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KING'S PRINCESS
Just
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ALTALKERAMZ POMATIŠKAI Pia imeite
Never Say Goodbye
ROCK HUDSON
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TECHNICOLOR
A CORNELL BORCHERS-GEORGE SANDERS
From My Pay "Sama Pylone Seghe & Pane" by Luigi Prancese
QUEEN'S & ALHAMBRA
0313, 1.20 A 210 N 191.
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A Historical Chinese
Drama!
LI LI-HUA in
"DANGEROUS BEAUTY"
A Mandarin Picturc
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"LADY CHATTERLEY'S LOVER" A Columbia Picture with English Subtitles
CAPITOL RITZ
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AT 2.30, 5.30, 7.30 & 9.30 P.M.
THE SCORCHING STORY OF
THE GUN THAT WON'
THE WEST
منوع
Technicolor
DENNIS MORGAN
A to Pictunt
Next Change ""THE EDDY DUCHIN
STORY"
in CinemaScope
'THE CHINA MAIL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1956, ~
Big Airlines
Are Using
Automation
Edinburgh, Sept. 18. Six British and American airline companies are cur rently using electronic com. pulers to simplify passenger bookings and related mat- ters with an "astronomical" Baving of time in some CROCS, Mr Lorimer Weir, Chairman of the Inter- national Air Transport As- sociation's Financial Com- mittee, said today.
Presenting the Committee's report ai the IATA's and meeting In Exlinburgh, Mr Wor said the Association's financial experts were investigating how such automation could help alr- lines to simplify the organisation of their bookings,
HALF AN HOUR
An eletronic machine could do In half
which an hour a job would take weeks or months if done with ordinary calculating machines, he said.
Mr Wetr anid this Byslem could Suve much time and money for the airline industry, which had been expanding very rapidly and was having di- culty in keeping and housing an adequately trained staff.
Mr
Weir, who is financial
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MAVERICK MENT
JOHN ERICSON "WANTED" WOMEN, MARI BLANCHARD
NEVILLE BRAND
"The
RETURN of JACK SLADE
SUPERSCOPE-
Naxt Change --
Clayon Moore in
"THE LONE RANGER"
in Warnercolor
ORIENTAL Majestic
AT 2.30, 5.30, 7.30 & 9.30 P.ML
A passionate outcry against | SHOWING TO-DAY
impulsive marriages and the multiple divorces of to-day's youth!
Hilda Crane
PE
"PAN JUDITH EVELYN KEGYELYN VARDEN
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C
"23 PACES TO BAKER STREET"
AT 2.30, 5.20, 7.30 & 9.30 P.M
Karamand MomPASME AVENEGAL LID
SASTMAN
COLOUR
NEMASCOPE
MADEMOISELLE PIGALLE
CETTE SACRÉE GAMINE
Starring BRIGITTE BARDOT JEAN BRETONNIERE
HOOVER : LIBERTY
CAUSEWAY BAY TEL78371
TO-DAY
KOWLOON TEL 60140, 60248
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M-G-MCA DRAMA AFLAME WITH LOVE AND REVOLTI
AVA GARDNER
STEWART GRANGER BHOWANI JUNCTION
ONEMSCOPE
WITH PERSPECTÁ STEREOPHONIC SOUND
ROXY & BROADWAY
GRAND OPENING TO-DAY
AT 2:80, 5.30; 7,50 and 9.30 P.M.
MAN
Bigger Life
Than
pean Airways, pointed out that ย! their busjegt time, each spring, the BEA had at least a inillion reservations on hand to organise. --France-Presse,
100 Tons Of Meat For Olympics
Melbourne, Sept. 18.
thanks bux WWI ย
A LA 35.000 contract to supply itat for officials and athletes at はい Olympic
The village for
y
Soviet Pilot Flies MOON-LANDING
R.A.F. Hunter
Chief Tesi Lieutenant-General A. Blagoveschensky.
Hunter from the Pilot of the Soviet Air Force, elimbing two-seater jet trainer which he flew at the end of the flying He was display at Farnborough Air Show in Hampshire. accompanied in the plane by Bill Bedford, Deputy
Test Pilot for Hawker's-Kruterphoto,
Chlef
DEAD RED LEADER REHABILITATED
Sofia, Sept. 18.
The Central Committee of the Bulgarian Communist Party today decided to rehabilitate former Vice-Premier, Trafiche Kostov, who was executed in 1949 for "Titoism, treason and espionage".
The Central Committee also rehabilitated other persons who
were convicted along with Kostov.
YEARS, LEADING
...
