1955-05-11 — Page 3

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

"THE CHINA - MAIL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, TON

ARMS AID PAYS OFF

82-YEAR-OLD

STUDENT

Mlami, May 19.

Mr Bert Schnurer, tired of retirement at 82, is studying for the bar at the University of Main! Law School, where he hopes to graduate next year.

He was formerly a cloth- ing manufacturer-China Mail Special

Macmillan

America Urged

To Continue

Assistance

Washington, May 10.

The Assistant Defence Secretary, Mr H. Struve Hensel, said today that if United States military aid spending prevents only one local war like the Korean conflict, "the

Opens Tory money cost is well worthwhile."

TV Election

!!

Campaign

London, May 10.

THE Foreign Secretary, Mr

THE

the

However, he warned the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the nation must continue to "spend large sums of money" for a "substantial period" to nail down the benefits of collective security with free world allies.

pence and thwart

"These defence alliance ex-

Mr Hensel said that the United 1 preserve Harold Macmillan, left here States has spent about $11,000,- aggression," he said. by air for Paris tonight after | 000,000 for military aid to nijes making Party's first televised general election speech. The elections are to be held on May 26.

Conservative in the last five and a half years.penditures are obviously cheaper

In his speech, Mr Macmillan expressed his satisfaction that the Soviet Union had accepted the Austrian treaty, which they the Russians) stone- walled for years." The treaty. is to be signed in Vienna, next Sunday. >>

We

Speaking on the projected Biz Four talks, Mr. Macmillan said:

Conservatives were always in favour negotiating with the USSR

of

THAT MUCH STRONGER

"Those allies are that much stronger than they would have been without our programme and that much more able

Sex Change Operations

to

We are in favour of negotiat. On Children

ing through strength. Now

we have the strength.

NEW INITIATIVE

Mr Macmillan said the

Big

Three made a new initiative for peace" when they patched a joint note to the today, calling Soviet Union for Big Four talks.

Mr Macmillan Said Britain had made much progress at home under the Conservative Government and added: "We must have pence and security."

Speaking of West Germany's entry yesterday into the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, Mr Macmillan said "France and Germany have shaken hands after ages of · bitter feud."--France-Presse.

than war," Mr Hensel said. "If they can prevent war-and that is the purpose of our programme the money cost of the ounce of prevention is well worth- while."

The Committee is considering President Eisenhower's $3,530,- 000,000 foreign aid request. The total iicludes about $1,700,000,000 for military ald.

CLOSED SESSION

Mr. Hensel testified in closed session but the Chairman, Mr Walter F. George, made publie

his prepared statement.

Mr Hensel, who heads

Helsinki, May 10. military aid programme, said Sex change operations that United States aid to the allies has "obviously stimulated have been performed on 12 greater efforts on their part Finnish children in the last than otherwise could reasonably

experted." eight years, it was stated have here today.

The statement was made at the annual conference of the Duodecim Medical Association by Professor Matt Sulaman and Dx Hilkka Tachkac. Most of these

operations were on "children born with slight malformations and were merely plastic surgery cases,

MIXED SEX

a true

The other cases were of mixed sex, though always with The one sex predominating. specialists declared that there was no such thing as Hermaphrodite.

Prod essor Sulamaa stressed the importance of early treat- ment. The first operation can be carried out when the child is one or two years old, he said. If necessary, a. second operation Three

brothers, all Jesuit may be done at school age, so as priests, took part in the cere to avoid unnecessary social dis- may-China Mail Special tress later.-France-Presse.

Madrid, May 10. Don Jose Maria Sauras, aged 78, has been ordained a priest here.

A British Crossword Puzzle

120 121

18

23.

127

ACROSS

1 Parent (8).

5 Put up (5).

8 Allude (5).

8 Equine galt (6)..

* 10 Omaments, (5),

18

10

11 Rain-show mixture (5)),

13 Land measure (4).

13 Cook (5).

16 Abandon (6).

18 Tormented playfully

20 Severe (5).

32 Tackle (4):

28 Monsters (5).

25 Steer (5)

28 Conundrum (6)

28 Chase

29 Muile

22

124

· DOWN

1 Goes abroad (8).

2 Endure (8).

3 London statue (4).

4 Answers (7).

6.Prised up (7).

