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A-8 THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. C. lng with bullets until six figures found lying inside In their night- TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 20. IBM! Cypriot Boy Slain; * were seen running across the clothes. Other troops searched D. C. Relaxes U. S. May Ask More Data 1 fields behind. the area and made the two Suspects The wounded family were 7 2 Seized 1 arrests. Norstad Heads SHAPE NICOSIA, Cyprus, Nov. 20 VP). ' On Reds Arms-Cut Bid —Two suspected rebels were held Seat for questioning today after a gun Belt Rule By JOHN A. SCALI an inter-departmental disarma- battle in which a Greek Cypriot Hour,: 10 As Gruenther Departs District traffic authorities are Associated Press Staff Writer ment group which includes Pres- boy, 9, was killed. I Store Doily t.a. to 6 p.m idential Assistant Harold Stassen „ 7 Comer, evening ,topping: Thursday and Friday until“¦a9:30 p.m UP)—Gen. * '' unfastening their new seat belt The United States probably The child’s mother and PARIS, Nov. 20 Al- , and representatives of the State father fred M. Gruenther handed over M 1 regulation for another start to- . will ask-Russia to give a fuller and four British soldiers were explanation and Defense Departments, the wounded the supreme command of the ¦'¦jar ward equitable of two of the newest in the short, fierce ex- an rule. Soviet disarmament Atomic Energy Commission and change at a 15-nation Atlantic Treaty forces -i-i- > ysSk, proposals. farmhouse near the *vyPz. / Traffic Director George E. the Central Intelligence Agency. village of i in Europe today United They were set forth by Premier Nikitas. 30 miles west i to States they Keneipp has halted Bulganin Officials said were avoid- of Nicosia. Air Force Gen. Lauris Norstad. enforcement i in his note to Presi- ing 3 [ the temptation to give a Two pass- of part of a regulation adopted dent Eisenhower Saturday, i quick British vehicles were The new commander said he Jij|fl^fl|Nggsiipv g There virtually “no” based on the over- ing the house when | early in October which virtually seems no whelming propaganda a bomb ex- took over the post “with a firm chance, however, that the White framework ploded near one of the cars and that NATO is, if anything, would outlaw all in which the Soviet proposals belief new cars ' House will agree to a proposed machine-gun fire rattled from more important than ever be- /<t . •> ¦ equipped with the safety belts. Big were laid down. Sometimes the darkened house. The summit conference of the Moscow’s willingness to make sol- fore." 4 ¦ ¦ The equipment is optional. Four countries, plus India, to diers sprayed the mudbrick build- concessions, they said, is ' '*'" ' ' “The Soviets have again, and > tangled hidden l 1 The rule requires that the discuss the disarmament under perhaps more wantonly and , problem. a violent smokescreen of brutally than before, belt be anchored to the frame propaganda. ever dem- of car, directly James C. Hakerty, President they the either or With this in mind, they said Soviet Ship Taking onstrated that undersand through , Eisenhower’s press secretary, only use of an anchor bar. they felt the Bulganin proposals force,” Gen. Norstad said. safety belts, including said yesterday Mr. Eisenhower "It Most were something to probe and is clear that our peaceful those cars, ! has gone over the Bulganin text, Wheat to Egypt only on the new hitch to consider carefully in order to aims can be achieved by flooring post, but no answer was yet in sight. LONDON, Nov. 20 UP).—Mos- maintaining the or to the door obtain more specific information., our strength, by but not to the frame. cow radio announced today that striving for unity of purpose and Two Major Points The need to establish an accept- ship Mr. able the Russian Olya Mechni- action from which our strength Keneipp said the regula- Disregarding the bitter anti- East-West disarmament ar- kov has left tion snagged any rangement hydrogen for Alexandria must spring, and by reaffirming was before West propaganda blasts in the in the bomb carrying purchased cars equipped with the belts age makes this necessary, they "wheat by our calm and resolute determi- NORSTAD 1 note, authorities appeared to be Egypt in the Soviet Union in GEN. LAURIS were rejected during safety in- especially said. , nation to defend the NATO peo- Takes interested in these two accordance with the trade Command spections. It will not be enforced points: ples.” —AP Wirephoto i agreement between the two pending a change by the Com- 1. Russia’s professed willing- countries.” Gen. Gruenther told the top missioners. Newspaper States, British, ness to consider limited aerial Paris The broadcast added: “The officers assembled for the cere-, {United Canadian The rule mony: “It is unfortunate 'and French Air Forces zoomed; was attached to a t inspection, proposed by Mr. Ei- administration of the Black Sea that! regulation which requires that senhower his earlier “open Egypt navigation the world today is in a situation overhead at the close of the t under Hits Attack has received a report that ceremony. safety belts in automobiles com- ¦ skies” plan, but only of a 1,000- PARIS, Nov. 20 (AI).