R
THIS IS AMERIC
New York, Monday
AMERICANS: THEY ARE
PHONE CRAZY
THE telephone, it seems, has become an indis- pensable part of U.S. life. It is used for gossip. for business, and for tapping. It is found in cars. gardens, bathrooms, even in junior's
playroom.
2
1
least lurer KUNSPO ANY from her American femi
ish
regard the phone as a meras Ana OXING Bols of the Weddin
And yesterday
Put plan from New
We urged
Alemda darts a know Alar PRE
Hot one huge plane of the druk
in that w
Youk Tenphora Compati plaint the
New
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plom postiels palatal.
od bored aknar
booths
Metris 60 per cent of aldat
Tren
JAN
EN
phone.
. | ,:
"Tha ing best phone bencijs
Betroll to steel Inth Robert Cranseer.
I will b "a quiet family wedding party."
Bays Ho
Conservative, estimate of the rost: £35.000.
Fleets of Cadillacs will var
parry the 1,000 gursts and right bridesmaids A night club is being taken over for the recep tion
J
The cake? 14 is Just Bft.
THE CINDERELLA of Long Island has turned out to be
three-year-old
Taas he jameel the down ndard show and the J3K scholarship that goes with t
Peter Evans
doubled ovine when we from
and on
anak
էր 2 .
nati
them
term.nal."
today
be air-curtshipped,
Wit
i
microphone to talking
Rond
loudspeaker for stebuk
1
A was the plea of Miss Cecil heget mustress & girls' ook, who found the battered ult shor
Faber dmrstep anch
ku Lip
awat Future hover bar food will pedistast
Cinders Bennett was the fifth alan 10 try on the lao-- and the Brst it Aited perfectly
We are surprised vir Cinders i'l
he gets the a girl buf scholarship just the same," said Ms Doris
JIMMY HOFFA, Teamsters (lorry drivers) Tross who
is facing
charges of fraud itle
My Manhattan barman put op "Drink a new sign last night: now and avok the Christmas
AVING been Dextremely
tival of "ftubby Amer
Kennedy has Cans, President started a daily dose of muscle building exercises in the White House Byrn.
But it is not because he feels hes getting too beefy to be a cribe Be is trying to strengthen has troubled back and get back misuse of union fonds. forgets to golt, which he has not played his cares this weekend for his sce May
daughter Barbara's wedding in
··(Londen Erpress Service)
THE CHINA MAIL, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1961.
by Anne
Sharpley
I SAIL WITH THE MIGRANTS: PART TWO
THE STORY begins in Kingston. Jamaica, as the latest group of West Indian migrants to Britain board their ship. Travelling with them: Reporter Anne Sharpley, looking
A GIRL
A
SOON LEARNS -COLOUR
DOES MATTER
WE
VE had found a space on the crowded deck (for all that we were only 600 migrants instead of the usual 900 there never seemed chairs or space enough) and were watching the flying- fish zip over a sea that was advertisement blue and as flat as the eye could make it.
Ivonne. The girl I was shar- DA
cokin my
with. Was crocheting
table-mats that have bot her only means of urome ban 19 years. "Some- bly show me how to start an'
show me the rest. she would franquilly Angers flew.
Her joblessness in the prist than was and her fault. More 20 per cent of the labour forme Juniora is permanently out of work Besides. as the taxt eldest of a fammiy of 13, there was plenty to de at home.
for the side of the immigrant story that has not been told before. Two days out... and at least one of the West Indians is learning a lesson about the colour of skin...
проте
As we sat down Ivorine was There brusquely ordered out.
she were 100 many people in
and Ivorine dining-room, loveliest. but blackest, of us all. was told to go to the main dining
"Your thought must rest in Tourist rate of £ a passage Dear-white Then the the Lord and he will guide you
faces. Then a few black faces and protect you. Remember de
were either genuine Special kind and courteous w others Tourists or just lucky. and will be loved by all. Please do not let your
Aunt frud the symplest fault with you just do what you know phrases larr best. Your mother says to tell you that you neither
who or where, you knote poing but you must put the Lord in front and you 17:2481 Aun! to šte Ti milow you? us making any complain about Plenty to stry neat time ke good knight and good-by
Оте
but not farewell, May God
less you till we meet Mother and Father
ia
tshe
room
"But she is a Special Tourist. she has more right to stay here thom me, and, furthermore, you Part her here yesterday protested.
"Om." they 1016 Ivorite. "I'm going, 17, said. "No 1440 you must stay here." ther sand She must KOL Bun wit had airely gone.