8 Speaker (6).

7 Surmise (8),

14 Waited on (8).

15

Number

(8)

18 Perlis (7).

17 Cut of (7).

19 Wears away (6).

21 Digit (5)

24 Flink (4).

KESTERDAY'S CROSSWOE D.-Across: 3 Evil, 7 Feet 8 Arab, 9 Brig, 10 Praise, 13 og 15 Dizes, 18 Sent 19 Prods," 11 Trade Diet 23 Weird, 26 Meet 29 Average, 30 Rare, $1 Viza, 22 Praim, 23 Past Dowa: 1 Alert, 3 Decided, 4 Verse, † Lag, Dado Bend L1 Show 13 Loot 14 Cash 18 Spize, 17 Stem, 18 Safe, 20 Baets, 23 Dive, 24 Earls, 15 Aglio, 29 Belt, 28. Trap,

the

For example, be said united States has spent $7,800,- 000,000 on the

North Atlantle Treaty Organisation, while other NATO nallons have spent $42,- 000,000,000 in building up their owa forces......

"It would seem that we have. made" a good investment in collective security," Mr Hensel

saich

"Mr Hensel said that the Korean conflict he called it a small war"-cost the United States an estimated $18,000, 000,000, not counting pay for troops-United Press.

Premiers Nasser And Nehru At Rangoon

D-Day Spearhead Will Meet

At Harwell.

London, May 10.

A group of British war veterans will gather at England's atomic research centre on May 14 to mark the time when they made history by leading the invasion of France.

The veterans, representing units of the Royal Air Force and the parachute and glider pilot regi- ments, will remember the days when Harwell, site of Britain's atomic research, was a base for World War II squadrons.

FAMILY DOCTOR'S

#

It was on the night of June 5, 1944, that planes roared off the Runways, carrying the Sixth Air- borne Division to the Normably beachheads, Men who bad waited for months and years for the invasion of Europe sat in those planes, wondering what ..............kawaited them on the other side

NEW ROLE

A.

the Channel, where Hitler's

Premier Gamat Nasser, af Egypt (left) and Premier Jawaharlal Nehru of India second from right), follow the old adage of "When you are in Hom

and enjoy Burma's traditiona "Water Festival as Burmans do- when they were in Kangoon to the Afro-Aslan Conference as Bandung. The hoot, Premier B Na, of Burua, is shown between the two distinguished guests, who were clad in Burma's tradi- tional attire. On the extrezne Helt is Major Salah Salem. sypian Minister of National Guidance, who

cu routa

WLE

50.00

the Erptian delegates to the

Bandung meeting. Premier

Premier

the celebanic d'emer Nehru

festival of Burma-Express

Photo.

REFUGEE PROBLEMS

IN CHINA

Geneva, May 10. European refugees in China

New York, May 10. British psychiatrist guns and divisions kept ominous face the problem of rarely being

said today that eventually the task of treating mentally ill patients will be the family doctor.

one of a

Dr Thomas P. Rees, Physician Superintendent of the Waring- ham Park Hospital at Croydon, near London, was group of experts who reported on the latest techniques in the battle against mental illness in a closed Circuit report to the American medical profession.

SINKER HIT De Ress said that his hospital,

watch.

UNVEIL PLAQUE

And so, almost 11 days after D-Day, a little froup of that invasion force will gather to niveli a plaque,

able to get at the same time permission to leave and permis- sion to settle somewhere else. the Executive Committee of the United Nations Refugee Fund was told here today

Page I

BATTLE OF THE BARS?

Sydney Pig Swill'

Still On

Sydney, May 10.

The "battle of the bars" is still fought each day in Sydney in spite of the extension of hotel trading hours to 10 p.m.

So far, ten o'clock closing has done nothing to alleviate the furious late afternoon "pig-swill" drinking, which used to be blamed on six o'clock closing.

Sydney drinkers still crowd into the city "pube” at five and drink

as purposefully as they did when

""""time" was' called 6 PLEX

After almost 40 years of @p closing, a majority of voters in a referenckim last year favoured the extended hours, and on February 1 the State Government introduced the change.

On the first night of ten o'clock closing, crowds gathered In the city to celebrate the new "freedom -and some hotel koppers served drinks "on the house." But the novelty of the new hou so wore off and few hotelkeepers made to Et- tempt to attract late customers,

LI

108

FOLLOW SUTT Hotelkeepers who have oat to attract late drinkers, belleyn that other members of the trade will follow suit when they hear about the profits that can be made.

E. Germany Wants To

Attend

A-Conference

Berlin, May 10. The East German De- mocratic Republic today re- quested an invitation from the United Nations to take part in the international conference for the peaceful use of atomic energy due to take part in Geneva in August next.

The comparatively few hotels which have provided special amenities, such as new lounges, beer gardens, music, and live

The request was contained in entertainment, are all in the suburbs. In the clty, there is letter from Mr George probably not one hotel which is Harike, Secretary of State to making a good regular profit at the East German Foreign Mini- the evening trade.

stry, addressed to Mr Dag Ham-

At 6.30 pm when the hotelsmarskjoeld, Secretary-General close for a 6.30 to 7.30 break, of the United Nations, the For- drinketa “Janave as reluctantly eign Ministry announced official-, they used to do at 6 p.m. but few|ly tonight. return after their evening meal.

