
6
CYLINDER
VAUXHAI'
BEST
CAr'
THE
DAILY
.NEWS
~~
e*·
4~~
Vol.
67,
No.
29
THE
DAILY
NEWS,
ST.
JOHN'S,
NFLD.,
THlJRSDAY,
FEBRUARY
4,
1960
(Price.
7
Cents)
Charles
Hutton
&
Sons
U.N.
Asks Syria,
ls1~ael,
To
uit
·Disputed. Zone
--···~--·~·--------
....
----
-----~---------
*
NO
REPLY
TO
!--------------,------------------------~---
DEMANns
1
De
Gaulle
Gets
JERUSALEM-AP-Israel charged that Syrian gunners poured
new
fire D p
Wednesday night on an
Isr.1eli
settlement
in
a demilitarized zone southenst of
ec
ree·
owe-rs
tht>
Sea
of Galilee.
An
Israeli army spokesman said one 'Israeli guardsman
was
wounded. He said fire from automatic weapons and mortars hit the Beit Katzir
-----------,~-------------------------------
sdtlemenl but that fire was not returned from the Israeli side.
By
HARVEY
HUilSON
i
mination
in
~·ranee's
big
North
In
a report from Tel
Aviv,
he
claimed Syrians opposite the southcnstcm
shore
of the
Sea
of Galilee fired machine-gun bursts and rifle shots into Israeli
territory.
He
sahl the fire was not returned. There was no immediate confir- ,
mntion from the
U~
or other sources. The spokesman denied an earlier Dam·
ascus
rCI)Ort
thnl Syrinn soldiers had fired
on
an Israeli patrol and Jsmcli
mnchinc·gunners
fired back during the day,
PARIS
:AP)~l'rcsidcnt
de
African
territory
might
'even·
Gaulle
WednrRday
night
got
tually
give
the
Moslem
m~jority
the
derrce
powers
he
wants
to.
control
and
force
them
out.
I
act
deci~ive~y
against
his
~P·:
But
some
t'rench right
wing-
i
ponents
Ill
F
ranee
and
Al;!~rw.
ers
also
OJiposc
d~moeracy.
I
ln
rt·spo~1se
to
an
appeal
hy
'Some
o[
the
right
win;!
leaders
Prem1c\
)hchcl
Dehrr.
I
hi'
Se_n·:
now
sou-ght
by
the
police
were
ate
qu1ckly
approved
a
lull
:~clive
in
the
t930R.
when
there
"ranting
the
·•overnment
~mer-
was
·uppo
t h r f
f·
sc1's
ALGIERS_:_Arms
outstretched. bearded
rchd
lcadel'
PicJTl'
I.aG~1illarde
lea\·(~'
his
barricade
to
surrender
to
Fl'ench
h·not>s
hen• Fchruarl'
1\t
after the settlers'
re\'olt collapsed.
lie
is
followed
hy
men
can·yin)(
fla~.
1\adio
Al~icr~
said
fl'i>rnary
1st
thai LaGaillardl'
was
in
the cmtml\'
nf
militan· authorities.
It
wa!
rC(lOrled
that the French Cabinet would decide
.his
fatc.-t:.PI"Phnto.
DENY
ISRAELI
PRESENCE
'
Radio
Damascus decla!'cd,
The
spokesman
addr~
huw-
~
"'
s r e e
or
•
1
•
m.
, • • • • , •
1
• •
"·
gency
powers
by
a
\'ole
nf
226
J.1ael.
mean11hllc,
delllcd
lhe
U.A.R.
s lst Syrian army
Is
e1•er.
that Israel
IS
pn•pnred 1
39
Tl
l'l h r D t'
Dehrc's
')wech
to
the
Senate
thcrt' are a hra It f I r d t " t
lk
I
kl
d t t lk
th
s · · •
11
:
0
• ·
le
lam
er
0
cpu
ws
· · · ·
.
ny
. c
orc.es
n
ca
~
o s r e
qu
c y
an
. 1 o a over c
yr~am
'a
·
ah·e:~dy
had
approl·~d
the
bill.
as
in
hi>
address
ln
the
as:-cm-
the demilitarized
zone
11hcre
hard against
any
new
Israeli:
pos5lble
measures
which
could.