Ivanne isad certainly fohowed hey Father's advice to read her Baie on the first tugin wah, in fact, never fead it during the fortnight we shred a embung and as we lay in our inunks, close thing and
heat as baking-lins, the only
* suglely antigabed by Jan. 1 asken her which ja. of 1 she was reading
It was Numbers Abe account of the Israelites wanderings in the Sinal after their departure frat E83 p An et choice for the West Indians are leav- ing their isiand now in much
annual quantities (52,000 last year as they were
the British Preu Have ships 225 years
rooked cracken. Three eggs buried In cassava flour for pan- tection. Some rofice beans. The Some maize. And some of the medicine called "busy" that brought Ere
cure-all for molaria. high blood pressure and poisoning. 1.70
"Bissy"
of
Bumerous
Her father is a carpenter and they live 98 miles from Ring- ston, at lister Spring, Trelaw ney. Her mother's sister, Autil Puls. who bail been in Jam- don for eight years, had pand fret passage and also sent he the yellow dress and coat she lead was Th her day as wel Cas Tow the long wooth & sacies stu
werd g
HOW. So proudit stespite the great bat
wan
"Ooly Bat it as very cold, vers pretty and nice," she said an iner sweet singsong.
IS
Ot
examples of African words retained in Jamaica Talk it the same as the West African Twi word "bise" and in fact the cola plant which was brought to Jamaica in the alave ships. "When I'se poison- ed, it clean about," Ivorine.
'The Good Lord'
مهد کود
said
slowed me her father's
her per print in It began.
istler MASSIVE
Take und gave
10
an
For vorine there Was con-
in this ac fort and guidance
ont of another people's up- rooting wod leaving then place wavey
The privileged
Fanch was called and.
shown been
we
ww {inte
The 34. before.
went along
The kitchen corridor, skirting the
dining-room. main
-the 147 Speri. Tourist Dining Room
damages cooler,
separate
b. the huge, crowded dining-
Joon
WE WELC served a meal whose mak course was tally astounding 11 consisted of one smal silee of corned beef, still frozen hard.
One sardane A large mound of badly steamed C A large mound of even worse steamed pulators. Bean
first course. Rice and potatoes inevitable vegetables. We were to learn, although the ment would speak in a grand way of other vegetables, which We seldom gol.
Irörine in her
"Go-a-town
hat and
yellow coat
ond dress sent to her
from England
by her aunt.
el she was eating her father's Rift of 2 chicken
They tell me to go in the
big dining-room.”
Did you show
"Yes,"
them your
When I returned to our cabin Nine was pressing pale powder beket?" < to her clearly carved face and duly skewering two un-
For Teorine it was the first blushing safely pus in an even.
balears
tome she had encountered dis- deerdded was She showing too much shoulder. tination because of her
elon. "Where were you?" 】 asked. -London Express ·Service).
or cabbage soup were the usual TOMORROW: Stowaways, saints and sinners
the
Red wine-free
(Aaat: "Salade Mimose" and "Sulude Caprice" frequently there on the menu. What were
like"
When we you salad-seidom--11
shredded cabbage with
of inmate.>
2
EFX
PICASSOLATRY
If, like the Emperor PICASSO is 80.
Vespasian, he thinks he is becoming a
did get god, one can scarcely blame him for his was simply presumption. For years now the faithful. int have been insisting that he is not just an artist of genius but a being of messianic omnipotence, all-seeing, all-knowing, a mixture of Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci and Father Divine.
The Chard course was always
different colours.
an e-cream-sane Bavour, but
the menu nearly always named
mythologica! "top"
ה
never appearori,
whirl:
fables and waiter service Where were you?'
though the food was the same).
"None listen Neusie" fluer The kitchen corridor afforded
US
What do you know
about lath's
fur her maily te
whappetising glimpses England! asked Ivonne.
"None RFFEL! በሞያ have goM/ Fo into the kitchens where grub- Experience Soine new Thought. bily tired chefs waved stup sonur new places and some new Jules at
cheery greet- and different kind
way you i
and the sineils were U must act the way the Good Lord of Heaven who has help nd you to land on the shores n England, would wish pour youthful days yanı
Sne would like to be a nurse, she explained
Her father had brought the ship a touching patrimony A Bible
A Teller of advice A
tops up-to-date automatics
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0 0
0
8
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8
8
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Ө
8
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the evening there would br cake which was sometimes good. in fairness 1 ought to say that sometimes this dual diel
I
Th Sure however, that Pleasso himself, while welcoining the golden offerings heaped be- tore his shrine, must regard the incense and mumbu-jumbo as an enormous joke.
