Paraguay Says 'Completely Su Invasion aashed' Rebels Flee To Argentina After Attack Minister Says Towns Not Lost to Exiles ASUNCION, Paraguay (WP)-In- terior Minister Edgar Insfran told a news conference last night an invasion of Paraguay by armed rebels had been "c o mple t ely smashed." Insfran, former Asuncion police chief, said an invading band of about 150 men had been scattered and disorganized with the help of the air force, and presumably had fled back to Argentine territory. He said Puerto Carlos Antonio Lopez and Colonia Otano, two small towns along the Parana River, were not captured by the- invaders as previously reported. Insfjan said three invaders were wounded and government forces had no casualties. Rebel Invasion The Paraguayan government previously had announced that a rebel force of between 500 and r 1,000 men crossed the Parana River from Argentina's Misiones province Friday and attacked the two towns. A government communique had announced the fall of Colonia Otano, but had not mentioned any rebel takeover of Puerto Carlos Antonio Lopez. r Earlier government statements claimed the rebels were armed with Argentine weapons, and said civilian militia as well as troops and police resisted them. Colonia Otano was said to have' been defended by only five police- men. Map Guerrilla Strategy Informed border sources in Ar- gentina said yesterday that well- armed rebels seeking to over- throw Paraguayan President Gen. Alfredo Stroessner, South Ameri- ca's last remaining dictator, ap- parently were mapping a guer- rilla - type campaign patterned after that of Fidel Castro of Cuba. Paraguayan exiles, of whom there are several thousand in Ar- gentina, said several columns had crossed the Parana River from both Brazil and Argentina. Official sources in Brazil said they had no knowledge of an in- vasion from Brazilian territory, however. Strength Grows Informed sources in Argentina said the rebels launched their in- vasion into southeast Paraguay from Posada, Argentine border point, and other places and were in greater strength than last De- cember when an invasion force of about 1,000 was crushed. The Posada informants said most of the insurgents are mem- bers of a Fourteenth of May movement which launched the unsuccessful December invasion. May 14 is Paraguay's independ- ence day. Stroessner, 47-years-old, charg- ed that the earlier invaders were political delinquents supported and financed by Castro's government. Squashed Coups During his strongman rule of the land-locked country of 1,600,- 000 people, the Paraguayan presi- dent has put down at least a dozen attempted coups. Moreno Gonzales, the Paraguay- an ambassador to Uruguay said his government expects more rebel attacks from across the Argentine boarded. This would be in accord- ance with plans for the revolu- tion which he said were learned previously by his government. ARTS AND LETTERS: Sees Change in Composers. By BEATRICE TEODORO "The types of people who now become musicians have changed since the 18th century," Roberto Gerhard said.' He was sitting in the small Bur- ton Tower office of Prof. Ross Lee Finney, the University's composer- in-residence. Gerhard is taking over his duties while Finney studies in Rome. "Usually musicians came from a long line of musicians," he con- tinued. "Or in some countries, future composers were recruited from street waifs." He cited the case in Italy, where "ospedales" were institutions which took care of abandoned children and gave them musical training. Composers 'Incurable' One of the names he likes to remember is "Ospedale degli En- curabilli," or "Home of the In- curables." All composers, accord- ing to Gerhard, must suffer from something "incurable," to dedicate themselves to music, so perhaps the name isn't so incongruous. Today the kind of people who enter the field of music have often been trained in other professions. Music has been "method- starved" for a long time and must sometimes look to other fields to develop techniques. This trend is reflected in contemporary com- position which shows strict mu- sical discipline. Gerhard's home is in Cambridge, England, where he is a free-lance composer and teaches private pupils. Refused Positions He has given occasional lectures at Cambridge, but refused offers of a permanent teaching posiiton because he could not devote all his time to composition. When he came to the Univer- sity, Gerhard had had no experi- ence in group teaching. Fortu- nately, he has been vrey pleased with the .students here. "Music can be a treadmill, concentrating years on the technical problems." But the students he found here were eager and well informed, with a breadth of interests outside of the musical field. 'Early European' Gerhard is in a quandry when asked about his nationality. He likes to classify himself as an "Early European," because, in his opinion, Europe is not yet a com- plete entity. In more concrete terms, he is of Swiss and French parentage, and was born and bred in Spain. After the defeat of the republican government in the Spanish Civil War, he moved to England where he received a fellowship to Kings College, Cambridge. He has lived there since. Because of his cosmopolitan background, critics have often spoken of the "English influence" and the "Spanish influence" in his compositions. Gerhard believes that these effects are not the re- sult of his conscious planning. Unconscious Spirit He has developed rigorous tech- niques and become detached from coloristic and picturesque com- position. However, according to other musicians, a Catalan flavor is definable in certain of his works. Gerhard still maintains that this national spirit has been in- jected unconsciously, but he is glad that it appears. Gerhard studied under Schoen- berg in Vienna and Berlin. He never completely accepted Schoen- berg's method using the 12-note scale based on the pitches of the octave as opposed to the 7 note tonality