Unually, there are no more Mr.Hanika asked the Secre- than six people in any city bar|tary-General to send the East after 7.30 p.m.

German GoVERAČNÉ & formal The bars look gloomy and in |Invitation and the conference | many the licenceos switch off documents...

most of the, lights.

The public certainty approve Fast Germany was working of the later hours. A recent sur-, sucessfully towards solving the

showed

that 30.6 per cent problem of the peaceful use of were pleased with ten o'clock atomic energy, said Mr Hanlike closing 212 per cent were not in his letter.

pleased and 282

282 per cent hand De opinion. More than half (59.2 per cent) of the male dzintars and 24 per cent of the female drinkers said that they had taken

advantage of the later closing.

FAMILY DRINKING -

and

SOVIET

ASSISTANCE

Thanks to large scale scientific assistance of the Soviet Govern ment, East Germany was ready to carry out full scale research In the use of atomic energy in medicine, biology and other scientific and technical fields.

the

One of the most signi. ficant results of the new liw has been the emergence of Dr Elan Rees, European re-

He added that his country

· family drinking” Husbands presentative of the Commission

wives are was ready to participate actively going together to have a drink in the development of inter at suburban hotels after evening national co-operation, in the meal. But they go only to the interests of progress in hotels which have attempted to peaceful use of such energy. cater for this type of drinking,

I was ready to send to the Bars will have to be made much Geneva conference a delegation more attractive if they are to of eminent scientists." become generally acceptable to

German physics Nobel prize women patrons.

Most hotelkeepers, waiting to winner, Gustav Hertz, has for see what happened, deliberately some time been concentrating in

East Germany on the uses refrained from making costly. alterations to their premises atomic energy, in collaboration several other German before the introduction of the with

scientists, repatriated from the new laws,

Now, the public has shown Soviet Union, where they had been transferred, after the wr. unmistakably, that it will give

-France-Presat. the its evering patronage to

offers the most hotel which congenial and attractive ́ ́ con-

Today the yast establishment of the Churches on International at Harwell is busily engaged in Affairs, explained that the ferreling out the secrets of the World Council of Churches and atom, tat strange symbol of Litheran World Federation held destruction and peaceful pro-resettlement visas for 3,308 of gress.

These refugees who could not get permission to leave. The roar of propellers. no which houses some 1,000 longer shatters the air at Har- The Council and Federation patients having all types well, as it did during World War had in their Hongkong registers mental illness, has Do locked

The planes are gone, and 10,235 more who could not get wands or rooms. The patients the men who few them those resettlement visas, Dr Rees

who are still alive are older added. Reuter. and greyer than when they "I believe that the future of

Sir psychiatry lies not in the mental East London, May 10. hospital but outside the mental Leslie Hollinghurst, who sat in Little East London girl,hospital and that our first task the first plane off the ground on Elaine

progressing should be to educate the general the night before D-Day wher Korte, is

Airborne Division favourably after an operation practitioner to become a better the Sixth

GIRL IN

FACE

an inch from her spine.

Eleven-year-old Elaine was playing by herself when the

are allowed to come and go as they please.

hope,

NOT IN HOSPITALS -

piloted their craft over Europe.

Alr Chief Marshal

to remove a four-ounce lead psychiatrist and, eventually, I took to the air, will be on hand sinker which smashed through her face and lodged a third of Re Put us all out of a job," Dr for the ceremony,

So will General Sir Richard He spoke on a closed circuit Gale, .Commanderiin-Chief of television clinle to doctors in 34 the British Army of the Rhine. cities,

In 1944, he led his Sixth Air- The programme was sponsor-borne Division in its midnight Kline and French laboratories in Fhiladelphia in co-operation with the American Medical As sociation, local medical societies and the American Psychiatric Association which is holding its annual meeting in Atlantic City this week-United Press.

accident happened. Nearby two ed and produced by Smith sight to shine off the field at |

men

were practising casting with their Ashing rods.

She was immediately rushed to hospital where a large wound beneath her left eye was sewn up.

Two days later the child was taken back to the hospital for a further check and an X-ray showed a sinker lodged just above the top of her spinal column

sinker, which The weighed four ounces and had a short length of string attached to it, was removed in a 45- minute operationChina Mail Special

MATTER OF

NAMES

Nautilus

The first Harwell 11 years azo W38 clocked out at 2308 hours with Sir Leslie aboard.

Plastic

Surgery Forions.

