PAGE TWO 'Doctor el Y'rar' Expresses Dislike f 'lam f ®r qi edical Care of Aged WASHINGTON (AP)—America's "general practitioner of the year" yesterday saw "a form of blackmail" in the legislation endorsed by the American Medical Association to finance medical care for aged persons unable to pay for it. But he doesn't like the broad, Social Security approach favored by President-elect John F. Kennedy, eitheE, and thinks the states and the doctors should do the job. Russians Accused Of UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.(/P) —Britain injected the issue of Soviet colonialism into Gen eral Assembly debate yester day over Premier Khrush chev's demand for immediate independence of. all peoples living under colonial and UN trusteeship systeMs. The move brought angry So viet charges that Britain was POk ing _in to the internal.affairs of the Soviet Union and resorting to cold war tactics. The clash Marked the opening of debate expected to last more than a week. Soviet Deputy Foreign Min ister Valerian A. Zorin assailed the U.N. trusteeship system as an outmoded and an ineffec tive instrument of the colonial powers and declared it must be scrapped. David Ormsby-Gare, British minister of state for foreign af fairs, accused Zorin of using the assembly debate "simply as an other occasion for vitifyin.r , my country and its allies, awl for carrying the cold %val. into Africa, in the hope that perhaps it can be hotted up to its advantage." Ormsby-Gore said that since 1939 about 500 million people, formerly under British rule, had achieved freedom and inde pendence. In that same period, he added, "the whole or part of six coun tries. with a population of 22 mil lion. have been forcibly incorpor ated into the Soviet Union. They include the world's three newest colonies -- Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia." Congolese Pursue Fleeing Lumumba LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (Th—The Congolese army yester day was ordered to pursue and capture fugitive ex-Premier Pa trice Lumumba before he can reach his political stronghold of Stanleyville. His flight raised the lineal of civil war in this troubled nation. Lumumba drove past sleepy Congolese soldiers watching his villa Sunday night, leaving be hind a statement saying he was going to Stanleyville for the fu neral of his infant daughter. But his political foes. President Joseph Kasavubu and Col. Joseph Mobutu, the army chief, seemed far from reassured by his prom ise to return within a few days for Kasavubu's unite conferences. "GI BLUES" STARTS TOMORROW Dr. James T. Cook, 44, of Mar ianna, Fla., made Lis comments at a news conference shortly aft er the AMA had• named him the 14th recipient of its annual award to a general practitioner "who has made an outstanding contri bution to his community." Cook was asked his view of recently enacted legislation un der which medical care for the aged unable to pay for it would be - provided by federal grants matched by state funds. °That's a form of blackmail—l don't approve of it," he said, ex plaining that he meant that such !a system forces a state to put up equal money in order to get a grant from the federal govern ment. Actually, the new law fixes the federal share at at least 50 per . cent but can go up to 80 per cent in states, of lowest per capita in come. And in many cases states won't have to put up a cent to get the extra old age assistance mon ey, being credited with funds they already are spending for public assistance. But, almost in the same breath, he said he is strongly opposed, as is the AMA, to pro posals by Kennedy and others that medical care for all the aged be financed through Social Security taxes. Cook told reporters he believes it's the responsibility of states and local communities to take care of the hospitals while doctors should provide their services for the indigent, aged or otherwise. If a state finds it cannot do so, he said, it could then appeal to the federal government for aid. But he stressed that he is against the federal government taking the initiative and the states accepting "anything that was offered" be cause "this makes it a political football." Cook said extending Social Se curity lo cover medical care for the aged "would have provided :his only to • people drawing a Social Security check," Kennedy Not Concerned With Election Challenge WASHINGTON M—Pres ident-elect John F. Kennedy said last night he is not con cerned with Republican chal lenges of the presidential elec tion vote in a number of states. "My information is , the count has been accurate," he said. Kennedy told reporters this on the steps of the Georgetown home of Dean Acheson, former secretary of stale, amid indica tions he may be nearing a PLAYERS Present TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' "SUMMER AND SMOKE" THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Boycotts Stall Integrationists NEW ORLEANS (if') Angry white parents boycotted two in tegrated public schools yesterday, condemning four Negro first grad ers to virtual segregation once again, "You've got the whole