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2-7-1966 Times (February 7, 1966, vol. 4, no. 261) Bakhtar News Agency

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~TBEB FORECAST PAGE 4 KABUL TIMES FEBRUARY 6, 1966 lI/EWS STALLS Tomorrow~ Tempenau. ltabul Ttmes is available at: His Khyber Resburant; IUbuJ .>, Majesty Sends Afghan Poets To Attend Amir Khisro Anniversary AT THE CINEMA • Max.. +12°C. Minimum -O°C. Ceylon Congratulations Sun sets tomorrow at 5:26 p.m. a,tel; Share..eNa* near Park. On National Day ARIANA CINEMA Sun rises tomorrow at 6:41 :un. Cinema; Kabul l1lternJltlol1:l1 At 2, 4:30, 7 and. 9 p.m. Aernri· Tomorrow's Outlook: Cloudy AIrport. ' KABUL. Feb. 6.--00 the occa­ can film.starring Charlie- Chaplin. , meS~ sion of Ceylon's "national day a 30 YEARS OF FUN sage: of congratulation' has been sent 'PRICE AJ.. " PARK CINEMA KABUL. M0NDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1906, (DALV IB, 1:H4, S.H.) \ to Colomho on behalf of His Ma­ A.t. 2:30, 5, 7:30 and' 9:30 p.rn. VOL. lV, NO. 261. jesty. the King to the Governor Ge- I American: fiIm,:starring Charlie oeral of Ceylon. Chaplin. ~:r~~: ~S::~~d~~re Cabinet Approves New Name --- 30 YEARS OF FUN Johnson Meets S. Vietnamese .IH II KABUL, Feb. 7.-Mahmood Fe- UU roughte bas been appointed. the For Information Ministry' Khushal Khan Pres., PremIer n ono ambassador of Iran to AfghaOistao. . K.."UlUL, Feb. 7.':'" Air War... HONOLULU, FebrnJlry 7..,- His MajeslJl the King bas agr=! . ON the proposal of the lIIln1stry of Press and WormatioD'the (Conld. from page 3) I OUTH Vietnamese leaders Major-General Nguyen Van to the appolnunenl of feroughle as Not only were there troubles ~ cabinet has decided that the 1Ilinistry beDceIorth be known ICnnld. Iwm pap 1) S Tuien, head of the state and Nguyen Cao Ky the Pri.nie ambassador to Afgb:lOistan. the Pro- but there were also betrayals. As I tion with South Vietnamese lea­ as the'i\linistry of InformatioD and Culture, . ~ a result of poe of these. he was Minlster met President Lyndon Johnson here Sunday. tocol Department of the Ministry of In the proppsal of the MiniStry The MI.DlStrv aof Informat~on and. ders covering economic, ·agricUl­ ~ Co~t ~nnounced. ~ccord3~ce unjUstly Jrnprisone<:l in 1664 i:n tural as well as military prob­ In a \1;elcoming statement Pre- forts of our tW? nations the I it was staled lbat since. printing and Culture. 10' wtth. the India for some years. Embitter­ lems. sideDt Johnson referred to what service ot the Ideals of liberty, Ma.wandwal publicity for the preservation. and Press law•.w:~ contlOue. ~o look a~­ ~ews ed by the treachery of his family, .The President's calling of the he caUed "special pleader.> who and peace in the world Will lead I development of national culture. in- ter the act!Vltles of ·radlo. th.e the GovernOl"S of Kabul ahd the ne?"sp~pers Honolulu conference follows- an counsel get out of Vietnam:' and Ta~ksfi al ;:;'twee~'ctOry" , R h D h b -tr.oduction of the country inside' and agency, and periodicals Mf.lgu) dynasty, Khushal Khan intensive 'review in Washington added "they belong to a group to the U.S. and the ecic es OS an a oUlside , encouragement publis~ed on.·~haU of the state," ~o­ on his return home. joined the three weeks ago of plans forrural that has always been blind to Vietnamese leaders are expected arid patronising of art, cultural and vemment. pnntmg ho,~ ar.t and Afridis and the _Mohmands in reconstruction in South Vietnam experience and deaf to hopc". to cover economic. cultural and KABUL. Feb. 7.-Prime Minis- press institutes, preservation and theatre. cmemas, public Iibranes~ and their struggle against the oppres­ , and eventual. electionS. He said: "We cannot accept military problems in South Viet- ter- Mobammad- Ha!him Maiwand­ development of Afghanistan's cul- so {orth.. . .' their logic that tyranny 10,000 wat arrived on Sunday in Doshan~ S""f.S. However, here too, he en­ Premier Ky, of South Vietnam lural ties with foreign countries. and .~e mln~ster and offiCIals of the countered unhappiness... miles away is not tyranny to con- n~'cording to an AP despatch ba, capital of Tajl~estan. from the ~lnJstl)', ~e. U1 a speecb on Jan. 15, said that encouragement and development of will addressed as. o,ffi-. the emphasis of his government cern US--Qr that subjugation by froin Tokyo the Viet Cong claims Crimea. tourism in Afghanistan are Ihe ,main clals of·t~e- Mmlstry of In!ormatlon- an anned minority in Asia is dif- the U,S.-South Vietnam confer-· Members .of the Prime Minister's Whether it be sages or' fools, th~s ye3! would be' on pacification aims of the Ministry it is fitting lhat and Culture. , Or honest men or thieves, ferent from 'subjugation by an ence in Honolulu is aimed at in- party and Soviei. officials accompa· and reconstruction in hostile parts the name of the Mi.istry be cbanged Education Minister· I do '01 see a single oDe of the ccuntryside. armed minority in Europe." tensificatieR and expansion of the nYlOg him on his SQviet tour also to the MtnlStl~' of information and Willing to share my r:oad. The President said that in 1940's I Vietnam war. arrived with him. President J ohnsoil said last mad~ night that the United States and 1950's the United States took I Radio Hanoi quoted a spokes- A guard of. bonour. up- of Culture. Visits' Puli.Kkumri Their sovereignty they have its stand in Europe to protect the I man of the Viet Cong as saying soldiers from the garnson of the Three Afghan poets and scholars who are In Delhi to alte.d the annJversary celebra· would emphasise in every way it renounced (the Pashtuns) freedom of those threatened by "the South' Vietnamese people capital of the Republic. was drawo . Four Envoys Pay tions 01 Amlr Khlsro. They are: (right to left) ·could economic and social plans Aibak, Balkh , Preferring Mogul gold. p~ aggression. will never flinch in face of any up at Doshanba airport where the They seem to have but one ~e­ Mohammad 'IbrahIm KhallJ.., Mahmoud Fanni. Mayet Berawi. "in !We with .the very fine fla~ t- nouncements that the Prime Mi­ "Now the centre of attention act of intimidation of the U.S. national of Afghanistan. the, C II 0 SOd' sire, During their two-week stay In India they will also visit Deohund, ChandJgarh, Nan· bas been shifted to another part imperi.alists and their henchmen. USSR and Tajikistan were flying. BAGHLAN. Feb. 7.-The M,inis- ga~ nister has made concerning his a s n I qI To seek for' Mogul ~ titles. Amhala, Sarblnd, Agn, Aligarh and Lncknow. of the world where aggression is They are resolved to Carry T~e Prime Min.ister and h,ls com- ter of Education Mohammad 05- desires in the field of education on the march and enslavement of through their struggle for national paOlons were met ~Y Abdulakhad KABUL, feb. 7.-The Bulgarian man Anwari., arrived. in Puli-~hum- and health and agrIculture. His son ,Bahram gave him DO free men is its goal Our stand I t" 1"11 final victory" Kakharov, the ChaIrman of the Ambassador Volko Gochev.. tbe In· \ ri Saturday afternoon to mspect the peace, setting tz:ap after trap "We want to be SUle that we must be as firm as ever:' be sa;:..~o~hi~a News Agency c1alm- I C~uncil of Ministers of Tajikista.n. dian Ambassador General P. ~. ~h?Ols and the progress Qf edu· have our best planning 'and our Tursi.J.iI.-Z~deh. ~half- catlon~1 for him. However, time and again Soft Landin'g I added. ed President Johnson has decided . Mlrzo the. ThapJ.r, and A. Shahbaz the ChIef programmes there. Khushal Khan evaded them sue-, Tremor In Central Greece maximum effort put into it. That General Thieu, replying to Pre- to go to Honolulu .personally to ~an . or the ~\llel Afro·A~tan So- of the United Na.t1ons D~velop'ment WhIle vlsltmg the boys and girls occupy a substantial part of cessfully. Bahram was to Khusha1 will sident Johnson's' welcome said: preside over a bigber-Ievel meeting Ildanty S:0mmluee, other bl~ rank: programmelOffice hMe~ebPaid seapar::..e schools,in Puli-kbumri city. Anw,ari (Cnnld. tram page I) the conference." ' I Khan what Aurangzeb was to res. Kills One, Destroys V,iliages "We firmly believe that the ef- to discuss the "co~plete prog. ing offie,tals and rep,r.esenta~l\'es 01 r eourt~y ~a Is on, I, 0 amma ~. took notes about the need for lext- Shahiahan... .. f th US war of ag- the public pi tbe Tajlk capital. I ~.Sl(;lql. the MIDIster of Informa- books, new maps' and other educa- It was resolved to land the station ramme 0 e ...... ' d d CIS ·d . ATHEN, February 6, (Reuter).­ gression in Vietnam. As the. "[l~18 ,3lrJtoer taxle -t,o, non an U ture, un ay mOrnJpg. tional material and' equip'ment. on the visible side of the moon in Employment amba~sador ", Not Shahjahan the Emperor order .to reduce the size of the ap­ AN earthquake Saturday destroyed four villages, killed ODe Viet Cong Uses This comes at a time when the the termlDal, Malwandwal and hiS I The of _German Fe· He was accompanied by the . go- ., Lies captive-in wnose bonds? . paratu.ses, and, to cut power expendi­ woDian and injured scores 01 people and left thousands 01 (Cnnld. /ram page2) United States has got into a blind wife and o~er gu~sts· !itepped down, deral Republtc, Dr~ Ge~hard Molt- vemor of Bagblan. Think on his fate and leam people homeless In central Greece • workers occurred in -the' following allEiy after the failure of its war the gangway. children presented. t mann and, the ~ndonesl~n Ambas- Dr. Anwari also visited the pri­ tures for beating and'lighting. How­ New Weapon In Kakba!O-~ pat~ from it ever, there still remained many diffi­ government a The Quake, which registered levels: there and the recent explosion of them With fresb flowers. Isador. Qadir Osman , separate mary school for boys in Bala Do- The declared war~ly c~ud-r!esy The lesson ot the times. cult problems, according to a scien­ state of emergencY in the area as more than six points on the Kabul 67,600 its "peace talks" fraud. shook hands with the Pnmlrie call.S' on .tbe MIDIster Sa- rie viUage of the Puli·Khumri Wo- tist, who took part in ~e design of troops and resCue teams arrived Richter scale, had its epicentre Puli-Khumri 5,300 Vietnam War .' . that Minister aod the .members of s . tur ay momlOg. leswali. He thanked the people of K;bushaJ Khan finally found reo Chari·kar "ThlS IS. the first tune party. J _ the viUage for donaling land and the television equipment to aid the stric_ken villagers and 190 kilometres northwest of here, 6,200 (Reuter).-~rog- fuge in Afridi countrY where be It was' necessary to conform ac­ search the debris for casualties. the Athens observatory said. . Baghlan 3,270 SAIGON. Feb. 7, (Reuter).-Viet IJohnson has left the U.S,. proper The nationJ.1 anlhems of Afgba- I TOKYO. Feb. 7, money for· the construction o[ th-e died in 16I!9 at the age of 76. curately with the size and weight Social Welfare Minister Michael, The ~allest detectable Quakes Kunduz 5,860 Cong forces have begun to use much to plot a funher escalat!on ?f nistan, tbe SO ...