Hiroshima

Victims

next few

In the

months, therefore, Tiny hotelkeepers can be expected to improve their properties to meet the new com petitive conditions. This will become more urgent, particularly for city hotels, as the people become more, used to the later hours and change their habits of spread them from afternoon tu evening drinking,

lat

Jap Film Applauded At Cannes

New York, May 10... Twenty-five women vic- Five Albemarles carrying the

Independent Parachute tims of the atomic bombing

Sydney drinkers may have a 22nd

· Cannes, May 10. to learn about civilised Company followed, then the rest of Hiroshima will leave here

Japan made up strongly for of the Sixth-264 planes and 98 tomorrow for two weeks' drinking habits, But they have lost ground in the Cannes Ine gliders.

The

planes dropped 4,310 rest at a Pennsylvania at least not borne out the pternational Alm competition to

dictions of the prohibitionists day with the presentation of troops

by parachute, Landed Quaker village before that later closing would lead to her final picture of the festival another 483 by glider, supplied turning here for plasticsur- riotous revelly, the men with guris, Jeeps, motor- cycles and other supplies, then gery operations.

Shakedown went back for more

Cruise

Washington, May 10. The atomic powered sub-

Nautilus, railed, from

New London, Connecticut, to

SECOND WAVE

One June 6, RAF Groups 36 and 18 picked up another 250 gliders from Harwell with reinforcements and supplies to fill the gaps on the beachhead,

The women their faces scarred by burns from the bombing, arrived here. yesterday from Japan

NO INCREASE Neither drunkenness nor crijne has increased The only people who have suffered from the new law are

"Senhime"

Sopi (Pslicess which was hailed with en- thusiastic applause by an audience of film celebrities, critics and journalists.

Previous to today's presenta

virtually Japán had been

Oficials at Mount Sinai some nightclub owner. Their fish out of any chance for Te

Hospital, said that the opera tions would begin about May 26 and that two women would be day for a six-week "shake-

The men who gather at the operated on at a time "so that

would become lonely." end of the runway at Harwell none would be down" cruise in the Atlantic..

Admiral Robert Caraval General Gale unveils the plaque

rsey will remember all that when Dr Arthur Barsky noted New Chief of United States Operations, was on board and Then they will leave Harwell York plastic surgeon, and Dr will sail as a passenger for 24 to its memories of the past war William Hitzig, both of whom hours. The exact route of the and its hopes that the old air- visited the women at Hiroshimas, not disclosed field's new job will mean peace will perform the operations, the The Civil Air Transport an, voyage" was

in the future-United Press Hospital said.Reuter. nounced today that all aircraft Reuter. operated by the Company were owned by Chinese Juristic per- som? and there was no con nection with Civil Afr Trans- port Incorporated, ma

Taipei, May 10.

The CAT Public Relations „Office said that & Press report -from--Hongkong-weerton

that CAT-owned saying plazes were flown by

Chull Air Transport

The apparent due to the Hundlarity in the Chinese translation of the pot. mány names 1-today's nEDOUNDO. ment mid,United Press, S

T

BINH XUYÊN

Salcon, May 197 FIETNAMESE ́aliedra, mid

today that the Bish Kayen

dations recent street fighting in Sai- ron still had six ersek bat taliana poised si Bucs Sat, 29

with their powertal Hos. Und - sect allies, the insurgent "azmay has 25.000 battle-trained men

LOST TWO BATTALIONS

owned

by the Binh Xuyen will be

fancy prices. No one main attraction was liquo those prices any longer - China Mall Special.

284 Aims, Chikamatsu Maingatari (A cognition as Japan's fast two Legend of Chicagen) and Omma No Koyomi" "{liomen's Calendar) received a cool recup- tion

Disarmament Conference

An inchient caused by remarks about France attributed to pro- ducer Masaichi Nazatabad clouded Japan's position at the Lasion, May 10, Festival but was later embolized The Ave-nation disarmament over. conference now in its third

month held a further fecret 25 Ond well known American meeting, here today and will film star sold after the per- meet again on Thursday, it was formance: "There aris just onÓ officially announced, today a word for Senfime, wonderful.”

Mr Antony Nutting, British Minister of State at the Fores

was too early however to could Office, presided over today's say whether Japan

duplicate her feat of last year

serious threat to Saigon, they | About: “100 and trucks, Smaid, this

speedboats and river barges owned. by zumbers of the The insurgents are baskly rein-

Which forcing reports:salā.

ontrolled the Palicom All the seized; premis

cized and will be sold The four Western representa in winning the Cannes Fert mid that Binh Xmentives held separate private riament buildings will be meeting this morning besore to

seated to house persons day's full session with? Eatada hose homes were destroyed of the United Nations Disarma

recent #ighting United ment Commission's

commitice-Reuter

They buck Nouver

the Bat-

Grand

D

Senkime should, in the

of most observent hard, wom

at least one of the prizes

handed our tour

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