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The Evening Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 3

Publication:
The Evening Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE KVKNLVG SUN, BALTIMUKK. SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1960 PAUb 3 Ceylon Leader Loses Seat In Parliament Colombo, Ceylon. March 19 Prime Minister W'ijayanda Daha-nayake lost his parliamentary seat in today's general election. He was beaten by a member of the United National party, which won the first five seats decided. Dahanayake had said earlier he would try to glue together some kind of rightwhig coalition gov-ernment if no single party won a majority.

Predictions before the balloting were that none would. A oj (J COLLISION IN JAPAN The remains of an All-Nippon Airways passenger plane stands on runway at Knmaki Air Base in central Japan after it collided on a runway with a Sabrejet of Japan's Air Self-defense. Three persons died and more were injured. Murphy Funeral To Be Monday Russ Offer A-Test Ban Conditionally HONORED Komad Adenauer, Chancellor of West Germany, receives an honorary degree of doctor of laws from Donald McLaughlin, right, chairman of the board of regents of the University of California, at Charter Day Ceremonies at Los Angeles. Adenauer Stands Pat On Vote Idea Continued Prom Page 1 themselves suggested such a re where she was graduated with'1 honors in 1913.

1 At the time of her marriage in. 1916, she was a teacher in theJ Washington schools and Mr. Murphy was professor of German at" Howard University. Mrs. Murphy w-as president o( the Women's Auxiliary of th church and was a founder of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, a.

national colleee society whioh has more than 230 chapters in the United States and abroad. 'CllO lUQC ita fit'ef mii-1nnl "UV U. the Women's Auxiliary of Crowns-' ville State Hospital and organized the annual tag sale. She was a founder of the Philomathian Club. Survivors include five daughters.

Mrs. Elizabeth M. Phillips, Mrs. Los Angeles, March 19 OH West German Chancellor Adenauer is sticking by his proposal that the people of West Berlin be polled before the summit conference on whether they want the city's status changed. The recommendation is reported to have caused concern in Washington.

United States officials earlier had suggested a popular vote involving all of Germany and Adenauer did not give them advance notice of his proposal. Adenauer, visiting California, said: "A vote by West Berlin's population would allow the West to go to the summit with the results in their pocket. I am convinced over 90 per cent are in favor of no change in West Berlin's status." Denies Predicting Russ Lead At the same news conference. Adenauer denied he had predicted in Washington that the Soviet Union would surpass the United States in industrial production by 1965. One Washington report said Adenauer made the prediction at a dinner attended by Secretary of State Herter and others.

The report, said United States officials argued that Soviet production, in relation to that of the United States, is growing much more slowly than Adenauer believes. "The only thing I said," Adenauer commented yesterday, "was we must follow closely the economic developments in the Soviet Union to prevent an economic cold war." He said Russia's rising economic sured controls." types of explosions: 1. All nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere. 2. All tests in the ocean.

3. All tests "in those regions of space where effective controls can now be agreed to." 4. All tests beneath the surface of the earth "which can be monitored." Tsarapkin Sees Progress Tsarapkin complained at the time that such a ban "would just be a step backward." He said today that, as originally proposed, -would constitute an invitation resume underground testing. However, despite the slowness the negotiations, the conference has done good positive work, the Russian delegate told newsmen, and "it is possible to say that the work on the treaty is on the verge of its final stage." The United States has repeatedly told Russia during these sixteen-month-old negotiations it will accept no obligation to stop testing which cannot be policed. Sees Detection Improved The framework of a complex international' control and inspection system has been worked out by the American.

British and Soviet negotiators but the Western powers maintain the system could not give warning of underground tests below a seismic magnitude of 4.75. This is approximately the shock force of nuclear bombs of 20 kilotons equivalent 20,000 tons of TNT. Tsarapkin said the voluntary moratorium should remain in force while the three powers conduct a joint research program to improve detection techniques. The Western delegations have Elizabet Visits London, March tjpi Queen Elizabeth left Buckingham Palace today for the first time since the the following, Most of the 900 candidates for 150 seats in the lower house appeared united behind Ceylon's foreign policy of nonalignment with foreign blocs. The island's 3,700,000 registered voters were expected to ballot by the time the polls close this evening.

Dahanayake took over alter assassination of Prime Minister Ban-daranaike last September. There are 23 parties in the race. The three major ones are the leftist Freedom party founded by Bandaranaike, the United National party led by former Prime Minister Senanayake. and the People's United Front, an alliance of Marxists and Buddhists. 6,000 In Java Die Of Malaria Jakarta, Indonesia, March 19 Six thousand persons have died in a malaria epidemic in central Java since October, officials reported here today.

