have beenI a two-hour Defen delay in announcir hicle had been des * * BRUSSELS -Pa is heading toward at the border ofI Province and Le vince, the Belgian night, quoting of sources. They said he was area of his Bab northern Kasli, w go to Stanleyville, o tal Province. Or trolled by his part LONDON - Churchill, recoveri ken bone in his b his 86th birthday day with his family of absent friends. 4. iet Union in Congo Says Russia, Undermines cretary of state ary of defenset .rry S. Truman. Americans Denounce ped up now in a return to one Cost Sharing Refusal he two depart- UNITED NATIONS () - The of the earliest United States declared yesterday Kennedy-for- the Soviet Union is doing all it{ He has figured can to undermine United Nations1 ey general andf eme court va- peace efforts in he Congo. prominently of Refusal to share in the costs, about secretary it said, is in line with Soviet3 policy aimed at wrecking the UN.e the call to be A United States delegation" interior. He is spokesman made the charge as he post usually the Americans disclosed addition- ;r, al steps to ease the financial. crisis facing the UNbecause of its Congo operations. The United States made known eit has paid $20 million in ad- vanced pledges into UN funds for J g aiding underdeveloped countries. Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold can borrow from these rated Press funds instead of resorting to com- mercial banks, pending receipt o President Chare U asessmentsand other con- ~'rsldntChal-tributions expected in the next' atomic striking few months. nd time The pledges-$12 million for the 82-84. The bill expanded technical assistance and inant house o $8 million for the special develop-. nango , for ment fund-were made six weeks ago. Payment would not be made Debre probably normally until January. ue one of con- Hammarskjold appealed for rnment and the such .advance payments when he y will bring in disclosed last week that the UN just as on the treasury would be virtually emp- ty by the first of next year. ~ The Soviet Union told the UN ZA - A double Budgetary Committee yesterday et developed a that Hammarskold should sub- was deliberately mit proposals for ending the Con- sght yesterday, go operation in order to stave off ted Statesrbid UN bankruptcy. satellites into "We do not believe that the arth. withdrawal of the UN forces now e reported that stationed in the Congo is the an- s of the rocket swer to the organization's finan- on Cuban soil cial problem," said Francis W. the reason for Carpenter, United States delega- ase Department tion spokesman, in the first ng that the ve- American comment on the Soviet stroyed, demand. * atrice Lumumba re i Port Franqui, O a Vaccin northern Kasa k °d'aPro- Not Available Radio said last ficial Congolese WASHINGTON M) - Surgeon s en route to the General Leroy Burney said yester- etela tribe in day that contrary to earlier hopes, hence he would live polio virus vaccine-which can apital of Orien- be taken by mouth-is not ex- iental is con- pected to be available for use In isans. time for next summer's polio sea- * son. Sir Wi n s t o n At the same time, the public ng from a bro- health service chief urged a step- back, celebrated ped-up effort by the nation's doc- quietly yester- tors to get more people protected y and thousands by the already available Salk vac- cine. Burney said Salk vaccine offers between 90 and 95 per cent pro- GIFTS ! tection, and large numbers of the United States population have not taken .advantage of the vac- cine," The Salk vaccine, made of killed virus, must be given by in- jection. The live vaccine, made of living but toned-down virus, can be taken in the form of pills or as a syrup. WITH COMMUNISTS: Bonn Government To Resume Talks BO1' 1 .. The West German cabinet decided yesterday to re- He refused to elaborate. But his sume negotiations with Communist words indicated the Bonn govern- E a s t Germany to determine ment does not consider the restric- whether a new trade agreement tions important enough to con- can be reached. tinue a trade ban. Government Press Chief Felix von Eckardt said Kurt Leopold, Talks Unofficial West Germany's chief representa- Von Eckardt said the negotia- tive in past trade talks, will be tions would be unofficial. West given directives to proceed. Germany does not recognize the The Bonn government canceled Communist regime. the present trade pact as of Dec. Leopold has said he will begin 31 in retaliation for travel re- talks with the East Germans Fri- strictions imposed by the' East day but von Eckardt would not German regime on West Germans confirm this. visiting East Berlin. Moscow Radio said Soviet lead- Elastic Policy ' ers assured an East German dele- The West Germans said in can- gation today the USSR will supply celling the pact they would resunie any raw materials and goods cut negotiations when the Communists off from the Communist German abolished the restrictions. But re- regime by West Germany if a new cently, Chancellor Konrad Ade- pact is not arranged. nauer said he was in favor of an The broadcast said the assurance elastic policy on the trade question. was given by Premier Nikita S. The press chief noted that the Khrushchev to a visiting group "sector restrictions exist in law headed by Walter Ulbricht, the but in practice they were handled East German Communist Party generously." head. Ten Rebel Bombs in Cuba Damage City Utility Plants HAVANA (M)-Saboteurs' bombs struck paralyzing blows in Hava- Fajardo was a rebel military na, and in central Cuba Prime doctor in the war against ousted Minister Fidel Castro's personal dictator Fulgencio Batista. He physician was killed in a chase took over treatment of Castro after rebels. Eight bombs touched off in when the prime minister was early morning hours damaged stricken by pneumonia last sum- power and water installations and mer. cut off electricity to the city's business district and many other areas of the capital. Two govern- ernment - controlled newspapers, Combate and Advance, lost their power. As authorities pressed an in- vestigation of the bold series of bombings by anti-Castro elements and strove to restore power, the city was shaken by two more B Ud-M or bombs at noon. One destroyed a restroom and blew out the windows in the head-~~ --.~- quarters of Castro's urban reform program. The second blew up near the tropical brewery. There were no deaths, but one of the morning bombs seriously injured a Cuban. An official announcement said Maj. Manuel Faardo, Castro's. physician,nwas killed Tuesday night outside Trinidad, center of government activity against in- surgents in the Escambray Moun- tains. Fajardo, commanding rural militia in Escambray, was pur- suing five armed Cubans who had fled Trinidad in a comandeered Arn de , ,11rSh o car. l VAJ /~rLJ'0 The announcement said two of 16 NicKELS ARCADE the five were captured and, in the confused firing in pursuit of a third, Fajardo was killed and three of his militiamen were wounded. This indicated Fajar- do may have been shot by his Headquarters for own men.1 I I / lat orm t raction,6 33 EXOTIC 4 FROM THE Waiting for yo INDIA AR 0 Maynard Lake Storm Cripples Ship TRAVERSE CITY (/P)-Smash- ed by gale winds and high seas, the grounded Liberian freighter Franeisco Morazan with 14 per- sons aboard fought to live out a furious Lake Michigan storm last night. One of those aboard the crip- pled vessel, aground off South Manitou Island in upper Lake Michigan, was the captain's wife, an expectant mother. The United States Coast Guard, with planes and rescue ships at the scene, held out hope that the Morazan would survive. Bound from Chicago to Rotter- dam with a general cargo, the 246-foot vessel ran aground in 14 feet of water Tuesday night when caught in the gale and a whirling snow storm. ORIENT u - at the 1 T SHOP Ann Aroor, ENTERTAINMENT by BUMR i SAV E-A-STOP! $Chester Roberts Gifts has a POST OFFICE located at the rear of the store-lets you do 2 errands in 1 stop! j MARCEL MARGeAU "A wordless wonder". * * Life II !i "s Y ~ v J' iII.-I