1957-06-18 — Page 3

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

Page

THE CHINA MAIL, TUESDAY, JUNE JA IREL

ALL AGREE IMPORTANT STEP'

Outlook Of London Talks Encouraging

London, June 17.

28

Western representatives today described "an important step" towards partial disarmament the Soviet Union's latest proposal on a nuclear tests ban under international control.

The delegates of the United States, Canada and Britain-Mr Harold Stassen, Mr David John- son, and Mr Selwyn Lloyd-were stated by con- ference sources to have all used this term in speeches at today's meeting here of the five-power United Nations Sub-Committee on Disarmament.

The Soviet proposals, submit- Mr Lloyd said he had come the sub- ted at the last sub-committee in person. becillise meeting

has Friday by Mr committee's discussion Valerian Zorin, ealled for a ball reached an Important stage. le to nuclear tests for two or three also found Mr Zorin's proposals

Control over years,

the ban "an important

towards step would be exercised by an later-agreement on partial measures," national body reporting to the the sources auki. United Nations and with control posts on the territory of atomic Welcoming the approaches of powum, including the Soviet both Unton.

ת

Amaricin

Soviet artal delegations, he said there were now new grounds for construe-

Mr Lloyd, the British Foreign tive examination of what should Socrolaty, unexperley attend- | form part

ed today's session for Britain.meni. Britain's normal delegate is Commander Allan Nobl, atinis-

ter of State, al The Foreign Office,

Importance

Diplomalle observers regard-

of a partial agrce-

M Zorin welcomed the fact that

had Drevicus speakers desertbex his proposals as im- portant.

with

flowever, he disagreed emphasis placed by Mr Johnson and also by the French delegate, M. Jules Moch, the

cd this as indicating the impor-portance of control, lance attached by the British delegation tu

the discussions

following the latest Soviet pro- posals, and in view of the fact that the American delegation expected som to submit proposis of its own.

new

Mr Slossen, the first speaker

On

11 wis only possible to agree

the

control extent of measures when It was ricettled what a disarmament agreement should contain, Mr Zorin main- tained.--Chinn Mail Special.

Lolay, was quoted by confer TELEVISION ON

ence sources as saying that the

Soviet prupovala wore

important

all

move" towords

agreement (11 A parthi dis-

arniment treaty.

MAYFLOWER

Plymouth, Mass., June 17.

tele- They were particularly im Millions of Americnu

the Sovket vision vlowers portarit, becUIRE Union d accepted the idea of aboard.

were

"invited when Mayflower II of the Steve Allor 4 control system operating in-cameras side Russia, ng

modern-day well an insido Show toured the ather mekar countries.

replien of the ship that brought the pilgrims to these chores 23 en-years ago. Im-

The outlook WBS MOTU couraging, though nung portant problems still remained to be solved and many detailed negotiations lay ahead,

In a brief TV appearance, Captain Villiers accepled the Arst citation of President Eisen- hower's people-to-people com-

Mr Johnson of Canada wel-mittee for "broadening intern- comaxi Mr Stassen's statement, ionad sports netivities" (and). and said he regarded the Soviet

proposals, now under study by his government, as important.

31

fostering the international brotherhood

Mall Special

uf man."-China

A British Crossword Puzzle

12

3

14

15

16

19 20

22

23 24

27

28

29

30

ACROSS

3 These Sours

(4),

come in pairs

7 Land in N Africa? (5)

i Enger to be a famous figure

(4).

D Plenty for redskin? (4).

10 Told within the family? (7).

12 Harb is wise (4),

16 The fortress'a lock; (5),

18 Between a man and his

dog? (4).

10 Though sheep-like, in nothing

more than a plant (5),

21 Yawning hollow (5),

72 Go like a weary ploughman'

(4).

23 The danger of

illustrations (5).

DOWN

114

1 Seeing me in bod is

heavenly sight (5).

A

2 Makes a secret arrangement

(7).

4 Comes first, we hear, in

Yorkshire (5).

5 Mugs of juice? (4).

6 Like the trunic of a pino?

(4).

it costs nothing to pay (4).

11 Vagrant vessoi7 (6).

13 At heart Vi's greedy (4),

14 We're in jug (4).

18 I'm sold out, it sms, but

not of gus (5).

17 R.AS.C. formation (4),

improper 18 Frollegomo biedt (4).

20 Not toothles Ubertino (4).

20 Encyclopedie

possibly (7).

work

30 Wont down to tie bargain 22 Malce à sound appeal for the

basement? (7).

30 Extremely light? (4),

31 Bandy brown mustly. (4).

32 Shart way to chop up trees

(8).