The central Java malaria eradication service said the epidemic is especially severe in southern coastal areas and the entire coastal area population, estimated at 4,000,000, is threatened. Atni-Catholic Data In Wis. Continued From Page 1 literature until newspaper men asked about it. Senator Humphrey, meanwhile, visited populous southern Wisconsin communities Friday before speaking at a Racine convention that drew about 450 young Democrats. Minimum Wage Bill Both Presidential candidates planned extensive speaking tours of southern Wisconsin today to woo delegates who ill be elected in Wisconsin Presidential primary April 5, just seventeen days away.

In Pittsburgh, Senator Kennedy said today he plans to co-sponsor a bill to extend minimum wage law provisions to an additional 7,500,000 workers and boost the minimum pay from to $1.25 an hour. Kennedy said he and Senator Morse Ore.) would bring up the bill in the Senate in six weeks. But he added in a speech at a United Steelworkers Pennsylvania legislative conference: "The President needs only a third of Congress with him to defeat it. If he picks up twenty Democrats, we're licked." Kennedy remarked that the Eisenhower Administration is "frozen in the ice of its own indifference Flight Record Claimed London, March 19 Air India claimed a commercial flight record for a Boeing-707 jet airliner, which flew 470 miles from London to Geneva today in 66 minutes. The plane was on its way back to India after demonstration and proving flights in Europe.

The flight took 49 minutes less than the scheduled time for propeller-driven planes. Holy Places 'Impressive', Graham Says Amman. Jordan. March 19 ifr Evangelist Billy Graham. after visiting the holy places around Jerusalem for the first time, said they are "even more impressive than I imagined." In a farewell message to Jordan published in the Jerusalem Times, he said: "I had expected the beauty of this country to be remarkable, but it is much more than remarkable, it is truly Police In Paris Seize Edition Of Red Paper I ill itlCJllll 'il I UlllC seized todav's edition of the Com- munist newspaper L'Numanittvt which charged that Brig.

Gen. Andrew J. Goodpaster, an aide to President Eisenhower, has filed a secret report on the French Army. In Washington, the White House said it will have no comment whatsoever on the newspaper's charge. ine paper said tne report mam- tained that certain officers in the! army were transforming it into "sort of a machine for a coup d'etat." The newspaper said the report outlined the possibility that fa-1 natic French officers might try to provoke a third world war presumably to end the threat of com munismby planning to assassi nate President Eisenhower or Soviet Premier Khrushchev.

Report Given The newspaper said an investi gator reported this to Goodpaster: "Obsessed by the idea that a care fully prepared political assassina tion alwavs leads to the necessary war, these officers are constrained to think of all possible forms of final action, of which a result could be the assassination bv a fanatic of the Russian or American chief of state." Newsstand copies of the paper were seized under a French law which covers "attacks against the internal security of the state." No official reason was given for the action, but L'Humanite officials said they were told it was because of the Goodpaster story. Implication In Paper The newspaper implied that the American general was asked to compile the alleged report at the request of Allen Dulles, United States intelligence chief. Any kind of report charging army members with backing a coup d'etat is certain to strike sensitive nerves in France, where 500,000 soldiers have been fighting more than five' vears to put down a nationalist rebellion in Algeria. Army backing made the May. 1958.

right-wing revolt in Algeria a success and paved the way tor Gen. Charles de Gaulle return to power. Political observers agree that the army played a major role in settling the recent Algerian crisis involving right-wing settlers. Non-Communist newspapers frequently have attacked the army's growing political activities. Blaze Kills In Hospital Kurume.

Japan. March 19 HP- Fire today destroyed a mental hospital here killing eleven persons. Another was reported missing and presumed dead. The blaze broke out in an old wooden army barracks where severe mental cases were locked in cells with barred windows. It burned to the ground before firemen could rescue the patients.

Seventy patients in two other buildings adjoining the barred section were led to safety. Authorities said they learned one ol the patients picked up a box of matches the previous day while walking outside. VISITOR PrincPM Margaret and Cheshire, England, when the it to of to Plebiscite Observers Proposed By U.S. birth of her third child and drove At Windsor royal lodge, 2 miles to Windsor Castle to joiif her 'from the castle, Princess Mar-family. The baby.

1 month old I garet and Antony Armstrong-Jones yesterday, was left in the care of i were spending another weekend Requiem mass will be said for Mrs. Carl Murphy, wife of the president of the Afro-American Newspapers, at noon Monday at St. James Episcopal Church, Arlington and Lafayette avenues. Binial will be in the Arbutus Memorial Park Cemetery. The body will be on view at the Murphy home, 2406 Overland avenue, from 11 A.M.

until 9 P.M. tomorrow. Mrs. Murphy died Thursday at the Johns Hopkins Hospital after a lingering illness. Mrs.