It
be
001
. 1 . . . d
hh'
the
dw
before
viewed
the
thr
1.':-.i
ask
d
bot!
ld
t h tlllt , b h I f 1 t I , , c
cs
aw
a~
soon
. . c •
'.
. .
. c \ s cs o
os
y.
1 e e P u o
rna
ntam quwt
1
G·mlic
·
gns
it Frrnch
uprising
in
Algeria
withdraw. Fighting
broke
out . . and order" along the
f1·onlier.:
'
51
· · . ,
·•ravel
· ,
..
Friday
in
the disputed
81
.eas
In
Egypt,
Syr1.a's
pal'tner
In
i There
was
a further
dec
lara· !
Thus
armed,
rlt•
foau
<'
was
",
l ·
~outheaH
of the
Sea
of
Galilee.
•.he
U.A.R.,
Radio
Cairo
broa~·
i lion
from
Oslo
concerning the i
r~~Jortcd'
tu
be
pl:~~~~llll7
a
dr~~-
"We
a I
moot
oil\\'
a
collapse
n[;
N 0 v a . s c 0
tl•
a H
I.
t
By
Col.
Raymond
Plrlot.
Bel·
cast a statement that· Syria
IS
j600·man
Norwegian
battalion i
he
shakcup
~f
:llllial~
and
mlli•thc slate
last
week."
he
sairi
..
lila~
chairman
of
the Israeli·
1
read;v
to
discuss the
problc~:
In
the
5,000·man
U!\1
~m~rgcn·
t;
1
ry
_Jead~rs
Ill
Algr~m.
.
"The
stability
of
institutions. i
s~:r1an
mixed armistice com·'
of
the disputed
zone
wlthm l
cy
force
policing that frunlict·. I Elen
,before
parliament arl·l
the
continuity
of
thought
and'
mission called
on
both Israel;
l~\e
mixed
armistice
commls·l'
NORWEGIAN
STATEIUENT
:
ed.
the
~overnment
bc~an
mov-
·political
action
are
more
neces·
and Syria Tuesday
to
wlth·ls'on.
Foreign
Minister
Hal
van!
,mg
a;,(amst
ngh~
wmg-extre·'
sary
than
ever."
i w t
St
I y
draw all r d
f.
d·
L I d
•mists
who
are
believed
to
have·
ors
orm
e
a
me
orces, arme I
ISRAELIS
UNINTERESTED
ange
ssue
a statement
sal'•:
. : I n a r s
ci\'llians and weapons
from
the
1
Th
1
11
h
..
t
ing
the
Norwegian
gol'ermueJit
~been
.the real
_force
behmrl
last·
Dcbre
refused
to
a~cept
a~y
.
zone.
1 . e srae s s
owed
no
m I "has
not
considered
an
with·
I weeks rebelhon
by
French
amendments
to
the
b1ll.
This~.
Albert Grand
•.
a
UX
spokes·! Iciest
In
such
a debate. ,
drawal
of
the
Norwcgi:n
con-:
~c_l!l~rs
.m
,Algcn~..
means
that
ca~inet
dccre~s
will
i
man, said earlier
"we
arc~
"S;vria
has
no
standing In·
tin
gent."
1
SEC
fi.F.IIS
BIG.