38 Not a comanon word? (4).

victim (4).

don't know

making it (4).

24 You

25 The

THE QUEEN SEES BRITAIN'S LATEST

-་་་་་་་་་་་----EH

For the first time photographs are permitted of the British seeres, alk-to-ale gulded misalle, the Firestreak, and an interested viewer is the Queen, shown the weapon during her visit to the RAF station at Leuchars, in Fife. With her is Prince Philip. -- Reuterphoto.

British Or American Nuclear Plants

JAPANESE REFUSE TO COMMENT

London, June 17.

Two members of a Japanese delegation now in Britain to study the possibilities of buying atomic energy equipment tonight refused, in a television interview, to be drawn into the controversy which has been going on in Britain about the merits of British and American power plants. ・・

Contempt

Indictment

Dismissed

the

manufactured

Mr Koich! Uda, Japanese Minister of State in charge of atomic energy, and leader of

delegation, who visited Britain's Atomio Energy Re- search Establishment at Harwell earlier today, was appearing in British Broadcasting Corpora Hon's

weedy programine. "Panorama.*****

Mr Sashichiro Matsui, another member of the delegation, also appeared with him.

Eritain's

They were asked what effect American adverse comment on Washington, Jane 17.

Calder Hall Atomic The Supreme Court today

Fower Station would have on reversed the contempt of their attitude to the purchase, Congress

power plants for

conviction

of of atomic Illinois labour leader John Japan. T. Watkins, who balked at telling House investigators about other people's past Communist activities.

The Court's 0-to-1 ruling ordered the contempt indictment

dismissed.

Warreti Chior Jusco Earl sxke for the majority. Justice Tom C. Clark dissented.

Calder Hall

the sto

M: Matsui replied that delegation would like to Calder Hall in operation before making any comment.

The delegation is leaving here later tonight for the North of England to visit Calder Hall.

A "war" botween the atom salesnen of Britain and the

The ruling was expected to be United States has developed since usod in an appeal by playwright M: Kenneth Davis, of the United Arthur Miller against his recent States Atomic Energy Commiz- contempi et Congress conviction, alon, declared in Tokyo last Miller, like Watkins, refused to month that British atomic power tall a Congressional Committee stations were "expensive, cum- the names of one-time assolates bersome and belonging to the

atomic dark ages.". in a Communist group.

The

NO DOUBT

Court majority

Mr Uda tald British viewers tonight that the purpose of his mission was to "inspect the

nuclear

Macmillan's Reply

Disappointing Says Moscow Radio

London, June 17. A Moscow Radio com- mentator tonight do. scribed as "on the whole disappointing" the week- end letter of Mr Harold Macmillan, the British Prime Minister, to Mar- shal Nikolai Bulganin, the Soviet Prime Minis- ter.

A number of Mr Mac- millan's proposals "and also his unfounded charges against the Soviet Union definitely contradict thinga he himself has said beforo," the commentator, Mr Yakov Viktorov, said.

Marshal Bulganin's message lo Mr Macmillan on April 20, said the commentator, showed that the Soviet Union was striving to improve relations with Britain.

"TO

my mind an improvement

in Anglo-Soviet relations would be just as much to the interests of Britain as it would be to the Soviet Union," the commentator said

in n broadcast to Britain. "For that reason

Mr Minc- millan's statement that he is willing 10 consider his acknowledgment of the fact Stunt the Bulganin-Khrushchev' Visit to

(last year) payed the

better way for relations between Britain and the Soviet Union are worthy of attention."

Britain

DIFFERENCES

Differences between the two countries should not provent the

relations."

establishment of "more sensible

His proposals,

he

The commentator continued:

in which again poses the question of regis-

ring nulvar Losts insicas of projbiting them outright, are a step backwards."

"Mr Macmillan's letter is not

only disappointing because it alms to compileate the disarm- ament problem by linking it up

Hongkong Girl with the German problem, but

In Brisbane

MRS MOLLIE DAY

Brisbane,

wife of an English lead MBS Molle Day, a Chinese

ing Scaman at present stationed In Sydney, was photographed last week aboard the Dutch freighter Bilindoeng at Hamilton,

She was married in Hong- kong

aga years

to Leading Sesman D. 8. Day. submarine HMS Auroolis, and is on her first visit to Australia,

four ruled programme hore of the peace- that a Congressional Committee ful uses of atomlo overgy.

the explain

of the Asked if Japan was going to kyst plearly

legislative purpose" fustifying buy a British atomic power ils question to a wliness. "We station, Mr Uda said the Japan- been had have no doubt that there is not ese Congressional power to expose for the sake of exposure," War- ron said.

