"MONARCH

the GLEN

MACLEOD

MAC

MILLAN

Cumming

LORD HOME

"Goodness, Prime Minister! Now it's the English demanding

independence and the right to run their own affairs..."

London Express Service.

THE CHINA MAIL, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961.

THE MOST

DISASTROUS

by

DOUGLAS

CLARK

MAN IN POLITICS!

SOLEMNLY, weightily, the Colonial Office issues

an assurance that no decision has yet been taken to free Mr Jomo Kenyatta, the African leader.

But how much longer can Hyliain be relied on të stand firme In this matter?

-

Consider Macleod's

And this, I believe, is why.

the results of Mr den explesions could occur any- 11ician, remorseles passion whore. for "progress" in the past 12 months.

his

As

with njone thoughts, must ask himself he lies abeck---- You might think iberefore But the moment he went to

"What is my personal future that, as he surveys his fist to be?" the Colonies something hap-

-h KENYA facing Suddenly the

Let Mr Macleod ndrout.

remember, major year's toil at the Colonial Office. One man, you

may be sure. Ipened.

of Mr R. de is sensitive to dio mounting Hurd-hitting negotiator assumed Anancial crisis. Fear of impend. Mr Macleod is now saying to then, the case

air of an ing political clamour

the starry-eyed

changes has been himself: "Perhaps I am wrong. Butler. from African

driving out capital at the rate Perhaps, after all, I have been One Imporinat reason why Mr tlonalirts--in and outside Kenya Aldermaston marcher,

e? £1,000,000 a month.

moving too fast.

Butler failed to become. Premier --for Kenyatta's speedy re-

But not at all. Indeed he has four years ago was that, in the CENTRAL AFRICA is piùng- Just revived that unfortunate general Tory vlow, he was "too

In confusion prid un phrase which Mr Macmillan far to the Left to be right." pl

Tories about the future of rolled out in Cape Town months certainty

in growing numbers its Federation, And Dr Hest- ngo,

are now pinning that label on mere rabble-"

the back of Mr Iain Macleod, inge rouser, has been lifted up to

In a New Year message posilich where he can per- he assured us he had Nu sonally make Or break this time for people who

050-

He decided to be as soft lo The black of Africa as he hat

Mr Iain Macleod, the British bean roukh to the whites of the Transport and General Workers' Colonial Secretary,

Union.

Deplorable

Mr Meeleod is the highest respect for the views of Britain's erlties in Africa He seems to pay more eager attention to them the real interests. et thin to Erlisin herself.

What a deplerable thing it is! Consider the astonishing Macleod since he went to the change that has come over Mr. Coloral Offer.

In his previous job he won himself n splendid and deserved reputation. As Minister of Labour He pleased both the Right and the Left,

Trade union leaders mired his realistic,

ad- down-

It sectned nimest as if the African witch-doctors had cast

spell on My Macleod. What has been the outcome? The new-yle Macicod, well bursting with Feel manup. intentions, has moved the mes: calamitous Colonial Secretary in history.

'Down river'

Banda,

plendid venture,

BUGANDA, Whose only crime is 201 she wants to preserve her separate identity and trad!- tions, looks like being steam- rollered it of existence.

Powder barrels

"buried their heads in the shifting sand for prolec tion against the wind of change."

Is it porsible that Mr Macleod can really be so short- sighted? Has he not even now anted to recognise the reckless stupidity of hic policy?

Then let him consider this

The year 1000 halled

Iis birth oxuitantly at

AS AIL over British Africa further point. Africa. Year" – will go down Macleod has been planting

Sometimes, in the small hours,

in the records as one of gathering massive powder barrels. Sud- even the most high-minded disaster for great stretches of

that continent,

As the chairman of the

His claims

Already. for many. Mr Mac leod is the most disastrous man in the Government.

If he pushes on with his fatal African policy the waverers will soon be convinced too.

And if Mr Macleod makes one more mistake, the wind of change will blow away any remaining

claim he has to the future leadership of the party.

