Page
THE CHINA MAIL, TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1955.
Pago S
GERMAN REUNIFICATION Tents Star Turncoats Will
TAILOR MADE RIFLE
Melbourne, July 25,
National serviceman Pri- vale John Mansell is no alt-4f #lus-that he couk na drill effectively with the normal .303 rifle a the Army cut a bit off The barrel,
Mansell, friend in camp In private John Child who Bft 4ins. tall,--China. Mall Sprefal,
Red Plane Production Under-rated
SAYS SENATOR
Western Powers Lived Up To Their Promises
FOUGHT HARD FOR UNITY
Bonn, July, 25.
The Geneva conference has proved disappointing to those West Germans who expected progress on German unity but the Western Allies are generally thought to have fought their hardest to obtain it.
The concensus of political and press opinion here is that the Allies redeemed their promises given in the Paris treaties to bend their best efforts to end the partition of Germany, After the Berlin conference of 1954 many responsible Ger-
mans, particularly among the Social Democratic opposition,
claimed the West had not thoroughly investigated all possibili ties. After Geneva it is now generally conceded that they did.
The independent Die Welt of conference but regretted Soviet October conference un inter- Washington, July 25.
for a united Senator Clinton 1. Ander-Hamburg, one of the country's refusal to consider the problem national status
most important newspapers, saldripo für raklion at the pre- Ge.many which would meet the son thinks that America is the Western powers had fought sent moment.
approval of all four powers. lagging in aircraft produc-for Germon unity at the risk of The main achlevemiers e DI
calied They also
On the the cunferenes are seca u Bonn Chancellor "to take every con- tion heenuse United States the collapse of the conference,
10 be: military experts have "con-
ceivable step to nonnalise as far between 1. The danger of war has
as possible relations ev.dently
Soviet the population receded for into the
of the background.
zone and of the Federal Re- public" in the interest of the
solution quickest possible the unity problem.
sistently
under-estimated"
Russion production capaci- tics.
آروم
Sen. Anderson, Chairman the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee, said yester- day that he feels last week's De- felice Department announcement Statex of a set-up in United plane production "comes be- latedly.
Russia now
CONGRATULATED ·
The Social Democratie statement opposition in
insuca today congratulated the four heads of stale on agreeing to treat the ques- tions of German unity and European
La Recurlly whole "in contrast to the Berlia foreign ministers' Conference,"
Newspapers
40
11
politicians has the heavy aircraft needed to deliver hydro-whole praise the way the Westten powers conducted the
gon bontby anywhere in the world, Sen, Anderson said. He also said he believes the Soviets have the potential to out-pro- duce America in intercontinental bombers.
Sen. Anderson said the Rus- sians already are "up with us"
the production of heavy bombers and "ahead of us" in jet fighters. Only in the medium jet bomber field, he said, his the United States maintained its lead-United Press.
ROCK BLASTED
TO SAVE NIAGARA FALLS
Niagara Falls, July 25. A 1,000-ton rock overhanging Luna Island was blasted into the gorge today as engineers gave Niagara Falls in 30 minutes # "face Urting that nature has Seen working on for centuries.
Three
dynamite separate blasts, the beginning of a series designed preserve the beauty of the Fails, knocked off the In all, nn scolion of the rock. estimated 15,856 cubic yards of rock overhanging Lama island and the Bridal Veil Falls will be removed.
as a
dis-
SAIGON RIOTS
2. The discussion of Ger- man unity, though not promle
Ing yet, in still under way and will be resumed by the forelga ministers in Otober.
3. The unity and tensely of the West at Gencyn
was gratifying for Germany.
ADENAUER'S VISIT
Inevitably public Interest In Germany will concentrate in the next few weeks more and more on Dr Adenauer's prospective visit to Moscow.
of
his
The Government lists a fur-
Asked about the trip at ther achlevement -- that jhe
conference press
at Mucrren Soviet Union has now evidently come to accept the Atlantic Pact today Dr Adenauer said it should and West German membership
be regarded independently from of it as accomplished facts.
the Geneva conference. But to The Social Democrats, how the pain whether the Soviet ever, claimed that the conference Union had left anything open for direct Soviet-German discussions "If one does not he answered:
d'oeuvres hor
ono ke deverthrices waits to see what the roast is like."