Murphy, the former Lula Vashti Turley, was a native of Washington and the last surviving member of her immediate family. Her parents were Hamilcar and Ida Francis Turley. Taught In Washington She attended Washington M. Street High School, Miner Normal School and Howard University, Secor Chokes Jay K. Secor, 48, Baltimore county lawyer and dairy farmer, died suddenly last night when he choked on a piece of food at the dinner table at his home on Monk-ton road, police said.

His wife summoned Dr. Walter Kees, but Mr. Secor was dead when the family physician arrived around 8 P.M. Mr. Secor, who had a law office Trygve Lie's Wife Dies Oslo.

March 19 Reutersi Mrs. i Hjoerdis Lie, 59. wife of former United Nations Secretary General Trygve Lie, died here today. She married Lie in 1921 when he was assistant to the secretary of the Norwegian Labor party. After holding several Cabinet posts in Norway, including the Foreign Ministry, he was the United Nations' first secretary general from 1946 to 1953.

Since 1953 Lie has been Governor of Oslo and Akershus. OTHER DEATHS Urelaigne Windusl New York, March 19 iflv-Bret aigne Windust, 54, Paris-born director of numerous Broadway stace hits, died yesterday. His Broadway production included "Life With Father." "Stale of the Union." "Idiot's Delight." "The Taming of the Sherw." "Finian's Rainbow," and "Arsenic and Old Lace." John J. liabe Washington, March 19 John J. Babe, 57, chief trial litigation attorney for the United Stales Labor Department, died yester day, Babe specialized in cases' arising from the Fair Labor Standards Act.

Mrs. Alice Standish Huell New York, March 19 MwMrs. Alice Standish Bucll, 68, one of America's well-known women art ists, died yesterday, Mrs. Buefl, former director and vice presi dent of New York's Art Students League, also was an outstanding etcher. Thurman I'cpple Chicago, March 19 Thurman Dwight Pepple, 84.

theatrical agent whose proteges included thei Duncan sisters of musical comedy fame, was found dead Thursday. Thomas Mulholand Evansville, March 19 Thomas Mulholand. 84, one-time actor on the New York and Chicago legitimate stage and retired chiropractor, died yesterday. RENT A CAR BUY AMOCO GAS ETC. WITH YOUR INTERNATIONAL CHARGE OR DINER'S CLUB CIRCIE-U-DRIVE IT 213S N.

MONROE ST. MA. 3-7000 MA. 3-9521 search program including pilot nuclear tests but did not couple this witn any proposal for a volun tary moratorium. British officials have privately hinted that a partial treaty, with a simultaneous moratorium, might be a way out of deadlock.

Tsarapkin's offer thus might place the British delegation in an embarrassing position in the talks if the moratorium proves unac ceptable to the United States. "Tied To Research Period" At a news conference after the meeting, Tsarapkin was asked how long the moratorium should remain in force after conclusion of a partial treaty. "This period." he replied, "would be tied up with the re search period. All explosions above 4.75 would be prohibited The states would also assume separate commitment not to con duct tests below that threshold. After conclusion of research, pro visions for a complete ban would be added to the treaty." Today Radio Moscow hailed what it called the "sufficiently good progress of the conference It autled that never once since the war have the U.S.S.R.

and the Western powers gone so far ahead on me road to agreement as at these talks." Moscow charged, however, that the forthcoming United States un derground test in New Mexico would violate an unwritten agree ment between the East and West. "It was probably for purposes of allaying these doubts that the I United Slates Atomic Energy Commission reported it would welcome the presence of foreign observers at the test, it said. Family At Castle Prince Philip and Princess Anne who arrived yesterday. Prince i Charles is at school. together planning their May wedding.

front of radio Irletrnpe antenna Mads 'PH( satellite Pioneer V. strength could result in wholesale dumping of goods on the world market by the Soviets. This, he said, would upset the market. They already have done it with tin, he said. Earlier, in an address at U.C.L.A., Adenauer said the West should not expect too much from the summit conference which starts May 16.

He said the conference is like a pandor's box "you never know what to expect out of it." Later, in a banquet address, Adenauer said Russian Premier Khrushchev has placed much emphasis on the right of self-determination 'but he has also said this does not apply to the Germans." "He is an excellent actor," Adenauer said, "but don't let him fool you." 2 Proposals Compared Under the West Berlin plebes-cite proposed by Adenauer, voters of the city would be asked whether they want to remain under the protection of Western powers or achieve some new status, such as Khrushchev proposed in demanding the West's withdrawal from the city. Herter had proposed an East German or all-German plebes-cite in which people would be asked whether they want to unite or remain divided. Western lead ers feel either plebescite would go against the Russians. Adenauer was to leave today for a rest at Palm Desert. 130 miles east of here.

