THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1950.
Korea Reconstruction Will Take Years And Hundreds Of Millions
Catholic Priest Slain In Korea
Milton, Mass. Oct, 24. The slaying of a Catholla Urtext
Communut br troops in Korea was re- porled today in a dispatch which also said that nino lionaries were missing. The victim of the slaying occurred on June 27 ww identified me the Kë- verend Anthony Collier, 17, of the Columban for elga missionary koma bera, Ner. Colller was a native of Ireland and ociated with the Columban Order's beadquarters at Omaha, Nebraskalted Press.
HUNGARIAN
CARDINAL
FAILING
Vatican City, Oct. 24. The Communiat authori- ties in Hungary have called in seven specialists during i the past two months in on attempt to prop
New York, Oct. 24.
A United States rellef official said today that reconstruction of Korea would take "many years should be the joint task of the United Nations, and many hundreds of millions of dollars" and
Dr Edgar Johnson, director of the Economic Co-operation Administration
programme for Korea, said that the United States had spent more than $500,000,000 in Korea before the Communist invasion.
"We are going to have to. In- vest П 101 more money and lechnical assistance to protect the Investment we have al 'ready made,” he added.
Dr Johnson who recently re turned from Koren, told the: American automobilio Associa- tion: "We have a new
oppor tunity to demonstrate cerisini principles of humine conduct... to the entire world. What 11 needed is i swifi, adequate and solidly-supported program-
MISSING
SCIENTIST
MYSTERY
(Continued from Page 1)
me of reconstruction in Korea."seek for two days from country
He added that, just as the country. "moral forces of the free 13-
What are we to conclude?
Dons were consolidated" under Did the Kalian Bruno and General MacArthur, the tark his Swedish wife, Mariana, of reconstruction must be a quarrel and argue and change Jolat
Urzited Nations under their mind first heading for inking, but the United States her home and then turning
towards the should offer is "proper share" back
Soviet
of money, skills and services. frontier? Finally, why did the Finnish authorities let him stay in Finland, giving his actress only as "an hotel."
Dr
BURGLARY
Johnson said it was high recognised
your.
con-
There are still doubts, but the Russlors up the time
musi we
presume that the rapidly failing health of "that our investment in Korea Russians now have the Protes- Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty, lonal prace" and would
was an investment in interna-
For fron Harwell In their
They hands.
nak him will the imprisoned Hungarian
tinue to be. He also raid that, practical questions. He, knows. Primate, Vatican Sources while the United States ita for Instance, how uranium rods; aald tonight.
vested $500,000,000 In South are arranged in an atomic pile. Reports reaching the Vall-Korea and took not one penny
This secert Was can from Budapest indicated out, the Russians had drained
curtaftedt prying eyes that the Communists were an-North Koren
during the of $50,000,000 to from xious at oll costs 4 prevent $70,000,000 worth of food, rain-recent Press tour of Harwell but the death in prison of the 88-crals and manufactured goods would be obvious to anyone yenr-old
had each anti
who works there. Pontecorvo considered the possibility
could also tell what substances "What a contrast there is be-best resist the corrosive effect of him.
tween our polley and the Com-radio-active uranium cases, were reported (munist system of international mended continualį burglary,
could tell Soviet engineers most I canne!,
in all the of the British schemes for heat the Car-ionnals of all human history, and from the atomic pile. an attempt to any war which is anywhere near the method that
This is com-as important as this one...
the Sovlot thy Union claimed to regard with is the uprising of the righteous contempt a few days upp.
Indignation against
Professor Pontecorvo has the visited Invasion by the Communists."
practical engineering Know- various times)United Press,
for the making between September 7 and 10
atomic power plant.
But Harwell is
Cardinal
even
of
eleasing
to have
injections to enable
In
dinal to sleep
stuvo off a threatened plete nervous colinose.
The Vatican reports sald that world six of the specialists
the
a
Cardinal at
in villa at Svabhogy, a for- mer German
wartime police post, where he was held pri- Loner
Cardinal
Mindszenty hnd been transferred to the vilin earlier this year from the pri- non at Vac, where he is serving
to sentence
and espionage.
for
treason
The specialists were reported to have found a serious de- terioralion In the Cardinal'a health and to have recommend- ed Immediate anti-neurole treatment if fatal collapse were to be prevented.
Australian
Railway
Strike Spreads
On September 27 the Car- dinal was visited by a seventh a famous specialist, this time Budapest neurologist,
Immediately afterwards, the reports said, the neurologist was summoned to report per sonally to the Hungarian Prime day. Minister. Reuter.