General Vo showed the correctness of their
Protests
Loudon, July 26. General Vo
Nguyen Clap, Commander-in-Chiet
the North Vietnam Army, hus pro- tented against the treatment of members of the Indo-Chinn Truce Control Commission In last week's Saigon riots in
eller 16 the Commission quoted by the Communist New China News Agency today.
argument that German unity could be achieved only if the polley of incorporating West Germany in the Atlantic Pact was hulled it once. They all IT their statement that there was a danger that the unity question would be subordinated to the question of European security. This development was a direct result of Dr Adenauer's rearmament policy.
Dow
They called on Dr Adenauer
Most editorial opinion, how- ever, takes the view that miracles are unlikely In Mosow and that whatever the results may be it will take many months, if not years, for them to resolve into a concrete plan leading up to re-
unleations of divided Germany,
to devise in preparation for the| China Mail Special.
EISENHOWER'S PROBLEM
by members of
Married
Six . Tinus, tall Italian tennis star Orlanda Sirota has Eng- married at the Caxton Hall in London a 21-year-old Hsh girl Corise Ann Plllips. The couple met only three weeks prior to their marriage, and he proposed within four- teen days. Picture shows; the groom carrying the bride from the Registry Office after the ceremony.-Express Photo.
Freighter Blamed For Collision
5 KILLED ON YACHT
Washington, July 25.
freighter the chief blame for a collision with an The Coast Guard today placed on a Swedish
American pleasure yacht near Point Arguello, California, last April. All five persons aboard the yacht died in the collision.
A Coast Guard investigating Board found that doreements. Washington, July 25.
the officer on watch aboard the Swedish ship President [2
Eisenhower today Congress of the President's pro- Parramatta had "incorrectly evaluated the situa-
posal for an by faced up to the crucial problem
of making friends of Soviet tary information and aerial between leaders without losing friends in photographic facilities
the United Slates Congress.
Soviet Union.
The letter "especially pro- tested against the manhandling of some members of the inter- tional Supervisory and Con- trol Commission in. Vietnam the July 20 riot engineered
Diem elique I the Ngo Dinh Sulgon," the letter sald, ac- cording to the Agency quoting the Vietnam news agency.
wcrc
national
exchange of mill- tion" when he sighted the lights of the yacht Suomi.
•
and
DESPITE PRESSURE
Despite pressure from many of their Republican colleagues and the embar rassing example set by enthusiastic Democrats several rightwing Republi- cans including Senator Knowland maintained an ostentatious silence through out the Geneva conference.
the
The Board said the Parra- mandant, look exception to the matta's "fallure to keep a proper lookout contributed directly and materially to the collision."
Be Arrested
ALLEGED MISCONDUCT
Washington, July 25.
Three American soldiers who willingly stayed in Communist China after the Korean armistice but recently decided to return home will be arrested as soon as their ship reaches San Francisco, De- fence Department officials said here tonight..
Court Actress Sues For
Tho three men, Wiliam Cowart, Lewis Briggs and Otho Bell, wit later ince n martial on charge including thora of aiding the enemy and misconduct as prisoners of war, Omcials sald officers, who would ко оп board the liner President Cleveland
TTYnke
the arrests, would clress that their action had nothing to do
with the fnet that the three originally refused repatriation,
Under the terms of the Korean truce they cannot be prosecuted for choosing to go or to stay in in country other than their own,
A form
formal announcement of the Army's plans to deal with the three men will be mude later this week, officials sakl Reuter.
Nutting Rejects Anti-Nuclear
Proposal
London, July 25.
$2,500,000
LIZABETH, SCOTT.
Hollywood, July 25. Actress Lizabeth Scolt sua Confidential Magazine for $2,- 500,000 today, charging that an article in it had ridiculed. defamed her.
and
It was the third suit in re- cent months against the New The Minister of State, Mr York publication. Anthony Nutting, rejected in
Miss Scott said the story Im- in-
the House of Commons, to-plied she was "prone to day a proposal made by two decent, Illegal and highly offen- Labour ex-ministers aimed sive nets
private nnd
In her
it suspending the projected public life"-Unites Press. British nuclear test explo- sion.
t
The ex-ministers, Mr Philip Noel-Baker And Mr Arthur Henderson, asked that the lest be suspended for one year pend- ing an international investiga- tion into the dangers of radiu- active. fallout from nuclear tesis. Mr Nutting maintained the oficial British poins of view that such tests should be suspended solely within the framework of an international agreement,
Britain's top, alomte scientist
radioactive fallout is very low Soviet
during nuclear tests. Sir John Cockroft has said that
Mr Nutting said the Union has proposed that nuclear
tests should be suspended within
the framework of an overall- disarmament agreement.