·iet Union and T,aji-, men Sunday located the AU Nippon school. heavier weapons including 120 mili- th,e U.S, .. of aggression 10 klstan were played. Maiwandwal,; AirwJ.Y Bocm& 727 whi~h plunged The Minister visiled Aibak. Sa­ The poems in the Div.an are which were ~culat.ed to a precision Galinos said all 750 houses in register on the Richter scale are Fizabad 2,000 '!'ar not arranged in chronological or­ metre mortars with a range of well Vietnam, It says. ac~mpanied by Kakharov, inspec- into Tokyo bay on Fnday D1gbt, fTtangan province, Friday evening. of milimetres and'grams. Krenti, Fourna (also known as under three and the largest at Samangan 2,760 av~tion's der and hence they give no indi­ The sensitivity of the television Kerassohor), Klistos and Vraha about 8.6. Mazari-Sharif 12,500. over three miles. A Reuter despatch £ro.m New led the guard of honour. I klUing 133 people in He explained to the people of the cation of when they were written This is a mile more than any other Yor~ quoted the Col~bla ~road- The premier and his compamons ! worsl one---plane c~h. . I area about expansion and de\'etop- apparatus on the station must be had crumpled. Saturday's quake is the second Shibergan 3,610 ~YlOg h~d the~r with the exception of a few in. rather large, since luiJ.ar rocks badly Police feared that three other earth disturbance .reported in Maimana 3,600 weapon in their regular armoury. It castmg system It preceded from the airpon to I The naval self-de.lence ·force scud ment of education which the goy-- passing ot years or .to some event. e~identJy KaJanau may well lead to some hasty rethin- ! learned on, the highest authonty residence. The main street of the' the main body of the fuselage was emrnent of Mohammad Hashim reflect. light: they are black villages--Agrafa, 'Granitsa and Greece· this year. 1,400 Presld~nt which there is a reference to the and dark.-brown in colour and look Prosu -may have been hit. Com- 20,500 king of U.S. strategy for the defence that Johnson had or- Tajik capital through which they Ily.ng on the muddy floor of the bay Maiwandwal bas io view. ._ the date of which is knoWn. very dark. munications have been Interrupt­ Farah 1,600 of large bases. dered a major step-up of the U.S. were dn\'ing had been decorated 24 melres below the surface. Elaborating on bis tours of the Therefore, it would seem that des­ The mortars, biggest yet employed bombing of the North. WIth the national flags of Afghanis· It was not· immed~tely mown provinces, Anwar; said that ,he wants Because lunar rockS reflect light ed since the tremor at 0412 local Helmand Valley Th~\ .coITespon~ent pite the vicissitudes KhGshal suf­ well only in one direction, the side time in the morning. Japanese Premier I. ::t(inc authority) . 20,500 by the Viet Cong in the war, can report, from tan. the SovIet Union, Tajikistan, and how many of the 103 missing bodies to explain to tIle people about the fered he retained' the amiahility . 1,100 hurl a 35-pound shell up to 6.236 Martl~ Agronsk~ 10 Washinh~· welcommg streamers. the wreckage held. jnteresr His Majesty the King., has from which light rays fall upon Galin;;ts said medical supplies, specIf~ ~ of his nature, the forthrightness Kandahar yards. ton, .dld not whether is for the development of education in .- them,' a found, panoramic scann­ food and blankets had been sent Asks Inquiry Into 20,500 tar~ets of his character and his love for ing of the lunar surface was envi­ to the ..necked areas. He was Jabel-us-Seraj . 2,360 They were used recently in bom- applied tl' 10 North Vlet- PI M' d T· R 't Ie' the_country. his fellow Pashtuns. saged Which makes it possible to flying there immediately for Gulbahar (textile factory) bardments of two Americao military nam. South Vietnam, or both. I ans a .eo· eVI a ISe The Minister is o. an inspection instaUations in northern provinces. But Agronsky ,told R~ute~ later tour of the northern regions of AI:. view the locality around the con·. Athens. ANA Plane Crash 5;000 U This volume contains many tamer also in that direction where Total 171,000 Hitherto, the South Vietnamese that :vas referrlOg pnmarlly to E'38t rn RegI'On' HandI·Cra ;....· .gbaniStan. ' selections from the Divan (Col­ objects will be distinctly visible. TOKYO. Feb. 6. (DPA).-With and Americans bad to face nothing bombmg of the. North. e . .LUS The Minister requested the people lected Works) of KhushaJ Khan A television set has been design· Civil Insurance Joins [he successive discoverieS of dead larger than 81 and 82 milimetre mor- The report said plans caUed for KABUL, FebmarY''1.- 10 forward their ideas for the im- Khattak, comprising lyrics, odes bodies of passengers and shattered Violin Concert tars and 75 recoiUess rin~ with a a Feb~ary bomb t~nnage 50 per ~. 1I1in d Ind tri laos t • th provement and reform of the social ed and built whicb weighs little and gher than m any month 1Ilinistry of es an US es p . 0 reVIve e . and Quantrains· with the beauti­ Public Health Ministry fragments of. wings and fuseJag!= Sa· maximum range of under two miles. cent hI. handloom and handicraft indUstries of the eastern parts.of . and educational situation quring- has a .rather good "sight", says an t~·o fUl Hamd (Econiwn) for its open· article in Komsomolskaya Pravda KABUL. Feb. 6.-The civil ser­ turday the worst air accident in the (Could. -from pace J) No base in South Vietnam at the before tht recent pause, and their meetings with the ministers. present time has a defence perimeter and a half times greater than 1!I the country immediately and to find markets for the products. The minister arrived in Balkh ing. on the '\.·Luna·9" radio control ~n­ vaots health insurance: Department world's aviation since 1946 involv­ Radio Afghanistan Concert Hall deep enough to prevent bombard- any mont.h of the Korean War. Engineer Abdul'Sarnad Salim, ments for the establishment o.f a Saturday evening. , tre. is now under the jurisdiction ·of the ing a BOeing 72:7 jet airliner of All proved its suitability for this For those unacquainted with Ministry of Public Health. Before Nippon Airways (ANA) has be­ th 0 the ).linister of M-ines and Indus- . carpentry factory in Chagha G k P tp The success of the "Luna-9" kind of occasion. One hopes that ment by e 12 mm mortar. MAL tries. who had gone on' a' fact..:: i-Sarai' to manufacture furniture. romy 0 'Os ones the poet, there is a good introduc­ it was under ihe Ministry of Fi· come an undeniable fact. someday soon Radio Afghanistan L Oight and its soft landing brings It ~ade a devastating debut in ayor .sgnar ays find,·n." tour of this re."ion, return. " Short term and' a long term Visit To Rome tion which gives a clear, vivid nancc. All hopes for survivors have been' take advantage of the pr~ the Vietnam conflIct a few weeks . closer the implementatjon of the will ~~b. (D~A}.-Soviet picture of his Ufe and tUnes. Mr. The d~ision was taken in a 'mee­ abandoned as the temperature over sence of star performers on its ago, flattening a large part or the eel to Kabul Friday. . I programmes in accordance with RAkbar the President .As farming and cattle raising try officials said here Sunday. standing Pashto He has done Prof. Boris Levin believes ~at landing of the Soviet '''luna·9'' au- 60 fishing boats, patrol boats and can be broken down 10 a ree ple- stone for a temporary market was I ,.. - his T' .. excell~t ces for transport with foUl men car- I'd b Pr f M h d A har of Induslries who had accom- ar~ ess promising m t area, hey told queS!lonlOg reporters an piece of work trans-­ seismic investigafion could produce tomatic station, on the' establish- warships of both Japanese self-de­ ing eacb one al y 0 f' K °b a,mSma d sg panied thE Minister said. carpe.ntry and handicrafts· could that the visit had ndt been cancelled, lating the verses in a free style ment of stable radio communications I fence and U,S. forces and eleven ry I many interesting .r.esults. This will . ',. the Mayor 0 a u un ay morn- A F h d I. '11' 'd I t f th A t b 'd be un~vol'd the original. according to those make it possible not only to, confirm and the transmission of pictures of air.craft which are combing the wa· WANTED: Meanwbile Amencan pllots are ing, The new market will be cons- renc e egatlon Wl arnve provl e emp oymen or e pe<>-o pos ponqemenr, a en - /which has . kept' the essence of that the moon must be seismically the moon and ether scientific· in- rers of the bay. worried about the increase in the tructed wbere the offices of Radio here shortly to make arrange- pIe, Dr. Akbar said. able under the cIrcumstances. who read both Pashto IlIld EluI. formation to earth are prominently The d'oomed aircraft. carrying GenUeman with perlecf Eng. amount of ground-fire they are reo Afghanislan were located before calmer than earth, but also to find 1Ish, good typing and. experIeDce lish Iluently. I leel no better r . featured in the world press. 126 passengers aDd'a seven-member ceiving in the central bighlands and they were moved 10 the new pre- the real di,stribution of density inside in AIrline wanted tor attractive commendation for this. book can the planet. to ascertain whether ·ii crew from Cbirose airport in Hok· northern areas of the country. mises. Moon Research Probe Ends, Photos Shown be given or is needed. ·For years now we bave looked kaido. lost contact with the control saJary I.r Czechoslovak AIrlines. Intelligence reports say several The market wiU be used by those MOSCOW. Feb. 7. (Reuter}.-So- ~ Yiorking perfectly. nestling in their eke' which delivered it fo the moon's .has an iron uudeous. Applicants shonld deliver their .' f01'Ward for the time when man centre at Haneda airport and c;rash­ No:rtb Vietna~ese anti-air~ft bat- who lost their shops· in Ihe 6re viet scientists Sunday declared 'an If globe-shaped centre piece .and pro-' surface. , written applications before Vitally' Ginzburg, co'rresponding would succeed in landing instru­ ed into Tokyo bay a few minutes tabons have mfiltrated IOtO the which broke out in Ahmad Shah Sa­ ,end to Iheir history-making luna-9 leered by ~tal-shapd f1a~ . Sunday's pictur'e;" was only the March 15 to CSA olIIce in Hotel I, ~ouJd before landing at lbe airport. South. O\ler the l~t few mont~s arm- rai two months ago. Dari Proverbs member of the Academy of the· Sc­ mentS on the .IJloon that Splnzar. moon research programme only 48 There was no explanation tiere fthird from Luna-9 to be released" iences'of the USSR. says that the continue to send back. information. Most of the passengers, all Ja­ ed Wlth 50 caUbre machme-guns The shopkeepers will pay a nomi· hours after it began. - why Luna-9 should. have ended its here although Iodrell Bank observa- (Conld. tram page 3) instruments carried to the moon. A very great step forward was ach­ panese. were sight-seers to Hokkai· capable of bringing down an licraft nal rent to resume their commercial The announcement of the end of lra!lsmissions-only an annoWlce- lOry has reported receiving- eight. where nothing interferes with study ieved. says Bernard Lovell, the direc­ do, wbere a lraditional snow festival FOR SALE flying at over 3,000 feeL activities there. picture transmissions from Ihe ·small ment by the Soviet News Agency The British stalinn received a blast is currently being held in its capital Don't '$toP,Q d,?nkey Iltar isn', of outer space, wiJl help 10- over­ tor of JodreU' Bank. in a statement YOLKSWAGEN 1200 Abdul Wahab Malikyar. the First moon stalion cre!!led a new air of Tass that it had compleled the plan- from Soviet scientists for releasing yours. come three barriers Which hamper publishCd in the London "Daily city, Sapporo. 1960 Mode~ Deputy Minister of Interior and the mystery around lhe luna·9 project. ned -erogramme of research. the pictures.. The Soviets claimed Prime Minister E. Sato Saturday Excellent condition. the work. of terr~trica.I investiga­ Express". Two College Of Medicine Chief Commander of Police were The scientisls -.aid lbe final radio In a television conference last Ihey were distorted with the, hori­ Ellen if th~r~ is only ,bread tors: atmospbere, ionosphere and instructed all the government agen­ Customs doty not paid, also present. Isession with the sunflower·like ins- ·Frida.y 3. Soviet radio expert said 1zontal scale shrunk 2-i times-mao.