Show Britian Keeps Summit Hopes Alive By ASSOCIATED PRESS LONDON Prime Minister Macmillan Monday made a Spring summit conference almost a certainty so far as he is He told Premier Khrushchev he would go to such a parley even if forthcoming disarmament talks bog The British Leader insisted in a letter to as President Kennedy did that foreign ministers start the negotiations on disarmament opening in Geneva March BIT MACMILLAN kept the summit idea alive even while he rejected Khrushchev's proposal that the talks be lacked off at the highest Two situations might arise which would make a summit meeting Macmillan wrote first is if the conference is making satisfactory and definite In such a case a meeting of the heads of government might well serve to consolidate what had been achieved and to make a further step towards an actual he SECOND situation is one in which certain major and clear points of disagreement have emerged which threaten to hold up further In that case the heads of government should perhaps meet in order to try to break the Diplomatic sources suggested this arrangement would seem to remove any pressure on Khrushchev to guarantee progress in the early stages of the Geneva Macmillan's suggestion emphasized a variation between British and American Washington wants definite results from preliminary spade-work before commitment to a meeting of government KENNEDY phrased that in restrained terms in his latest contribution to the exchange launch-M He told Khrushchev that to have government chiefs at the beginning of the Geneva conference be to begin at the wrong end of the He added the hope that in the conference and internationally would make it useful to arrange for the personal Participation of the heads of government before June the ay the Geneva conferees are the United Na |