France-Presse,
PERONIST RESIGNS
intter finding of the Board. He said there was "no evidence in
Buenos Aires, July 25. the record to sustain" that And- ing since the
Rear Admiral Alberto yucht sanic Im-
Vice-President of collision eire,
The Board recommended that mediately after the the Coast Guard propose to the without any trace of having next invicurationál conference been under sall.-United Press. that care bo taken to ensure *proper lookouts" en) vessels of the class of the Parramattu, a 4,950-tom ship owned by the Trans-Atlantic Shipping Com- pany of Sweden.
At a White House briefing on The letter declared the riots last weeic's Big Four conterence the President Eisenhower appears to violation of
General have been as successful in dis- rock removal became Geneva agreement." The
proposed to the necessary when engineers
Inter- pelling the distrust of some covered last summer that Luna
Commission that
about rightwing Republicans island was dangerously undercut
should continue to taire thenny dealings with Communists and faults and fissures in the necessary measures for "the as he was in dispelling the dis-
observance and implementation trust of the rock indiented it might collapse
Soviet leaders in <if the portion of Prospect Point
Geneva agreement."
Geneve itself. did last July 28.--United. Press. Reuter.
One of the most suspicious of these Republicans, Senator WII- Bam Knowland, the minority leader in the Senate, spoke with
They made it clear that they unusual enthusiasm of the brief- thought they should have been ing give
given by the President. Ob-
Ob consulted
Haury Melors of San Frun- about the, disarmam mindful viously
of the secret ment proposal before the Pre- agreements made by President Roosevelt with
Stalin deni loft for Genova. Marshal
refused to join in the chorus at
A British Crossword Puzzle
D
12
24
114
ACROBH
1 Frank (0)
7 Spoken (4)
D Active (5)
10 Lost (5)
11 Block abundantly (4)
19 Calamitouts (10)
10 Gem (4)
22
Trequisition. (18) (4)
25 Publish (5)
26 Conceal (4).
24 Bishop's cap (5)
18
4
5
13
10
20
2 Wrong (5)
3 Garb (5)
DOWN
4 Puts off (8)
6 Muddied (6)
6 Summon (4)
8 Elevate (5)
18 Outcast (5)
18
(8)
14 Parcelld out (8)
17 Pungent (8)
18 Drives (0)
20
Ingenuous (5) Telayod (5) 27, Swit, (0)
Leave out (4))}. YESTERDAY'S CROSSWORD1 - Across: Fasted, 4 Gorms, 17" Allsop, 40 Spurn, 10 Tlar 12. Departs, 15. Canoe, 16 Test, 17- Real; 19 Sprig, 20, 2aduros, 21; Cita 123- Ambit, 24 Servom, 15 Bhigi 20 Cratera Downs 17-acture 3.6llendod, 3. Ever, 5. hero. alle, d. Morita, D'Keepy, 11 Beluang, 12 Dased, 13. Regiment, 14
TiO
ÓWNER.. KILLED
Suomi, # 50-foot yacht, was owned by Mr
cleco who was killed in the
Dollision. They
et Yalta, the cautious Republican priso through which other Tho Board leader told correspondents of the President's assurance that "no secret agreements of any type! or character directly or indirect-hower's hand at Geneva. ly had been entered into 211
Geneva.
ACHIEVEMENT
a
It President Elsenbower succeed in this objective of making a peace for the world without arousing political
at home it would be a major and prob- ably unprecedented achieve- ment for a United States President,
wor
the
U19
also said members of Congress sought to operator of the Suomi "shouki
President strengthen
such action Eisen-have taken
necessary to avold immediate danger when it became evident i that collision could not be This led a group of pro-avurled” with the Parramatta, Eisenhower Republicans on The Board said the Suomi Saturday to issue a round robin operator, also should have of support for the President's coumicu the danger signal to Sfsarmament proposal and his alert the Parramatta. conduct at Geneva generally 0
+
well meant move which had However, Vice-Admiral A. C. the chief effect, however, of Richmond, Coast
drawing the world's attention
to tho alience of Senator Know-
land and his friends.
