PAGE TWO JFK Plans Bud yet HYANNIS PORT, Mass, (RP) —President Kennedy sat down with the nation's top military and fiscal experts yesterday, going over plans for the next year's defense budget, which may hit a peacetime record of $5O billion. That was , only one of a series of meetings: He also talked_ with commerce and trade experts on trade policies and on the future of the reciprocal trade treaties which expire in mid-1962. The defense meeting reconvened after lunch for further talks on civil defense. White House press secretary Pierre Salinger said the civil defense session was in the na ture of a survey of "what the Defense Department has accom plished and what plans it has made for the future since the agency assumed responsibility for civil defense last August." The current estimate of defense spending in the present fiscal year is $46.85 billion. This estimate does U.N. Council Sets Mandate on Congo UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (/P)—The Security Council laid down a new mandate last night for U.N. action against the Congo's secessionist Katanga Provice, but only after two So viet vetoes had killed U.S. pro posals for broader U.K. authority. The council demanded that all secessionist activities in Katanga "cease forthwith" and authorized acting Secretary-General U Thant to use force if necesrxy to re move the. foreign mercenaries that are said to be the chief prop of the 16-month-old secession. Its vote was 9-0 for a resolu tion in those terms introduced by Ceylon, Liberia and the United Arab Republic. Britain and France abstained. Immediately after, U Thant pledged he would do his best to carry out fully all resolutions of the General Assembly and Secu rity Council—including the one TONIGHT 8 P.M. CAVE DWELLERS WEEKS not include $7BO million which Congress voted above the Ken nedy administration's request. The Pentagon announced in niid-October that the extra funds would not be used. Bust adopted—to restore order in 'the Congo. He appealed to U.N member countries, particularly the Afri cans, for more troops to rein force the U.N. Congo force. The Soviet Union used its veto against U.S. amendments to a three-nation resolution to have the council deprecate "all armed ac tion" against the Congolese cen tral government and to authorize the secretary-general to help that government reorganize and re train its army "for the tasks which confront it." The vote on each of these amendments was 9-1 with France abstaining. CATRAiIIVI NOW Feature at 2:10-4:30-7:00-9:20 TROY DOROTHY DONAHUE ki MOIRE CONNIE 1111MTD STEVENS HOLM okiewmacts, • tititecianSerteie , ant • TECHNICOLOR' nom WARNER BROS I THE Today: "Flying Leathernecks" SUN. *MON.* TUES. Lock up your dollars and your daughters: Here's that man again! ALEX GUINNESS as Players "THE PROMOTER" THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA . confers with. experts Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, who led two of yester day's conference groups with the President, has said the acceler ated buildup in other categories made it unnecessary to spend the money. Most of it was for extending production of 852 heavy bombers. The outgoing Dwight D. Eisen hower administration proposed $42.9 billion for defense in early January. In March the Kennedy admin istration revised this figure to, $43.8 billion, then raised it again; when the Berlin crisis developed in the summer. The. President's series of meet ings started more than an hour behind schedule when poor fly ing weather in the Cape Cod area delayed the Air Force jet plane which brought the offi cials from Washington to Otis Air Force Base. The first meeting—on trade policies—included Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges and Undersecretary George W. Ball. After an hour, the president joined McNamara who had al ready started the defense budget session. Scranton Declines Possible GOP Bid SCRANTON, Pa. (AP)--11.S. Rep. William W. Scranton of Dalton ruled out yesterday the possibility of becoming a can didate for the Republican nomination for governor or U.S. Senator in 1962. The 44-year-old congress man thus ended months of speculation about his availabil ity for the statewide ticket. In a statement read at a news conference Scranton said: "Every indication points to a splendid Republican victory in Pennsylvania in 1962." University Creamery Sales Room Dairy Products Ice (ream Pasteurized Milk Chocolate Milk Buffer Milk Creamery Buffer U.S. Warships Welcomed UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (IP)—The Dominican Republic declared yesterday it wel corned the presence of U.S. warships off its shores as a bulwark against any attempt at invasion by Cuba "or other Communist countries." "Blessed be the moment that the United States fleet came into our waters," the Dominican dele gate, Jose Antonio Bonilla Atiles, tOld the U.N. Security Council. Bonilla Atiles, who said he was a member of an opposition party in his country, and Dominican Ambassador Carlos Sanchez y Sanchez both denied Cuban charges that U.S. warships and planes had violated Dominican territorial waters. Both Dominican delegates ac cused Prime Minister Fidel Cas- Rockefeller Sought MERAUKE, New Guinea (AP) —A 50-50 chance still exists that' Michael Rockefeller survived a 1 / 2 -mile swim through shark-in fested waters and is somewhere in the jungle, a Dutch leader of the weeklong search said yester day. The Dutch commissioner for southern New Guinea, F. R. J. Elbrink Jansen, based his ap praisal on the fact that two gasoline cans, a vital element in I the hunt, have still to turn up despite the intense search by planes, ships and thousands of men. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's 23-year-old son used the two cans as a makeshift raft in his swim toward shore Sunday from his capsized native boat. The fact that they are still to be found indicates he may have Brick Cheese Cheddar Cheese Cottage Cheese Trappist Cheese Grade A Large Eggs SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 1961 tro's government of trying to in cite bloodshed in their country by inflammatory propaganda broad casts. Mario Garcia - Inchaustegui. the Cuban delegate, reiterated Cuban demands that the council condemn the United States as an aggressor and call for drawl of U.S. ships from the area. He claimed the the - Dominican people were not represented by the two Dominican delegates. The council put off additional debate until next Tuesday. The government of Fidel Castro of Cuba was reported yesterday to be making an all-out effort to foster trouble in the strife-torn Dominican Republic.. Diplomatic quarters in Wash ington said radio broadcasts from Cuba are urging the people of the Dominican Republic to kill Presi dent Joaquin Balaguer and any body working with him. at least reached New Guinea's southern shore and set out for the interior, Jansen said. Rockefeller, still hopeful that Michael is alive, said he will re main in New Guinea a few more 'days. "I'm a realist." said The New York governor, "and I know What he faces if he reaches that jungle," The search has been expanded to cover 150 miles of shoreline from north of the Eilenden River to Frederick Hendrik Island. Jan sen said that if Michael did not land, the current was bound to carry the two gasoline cans to the island. . , f.;7 7 =-4., . . 2 . ' , ft= : , i / 4,01 ° ' I .'' 1 r ty'r , '•....." • `.. r ..i,:.'1:::...-:-... r * ...dre ~ ~,,,., , , 0., I, SETTING Famous Solitaire with the new, distinctive. Tulip setting enhances the beauty of the diamond and insures a perfectly fitting wedding hand:
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