Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 71, No. 167, Ed. 2 Monday, August 22, 1960 Page: 3 of 10
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4
7
Our World
Today
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Undersecretary
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The Senegal assembly met
a
hostile public" if it tried to
ratified
Fh
Dia’s declaration of inde-
disarm.
pendence from the federa-
infant nation.
H
Dia Busy
It was not known immed-
Keita would
i
Cuba Slap Studied
disarming
its
army—an unjust charge, for lation.
Confidence Expressed
throughout Senegal met and
lie.
speeds healing. Don't sufter another minute.
Get LANACANE today at all drug scores.
it
OAS Sunday in approving
coer-
11
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Ceylon: Bells Toll
"1960 FRIGIDAIRE
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Coalition Fails
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Laos: Talks Continue
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Officer’s Suicide
Linked to Secrets?
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lice said 2nd Lt. Martin Har-
stantly" in his flaming sta-
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SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (P)
—The western hemisphere
foreign ministers’ meeting
dictatorial regime of Gen-
eralissimo Rafael L. Tru-
Senator Hits
‘Red’ Cuba
Model
S 9 60
port of the bulk of the 7,000-
man police force and army,
Trips to Moon
Believed Near
Leek at
these
Ralph J. Bunche says the
JN force in The Congo would
LAUREL, MD., (UPI) —
Government security offi-
CERS Monday investigated
the suicide of a young Army
officer with top-secret clear-
ance recently assigned to a
section of the hush-hush Na-
tional Security Agency.
5x7
Coronet
UN Action
1
Defended
ITCHING Torture
Stoppedlike Magic
Red Plane Crashes
jillo regime until it makes
democratic reforms.
The Dominican delegation
walked out of the conference
By Bunche
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
Every Child Has
A Chance to Win!
V/2 Price Special
This Week
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tion wagon, about 9:15 a.m.
Tuesday. His wife, Elsie, is
expecting their first child
shortly at their home here.
No Note Left
The Army Security Agen-
cy reported Innet had been
«»
/
be pointed out as a Trojan
Horse for communism in the
Americas.
i
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Proofs shown
No appointment needed
Brown’s Photoreflex Studio, Ind fl..
Par* Ave.
Capitol Hill and
Penn Square
VIENTIANE, Laos (P)—Premier Souvanna Phouma
of the Laotian coup d'etat government said Monday
he is still negotiating with a holduout in the south who
has threatened to retake Vientiane.
Prince Souvanna said troops under the command
of Gen. Phoumi Nosavan have stopped their advance
toward the capital while the negotiations are in prog-
ress. He said he was being represented by the newly
reinstated national army commander Gen. Ouane Rat-
tikone and that Phoumi had approved Ouane’s reap-
pointment.
A
4
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Concrete swim pools with filter-
installed _ $1995. Barnetts _
WH 7-8887.
1
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His rival, Sudanese Pre-
mier Modibo Keita, who had
been kept under guard by
Senegalese soldiers since Dia
split the federation of Sene-
with an amazing new scientifie formula
ailed LANACANE. This fasoactin, wain-
leu mediated creme kills harmful bacteria
Algerians Want Vote
TUNIS (AP) — The Algerian rebel government in
exile Monday called for a referendum under the super-
vision and control of the United Nations to decide the
future of Algeria.
A communique issued after a session of rebel Pre-
mier Ferhat Abbas’ determination for the French North
African territory as “empty of Democratic content” and
designed to "Balkanize Algeria by force.”
1
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W--2
{-25
DOOR STORASE SPACE
GALORE ... butter
zation of his home state or
P
China Backed Riots?
TOKYO (UPI)—Police officials are investigating
documents purporting to show that the outburst of anti-
Americanism which blocked President Eisenhower’s
visit here was organized on orders from Red China.
The papers appear to be letters from Chung Yu,
head of an anti-American group in Red China, to Shigeru
Tanehashi, chief of the Red-tinged Sohyo Union Federa-
tion s international bureau.
The letters, each written in Chinese with a Japanese
translation attached, called for a mass campaign op-
posing the U. S.-Japanese security treaty and the
Eisenhower visit.
ization of American States meeting (AP Wirephoto) K
Bunche replied that the
UN “has neither sought to
replace The Congo govern-
ment nor to make it cap-
tive.”
“The Congo government
for some time now has been
HME
FULL-WIDTH. GLIDE-
OUT HYDRATOR
CAIRO, Egypt (P)— Word has been received here
that John Kale, 32, secretary of the National Party of
Uganda, was killed last week in a plane crash en route
to Moscow for the trial of Francis Gary Powers.
The Asian-African secretariat said it had learned
from Moscow that the Soviet Ilyushin 18 transport plane
carrying the exiled leader of the Uganda independence
movement and others to the trial caught fire and
crashed. The announcement here did not give the exact
date or place of the crash nor the number of persons
aboard.
ment from Leopoldville Sun-
day in reply to criticism by
British Maj. Gen. Henry T.
Alexander, defense chief of
Ghana and commander of
.Super
REFRIGERATOR
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Frigidaire
Features:
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Hpemered de M-rt d— mil
* Phororrep Seudie
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Father Clinton Anan-
dappa, secretary to the
Catholic Archbishop of Co-
lombo, said funeral bells
will be tolled every Sun-
day and special prayers
said for some 600 Catholic
schools likely to be af-
fected by the decision an-
nounced at the opening of
Parliament August 12.
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES Monday, August 22, I960 3
Senegal Chief
Gets Support
COLOMBO, Ceylon (P
— Mourning bells tolled
in nearly 1,000 Roman
Catholic Churches through-
out Ceylon Sunday in pro-
test against the govern-
ment decision to take over
schools run by religious
bodies with financial aid
from the state.
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‛Funstitute‛ Held
WEST POINT, N. Y. (fl —
Three hundred dance in-
structors from various parts
of the United States and
Canada are holding their
annual "Funstitute" at the
Hotel Thayer, on the grounds
of the U. S. Military Acad-
emy.
#V
the resolution, which
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$3
portrait, Reg. $64
Prince Georges County po- assigned to an ASA support
element at Fort Meade,
Md., which works along
with the NSA. The Army
said he had not yet been
advanced
I
8888
Fe
FRIGIDAIRE MEAT
TENDER Stores fresh
meats up to 7 days
_
g , • ■■ o termed “illegal and
ridel Castro has already j diplomatic and economic re-'cive."
Alexander said the UN
command was “weak," that
it did not issue “clear or-
ders," and that it had out-
tion and constituted itself a
national assembly rather
than a state legislature.
Dakar Calm
Although Dakar was com-
pletely clam, there were re-
ports Dia's forces had ar-
rested some 30 Senegalese
in the city who supported
Keita and his idea of a
strong central Mali govern-
ment with himself at the
head.
Keita's train meanwhile
crossed the border into Su-
dan without incident. Re-
ports from Bamako, the Su-
danese capital, said it too
was calm.
_ Advertisement
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gal and Sudan Saturday, was
Ghanian troops in The Congo, allowed Sunday night to
board a train for Bamako,
the Sudanese capital.
Bunche cabled his com-
lawed use of force by the in- lately whether
I tngninion coningents serv- go ahead with the reorgani-
5
E
k
whether he would try to
launch a move to rebuild the
federation.
Dia was busy creating new
I ministries, a customs . serv-
ice and a treasury for Sene-
gal. He also asked foreign
criticizing the UN force for governments for recognition
'disarming' its national of Sengal as an independent
I
rison Innet, 23, “died in-
given an assignment.
County detective Henry
Schoen said Innet did not
leave a note but officials
■ turned up circumstances to
i explain the suicide. Local
> officers, however, refused
i to give details on this point
I because federal officers
. were handling the case.
Sprayed Car
Schoen said Innet killed
himself by spraying the in-
terior of his car with gaso-
line, placing a 2-gallon can
of gasoline under him and
lighting a match to ignite it.
A routine autopsy was to be
' performed by the Army but
i Schoen said all officials in-
volved had ruled suicide.
Innet was a native of Yon-
kers, N. Y., and attended
Alfred College, N. Y., and
where he received a degree
in physics.
expressed confidence in Dia._________________
Representatives of all relig-1 fnnammeabilsnitigouehetgpwacirzicntndand
10US communities —Roman r ""----------
entered a new, critical phase jillo in the Dominican Repub-
Monday in which Cuba may
The United States joined Saturday in protest against
with other members of the '
olution condemning the|strictions against the Tru-
gudeg
* 39 9*
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Sen. Frank Church (D-Ida-
ho) says “Cuba is fast be-
coming the first Communist
satellite” in the western
hemisphere and represents a
"threat to all of the Amer-
icas."
Church said Sunday, how-
ever, the Organization of
American States (OAS)
should be the only group to
take action against Cuban
Premier Fidel Castro.
Church added the OAS
could do nothing “except
through intervention."
BELGRADE (UPI) —
Yugoslav astronomer Pero
Djurkovic says men already
bom “probably will live to
see the first astronomical
observatories built on the
moon."
The official agency Tan-
jug carried a dispatch Sun-
day quoting Djurkovic as
saying that "the day is not
far off when the first astro-
nauts will leave for
the moon."
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SEOUL (UPI)—Premier John M. Chang failed Mon-
day to reach agreement with dissident elements in his
Democratic Party on formation of a new cabinet.
Chang rejected a conditional offer from the so-
called Democratic “old guard" to join in a coalition
cabinet.
The old guard had offered to contribute five mem-
bers to the 12-member cabinet on the condition that
Chang appoint five from his “new" faction and two
independents.
I
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1 - (UPI)
DAKAR, Senegal (fl —
Mamdou Dia, who pro-
claimed his West African . , _
state of Senegal independent most of whom are Sengalese.
of the Mali Federation, was " '
busy Monday setting up the briefly Monday,
compel The Congo's army to machinery needed to run his Tin’
y )
wherever elements of the
Congolese national army
have laid down their arms
on the arrival of elements
of the UN force, this been
a purely voluntary act," he
added. Catholic, Moslem and Prot-
"H the UN frce began to i estant - issued statements
kill Congolese, its doom backing the Senegalese pre.
would be quickly sealed. mier. He also had the sup-1
MbI not “long survive amidst
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Is
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46 (.
Municipal councillors
A
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served notice Cuba will re-
ject any such charge and
will bitterly attack the United!
States. A Cuban walkout
from the conference being
held by the Organization of
America States (OAS) is pos-1
sible.
The foreign ministers;
turned to discussing Com-
munist infiltration of Latin
America after signing a res-
, / ,
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 71, No. 167, Ed. 2 Monday, August 22, 1960, newspaper, August 22, 1960; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2004194/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.