TE was not certain today that the last had been heard of Con-
For this was just what the pressional misgivings, amongst only three other presidents who the rightwing Senators but so had travelled overeas to Inter- far as Senator Knowland is con- national conferences--President cerned the Presidente tact and Roosevelt, President Truman charm appears to have had o and President Wilion-failed to substantial effect, achieve after the Yalla and
Guard Com-
HK Geologist Visiting Russia
New York, July 26. Thirteen experts in mining, from Potsdam conforoncos in 1945 and In addition, later in the day engineering and geology the Versailles peace conference the Secretary of State, Mr John Hongkong, Jupan Indin, OL 1919.
Foster Dulles, made himent Afghanistan Burma and Indo available for further private na will leave Now Delhi on There is no question that an questioning about the Genova August 2. on the first stogo effort was required by the Pre-conference by the Foreign Re- a study tour orgnated Jointly Adent to relax the domestications Committees of both by the United Nations Techni- tensions which devolopod last Hopes of Congress, China cal AssistapedAdministration week particularly over en- Matt Sportal.
and the Economía, Commission Ter. Alu-and the Far East (DCAFE), it was announced at United --Naklons – hesdquarters tackay,
CONFIDENCE RESTORED:
London," July 201
"commentator
A Moscow, radio
said today the INó Four, moet÷ Gendés: Take week. restored confidence: the Chris Powers.
'forenes algmify - tha^ beg
ofis, new period
· Hons of the Big"
South Seas
A
Lured Ledger Keeper
Los Angeles, July 25.
N accounting clerk who gave up his ledgers for a round- trip solo cruise to Tahli was back home on Monday seeing friends and relatives who had given him up for dead, Rolf Thorvaldsen, 31, whose par
ents are Norwegian, left home ini May 1982 to sail the 28-100t ketch, Talia, to the tropical Island alone.
He said on his return, two months overdue, that his 836-day trip to Tahiti was ensy compared to the voyage baelt,
Only a few days out of Tahiti he ran nto high seas and the craft épilt her bow. Thorvald son fashioned a canvas patch and kept smiling. The strong winks pushed him for off
Spotted sitting out a calm_not far from the Southern Call- forella sharo, Thorvaldson was towed into port on Saturday by a sports fahing bost, Thorvaldson's. Lather ante malher came to the United States from Hyllingfos, Norway, in 1923. Ho
brother Carl - ins Chicago. The solitary marinar
has
(Dr 8. G, Davis of the Hong-no immediate plus for tho kong University in supreletting future other than to take it ory a while and clean up my 13, bont through" | Hill only afm, lat prowonly be ins dicated, was "to avoid going
Teis- the
Argentine Republic, today turn- ed over his post as the head of the Peronist Party to a national consultative junta composed of representatives from
various provinces.
recently
Admiral Teisoire
.
as President of the
S Council of the Peronist
Party in conformity with the directives of President Juan Domingo Peron, declaring the necerity of separating Party functions from government func- tions.-France-Pressc.
Conscription Will Go On
London, July 25.
Mr Fitzroy MacLean, Under- Secretary for War, said to night that no drastic reduction In Britain's two-year period of conscription was military possible at present,
He was replying in the House of Commons to Mr George Crad- dock, a Labour member, who sald he thought a cut to ono mado year could easily be
having regard to the result of the "sumanit" talks at Geneva, Mr MacLean said the Army
relied heavily on the national serviceman (conscript). cut of 12 months would reduce the strength by about 150,000 and a six months' reduction by 72,000. "Unfortunately
tou
it is still early to presume that the cold war has come to an end, and in the cold war conventional forces are absolutely essential," he said.
"We all hope the good work started at Geneva will go on and that tension will be fur- thar reduood and that in due course it may make possible a reduction not only in rational service but in the whole crushing burden of armaments at present weighing on world.-Routar
Wisemmis
the Nicest Place in Town!
• Morning Coffee
• Afternoon Tea
the
For Tiffin or Dinner
Reservations:
Telephone. Ho
at 26433
LANE CRAWFORD'E
Tim
No comments yet.
Private notes are available after approval.