­ Soviet scientists will now have cies concerned to conduct a thorou­ Con~t Hargreaves sl~lion, and onions. still 'one can IuJv~ magnetic field of the' earth. such information about the Junar . Professors Visit Paris The Ministry of Information and I frument capsule of luna-9.. which the could in principle go on king the moon's features look. taUer a happy face. gh investigation into the cause of Tel: 22014 KABUL. Feb. 7,-Dr. Keramud­ Culture gave premises to the Mu­ noafed gently down on the moon's working indefintely. with its solar and trunner. surtace, the Washington Post says. the disaster. During .mce hours. Prof,' Yak.ov :Glembotsky, the which 17,259 pbotographs made by din Kakar and Dr. Abdul Walie nicipal Corpora!ion. tondy surface on Thursday night. batteries being recharged. The Soviet photos now shown . God said. "Eat and drink'·',· biologist, pins great hopes on the American probe "ranger" could not 'Zakie both from the College of Me­ There will be 126 shops in tbe was held bef'n'ee~ 1900 and 204'. . Sunday the:e ,was still. no: in~ica· give a clear. view oL the lunar I~foscow but hI! didn't say. "Gorge to finding ofmicro-organisms on the produce, dicine. KabuJ University left for market. according tb EsmatuUah time (1000 , .... 1741 GMT) non why Soviet space SCientISts were plains, pockmarked With pebbles dis~ ,ht! lull (up to your throat)". moop. This would prove that life The Soviets have accomplished Paris at the invitatiop.'" of the French Enayat Seraj, the Chief of Construc­ Salurday night. taking. so Tong to issue the complete and strange cavities, and finally A mo.rhu won't' give milk' 10 can adapt itself to cosmic condi­ the most difficult exploit in ~pace TOATHENS,i'RAGUE .WITH EXCELLENT government tion Department in the KabuJ Mu­ In Brilain. scientists at· Iodren set of photographs transmitted to pelled the long beld theory that the her chiM unll1 he cries. tions. exploration. says London Times. During their one-month stay they nicipality. Bank tracking. stallon said they earth from the moon probe's ca- moou's surface is covered with thick. CO~'N~CTIONS ,0 OTHER EUROPEAN CAPITALS mer~s. A 'repon from JodreU Bank The soft landing, the "Philippine will deliver lectures and visit medical Aner tbe cause of the fire in solv­ planned to- stay tuned to Luna-9's .... dust. • A new ~rvant can caleh a exp'ressed the opinion that the S0­ H,erald" says, dispersed apprehen­ AND U.S.A. ,u.y, .nll~' institutes. ed by !.he law courts and until the wavelength. The director. Sir Ber- Moscow felevislon last night sbo- • The spot where Luna-9 squa.ts is fleeing dur. viets would send a man to orbit ex.ll ".. It is expected -that another group old Ahmadshalii market is recons­ nard lovell. said he failed to urider- wed lhe eager Soviet public a new solid. Moscow expirts Stale. the im- sions of scientists on a soft struc­ around the moon in the near future. ture of the lunar landscape and crea­ II j!' I'l:lll'~.ll T !·I:,(;rF. of foUl professors of the CoUege of tructed. the present temporary mar­ stand why operJ.tions ead ce3sed. picture of the lunar surface. plication being it could take a man- Stretch your foot only to the Meanwhile, the latest space ex­ led firm confidence in the accom­ AIRLJ~I:.'S Medicine will leave for France under ket will serve customers. The last transmissions from the Taken looking nonbwards and ned spaceship. length of your carpet. ploit, of the Soviet Union has been plishment of manned moon flights, CZECHOSLOVAI\ the medical cooperation programme The Chamber of Commerce and Soviet station. perched on the ed.ge transmitted on Friday, it showed (Look jor feature on signifi-: 11011-1. :-;I'I~7.AIt TI I.lli:2 The sieve says to the strDiner. in the spotlight of the world for the Russia's moon station finished between Kabul University and banks will belp in the construction of the dry and desolate ~urface Ln- what appeared to be rocks and crags CGnU of Luna-9 in tomorrow'$ "You nave hold'. second day. The reports on the SOfl· its research programme last night. - lyons University. of these temporary shops. Idieated the delicate instruments were and parts of Luna-9 or the space ro-- issue of 'the Kabul TimeJ).

f \ KABULTIMES FEBRUARV 7, 1966 PAGE] China Comments On FEBRUARY 7, 1966 Published By: Kosygin's Message THE KABUL TIlIIES Ata PUBUSHU'G To Geneva Disarmament Women AGENCY Committee Glanc. Researchers Editor·in·Chlef PR.ESS I Ente: S. Khalil Chairman of the Council of disarmament. Ministers is now in the fo~ in Vietnam Laboratories,. Editor: of the USSR. Alexei ground of whose freedom-loving .... Other Kosvgin the proceedings of the people The world needs peace and C.entres in' a letter to the mem­ l8-nation fell victim ·to unperialist In the tWo ·short Shafie S. Rahel committee." security today' and those nations years since the' Mlnistry.of Mines bers'" of the United Nations He said mtervention." Industries' .Department . aDd Address:- 18­ that the Soviet govern­ .. which are trying to develbp all of MInes .11as employed nalion w,omen disannament committee ment would Kosygin's message was instantly about lahoratories, the in its Kabul. Afghanistan ·'take an active part rapidly need it particularly, resnlts .have been said: "··The government in acclaimed by the U.5., de­ more satiSfying., So said Telegraphic of the the work of the disannament British and clared !slab in Hashim :blirzad, President of Address:­ USSR jnsists on the necessity other delegates. A its editorial Sun· the Department of MIn~ . -··Jlmes. for committee and would .be prepared Reuter report day.· '"The women' do an even better Kabul .... immediate conclusion of said last week that job that -they do excellent work a treaty to study without any prejudice the chief Realising this, than men doing the same type in the' Tc=lephones: on the non_proliferation U.S. delegate, William tbe peace-loving. capacity in which -.they are einployed. of nu­ and to take into consideration F. Foster, people in of work. Although DOW [rlllQr: 24047 clear !veCipons.'· all "hailed" the the world are trying to their aCti- They are conscientious F~lr" proposals of any other message and said adopt vities are largely mechanical and- accurate. (Ither numbers The message delega· that it and pursue il peacefu) po­ and' more SO in first was released tion:' "showed. Mr. Kasygin's liey routine. with. further many. cases than men . dial sWlt('hbpard number on Feb. . desire to as an example to ~ther na­ study and doing comparable 2 Kosygin' reiterated advance the work of the tions. training they wiD work". :!40:!6. 2.4028. or 23043. Following the long- (disarmament) Afghanistan, said the ed.i­ soon ·be doing- in­ their line of Ameri­ discredited Khrushchov conference and torial, dependent C.rculat-lop and Advertis· can-Soviet revi­ the U.S. follows the principles. of research". Mirzad said. "We find cooperation for world sionist ··concrete would study it with co-existence The women. 18 in general that the wo­ 1l1g Ex. 59: ...... :.a dom·ination. programme for care.' and thus ; believes .in all are students­ men here' take the Soviet leaders general and. complete that of the· College of their work. seriousJy Edltonal' Ex. 24, 58 are. now disanna­ The war is not the way to Solve Science in Lbeir and have a fine 'Obsessed with the desire ment which envisages British Disarmament Mi- disputes. third and fourth -sense of responsi~ Subscrlptloo Rates to· enter into complete nister, Therefore, Afghanistan years at Kabul bilitx... Mirzad an agreement with liquidation of anned Lord Chalfont, said the is University. lbey· continued. '..All is Yearly non-proli"feration fOTces and proposal anxious for negotiations to attend the College not on the Af. 500 of nuclear wea­ armaments" and was "encouraging and re- for hali a day plus side however. In Half 'yearly pons With "an economic constructive place war. People in and spend the other view of Af. 300 a view to maintaining programme of and Britain would our half in practical the fac;t that the work is new Quarterly their nudear disannament".· The study country are interested work at the De­ tet them AI. 200 hegemony. latter programme, it sympathetically," accor- in partment of they are at times inclined Kosygin he cl.aimed, ding the end of fighting in Mines. to be easily FOREIGN said in 'his ··would make it to the same report. any One -graduate distraCfed. and become message: possible to raise The part of the world but particularly of the Scfence Col­ upset if Vearly S "With the oir the welfare of Associated Press reported lege. Mrs. Nabera. the work dOes not go right 30 ject all peoples of the in our rE::gion, said the editorial. whose particular or if criticism Half Yearly of facilitating an under· world in a historically last week that western officials job in the ··is made. Up' until $ 11 standing short space greeted The Vietnam war, said Coal Analysis labora­ -now the Qu.arterly on the conclusion of a of time and the message "as a posi- Islah, tory. entails analysing educational level has Oeen $ I .trea enable the peo"ples has created a grave the- properties low ar~,.:.,~giI:!niJ;!g ty. the Soviet government and countnes live step in the path of situation of coal. but we to Subscription from abro.ad· expresses which are back­ nuclear. which threatens the percentage of water, ash, get its readiness to inSert ward throu~h disannament:' peace and volatile people graduatea'" in the sciences 'vill be accepted. by che-' the fault of colo­ security of this region. matter. impurities, sul­ into the draft an artide on nialism Another 4.P report The fu- phuT, and their .behaviour is more ques nr local Cl,Jrrency pro­ tt· eliminate their erono­ said: "In ture of the area 'and other chemicals, finds her fessional" pro­ at hibition oj the use of nuclear view of the SincrSoviet has become ~ork the wea­ .mic backwardness and reach Quarrel, gloomy. to be particularly absorbing . official dollar exchan­ pons against non-nudear the the Security Council states. level of contemporary civilisa­ debates on 'It is the earnest and is fully aware of its importance ged rate. parti"es to the treaty. which Vietnam and the desire of the ..It depends a'great deal. have tion." resumed Arne- people' of to the Ministry. "Since the equip­ on the Printed at:- no nuclear weapons on rican air offensive Afghanistan that the wisdem of the' ~mployer their ter- With refeTence to the against North parties - ment. is somewhat limited.)'at how wo­ Govt. Printing ritory.:' " Vietnam Vietnam, the involved. in the Vietnam the pre­ men are bandled wben 80\15' war. Kosygin did not message looked like conflict sent time, a complete analysis they are not He declared that condemn a goodwill . begin negotiations to can used to the type "the task of· U.S. aggression. gesture which could bring not be done hut eq~pment of work or to being implementing He wrote rather facilitate abou't a lasting peace in this new _ is . employed at FEBRL'l.RY " ·1966 a complex of mea· casually: "for effective disarmament e,pec~ed to ·be installed all. Here we are not­ sures, connected a long time the negotiations. war-torn.area. soon which too strict in our with nuclear flames of western sources PrUne _ will enable us to make discipline in order war have been raging said." 1Hslnhua) Minister Mohammad complete that we may encourage Hashim analyses·'. Mrs. Nahera more women Maiwandwal's proposal said, . to take up this- that tn (he Chemical Analysis type ot work. . Revitalising a pE-ace committee be form­ Labora­ "With a little Italian Parliament ed iUiJstrates tory. the six girls. trim :more discipline they Considers the desire of the and efficient c"an and. will make Agricultural Afghan looking in their white, lab an excellent con­ people for universal peace coats. dis­ tri.bution to the Cottage and security. cussed (he!r work and expressed :work being done ,1ndustries Development said Islab. Mai­ with here: They are bsginning Plan For wandwal's suggestion 'Jlmost ~omplete consensus, the to realise The decision Next Five Years is one waY in­ the possibilty of their positions of the Ministry in which an end ferest .their tasks held. They agreed and of The second "Green might be brought Ihe importance of the I\lines and Industries to re­ Plan'· for ag­ ploited. New to 'the bloody Ihal this was a wonderful opportil-­ activities ·that ricuitural dc=velopment irrigation scbemes are ture. conflict in Vietnam. will depend upon- their performances vitalise cottage industries over the five to be carried investing larger sums of mO'­ concluded ·!slah. n'ty 10 Obtain practical experience in year period 1966,70 OUl and there will ~ ney here", Mirzad added. different parts of has been put intensive and reducing manpower. In the In the while at -the same time earning tbe country is before the Italian mechanisation in those southern same issue of. !slab a th;ir a welcome Parliament for areas where regions, agriculture should letter to the editor degree in science. " move. \Ve .hope that appr~·val. The govemment it is possible to employ . expand blame9 care­ "There is a real way the Ministry draft minimum if crops are changed and less driving for Three "We do have lab work open here will go beyond projecl. is based manpower per unit of farmers traffic ·accidents. Kabul University graduates, in the for 'girls graduating from on the fact that area. grow more vegetables. fruit, The writer Raflq, (!rom left to righ~) M;rs. Rabat Baira~ College" one of them ~d, the Col­ words and. will take effective profound changes grapes. suggested that strong· and iUiss Nouria. left on Tuesday Miss "but­ ·Ieges in scientific- work' are now taking The'draft and olives. measures to study English 1D there it is different.