THEMICHIGANDAILY Pa rty Chooses. Erhard ' * 4 * * * * Commission To Send! Truce Team To View L os ra Camps White Tells U.S. Position On Situation WASHINGTON (P)--A State De- partment spokesman said yester- day an effective cease-fire in Laos should provide for withdrawal of pro-Communist forces from the areas they have overrun, and re- turn of neutralist troops to their lost positions. Press Officer Lincoln White re- ported that the latest information from Laos indicated that there has been no further fighting. He said the cease-fire arranged last Sunday by Premier Souvanna Phouma and his pro-Communist half-brother Prince Souphanou- vong appears to be in effect. White called Prince Souvanna Phouma's request for the interna- tional control commission to es- tablish a permanent base in the fighting area "an encouraging step." On the mission of Undersecre- tary of State W. Averell Harriman to Paris and London, White could provide no details. Harriman is go- ing to discuss the Laos problem. But, for the second day, he refus- ed to rule out a possible visit to Moscow by the trouble-shooter for President John F. Kennedy, Earlier, high ranking Unit- ed States authorities said there is a possibility United States troops might be sent back to Thailand because of the Communist threat in neighboring Laos but did not predict that this would happen. They spoke of the serious situa- tion there as President John F. Kennedy met during the morning with the National Securty Coun- cil to discuss Laos. No statement was issued, however. In other action, Britain has re- jected a Soviet proposal to join the Soviet Union in charging the United States with fanning ten- sion in Laos, the newspaper Izves- tia said last night. The Soviet government publish- ed a draft of a note rebuking the United States presented to British Ambassador Sir Humphrey Trev- lyan last week. The note claimed that "military personnel of the United States have not been com- pletely evacuated from Laos." SOUVANNA PHOUMA ... control commission ECONOMICS: SeePossible eBritish Vote LONDON ()-With unemploy- ment figures going down and ex- port figures going up, British poli- ticians were thinking of a possi- ble election in the fall. During the winter Prime Minis- ter Harold Macmillan's Conserva- tive Party associates were figuring that the earliest election date would be May or even October; 1964. But with the new decreases in the unemployment figure-down to 2.7 per cent of the working population-and increases in over- seas trade, the time seems ripe for an election. Conservatives maintain that the recovery is due to the money that Chancellor of the Exchequer Reg- inald Maudling pumped into the economy last fall. Macmillan overhauled the Con- servative's election machinery last week by naming Lord Poole as co- chairman of the party with Ian N. Macleod. Poole is a former chair- man of the party and noted as an organizer and fund-raiser. The opposition Labor Party held a conference over the weekend to discuss a possible election. Prince Asks Observation Of Fighting Nosavan May Order Regulars into Battle VIENTIANE (P)-The Interna- tional Control Commission, barred from operating within lines of the pro-Communist Pathet Lao, is sending a truce team today or to-' morrow to the neutralist side in the Plaine des Jarres campaign. Neutralist Laotian P r e m i e r Prince Souvanna Phouma said yes- terday the commission's observers -representing India, Canada and Poland-can at least see "who is firing the rifle shots." There had been a 48-hour lull in the shooting, but heavier fight- ing threatened. Rightist Gen. Phoumi Nosavan said he would send his regulars into action as allies of the outnumbered neutral- ists if the Pathet Lao completed its conquest of the Plane, a stra- tegic plateau 110 miles north of Vientiane. A Pathet Lao broadcast from the interier asserted that two of Phou- mi's crack paratroop battalions had been dropped in the Plaine Des Jarres area Monday and yes- terday. It said this proved the United States and the rightists "did not want to end the present military conflict." Phoumi denied similar Pathet Lao r charges last week. Abroad, other developments re- flected concern of the United States and other powers at the menace to Laos' neutrality and in- dependence that were guaranteed by a 14-nation Geneva conference last July: Units of the United States 7th Fleet were reported moving to the South China Sea area off the Gulf of Siam as a precaution against a, Communist takeover. Laos itself is landlocked, but it is a potential stepping stone to its southeast Asian neighbors. Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman, fresh from con- sultations with French authorities about the Laotian situation, sped to London for similar talks with the British. See Naming As Rebuff To Adenauer BONN () - West Germany's strongest party overruled the ob- jections of West German Chan- cellor Konrad Adenauer yesterday and nominated Minister of Eco- nomics Ludwig Erhard to head the next government. It was a bitter blow for the 87- year-old chancellor, who is com- mitted to retire from the top job this fall. He believes Erhard lacks political skills necessary to run the government. The two shook hands and prom- ised to work together after Erhard was picked, 159 to 47, at a meeting of parliamentary. representatives of their Christian Democratic Party and its close ally, the Chris- tian Socialist Union of Vavaria. Adenauer Upset Adenauer looked angry at the end of the two-hour session. On the other hand, Erhard was beam- ing. "I am very happy about the result," he said. Erhard has been Minister of Economics for 13 years. If every- thing goes as planned, he will take over the chancellorship when Ade- nauer steps down. Heinrich von Brentano, the Christian Democrats' leader in parliament, was designated to in- form President Heinrich Luebke of the nomination. Luebke Submits When Adenauer resigns Luebke will send Erhard's name to the Bundestag, the lower house in parliament. The Bundestag elects the Chancellor. The two christian parties do not have a majority in the Bunde- stag. They work in a coalition with the Free Democrats, a right-of- center group. But the Free Demo- crats announced after the vote that they are ready to continue the coalition under Erhard. Post Offices To Cut Services WASHINGTON (P) - Taking drastic steps to match congression- al budget cuts, the Post Office De- partment clamped down yesterday on new hirings and overtime pay in its 68 biggest offices and told them to curtail their service if necessary. There was a hint that the re- strictions may extend later into other communities. But the order would be wiped out if Congress relents and gives Postmaster Gen- eral J. Edward Day the money he says is needed to keep his depart- ment at full steam. Congressional reaction was mix- ed. Some members said the depart- ment had no choice and should get more money. Others said econo- mies should be found elsewhere than cutting down service. House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck (R-Ind) said Day's de- partment is "trying to blackjack Congress." Rep. Ben. F. Jensen (R- Iowa, of the House Appropriations Committee, said "they would have hollered if we had cut them only $5." The first action, where "abso- lutely necessary," will be to halt plans for extending mail delivery to new office buildings and hous- ing developments not now served, Assistant Postmaster G e n e r a Frederick C. Belen told the post- masters. OAS Votes For Council Inquiries WASHINGTON (P)-The Orga- nization of American States voted 13 to 1 yesterday to empower its council to investigate Castro- Communist subversion anywhere in the Western hemisphere-with or without a member govern- ment's permission. Brazil opposed the move, call- ing it a big mistake and saying "we will not accept any initiative from the investigating body." The action stemmed from a rec- ommendation of the American for- eign ministers meeting at Punta Del Este, Uruguay, in January 1962. The United States was joined in supporting the move by Argen- tina, Colombia,. Costa Rica, Uru- guay, Peru, Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, Paraguay, Nicaragua, Panama and Ecuador. Mexico, Venezuela, Chile, Bol- via, Haiti and the Dominican Re- public tried in vain to dilute the powers given to the council, and when this failed they abstained from voting. Investigations would be con- ducted by a special security factr finding committee of the OAS council. The aim of the two ambassa- dors will be to revive Khrush- chev's flagging interest in an atomic weapons test ban. There was an acknowledged pos- sibility, too, that the Kremlin ses- sion might lead to a higher level meeting at the summit or foreign minister levels later. But United States sources tended to discount this idea. It was stated that the British, who are fonder than Americans of high-level meetings with the. Reds, were the initiators of today's meeting. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan has been under attack from ban-the-bomb critics at home. But in the United States view, today's interview could shed light WASHINGTON (A)-In advance of a United States-British appeal to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- chev, United States disarmament chief William C. Foster expressed hope yesterday that Russia will see it is in her own interest to sign a nuclear test ban treaty. Foster spoke to newsmen at a state department foreign policy briefing shortly before a spokes- man announced that the United States ambassador to Moscow, Foy Kohler, will see Khrushchev to- day. Joining Kohler in the Kremlin appointment is Britain's ambassa- dor, Sir Humphrey Trevelyan. Ambassadorial Aims The United States disarmament administrator said Khrushchev is well aware that he cannot get a test ban agreement with the West without allowing inspections to police it. He conceded that the Kremlin became distinctly cool on the lengthy Geneva talks last January, only a month after Khrushchev had led President John F. Ken- nedy to believe the Russians were seriously interested in outlawing tests. The turnabout by Soviet nego- tiators coincided with a heighten- ing of Moscow-Peiping differences and the disarray in the Western alliance following French Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle's mid- January rejection of British entry into the European Common Mar- ket. Also, Khrushchev went off on a month's vacation and "nothing was going to happen" at the Ge- neva talks with the Russian leader away, Foster said. Foster said a nuclear test ban is in Russia's own interests, as well as America's, because it would save several hundred millions of dollars in nuclear expenditures a year. And it would be in the Soviet interest too to stem a spread of nuclear weapons to non-nuclear nations which would vastly in- crease the danger of nuclear war, he said. NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV ... summit meeting? on Khrushchev's latest thinking. Foster refused to acknowledge that apparent rebuffs by the Rus- sians on test ban questions mean the Kremlin has irrevocably turned against a test ban treaty. Police Inspections He said he, does not believe Khrushchev will withdraw his of- fer to allow on-site inspections inside Soviet territory, despite the Soviet leader's statement Monday that Russia was considering doing so. A HIGH-LEVEL TALKS: Foster Hopeful for Test Ban r World News Roundup ] By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Four Cubans left Americans jails and returned to their Communist island yester- day in an exchange for 21 Americans freed by Cuban Premier Fidel Castro. The Americans had been captured during the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961, and had been held in Cuban jails. ** * BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- United, States District Judge Clarence W. Allgood refused yesterday to take over the integration cases of Rev. Martin Luther King and other Negroes, despite their attorneys' pleas that they could not get fair trials in state courts. JERUSALEM - Former Israeli President Izhak Ben-Zvi will be buried today in a Judean Hill cemetery. He died at his home, the' victim of cancer at the age of 78. * * * OTTAWA-Canada's new prime minister, Lester B. Pearson, said yesterday he will visit British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in London next week and meet a week after his return with Presi- dent John F. Kennedy. GROTON, Conn. - The Lafay- ette, the world's largest and heav- iest known Polaris firing submar- ine, became America's 28th opera- tional nuclear vessel yesterday. The Lafayette is the first of a class of submarines designed to fire a 2500-mile Polaris missile. * * * WASHINGTON - The defense department announced plans yes- terday to set up worldwide voice and other communications net- works to link United States mili- tary installations and tighten command control. The plans in- clude putting five or more satel- lites into orbit with a single rocket. * * * KUCHING, Sarawak-About 10 heavily armed raiders linked to a Brunei rebel leader attacked a British commando unit camped about a mile from the Indonesian Borneo border yesterday. O n e Royal Marine was wounded in the second clash in the border area in 11 days between government forces and rebels fighting the proposed Federation of Malaysia. LOOK YOUR' BEST FOR SPRING!! Collegiate Styles to Please 4 Barbers Try the U of M BARBERS N. University near Kresge's NEW YORK - The New York Stock Exchange underwent an- other substantial rise yesterday as trading exceeded five million shares. The Dow-Jones averages, showed 30 industrials up 3.97, 20 rails up 2.50, 15 utilities unchanged and 65 stocks up 1.63. "For all the winds thtin anweatZ proof, lii2J li. - -n trC ber I I I TOMORROW at 8 o'clock HELLEL presents the 5th lecture on "JUDAISM-A Living Force" I T 1 ? M; III t