He goes to San Francisco Monday. and thus reject Soviet Premier Khrushchev's plan to have the Western allies abandon Berlin. Wants To Set Precedent Herter is understood to have argued that when West Berliners voted two years ago and clearly showed their dislike for Khrushchev's ideas, Soviet propoganda promptly denounced the election as one held at bavonot point. Herter believes that the presence I of international observers would forestall such a propaganda attack I this time. More importantly, however, Herter feels that the West should I set a precedent by having inter-i national observers present.

This i relates to a plebiscite proposal he fenny put before Britain. France and West Germany. He would ask Khrushchev at- the summit conference to agree to a vote in East Geitnany of whether the people there want a separate peace. Treaty Threat Dangles Khrushchev has threatened to make a separate treaty with East Germany unless Hie future of Ber lin is settled to his liking. Herter is willing to have a plebiscite in East Germany alone or one which would also include West Germany assuming Ade nauer and the other allied leaders were agreeable, lie has argued.

however, that international super vision would be vitally important to insure the fairness of the vote. Cop, Thieves In Chief's Car Swap Salutes Kingston, Jamaica. March 19 Thieves stole Police Chief Lawrence Browning's automobile today, refuelled it at a nearby filling station, and used It as a getaway car for a burglary In a village 60 miles away. They got away with t.VX) ($1,400 worth of goods and abandoned the chief's car about four miles from his home. The galling thing for the cop In the village is that he spotted the car, saluted and got saluted in return.

Irfa Smith Mrs Vaclifi Matthews and Frances M. Wood, all of Baltimore, and Mrs. Carlita M. Jones, of Buffalo. On Food, Dies in iow son, was a memDer or tne Maryland Civil Defense Agency and served overseas in World War II.

He has won agriculture awards, among them the 1949 Greener Pastures contest in Maryland. Hats off to SDH CLASSIFIED Baltimore's Busiest Marketplace Here's the way Sun-Ads sell! Vtry goarf result BEDXIOOM Twin Blond Mod. 5 PC. Pert, eond. $85.

FO. 7-0182. Sold Itt call BEDROOM SET 7-plec -vlnut. Poster bed. 150.

3 kC. eabtnnn, 1 tall to 1 Miort, 18 Jb; 31 T. V. $a0. Misc.

PE. Sold lam day WTLDER Kinerson 110-volt. 20 to 75 tinu BB 3-71 88. fxcollent WASHING Maehlnt Norg. $25.

PU Ml 81. Auto- tlmcllnf. Very wall ploaiod LJV. ROOM (3 piece) with slip cov li 2 mttchttif end tables. Co.it liOO.

tklnr mo: .12 ft. new fx-tentlon ladder 120. MO. 4-2641. 447 (tsmre Avenu Sold coot ImmtdiaUly FUR STOLE Bt aualltf oable- dved aauirrel.

Worn twlci. Sacrifice. 8.. TU. i-mt tombardad with call WA8HER Ma Aluminum tub.

good ennd. Ki. Call CTi 4-SR7I. It's Easy to Place an Ad in Sun Classified just dial IE 7 a.m. to midnight daily Sunday's ads occepted up to p.m.

on Saturday. Ask for on ad writer. Sht'll word your od for you. Washington. March 19 Secretary of State Herter has proposed to Chancellor Adenauer of West Germany that any pre-summit plebiscite held in West Berlin should be conducted with international observers present.

Adenauer, who called for such a plebiscite in a speech here Wednesday, said it should be conducted by the Western powers. The United States is beginning consultations with Britain and France the other two powers with troops in West Berlin on the Chancellor's proposal. Unsure Of Acceptance United Stales officials are not sure at this point whether if will he accepted. London has been cool to the idea, and authorities here do not like the form Adenauer Also, they say, there is little time for making arrangements, with the summit meeting in Paris only two months away. Adenauer argued that the West Berliners would vote overwehm-ingly in favor of 1 he continued presence of the United Stales.

Britain and France in their city i A nursemaids. At the castle, the Queen joined, Professor A. C. Lovell walk In listened to signals Irom United Jjjj jJ4 New Housing Map FULL-PAGE MAP, locating new housing developments in Baltimore city and the metropolitan area, will be printed April 3 in the Sunday Sun Real Estate Section. Tie map similar to those published by the Sunday Sun In 1957 and 19.fl will be limited to "active" housing development, or ones that will open shortly, in Baltimore city and the metropolitan areas of Baltimore, Anne Arundel and Howard counties.

To make the map as comprehensive and as accurate a possible, developers are invited to submit the following iniormation in writing about their developments: Name of development: Date of opening (if not yet open: Exact location: Type of housing 'group, level': General cost bracket: Name of company developer: Information should be sent to: Sunday Editor, the Siifipuprri, Baltimore 3, Md. All Information must be received by March 23. The map is an editorial project. There Is no charge for the listing. VkYj vln 1.

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Pages Available:
1,092,033
Years Available:
1910-1992