H.,\R
bec?mc
law
wllhout
parliament:
By
DOX
HOYT
weather offkr.
knol'kerl
rlown
found
thcm,ch·cs
in
rrot;,ur·
still. waiting
for
,a
reply from: the
_zone,"
an
Israeli foreign i
Tuesday
Norway's
army
rom-:
,
The
•.
set~lers
learf'rl
riP,
hann~
anything
to
say
until· 11:\LlFAX
ICP)~:\n
unex·
all
preriou~
records
for
snow-
ants
with
no
cleC'tricity
to
S~·r1a
and
Israel. ' ! mllllstry spokesman declared./
mand
said
the
i\"orwcgian
:
Gaull~_:_
_
_!l!:•':._
-~_r
sclf·rlrtcr·: later. '
pee
ted .
st.orm
o\·erwl~elmed
fa
II.
l'Ook
food.
:I
lost
of
the action has been'
He
said the
zone
"Is
wholly
troops
would
be
pulled
out
of:
·--
sou
the!
n :\ova
_scotia
\\ edncs·
WORST
SINCE
1894
Residents
were
urged
to
u>~
ln.
the
area of Tawaflx village, under Israeli
sovere!Gntv.,
the
danger
zone
and
probabl\'
SOUth
Afrl'ca·.
Clay
and went
mto
the record
The
oul.v
thing
<"lo'e
to
I h l I
"
b k
th
1 1
~
their telephones
only
in
an
•
1g
t y ess than
two
miles though earmarked
as
a demlll·
[)fdered
home
1
·f
serJ'ous
fl'~ht·.
_
1
oo
·s
as
e
wo_r_s
of
t1e
ern_·.
Wrdncsua;··s
snow
oceurrPd
in
f th
~
t f
th
1-1
1 t
••mergen<·y.
Some
power
anrl
cast o e southern tip of the I tarized
aJ'ea
under
term•.
of
JnG
broke
out
between
Israel·.
ury
or
e a 1
ax
metropoh·
1894
when
24
inches fell
in
24
"
..
N
8
r • telrphonc lines collapsed
IJ~·
Sea
of Galllee. the
1949
armistice agreement.''
and
the
U.A.R.
; 0 r
It
ISh
s t . ton area. . hours. neath the
snow.
-
----·-
i
up
por
,
By
late afternoon.
26
llll'h~,;
Some
rliill\.1~e
was
1
,,
111
,cd.
Parliament:
· :
had
fallen
on
Halifax
and
Dart· The
roof
of
a building
hou:oin!!.
The
:\llant
ie
storm
t:lll'\"t·rl
No
Grounds
1 'mouth
in
18
hours.
It
was
a
be\·crag~
firm
collapserl
in
in
toward,;
Xora
Scotia Tuc'·
Members
Discuss
Legislation
Govt.
F
S
•
still
fa~ling
and
drifting
b~·
• Lunenburg.
X.S.,
damaging dar night
with
its
centre about
F
D
•
0 r
egregatiO
n fore
wmds
that. gusted
to
four cars.
Xo
one
was
hurt.
100
miles
south
of
the pro\'·
or
IVOrce
more.
than.
60
mi~S
.an
. hour. '
In
Halifax.
the
rlowntown
incc
and
stayed there.
Then
• ,
..
· . _
..
!lima
Scotia
hl~hw~y,
dP·
·area
wa•
without
p<Jwer
f•>r
al-
Wcrlncsrlay
morning.
it.
moved
LONDON.
(Reuters)
.-
. A . , . , Jlartment crews and
c1ty
snow
most
an
hour at
noon
..
\I
any: l'astward like a scythe
alon
2
man
who
tnes
to
stop
h1s
Wife,
t:APETO\\
N (RPutersl -
FRA:'IlK
REPLY
plows
fought a
lo>~ng
battle. oi those
who
\\"liked
to
work 1
th
south
coast ·
from
snoring
by
turning her!
Prime
Minister
).tacmillan
told
I
In
reply
to
llacmillan's I The provincial road
d~parl·
~---------·-------~
_
_.:_·
_____
...:_
____
-~~
over
or
moving
her
head
gently
I
the
South
African
Parliament 1
speech.
nationalist
Prime
Minis·
ment said
plowinl(
would
con·
is
not
cruel, a
divorce
court
;
today
that Britain
could
not
1 tcr
Hendrik
Verwoerd
said
I tinuc but there
was
no
ho:Jc
ruled
Wednesday.
support
its
policy
of
racial I that.
speaking
frankly,
..
we
can'
()f
opening roads
in
eight
south
By
DAVE
MeJNTOSH
1 Apart
from
re·introduelion
of
The
wife,
brunette Pamela·
segregation.
