1
The
THE CHINA MAIL, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1961.
'He will never rule us'
KENYATTA'S LEADERSHIP CHALLENGED BY MASAI
pluck of the Irish!
A woundedk Irish NCO, of the Cnited Nations force smiles from Jais stretcher as he is brought off a plane at Leopolitville Airport recently. He was transferred from the .bigod-staford stretcher to an- other and then rushed by am- balance to the UN hospital in Leupoldville. The NCO WOR flown in from Elisabethylle by a plane of the Italian Air Force's 40th squadron-AP.
Erroll leaves Djakarta for Saigon
Djakarta, Sept. 24. The British Minister of State
at the Board of Trade, Mr! Frederick J. Erroll, loft Djakarta today for Saigon after a four-day visit to Indonesia.
Mr Erroll is making a survey: of British trade in South-east
Asia.
He told press conference there were good uppurtunities
for British
manufacturers
AUSTRALIAN MISSION
TO PROMOTE SALE
OF WOOLLEN GOODS
Sydney, Sept. 21.
Nairobi, Sept. 24. Jomo Kenyatta's leadership of Konya Africons was challenged today by a Masal Tribal chief who said "ho will never rula us."
The Masal member of Kenya's Legislative Council, Olo Tipps, told a meeting at Narok in the heart of Masailand that "any- body who wants being ruled by Kenyatta should leave Masal- inski."
Kenyatta, recently release! from nine years' detention for his part in the 1932 Mau Mau terrorist movement, war 10 speak today to an estimated crowd
80,000 persons bt Nyeri, in the heart of Kikuyu- Innd, his stronghold of power during Mau Mau days.
Meanwhile, Kenyatta, speak- Ing to a crowd of about 100,000 at Nyerl, abuul 50 miles north of Nairobi, said today that lund which had been taken
away
from the Africans and was not properly utilised should be re- turned to them.
'A prayer
He added: "I have told you we sho ask for our land back in pence, but gone to those lands and claimed arean for yourselves, and that is wrong.
some of you have
Mr Kenyatta more forectu! than at any previous meeting since his release from Govern- ment restriction, was making his first speech in a Kikuyu tribal
arca,
At the meeting Mr Paul Ngel, an old colleague of Kenyatta, chunted a "prayer" which sold, "God of the Africans we ask you today to tell the God of the Europeans that Africans of this country want their land back."
Mr Tum Mboya, General Notional Union, told the meet- Secretary of the Kengu African ings: "All we say is that those Europeans who remain
in this country must be prepared to The trade mission comprises tive under an African Govern-
themont."-Reuter and UPI.
The first specialist trade mission to promote the sale of Australian-made woollen goods in Canada and the United States left Sydney by air last night.
Lo
Two
des
join in the Indonesian Covere- iment's current eight-year
velopment plan.
OPENINGS
Multi-milion pound Sterling contracts have already beert secured
provision ล
spinning mills
rables.
Be helleved
uns
of
telephonr
Crossed
by raft
on floats
and
of
a ve-man team led by Chairman of Directors Joint-Managing Director Nock and Kirby Ltd., a large Sydney retail store, Sir Norman Nock.
Sir Norman Nock said before leaving that members of the trade group would evaluate the wool textile market in the United States and Canada. When they return to tralia in six weeks time, they
report to th Govern-i
wool ment and the Australian textile industry.
Wi Dover, Sept. 24, Belgians, boat owner Lucien van Maldoren, 41, and Mohammed Pal, 33, both of a restaurateur,
Aux
MAIN AIM "Our main
aim will be to contact the clothing manufoe-
De Panne, crossed the 50 turers, the weaving people and miles from their home all those who are interested in. town to Dover on
fine auring Australian
wools," Padalo, a raft on floats Sir Norman Nock said.
ridden like a cycle.
"North America Imports £ A86,000,000 worth of woullen goods a year but Australia's share of this is only about year," China
The crossing took 15 hours. They said that because of A150,000 strung tides they were taken uff Mail Special. course and covered more than Malaya, 70 miles.
there were also opening for the sale of a com- plete plant and factorles-such by cement works to Indonesia. Mr Erroll, who has already been In Burma, Singapore, is now scheduled
visit Thailand, Indo-Ching states, and
Channel DR MOORE
130 "Next time It's Hong steamer for us when we want kong before leaving for honeto visit England," said Lucien, Reuter.
China Mäll Special.
24
A British Crossword Puzzle
12
18
ACROSS
1 Potato piece?
4 Clean up the under-growth.
7 Crab catcher?
Perhops dead plant.
11 Worn car parti
12 Much spoken of In the Bible.
13 Jule talk.
13 Restricted.
18 Silver boy!
19 Sent by the music?
20 Ficot.
23 Sound bovine.
24 Nippers!
25 Palts of children,
14
122
6
Plan to build
biggest....
office 'complex'
Montreal, Sept. 24. Promoters representing fin-
Panchen Lama
to attend celebrations
Tokyo. Sept. 25. The Fanches Lama, Hauro-
¡Communist-backed
head ruler of Tibes atrived in Lanehow from Lhasa Lo- day on his way to Peking
afiend the
October 1 Chinese National celebrations, the
to
Day New
China News Agotiof re- ported.
The Panchen LAMA number two spiritual and stoulas leader of Tibet, WIL installed on the Lamaist throne After the Dalai Lama Red to India when the Chinese crashæð A Tibetan rebellion in 1959.
AP.
Russians design automatic trawler
Leningrad, Sept. 24.
CASH GRANT
Canadian
Red Cross
gives $20,000 for
use in Burma, Laos
Toronto, Sept. 22.
The Canadian Red Cross Society has provided $20,000 from the International Relief Fund to be used for the assistance of disaster vic- tims in Burmia and Laos.
Mr Frank Hui, Chairman of. the National Executive Com-| mittee of the Canadion Reil Cross, announced today that wo cheques for $10,000 each have been forwarded to the Aslan ustions.
The cash grani for Burma has been sent to the Burmese Red Cross to assist flood victims. Thy League of Red Croga Sucictles appeal from Geneva listed more than 200,000 people | homeless.
URGENT NEED
The International Committee of the Red Crosa will receive the second cheque. The money will be used for emergency re- lief action among victims of the Laotian conflict.
The
International Red Cross lins said help is urgently needed for 35.000 displaced persons who Electronic computers which are in dire need of food, cloth-
will navigato, control ing and
medical supplies, engines and scorch for China Mail Special. fish, will be fitted into automatic ocean
trowlers now being design-Found guilty
ed hare, the Soviet nows agency Toss reported. The computers also will be able to operate the trawlers Ashing gear and processing
equipment.
but mentally
slon eye" will automatically re- gulate the depth of a trawl, depending on the concentration of fish.
A special elevi not responsible'
with a technical education, will Only 22 men, most of them
man ench 5,000-ton automalle trawler, supervising and tuning the computer.
labour efficiency in the
Specialists estimate that
new
vessels will be almost five times greater than in any present irawler, and that production costs will fall by 70 per cent China Mall Special.
Saudi Arabia.
removes
press curbs
Snakes menace
Burmese
flood victims
Rangoon, Sept. 24. Medical teams are touring
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