SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 25. 1961 Guevara Enters Castro Cabinet HAVANA (M—,Fidel Castro moved economic czar Ernesto Guevara into his Cabinet as chief of a new superministry of industry and reshuffled other posts to tighten state control over all phases of Cuban economic life. Guevara, an Argentine-born leftist. who fought in the Presidents' Maid Publishes. Book On While House NEW YORK (M—White House maids of the future may have to keep mum about their experi ences, but a veteran of the past has plenty to say. Lillian Rogers Parks says it in a book to be published Feb. 27. Advance copies were released just a day after the White House announced that, at the suggestion of chief usher J. Bernard West, domestic personnel pledged to re frain from publishing memoirs hereafter. Among other things in her bock, Mrs. Parks related: • Mrs. Harry S. Truman was the most considerate First Lady in decades. • Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt was quick to fire servants if they angered her. • Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower had a hot temper but never fired anyone. • Mrs. Herbert Hoover kept the White House in the most turmoil, because she could never make up her mind ,how she wanted things arranged. Household servants never knew what to expect next—whether to hide out or to be seen going about their duties. Mrs. Parks' book is entitled "My Thirty Years Backstage at the White House." It recounts her experiences as well as those of her mother, who also spent 30 years as a maid at 1600 Pennsyl vania Ave. Hodges Urges . Swift Action WASHINGTON (4P) Secre tary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges pledged yesterday that if the job of, reviving depressed areas is given to his department something organized labor op poses he will not let it become a "boondoggling," or make-work operation. Urging swift action on Presi dent Kennedy's $390-million de pressed areas program, Hodges told a House Banking subcommit tee more than 100 city areas and an as-yet undetermined number of rural sections must have fed eral help in curing persistent un employment. Supporting Kennedy's propos als, Hodges sought to quiet con cern lest industries be pulled away from some economically healthy areas in the course of pumping life into ailing regions. RETURN hills with Castro, was given broad powers yesterday to reorganize and develop this island nation's industrial life along lines some sources here reported w ere drafted by Cuban and Commu nist experts last year -in Czecho slovakia. State control was extended to all sports activities through the creation of an institute of sports, physical education and recreation. Mayor Jose Llanusa of Havana, who recently returned from a tour behind the Iron Curtain, was named director. The Cuban Cabinet, in a long session extending into the early morning hours, also named Haul Ceprero Bonilla. former minis ter of commerce, as chief of the National Bank. When Guevara headed the bank, he used it to cut Cuba's economic ties with the United States and connect them with the Communist bloc. Under Ceprero Bonilla. one of the few remaining ministers of Castro's original Cabinet, the bank's capitalization was de creed at 100 million pesos. This represents . a rise from 25 mil lion, presumably covered by as sets of nationalized U.S. and Canadian banks. The ministers of commerce and agriculture were abolished. Di rection of agriculture had long since been taken over by the gov ernment's Agrarian Reform In stitute, The government also revitalized the Central Planning Board to oversee development of Cuba's four-year economic plan starting in 1962. Castro, as prime minister, heads the board and his brother Raul, who is also defense minis ter. becomes deputy chairman. Foreign experts said Castro ap peared to be reshaping his re gime's administrative machinery into a form similar to that used in Communist countries. • ÜBA WILL RETURN FOR BOOKS UNSOLD BOOKS THROUGH THURSDAY, TODAY ÜBA Will Be Open 11-11 a.m. .BX Will Be 0 n 9-12 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA SPRING IS COMING! And You'll Want to be Prepared with the Newest Spring Fashions From the New Selection of Blouses & Skirts from AND MARCH 2 6 Airlines Start Return To Normal WASHINGTON (1P) Amer ican airports started a return to their normal, bustling pace yes terday while the head of a pres idential co rn mission quietly sought a solution to the airlines dispute. But, despite this hopeful air. rumblings of trouble still could be heard. • In Miami, a- federal judge ig nored one element in the formula that brought the nation's most crippling airlines strike to an end Thursday. U.S. Dist. Judge Emett C. Choate held the Eastern Air Lines chapter of the Flight Engi neers International Association in contempt of court. The strike continued at West ern Air Lines, which still refused to take part in the settlement initiated by Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg. In addition, PreSident Kennedy acted in a separate though re lated strike. He created an emer gency board to investigate the Northwest Airlines strike and ex dered the filght engineers there back to work. The union said the men were ready to go back to their jobs. In the truce Thursday, flight engineers of six airlines agreed to go back to work while the Presi dent's special commission investi gated the case for 90 days. Attempt to Orbit 'Radio Brain' Fails CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. UP) —Failure of the upper stages last night ruined an attempt to orbit a "radio brain" satellite designed to study the effects of the iono sphere on long range radio and television communication. The 75-pound satellite and the three-stage upper assembly pre sumably plunged into the Atlan tic Ocean. The satellite was to have been called Explorer X. The failure sets back U.S. plans for continuing a far-reaching study of the ionosphere, an elec tronically charged region which surrounds the earth. MONEY SOLD Britain Says 'Soapy' Entering Her Affairs LONDON (VP) G. Mennen Williams was accused in Parliament yesterday of meddling in Britain's'African affairs. A member of the governing Conservative party urged the matter be called to President Kennedy's attention. The storm blew up over a remark Monday in British Kenya by Williams, assistant U.S. secretary of state for African af fairs, endorsing "Africa for the Africans," a slogan of militant African nationalists. His state ment previously •had provoked an gry words in South Africa's Par liament In Uganda, Williams paused on his fact-finding tour to re iterate what he said in Kenya —that he meant whites as well as Negroes when he referred to Africa for the Africans. In Africa, the word "African" generally refers to the original in habitants of the continent, in oth er words the Negroes. But British critics were not mollified by Williams' explana tion. Anthony Fell, a Conservative, introduced the Williams' ques tion in the House of Commons. Fell said he wanted to know if Prime Minister Harold Macmil lan intends to make represen tations to Kennedy about Wil liams' "interference in Her Maj- BREAKFAST SPECIAL 7:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. 2 EGGS Any Style BACON STRIPS TOAST and JELLY COFFEE, MILK, or TEA 49c REA and DERICK . 121 S. ALLEN ST. ~, ~' ` 1 "•:1t Daily olloiali Business Candidate School Place: 119 Osmond esty's government's colonial and Commonwealth affairs in Africa." ALPHA COLONY OPEN *HOUSE In POLLOCK I LOUNGE Sunday, Feb. 26 2-4 all interested welcome Day: Tuesday Date: March 7 Time: 6:30 - 7:30 Meetings Tuesday & Thursday Becky Kohudic, in charge PAGE THREE