:say
we
differ
from
your."
I
coast
and
Annapolis
\'allr~·
.
OTTAWA
(CPl - A
Com·
this
many
• sided
problem,
Com·
Douglas,
28,
failed
to
obtairi
a'
Macmillan
said
to
do
so
would
1 I counties until the
winds
stop·
·
F1
..
ench
P1
4
ejJa1
4
e
Fo1
4
Blockade
mons
1tatement
Wednesday
by
mons
business
was
fairly
rou·
divorce
from
40
•
year
•
old
:be "false
to
our
own
deep
con-
1
He
~roughl
applause
fr~m
I'
peri
blowing.
"That
l·ould
he
Prime
~inister
Diefenbaker
in·
tine
Wednesday.
Charles
Douglas.
J
victions
about
the
political
ries-
'!,he
legislators
when
he_
sa~d:,
tomorrow," a spokesman sairl.'
dieated
Canada
and
the
United
The
government
tabled
fur· Judge Sir
Seymour
Karmin-
tinies
of
free
men."
1
There
must
not
o~ly
be
_Justice
I A Trans-Canada
Air
Lines·
States
are
not
out
of
the
woods
ther supplementary
spending
ski
rejected
her
allegation that/
He
also
warned
the
white
ito
the
black
man
'"
AfriCa
but
official said airports at near·
)'et
in
negotiating
an
agreement estimates
of
s31,96Mll
for
the
1
the
husband
had
treated
her
1
~egis~alors
t~at
the
mo~t
strik·:
also
to
the
While
man.
b~
Shearwate~
and
Gr~cn·
----------------------
t·oncerning
custody
and
control current
fiscal
year
which
end!
roughly.
i'~g
1mpress1_on
he
_rcce1ved
on:
"We
see
oursell•es
as
part
of
\\ood
and
1'armouth, :\.S
..
; , ., . . . . .
of
nuclear
warheads.
March
31.
There
was
no
dis·
"I don't
think
he
behaved,
hJs.)7,000-mll~
African
tour
-'the
Western
world
_ a true
would
not
be
open
to
!raffle
~IZER
I
E.
Tutll>_:a
I
Heutcrsl
~wn
~JY
hcnch
alrcl·aft
of
the
•
Replying
to
OplfOsitlon
Lead·
cussion.
other
than
as
a
reasonable
hus-1
Which
ends
Fnday-is
that "the
white
state
in
southern Mric for at least
24
hours
from
- f
re!1ch
na1·al
oft1eers
pre
par·
Ium;1an fronher nllage
of
Sak·
tr
Pearson
about
a
press
con·
Finance
Minister
Fleming
band
would
have
done
in
those
1
wind
of
chang~
is
blowing
with
a
possibility
of
~ranting
a;
n_o~n
Wednesday.
:\lost
trail.1s
erl
.''-~dnesday.
for
a_
possible
l~l-~idi·Youss;f.
.
ference
state!"ent
in
Washing·
said
imports
of
Japanese
lex·
circumstances,"
the
judge
said./
through
the
conhnent."
full
future
to
the
black
man
in
we~e.
~:ltahyed
ahnd
some.
DillY,
;un:si.Jnt"
blockacttc
f
aulned
b?t
I·.rance
claimed
the
raid
was
ton
by
President
Eisenhower,
tiles
into
Canada
are
getting "After
all
th
h b d h "Whether
we
like
il
or
not,
r
·d
t,
m~
c I . roug mountamous, omng
ucm
ou
o t
1c1r
1g
agmnst
anti
- French
Insurgents
the
prime
minister
read
part
of
out
of
hand.
got
to
get
'm e
1
us
and
as
this
growth
of
national
con·:
ou
ml
s · dnfts
be
lund
snow
plows.
