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Jl«X ALASKA—MEMBER AC-ZOAIED PRESS _ 62nd Year No. 153 NOME, ALASKA, WBBHCGDAY, DECEMBER 2\, 1961 (r.'/ ) Per Copy 15» Tshombe Claims Congo Troops Aided by U.N. Attack Katanga Village BUS ABETHVILLE, Katanga UO —President Tshombe claimed that troops of the Central Congo gov ernment attacked villages near the town of Kongolo today. He charged the Central Congolese forces were aided by United Na tions troops. He told a news conference at his residence here there had been serious fighting in the area earlier today. Tshombe also charged Indian Canberra jet bombers attacked the town of Kongolo itself. The United Nations, he alleged, helped the Central Congolese sd^iroops toy providing transport for them. Kongolo lies about 40 miles south of Katanga’s (border within Kivu Province. There was no confirmation from the United Nations of Tshombe’s report. r——. Cold Weather Cancels Wien Airline Flights Again For the second successive day Wien Airlines have had to cancel out their mainliner flight from Fairbanks, due to extreme cold weather at Fairbanks, reported this morning to be minus 61 de grees. Bush flights to St. Lawrence Island and other points will be made on schedule, however. Station Manager Pearse Walsh, always alert to the needs of the coastal Alaska, observed this morning that both military bases at Galena and Fairbanks were closed due to weather and would be powerless to defend North western Alaska should the need exist. If military planes were away from their bases they would be unable to return, even for re fueling. This again confirms the need for military strength along the Coast of Alaska and points up the weakness in the defense of America. """. 1 ... Comic or Cosmic? NEW YORK lS) — Thank your lucky stars! An official of the Hayden Planetarium dismisses as “non sense” the predictions of Hindu astrologers that the human race will be destroyed next February. “It’s the same kind of gobble degook astrologers have been handing out for thousands of years,” says James Pickering, as sistant atronomer of the Plane tarium. Astronomers — serious students of the heavenly bodies — tradi tionally explode like dying stars when the question of astrology comes up. Astrologers — who try to pre dict the future by the stars as they move across the various con stellations — traditionally note that their art is older and consider astronomers upstarts. In India right now Hindu priests are in the process of chanting sacred verses and offering sacri fices in an effort to avert what they consider imminent disaster. Hindu astrologers say a catas trophe is imminent because of a forthcoming inauspicious combi nation ot planets in the constella tion of Capricorn now approach ing. They predict things will start going from bad to worse next month, with the catastrophe itself occurring between Fob. 3 and 5. Among the prophecies of doom are world war, widespread plague and earthquakes. , Actor Marlon Brando Gets Smacked in the Face SANTA MONICA, Calif. tf> — Emerging from a stormy child custody hearing, Anna Kashfi smacked her ex-husband, Marlon Brando, across the face yester day. Brando continued down the courthouse corridor without say ing a word. Miss Kashfi, trembling, told photographers: “Don’t ever say I didn’t give you a good picture.” The blow, delivered with an l open hand, was heard down the corridor and in full view of news photographers. The incident followed Brando’s testimony that he’s “tired of playing the heavy” in the pro longed court squabble over their 3-year-old boy, Christian Devi. The actor was seeking a court order to visit the boy three times, instead of twice, a week. Brando, 36, was granted per mission to have the boy visit him every third weekend in addition to the twice weekly visitations previously allowed. Miss Kashfi,, 26, and Brando were divorced in 1959. NW GOPs Endorse Mrs. Grace Johnson For Seat in the House The Northwestern Alaska Dis trict Republican Committee has announced endorsement of Mrs. Grace Johnson as replacement in the State House of Representa tives. to fill the seat left vacant by the death of her husband, Arthur Johnson In District 23. Appointment is to be made by Gov. TOn. Egan within 39 days, with confirmation by majority of the Republican House members. Mrs. Johnson was in Juneau last year with her husband and is familiar with many of the prob lems which will come before the 'State Legislature next month. . mimi.-mmuL• - -.v.-- . ;V;.v East-West Football Stars Clash Tomorrow SAN FRANCISCO UP) — Foot ball stars with speed, power and aerial accuracy clash tomorrow in the 37th annual East-West game at Kezar Stadium with the out come depending on who stops whom. The West must halt the running of such driving backs as All Americans Ernie Davis of Syra cuse and Bob Ferguson of Ohio State while also guarding against the pass threat of quarterbacks Roman Gabriel of North Carolina State and Ron Miller of Wiscon sin. East defenders face such rush ers as Ron Bull of Baylor and Curt McClinton of Kansas plus an aerial bombardment trigger ed by Mel Melin of Washington State, John Hanl of Kansas or Kermit Jorgensen of Washington. Weather conditions were un certain for the 2 p.m. kickoff but the week has been clear and cool. As usual, a capacity throng of 59,000 is expected. 