U.S., Britain Sidestep Attempt To Push Economic Pro gram HUNGER MAY REACH THEM FIRST: Castro Commands Troops in Search of Rebels 0. LAS MERCEDES, Cuba (>) -, Villagers here in the Oriente Province foothills see little chance that an Army captain rebelling against Fidel Castro can hold out Prime Minister. for long against the bearded All sources agree they have seen large movements of regular army troops in the foothills of the tow- ering Sierra Maestra during the past few days. Castro himself is in personal command of the search through his old rebel mountain hideouts for Capt. Manuel Beaton. The green and brown slopes of the Sierra above this village were obscured today by low-hanging clouds. The spring rainy season is only beginning. Wild fruits and other edibles that could help Beaton and his band of about 50 men live off the land do not begin to ripen until the end of the month. Nothing To Eat "If the compesinors (peasants) don't get him," said one store- keeper, "hunger will. There's nothing to eat up there for an- other month." There was no indication whether Castro-now back in his old role as Field General-has called on his peasant militiament for help in his anti-rebel operation. A news blackout continued in official quarters on the progress of the eight-day hunt, which appears U C 9G o * TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:00 STEINBECK'S THE GRAPES OAF WRATH (directed by John Ford) with Henry Fonda Jane Darwell John Carradine Saturday and Sunday at 7:00 and 9:00 DR""E AM BOAT with Clifton Webb Ginger Rogers Elsa Lancaster Short: Wanda Landowska ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents I I WDIAL NO 2-2513 First Show Today 3 P.M. LQGAN9 ~^pep8, cy ...that co//ege whoy Prk 4 can'tbelp /ovin " Y boys.. I{a{ H1 From WARNER BRAS nfih Pe' nS " ane tond concentrated on Beaton despite the reported presence of two other small rebel groups. Cuban news- menreported they located Castro in the hills but he told them to get out. Still At Large Military sources would only con- firm that Beaton is still at large somewhere in the vast mountain range, covering .2,000 square miles of eastern Cuba. They refused to comment on either the size of the pursuing forces or' the pursued, or whether any contact had been made. They also were mum on a re- port from Santiago by a Castro commander that Beaton's second- in-command and two other insur- gents have been captured. The official said Wednesday the three would be brought to Bayamo mili- tary headquarters 60 miles west of Santiago. But their presence was not ad- vertised at Bayamo and there was no sign of them anywhere else in the area. Little Activity Bayamo itself was hardly a beehive of military activity. One helicopter was at the airport. There was no sign of any aerial activity in connection with the: hunt. A reporter traveling from Ha- vana to La Mercedes, found little interest in the search. This con- trasted with stories circulating in Havana that the local popula- tion was going all out. However, Fidel Castro and his brother Raul, Cuba's Minister of the Armed Forces, were reported pressing an inch-by-inch search on the northern fringes of the Sierra Maestra. This is not far from the place where Castro him- self established his original moun- tain hideout against Fulgencio Batista in 1956. Army Invents Anti-Collision Flight Device WASHINGTON (M - The Army said yesterday it has designed a low - cost radio apparatus that promises to eliminate 99 per cent fof all mid-air collisions. Three ordnance corps scientists studied the feasibility of various collision-avoidance ideas and came up with one which they said could pave the way for complete auto- mation of flight control. One of the scientists, M. D. Reed of the Diamond Ordnance Fuse Laboratories here, said the con- cept still exists only on paper. He said his group had no funds to build a working model but is con- vinced the idea is entirely prac- tical. The proposed system, according to the Army report, would have avoided the Grand Canyon colli- sion of two airliners which claimed 128 lives in June 1956. THE PROMETH IAN OPEN DAILY at 2 P.M. Entertainment Nightly Allies Close Pre-Summit Conference Dispute on Proposal Dulls Group Success WASHINGTON (P)-The United States and Britain yesterday side- tracked French pleas they join Russia in stepping up economic aid and cutting back weapons shipments totunderdeveloped countries. Foreign ministers of the Big Three Western allies disagreed on the issues as they wound up a pre- summit harmony conference. The dispute somewhat dulled their success in forging an other- wise solid front on the Berlin-Ger- man and disarmament problems their chiefs will discuss with So- viet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev at next month's summit confer- ence in Paris. Ministers Satisfied The allied foreign ministers, in- cluding West Germany's Heinrich von Brentano, pronounced them- selves well satisfied with the result of their three days of strategy talks. "Preparations are well advanced for the effective presentation of the Western position at the sum- mit," a final statement said. Secretary of State Christian A. Herter teamed with British For- eign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd to block approval of the French pro- posal advanced at the last session by French Foreign Minister Mau- rice