•
naval
b;1se
here.
.
from
Algeria
who
were
in
hiJ·
a
Canadian
Pre111
dispatch
from
Heal'"
MI.
1
t M t
"t"
ld
bably
go
tos~or~
~::pnea~
d~r'!:
sciousness
is
a
political
fact.
We'
ALE~T
KEY
~ERVICES
,
PreSident
Hab1h
Bour.guiba
·
ing
there.
They
also
said
that
it
Washington
'"''
n
5
er
on
e1
11
sa
y.
must
all
accept
it
as
a
fact.
our· N
n·
• Pollee
anri
f1re
departments_
made
a
formal
request
to,
was
launched
after a
recon·
It
aaid
th~re
are reports
the
~ha~al~::l
m~~
~!~0~!~~~:~
:~
. .
national
policies
must
take
ac-'
0
ecru
ItS
here set
up
emcrg'ellc):
pro·:
France
.la!l.
28
for
e\·ac~alion
'naissance
plane
was
fired
on
U.S.
admiDistratlon
may
pro·
the
last
yea
The
mam
busmess
of
the
day
count
of
it.'' i cedures and
142
extra firemen
of
the
base
by
Feb.
8.
It
1s
the:
from
Tunisian
lerritory.
pose
changes
In
the
American
r.
was
discussion
of
government
By
refusing
to
do
so.
he
add·~
were
on
duty.
Hadio-equipped
last
French
hase
on
Tunisian'
FOI.LOWS
BLOCADE
taw
allowing
such
allies
as
Formal
,votes
were
required
legislation
to
exte~d
~ncreased
cd
..
"we,may
imperil
the
pre-~
LO:"'DON
(APl
_Wanted:
pl~_ws
kept
try~ng
to
open
a~··
soil
untl~r
:m
agreen~ent
be-:
The
bombing
was
followed
b~·
Canada,
Britain
and
France a
to
defeat
two.
attempts
by
Op·
governmen!
~ontnbutlons
to·
1
carious
halance
of
East
and:
~len
with
good
mechanical
ap-
tellcs
_and
wete
on
the
ale1.t
•
!'wen_
th~
countnrs
wh~ch
ga_:·e.
a
three-month_
blocatle
of
jlreater deiree
ot
custody
and
position
members
to
obtain
ward
ellmmahon
of
dangerous
1
1
west,
on
which
the
peace
of:
titude
who
aren't afraid
of
,
to
m~ve
q~JCkly
tol~clp
~mel·,
Tums1a
nulepcndence m
19~?-
French
bas~s
m
Tunisia
and
control
of
U.S.
atomic
weapons
copies
of
documents
from
the
railway
level
crossmgs
for
the
worlri
depends.'' !
sudden
loud
noises.
I gene) vehicles.
a!1s~er
ca!ls.
Negollatlons
on
Blz~rte
s
the
e\·acuatwn
of
all
of
them
•tockpiled
In
these
countries.
government.
another three years-to Jan. l, I llncmillan
said
he
thought
1
••
AI,
least
fou.
1
1ad10
s~atwns.
future
n~w
ar~
under
way.
except
Bizerte.
ra
e
ay
ext
By
WILLIAM
L.
RYAN
The
explosion
can
begin,
'the
NEW
YORK
(AP)-Rellable
Informants
say,
with
a
new
up·
Informants
say
the
Middle
Eut
heaval
In
Iraq,
wllere
the tide
I•
in .tore
for
1
new
violent
of
popular
sentiment
among
thock.
They
desc..U..
the
cur·
the educated
Ill
per
cent
of
the
relit Arab.Jsraell
~llsb
near
the
po~Iace
Is
t:eported
turning
1
S~Tian
frontier
as
only
1
pre·
aga
nst
the
revolutionary
re·
'
Jude
glme
because
of
Its
deep
in·
·
volvement
w
It
h the
Com·
muniatJ.