—The in- that the Soviet tankers Lenin- such there are strains in ply with specifications by mile which the alliance, but it is my convic- Gen. Gruenther was scheduled drawn r zone would divide dependent newspaper Le Monde grad and Azbek, which had left Hartmann Luggage | the Society • Europe. | tion those going to leave for Canada and the of Automotive En- east-west lines in yesterday denounced French Odessa for Egypt, safely deliv- difficulties are gineers. Mr. Keneipp ; ac- 1 solved.” United States this afternoon. said that 2. Sovie readiness to talk about Egypt ered their freight in Alexandria experienced travelers e to be since anchoring considerable tions in in some of the j* Gen. Gruenther was considered I“a reduction” of language { and are at present on their re- Troops said events of important, most vitriolic ever seen Parade the last few weeks caused SHAPE he asked the inspec- ¦ Russian forces in Eastern Eu- turn voyage home.” Hartmann is noted tion division to draw up sug- ropean in the non-Communist French | for luggage well- | Troops representing all the to undertake a series of studies a ¦ satellites in 1957. At the press. The British Admiralty warned NATO nations—except gested rule on that. same time American-British- world shipping Friday (? - equipped to the rigors of Iceland, to determine its past showing has a policy led to last that withstand which has armed forces—- steps any The rule was approved just ; French forces would be cut in “Seldom Egyptian no and to take to correct rapid, complete authorities have mined constant / paraded before North Atlantic pact countries,! such and obvious the approaches travel. Vinyl-coated fabric without. arms as the shortcomings. introduction of the 1957 f bankruptcy,” to Alexandria changed under Premier Bulganin’s pro- Le Monde said. gave command hands at “As we contemplate the dark models, and when it was found I ! but no indication whether covering has hard vulcanized fiber Supreme Headquarters would be , posal. It accused the British and the placed Allied clouds over us, let us remember it not feasible to at- French governments, by their at- mines were inside or (SHAPE) near Paris. lining. tach the to the new wider Both these points were obvi- ( outside Egyptian territorial wa- l binding, is bootmaker-stitched with | there is this silver It has belts Zone, Britain’s Field been made clear again that our frames, Mr. Keneipp said he . ously unacceptable, in their' tack in the Suez Canal of , ters. Marshal! having the nations of the white nylon thread. Suntan with tan * Viscount Montgomery, Gen.; freedom must be preserved from halted enforcement pending a | present form, to the Eisenhower led | Gruenther’s chief deputy; any possible weakness," he said. study by the society on the sub- . administration. earth to the brink of a third £ grained washable lining, solid polished •) world war. It predicted that, ‘ Ambassador Aldrich French Marshal Alphonse Juin, 1 Granted a wish, Gen. Gruen- ject. More Positive Approach | NATO’s, retiring ther said, people might because of the shock to French C brass locks. Central Euro- some District velflcle laws do not Authorities noted, however, Postpones Vacation pean commander, and Lord Is- want> to double NATO’s military publicj opinion, a political up- require seat belts, but the traf- ¦ that the Soviet aerial photog- ] Nov. 20 UP).—United > may, secretary general of NATO, strength, some might want to fic director heaval could place France under LONDON. Companion, 55.00. 2-suiter, 75.00 1 said it is normal raphy proposal marked more ] ! Winthrop were among saluting strengthen it in the political 1 a fascism. States Ambassador those as! practice to insist that optional positive approach toward postponed P Plus tax. the SHAPE flag lowered. ifield, and “might wish that 1 Mr. Just about every shade of ‘ Aldrich his vacation p was some equipment meet safety stand- Eisenhower’s open skies plan ] today “because of the It signified the end of Gen.; Khrushchev would abstain for a ards. French opinion, except the Com- ' world sit- going than has heretofore been dem- , previously duty- uation.” } Mail nd phone orders invited, Gruenther’s nearly six years at | while from to those cock- by munists, has felt 1 f parties onstrated the Kremlin. The boundj to support the government Mr. Aldrich and his wife were " SHAPE, first as chief of staff to tail in the Kremlin.” Bulganin proposal exempt.