In this case, the Chief Justice wald, the Committee's explana

on to Watkins was "woefully Inadequate" and the

witness

Government favourably impressed" by the report of a previous Japanese mission to this country.

Nine Companies

He added that Japan's mine

a fair op electric power companies would

They have lived in England and Singapore.

Lending Seaman Day will be stationed to. Sydney for 12 months—Brisbane Telegraph

Service.

also because its approach to the German problem le in completo

the talerests of accord with Bonn, and by no means with the interests of the German people," the commentator said.

The British Prime Minister had ignored the existence of the Fast German Republic. — China Mail Special.

ESPIONAGE

TRIAL

BEGINS

Oran, June 17. The Sudanese owner, six and Algerian passengers crew members of the pirate yacht Athos went on muli-

tary trial for espionage here today on charges of running guns to the Algerian rebels.

French Navy vésséle seized the yacht when it was discover.

ed flying no flag of the coast on October 16, 1056, and con- fiscaled 400 tens of modern arms and ammunition worth US$1,- 142,857 in its hold.

The

ben owner, ibrahim Mohammed, told the police.at the time that the yacht belonged to the Egyptian government,

He added that the arms were loaded at night by Egyptian soldiers and were to be deliver- rebels between ed to Algerian Oran and the Moroccan border. SABOTAGE

was not determine whether jointly arrange for the purchase Flu On The The Algerian passengers ad-

he was within his rights in re- of a reactor.

fusing to answer.

Asked whether the Japanese Walking, 44, 4 United Autonation was frightened of atomle mobile Workers organiser, was energy after its experiences of summoned before the House Un-alon bombing in the last war, American Activities Committon Mr Malou said the Japanese on April 29, 1954.

People remembered Hiroshima

Mike a who he thought were still Com-mare."

He talked freely about persong and Nagasaki

But, ho asided that munists and about himack, but

those he mid had long since left the movement United Press.

You're Red Capitalists

present, perhaps, newhat trained (8).

27 A drink for a plant (6).

20 Always a clever finkih. (4).

MONDAY'S CROSSWORD.—Across; 1 Tragle, 7 Noe-d, 9 Lesta, 10 Mitre 11 (1) Bane, 13 Disappear in Tris, 16 Lepr(t), 19 Meditation, 22 Apes, 24 Ensuą, 26 Image, 20 Mode, 27 Tender. Down: 2 Rampa a Group, 4 Compád), 6 Indoret, 0 Foc 9 Erose, 12 Ben, 15 Delta, 1s Aagogoed, Direct, 20 Alisa, ži. Inaos, 33 Peak,

ig

4 18

Wane In Calcutta

mitted undergoing specialised sabotage training at Egyptian military schools, French officials said. French officials cinbred that the arma were to be usest to vi general offenalve Algerian rebels and Moroccan Calcutta, June 17 Liberation Army volunteers The death toll of Calcutta's against the whole region lying the influenza epidemic, now in its west of hare,

aight-

tho

Π

he refused information as to Japaktese knew at the same time ath week, ronchod 100, today,

According to the French, the that nuclear energy coubt bring but hearth officials poli

the Algerian passengers were close "unlimited happiness and can epidemie was definitely waning. friends of the rebel leader Bet help to raise the standards of | living of peoplo sil over

The highest number of deaths Bella, who was capture a week world."

recorded in a anglo 24 hours later when French fighter planes forced his Tunis-bound aircraft Asked it he thought Japan in was 15 last week.

to land at Algiers the

bocom futuro would

Оде Calcutta doctor an-

A similar indictment against Paris, June 17.

major exporter of nuclear power

that he wna quring the Greek captals, a Görmen. The total income of Shanghai in Asin, Mar Matrul and tint in ounced

patients by injecting them with and two Greek sailors was capitalita in the part DOVEN view of the expected shortage vaccine made from the blood of dropped last week. years amounted to 65.8 por vent of natural power and energy in wedients who had had influenea.

The captain claimed to was of the prosent value of all the Japan Inst How your ups,

At its peak, the epidemic forced to undertake the mun- private staros in the fount State Japan wanted to be shin 10 private enterprise of the city, utilise atomie energy for peace, affected all public utķiles and running mission but he the Peking Radio quoting Blang-ful purposes heraal. Later, we porvicks, including transport, feared reprisals against his 29l official sources said today.— might be phje: to export. At to the postal myubem and garbage family, living in Egypt--Unlied

! PRzQ

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