Food crisis in India claimed under control By RUKMINI DEVl And the government‘s confi-lbeen no starvation deaths dur- Inldian Press Correspondent deuce is indicated by its rejec-iing the present crisifi, though Ay (cp.——A food criqsition of a demand from the So-ipress reports say v agers in mffit on India m0 “10,1515 eialist “ginger group the 1 some remote parts of the coun- .50 has passed its worst phase party for complete nationaliza- try are livmg on roots, wildl ‘ovemmem officials 31: tion of tie food industry. fruits and leaves. I though the next eight to lol India, now a nation of 465,- Tl" 80Vemfn€nl .Dal'ily llah' Weeks will continue to be an 000.000, has not faced a Similaribee'l Soaded ""0 firm action: anxious period. shortage of grains since the} 3831"“ "will hoafdel‘s by Wide-E " < r t 3 al Famine of the . Food Mlms‘" “mam?” 6:13 19;)? But mews an in; The Socialist, Communist and: 1:".th la Spec“! convent]? girtznt difference Hindu opposition parties have; t e m mg congress par y . . l . made litical c ital out of the‘ that he now has a “firm grip" About a million people died in i “make: up ‘ on the national fond situation the Bengal famine. There havelURGED‘To RESIGN ‘ However. in some cases even‘1 :members of the Congress partyl statements. N. V. adgil, for . mer governor of Punjab. saidl .Prime Minister Lal Bahadut‘ ito solve the crisxs. l ' A combination of factors d' EN to the food shortage M been below average. Expecting higher prices. some farmers oe- gan hoarding grains. There wealthy wholesale traders ad- ‘vanced money to villagers to persuade them not to sell their prices rise sharply. i F Minisler Subramanyam has said there is no real short— have joined in anthgovernmentl ,Shast‘i should resign if unablei The last three harvests have have been allegations that grains in the open market until age of grains in the country but The Guardian-The Evening Pom n ..-ItA.Uukv‘vvuvt19—a—u-QQCVUIQY'TIIIDI.Wl..." 'v The Halifax See-d Co.. extends ; their warmest greetings and sincere best wishes to all com- t h 3 Canadian HOUSE BUILDS OWN PLANE Mrs. Tracy Pilurs, 36-year-old mother of six children, stands beside the small biplane which she built and flies. Mrs. Pilurs built the plane in the garage of her home at Highland Park, 111., a north _Chicago suburb, during the past four years. She painted the little airship d named it the “Pretty Purple Puddy Tat.” She flew the craft Thursday for lavender an sulted in seizure of 200,000 bags .of wheat. Critics of the government say food ministry is to blame grains to deficit states. This at-l titude has been assailed by oil-t press t e l for the difficulties, contending]i position parties and the as “anti-national." that under pressure from so- one commnist wrote: “It )5 called vested interests in tiie .9851" to get Wheat from Amer- ‘ 'Congress party the administra-j ica than from Punjab." tion failed to take effective ac-. The united States has Stepped ltion against hoarders and black _ up wheat shipmnts to lndlu,‘ imarket operators. and Washington has promised ; REELUCTANT To SELL 4,000,000 tons of wheat and rice y Four or five states in the ‘ 5 HALIFAX SEED co. i (P.E.l. LTD.) - Queen Street Charlottetown . in the coming six months. . . . .l A family planning conference country. including Punjab and [in Bombay was {old by goverm , «.ment experts that, in the light 1of a 2.1-pr-cent annual popuia- I tion increase while food produc- jtion remains almost stagnant : :(80,000 tons of grain a year». 1 the only real long-range solution ‘ jlies in mass birth control. I The Indian cabinet has ,started a reassessment of five- .year-plan p critics to ensure ‘ Ethat sufficient attention is paid ‘ to agriculture. but the crisis has Central Creameries Ltd. wish to lpt‘OVided ammunition for var- ‘ious political groups. ' Opposition .p a r tie s have fstaged nation-wide demonstra- ; tions, some of them impressive, 'against what they describe as government bungling of the food roblem .