scale, but he has adapted the scale to his own needs. This is one of his basic theories: the composer must never adopt methods directly from anyone else, but he must adapt and choose to fit his personal requirements. It is this practice of basic choices, engaging his own responsibilities, which makes him a. composer. American S hipping Boycotted CAIRO (MP-Egyptian port work- ers launched a boycott of Ameri- can shipping yesterday in reprisal for the picketing that blocks un- loading of the Egyptian freighter Cleopatra in New York. President Abdul Gamal Nasser approved their vow that they will neither repair nor unload United States vessels at Alexandria, Port Said or Suez. Alexandria, on the Mediterranean, is Egypt's chief port. Port Said and Suez are ter- minals of the Suez Canal. The chief executive of the United Arab Republic told a 30- nation African-Asian conference in Cairo the boycott will continue until New York dock workers and seamen abandon their picket line against the Cleopatra. A single picket carried on the blockade in New York yesterday. Promoters of the action, which has prevented the Cleopatra from un- loading for more than two weeks, describe it as a protest against Arab blacklisting of American ships which deal with Israel. They say the Arab blacklist has cost them jobs. The boycott of American ships was called by the confederation of Arab trade unions, which hopes the movement will spread to all Arab ports. Jordan announced it will boycott all American ships calling in Aqaba, its only port. The boycott already is in effect in the Syrian region of the U.A.R. The confederation called on all Arab workers "from the Persian Gulf to the Atlantic Ocean to tighten their boycott in order to foil the aims of Zionism, which is: behind the American picketing of Arab vessels." Sympathy with these aims was manifest by 3,000 Lebanese stu- dents with a march through the: streets of Beirut. Protesting the picketing of the Cleopatra, they shouted anti - American slogans and paraded with placards read-, ing: "Arab peoples support dock- workers in boycotting American ships." The Isbrandtsen line freighter Sir John Franklin was the first American vessel to reach Port Said after the declaration of the boycott. Capt. J. Hudson, skipper of that 6,735-ton vessel, told authorities he had nothing to load or unload and planned to go on through the Suez Canal with general cargo and a few passengers for the Far East. Dock workers in motor launches circled the ship waving posters reading: "Arab workers can strongly counter American picket- ing of Arab ships. No canal for Israel. Long live Nasser." Rhee's Appointees Resign As Korean Purge Continues SEOUL (A') - South Korea purged police and provincial gov-1 ernors yesterday in the drive to tear down the totalitarian regime that grew up under ousted Presi- dent Syngman Rhee. Acting President Huh Chung's caretaker government accepted resignations from all the nine governors, who are appointed, and1 from 21 high officers of Rhee's discredited national police force. The latter included National' Police Director Cho In-Koo and Kwak Yung-Joo, head of Rhee's bodyguards.' Reforms Spread With the prospect of all new governors, post-Rhee reforms were expected for the entire countryside as well as the big cities, where the student - led insurrection against Rhee's government was born. "New persons whose position and status are politically indepen- dent and socially unbiased" will be named to the governorships, the new home minister, Lee Ho, said. Police state methods and rig- ging of the March 15 presidential election were the main complaints setting off the insurrection. The new government has promised new laws guaranteeing free speech, press, assembly and elections and a return to more local autonomy,! as well as a new cabinet-prime minister system of government to prevent any future regime from becoming as entrenched as that of Rhee. Tragic Shooting One of the insurrection's most tragic chapters closed with the burial of vice-president elect Lee Ki-Poong, his wife and two sons, one of them adopted by Rhee. The Lee Ki-Poong family was found shot dead in a cottage near Rhee's palace last Thursday. Rhee, trembling and dazed, per- sonally attended the funeral, touching off a chorus of wailing,! sobs and cheers which drowned out the Methodist services. Accolades for the 85-year-oldj ex-president wherever he goes have prompted speculation that Rhee could still make a comeback: in promised new elections, partic- ularly if the presidency is changed ot a ceremonial post and major power transferred to the office of prime minister. However, most observers feel the cheers are to honor Rhee as a patriot and are inclined to doubtf he has a political future. pure silk chiffon oblong scarf, bloomingd with hand-pointed rosebuds.,18"x45". Yel- low, pink, beige or blue on white. 3.50 l Jy'S y Pa} Joy by Jean Patou, aristocrat of floral fragrances. Perfume, 12.00 to 50.00 aude Toiete 12.00 10 20.00 plus tax nylon from Italy. On the back, a grden of delicate pink rosebuds; oat h wrist, one petite pearl button. One st. 3.50 /5 ms'r tney. fi t 5 ''9 P'e y** r yL,, 's e n nyo rmItaly'an*te bac, agade 0, x Bell-Shomeerproprtioed nlon fitMoer'sSa legsx pe}'rfecl, ful-fshne =X'timesheersth .atwlen warbiK t with beauty. Coffee beige, taupe mist, pretty plush. '1.65 Box of 3 pairs. 4.75 F f I I ;z :, p.t I Second Front Page I Sunday, May 1, 1960 Page 3 I B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION SUPPER CLUB will be discontinued for the remainder of the semester 1429 Hill Street Classified Advertising Number Is Now NO 2-4786 I __ _.._ t DAY Is chio Chick SUNDAY MAY 8th This Is Anne e + isl/ A fashion plate For $9.98 Though taken at the zoo. This shirt dress trim With skirt so slim I K" JACOBSON'S offers you FREE GIFT WRAPPING i . . . especially when you fedther kp~ r ct vn/ithrifn -nrkI I I !I AI a - N% -r- V r-a t oS "*N,