The Daily Chowanian Volume 1 Number 44 Murfreesboro, North Carolina, Wednesday February 17, 1960 Associaled Prr^s Khrushchev Discusses Possible TJiilpc With Neutralist Burma’s President By FORREST EDWARDS RANGOON, Burma AP — A not-so-bouncy Nikita Khrushchov discussed possible new Soviet eco nomic Rid to neutralist Burma in talks today with Burmese Presi dent U Win Maung and resurgent political leader U Nu. A Government source said the Soviet Premier and the Burmese leaders also touched informally on relations between Burma and Communist China and the China- India border dispute. Khrushchev reportedly applauded the agree ment Jan. 28 settling some dis puted points on the Burma-China border and agreeing to negotiate the others. Some Burmese observers felt co suggest that he may have mis- that Khrushchev would not Be ir>: ed t’.ie nation regarding its de- a handout mood on this v i s i 1.1 Jense position. They noted . that the Cornmunist Eisenhower said that if anybody National^ Umte^ariiXent^’^seL in!^e!ioves that he has misled the Ike Will Discuss South American Trip WASHINGTON AP — Presi- dpnt Eisenhower will go on nation- wire television and radio Sund^iy I'vening to discuss national de fense and his forthcoming South .American tour. The President announced this at 1 news conference today. And-in cold angcr-Eisenhower called it despicable for anyone ration on defense matters, he Committee Agrees Clear Civil Rights Bill to Decline Noted in Influenza Cases PAI.EIGH AP —About 100,000 cases of influenza-like ailments VLre rcpored last week in North Carolina, a sharp dcline from the 15.'),000 of two weeks ago. Health officials said the epidem- c appeared to be on the wane in most areas of th state. .Mecklenburg County was the ra-de'it hit last week, reporting 8,000 cases. County health offici als said there were 20,000 cases *,\vo weeks ago. The State Health Apartment .'uccivid last week’s rports form ’ 1 'ocal health units. A decline was noted in 38 counties and an increase in 15. The rest reported flu incidence as about the same as two weks ago. Some counties I I :eii iir.it reiwi'ts this week. 43 of - - the Feb. 6 elections. But others . believed he would make a token would bke to deny it to that per- offer of at least one aid project j soiis’s face, in an effort to show that Soviet, i j t friendship is not based on Burma’s, , hisenhowcr asserted that Amei- internal politics. ® defensn is not on.y strong. Khrushchev today toured two' oi'-t also awesome and respected Soviet gift projects that resulted elsewhere, from his 19l-d visit, a technological institute for 1,100 students being built just outside Rangoon and a plush, 200-room hotel nearing com pletion in a Rangoon suburb. Khrushchev appeared weary when he arrived Tuesday from WASHINGTON AP — Presi- sessment of the nation’s defense Calcutta lor the second visit oi, Eisen‘.*ower said today tint, posture, Eisenhower said that, his four-nation Asian tour. He, ,— ■'4, , looked somewhat fresher today, I but the exuberance and energy he; has displayed on past trips was still missing. Eisenhower Says No Political Variances Between Him and Nixon ■Attempts Made to Re-float never in seven years has there ^ - a.iy major variance be- '.ve'.n and Vice President i’hr.vd M. Nixon on national /C lic.f. 3. WILMlNC'fON, li. C. AP — Winches wer.-; to bo used today in another aiienipt to refloat the grounded freighfer Mancheste- City, stuck at Big Island six miles d.Avn the C?p-' Fear River from here. Large anchors were hauled by tugs iuesday to banks opposite the stranded snip. Tiia winches will be worked from the anchors to try to dislodge thL> freighter. R. G. Thompson, supervisor of t'.e d.-edge Cherokee out of Char leston, S. C., said efforts tj pump a mudbank from under the grounded British freighter had been ui.successful. “I believe, she’s on a whole cluster of cy press stumps,” he said. The Manchester City was en route to Baltimore from Wil mington when she stranded. The vessel draws 25 feet of water overall and presently her bow io in 17 feet and the stern 14 feet. Eisenhower was asked at his nev.’s confcrence to discuss re ports that Nixon, the prospective Republican presidential nomi- d-tiers with him on some .natters. A reporter specifically ,:;ted Nixon’s call recently for a ;no.ith-to-month examination of ."lational defense. The President replied that all of us are iiuman, and he doesn’t believe any tv/o individuals find the same methods or use tiie same procedures. i-t,;- said