-(Londen Express Service),

'DEEP VISION' GIVES 3D PROCESS

to-earth toughness. And. Labour Party put it 'DEEP VISION'

for the same reason, old the other day: "Macleod Tories in the clubs around has sold the white settler Pall Mall would rumble down the river in a way no Secretary over their port: "Here is Labour Colonial a good fellow."

could possibly have done."

AFTER A GLIMPSE ON HOW CHILDREN BEHAVE-A QUESTION...

What sort of girls

VICE in the schools

are alarming

there official reports, such as that just made by Sir John Charles, who has recently retired as Chief Medical Officer to the Mini- stry of Education.

Reports of promiscuity, of "strip poker" of girls deliberately provok- ing boys. There are many private reports of individual cases,

Are we producing a generation

of girls who have lost all moral

subse

A girl, they say, should be like

a rebud-stil 11 enchanting promise of beauty to be.

is

Britain

bringing up?

by DONALD EDGAR

"Well," she replied in hor valce that would charm birds off trees, "I would have though! the greater freedom brings with

it greater moral dangers. The young girl should be made more "quite aware of these dangers.

EVEN MORE REALISM

THREE foot high illuminoted colour pictures of beautiful women will be seen in various parts of London shortly. Behind them lies the story of a British invention which may revolutioniso 3D colour photography.

The three-dimensional · effect is vo veelistic that objects In u house, or a view from a liner, appear cqually touchable. No special glosses are reedeu.

idea

TECHNICAL NOTE-II you look at an ordinary photo- toph your eyes focus on its ant kurique. A klöép "víšíon"""' pic- ture is faced with a piece of of glass, the inside of which is

etched with hundreds of verti

at Hires.

the new lochnique, nown as

vision, Is the Mr Solomon Silver, a 55-year old London technical photo- apher. It is being developed by Mr Patrick Johnson, ex-RAF flying ace who drew up the first ing you look through slits. Your Jet engive pattern for Sir Frank eyes focus on the picture be White on the back of on old hind, from different angles,

envelo

Mr. Wohnson told me: "1 rather te looking through two Fargerent windows, giving two alants on the scene beyond."

COSTS LESS

The pictures are four times 3-D The freedon is there part bigger than conventional

of that immense revolution that our prints, cost less to pro-

These have the effect of molt

THE SECRET ·

vision"

The wurst of "deep is is lined glass, known as the grid. The Hnes are scored with diamond, and ore invisiblo unless held on inch or two from the eye,

An idmittcal grid is placed on

The World of Science

by Paler Fairley

Pictures are taken in Black---

hand-coloured

and white, and

Inter. In this way, large plates. cat be used

in the camera, instead of expensive colour film, There is the saving.

* TAGGING SEALS

:

WANTED-strong mob. Must be capable of holding still 100 ib of slimy, wriggling animal.

If you have there qualifien- «

Mar Grace Hickling, of

cach photographie plats used, tions, and a picture is taken by the Hancock Museum, New-

is the emancipation of women.quee, one can be viewed equal-

Good and bad there will al- ly well from a wide

angie ways be.

They will shortly be used as swinging the camera across ils But it seems that, in spite of "eye-catchers" in

and target, from left to right, with castle, has a job for you. It than ever, both on the all new developments, the secret travel encaux; as visual tads its shutter open for five seconds Involve, keeping a firm grip qu young grey scals us they, ove machines,

of Identical weighed dozons

Mys

com has been taken; noiliinst "No," the replied, but n inetal revolution will average, 1 should say,"

The task of bringing up girls "Are they particularly prefty?" now throws a greater responsi

hitley "No" was the answer, "not tone and on the school. particularly."

This is a challenge

There are many who say that change that. So that I found my- our girls of 18 and

self changing wisher are

the question and already fully blown roses -- and asking "What use la beluş: mude

already of this freedom?"

in some

casex

marited with deeny.

A deult subject to generalise 1. Fur we are all Influenced

by what we happen to see or read,

One faci stems certain; Eng- lisa girls are maturing earlier than they used to. Some say by at least a year, others by as much

Tough side

Most of the girls are not Lon- doners. They come mainly from times." Scotland, froland and the North of England.