IN 40
U.S. SCIENTIST PREDICTS
Rome, Sept. 18.
The International Astronautical Congress opened today with scientists predicting that man will land on the moon by the end of this century.
Mr C. Durant, President of the Internacional
Astronautical Federation, told reporters he be Red China
lieved man would be on a satellite, circling around the earth hundreds of miles above its surface, within the next 10 years.
"After this satellite flight, there will be
Hears
circumlunar (around the moon) flights and finally Frenchman's
before the end of the century we will have man landing on the moon," said Mr Durant, an engineer from Concord, Massachusetts,
The main object of today's session was the un- manned satellite which is scheduled to be launched by the United States in about 18 months. But all scientists agreed this was just a first step in man's exploration of the universe.
Views
Tokyo, Sept. 18. A top French Communist sald today
of millions Frenchmen were convinced that those who would keep Communist China from the *were International arena attempting in vain to turn
Prof. Arturo Crocco, President of the Italian Rocket Association, reviewed work being done on realising a theory of Albert Einstein. According back the wheel of history."
Speaking before delegates to Einstein's theory of relativity, time would stop to the Eighth Chinese Com- for man travelling at the speed of light. At first munist Party Congress in scientists saw no way of reaching the speed of Peking today, M. Jacques light, but a possible means of approaching it was Duclos, head of the French announced three years ago.
A Photonic Rocket
Communist Party delega- tion, said "nothing will hinder the establishment in the near future of normal relations between the French Republic and the
The New China News Agency
speech sald M. Duclos's "punctured by wat applause."
FAITHFUL
"Faithful to the Marxist
tho
French Cam-
never ceased
This would be on a photonic rocket, using the People's Republic of China." enormous speeds of particles in atomic reactors., These speeds approach that of light.
Discussing such schemes, German scientist Eugene Saenger noted that at speeds approaching the speed of light, "a man's life time would be principles sufficient to circle the entire motionless universe.'
"Whether on the return of the crew our solar system would still exist," added Dr Saenger, "is,
"
Was
muntst Party fighting against the war made on the Vietnamose people.
"In opposing the war against the Algerian people, the French Communist Party
wus com.
It found that they had been "condemned without foundation" however, more than questionable because in it (the schously as well as the work-
solar system) more than 3,000,000,000 years would of uf meat
have elapsed in the mean time.
sturing their! and should be "legally rehabilitated," with their titles of members
| those convicted.
of the Bulgarian Communist Party restored to all exempt two of
Games in Melbourne this year, ¦ Alhistes are exported to eat! 100 tons
Estimates include about 15,500 Ib of bone leak, 10,800 16 of Bump steak, 11,300 h of rolled and honed prime ritis, 5,800 lu of legs of pork, 180 lb of rack- big pig, 1,575 t of calves livers
20.520 Ib of ox Talis.-i China Mall Special
AUSTRALIA LEADS
The Bulgarian news agency, which made this announcement, said the Central Committer had acted on the basis of the findings of a special committee set up to investigate the trials--France-
Presse.
The
RADIOACTIVE
HAZARDS
Henry
Belle.
Melbourne, Sept. 18. a leiter to Mr Australian Government, Bremier of Victoria.
ANTI-POLIO WAR wants uniform legislation 1 He suggested formation of a
Sydney, Sept, 18. Australia Was levicting the world in its Salk Buyt-poliu vur. campaten Dr E. S. A. Meyars, director of the New
Wales campu kini,
Cine
South today.
com-
protect people from radioactive Commonwealth standing hazards, the acting Prime Minia-mittee to examine the problem tre, Sir Arthur Fadden, said into
continuous advice to Kive governments as an initial step.
This
Sir committee,
said Arthur, should consider prepara- tion of uniform codes as a basis for protection of people from radioactive hazards.China Mai
Bomb Explodes
He said that by the middle
Blida, Algeria, Sept. 18. of next your #1 Australia's
A home-made bomb exploded | Special children under 15 whose parts today in a restaurant in Blida, have consented will have slightly injuring seven French received two injections of Sulk soldiers and a child.
vaccine.
Australia would be the first Three months ELLO a similar country in the work to schievo { bomb... incident occurred at the this singe-China Mull Special, came resturant,—France-Presse.
NEW YORK GREAT WORLD
4
Causeway_Bay, »Tel. 7873), 78155
.Kowloon, Tel. 53503 .
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THE RANK ORGANISATION PRESENTA
KENNETH MORE
IN
Reach for the Sky
Based on the book jy Phuj Belokhlit
ALDO SVAN DE PEJAD
1.9
MURIEL RAYLOW
LYNDON BROON - LEE PATTERSON - ALEXANDER KNOX
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Martine Carol in "CAROLINE CHERIE"
WELL HERES TO THE WEATHER BEING KIND FOR
*THE FÊTE
PAH! WHISKY
TALKS ON SUEZ
Paris, Sept. 18. The French Premler M. Guy Mollet and the Tunisian Premier, Habib Bourguiba, dis- cussed the Suez crisis during an hour-long meeting here to- day.
M. Bourguiba, who is on visit to Paris, said he had in- formed M. Mollet "of the Tunisian point of view, which is hostile to any mechanism of procedure which could lead to war."
In reply to a question, the Tunisian Premier said that M. Mellot "anderstood our position. I was happy to hear him, my that, although he "did not ex-
cludo military measures, ho would do all that was possible to arrive at a negotiated solu- tion to ovold war,"
and
M. Bourguiba said that during the talks, which had takan place in an "atmosphere growt comprehension. cordiality" ho and M. Mollet also discuscod recent incidenta Involving French and Tunistans on the Tunisia-Algeria frontier. France-Presse.
OH-FORGIVE. ME,
I DIDN'T REALISE | SHOULD
HAVE.
As
defending the interests
ing class and the people at France," he sold
"In the Sucz Canal issue,"
"During this time, the spaceship's crew far as time is concerned would be nearly outside M. Duclos said, "the colonialiste our world system, that is to say, in another world."
Australia Unprepared
For Atomic
Attack
Melbourne, Sept. 19. An atomic attack on Australia would cost tens of thousands of lives be- cause of inadequate civil defence, Brigadier Augus tine Wardell, National Civil Defence said today.
Director,
In an interview in the Melbourne Herald, he said an atomic attack would And Australia almost completely unprepared.
Although plans for pro- tection of Sydney and other cities had been be fore the Federal Govern- ment for more than year, no decision had been made.
A
foreign "Any day a submarine could surface
200 miles to sea, a button could be pushed, and one
of our cities wiped off the map by an atomic or hydrogen guided missile,” he said. China Mail Special.
No Soda Pop:
MY FAULT-
I THOUGHT", IT WAS
·BRANDY}\
otr party oppose at- tempted to deal a blow to the
The universe which man couldntional Liberation movement of circle in a lifetime is estimated the colonial peopics. at several billion light years.
Dr Einstein held that the speed of light could not be ex- eceded if taken from the stand- point of an observer ni a fixed point
But, said Dr Saenger, If the observer is moving too, the speed of the ship eculd become many times that of light,
The exact significance of the theory will have to walt scienti- fic tests, but scientists sold J operred the possibility that man could explore the farthest corners of the universe within his life- time,
Time Factor
If time remained what it is commonly thought, man could never reach the outer edges of the universe because it takes so long-even at the speed of light to reach these distant points. The light from somó galaxies takes hundreds of thousands of years to reach the earth.
Italy,
Professor Crece of commenting on this question, Bold that for the present the question of attempting to realise these dreams was for mathe- and phy- maticians, ph_ricists Biologists, but suggested it was not too soon for others to start thinking about the algnificance of man's conqueal of space.
"It should not be sold—let's walt for the photonic rocket and then we will talk about the ccnsequences," he said.
On
the more down-to-carth matter of getting the satellita Into the air (by meats of a three-in-one rockot), the Con- grese hoard a fochnical report by Prof. Fred. Jinger of the University of Maryland on the "aid" temperature of satellite vehicles when they re-enter the earth's atmosphere.—United Prens
"But the cup is still far from their lips," he said, "and thanks to the people's resistance, their
plan will ond in failure." United Press,
Pedalling Around The World
Moscow, Sept. 18.
A 22-year-old Indian student, Ram Shandra, arrived in Moscow today on a bicycle after pedal- ing 7,500 miles through eight couandro
Ram
started
out from Calcutta, crossed Pakistan,
Turkey. Suria, and Rumania, made hla
He
Iran,
Bulgaria and then way through
Odessa Province to through
He plans to go on Leningrad
"Finland
Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Germany, Holland, Bel gium, France, and England. There he will take a ship back to Calcutta.
crossed alone Shandra more than 750 miles of desert, is only equipment a tent, a small alcohol stove,
a water container! ams a jew food supplies,~ France-PresSE,
PRECIOUS DROPS FOR
PRECIQUÉ MOMENTI.
CHERRY
Permatic dienase,
Mitigal
«Bayer"}
GERMA
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