THE
COUNTRY
PARSON
If
that
should
come-ani\
the
lnformanta
say
it
could
I
happen
almost
any
day-the
en·
lire
Arab
elst
coulrl
be
invol·
ved.
There
is
always
a
poasl·
bility
that neighborlnl Jordan'•
'"
,
younc
King
Hu111ein,
who
con·
· .
:1ldera
himself the legitimate
...
.heir
tu..the · Itaql throne,
might
send
army
unita
to
aupport
an
uprising
against
the
rule
of
- Iraqi Premier
Abdel
Karim
Kanem.
·
General
turmoll
In
the
area
coujd
provoke
precautionary
de·
lenslve lneuures
by
Israel.
1964.
' 1
the
great
issuses
in
the
second:
This
call
was
issued
Wed·
!
'"
Nova.
s_cotl~
exr.enenced:
BourgUJba
last
week
told
a
~leanwhile.
neither
~irle
will
Lucien
Cardin
~L-Rirhelieu·l
half
of
the
20th
century
"is'
nesday
by
Lt.-Col.
J.J.
Hands.
power
~Jfftcultlcs.
F.mergen·
•
huge
crowd
lha~
"the
..
battle
for
say
more
than
that
"ncgoti3·
Vercheres)
and
Frank
Howard
1
whether
the
uncommitted
pco.l
Jle
commands
a
bomb
dis-
cy
~ower
wa~
used
by
ll~llfax;
B1zcrlc
~cgms
F
t•b.
8
-the
.'er· ·
lmn;.
mrludmg
those
on
(CCF-Skeena)
suggested
the
I
plcs
of
Asia
and
Africa
will·
posal
regiment
of
the
Royal
stations
~~
times
t~
mamtam,
onct
annl\-crsary
of
the
r!t•struc·:
Bi1.crtc.
are
still
~oin~
011.''
legislation
be
made
permanent.!
swing
to
the
East
or
to
the·
Engineers.
It
handles
unex-
broadcastmg
faclhll~s.
·
----------
-------------'-----
Discussion
of
the
measure
1
West.''
~
ploded
wartime
Luftwaffe
.
Many
stores. offices
and
Eisenhower
was
still
going
on
when
the
I
"The
struggle
Is
joined
and
bombs
after
they
are
located.
md.uslnat plants
were
closed
1 •
H
6
ousme
adjourned
for
the
day
atj
it
is.~
struggle
for
the
minds
of'
He
says
there
are
plenty
of
~:~a~~:o~~a~f~h~er~~t"a~~o~~
•
p.
.
men,
he
declared.
I
bombs
left-but
few
recruits. lashed with the
Hting
of a
whip
. w I d R e I a X
by
the
wind.
Schools remained 0 u
~
closed, university students
got
•
~Jr
a holiday
and
residents were'
urged
to
leave their cars
home
if they ventured
out.
Hotels •
~~~durt~ot!reo!s
':~:~emf{~n~.
N
UCii·ea·
r
Laws
reser1•at1ons
to
sleep out the
storm.
Cars were a big problem.
Those that stalled
on
main
' .
thoroughfares
were
towed
By
~AitoLD
~lORRIS?~
''''?uld
r~_act
to
hm·mg
the
ad-
away
as
soon
as
they could
be
Ca~a~1an,
Press
Staff
\\
nter_
:
num~h·atwn
turn o\'er
~OI_Ilplete
reached.
Even
the city's eelec·
\~AS~IINGTON
(~PJ-Presl·
i
atom1c
_w~apons
to
Bntam
un·
trically·operated trolleys
were
1
dent
E1senhower
shrred
up
aider
ex1st1ng
laws.