Ni\on has been close to him for seven years and never has been excluded for any im portant group making policy de- c.sion or drafting plans for ac tion. Never onde has Nixon been at major variance wathhim, Eisen hower emphasized. The President w'ent on to say Lhat Nixon uses methods differ ent from his own and doesn’t work with people in the same way. In an incidental comment Eir seiiliower said he has his ov^n mttnods and thinks they are pretty good. Turning to the question about Nixon’s call for monthly reas- iar from waiting each month to weigh the defense situation, the National Security Council keeps jc..slanSly in touch with it. With obvious reference to Nix on, Eisenhower said nobody is bjrred from bringing up in the council any anxieties he may feel or any convictions he may have on security matters. Nixon is, by law, a member of the Security Council. Critics Talk of Billion-Dollar Cut in Foreign Aid Program _ Adenauer Sick With Flu . BONN,Germany AP — Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer was con fined to his home today with a mild attack of influenza, his of fice announced. Adenauer, 84, is subject to occasional colds and influenza in the winter. Weather NORTH CAROLINA: Partly cloudy, somewhat warmer today and tonight. High, 50s except lower 60s southeast portion; low, 80s. Thursday, increasing cloudi ness and cooler with chance of rain west portion in afternoon spreading eastward at night. WASHINGTON AP — Con gressional critics talked today of d billion-dollar cut in Presi dent Eisenhewer’s $4,175,000,000 I'oreipn aid program, even as Secretary of State Christian A. Herter headed for Capitol Hill to defend it. Herter had an appointment with the House Foreign Affairs Committee. He was expected to emphasize U. S. efforts to have European allies, once again prosperous, take on more of the burden. It was understood Herter would report progress in working out arrangements with these countries to help under developed nations. The opposite point of view was summed up by Rep. Otto E. Passman D-La. Passman, chair man of the House Appropriations sub-committee which handles foreign aid, said Eisenhower’s recommendation is at least a billion dollars too high. United States and Great Britiem to Set Up Radar I CIVIL RIGHTS [ I ■ WASHINGTON AP — The [ informally today to clear a stale- i House Rules Coniinittf e agreed I muted civil rights bill for House consideration. Formal sending the mea sure to the House floor probably will be taken Thursday. The de cision to act was madle at a hur- ••iediy called session this morniilg. The House probably will consid- ET the bill next month. Meanwhile, a Democratic plan for sec;iring Negro voting rights was placed before the Senate Rules Committee but considera tion was deferred. Chairman Thomas C. Hennings Jr. D-Mo, author of the measure sent word he was unable to be pre sent because omf illness. He re- q'-isted that action be put off. The Hennings bill, made public for the first time, is modeled in large part on the Eisenhower ad ministration’s proposal for court- -EJ iu3A3Jd O') KM.iejaj p-i)uioclar cipl discrimination in voting However, instead of court—ap pointed referees, it provides for federal enrollment officers ao- pointed by the President to over see registrahon, voting an! vote- count'n;; in federal, state and lo cal elections. J / i Vi lr■r^ s ei iqualifications ■i^ere challenged after being put on t'le rolls by federal officials would be permitted to vote and ,iave their votes counted. But ballots cast by challented voters would be impounded and could bo tlirown out later if the ciiallenges were upheld in a fed eral court. An expl.'ination given o.it by one of Her.iiings’ aides said this pro cedure was dssigned to overcome judicial delays that might arise under the administration’s ref eree plan. Heart Disease Still Main Killer in U.S» RALEIGH AP —Heart disease- retained the role of chie*’ cr\u.se of death in North Carolina last, year. A report from the St.^te Board of Health’s Statistics Section; showed Tuesday that 12,685 per- lons died of Heart diseases in 1959. Th’s was ab^ut one-third the- ’■etal deaths of 36,138. The total --as ??1 higher than the 1958 fig- re of 35,987. I Liv.e births during the year to- ’ ’n'ed 111,344, up 64 frcm the 1953 level. Cancer ard accidents were- '■'•r lea'^ing c^use‘^ of death. Cancer claimed 4,335 victims, while accidents took a toll of 2,460. This was broken down int> 1,239 motor vehicle accidents, 718 on the hnme and farm, and 503 other accidents. 