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\ . • ': •. 1 . Sub Base Pact Confuses Britons '' .. ' . ·. .. ' ... • I '.' L' •'- ,,...... • ,I ' • "'"• ·~ DOYLE'S ... ~ . :. :. ~~·-·,... ., .. ,. ' NEWFOUNDLAND ; 0:~fJ,L ·· COD LIVER THE DAILY NEWS " H!WfO~tiO' OIL • h~ttll~fli U!l ... : •. ( C .A ' S U l .• I .. RICH 11-1 VITAMINS .... _,.. __ _ '~-·- ... -·-· l,i IHI {J ' l!ll' IF I lll ·,, Voi. 67. No. 247 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., fRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1960 ' (Price. 7 Cents) I' •'••• •o•w•-•- A and D • 1ans aos ,.. .... I -¥- I !MORE ·NATIONS BACK• :CANADIAN PROPOSALS' UNITED NATIONS N. Y. ..,.CP-Bclgitm advisers are adding to the chaos in the Congo, the United N:1tions General Assembly was told Thursday in a report from its own i command. Secretarv-Gcncml Dug Hammarskjold placed before the Assembly a report I stating that Belgian-tutored Congolese lcudcrs in the army-backed regime of Col. Joseph IMobutu nrc steering the youn~ republic into ever more troubled w:~tcrs. Author of most of the 63-pagt• report was Jndia's Rnjcshwar Dnnl. Hammarskjold's spec- · in! representative in the Cono. hut it also included the texts of sharp rxchangcs between the Sccrctnry-Genernl and Belgium. It also included texts of exchanges between Hammar skjold and !\Ioise Tshombc. the Belgium-supported leader of breakawa)· Katunga pro· vincc. BELGIANS RETURN!l'iG \ ne wasn't sure the V:-1 disarma· , -----~--- -- \ Belgians are heading hnvk to! ment committee suggested by 1 L BOOM 1 the Congo, the reports indicated,! Green should be selected excJu. and exerting an upsetting influ.i' sively on the basis of geography-! 01 Ience while the UN [?rce _of 20.~0, cHI distribution.. l Sl'E: ROSAL!E, Que. ( CPl _ , men fro~ 18 c.o~ntncs-mcludmg , Green had. smd the prune a1m : The oil boom subside<! Thursday Canada-Is strll'mg to restore or- i o~ the comrn1ttee w?ul_d be to ~el ~ in this little village aftPr two der. ; dtsa.rmament negohaho~s gomg •enterprising individual> peddled The repo~t de<;lar~d .that on~:; , ag~m under closer aeg1s of th~ · so,ooo ga1lons and the Irving on two go~crmng mslltut10ns sl111 : U~. , . Compan recovered 400,000 ga;. sland m the Congo-parliament . Ecuador s Leopoldo Bcmles en· 1 / nearly 1 ooo 000 that 1 and the office of ~he chief or·. d?rscd the ca.na~ian proposal .as: rr~!ed 0 from a dam~ged tank. slate, held by President Joseph: dul South A~ncn s B. G. ~ounc. i Weight of the tank and content; Kasavubu. The UN 1eport came 10 '.ld· · caused a shift in the earth Wed· . A return of a minimum or or· vanes of a General Assembly sc~· day ;\ seam in the tank: . : der would open the way for Co~go sion on the Congo set for ~!on· ! ~c~ncd. ;nd fuel oil flowed out 1 .·· · · . lteuders to :;eck peace by usmg day. Dayal was on h1~ way to;/ 1 . ·· UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.-Canalllan External Relation~ : bo~h parliament and, Kasavubu's :'lew ~ork to confer wtth Ham· i r~~~t of the escaped oil was 1 LANCASTER, Pa.-Vice-President Richard ~1. Nixon, a Quaker, is greeted by a group of sell· alln!ster Howard C. Green (center) adllressc, the U. N, Gen· • af!Tiche, the retport sa•db, 'tt d t mnTrhsk)oAids. mbl 5 e s 51• 0 n w•s: contained by five - foot earthen. called Plain People in Lancaster Pa., heart of the Pennsylvania Dutch country, Nov. 1st. Tht N 15 t e repor was su m1 e o e s c Y " · d 1 ld · b · l'k1 · era! Assembly's 1\laln Political Committee here ov. • the Assembly as a document called to consider a demand by: dykes ~n 1e 111 ~ ~s~n • t he. Republican presidential candidate attracted a large turnout In this normally Repubhcan commun· 1 On Green's left Is Cameroon's Fcrdlnpnd Oyono In reso. ' while disarmament debate con. eight ·African and Asian nations j a~ea. dSoBmet thseepc essu~n °or th: ity, and encountered une or the wildest demondrations since he hit the campaign trail. I I d b N and Swed•n Green proposed · d · th b l't' I th t th C g ' · t bl ·1 g1otm · 11 e pr e ut on co-sponsore y orway . ~ • , tmue m e 99-mem er po ttca a e on o s ~acan assell! .1 o'l forced 8 hole in •he dvke and: that thr U.N. create a •mall power, non·nuclear committee : c.ommittee, where new small-na· i seat be filled by. represe~tabves !oll began flowing into a roadside I · • · N d to uslst the major powers In disarmament negollatlons. i bon support was upressed for Iof deposed prem.er Patnce Lu-~ ditch. ! ch I BN A A t 11 1 ~·· .. ~ ,, ..• ;,,·. ;··:.:.•::• ..•...:. :.: . ·: ', >·::·• 'r.·.·• .. •,;·o:.:;:,::.~::• '!!t~!~ar~~'::J~~ b~e~~~~~::al s~~·l m~~:tN report said .that the ad-: bi;o~~t~:Ucta~~d ~:~~i~u~ I anges ·n c ee fatrs Mmtster Green or Canad11. : vent. of Mobutu and h.1~ Congolese about 60000 gallons in all from 1 QUALIFIED SUPPORT I army onto the pohttcal scene . th ditch ., said plant manager •t k II Gt Jordan's Abdul Monem Rifa; j "constituted a new menace to: Aed Ch~rtrand I S .e S ~xpressed qualified suppo.rt, say-: pe~c~ and security, a.n~ actua~~~· i ~·l~other man ·showed up with Ga e mg the Canadian resolution was Imh1b1ted peaceful pohllcal acll.·, p'ck and shove] and dug a trench . "on the whole commendable" but. ity." ___ -·----- . r:om the ditch to his cellar. I. Provincial Govts. Consent f• ! figure he got about 20.000 gallons, • . d •v t ' :whichhekeptpumpingintotank. By.T.UIES:O.:ELSON British:\orthAmcric~:\ctlrom.~llfurthcrpolrct·tochangcthe COn I ence 0 e i US• • Su b Base Pac t l ca.~~ ~~~~fh~n~~ j~~~rs. ~an bel g~~t~~~~ ;~;~s ~~~~C W~~~~lll·. ~~~~On;\~'~ ;\i~.;~o: ~~lC;~llftd~~. ~~e~~ril:uit:irl:llra~:d~~l'mtl!a for o: .. :: .... :: . , . , · . :. , . 1 I ' :done, but we are c,onsulhng the. ion-provincial cunslilutional con·· Canada which will be flexible. The ~mending formula is more I company's lawyers. ' . : ferencc agreed Thursday on the enough to protect basic prin· difficult to write. When the lasl LONDON (AP)- Hugh Gail· party's members in the House of' USIOn• ' Some peopl~ came With buckctslgcneral road to COIJ>titutionalre· skell retained leadership of the 1. Commons, pledged to support of Causes Co.n f :to carrv off mllor household use .. form but still has thr. job of fill·: ciples. atte~pl_ 1~as:l madte' 10 ycarst adgo 1 1 d'v'd d Labo party Thursday de the Western defences could be Oth • t ks at tht's storage and 1 • h ' · k · pronncta 1 -e cl(a tons wan e 1 1 I e r • : , :that neither will use nurlrat·. _cr .an . , mg a few. pol· o1 es 1o rna ·c I1 a ~lr. Fulton •aid I he pt·oblcm of i multiplicity of B:-IA Act clause:; !eating Harold Wilson, 166 votes : compelled by the party conven·l By BORIS MISKEW dlstnbuhon 'lcentr et of£ !hie tcoml· smooth tnp. , Ihe transfer is simple. Bt·itain Ibut bevond the po>sibility of to 81. 'tion to eompletcly shift their pol Canadian Press Staff WrJtrr : weapo~s with~ul .consulting the pany, 35 ml cs cas 0 ·'on rea.. • _ .. · . The result of the balloting,. icy. Gaitskell said th~ could not. ! Embarmssin~ confusion ·lws oth.er 1£ there 1~ hme for consul· were not li!fected. After a second two·rlay meet· could hE asked to paos one more ·amendment by rcquumg unamm· amonj! Labor MPs wa.~ an·' In challenging Galtskell, Wilson i been touched of£ . by Bntam,s. tatmn. , ~r. Chartrand said the big. ing hehind closed doors, the pro· B:\"!\ Act amendment renouncing Ions consent to any .:han~e. nounced at a party caucus. 'had the backing ~f those who ' agreement to pr~l'1(\c a bnsc Ill, ~ tank contained 957,000 gallons of : vincial attorneys - ~eneml and -·---- ·:-- ·~ · 1 The tally, in progress all week,! maintained the caucus. at Scar. Scotland for Umted States nn-1 1 fuel oil when the break oc.currcd.; Justice Minister Fulton said in a·. f• h T. climaxed months of intramural I bot·ough spoke the true party pol-l clear sn~marines. ' i BEHAN HITS Company employees, With !he i commumque that: . • me na 1: battling, largely over the issue of ! icy. 1 ~he mt~u.nderstandm~ fo~lowctlj help or 30 tank trucks supphed : . nuclear weapons and the Western I TRADITIONAL ELECTION Prtme Mmtsler Macmtllnn s an· by various companies, worked' f 1 · 0 nl~ 11nanJmo~~ 5 agre~tment! 1 1 alliance. · Traditionally, the Labo1 party' nouncernent in the House of Com-: lh h th ight to recover the . 0 a11 1 egl.s a urcs IH1 1. permt any' b TORONTO I .roug e n change m the Bnllsh North. Gaitskell remained firm in sup· Imembers in Parliament elect the Imons that facilities would e pro·' mi. , America Act's basic guarantees 1 port of NATO. 'I party leaders-not the convention vided for Polaris· armed subma·l of English and French bilingual·!' 1 Despite the defeat left wing ad· I· delegates. or the !54 me.m~ers, rines at Holy Loch Jn the River! T?ROCilTO <CPl - Irish play IN R f , ism and provincial supremacy in pocates of nuclear disarmament there were seven abstentions In Clyde. ' wnght Brendan Behan spent e or 1 I Defence Claims who backed Wilson said they wiill the' balloting.