The
com·
stopped. hornets'
nest
in
C~ngrcss
Wed-
i
mittee
app~r~~tly
had
express·
NO·
AMBULANCE
· -
lnes_day
by
suggeshn~
that the·
crl
~orne
CTJhCISm.
A
few
accidents
were
report· !
Umted
States
relax
1ts
nuclear
I
Eisenhower
told
a
press
con·
ed.
A.
woman
was
carried
by
i
laws
to
allow
him
to
~ransfer
1
1
fcrence_
~e
would
like
to
see
interns about
two
miles
on
a
control
over
U.S.
atom1c
wea·
the
ex1shng
laws
made
more
stretcher
to
hospital after she I
pons
to
certain trusted
allies.
\liberal.
His
press
secretary,
was.
struck
by
a car. · i
Among
the
cl~se.st
allies
are
I
James
Hage~ty.
later .
added
C1ty
works commissioner.
Canada
and
Bnta1n.
that
tl1e
While
House
1s
con·
~eor~e
West summed
up
the: ,
:\~embers
_of
joint.
rongre_s·
i sidering
_the
poss~bility
of
re·
SitUatiOn
at
rioon
Wednesday I
swnal
atomic
committee
sa1d
1
.
commcndmg
to
Congress
that
when he said: that,
while
they
have
reached
the
law
be
changed.
"It's a losing battle.
As
soon
1
no
final
decision
on
the
issue.
•;w;w;w~~~~;;;:;;
as
we
get a street clear it fills
they
would
oppose
grantin-:::
lhe
i
in
again." · president
such
wide
powers
,
Weather
Cloudy,
with
few
snow
flurrie;
this
afternoon.
High
today
30.
I
And
President
'_Gamal
Abdel
...
Ships nearing
pm'l
hove
to that
Congress
no
longer
would:
off the harbour entrance to
have
any
control
over
disposal!
ride out the blizzard. Harbour
of
atomic
weapons.
1
ferries kept a transportation
"It
is
one
thing
to
give
link
open
between Halifax Britain a
do-it-yourself
kit
and
and Dartmouth.
Navy
vessels I another
to
give
her
sealed
ferried
some
dockyard
em-
plutonium
•
type
weapons,"
ployees
to
work.
said
commitlee
chairman
Sena-
TEMPERATURES
· Naaier ·of
the
United
Arab
Re·
publlc
of
Syria
and
Egypt
could
..
, · . ·
ilardly
remain
aloof,
bec~use
·
Man,
like
h1s.
1'V,
must
be
the
Ira!J,i
real
me
has
loudly
pointed
In
the
right direction
challenged
his
anll-co·mmunlst
In
order
-~~
Itt
a clear picture posture
In
Cairo
and
hl!
claim
of
t.hlap.
to
Arab
leadership.
.
't
.
...
-··--
,,
.
.
ANDREWS AIR FORCE
BASE,
~~~I.-President
and
Mrs.
Eisenhower are met
by
Hast'.
C'.ommander
~~~lonel
Wil!inm
.T.
Smith after returni1!g February lst
from the
West, • The
Ch~tf
Executive ended a vacation
on
the West Coast und
Mrs. Eisenho;ver returned from Den\'cr, Colo., where she 'visited her mother.
U PI T cleplmto.
Town
engineer Walter La·/ tor
Clinton
Anderson
in
an
in-
Toronto
. . . . . . . 4
17
hey
of Dartmouth said the
lerview.
· I
Montreal
.
...
. .
11
23
storm
•.
which
began late Tues· i
COMMITTEE
CRITICIS:tl
l!alifax
. . . . . . .
21
3.'i
d?y
mght,
matched one that; .
~he
New
~lexico
Democrat
·
Sydney
. . . . . . . .
26
33
h1~
the
ar,ea
Dec.
24,
1~48.
But
i
md1raled
tha(
lhe
committee
(
St.
Johns
.....
28
30
lh1s
years
bl_?W,
·
sa1d
the'
had
been
fell
out
to
scr
how
it
••••••
......
••
4
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