DUTCH M.P.
ARRESTED
Melbourne, Oct. 24.
How
He
of an
not irr
America. It doesn't make bogus onú Pontecorvo has probably never seen an atomic bomb of any kind.
But there is also another field where he muy know more than The has ever revealed in England.
to the metropolitan meat mar England nor kets to keep up the regular meat experiments supplies, and production losses amount to thousands of Pounds
Princess Margaret Opens Motor Show
West Europe Can Have Guns & Butter
Princess Margaret wore a dusty pink coat over a pink spotted frock, with black hat and pink feather, when she opened the Motor Show at Earls Court. Our picture shows the Princess, escorted by Sir Rowland Smith, chairman of the Ford Company, examining one of the new Ford models on exhibition. (London Express Service).
SOURABAYA SIT
CLASH
Djakarta, Oct. 24. Indonesian police ar. rested about 20 people when a crowd of AmbonCSO shok at troops In Goura baya, East Java, lasi Sun- day, according to reports reaching here today.
The crowd also threaten- ed the police with "tand-
the grenades.
reports stated.
The arrested persons In- cluded a Timorese mem- ber of the Royal Nether- lands Army, who was said to have two hand-grenades, -Router.
Possible Successors To Lie
Gladwyn Jebb Remains Optimistic Over United Nations
New York, Oct. 24.
The chief British delegate to the United Na- tions, Sir Gladwyn Jebb, told the Herald Tribune forum today that the United Nations provided the "only possible basis on which to found a world community of the future.”
However, he warned that, whatever its strength or weakness, "it is not now and cannot for a long time be a real world government and therefore cannot of itself preserve world peace.”
"It can only"
assist various governments, notably the great powers, to create a situation in which peace will be enduring." le-said-there--was no good thinking that the United Na- tions by self could
prevent nother
great war! because New York, Oct, 24.
that depended
upon co-opera- Four names were mentioned
tion among
the great powers. us possible
Mc successors ta
Reviewing the progress of the Trygve Lle as Secretary-tien- United Nations before Korea, ral of the United Nations at Sir Gladwyn said that, despite the closed meeting of the Ave Soviet permanent members of the Security Council yesterday, it operate,
of
Dr
Mexico.
General
If It Decides
Washington, Oct. 24.
Western Europe can have "both guns and butter" by increasing its production rate by $1,000,000,000 worth of goods per year, and it has sufficient raw materials and other wealth to do this, according to opinion expressed in authorita- tive circles here today.
The source of these views cannot be revealed, but it is regarded as highly responsible.
According to this analysis, the munism by "building up situs- European rearmament pro- tions of strength" was strongly Kramme can be carried out supported in s analysis, but without hurting living standards it was warned that the pro- or economic stability either in gramme must be kept within Enrope or the United States, the limits necessary to provent provided:
the Western world from falling economic dimeulties
1. The United States govern- into the ment supports its foreign aid which Kremlin theorists have and domestic rearmament pro- predicted. grammes out of the current COULD BLUNDER Laxes to halt inflation.
The View WAd expressed 2. European countries con- that if the present Western tinue to move toward economic policy of building up both ils integration and co-operation. If military and economic strength they return to tho "old way followed through, Rus nationalism" they may have a would continue to evade a neither guns nor butter, it was major war. It was emphasised. warned.
huwever, that elther The opinion was
also ex-might "blunder" into a silun- pressed that most of the peopletion leading to war unless cau→ of Western Europe could be tion was exercised. counted on to defend them- A high European official w
Communist quoted
selves against aggression, provided:
1. United States aid is suffi cient to make it
clear
they have a "chance to win".
2. It is made clear to them the present rearmament pro- Cramme is designed to help prevent war "and not to wage
ECONOMIC AID Reviewing the world sltur- ton in othe areas, the es- timate was made that, for the expenditure of $3,000,000,000 a could year, the United States carry on an economic nid pro- gramme in the Middle East, the Far East and other undeveloped countries, sufcient to ward off Communist political progress.
013
during this valuation having predicted that a conflict in the Kremlin might occur within 10 years, touching off a state of civil war in the Soviet Union.-United Press,
Egyptian Army Scandal
Cairo, Oct. 24. General Mohammed Halden Pasha, commander in chief of the Egyptian armed forces, may resign in connection with the arms scandal being investigated.
Government, Waldist These
I was maintained that this by the money should be spent only in sources said tuday. localities
definitely determined sources added that several off- to be important to democratic cers figured in the investigation associated with and Turkey were mentioned as General Haldor and ho wanted examples
-to-avold-any possible sugges The Secretary of State's on that he was interfaring in policy
containing Com- the inquiry-Unlled ProES,
Truman Talks security. The Philippines, Iran were closely
Cordially
.
To Vyshinsky
Flushing, Oct, 24. President Truman during his ww visit to the United Nations to- day, talked cordially about two minutes with the Soviet Foreign Minister, Andrel Vyshinsky,
"Revival" Of COLLECTIVE DECISION
Ja
beard
recent
of
unwillingness to co-
the organisation not broken and was understood here,
up "trading in sults is better than trading They were Sir Ramaswami bombs". He said there nad He has had experience with Mudaliar and Sir Benegal Hou
been successes too, like the Carlos India; heavy hydrogen and "ritium,"
setilenients concerning Greece, The President WAR Romulo of the Philippines; and Palestine, indonesia and Italian telling the Russian that he had (which is a substance from which The nine-day old strike of hydrogen boinks may eventually
Padilla Luis
Nervo D
colonies, while open Victorian railwaymen, which be made.
warfare not seen anything about war- He worked as the
had been prevented in Kashmir. spread
These names will be further
mongering
his yesterday to South favoured
of Professor pupil
One major fact emerges from speaches. Australia, has seriously affected Enrico Ferial on "heavy water."
So discussed privately by the Industry in the two States.
lg Five" on Wednesday. The the elbreak of the Korean coli- But it is quite certain that no Security Council Road transport has been un- real advance to the hydrogen will then meet
Vyshinsky, as a whole fiet. according to Sir Gladwyn
speaking the fro in pri fe,— ] ...
occasion on through an interpreter, replied. able to carry enough livestock bamb
has been attempted in
Reuter,
which real, undisguised, un- shall come to that inter." were the revent
deniable aggression look place He told the President that the the United
after World War II, the world American press was gulity of States revealed to Pontecorvo.
community as a whole success-maguifying the possibility Whatever vise is said of
fully mobilised Itself to hait it." War, to which Mr Truman re- Dritish security, its impos-
pled that the pres in the The Victorias railwaymen
sible to belleve
United States is free and can that Ponte- struck
He admitted over clubes
practised spy who
that this could print anything it plenses. for over fed from England as the time pay and other
partially be Futes.
Later, Mr Truman He left
told re- Russian boycott of the Security porters Yesterday railwaymen in South closed round him.
that he had British Australia and New South Wales
plways passport without
council and the fact that hindrance.
Santiago, Chile, Oct, 24.
the thought Vyshinsky a nice fellow. And judging from
United States had been willing He added that the Russian re- staged iL 24-hour sympathy the knowledge he had,
former member of and
to carry the burden for the free presentative strike and the South Australians
that
Chamber of Deputies world, but "the fact remains, it United States and must be the Russians Chilean later decided to continue their presuming
A guest in the troubled to beguile and claimed today that Adolf Hut- such a collective
decision had ircuted courteously, finally to abduct him, jer's deputy, Martin Bormann, been taken in the 19306,
President We Truman arst met Mr Vyshinsky can arrived in Patagonia in 1945 only were warned draw is that the Soviet Union cord a German submarlac might never have had World in the Potsdam conference
Argentina and Chile ever since. tion and confusion, the United
II." All War living In Southern becn
1045. United Press. Despite apparent disorganisa- This entirely unconfirmed re-Nations "does represent a port was contained in an Inter-of world conscience does pro- view published in El Mercurio vide the only basis on which with the former Catholic Centre to found a world community Farty deputy, Paul Hesslein, the future", Sir Gladwyn said. who claimed he saw Bormann
"We must never do anything personally in February 1940 near which
would on the shores of Lake world character Llifen
the endanger
of the United Ranco, Chile, riding with two Nations."
corvo was
have walkout.
perhaps Kerkrade, Holland, Oct. 20, Wheat farmers la Victoria and the Six Dutch Communists, In-† South Australia cluding a
conclusion
net on
A
we can
Member of Parlia today not to rely on the rall-is much less for forward with ment. huve been urrestert in ways to transport their expected the development of atomic Limburg Province, on charges record harvests.-Reuter,
of Inciting soldiers and airmen
to desertion, it was learnt here
today.
The member
SIDE GLANCES
of Vaals,
of Parliament,
Mr J. H. Hermans, was arrested in bed last Thurs- day shortly after returning from The Hingue where he had attended Д parliamentary session-Reuter.
Student Strike Ends In Madrid
Madrid, Oct 21.