# We .. Mirzad sta­ steps to Implement place in agriculture BiU also contains norms be taken against care­ Australia. are- beiDg led. ~'Too often. the plans because of in· concernmg Agricultural experts, however. less drivers taught and not really doing graduates suffer to help tbe tense technological the deve1opmc=nt confid~nt are in order to save the things from a kind of inertia local people in progress and vast mountainous of that production can lives of ourselves.. Here we actually which pushes \'arious expansion regions, billy area~, be the innocent victims who Three do the ~em toward pat:ts of the country in industry and tertiary plains substantiaUy increased through are often Journalists work ourselves. It is the teaching profession, actiVities. and localities that are near me­ school children. To Study In -more compli­ simply. because improve their products chanisation. the spreading Another A Australia cated. but we feel we they do not take the' which large consumer points. Widespread of coope­ letter in !slah request­ group of three gnduates of are participa-' time and effort a Ministry Representative ralives. better market ed that e, ting in t~e work that to consider alber des- One of reconversion is nOI to be practiced organisation bakers who sell leaves of the Colleg of Letters Mrs.. be extended :he '\.\·orked for Radio Afghanis- is done". fields. cribed in an :interview the chief trends in cur­ and more concentrated bread up to tWO years. tan. "We find this work Satur- rent transforr:na-tion in northem Italy and .improvem~ts livestock which do not meet the re­ Rahat Hairat. Miss ,Mehna If theIr grants are extended She returned from West Ger- a great help" day. is represented will breeding. T.o this end. agriculture quired standard fiq they . . d h in our studies at the b:i a wholesale chieny con$ist of more wille- tS be punished more Ra and Miss Nouna Ie t[ Will spend the remammg o~e many late last mont.h an University", We are gratified The exodus of .agricultu· being assured -_..I as .another that women are improvement and expail- spread mechanisation the assistance of tech· .severely. Bakers are Kabul by air u~aY and a half years started b d t girl remarked. "By doing be~nning ral workers who are now and concetJ- nical bodies ·now fined on T taking courses ill taking part 10 rca. ~~ - "these to see the possibilities sion of local industries will seeking Irated breeding wbich will advise and between Af. 200 and morning to study ing special Sh . things ourselves, it makes it in not employmect in otber of livestock.. In cen· make Ai. 300, noted. En.gIish and jo~rhneal'S~~t pTognunrnes. e IS Ln only widen economic productive tral Italy. the necessary alternations req­ the writer. Su,ch a Journalism" woman who went the easier to understand the theoretical oppoJ1:u- .brancbes that provide it is hoped to increase uired. light fine does in Australia under abroad arts and literature section of" side other areas and particularly nities {ot" hundreds them with a productivJty not stop bakers from the auspices (or furtheT training in the of our studies", A third added bappy of thous·. higher personal income. by modernising SlruC- continuing of the Colombo Plan. neld Radio Afghanist.aJ1 where another that that they find their work" bere ands of our people in spilC= of their illegal actions, "Iehna and .. f jOlXnalism was l\'lrs. of laboratory work in the College safis;. but.it will this, he pointed IV Nouria are 1964 her classmates', (ying enough r,.o wish ilio enable agriculture has kept pace with out. If they f Shukna !so Nour Jahan was limited and it meant _to continue in us to earn more 'other were fined as much graduates of the Department Raad. She was a a 'J.laiwandi also works. a ,great it". economic sectors and there as Ai, 2.000 0 19tH gTaduate of the deal to have the scope foreign currency. In .other or Ai. 3,000 they pro!). Journalism of the College of College of Although the ~ection provided by coun- has been satisfactoJ;Y progress ably would Letters. Letters f J is respon- working in the Ministry past few in the not violate the re~ The 1964 class waS t eh Department a ourna- SIble for producmg and laboratories. A. -A, Akefie, tries the sale oC·cottage years. In spi"te of a TedUC­ lation, suggested. broad- While most of the General Director of indus- tion in agricultural What We Plan the writer. first one to graduate from h' 1Ism. casting a large arraY of program- girls will be Mines and Assisstant try products brings employment. es­ To Do The- successful t IS Before she went to 1~ eligible to leach upon to the Presi­ -large am- timated at 1.90();OOO As the news item on the air soft and slow depanment. the FedeTaI meso the two graduation dent added his- ounts of re\'enue during- 1955/ pointm~nt vinces of Afghanistan. landing RepubUc of Germany girl.::> manage ,s.pe- from the College. views to" those of to the govern- 64. the index of· Sayed Khalil, We feel of the Soviet Union's During 1965 the for practi- dal women's none of them ex- Mirzad while ments. for agriculture and the that most of the material spacecraft~ two girls cal training in programmes entire- pressed an interest concurring in his' ideas forestry Editor·m-Chief of Kabul Times. provid­ Luna-9, on the surface actively helped Kabul papers radio journalism lyon their in. becoming ·a. and opinions. The I\finistrJ· (wilh 100 as average base ed for .. his page has been of moon with own_ teacher. Somehow "We cannot accept 01· Mines and for years cleaTly indicates, the papeT is original and the pictures of the women and society news. the fascination of aU of the sCience Industries prior to 1955) rose 10 130.6 on and thus ought to be moon their present students who wish has various plans in the verge of great changes. published in sent back by this spacecraft This they did in addition to their work has caught hold· to become J964.. a separate pamphlets. is" a and they want p'art of this programme: and projects in- min~ Mohammad Osman Sidqi, This will be great achievement for the secTetaria] jobs with the Bakhtar U.S. to continue with it "he said. to huild Heavy inveslments the done. Soviet News Teacher Studies Their goal. after but we acco01modate as up cottage industries. have been MinisteT of Press and Infonnation • scientists and a great gift Agency and the Ministry Schools, receiving their deg. many -~s we The Mi~· made in agriculture &. Our efforts will be for tod:iy's rees and with more can and have found the oister himsell for they "have n­ has decided that Kabul Times intensified generation as well, of Press and Intormatlon. training in the arrangement has also pointerl. sen from to gather and publish said Sunday's Plans practical end. is to be very profitable out ways Lit. 1.26.000 milljon to Ut. should not onlY put Qut a more home Anis in its editorial. Although Mrs. Rahat Hairat Exchange to engage in inde- for us as well in which ,the Ministry 430.000 daily news and articles on But Of Letters pendent researcb as th"e students.... .hopes million in tbe last ten English language newspaper the country. man, said the paper, des­ graduated from the Dari Langu­ 1'1 plan to work with the ..and eventually to­ to attack this task. • but Our newly established pite such American Association for Univer­ make some significant years. Dunne the same period, also become the central organi;. reporting advancement in techncr age Department of the College sity graduates in contribution One point, how~ver, which me· section will take logy, of the U.S., Afghanistan and 10 the economic Recipe Corner chanicaI farming Implements sation r~ponsible for care of this. has still not been able to Letters and served as have visited," the countries I progress of tbe we think should be rose publicising 7. Advertising, reach a teaeber said an American teacher country. borne in from a total of "5.893.000 Afghanistan abTOad. as a source of his ultimate goal of she was also interested visiting here last week. mind, is that b.p. to As a major revenue, lUli. In jour­ "We will try to match C~r.tQgrapby the Ministr)· of J8.489.000 step in this direction, is most essential to versal and lasting peace. nalism. OUTing those with, similar interests-those The" Department Dolme Ranjan M~ines and 'lndu~ries n:p. With modemisation the Afghan our publications. an last year she who like to cook. [he in and the and transformation. Publicity- Bureau Better contacts The three thousand edited d~ily Islah's those with several ('hildren, Ministry also makes use of wo­ - many changes is now a part will be million women's page. and so doctors' wh'es, Eggplant Casserole ~th l\Unistry have !::ieen made in of the Kabul mad'e with our clients in people in the world still Miss Rafiq helped on:' men in the tracing and making Meat of Inter!0r, which is have crops. Cereals Times. this respect. do not the Ka'liul of 1 large eggplant ... . b f th dropped and lb b " __ The enlargement enjoy complete security. Times on its '·r have also been very impres­ seen geological maps and survey cbarts. now In C arge 0' e act· ·tl ere of the paper's Political women's page. too, many kinds of s'l:hools in I cup shortening IVI es strong rise in production as =n a fonnat. the 8..We are planning to enlarge diffe.rences threaten but she submitted sed WIth the teacher training traveling Here. university training is o'ot of the Rural Dev'elop~ent' of ve e- publication of a maga­ and the Asian, her copy in from the U.S. through a 1 large onioo (sliced) tables (almost double). industr~al zine and other further equip our department African and Europeali Dari. She hopes programme I have observed here," Asia requirement but the same enthu- Department, . shoul~ c~- . changes necessari­ of photography. nations on her return to Afghanistan. tn Hong 1 lb. groWld beef . crops, tree crops and ly depend upon Our photo ser­ with' regional wars and from Australia commented Mrs. Porter, Kong siasm was found and the girls operate . effectively livestock. the availability of vices the fear to be able after schools are held on roof­ talked 2 cloves garlic (chopped) fiel~. m. this Italy rc=mains one capable personnel will also be available of annihilatio.n from to turn her VIsiting schools in Jalalabad tops of their work with interest and It 15 Qne of the of Europe's and well tuin­ photograph to nuclear war copy in English. last and in Delhi in tents. Those mation" ani- 2 ~p. saiL pnmary .chief fruit produ~rs ed Lincrtype marriages, parties, which hangs over all. The- three ).Ionda..... tent . duties of the Rural. aQd is only operaters and page­ and girls will take a six schools reminded me of the "I tsp. cinnamon Develop· preceded· by the setters. so forth on a business basis. The editorial urged. months English "They appear to be doing ones "Only in field work and ment Department United Slates on the leaders course in Sidney. a in Miami. Florida, in the actual 2 large tomatoes to help the a world scale. 