" eulivened by chicken was unattractive that one little girl
Wine
was
Unlike the vast majority
AFF
the pious
cherished any old splinter from
I the pelvis of St James of Com-
of 14 who shurreri ne table re- beef, that the bread was al-his devotees, who cherish his Jused ever to
In table ways good, and reasonable red meanest scribbles us Come again and
free her mother had to
served
wit: Jake her food to the rubin. every meal, although West In gut such a fow appertunatey
dians seldom touch
wire. and an uppealing to you for
Here in the Special Tourist noticed. Tha! evening I was good and best behaviour and Dining Room 30 or so privileged asked to return to the Special Pestella, Picasso has a sense öbedience to all. You must not people ale. Fist, all the white Tourist Dining
Room and Jeane mut reading yout Bible fue were automatically put said I would, provided Ivorine each day in sahich you will find there irrespective of whether was allowed too. As she did much virtue in your travelling. They were paying the Spreiot me appear for dinner I assuin-
Je's an simple as pushing a single button on the
control panel if you photograph with the Agfa Optima III. This great 35, com camera is the most valuable of the Optima series. Forget about tricky calculations and just look for the green signal in the viewfinder when you push the "Maglo Koy" --
nother outstanding bot will be yours. your-photo-shop and ask for this high-quality camera or the loss expensive Optime I.
Sec
AGFA OPTIMA III
Sola Adam: JEBSEN COMPAN
For automatic fainoraphy It's Agfa
THE CROWN
Адра
e
Cummings
humour.
い
باشی
insulated from
He is also much of their ing because, mercifully for him, he is unable to read English. And it is in that language. Ur romething like it, that most Ave
Picassos are couched.
A HOMAGE
I have before me a majestic birthday homage*: costing £ï 7 and published by the Prime Minister (well, almost).
David Douglas Duncan,
Just as
well
he's
got a sense
of humour
This teden psom para remakes
This Inoks even more préten- tious in the text than does here, since Duncan spaces it out In lines of three or four words, as if it was vera bre Oc- castonally he even lapses Inte blank verse.
MADDENING
One of Picasso's models is described as "lost in a land where each day seemed-the (Compare Keats Lost
brillant photographer and a same." personal friend
of Picasso
imagine the language-barrier in a sort of Purgatory blind.") helped), has been fortunate But even more enough to obtain permissION
maddening from, to photograph all the ple- traie, grovelling Picassolatry.
the
be calls then Duncan's style is his pro-
tures which have hitherto lain hidden in..
What he implies is that heights the villa of La Califorble near Cannes. (These quile sufficient for the greatest are by no means all Picasso 19th-century French painter Picassos. There are plenty of Maestro. Why, he doesn't Even others in the artist's chateau of bother to spell Cezanne's name Vauvenargues and, I believe, in correctly, with an acute accent bank vaults).
over the "e."
Much of this heard, described by Duncan as "a bonanza, of art shrouded in mystery," is com- pletely unknown except to 2 few of the artist's Intimates.
Now at last the public can enjoy them in Duncan's impet cable photographs, 102 in full colour, and over 500 in black and white.
Alas,
VITALITY
...It Duncan's photagraphs endorsed this point, of view, his prose might be pardonable. But there is nothing among all these marvellous reproductions to sug- gest that Picasso is an artist on the same level as Cezanne?"
Ath's This book, as Belloc said
Yes, yes, I know that. Pleasgo" of Piccadilly Circus, provides an altogether different type noble spectacle for anyone who of artist, more varied, mora cannot read. For Duncan has inventive, and capable of ex- added a text as rhapsodicas pressing ideas and emotions. the Song of Songs and as cn which could never be contained barrassing 858 circular from in the classical idea of Moral Hearmament
· stil-ule and, portrait. The. "Who is this mast, he asks, witty, tragic, lyrical, nightmarigh, in this book are. N "who moved deep into the bills tender, ironic, etc., etc. Their of Cezanne, among the rolling variety and vitality dazzle. hills feeding the heights.nf
Mount Sainte-Victoire: within, But how could anyone but all! time-embattled walls of a for- incense-blinded sidenan claim fress-chateau called Vauvenar for them, the Olympian Tan ZUCE
deur of the Mont Sainte-Victoro
In the Courtauld collection Stor
"But then even as the ele ments emblazoned. the heavens the Card Players sidlen not Jönig vi with their welcome, his eyes ago from an exhibition of Ales already were seeking new horl en-Provence? poin zone, far beyond rainbow or the mere heights of Sainte- Victoire.!
SANCTUARY
Douglas Dufkami
London Ripiroir Eervice.
David
Garritt
+