Take the tough side first: Miss Margaret May is the senior

"Someliow," continued Miss probation amcer for the Chelsea Juvenile Court. A charming. May, "they find their way into understanding woman with 12 the West End and end up in a clip Joint or club. They have years' experience.

probably had sexual experience She deals with glebs under 17 before coming here, but Nobody that I talked to seem- and mostly her enses are those bave not necessarily heen pro-

In moral danger and miscuous."

as two years.

ed able to give a definite reason, in need of care and protection.

who are Some talked of better feeding, some of the greater freedom.

A danger?

But, stil, this is a fact,

She tells me there is ar in- crease in the number of girls up hefore the court-though, sa she

The screw

they

Impatient

shops

of ensuring that the rosebud ma- to instruction on

and lagged.

of the lures to a lovely rose depends un radios or engines; in dentists' imagos appear in the negative. Hickling is one ut a group of

And she too, like Mins May, ressed the importance of the home. "The value of the home is the most preclous quality," she sald, and then, "the home is the key to it all."

Dome Kitty agreed the girls were maturing earlier.

"But." she said, "the girls here

says. It is nothing like the in- nothing to do with what Miss is a tradition of becoming doc

in parenthesis because it has have a sense of purpose-there May told me I have no doubt tors, nurses or entering a pro- that there are a lot of phoney fession. And, of course, they

crease in the number of boys up- so pearing there.

that when one talks of a girl of

14 today one should compare her

find have to work. told me once. She told employment agencies who She with a girl of 16 before the war. me twice. She told me three very speelal jobs for the prettiest With a girl of to now one should times that in nearly every case and keliest girls. compare a pre-war girl of around Rer girls came from a broken

18.

home.

In no time they find them selves having a good lime. nice clothes and little later-la I naked various people who

It is not necessarily a poor deal with young girls whether home-it is more often a home debt. It is then that the screw of they thought they were being where there is no father, a home corrupilon begins to be turned. tiven too much feedom and where there is a lack of affection.

Alingether, It was a depressing whether there was danger in this these girls, who are picked up in

I asked Miss May whether picture. the clubs or off the streets by, Now let us look on the fair One answer was unanimous --- generally, policewomen, freedom has been given; free- sub-Intelligent.

freedom?"

Just Tang Thai

PASSENGERS

OSLO.

were

on morning trains into Oslo are learn- ing languages as they travel. A tutor from Oslo

side:

"I do feel that this sense of purpose is of immense help u that age."

"What do you think of the generation you are now ctitica- ing?" I asked.

"I think it is a good genera- tion," she replied. "In standards ul sheer learning they are us good as any. They are an im- patient generation. Not all with tolerance. They are Impatient to want to know.

Dame Kitty Anderson is one of the most distinguished head mis- tresses in the country and abu "They have a great sense of runs one of its most outstanding wanting to serve. And I should girls schools-the North London say they are quite idealistic. Collegiate School at Edgware which draws its 850 girls. from London, Middlesex and Hertford shire.

:

An elite

The girls, whether their par

University teaches 13 "students in one of the carents or the local authorities pay, rioger. The scheme is so successful it is to be extended to other traine.

are something of an elite.

"I admit," said Dame Kitty, "we are rather previleged. Monf

Fot:our girls tend to come from

"The girl realises she is going

to marry early. She thinks about her career and abotit giving ser- vice to the community as a mar- ried woman.

"And," she added, "I don't thlik aho has lost any of her moral standaris."

The price

Before I left abe added once

what one can roughly call the more: "Categorically, it is the professional clķos,

MELBOURNE,

"What do you think," I asked,

home."

Now

"of the increaset! freedom that is given to young girls?”

Well, those 'wero' the answich

I was Elven.

TREN thousand kangaroos, moving like an army, have eaten many boof cattle have statuet to theath,

Then, ma chote ne Alice

the home.

In this case, the price of tree. / Burgerich, la embig children wo in slightly different positions. scientists about to fx Inkels on

dom is not ciernal vigilance. It is love and understanding.

-london Express Serules),

to unite elean their teeth; and by doctors These appear

when the gents to show how for they to supplement X-ray phalu- seen through, the grid on the wande from home.

print.. graphy,

·coches.

'ho, ho,

--(London Express Service),

up battery "flat?" I'm going to dot 'him."

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