9. Depending on the occasion of great powers of East But theiT stay good job of preparing teachers 1920·s.' original researc:h have the talents (sliced) villagers improve However. the latter some and West· in Australia can of. ! lsp. ootmeg their local country is not forc~d Notice has special. small ophamplets will that along with technologiCal on an emergency basis. I women nOI been utilised~ but industries. It to keep its been taken of these be published and . have that· ! lsp. pepper ltiight be appro. ~roduct for needs dnd by ~arch by the Kabul Times scientific advancements, (Conld. is not too far in the future", Mirzad priate for domestic consumption 21 we hope on various they also' on page 4) a dash of paprika the Ministrv of to to be internal matters. should not overlook said. "At the present time Mines the same way as Italy (95 in a position to introduce These "the two-thirds we find Cut the and Industries to -make per several will include the text 'of Afghan of the world's popuiation eggplant in half (len. cent) and Jarge.. quantities of major changes in the who ,~ gthwise). . are preserved fruit Kabul leaders' speeches, new projects, live in hunger and then slice it crosswise the plans and consider ~he and processed. In one Times and its allied publi· and ignorance. Two views of women at work in ! slices. fin- year Italian so forth. In the in laboratories 0 Wash- the sait off ances and expons of fruit totaB~d cations. same issue of Anis a l\linistry of Mines and Industries. f the eggplant the then work wdh ·the 18.5 million quint~ls. In a m.. tshell, these letter to cpld dry on a newspa­ Rural Development an absolute re- Some of the change envisaged are some of the editor said that the per. Depart· cord. the maj:>r changes which closing down ment in implementing are as follows: we hope of public baths these to introduce in the Kabul creates inconvenience plans. Agency. Times and diffi~ Melt shortening 1. Kabul cuWes .for .the people. ~~61!"'1.,·~o-lf'>.1 in a skillet and • The e~tablishment In current term..s. "agricultural Times will be changed Instead the .. saute the of a, cent­ pro- into a four page These are neither writer urged ·~Hl;.w.:."'tSJ" eggplant until golden duction in Ihe pa'!:t large size daily. commitments the Inspection De­ l..,'~ _- _ brown. raj organisation ten years bas 2. "Afghanistan nor promises, but part.ment ',.: , \-u.$.IIO{ . (As you fry the eggplant within the risen, from News" monthly our present of the Municipality to framework Lit. 3.1.35,000 to Ln." which plan of action. incrfase w~,:'1,~'lI-t,t I put it on newspaper to absorb of the Ministry of 4.575.000· .....as being published by the fine on those ;~.L~,~~.t the million but there is a the public ._.J:, grease.) Saute the onions Mines and Industries to handle marked Afghan Publicity BUTeau 'may batHs which do not follow in the difference between the in- be The suceess o~ the same skillet until golden' ,all matters connected comes enlarged and published. under' every news­ rules of sanitation, but to brown. with of rural workers and those a papeT depends let the Remove them from the such activities engagd different name and caiTy both on the interest of baths remain open so Urat pan and is necessary it ·in' other branches. The nc=w articles the readers the put -them ~sjde. Saute the plans "Green and news on the country. as much as it does people can make use of them, the meat are to b~ successful Ptan" has been drafted for ?-n the potential until done. Remove the [h~ 3. Kabul Times Will have of the paper Sunday's Heywad in its ~eason':t meat and Through such a programme purpose of graduaUy doing away a Fri­ Itself. editorial well. it day edition which wiH be Communication must be described plans for some is certain that a most With gaps that still exist in wages pub. two-way. changes fruitful lished oJo Afghan holidays, We would very much in the policy of the paper. phase in the and salaries. . too. appreciate Al­ Grease a'. pie pan social and ecODO" .~draft It will be ·published under letters from our rea­ though, Heywad has played or a casserole mie development The Bill now presented a dif- ders a dish. Put in a layer of our rural to ferent name and will have giving their reactions to part in tqe country'S current of eggplant, areas p'arliamen.t states that. as fat as a se­ m~terial re­ some garlic, meat. will be launched. nculture ag- parate subscription a-rrangement_. appearing in the paper. forms,. in order to serve· the tomatoes. arid IS concerned. the main goal coun­ rest- of the eggplants. Afghanistan produces is 4. "Kabul Times Annual Num­ try and the people better Heywad Top it with Some to achieve parity between wages dec;ded~ onions. products w.hich coul.d find earned ber", published in English has give priority an by rural workers and. will to Add a dash of paprika. internatiooal market. Iho~ ifl~dustry be another step in the direction CHICAGO. Feb. 7. (Reuter).­ those articlE.'S\ which advocate Bake in By intro· paid by and tertiary Cassius progress. _ a 300 degree F. oven ior troducing a coordinated servlces'and of providing interested readers Clay, the world heavyweight ..... 20 mi... plan to to level agricultural pro- with boxing nutes. Serve it topped improve their quality duction material on Afghanistan. champion, will defend h.is For instance, articles which with yo­ we are throughout the country. title in­ gurt. sure that lntensive The exact -number of pages against fellow-American Ernie troduce our t>e9ple to the princi­ Afghan handicrafts growing is to be introd- and Terrell Makes 4-5 s~rvings. ·will - uced fonnat of ·this publication here on March 29, Chicago ples of a democratic life and find many customers into those regi.ons whicb have has promoters also iample not yet" been detennined.. announced last night th.ose which report the govern­ around· the world. resources and in those in ·~which 5. Kabul Times has been carry­ The bout will be held io the in- ment's activities aimed at deve­ ..r natural resources can be ex- ternational lopme~~ ing one page weeIdy on the·1\i"o- Ampbitheatre, which of the country in every seats field about 12.000 peoples. WIll be given priority as- serted the paper. ' .. - .. ·1 , '. ,,- .- -:.- .,.~

,.....,----.~~ \ KABULTIMES FEBRUARV 7, 1966 PAGE] China Comments On FEBRUARY 7, 1966 Published By: Kosygin's Message THE KABUL TIlIIES Ata PUBUSHU'G To Geneva Disarmament Women AGENCY Committee Glanc. Researchers Editor·in·Chlef PR.ESS I Ente: S. Khalil Chairman of the Council of disarmament. Ministers is now in the fo~ in Vietnam Laboratories,. Editor: of the USSR. Alexei ground of whose freedom-loving .... Other Kosvgin the proceedings of the people The world needs peace and C.entres in' a letter to the mem­ l8-nation fell victim ·to unperialist In the tWo ·short Shafie S. Rahel committee." security today' and those nations years since the' Mlnistry.of Mines bers'" of the United Nations He said mtervention." Industries' .Department . aDd Address:- 18­ that the Soviet govern­ .. which are trying to develbp all of MInes .11as employed nalion w,omen disannament committee ment would Kosygin's message was instantly about lahoratories, the in its Kabul. Afghanistan ·'take an active part rapidly need it particularly, resnlts .have been said: "··The government in acclaimed by the U.5., de­ more satiSfying., So said Telegraphic of the the work of the disannament British and clared !slab in Hashim :blirzad, President of Address:­ USSR jnsists on the necessity other delegates. A its editorial Sun· the Department of MIn~ . -··Jlmes. for committee and would .be prepared Reuter report day.· '"The women' do an even better Kabul .... immediate conclusion of said last week that job that -they do excellent work a treaty to study without any prejudice the chief Realising this, than men doing the same type in the' Tc=lephones: on the non_proliferation U.S. delegate, William tbe peace-loving. capacity in which -.they are einployed. of nu­ and to take into consideration F. Foster, people in of work. Although DOW [rlllQr: 24047 clear !veCipons.'· all "hailed" the the world are trying to their aCti- They are conscientious F~lr" proposals of any other message and said adopt vities are largely mechanical and- accurate. (Ither numbers The message delega· that it and pursue il peacefu) po­ and' more SO in first was released tion:' "showed. Mr. Kasygin's liey routine. with. further many. cases than men . dial sWlt('hbpard number on Feb. . desire to as an example to ~ther na­ study and doing comparable 2 Kosygin' reiterated advance the work of the tions. training they wiD work". :!40:!6. 2.4028. or 23043. Following the long- (disarmament) Afghanistan, said the ed.i­ soon ·be doing- in­ their line of Ameri­ discredited Khrushchov conference and torial, dependent C.rculat-lop and Advertis· can-Soviet revi­ the U.S. follows the principles. of research". Mirzad said. "We find cooperation for world sionist ··concrete would study it with co-existence The women. 18 in general that the wo­ 1l1g Ex. 59: ...... :.a dom·ination. programme for care.' and thus ; believes .in all are students­ men here' take the Soviet leaders general and. complete that of the· College of their work. seriousJy Edltonal' Ex. 24, 58 are. now disanna­ The war is not the way to Solve Science in Lbeir and have a fine 'Obsessed with the desire ment which envisages British Disarmament Mi- disputes. third and fourth -sense of responsi~ Subscrlptloo Rates to· enter into complete nister, Therefore, Afghanistan years at Kabul bilitx... Mirzad an agreement with liquidation of anned Lord Chalfont, said the is University. lbey· continued. '..All is Yearly non-proli"feration fOTces and proposal anxious for negotiations to attend the College not on the Af. 500 of nuclear wea­ armaments" and was "encouraging and re- for hali a day plus side however. In Half 'yearly pons With "an economic constructive place war. People in and spend the other view of Af. 300 a view to maintaining programme of and Britain would our half in practical the fac;t that the work is new Quarterly their nudear disannament".· The study country are interested work at the De­ tet them AI. 200 hegemony. latter programme, it sympathetically," accor- in partment of they are at times inclined Kosygin he cl.aimed, ding the end of fighting in Mines. to be easily FOREIGN said in 'his ··would make it to the same report. any One -graduate distraCfed. and become message: possible to raise The part of the world but particularly of the Scfence Col­ upset if Vearly S "With the oir the welfare of Associated Press reported lege. Mrs. Nabera. the work dOes not go right 30 ject all peoples of the in our rE::gion, said the editorial. whose particular or if criticism Half Yearly of facilitating an under· world in a historically last week that western officials job in the ··is made. Up' until $ 11 standing short space greeted The Vietnam war, said Coal Analysis labora­ -now the Qu.arterly on the conclusion of a of time and the message "as a posi- Islah, tory. entails analysing educational level has Oeen $ I .trea enable the peo"ples has created a grave the- properties low ar~,.:.,~giI:!niJ;!g ty. the Soviet government and countnes live step in the path of situation of coal. but we to Subscription from abro.ad· expresses which are back­ nuclear. which threatens the percentage of water, ash, get its readiness to inSert ward throu~h disannament:' peace and volatile people graduatea'" in the sciences 'vill be accepted. by che-' the fault of colo­ security of this region. matter. impurities, sul­ into the draft an artide on nialism Another 4.P report The fu- phuT, and their .behaviour is more ques nr local Cl,Jrrency pro­ tt· eliminate their erono­ said: "In ture of the area 'and other chemicals, finds her fessional" pro­ at hibition oj the use of nuclear view of the SincrSoviet has become ~ork the wea­ .mic backwardness and reach Quarrel, gloomy. to be particularly absorbing . official dollar exchan­ pons against non-nudear the the Security Council states. level of contemporary civilisa­ debates on 'It is the earnest and is fully aware of its importance ged rate. parti"es to the treaty. which Vietnam and the desire of the ..It depends a'great deal. have tion." resumed Arne- people' of to the Ministry. "Since the equip­ on the Printed at:- no nuclear weapons on rican air offensive Afghanistan that the wisdem of the' ~mployer their ter- With refeTence to the against North parties - ment. is somewhat limited.)'at how wo­ Govt. Printing ritory.:' " Vietnam Vietnam, the involved. in the Vietnam the pre­ men are bandled wben 80\15' war. Kosygin did not message looked like conflict sent time, a complete analysis they are not He declared that condemn a goodwill . begin negotiations to can used to the type "the task of· U.S. aggression. gesture which could bring not be done hut eq~pment of work or to being implementing He wrote rather facilitate abou't a lasting peace in this new _ is . employed at FEBRL'l.RY " ·1966 a complex of mea· casually: "for effective disarmament e,pec~ed to ·be installed all. Here we are not­ sures, connected a long time the negotiations. war-torn.area. soon which too strict in our with nuclear flames of western sources PrUne _ will enable us to make discipline in order war have been raging said." 1Hslnhua) Minister Mohammad complete that we may encourage Hashim analyses·'. Mrs. Nahera more women Maiwandwal's proposal said, . to take up this- that tn (he Chemical Analysis type ot work. . Revitalising a pE-ace committee be form­ Labora­ "With a little Italian Parliament ed iUiJstrates tory. the six girls. trim :more discipline they Considers the desire of the and efficient c"an and. will make Agricultural Afghan looking in their white, lab an excellent con­ people for universal peace coats. dis­ tri.bution to the Cottage and security. cussed (he!r work and expressed :work being done ,1ndustries Development said Islab. Mai­ with here: They are bsginning Plan For wandwal's suggestion 'Jlmost ~omplete consensus, the to realise The decision Next Five Years is one waY in­ the possibilty of their positions of the Ministry in which an end ferest .their tasks held. They agreed and of The second "Green might be brought Ihe importance of the I\lines and Industries to re­ Plan'· for ag­ ploited. New to 'the bloody Ihal this was a wonderful opportil-­ activities ·that ricuitural dc=velopment irrigation scbemes are ture. conflict in Vietnam. will depend upon- their performances vitalise cottage industries over the five to be carried investing larger sums of mO'­ concluded ·!slah. n'ty 10 Obtain practical experience in year period 1966,70 OUl and there will ~ ney here", Mirzad added. different parts of has been put intensive and reducing manpower. In the In the while at -the same time earning tbe country is before the Italian mechanisation in those southern same issue of. !slab a th;ir a welcome Parliament for areas where regions, agriculture should letter to the editor degree in science. " move. \Ve .hope that appr~·val. The govemment it is possible to employ . expand blame9 care­ "There is a real way the Ministry draft minimum if crops are changed and less driving for Three "We do have lab work open here will go beyond projecl. is based manpower per unit of farmers traffic ·accidents. Kabul University graduates, in the for 'girls graduating from on the fact that area. grow more vegetables. fruit, The writer Raflq, (!rom left to righ~) M;rs. Rabat Baira~ College" one of them ~d, the Col­ words and. will take effective profound changes grapes. suggested that strong· and iUiss Nouria. left on Tuesday Miss "but­ ·Ieges in scientific- work' are now taking The'draft and olives. measures to study English 1D there it is different.# We .. Mirzad sta­ steps to Implement place in agriculture BiU also contains norms be taken against care­ Australia. are- beiDg led. ~'Too often. the plans because of in· concernmg Agricultural experts, however. less drivers taught and not really doing graduates suffer to help tbe tense technological the deve1opmc=nt confid~nt are in order to save the things from a kind of inertia local people in progress and vast mountainous of that production can lives of ourselves.. Here we actually which pushes \'arious expansion regions, billy area~, be the innocent victims who Three do the ~em toward pat:ts of the country in industry and tertiary plains substantiaUy increased through are often Journalists work ourselves. It is the teaching profession, actiVities. and localities that are near me­ school children. To Study In -more compli­ simply. because improve their products chanisation. the spreading Another A Australia cated. but we feel we they do not take the' which large consumer points. Widespread of coope­ letter in !slah request­ group of three gnduates of are participa-' time and effort a Ministry Representative ralives. better market ed that e, ting in t~e work that to consider alber des- One of reconversion is nOI to be practiced organisation bakers who sell leaves of the Colleg of Letters Mrs.. be extended :he '\.\·orked for Radio Afghanis- is done". fields. cribed in an :interview the chief trends in cur­ and more concentrated bread up to tWO years. tan. "We find this work Satur- rent transforr:na-tion in northem Italy and .improvem~ts livestock which do not meet the re­ Rahat Hairat. Miss ,Mehna If theIr grants are extended She returned from West Ger- a great help" day. is represented will breeding. T.o this end. agriculture quired standard fiq they . . d h in our studies at the b:i a wholesale chieny con$ist of more wille- tS be punished more Ra and Miss Nouna Ie t[ Will spend the remammg o~e many late last mont.h an University", We are gratified The exodus of .agricultu· being assured -_..I as .another that women are improvement and expail- spread mechanisation the assistance of tech· .severely. Bakers are Kabul by air u~aY and a half years started b d t girl remarked. "By doing be~nning ral workers who are now and concetJ- nical bodies ·now fined on T taking courses ill taking part 10 rca. ~~ - "these to see the possibilities sion of local industries will seeking Irated breeding wbich will advise and between Af. 200 and morning to study ing special Sh . things ourselves, it makes it in not employmect in otber of livestock.. In cen· make Ai. 300, noted. En.gIish and jo~rhneal'S~~t pTognunrnes. e IS Ln only widen economic productive tral Italy. the necessary alternations req­ the writer. Su,ch a Journalism" woman who went the easier to understand the theoretical oppoJ1:u- .brancbes that provide it is hoped to increase uired. light fine does in Australia under abroad arts and literature section of" side other areas and particularly nities {ot" hundreds them with a productivJty not stop bakers from the auspices (or furtheT training in the of our studies", A third added bappy of thous·. higher personal income. by modernising SlruC- continuing of the Colombo Plan. neld Radio Afghanist.aJ1 where another that that they find their work" bere ands of our people in spilC= of their illegal actions, "Iehna and .. f jOlXnalism was l\'lrs. of laboratory work in the College safis;. but.it will this, he pointed IV Nouria are 1964 her classmates', (ying enough r,.o wish ilio enable agriculture has kept pace with out. If they f Shukna !so Nour Jahan was limited and it meant _to continue in us to earn more 'other were fined as much graduates of the Department Raad. She was a a 'J.laiwandi also works. a ,great it". economic sectors and there as Ai, 2.000 0 19tH gTaduate of the deal to have the scope foreign currency. In .other or Ai. 3,000 they pro!). Journalism of the College of College of Although the ~ection provided by coun- has been satisfactoJ;Y progress ably would Letters. Letters f J is respon- working in the Ministry past few in the not violate the re~ The 1964 class waS t eh Department a ourna- SIble for producmg and laboratories. A. -A, Akefie, tries the sale oC·cottage years. In spi"te of a TedUC­ lation, suggested. broad- While most of the General Director of indus- tion in agricultural What We Plan the writer. first one to graduate from h' 1Ism. casting a large arraY of program- girls will be Mines and Assisstant try products brings employment. es­ To Do The- successful t IS Before she went to 1~ eligible to leach upon to the Presi­ -large am- timated at 1.90();OOO As the news item on the air soft and slow depanment. the FedeTaI meso the two graduation dent added his- ounts of re\'enue during- 1955/ pointm~nt vinces of Afghanistan. landing RepubUc of Germany girl.::> manage ,s.pe- from the College. views to" those of to the govern- 64. the index of· Sayed Khalil, We feel of the Soviet Union's During 1965 the for practi- dal women's none of them ex- Mirzad while ments. for agriculture and the that most of the material spacecraft~ two girls cal training in programmes entire- pressed an interest concurring in his' ideas forestry Editor·m-Chief of Kabul Times. provid­ Luna-9, on the surface actively helped Kabul papers radio journalism lyon their in. becoming ·a. and opinions. The I\finistrJ· (wilh 100 as average base ed for .. his page has been of moon with own_ teacher. Somehow "We cannot accept 01· Mines and for years cleaTly indicates, the papeT is original and the pictures of the women and society news. the fascination of aU of the sCience Industries prior to 1955) rose 10 130.6 on and thus ought to be moon their present students who wish has various plans in the verge of great changes. published in sent back by this spacecraft This they did in addition to their work has caught hold· to become J964.. a separate pamphlets. is" a and they want p'art of this programme: and projects in- min~ Mohammad Osman Sidqi, This will be great achievement for the secTetaria] jobs with the Bakhtar U.S. to continue with it "he said. to huild Heavy inveslments the done. Soviet News Teacher Studies Their goal. after but we acco01modate as up cottage industries. have been MinisteT of Press and Infonnation • scientists and a great gift Agency and the Ministry Schools, receiving their deg. many -~s we The Mi~· made in agriculture &. Our efforts will be for tod:iy's rees and with more can and have found the oister himsell for they "have n­ has decided that Kabul Times intensified generation as well, of Press and Intormatlon. training in the arrangement has also pointerl. sen from to gather and publish said Sunday's Plans practical end. is to be very profitable out ways Lit. 1.26.000 milljon to Ut. should not onlY put Qut a more home Anis in its editorial. Although Mrs. Rahat Hairat Exchange to engage in inde- for us as well in which ,the Ministry 430.000 daily news and articles on But Of Letters pendent researcb as th"e students.... .hopes million in tbe last ten English language newspaper the country. man, said the paper, des­ graduated from the Dari Langu­ 1'1 plan to work with the ..and eventually to­ to attack this task. • but Our newly established pite such American Association for Univer­ make some significant years. Dunne the same period, also become the central organi;. reporting advancement in techncr age Department of the College sity graduates in contribution One point, how~ver, which me· section will take logy, of the U.S., Afghanistan and 10 the economic Recipe Corner chanicaI farming Implements sation r~ponsible for care of this. has still not been able to Letters and served as have visited," the countries I progress of tbe we think should be rose publicising 7. Advertising, reach a teaeber said an American teacher country. borne in from a total of "5.893.000 Afghanistan abTOad. as a source of his ultimate goal of she was also interested visiting here last week. mind, is that b.p. to As a major revenue, lUli. In jour­ "We will try to match C~r.tQgrapby the Ministr)· of J8.489.000 step in this direction, is most essential to versal and lasting peace. nalism. OUTing those with, similar interests-those The" Department Dolme Ranjan M~ines and 'lndu~ries n:p. With modemisation the Afghan our publications. an last year she who like to cook. [he in and the and transformation. Publicity- Bureau Better contacts The three thousand edited d~ily Islah's those with several ('hildren, Ministry also makes use of wo­ - many changes is now a part will be million women's page. and so doctors' wh'es, Eggplant Casserole ~th l\Unistry have !::ieen made in of the Kabul mad'e with our clients in people in the world still Miss Rafiq helped on:' men in the tracing and making Meat of Inter!0r, which is have crops. Cereals Times. this respect. do not the Ka'liul of 1 large eggplant ... . b f th dropped and lb b " __ The enlargement enjoy complete security. Times on its '·r have also been very impres­ seen geological maps and survey cbarts. now In C arge 0' e act· ·tl ere of the paper's Political women's page. too, many kinds of s'l:hools in I cup shortening IVI es strong rise in production as =n a fonnat. the 8..We are planning to enlarge diffe.rences threaten but she submitted sed WIth the teacher training traveling Here. university training is o'ot of the Rural Dev'elop~ent' of ve e- publication of a maga­ and the Asian, her copy in from the U.S. through a 1 large onioo (sliced) tables (almost double). industr~al zine and other further equip our department African and Europeali Dari. She hopes programme I have observed here," Asia requirement but the same enthu- Department, . shoul~ c~- . changes necessari­ of photography. nations on her return to Afghanistan. tn Hong 1 lb. groWld beef . crops, tree crops and ly depend upon Our photo ser­ with' regional wars and from Australia commented Mrs. Porter, Kong siasm was found and the girls operate . effectively livestock. the availability of vices the fear to be able after schools are held on roof­ talked 2 cloves garlic (chopped) fiel~. m. this Italy rc=mains one capable personnel will also be available of annihilatio.n from to turn her VIsiting schools in Jalalabad tops of their work with interest and It 15 Qne of the of Europe's and well tuin­ photograph to nuclear war copy in English. last and in Delhi in tents. Those mation" ani- 2 ~p. saiL pnmary .chief fruit produ~rs ed Lincrtype marriages, parties, which hangs over all. The- three ).Ionda..... tent . duties of the Rural. aQd is only operaters and page­ and girls will take a six schools reminded me of the "I tsp. cinnamon Develop· preceded· by the setters. so forth on a business basis. The editorial urged. months English "They appear to be doing ones "Only in field work and ment Department United Slates on the leaders course in Sidney. a in Miami. Florida, in the actual 2 large tomatoes to help the a world scale. 9. Depending on the occasion of great powers of East But theiT stay good job of preparing teachers 1920·s.' original researc:h have the talents (sliced) villagers improve However. the latter some and West· in Australia can of. ! lsp. ootmeg their local country is not forc~d Notice has special. small ophamplets will that along with technologiCal on an emergency basis. I women nOI been utilised~ but industries. It to keep its been taken of these be published and . have that· ! lsp. pepper ltiight be appro. ~roduct for needs dnd by ~arch by the Kabul Times scientific advancements, (Conld. is not too far in the future", Mirzad priate for domestic consumption 21 we hope on various they also' on page 4) a dash of paprika the Ministrv of to to be internal matters. should not overlook said. "At the present time Mines the same way as Italy (95 in a position to introduce These "the two-thirds we find Cut the and Industries to -make per several will include the text 'of Afghan of the world's popuiation eggplant in half (len. cent) and Jarge.. quantities of major changes in the who ,~ gthwise). . are preserved fruit Kabul leaders' speeches, new projects, live in hunger and then slice it crosswise the plans and consider ~he and processed. In one Times and its allied publi· and ignorance. Two views of women at work in ! slices. fin- year Italian so forth. In the in laboratories 0 Wash- the sait off ances and expons of fruit totaB~d cations. same issue of Anis a l\linistry of Mines and Industries. f the eggplant the then work wdh ·the 18.5 million quint~ls. In a m.. tshell, these letter to cpld dry on a newspa­ Rural Development an absolute re- Some of the change envisaged are some of the editor said that the per. Depart· cord. the maj:>r changes which closing down ment in implementing are as follows: we hope of public baths these to introduce in the Kabul creates inconvenience plans. Agency. Times and diffi~ Melt shortening 1. Kabul cuWes .for .the people. ~~61!"'1.,·~o-lf'>.1 in a skillet and • The e~tablishment In current term..s. "agricultural Times will be changed Instead the .. saute the of a, cent­ pro- into a four page These are neither writer urged ·~Hl;.w.:."'tSJ" eggplant until golden duction in Ihe pa'!:t large size daily. commitments the Inspection De­ l..,'~ _- _ brown. raj organisation ten years bas 2. "Afghanistan nor promises, but part.ment ',.: , \-u.$.IIO{ . (As you fry the eggplant within the risen, from News" monthly our present of the Municipality to framework Lit. 3.1.35,000 to Ln." which plan of action. incrfase w~,:'1,~'lI-t,t I put it on newspaper to absorb of the Ministry of 4.575.000· .....as being published by the fine on those ;~.L~,~~.t the million but there is a the public ._.J:, grease.) Saute the onions Mines and Industries to handle marked Afghan Publicity BUTeau 'may batHs which do not follow in the difference between the in- be The suceess o~ the same skillet until golden' ,all matters connected comes enlarged and published. under' every news­ rules of sanitation, but to brown. with of rural workers and those a papeT depends let the Remove them from the such activities engagd different name and caiTy both on the interest of baths remain open so Urat pan and is necessary it ·in' other branches. The nc=w articles the readers the put -them ~sjde. Saute the plans "Green and news on the country. as much as it does people can make use of them, the meat are to b~ successful Ptan" has been drafted for ?-n the potential until done. Remove the [h~ 3. Kabul Times Will have of the paper Sunday's Heywad in its ~eason':t meat and Through such a programme purpose of graduaUy doing away a Fri­ Itself. editorial well. it day edition which wiH be Communication must be described plans for some is certain that a most With gaps that still exist in wages pub. two-way. changes fruitful lished oJo Afghan holidays, We would very much in the policy of the paper. phase in the and salaries. . too. appreciate Al­ Grease a'. pie pan social and ecODO" .~draft It will be ·published under letters from our rea­ though, Heywad has played or a casserole mie development The Bill now presented a dif- ders a dish. Put in a layer of our rural to ferent name and will have giving their reactions to part in tqe country'S current of eggplant, areas p'arliamen.t states that. as fat as a se­ m~terial re­ some garlic, meat. will be launched. nculture ag- parate subscription a-rrangement_. appearing in the paper. forms,. in order to serve· the tomatoes. arid IS concerned. the main goal coun­ rest- of the eggplants. Afghanistan produces is 4. "Kabul Times Annual Num­ try and the people better Heywad Top it with Some to achieve parity between wages dec;ded~ onions. products w.hich coul.d find earned ber", published in English has give priority an by rural workers and. will to Add a dash of paprika. internatiooal market. Iho~ ifl~dustry be another step in the direction CHICAGO. Feb. 7. (Reuter).­ those articlE.'S\ which advocate Bake in By intro· paid by and tertiary Cassius progress. _ a 300 degree F. oven ior troducing a coordinated servlces'and of providing interested readers Clay, the world heavyweight ..... 20 mi... plan to to level agricultural pro- with boxing nutes. Serve it topped improve their quality duction material on Afghanistan. champion, will defend h.is For instance, articles which with yo­ we are throughout the country. title in­ gurt. sure that lntensive The exact -number of pages against fellow-American Ernie troduce our t>e9ple to the princi­ Afghan handicrafts growing is to be introd- and Terrell Makes 4-5 s~rvings. ·will - uced fonnat of ·this publication here on March 29, Chicago ples of a democratic life and find many customers into those regi.ons whicb have has promoters also iample not yet" been detennined.. announced last night th.ose which report the govern­ around· the world. resources and in those in ·~which 5. Kabul Times has been carry­ The bout will be held io the in- ment's activities aimed at deve­ ..r natural resources can be ex- ternational lopme~~ ing one page weeIdy on the·1\i"o- Ampbitheatre, which of the country in every seats field about 12.000 peoples. WIll be given priority as- serted the paper. ' .. - .. ·1 , '. ,,- .- -:.- .,.~

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WEATHEB FORECAST Tomorrow's Temperature 1llEWS STALLS FEBRUARY: 7. 1966 J(abul Times. is ayaibble at;_ Max. +12·C. I\fiulmum -O·C. Khyber RestauraDI: Kaltul KABUL TIMES SUD se~ tomorrow at 5:26 p.m. S'''Itel; Sbare-eNau nea.r Park Teacher Sun rises tomorrow at 6:41 a.m. Cinema: Kabul lnternalloJUI PAGE '" Wilson Discusses u.s. Tomorrow's OuUook: Cloudy (CODld. from page 3) , Airport. porter who is on sabbatt- World Briefs M Election PI9ns rs. ' fro~.her job • cal leave for 1965-66 the VOL, IV, NO. 262 KABUL, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 8. 1966. (DALV 19. 1344; SB.) PRICE AJ.. 1 GEORGETOWN. British. Guiana, teaching elementarY m~dlc ID -Queen Elizabt:th an~ schoolAf~ Feb 7. (A~). ded a tWo-day viSit With Party Leaders Fort Lauderdale, Flon a, in P'nnce: PhIlip en and system, spent two schweelrsls for all Maiwandwal Visits Doshanba; 't'sh Gmana Salurd.ay LONDON. Feb. 7, (Reuter).­ ,.tan 'ting 00 to Bnl \ ht . ghaIDS ~\,; ... cr to education boarded the roya ya~ '. of tire- Prime Minister Harold Wilson Suo­ ages and ~ I s The Queen showed no :~gn 'W-alkIDg day discussed provisio~al pla.n , for leaders. . t·~·' Press Welcomes Him Warmly "The mO\mtams are .beau ~~ dnes'i despIte bours . d other a spring general electIons Wl.th ca­ DOSHANB.'\. February 8.­ th ough tbe IDdustnal fal~ ~D b binet ministers and top officials of andlid~eI~~; r . seen shlftmg er the nuts delicious,. pRIME Minister Mohammad Hashim iUaiwandwaJ bad a meet­ his governing Labour party, an au­ ren some of the frien es e...ents. but "",as ft' to the other ing with MohammadullaJi Khalov, the Chairman of lbe ~o thoritative source said bere. met,' she noted. ~l -will encour~~ welgbt from one . f alumin­ .~ Pre~idium.~f. dunng the inspection 0 an tourist agencies m the U.S..to the Sup,reme Soviet of Tajikistan, Monday. elude on their Itl~ ~rtme lum exbibit. A clear indication wbet.ber be Afghanistan MIf!.19ter Maiwandwal Alexei l\.osygin the Prime Minis­ will seek a national mandate in th.e s~ld he ",:,as happy to be in :raji- ~er said that hiS tnp to Afgha­ ----7 (Reuter.).