school to yourself now," yelled a woman as three of the 6-year-old pioneers in Deep South school integration entered McDonogh No. 19 school. Seven U.S. marshals ushered the trio into McDonogh and three others accompanied the Negro girl who went into William Frantz School. Hooting and jeering spectators numbered about 100 at McDonogh but only about 15 women were at William Frantz, the quietest school opening since integration began two weeks ago. A week's holiday for the city's 93,000 public school pupils wa tered down the heat of those who demonstrated violently week be fore last. Truancy and absence in the rest of the city's white schools dropped to nearly normal for a Monday. There was a 99.9 per cent boycott of William Frantz and McDonogh No. 19. Royalty Reported Angry About Servant's Stories LONDON (iP) Legal experts plan a crackdown on former serv ants who divulge intimate goings on in Britain's royal households, the Sunday Dispatch reports. Re cent newspaper articles about the behind-the-scenes_habits of royal personage reportedly have an gered palace circles. choice of a secretary of state. Emerging from a conference with Acheson, Kennery gave no indication who he might have in mind for his administration's top foreign "policy post. And as to whether he offered Acheson a job, Kennedy said, "That is not what I came to see him about." Today, Kennedy will be host at breakfast to Rep. CheSter A. Bowles of Connecticut, who was his foreign affairs adviser during the campaign and has been men tioned for secretary of state. Opening Dec, 2* CENTER STAGE For Reservations Call UN 5-2563. Tickets at HUB or Door *Running for five weekends Apalachin Sentences Reversed by Court NEW YORK (RP)—A federal appeals court yesterday upset the prison sentences of 20 delegates to the 1957 under world convention at Apalachin, N.Y. The government, which had boasted of the convictions, was soundly criticized for its handling of the case from start to finish. The three-man U.S. Circuit' Court of Appeals, unanimously ,••• • atholic Priests dismissing the convictions, called' the government's case "a boot- 1 strap operation," based on "crash lAssail Castro methods." The opinion, in effect, accused HAVANA ()P) Two Roman the government of setting up al Catholic prelates have met Fidel Castro's renewed attacks on ,the series of unproven assumptions, l ! and then belaboring the defend ! Churchwith declarations implying his revolution is more Commu ants because they refused to go' nig than Christian. along with them. The prosecution' Auxiliary Bishop Eduardo Boza never should have been started at'Masvidal of Havana and Arch all, the opinion held. !bishop Enrique Perez SeranteS of "In America. we still respect Santiago assailed the revolution the dignity of the individual, in statements read or distributed and even an unsavory charac- in two provinces Sunday. ter is not to be imprisoned ex- Then the prime minister in a cept on definite proof of spe- Sunday speech that ran into the cific crime," it added, early morning hours yesterday ac- Actually, the 20 defendants i cused some priests of preaching have not been imprisoned. They'counterrevolution for pay. have been free on hail pending! Two noise bombs exploded near the appeal since they were sen-lby as Castro addressed a rally at tenced last January to federall Havana University—part of a se sentences ranging from three to ries of 19 or 20 touched off in the five years on conspiracy charges. biggest counterrevolutionary dem- The 20 were convicted a year onstration yet in Havana. Neither ago under the conspiracy i n di c t_ casualties nor injuries were re ment which the government hailedported. as a strong. new lever against or- ---- ganized crime in this country. The Justice Department at the time forecast that "syndicated crime may soon have its death knell." The government offered an un usual argument during the trial here. First, it assumed that the gathering at Apalachin had a sin ister motive—such as carving up gangland territory and rackets. But the appeals court said: "Perhaps the most curious fea ture of this strange case is the fact that after all these years there is not a shred of legal evi dence that the Apalachin gather ing was illegal or even improper' in either purpose or fact " CATINAVM NOW ANIS POWERFUL ENTERTAINMENT . because it might be Gloria whose passions come wrapped in mink! Only best-selling author John O'Hara would dare to -tell Gloria's story fro first man to last! - METRO GOIOWYtH•MAYER presents ELIZABETH TAYL LAURENCE HARV EDDIE FISHER JOHN O'MARA'S `BUTTERFIELD °muffin DIM MERRILL cinemascope METROLOR Plus: COLOR CARTOON FEATURE BEGINS: I:40, 3:35,' 5:30, '7:30, 9:30 TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 29. 1960 We have the world's largest water tunnel Garfield Thomas Water Tunnel which was dedi cated in 1949. -.' , _'.41:'*:;,,:•.*..t..4,*.k. Last Day: "The Break Out" • TOMORROW • "For Members Only" The Nudist Story In Stunning Technicolor Plus "The Mating Time" if a woman answers clont hang ?ip! NOW 1011111 L
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers