THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE | on en tae" COMBINING THE OSHAWA TIMES AND WHITBY GAZETTF AND CHRONICLE ¥ SECOND SECTION OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1956 Fournier, Montreal Liberal, said|British because ci the similarity today it is right that Canadalof their uniforms and their flags. He had no hesitation in bowing hd hd * |chastised Britain, France and Is- > " |rael for taking the "law into their before the British flag, It was the . > i v own hands" Egypt. flag of a great pation "but it is ' : The lawyer-senator, seconding not our own." It was "nonsense the address in reply to the throne and a constant humiliation" that speech in the second day of Sen-|Canada did not have its own dis- LJ : ; 7 5 ate debate the special session of|tinctive flag. Fas al Parliament, said these three na-| "We are proud of our prestige i Hons 14 Szued the United - Na- all avout e world Ye are pres- | If Uncle Sam is seriously|aid -- a prime topic of dissatis-|irom a prosperous Moslem mer-| } ons charter agreeing not to use ent almost everywhere, but we are wi African opinion in the|faction, for instance, in the Tittle| chant in Algiers. "We don't trust y ? force. Yai buen Russia. or Com. Jot recogiiaed 9s ourselves, They, global struggle for men's alle-| West African republic of Liberia.|the French, but we do trust the! = nt munist China, or a puppet state] He realized the difficulties of giance, his signals aren't coming|America's domestic racial prac- Americans. Gay : of Moscow, which had invaded solving the fiag problem without through too clearly, y tices also receive critical atten-| A Moslem waiter in a plush 4 ; Egypt "we would have blamed causing a split. But he predicted That's the concensus of rep-|tion, Algiers restaurant thought Amer.' = them unanimously." What was!/that if the Progressive Conserva- resentative leaders queried in a| And from the banana patches of icans "are really sympathetic to, at " |good and just for certain UN na-|tive party, at its forthcoming con- comprehensive Associated Press|Kenya to rebellion-torn Algeria [the nationalist idea. An Arab bus A ! 'tions must be good and just for vention, would follow the Liberal §! survey of Asia -- African views Moslem nationalism in Egypt and driver believes the United States Ow 7 "other UN nations. he |lead in adopting a resolution fa- about the United States. It can|the Middle East are being closely|is 'neither for nor against the 3 Senator Fourn.er refefred to re- voring a distinctive Canadian flag fis be summarized in the words of| followed as clues to American Algerian rebels, but they are® ports that Egyptian Rremier Nas- then the government would act Balamu J. Mukasa, radio com-|/feelings about colonialism. against- the French colonialists.' HC % ; : ser said Canadian soldier "inlquickly in the matter, mentator and information ad-| Few African leaders see much|Algeria is part of France and ; : | visor in the British East African|likelihood of flirtations with Mos-! officially in the Western camp. [fC & : oF » protectorate of Uganda. |cow. In Uganda, Mrs. Pumla Ki- But many Frenchmen in North| yi 5 455 Pearson Sees S a Lebanon "America talks about world|sosonkole, a South African Xosa|Africa are annoyed at what they | bpp ? - / J leadership," said Mr. Mukasa,|tribeswoman and the first Afri-|regard as American softness tol SHOT NEAR HOME who has visited the United|can woman member of the Ugan-|the Moslem nationalists. | Moth f ni hild M As Next Sources Of Trouble States. How ea a United (da Legislative Council, said] A French ha saplaia, wet Fiora oi. Bo kph 3 oe, \ ates proclaim leadership over|*"most people in Uganda are sat- eran of Worl ar and of] s,s - 1 people who don't even know Roi isfied with the democratic form the Korean conflict, said Amer-| killed 400 yards from her home TIANA (COPY Bo or ot be neressed to deal with the new exists? People in this part of thelof government being developed icans should realize that thei [o. \" jrrested was her hus. |described current events in Syria| (News reports Tuesday said Jor- world see American automobiles here. We have no wish to ex-/Soviet Union is using Arab peo-| . : 4 ry ihe Devasioual tourist. That's| periment with communistic re-ples to spread its influence all Saud, Sialic oo Ring Jomd jane Lebanon as' 3 matter of Jm- gas has oved Jo canal ity 35 a y know about America." |forms." over Africa." | p | i : i influen Bits of information about the But troubles in the Middle A French postal employee,| hand. He is charged with mur- | He said in the Commons there all brush Bivencs Som ibe United States filter into Uganda East pose a different threat in whose family has lived in Algeria] 9€T --Central P Canadi {are reports of "Russian penetra-| .o.i°"e 59 persons in connection and other African lands vialthe view of Arthur Ochwada,|for generations, complained: | entra' Tress Canadian ition in Syria to an alarming ex-|iin™ ocala" of bombings. Iraq Hollywood films, with some odd|acting general secretary of the "The United States is smiling at| tent" and of moves to control the |p." o otected about anti - Iraq results. Mary Nairembe, a Kam-|Kenya Federation of Labor. He|the Arabs to improve its position|be derived from their system of Arab Somery, by a Rroup which |} 0a deasts from Syria and Turkey pala housewife, offered this as-/counseled a "cautious" American|in the next war. This only en-/government will fill it." (appears willing to work with yc" criticized *'war preparations sessment: [policy toward President Nas-|courages the rebels here to think| With other - Ugandans, Radio Russia. A lin Syria,") "The Americans must be a/ser of Egypt because, he said, the United States will help them."|Commentator Mukasa noted that| Mr. Pearson, during 'a speech, Mr. Pearson said the UN police cruel and savage tribe. Always Africans on the whole suppqri| Jean Labarte, a French store United States economic aid toon Middle East affairs. was in-|force in Egypt soon would be fighting, always shooting each/him on the Suez issue. clerk thought the Americans|/the country has been negligible. |terrupted by John Diefenbaker greatly increased. Its terms of other with guns. They make love! If Colonel Nasser is hardly weren't helping either the French One recent development loan for (PC--Prince Albert), who asked reference dealt only with matters in public, too. No cultured peo-|dealt with by the Western powers or the rebels. 'They're egotists./relending to African traders, he him to comment on the "critical" there, ple would do that. The red Amer-|-- Mr. Ochwada"s warning/I've been in America and have reported, was a failure because situation in the two countries. Mr Pearson added. however, icans are more savage than the came before the British-French seen the miserable conditions in'of wnrealistic conditions attached] Mr. Diefenbaker, Conservative that the UN General Assembly is white, but I can't help feel sorry military action against Egypt -- Carolina and Virginia. America is to it. {foreign affairs spokesman, asked/in session and he felt sure the for them." {an antiwhite undergound might the country of racism, not Alge- "this sort of thing doesn't en- whether the United Nations emer-| functions of the force could be ex- VAST REGION SURVEYED [spread southward from Cairo ria." {hance America's position gency force in Egypt will have toitended if necessary. i > J The survey covered parts of throughout Africa, he said. Many Algerians had personal abroad," Mr. Mukasa concluded, or | | | | aw ; i Africa, India, Indonesia, Malaya, LeRoy Francis, president of the|contacts with Americans, whose stressing that he 'liked - Amer-| y = | us and Singapore -- largely "un-| Liberian Labor Congress, says: [troops invaded North Africa injica and Americans" and was cri- a enkov aid In Buda est FIRST TASTE OF FRE DOM 4 committed areas where national! "I feel America is still sympa- World War II and spread pros-|ticizing in a "friendly, not a carp- Hungarl " 1 1 |'ing trom thelr Sovigt-dominated | ther inside Austria; Many ofthe independence jis relatively ne w|thetic to the African nations, perity through ample tips, gifts, ing, spirit." garian refugees line up | ing from the vig omina t er ins! eH a. ny or a fierce aspiration. The free/but I think this sympathy is|clothes, and employment. | In Kenya, scene of the now front of a field kitchen set up | country. Refugees "are process- | refugees will travel to hg 4 world has an obvious stake in|fast declining because of its] But in equatorial Uganda, Dr. broken Mau Mau rebellion, »'To0 Bolster Red Government by the Austrian army to provide | ed at the Eisenstadt camp after | the Sixteen nsHons w eh their ultimate alignment. friendship with the imperialist/Eli M. Muzawi, a physician who litically aware Africans are so the fleeing Hungarians with | crossing the border, and are | opene eit rd os Huns In Africa, these major points/powers . . . Personally I like has been active in the country's/bound up with their immediate } thoir flect Bot Mest af Ee os 2% | victims of revojrtion - forn Hung |v as individuals but I|political life, noted: "Our peovle|goal of self-government that little] BUDAPEST (AP)--Former So-|conciliatory attitude in confer- er escap- en po! camps fur- | gary. emerged: The preponderant mass of na-/can't say I approve of some of have no opinion about America| thought is yet given to any future'yiet Premier Georgi Malenkov|nces with leaders' of the Workers' | H | was not one given out by Des tive peoples are ignorant of tiie|their national policies." -- they don't know enough about|ties with East or West. : Council of Greater Budapest. | . . . w » United States and its wor'd role, Crisscrossing Africa the sur- her. But they are anxious to| Buf, said C. M. C. Argwings.| Vas reliably reported 10day 10 be Although Kadar has stated ex-' 0 1Ceé Continuing Investigation sey's personal manager, Ting even while nationalist ferment 1s, vey develops this further pic-|form one. | Kodhek, president of the Nai-{ 0 pr rid iv Th Poort | plicitly t at he will add only '"'non- Barzi, shortly after the : " | partisans" to his government, he : body working in their own countries. | ture: The same applies to the Soviet|robi 'African District Congress, Janos Kadar ' i But from a politically conscious! In Algeria, where Moslem na-' Union. I don't think the people!there's a latent bond of sym- 3 [on Bg Tuesday for three hours nto ommy Dorsey S Death foun ia He palatial Dorsey Tomé with Bela Kovacs, secretary-gen-| ' {here Monday. - Mrs. Dorsey, the former Jani mineriy, oe United States en- tionalism has flared into revolt,|of Uganda will ever drift toward pathy between the colony's aa-| au excellent Source, who asked counters sympathy and American popularity seems high/Communism if left to themselves. tives and Americans which could|not to be quoted by name, said itera] of the Smallholders party. | 2 --Po- ins | sharp citicism. [among the non-Europeans, Arabs The system is directly contrary tobe developed along the line that/Was Malenkov who advised Kadar| Kovacs, who spent <n than ENYCE. ong, (AP) oh The Statement Som Robbins New. was the'band leader's third African attitudes toward the|and Berbers alike. Many look to| African temperament and tradi-/the United States once fought a|to chance his lenient attitude and seven years in Russian prisons, b © 05 elr ivesti- came afer Lie medical examiner,[-vew, i United States are conditioned by the United States as a possible/tion. But the key phrase is, "if war of independence against|resort to Harsh measures against|is probably the only person the|8ation into the death of band|Dr. C. Stanley Knapp, signed a wife. She was suing for divorce several factors. On the plus side mediator in the rebellion. left 40 themselves." |Great Britain and that Africans still striking Hungarian workers. Hungarian peasantry would ac-|leader Tommy Dorsey, and police death certificate which listed the A hearing on her motion for tems is America's history as an anti- "We would welcome American| "There is a vacuum of public|associate the name of Lincoln] This was the explanation given cept as their leader. What Kadar | Chief David Robbins says a note'death as accidental asphyxiation porary alimony and support fof colonial power. There's the mat-|intervention in the Algerian con-| opinion to be filled. Whoever can with the emancipation of Negro/for Kadar's two sharp speeches|discussed with Kovacs could not|the trombonist left his wife 'is|from vomited food. their two small children was tf ter of United States economic!flict,"" was the typical comment best demonstrate the benefits tol slaves. in which he reversed his former 'be learned. * important to our case." ! The note Robbins referred to'have been held today. 5 PAGE 21 OTTAWA (CP) -- Senator Sarto Egypt might be mistaken for M e] A Gift For The Whole Family With . . . PHILCO-T A DYNAMIC NEW MASTERY OF TV SIGHT AND SOUND Philco for 1957 brings to television a twin triumph of electronic science, developed in a long and intensive research program -- Project Photosonic! 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