- , w~lch GENEVA. Fe·,b loads spring, or wait until the autumn, LS frAf~icans klstan. w't.h Afghanistan l11Stan was of great significance. Men wor\i.ers sbould .Dot ~arf)'(about' expected to emerge at the end of Crushed has hlstoflcal ties. i\.halov explamed to" Matwand- of more than ?~ kllo~~:~~m for day-long talks at his official country .Contact . between the leaders wal the developments ,lD Tajikis~ 110 pounds) while th~ uld be subs· r'esidence near London. 'To Death As police will help In strengthening trust qua~­ dm~ t ~a1 'h tan. ~'outhS' and women s 0 at La- In highly qualified political ao. co?peral1on. t e fhe Bakhtar correspondent . , .\ an Intematlon , Heywad Editor Pnme ~mls:.er, satd. .. wntes hom Doshanba: The press tanuaU) ~" (lLO) conference AniS Editor ters, an election in, March o,r April bour Organlsatlon . S. BARIMAN is considered virtually certalD. Rciid Night Club Refernng to the recent ViSIt of .m DQshanba, capital of Tajikis~ Satu.rd~J' RAHGUZAR .recommended here be sub- JOHANNESBURG. Feb. 7. tan, has warmly welcomed tne The recommendatlon WI, b dy Afghan Prune Minister's visit to (Reuler).-Six women '!Dd . d t the lLO governlOg o. Tehran Court Tries Dr. Anwari Visits that city. mine 0 eet before next year s World Population Will Be four men were crushed and In thetr SUnday issues the city's whll;h may. rn f the 115-mem~ trampled to death yesterday ce papers have carried photos and annual con,eren a f a 55 For Subversion wben they stampeded and Schools In Balkh ber United Nations agency or 7000 Million By Year 2000 bIOgraphy of ~laiwandwal on the WASHINGTON. February 7, (Renler).- rushed to a narrow staircase tinal decislon_.~__ TEHRAN, Feb. 7. (Reuler). of a night club after pollee MAZARI SHARIF. Feb. S.-Dr. front pages. world'S population reached 3,308 million by mid·l965, the I Tb~ trial of 55 meD accused Mohammad Osman Anwari. the The papers also had welcome MANlLA. Feb. 7. (Reuter).-Vil- bad raided the premises. Minister of Education inspected messages for the Prime Minister. n - g .homes near ~ ulatloD reference 'bureau reported here MondaY· W of plotting a rebellion againSt An eye.witness . said: "The lagers are agam eel.n 'killed more boys and girls schools in aDd around The messages, U1 Pakhtu and b pop e European hrili~::c. ones shown by Soyiet television Sa- ce ere anges Name Toryalai i£temadi. the Rector, five yards (4.5 metres). Dr. Castro's attack came 10 a achievements in industry and pgn~ airiine - amI now about turday. sbows that the lunar sur- KABUL. Feb, B.-The United Na· drew the at!eDtion of the graduates for Agticulture) and Jobn Gard- See· V· t C written reply published Sunday .on Ir;dl" routes of the Hllint'. ~ea, pa5sen~er:, ner iEealth. Education and Wei" Ie ong culture. 11'311' of \tollau{s incomt" 4.400 to -their desti· face is uneven and has indenta- tio~s Technical Assistance Office in to the respOnsibilities which they MOSCOW. Feb. 7. (Reuter).- thina's statements on. the redueuon rail. hi~hway an(.! air network~ to~ fare). i~ ,lrriH·,l from ilHltI~1rY alon~ ; con\"t~r(Oe nations doth'. In 'fact, many tions. Individual stones are clearly Afghanistan bas changed its name have the pU1?lic; President de Gaulle is expected to of riee supplies to Cuba. o~ 00 the i\t>therland:; and experiencell - travell~r!li h~li7\'e discernible on lunar surface in the intS the Office of the Development The College was founded by late Meanwbile, in SalgOD, U.S. Take Part In Talks ,~b01:lI It accuseo China "of brutal rep­ exp'ttrl';' Illtal olle quar.ler It.S nl.Jkr loaj(·o\ 4·ro~sruad.i' for troops were trYing. Monday to begin his visit to MoscoW ~lodrrn I~L'I­ r; KL\l i5 the mo:;t rehable aIrline area of the station. Programme of the United Nations_ King M:obammad Nadir Shah. June 20. informed sources said. risal of an eCoBomic nature for prwIU\'I';', Ir:Hlsport ('ulnmerce ;ntl trade, The lJutth ------:.....:=:....:..:..:.:===....:.:=~=:::- WASHINGTON. Feb. 8. (Reu­ .Iitie~. of them all. Visible in the lower left-band I here Saturday, . purely political reasons", and of join­ in1ernaliul1al hanklOg are tratle·otintleil and renowned «r):-The State Department made tlu3lili~J re~t"arch Tt clear that the United StateS The French President ~nnounced ing the United States bloca.de ago operation:-. for their sound bu:,iness princi­ ~r;~~ ~;o~ei,;~~::~rbth~S -tv;~ !.h~t. ~e ~ould fadotle~ manufa~­ I would be willing to see the South in Paris on ThursdaY ainst Cuba. in:-titult"i". and ples. \\'halever .question . you . Vour Iravel .oge~1 can 'help you De Gaulle Expresses Optimism About Future ~e He said the: real reasons underly­ anytllin~ mera. The size of its round upper I Vietnamese Nalional LiberatioD. make bis official Soviet VISit to turing :lllI1ost you d mav a!lok about Imlustr)', 4'OHl­ 'plon your In~ WIth KLM. Take. a ing China's reduction of ric:e supp­ h~\'e pa~oisth:b~i~ i~~n~t~~~~~~~Dt Front participate as an independent second balf of June. care to name. made the nlerce'o a~ri(:u1ture. the experts Jook al KLM !' l~OO\'ement sche· .. of Of France-W. GerlUlln Practieal·Cooperation lies-a staple d'iet here-were 00' r group in any peace talks. ':'\etherlallds one ol'the mo:-t ~o­ dules. For more information the station, wbich is out of focus MONROVlA. Feb: 7, (~ass).- economic as 'she claimed, but dicta· of their lleld will have the ans\'·{"T. because of its small distance from . PARIS, Feb. 8, (~uter).-Pre- General de GaUlle;s emphasis Foreign. Defence, and E~no. State Department offiCials· em­ aht.ad i,.'ll-llntrie!'- in the \"orl-d, :l11l.1 a pt'rsonal itinerary, ronsuH partu:i~ The Leone, the eW naIt?tmonaln ted by Cuba's refusal to allow b.er the lens' of the television system. sldent de. Gaulle sal~ Monday he on practi~ - co-operation was mit'S ministers· of the' two coun- ·phasised, however, that such cur~ \10111\ fo'reiCl'ners visit tht> country nmr travel·agent. He is a profe::;· pation wouJd merely give the Libe· The Leoen, the new nat.IOn_a! to distribute propaganda matenal ~\"{'r~ Why flying KLM 'is a good move A DPA dispatch from London ~as C'OnV1~~ed practt'tCal Problem5 F·'mUS.iC in ~ ears", West German tries were alSo conferring during vea; to sludy Dutch si-onal and can gi ... e you expert e~e~t. tha rati,olJ Front-the politicaJ arm of. rency -of Sierra' Leone, has com- "on questions tending to deepen di· metftOJ.~ trainin~, clo~e for you. KL~l Hights ~re,('onY~n' said. that Ibe British scientists Mon- 0 coopera lon-a s a . . t orelgn Mtnister Gerhard Schroe. the sixth round of Franco-Ger- pletely replaced no~ the West visions between socialist peoples and and to ad .... ice and answers to a bu~ines$' the Viet Cong guerrillas-the' status bu~int":o5 contraCI~. ient. fasl, pun~tual. 'I"OU II artln' day picked up siknaJs sent up 'by marked a new cordiality m der said later man talks. . Afr,ican pound sterling as le~al. states" through the armed forces and ana to J!ain man's questions about 1'\.1.\1 Soviet colleagues and bounced off Franco-Gennan relations, Dr. Erhard' replYing tb Pr' The Foreign Ministers, Dr. of an interested group and Dot that ~ca in Amslerdam refreshecl :lnd o~ a government.' currency in that part of other administrative sectors. lle\'t'lopment and assistance .and Holland. ' the planet venus, a distance of some The Fre~ch President who was dent de GauIie's .toast, said' l1d~l- Schr0e.<¥r and Maurice. COuve de on the expiry of a tran5ltlOna1 Dr., Castro lambaSted China for prn~ralllmes for their Q.~m coun~ relaxed, in l!ood tiOle IU make 56 million kilomet:.res. speakin~ at a luncheon in ElYsee pite the difficulties nothing he:; Murville, Monday discussed the North Vietnam has demanded that )"our business appointment. Ams­ ~f 4 the Nation'~1 Liberation Front must period of ·a year_ and a half. ·"bypocrisy. insolence, absolute ron­ trit"~. _ The operation. monitored at the Palace. ID honour West German changed Luxembourg has united Vietnam problem and the prog ' tempt, betrayal of confidence, frie~d- terdam i, at the hub of KD'1', British Observatory in Jodrell Bank, Chancellor LudWIg Erhard, here us again and Franco-Germ ress of the 17-nation disarmament be recognised as the sole genuine Free Exchange Rates At sbip a\ld brotherbood. bad fatth. The Dulh are naturol- born busi­ wodd.wide network, 50 onward was a joint project worked out un- on the first day of the twice.year- friendship has come out . f ~- conference at Geneva. representative of· dle South Viet­ connections to the USA. {~re~t der the tenns of Anglo~Soviet scien- 1y routine consultation ~alled for strengthened:' 0 1 The current talks are- being namese people before it will enter .D'.Mghanistan Bank, cynicism" and the worst form of n,essmen, 100•. Holland has been into any talks. . Britain and German~' go wlthtn tific cooper.ation. b~ th~ 1963 Franco-Gennan The Cbancellor was referring. held against a backgrouqd of dif- KABUL, Feb. 7.-The foUow- poiSOD...· . The spokesman' was clarifying the ~e the hour. No wonder shrewd fnendshlp treaty. to the Foreign Minister's Luxem4 fering views on western defence ioS are the excbange rates at The methods employed by I r.oin~ from Kabul .by :\ria~a cooperatiob~ U.S. position in the light of a radio .D' 'Afghanistan Bank expressed Cbinese ·in Havana were exactly UJe busine~smen fly KLl\l the air· bourg conference last month that and European same as' those employed by the for-. I Afl'!ban Airlines or lranalT, Kabul University Sends Informed sources said the ended France's four-month boy­ interview at the weekend in which line of Ihe careful. punctual IP Afghani. Sellin, mer U.s.' embassy when it "tried to ( vou can IIv KL~l from teheran .Message To Moscow friendly tone of the French Pre. "?tt .of the Common Market ins­ Dr. Erhard said in a television President Johnson's roving ambas- DUlCh. sident, proposing a toast to Dr. titutIons .in Brussels. broadcast befo,re he left Bonn sador, Averell Harriman referred . 87~0~(per one U;S. dollar) interefere in our internaJ affairs a~d . orBfirut to Amstenltlll1. KL\I's pub~c.ly ~or~ Af,. 75.50 in one way or another impose ~ts ..... estbound l\i~hts lea\'e Tehe· KABUL. Feb. 8.-The University Erhard, and the West German E ~ard°Dday afternoon Chancellor SUIl;day . night he was. going to I th.e first time' to possible of Kabul has congratulated the ~ans WI~ an open mmd for the J:l3rtlclpatiOn .of. the National LIbe· Af. 2)0.00 (per ~ne, PoUnd Ster~ wiU on the nation", Dr, Castro satd. raD even' l\'londav., Thursday Likemost thinas Dult'h. KD1 is. leader's reply reflected the mood r. conferred with the French l University of Moscow on the soft stxth serJes of talks under the ration Ftont as an independent r ) 211.40 The streogth of Dr. Castro's at- and 5alu'rd~y and 'leave Beirut dependable. thOorou~h and reli· of Monday morning's twl>hour Primp e. Minister. M.· Georges landing of Luna·9 oD'" the moon_ talks between. the two leaders. ompldou. _ French-Gennan friendship treaty.. group in any peace discussions. ~~~ 1875.00 (per' hundred German. tack, covering almost two pages .of ever.... c1ay!.except Friday. able. You can tell by the impec· Mark)' _1887.50 Sunday's morning -newspapers, stun· , ..~ . cable !"er"ice )'ou receive on , hl'l I. ~ i h .....LOtJ' flrrt (l1S1 Af 151821 (per hundred Freuch ned diplomats bere and started s~ _~ '".~U.l' board. the well·prepared meals. ,- Fr~c) . _ 1528.35 culation on the permanent effects It .1/.1 0.111" 0.. we,\ Oil. W"lhUldllf' I ROYAL DUTCH AIRLINES \ h •• lIhl", -: , the ·extra attentioo to small Af. 1746.21 (per hundred Swiss might have aD Chiuese-Cubao dip- A_III"'" ]II.n 6Gt:!t SlUG 91'-' J Franc) 1757.86 ~omatic :relations.

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