300-Foot Iceberg Spotted Off Massachusetts Coast SALEM, Mass. Uh — A 300 foot iceberg has been spotted in the Atlantic, 250 miles southeast of Salem and between the two major shipping lanes to Europe. The iceberg was seen yester day by Coast Guard Capt. Ross Bullard of Hingham, a membei of the International Ice Patrol who was on a patrol mission Capt. Bullard went out again to day aboard a Coast Guard plane. The Coast Guard said it was the first time an iceberg has drift ed so far south to menace navi gation since 1917. If it reaches the Gulf Stream it is believed it will melt rapidly. The International Ice Patrol was set up after the liner Titanic struck an iceberg and sank off Newfoundland in 1912 with a loss of 1,500 lives. Stevenson Says India’s Conquest of Goa Danger to World Peace PALM BEACH. Fla. Ufi — U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson told President Kennedy today that United Nations failure to act against India’s conquest of Portu guese Goa betrayed a weakness he said could endanger world peace. In a report to Kennedy on U.N. operations this year, Stevenson tempered claims of success in some areas and a “hopeful” view of the Congo crisis with a sharp assault on India’s takeover of Goa and two other Portuguese colonies on the west coast of India. Stevenson previously had criti cized India’s action and a Soviet veto which blocked UN. action on it. PORTER LOCKARDTO TAKE TRIP AROUND WORLD Porter Lockard, veteran bush pilot lor Wien Airlines made his last flight for the winter this ■week and then takes off for a trip around the world. Replacing him will be Ray Lewis, who has been flying out ' of Barrow, who will be accom panied by his wife to Nome. To fin file vacancy on the local Wien buah line, due to the death of Art Johnson; Clyde Rod will arrive from' Fairbanks with hit wife, the former Betty-Diede. Bob Erwin Transferee! to Fairbanks; Virgil Vochoska To Fill D.A. Post Here JUNEAU Ut) — The resignation, of William Taylor as District At torney for the Fourth Judicial District at Fairbanks, effective Jan. 31, was announced today by State Atty. Gen. Ralph Moody. Taylor’s place will be taken by Robert Erwin, currently District Attorney for the Second Judicial District at Nome. Erwin will be replaced by Virgil Vochoska, for mer city attorney for Nome. Taylor was District Attorney at Fairbanks for the past two years. His father, Warren H. Taylor, is a Fairbanks attorney and an nounced candidate for the gov eronrship. The elder Taylor is also Speaker of the State House of Representatives. Erwin is a native of Seward and is a 1959 graduate of the Uni versity of Washington (Law School. He was appointed District At torney at Nome last April. Vochoska graduated from the University of Denver Law School in 1958. He was with the Alaska State Attorney General’s office from 1958 through February, 1960, when he resigned to enter privale. law practice. Cold Weather Grips Westward Alaska . . . Nome Records Minus 41 By The Associated Press Westward Alaska continued to remain in the grip of an unsea I sonable cold snap today, with I temperatures in the Central In terior again dipping to the minus 50s and 60s. McGrath reported the early morning low, a minus 63. It was 60 below at Fairbanks, 53 below at Gulkana and 47 below at Kot zebue. The only areas of precipitation were the Southeast Panhandle, the North Gulf Coast and the Western Aleutians, in the form of light snow or rain. Nome temperature at 2:30 this afternoon was 37 below zero. Health Organization Attempts Trace Traveler Suffering with Smallpox LONDON UR — Britain called on the World Health Organization —WHO—today to help trace air line passengers threatened with smallpox. The alert went ou after a Paki stani who flew into London from Karachi Christmas Day was found to toe suffering from the disease. The Pakistani, Ismet Khan, 24, arrived from Paris on an Olympic Airlines plane with 40 others. Radio, newspaper and tele vision newscasts called on the [passengers to report immediately for vaccination. Kahn flew to Paris on an Air France flight which left Karachi Monday morning and stopped in Tehran and Rome. At Paris' Orly Airport, where Khan changed planes, scores of employes lined up for shots at the Airport Medical Department. Incubation period of smallpox la about 10 days, so if any other aboard the plane were Infected they would start feeling the" effects about Jan. 4. I •'■■■■'' 'i ■ .. ", ' ;jj S O T I f P NO PAPER MONDAY NEW YEAR'S DAY