‘ take this opportunity to wish best of luck to competitors in the :DEMONS‘I‘RATORS JAILED The pro-Moscow faction of the Communist Party of India is _ taking a leading part in organic . ing anti-government protests. Some 1 ommunists have parti c i p a t e d in satyagrana Canadian Championship 1-‘-_ Plowing Contest. ' petitors in that hoarders have cornered the first time. (AP Wirephoto) : . . . stocks. Police have been raid- g ChamPlOMl‘W plowmg mg. godowm (warehouses) in Madhva Pradesh, which are! ‘vanous pelts 0f the clmntry' surplus in food production havev matches. and one “Id In the Pumab re' also been reluctant to sell Russian source‘s greatly shocked By DORIAN FALK GENEVA tAPl"The defec- tion to the United States of nu- clear scientist Heinz Barwich—- long a holder of key positions in the Soviet Union and East Germany—caused elation today among Western officials. Soviet sources expressed shock. The 53~year-old East German is considered a major prize for e West. which lost two top nu— clear experts—Kiaus Fuchs and Bruno Pontecorvo—to commu- nism. Barwi h's defection was an. nounced Friday by officials in Washington. He made his get- away last Wednesday. while in Geneva for the 71-nation confer. enc on the peaceful uses of atomic energy. The scientist slipped out of Geneva's Hotel President when the conference ended accompa- nied by another East German scientist, Prof. Max Steenbeck. whose whereabouts has not been reveal . ‘ Barwich's chief in East Ger many. Prof. Baron Manfred von Ardenne. said by telephone the defection was "extremely de- plorable" and “I am sure that [family reasons played a very istrong role in this decision." 3y ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (Cpl—Racial barriers crumbled the U.S. Deep South last week with a tranquility that was ' 1957 when the long struggle be- gan in earnest. Negro students desegregated all-white schools in all 11 Deep- South States. The final thrust came in Mississippi. " . . . his is the turning point for the Deep South." com- Mrs. Constance Baker n - Motley of New York. a lawyer with scores of court cs 4 hind her on behalf of the Na- tional Association for the Ad- vanceme lorcd Peop . “I don't recall any similar year of widespread peaceful compli- ance since the 1954 Supreme Court decision." price some have paid for integration is refl t B' O n =‘ 7' who says. as 1,600 e dren return to public schools for the first time in five years: “Who knows if the gap can ever be closed?" Most of these students went without formal education for five years when Prince Edward County closed its public schools rather than heed the Supreme Court desegregation order. The county est lish private schools for whites. which still operate and which in effect con- tinue segregation. FEW NEGROES A‘l'l‘END But in the broad Deep-Saudi picture. more than 25 per cent of the school districts have been opened to Negroes. Yet less than two per cent of an esti- mated 2.900.000 Negro students will attend bi-racial classes this ear. About 127 new school districts have been open to Ne oes this school term. Many are in ‘ smaller cities throughout ‘ rural Virginia school principal he runny fla- vored areas where bitter anti- segregation sentiment may hang on longer. The Southern School News of the Southern Education Report- ing Service at Nashville. Tenn... reports that mo school districts now admit Negroes at. r- garten to university level. But another 733 are either all-white or aleegro. But all this last week the list of desegregated areal lengthened: Maryland’s nerchest‘cr County—More than 76 Negores register against as last year. Glou , Va. — Three Ne- gro pupils break the secret-- tlon barrier in Gloucester ounty: O Momlle. Ala. — Three schools admit seven Negroes c ed with one desegregated school last year. Alabama now has eight dcsegregated school sys- ms. . ~ Gadsden. Ala. -— A scene of: tense demonstrating last week but three schools eventually register 16 Negroes quietly. _, Mount Sterling, Ky. — More than 300 Negroes register for the first time after short-lived violence last week. Col Ga.—start deseg- Dallac. Tex.—More than 14000 Negroes register in lo desegre- gated elementary schools. There are complications. B. G. premier prepares for crucial light By ROBERT BERRELLEZ GEORGETOWN (AP) — Brit- ish Guiana‘s Dr. Cheddi Jagan He said he believes Barwich’s wife is still in East Germany. Washington officials declined to reveal details about Bar- wich's family, or his present whereabouts. But sources said he is in the Washington area. TAKEN 'ro RUSSIA Barwich was among the nu- merous German scientists taken to Russia by the Red Army after the defeat of Germany in worked in Berlin during the Sec- ond World War on nuclear re- search East Germany was not offi- cially invited to the interna- tional conference here in Gen- eva. It is believed Barwich may have got accredited by posing as a member of a delegation from another Communist coun- has turned in his prophet's robes for the trappings of a practical politician in a last- ditch move to avert election de- feat this fall, consens is that the darkly handsome Marxist prem- ier will fall. ’ But to British Guianese who now consider Jagan's ouster a certainty, the forthcoming elec- tions will amount to no more Racial barriers in troubled Deep South At Atlanta. 