11-Year-Old Boy Admits Starting Two House Fires WASHINGTON AP — A super power radar station able to spot; Soviet missiles thousands of miles' away will be set up in England for U.S.-British defense, the State Department announced today. j The huge metal screen—bigger, than a football field set on its ^ t ai-> a side—is to be built at a 120-rail-j lion-dollar cost at Fylingdales i r boy told police he Moor, Yorkshire. This is midway! ^ u u‘^1’ up the east coast of Britian, be- 7/'*^ nomemade bombs, because tween London and Edinburgh. I j installation, plus two others now neighborhood. The Defense experts said this giant under construction in North Amer ica, will be able to provide speedy detection over a large area of the northern hemisphere of any mis sile headed that way. The reported range of the high- powered radar is about 3,500 miles.. The electric eye can thus | peer across the arctic to spot mis siles launched from Russia. I The two other stations in the chain are now being built at Thule, Greenland, and Clear, Alaska, for completion expected late this year or in 1961. No esti-j mate was given for the construc-j tion time of the station in Britain, j The U.S.-British agreement to 1 boy told police Tuesday he “wanted some excitement” so he tossed his homemade bombs on porches in his neighborhood. Fire Chief Ray Bstzler said the youth, a fourth-grade pupil, had conc'jrntrated on setting brush fires but also set two houses and a garage aflame during the past eight months. Fly Boys Have it Made on Okinawa NEV/ \ OI?I AP — The Air men’s Club at Kad'-na Air Base on QVinaV/a is more than a homfi av/ay from home, says Time mag- izine. Home wa^ never like this. A Time article describes thesii club attractions for a Sl-a-montlr l~‘!: nisht'y dances with a 7r>-cent admission featuring nretty, medi- ca)!y approved Oginawan hostes ses; bingo games with ?1,0Q0 pri ze:: plus exnense-paid trips to Ha waii; cocktails and highballs for 5 cents each; steaks for 25 cents; free drinks and pizza pies once' at month. Time says its all paid for f>-oni slot machines that account for pro fits estimated at 2Vz million dol lars annually at the 50 service clubs on Okinawa. M. Sgt. .Iosfr;)h Peter Kl.iuzar, manager of the Kadena Airmen’s .■;iub, has the job of thinking up gimmick': to keen the troops hao- py. Tin^c qi’Otes Milwai^kec-bort* Kiavzar, a former movie—house manager, as saying: “When I was in showhi? the secret was constant gimmicks.” The magazine says Klauzar’s gimmicks for the club have in cluded free champagne and steak dinners.^ for any GI on his birth day and also when he leaves Kadena. Twelve Electrial Fanufacturing Companies Indicted for Price-Fixing PHILADELPHIA AP — Twelve cutouts combination units, insula- electrica' eauipment manufactur- tors, and open fuse cutouts, ers including the country’s two These products, amounting t» build it was only reached last, largest. General Electric Co., and over 55 million dollars in onnual Monday.. | Westinghouse Electric Corp., were sales in the country, are used in U.S. officials figure the con- indicted by a federal grand jury the generation, transmission and struction cost at 98 million dollars: today on antitrust charges of distribution of electricity through- for the United States and 22 mil- j price-fixing. ; out the United States. lion dollars for Britain. The Brit-i j * 1 Indicted today were; General ish will command and operate the Tuesday the pand jury mdict- T^ip^tric of New York; Westing- station f . five companies General Elec- jjguse of Pittsburgh; Lapp Insu- tric and Westinghouse among latpj. co. Inc., .Roy, N. Y., Ohio them—for conspiring to fix prices g^ass Co., Mansfield, Ohio; Ms- and rig bids in the sale of heavy g^ison Co., Elgin, 111,; H. K. electrical equipment. 1 pQ^ter Co. Inc., Pittsburgh; Hob- Four indictments were returned bard Co., Chicago; Joslyn Manu- today by the 20-member grand facturing & Supply Co., Chicago; jury. They involved the sale and the Porcelain Insulator Corp., distribution of brushings, distribu- Lima, N. Y.; I-T-E Circuit Brak- tion of lightning arrestors, inter- er Co., Centralia, Mo.; and South- mediate lightning arrestors, sta- ern Staf's Equipment Corp., Hamp- tior. lightning arrestors, assestor- ton, Ga. MacArthur Better NEW YORK AP — Lenox Hill Ho.spital says Gen. Douglas Mac- Authur, 80, is still showing mod erate improvement. Mac Ar thur entered the hospital Jan. 29 with a prostate gland disorder.