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THE WEATHER
Continuing shawory
CHINA
No. 37449
Established 1845
MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 1959.
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Comment Anti-Chinese Protests Journalists Not
Of The Day
PRICE OF HONOUR
bas long been thought that
the costly business!
of sustaining AL worthy mulation in a court of law
DEMONSTRATIONS IN TYPHOON JOAN BRINGS
MANY PARTS OF INDIA
New Delhi, Aug. 30. Demonstrations and protests broke out in many parts of India today against Chinese shooting incidents on the Tibetan border and oven the Indian Communist Party joined in criticism of Peking.
In Calcutta, more than 1,000 supporters of Indian Prime Minister Nehru's Congress Party today staged an hour-long anti-Chinese demonstration in front of the Chinese Consul General's office here..
Some of the bammers read is far too one-sided, inso. "Hands off India", "Down With far as if the person charged Chinese Imperialism",
is acquitted with his homured Tibes and Hungary?"
intuct there still remini
"erritorial
ciniñez with Communist Chinese troop: last Thursday. Wha The
newspaper based story on unconfirmed
the reports
"'un-
in New Delhi the Indian | reaching Calcutta, Communist party Retended the legal fees and in many India's
Integrity" Meanwhile, anxiety was grow- cases astronomical to lic
what it called askinst
ing here tonight about the fate paid.
fortunate inckients" with 38 men of the Longju out- post whose fos nessoge on However, there now exists the Chino Communists,
any two Wednesday said they were al- ponsibility that
cannot be There Home
large by na the question that na?pinions changes will be ande the Home Secretary, Mr territorial integrity of our R. A. Butler, is of the country must be safeguarded,” a
statement by the
opinion that It is wry said.
Communists
that people nequitted in The Indian Communists called courts should be able to for a peaceful settlement. pay the heavy costs. for
their own defence.
It is expected that following
talks between
Measures
the Home The main Secretary and Lord Chief the
opposition party, Praja Socialists called on
Justice Parker wrongly ne the Governinient to, fake "m cused people will find their measures" to make the Chineseo
Hability reduced.
Protests
THERE have been
THE
m
Communists "vacute occupied areas of our country,"
of
In their resolution, the Praja Executive sevused Ching "ruthlessly destroying Tibet"
and then arning against their
many friend India," with whom they
protesta 101 Parliament had declared their loyalty 10 over recent cases in Britain the five principles of co-
and while there is 10 existence.
similar avenue
vocal lamentations
open here!
occasionally heard
can
The probing claws of China be Wi have to be twisted back from and she should be made to the ultimate those who have had to face realise that in
analysin n democratic people would Triumph over The present system is funda-monolithic Goliath," The
mentally unsound in that solution sald. an innocent person
heavy expenACR.
should
re-i
In get Craumunist China admitted to the United Nations and
Haost surroundegt
Chinese force.
Official
sald
that
toliau patrols had pushed north from the outpost of limeking rear tic northeast frontier searching for the inc.--All Agencies.
America
Discovered
By
The
Portuguese?
Communist Propaganda In Nepal
Katmandu, Aug. 30, Hundreds of pictures of Mao Tse-tung and Chou En-lat are circulating in north-
areas of Nepal, ac-l
crn
HEAVY SHOWERS
Typhoon Joan brought heavy showers to Hongkong during the laht and the Royal Observatory recorded more than two inches of rain this morning.
Late last nighi and again thin morning there was a spectacular display of fork and sheet lightning which 16 the sky in rapid succession,
It was one of the most violent electrical storms the Colony has had this year.
Major Iandalides completely blocked Island Road at three points this morning near Chai Wan Police Stallon, near the junction with Shek O Road, and Deepwater Ray near the Golf Club.
Another landslide was reported on Repulse Bay Road near the junction with Wangelohong Gap Road, completely blocking the road, and on Tai Hang Road a large boulder dislodged from the hillside partially blocked the road near Wesley Village, One way traillo is allowed.
