THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1962 -.... . • . ~ .: ... , en. - Lemnitzer to .Head , uropea'' 'n Allied Forces IPARIS (fil Gen. Lyman L Lemnitzer was apprpved - unani-: ously bp i-Atlantic Alliance yesterday to succeed Gen..a.atuis orstad: as preme Allied earn- 1 ander: irf E pee ; (.- The name, 1 theretirinechair-' Man of! thetr.S. - Tpiet Chiefs of Staff 'was' p arced in nomination iby Presiders Kennedy and in-, dorsed at!aspec ial meeting " of the; North Atian c Treaty Organiza-I 4ec kion's :Perm ent c council. Norstad igned Saturday as ithe European chief of • the 15- 1 i nation alliance, effective about INov. 1. 1 - 1' There was no opposition to Lemnitzer, but 'his selection may .have ' been isligltly delayed by! France. ThelFrench Cabinet only approved th ie nomn ation - yester day. Preaid t Charles de Gaulle' has been re resented as rumoyed! at. ,the h t o . with which he thought W hington was trying to. put through the appointment. - THOUGH, NATO might choose the. SHAPE ;commander from any of its 15 members, all have been Americans tint* Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhowertook over as the first ; j one in 1950. U.S.' contributions MI nuclear an strategic air power! are factors this. _ Lemni . 62. Is a combat .vet eran with diplomat's touch. His succession .to the NATO post be came 'a Virtual certainty when Kennedy named -him last Friday to become, Commander • in. chief of, U.S. forces In Europe. another as- Demo rats Offered Ideas for Platforms HARRISBURG (A' Enough planks have been suggested for the :1962. Ibemocratic Campaign platform to build a bridge , f from a polling booth to the governor's chair. But as one member of the par ty's 34-member platform commit tees said today at the 'conclusion of . two d4rs of public hearings, "You couldn't possibly do every thing they want. - It will take years even to do the Most inf portant things." Some 51) witnesses—all of them representing organized: .groups, many of them philosophically op posed to the Democratic party— spoke tens of thousands of words to support their suggestions for various planks. Labor wants increased unem ployment j compensation benefits; business called for belt-tightening in the same area. , , • Spy Seek s Reft4ge , LONDON (AP)-Robert A. So blen appealed from piison yes terday for the Jewish home-land of Israel to give him haven from U.S. justice. ic Tel viv . attorney for the 61- year-old . ychiatrist who faces We imp ' nment as a spy 'for the Sosvi t Union if he is returned to the U led States — asked -Isra- Isra el's ,In for Ministry -to admit him as ai immigrant. - The move. came on the eve .of today's hearing in the British Court of Appeal to decide whether Soblen s ould be set free on Brit ish soil. . ''• • Don't Forget NEWMAN (WI PICNK Leaves— Eisenhower Chapel • SUNDAY at 1:00 signment that Norstad is giving up. Lemnitzer was proposed for le Allied ender i n •in a let from Ken to NATO tarp - Gen- Dirk U. K e n ld Stikker as sure .itzer is and favor known to .tuber gov- Gin. taunitior ernments of the - alliance." - He added: "It Is our firmly held conviction in the United States that we must continue to work in a spirit of independence in car rying out the common and in ' divisible task of defending Europe and North America. I am confi dent that, under Gen. temnitzer's leadership, this task will continue to be carried forward with the same success-that it has in the past." In a second letter addressed to Stikker, Kennedy asked that Nor stad be released about Nov. 1. 'Rusk, Oromyko Conference fails To Find Solution for Berlin Problem GENBV4 (AP)—Dean Rusk and Andrei A. Gromyko are leaving the Berlin problem essentially where they found it at the outset of their GeneVa negotiations, in formed sources said yesterday.l ! Nothing happened to create ei !ther a solution or a new crisis. Positions of the U.S. secretary 1 of state and the Soviet foreign minister, who conferred three. times on Berlin in the past five days, were termed basically un changed. RUSK TOOK OFF FOR Wash ington and Gromyko arranged to head back, to Moscow today. Each side ended with a definite recognition of the other's commit ments in Berlin and an under standing that serious consequenc es could result if these are in fringed. This would apply among other things, tolhe long-professed Sovi et intention to sign a separate peace treaty with Communist East Germany and turn over to ...FOR THE LIFETIME AHEAD The lovely Towk pattern you select here will not oaly Capture your affection, but will keep it over the years. Aced the more you me sterling silver, the lovelier it sets. 44% rim liasip. it 1127.23 Tag :mak tram SL2I areas Maas. Inte $&00 SUMMER COLLEGIAN!. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA Kenniedy to3Discuss Testillan Treaty WASHINGTON (1 Presi-lenvisages listening posts inside:decision has-been arrived at as to dent Kennedy 'will meet .with topithe Soviet Union plus on-the-spotiany modification, if any, of any advisers' tomorrow to consider; inspections - when a suspicious! U.S. proposal." whether to relay U.S. terms forkvent is recorded on the listening) ,"ft. is hoped that by late this an atomic weapons test-ban treatylmaehines. The Soviet Union has l week, or early next week, a final with Russia. ! tobjected to any control scheme decision can be made as to wheth , Press secretary o u t Sa to which would allow inspectors on;er any modifieation can be made !said yesterday . about 10 to i2 iSoviet soil. relating to detectbon and inspec !non on the basis of information ikey advisers. Including- defense! Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D- ,gained in recent tests," Hum land diplomatic officials, will at-Minn., said th e United States has (tend tomorrow's gathering. Hetno intention of abandoning the phrey said. described the meeting as one of a right of on-sight inspection. !, HUMPHREY SAID- Faster em iseries of inside-the-government! HUMPHREY MADE the corn ! phasized it would be premature idiscussions on bow the U.S. posi- a ft er a to assume that such significant ment Senate Disarmament Ai= on a test-ban treaty might ,l information has been obtained in subcommittee he heads ques H be modified. .. Itioned William C. Foster, directoethe recent fest; which would jus- A PRIOR' Cabinet-level meet -, of the U.S. Arms Control and Dis-: t4 a" modification of the U.S. • ing of agency chiefs concerned:armament Agency, on discusion• ipr?,Posals. ennedy told his news confer ,with the nuclear-test situation is,now under way on proposals to si: rk " k.nce Monday that the United !scheduled today. Salinger said he, achieve a test ban. ,States still believes a nuclear test did not know whether a final! Humphrey told newsmen Fos-!treaty should include inspection decision would be reached by the ' end of this week. - I ter: assured the subcommittee,_ "No !inside the Soviet Union. The question has been tossed to Washington's , decision-makers from . the recently announced re- Sults from Project Vela, a U.S. program aimed at improving the detection of below-ground atomic shots. The - results indicated nu clear explosions underground can be spotted at ra greater distance than previously supposed. The present Western proposal for a treaty to outlaw atomic tests East Germans the control of West Berlin's supply lines across more than 100 miles of Communist ter ritory. INFORMED SOURCES said there is reason to believe that if the Soviet do sign a treaty with East Germany, it will be done in such a way as not to interfere with the vital interests of the West in West Berlin. Rusk accomplished one aim in his conversations with Gromyko. He spelled out clearly the United States' position and its determina tion to defend its war-won rights in' Berlin. • Informed sources said U.S.-So tviet contact on Berlin is expected Ito be resumed in Washington. New College Diner . , • S T - E R L. G PAGE MEE