Couve de Murville. Goes to Committee After some discussion, all three agreed to hand over the contro- versial proposition, favored by French President Charles de Gaulle, to a committee of allied diplomats for further study. Allied spokesmen said disagree- ment on what they called fringe issues was unimportant compared to their success in bridging differ- ences on key issues the West will discuss with Khrushchev. In previous sessions the Foreign Ministers had unanimously agreed to recommend that their chiefs: Press for Vote 1) Press Russia to negotiate a single German peace treaty based on a free vote by the 70 million Germans in the Western and the Communist sectors of the divided land. 2) Search for a stopgap settle- ment of their Berlin dispute with Russia if, as seems likely, the So- viets reject a solution within the framework of German unity. 3) Offer Russia "quickie" par- tial disarmament measures as a means of reducing world tension, if Russia continues to spurn their sweeping plan for controlling nu- clear weapons, missiles and con- ventional forces. 4) Meet in Paris May 14 with West Germany's Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer for a final strategy huddle before the Summit Con- ference begins. Spokesmen for all Allied dele- gations re-emphasized that the West has -no intention of buying off Russian pressure against Ber- lin with concessions bigger than those the Soviets rejected at Geneva last June. They stressed also that they did not believe Khrushchev intended to push the Belin issue to a crisis at the summit. POLARIS : May Send missiles To NATO WASHINGTON (/P)-The United States is giving thought to arming the North Atlantic alliance with its promising submarine-launched Polaris missile. A state department spokesman said yesterday discussions of this possibility began at the Atlantic Pact defense meeting in Paris two weeks ago. He stressed the talks are in a very early stage. Word of this came a day after Britain junked a major part of its military rocket program and de- cided to rely on the United States for missiles which would be fired from mobile rather than more vulnerable fixed bases. New Development The new development fills out a little more the picture of the United Stateshas the missile ar- senal of the anti-Communist alli- ance. State Department Press Officer Lincoln White said Britain - which already has been furnished 60 United States land-based in- termediate range ballistic missiles -has indicated it would like to get Polarises on its own. But White said British needs "would necessarily have to be considered in the light of" over-all NATO needs. High Command If it was decided to go ahead, the Polaris rockets would be as- signed to the high command of the alliance. This command would deploy them where it thought they would be most effective. The nuclear warheads would be kept under United States control, but White said he understands Britain-an atomic power in its own rights-wants to build its own warheads. The sketchy announcement left open the question of who would build the specially-designed sub- marines to fire any Polarises handed over to NATO. Cost Too Much Most of the alliance nations are maritime powers, but nuclear- powered Polaris subs cost more than 100 million dollars each and there is doubt many could afford a sizable fleet of them. The United States Navy has high hopes for the Polaris, which is approaching the combat ready stage. First models of the rocket are planned for a range of 1,200 miles. Later types will have a longer reach. The United States already has equipped Britain with four squal- rons of Thor IRBM's, capable of hitting targets 1,500 miles from their launching pads. Italy is next in line to get about 30 Jupiter IRBM's in two squadrons. l e irl igttn a 0 !LAST WEEK! MILT KEMNITZ -paintings J J. T. ABERNATHY-ceramics 0_ o Forsythe Gallery O 201 Nickels Arcade over Post Office o t rF0R EASTERi I ImPorted jewelry from many countries Handcarved Sandalwood boxes o DOLLS from India, Pakistan, }ordan and Japan. RAW SILK ROBES for men and women. O HAPPI COATS and BLOUSES. 42 INl DI A ART 371-10? 330 Maynard --across from Arcade cm<=0Cmm<=oo Second Front Page Friday, April 15, 1960 v C3 IMIP/ Page . ._, .- - , _....1 11 L\,7L NI~ !li'iI;iII'iZHM9 2000 WEST STADIUM Iray Walston MP'rw . ".hs ' ~f B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION wishes to announce that PETITIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE for next year's offices. Hurry, Hurry, Hurry .... Tickets still available for the Friday evening and Saturday afternoon performances of the MUSICAL COMEDY HIT MU These may be picked up between 8:30-4:30 daily in the Hillel office, 11 WONDERFUL TOWN and are due no later than Thurs., April 21 at 5:00 P.M. If ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE BOX OFFICE OPEN All seats reserved Friday evening, $1.75 10:30-8 Phone NO 8-6300 Saturday afternoon, $1.50 Curtain times: evenings-8 P.M., matinee-2 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE 4 I I 0 I The PAINT-BOX PUMP is summer's darling I .J I { : :, , . a, : p+ Y i n a o r a 4; ' i$ t 't 1. ..'. r.,, . : s >. I 009%$9 09 styles it high or mid-heeled in shanolin, the shantung weave thot's crisp as linen and so coolly right, summering nnvwheel Which of 191 nale to blazina shades willvYou choose? Just name 0 0