At 8 am, this morning when the showers were heavient, motories were driving through pelling rain using headlights. Roads were awash in several places.
The Royal Observatory said the weather was not caused directly by Typhoon Joan but was associated with it.
The typhoon, after sweeping over Formosa, hil the Chins coast near the port of Amoy with hurricane force yesterday. The Royal Observatory predicted that Hongkong will have showery weather for the next day or two.
Rainfall from midnight to 10 a.m, ible morning was 2.3 Inches, 1.9 inches of which fell in three hours, from midnight to 1 am, 4 a.m. to 5 an, and 8 a.m. to a.m.
cording to reports reach- A Wet But
ing here.
Official sources said although such pletures were not bandfer there it appeared there was some organization behind their distribution in areas where the prople had close ethnic links with Tibet.
CAMPAIGN
Recently a campaign for signatures was reported from the Solu Khuinbu area near Mount Everest, to support the elain that the local people, who are mostly sherpas, were Tibetans by nationality,
A
Happy Princess
Brisbane, Aug. 30. barefooted Princess Alexandra was soaked to the skin as she skimmed over choppy waters off the north Queensland
coast in a catamaran to- day during a break in her Australian tour.
The Princess, who is spending the weekend ai Lindeman Island on the great bartier reef, reached i almost 20 knots and then asked to salt in more open waters. But the skier decided against it because of the rough sea.
In: Katmandu, official Dere</ Moscow, Aug. 30. ters said the Chinese Cumar
has its had maintained Soviet historian
a frigid Icwverds all Nepalese claimed that America was silence
| communications bow: Tiket end discovered It went on to say Indin whe
from Europe consiliers for Nupaise traders by Portuguese navigators in Tibet. be out of pocket. It has still making sineere efforts to often been propounded
the long before
first
They sald China had also voyage of Christopher refused to reply to a request Tho Princess and a plenic beach of Columbus in 1492. Chinese that Nepal be allowed to set up lunch on a sheltered
wireless link between sneirby Seaforth Island where navigators had reached, the American continent.hasa Consulate and Katmandu Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of which the Nepalese Government Edinburgh also relaxed during! Heross the Pacific as early had proposed according to the their Australian tour five spars as the year 8 A.D., he terms of the Sino-Nepalese ago. said.
their action was a "measure of
legal circles that us there is A public prosecutor there 12: should alas he a public de- fence.
On the face of it this would
seem to be the logical solusi tion, but this has bee strongly resisted and right-!
cynlul contempl with which they treat the noble con- erpts of friendship, toleration and co-existence.""
Aggression
ly no. Otherwise the legut It referted to Chinese con- ! fraternity would spend most struction of a highway across in!
The historian, D.Y. Tɛukernik,
of their time working forcessible regions of Ladakh, said he had reached his conclu- anyi a "veiled campaign for sion about the 'Portuguese dis- covery after painstaking study of tere and previously unpublished Portuguese, Spanish and tollan documents, which he found in braries in Moscow and Lenin- rad.
M
Cheaper
be
government fees thus being, imalayan Federation started Bnable to conduct their own by the Chinese #1 Nepal, Sikkim private cuses.
and Bhutan,
**11 the! Northerst Frontier Agency they have resorted to open aggression, thus the Chinese are using every instru- ment at their disposal to seek to corrode the traditonal toyalty of the people and to chip away hits of cur territory.
"China evidenty hopes that pay a small ne in lower once they succeed in breaking the Indien court rather than elect to the
"I people, the defences of countries fight for his reputation.
in South and South East Asia To go before a higher court:
the bill might well run it would be greatly undermined. hundreds or thousands
TR DUTLER has painted
out that it may cheaper for an innocent! TEPILTI to plead guilty and
k morale
"Therefore, it is necessary to
of understand that in defending pounds even though the its border. India is not only dew police case is defented and fending herself but the freedom. the accused acquitted with and sovereignty of all South East Asian nations," the resolu- his reputation unimpaired. One case in Hongkong comes tion added.
to mind of a man
churged
with carolees or dangerous
driving following an acci
Border Defences
The protest was made us the: dent involving the death of Indian army reinforced its units
A Woman.
DOCUMENTS
Dn
agreement over Tibet: Reuter.
TIBETANS DYING
IN INDIAN CAMPS
ATE OYSTERS
She clambered over rocks to hunt for oysters and ale them as the gilcked them.
When the 22-year-old Hoyal visitor arrived at Lindeman lost night she took off her shoes to wiggle her loes in the sand and then walked to the edge of the water a paddle.
After dinner she played "pan" tunes on an old upright piano.
Teenagers Stabbed
To Death
New York, Aur. 30.
boya Two 18-year-old were stabbed to death and another crilically wounded here early today in what pollos believe to be another outbreak of gang warfare, Felice said five boys and girl sitting in so un- lighted playground in
*
"
westalde lenement-district shortly after:
were
midnight
attacked by a FIDE of between six
and ten youths armed with knives, The deaths brought the number of teenagers killed by youthful violence in Manhattan to four in legs than a week.----Reuter,
Failed To
Come Out
Of Trance
Sydney, Aug. 29.
T
Interested In
What Ike
Ike Eats
建
UPROAR DURING
PRESS BRIEFING
London, Aug. 30. Exasperated British journalists nearly broke up tonight's press conference on the visit of Pre sident Eisenhower, demanding to be given poli- tical details of the visit instead of information merely about what Mr Eisenhower had eaten and seen.
The trouble started after the White House Press secre- tary, Mr James Hagerly and the Foreign Office spokesman, Mr Peter Hope, had reeled off, to the accompaniment of laughter from the assembled journalists, the programme of the afternoon's ac- tivities of Mr Elsenhower and his host, Mr Harold Macmillan, the Prime Minister.
Several London
newspaper | bccame
clear that the
men thereupon got up, among journalists were in no joking
cor-mood, them Mr Hugh Pilcher,
respondent of
the left-wing
Mr
Pilcher, after having
the
Daily Herald, who was greeted singled out for objection
by cheers when he whether
demanded
remind
the Eisenhower-visit details of the meals eaten by were to be taken Mr Elsenhower, went on to CONCETENCE'S
the two spokesmen seriously, or whether
only that 400 journalists from the triviality was to be expected whole world had come to Lon- don to be given news, not "Trivolities,"
from them.
The resulting aprour lasted for several minutes,
Both Mr Hagerty and Mr Hope were visibly taken aback by this attack and tried to counter it with pleasantries, but it soon
Mr Hope replied that he wat doing his best, but not until the shouls of protest and the booing und died down were he and Mr Hagerty able to resumo their briefing.--AFP,
| MACMILLAN - EISENHOWER
TALKS REACH AGREEMENT ON ALL QUESTIONS
London, Aug. 30.
President Eisenhower and Mr Harold Macmillan have reached agreement on all the questions they have discussed in their two days of talks at Chequers, the British spokesman told a joint Anglo-American briefing here tonight.
Answering questions by re- porters the spokesman, Mr
there shid
was Д "broad Later, in the twilight che A teenaged girl was rushed Peter Hope, of the foreign office, to hospital last night identity of views between the trotted alone up
a sleep hill behind her quarters for à view
17-year-old United States and after
Britain to
The historian's views were
of the water and soine of the amateur hypnotist could what should be done next;" surrounding Islands,
not bring her back from Published today in the magazine
London, Aug. 31. "Literature and Life," in
n trance, article by 1. Fuman, Professor A messago in the Daily Tele-
The Arl Patricia Ann
£9 The Princess who last week graph today reported that at the University of Voronezh.
of Cronulla Tibotan Sources were had to stay in bed with a cold Brown, 17, Prof. Furman sild that (Trukernik_had fowid documents which showed that the Portu- rese navigators hind been tanillar with the West Indies long before Columbus, Colum
The President and the Prime Minister together with Mr Christian Herler, the Secretary Aof Sure, and Mr Selwyn Lloyd,
the Fureign Secretary, had a 45-
claiming that many Tibot- and laryngitis, has been given southern suburb of Sydney
a clear bill of health by her Amateur hypnotist Ronald minule meeting after lunch to
an refugees were sick or medical emeer and resumes her Noel Silver, of Morida in dying in atrocious condi- tour on Tuesday--Reuter. tions in Indian camps.
bus hnd Portuguese documenta This conservative newspaper's in his pozassion when he mailed | correspondent in Darjeeling, On Jus first voyage, Including George Patterson, declared: maps of the Caribbean urea, the article cald.
Prof
Furman sald and re-organised defences in tiocuments found by Tsukernik proved that the Chinese the area of the Northeast Fron- also
that
been refused in- "I have formation by the camp athurl- ties; but I have it from Tibetan officials appointed by the Dalal Lama to go, to the camps that alter only two months in the
Evidence produced in court ter Augney. where Chinese bad reached the American con- | one at Mismari there were over showed that the car had troops attacked Indian outposts tinent after long voyages across 800 sick, 14 dead and about 29
the Pacific, as early as the year dying. been serviced a week before last week.
Official sources tonight denied A.D. There was evidence of the accident.. Yet the seci-
Two weeks ago 1. learned dent occurred because of reports of a now outbreak of this in Chinese coins dating from one of the highest Tibetan
from the latter part of the Han
oficials tut tho Sgures sudden failure of part ofghting on the frontier.
he said, and In Ancreased to 'thousands sick the hydraulic system. The The Hindustan Standard sold Dynasty,
forces had archueological excavations In and hundrels doud man was fined the nominateday that Indian
fresh Peru.-AFF.
dying."-Router. sum of $100 on the enreleassuffered casualties in driving charge.
!
Deterrent
Ta deterrent to an appeal THIS might have acted ns
as the smallness of the fine
; probably made the defend-A ant feel that the largo cost of an appeal would not be justified.
-
had
and
DAVIS CUP
Australia And
America 2-All. See P 6
Passenger Carrying Space Machine
three-staro
d
London, AuK. 30.
mschino spacp
Lake which, by 1875, mny
between passengers
Lo Angeles and London, lanco of 5,500 miles, in 40 minutes, was described by an American expert here tonight Mr Darrel C. Romick, banaxer of the Astronautics Engineer- ing section of the Goodyear Aircraft Corporation told the International AstronaKÚ- cal Federation Congress that In 10 years his company had
made
both fight "ponsible and practical," tion here to conform with Mr. Hamick mid the first two Britain's lead,
If Mr Butler has his way the police may in future have to bear a higher proportion and of the legal costa greater care will be taken in bringing prosecutions. If some modification is made to the present system in the United Kingdom It is to be hoped that Hongkong will follow and introduce foglala-
10,000 miles an hour and land in Iceland. The Goal-stago vehicle would then Increase Its speed to about 12,000 miles an hour and climb to an all- tude of nearly 36 miles --- all In less than '400-miles from its launching ulte.
: From this point, the vehicin would slide unpowered to, Ita destination, pasting near Iceland, over the southern Up | of Grecaland, and SCIDES northern Canads in the region of Hudson Bay towards the Unlied Blatu.
the craft would be manned and therefore recoverable and would be used to push the final vehicle with about 25 DABINKETS. to a speed "of about 10,000 miles an hour.
Describing a typical flight from
London to Los Angeles, hea said the Best section would
itself separate
from the vehicle when it was travelling at about 4,900 sulies an hour. The first sevilen would then to slowed down by acto- dynamlo re-entry, drag and would make a normal landing with larbo jet engines in Northern Ireland.
soollons ---- or "boosters" — of | The second would out-pff ·KG]
L
Near Los Angeles, Mr Romick said, ihe vehiclo would domocná to abong 40,000 feet
and slow down to about 400 miles an hour, at which point Ja turbo-jet engines would morial cut in and effeck a Iand 23.
und day discussing the problens of Paul Downey, 23, of Miranda nuclen: tosta were included in a variety con= |
Mr Eisenhower and Mr Muc- eerl programme at Cronulis,
madi discussed the Silver and
began millan Downey
the their aet nnx Patricia Brown Chinesɔ incursions acrosa
well first volunteers Indian tronfler, a usually was one of the
informed source said here to. to be put in a hypnolle trance.
She was placed under a spell right-Reuter, and she responded to Silver's direction to wake up.
She asked to be hypnotized bul again and Silver. obliged then he cadd not weke her up, After some Lime police, and anbulance were called and the girl was taken to hospital.
Eden Not
Attending
She regained consetourneske's Dinner
and was allowed to leave for hume.
The doctors sold she had suf- fered no offcula.
Father of Ronald Silver,
Mr
R. Silver, said his son, sul a schoolboy, was not thinkdag of taking up hypnotism as a pro- LessionChina Mali Special.
Soviet Author Invited To U.S.
London, Aug. 30. Bir Anthony Eden has declined on health grounda an invitation to attend the dianer to be given on Tuesday in London by President Eisenhower to his wartime colleagues and frienda,
Nevertheless, the former Prime Minister along with two of his predecessors Sir Winston Churchill Mrch Lord Atilee will attend the offcis dinner to be given by the Prime Minister, Dir Harold Macmillan,
President Elsenhower at 10 Downing Street—ATT.
to
Moscow, Aug. 30. Soviet writer, Mr Mikhali The whole machine would re-
Shololtov, author of "Quiet semble a delta-wing jet aire Flows the Don" and other moveis, craft and WEL an economie
was invited today to peco TIMYTV and commercial possibility
the Soviet Preniler, Mr. Nikila mainly because the first two Khrushchev, on the latter's vialt sections could be recoverod." to the United States on Sep- Passengers would Experience tember 15, Moscow, radlo zo
es ceriale amount of weight- ported, tonight, loganese" during the first few Mr Khrushchev, who has minutes of 'Eight, but, would boen vialling the area of the
Bloomington 111, Aug.. 30 southern In Cossacks, not suffer suy undue dis- Don
Adr Тогоо ofcor Donald comfiture. Landing would Russlo, tondered the invitation to
was fined $12 the day CARIO the passingtri no Mr Sholokov during a meeting | Speed
with the writer today-AFP.] before-for speeding-UPI, troublo at all---Revier,
Speedy
Americans See Ike For First Time
Oxford, Aug. 30.
Three Americans saw Pre. Kident Eisenhower in per- son for the first time when the President and Mr Harold Macmillan went for a drive to Ox- ford.
The President last visited Ox- ford in 1948 when he received an honorary degree.
The two statesnen; drove the Who 20 miles from Chequers, Prime Minister's country" re- sidence, in bright sunshine, leaving at 3.50 p.m. mud return- ing at 0.10 prn,
They visited Magdalen College
and Christ Church Cathedral,
Mr Peter Hope, the Foreign press Omco spokesman, told a conference here tonight that at Canterbury Gale, before enter- ing the cathedral the President anil the Prime Minister were spulled and recognised by three Americans and their wives, from Minnesota.
The Americans were natonish- ed to re the President-whom they had never seen before in person. Ho shook hands with... them and sent greetings to the people of Minnesota.
Later in the evening the two Statesmen anw a film thow tow mother..
"They saw the British Alm **Tiger Bay," which won 13- year-old Hayley Mlila on award Film for acting in the Berlin Festival in July.
ut Chequers--Router. ·
The film was . screened
A
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