Engineering students ou strike | here since October 18 today 10- turned to their classes after the Ministry of Education agreed to withdraw sanctions imposed
them
upen
The students boycotted their
protest classes in
against o Goverment decree authorising:
Lesuo " religious college to
diplom to its students on an equal or better footing thou their own-Reuter.
IN CIVILIAN
CLOTHES
Cairo, Oct. 245 Presi reports of the resigna- tion el Fioid Marshal Moham- med Haldar Pasha, the Comman der-in-Chief of the Egypilan armed forces, could not be con- firmed here today.
Haidar Pasha was appointed by King Farouk last February. Recently ・ho has been seen wearing civilian clothes, though he had previously worn a Field Monhale uniform-Reuter.
gather th
9-7
energy than it claims to de
By Galbraith
COPE, 1990 AY MEN BERVICE, ME. T. M. REEL, AL A. PIT, OFF.
**Uh-doe-remember my asking you a couple of weeks ago If you'd thought of retiring? Well-uh-forget It for a while, won't you?"
had
Bormann
other Germans.
the
and
The report claimed It could not be a case of mistaken iden- tity as Hesslein and Bormana recognised each other. United
Press.
British Sergt Shot By Torrorist
Asmara, Oct. 24. A terrorist shot and seriously wounded a British sergeant to- day. The sergeant, a member. of the Royal Army Servies Corp, was sitting in the front seat of a convoy going from Agordat 'to Karen.
The shooting took place at the) same spot where Shiftos (pro-¦ Ethiopian armed bands) "lost Saturday killed two policemen in an ambush.-Reuter
attributed to the
kind
WITHOUT DAYDREAMS
of
13
In
None The Worse
For Experience
Argentia, Newfoundland,
Oct. 24. Eight survivors from the 1,104-ton Greek-owned freigh- He thought it necessary, re-ter. North Voyager, whleh dis- farding UN functioning if the appeared Inst Sunday, walked Security Council is tied up by ashore here today from the
a Sovlei veto, that It should United States Coast Guard cut- be made clear that "we do not ter Sorrel. contemplate in any woy pre-
Judicing legitimate Soviet rights They were none the wordi under the Charter".
although after abandoning
Sir Gladwyn concluded: "We their sluking shly off Cape must not, dare not bbpe too Race they had spent about 24 much, but at least it is now hours in an open boat In bitter- possible to hope without day-ly cold weather. dreaming."--United Press,
Radio Hongkong
H.K.T.
0.00,
**John
Canadian and American air- craft were still searching for the other 12 members of her crew.
The Sorrel picked up the survivors from
u raft in the North Atlantic yesterday. One of them, John Gardner, of Montreal, said today over the
Hongkong Calling** graiana BUTTY: Bull's Bandeau. "İti£*** ship-to-shore telephone that the Bongs by Dennis Noble, ac when he went on watch early Yesterday and To-day: 820, Three North Voyager was taking water 4.40, Carlos Nunes and Mia Concanut Grove Serenadors. (Studio): on Sunday. "Lucky Dip"Variety Requests Presented by Pauline Spence.
(Studio) 6. World News and News fire box later and put out the Water reached the furnaceo Relay);
Smuggling Charge Analysis London
"Ordiestra of the W***”—WEZ
6.15 fires. Ashes clogged the pumps, San Francisco, Oct. 24.
Philharmonia Orchestra: 843. Serial and the captain ordered the Blory:-"Shadow of the Mine" crew to the boats. Fausto Vincente, 84, of 1421 Written and Head by Jonathan Bly. Rigal Avenue, Manila, charged (Part 7). (Studio): "From La with smuggling narcotics, was Weather Report:
Editorial." (London Relay); 9.10.
Gardner and seven other men 0.11. "Bervicot into the port bost, but they erraigned today in the federal Spot-Light With the Band of the could not get it back to the alde district court here, A plea was Addlesex Regiment, Relay from of the ship. An hour later postponed until November 18. the · N.A.A.SIN Crub, Kowloon they saw another boat with
Second Programme Vincente was charged with 20
In the three men on board, but later. Series Presented ay the Britis smuggling 20 ounces of heroin, Comen, (Studio) 10.10,37anch they lost sight of it. and nine ounces of opium of Cabaret"; 1930, "chestra Melodies"; "The captain was on tho UIC President Claveland on 11. Radio News Real (London me bridge and as far as we know which he worked as a waiter.oodnight Music" God Save
lay); 11.10, Weather Reportz 11.10. -United Press.
Laing: 11:30, Close. Down,
he went down with the Chip" Gardnor added.—Reutor.
of
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