6a.. the rare and recent development of a 50-50 racial split in a high school is threatened a w ' _ is desegregatlng one school grade. each year. work- ing from the tog). and now has Jed Grade . At Canton,-Miss., 13 Negroes were turned away from a high But the trend is'optimistic for the Deep South integrationists. M than changing the driver of the same old bus route. This is be cause of a spreading belief that the wave ofvracial violence be. > African dascem has gone beyond political control. _ Without internal peace and a common rdrlective, little hope is held for the development of this ambled colony. whether the leader he Jagan or his arch- r'lval, Negro leader L. Forbes Bgrnham. _ , BEYOND POLITICS Reflecting the opinion of some prominent Gui-niece. poll -. conmisslooer Peter Owen said “Neither Jag-n nor recently: r. 'm reaction to loin all other malor afraid violence has now gone Georgia cities. beyond the realm of politics " Briton co force of 1,000 u-nteers often I) a d 1 y over- malched in 24 months of almost continuous civil strife. Terrorist Violence since February has claimed 161 lives: 24 persons are missing, mono an 800 have been wounded and damage prope and crops is esti- mated st over $2,500,000. The violence has evolved moitly around the controversial personalities of the big, erudite Burnhain and Jagan. Burnham, a lawyer - Shake- spearean scholar with a large following among the Negro mid- dle and poor classes. is viewed warily by some intellectuals who claim to see im a dis- quieting thirst for power. REST HELPS Acne sufferers need not take special strict diets. but sleep and rest helps the condition. 1945. By 1955 Barwich had taken over as deputy director of the Soviet Nuclear Research Insti’ tute at Dubna, near Moscow. In 1957, he was permitted to return to East Germany and opened the East German Cen- tral Institute of Nuclear Re search at Rossendorf. He 1‘ tained his title at Dublin until early this year 0 its research is devoted to peace- ful uses of atomic energy. At Rossendorf. one of Bar- wich'z deputies was Fuchs. who slipped into East Germany in 1959 after serving a prison sen- .(passive resistancel in towns iand villages and have spent .--.-,-en~ medabad where six demonstra~ tors were killed in clashes with lice. The wunited Socialist Party and the Hindu Jana Sangh (People's League), both of :which are anti - Communist, lhave also organized many dem- onstrations but now seem to feel e Communists should he iso- ”Quolify Perfection Products" --_--~- — Fitzroy Street Charlottetown ' I short periods ranging from me Xto 18 hours in jails. to . l The only violence was in Ah- lated from the anti-governmch movement. As a result attempts organize “united front against hunger" have failed. The coverage given in Soviet newspapers to arrests of Com- munists. and the veiled insinua- tions made in the Moscow press about New Delhi's "inability" to deal with boarders have dis- pleased many Indians. They feel the Russians are being given a one~sided version of the Indian food situation. tean in Britain for passing nu- clear secrets to the Russians. U.S. officials declined to say whether Barwich now will work for the United States. The offi- cial announcement merely sald he had got in touch with Amer- ican authorities in West Ger- many earlier this month and has asked for political asylum Barwich was escribed as a husky man whose dark hair is thinning. He began his career as an assistant to Nobel Prize winner Prof. Gustav Hertz. who specialize in Welcome Canadian Plowing Mulch Championship Contestants MAY THE 1' MAN WIN! "'vwvccquncucpoo-c-nun-u.-¢‘c-.coacoouqcoo Last year’s winner was Stanley Willis of North River. Prinerdwudlshnd.Thlsycarwoextaidbestwishcsto Mr. Willis and all contestants . . . and may the best man will! I The P.E.|. Duirymen's Assoc. welcomes Canadian Plowing Match Chm’lpimhlp Dairy Queen ENGLAND and WALES Miss Christine A. Hewett to the the of FACTOR QMWOOOI'" Whonttrctrouble your'l‘lrc lyo debit _ oxmsou. Welcome Canadian Plowman QUALITY WORK CLOTHES c . At Factory Outlet Store we clothing for the working man. 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