FOR SHEER . DEIIGHT THE KABUL " r.'i( j.iiu m . -- v...i.mu VOL. VII, NO. 253 KABUL, THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1969 (DALW 3, 1347 S.H.) PRICE AF. 4 SECOND FAMILY Israel deputy PM proposes settlement in occupied areas GUIDANCE CLINIC TEL AVIV, Jan. 23, (Reuter). town in the Hebron region, also on Israel's deputy prime minister, Bri- the west bank, gadier General Ylgdal Alton, last The gerieral, who made his new night Jewish in proposal at a question-and-answ- er IN 1 proposed settlement OPENED KABUL yy " II yf i Is- I V"-'-- '' y-- A specific parts of Arab territory cap- session at a youth club of, the ' KABUL, Jan. 23, (Bfckhtar). Her Royal Highness Princess if tured during, the six-da- y war in raeli Labour Party here confirmed Khatol yesterday afternoon opened the Karte Seh Family, Plan-"nin- g June 1967. earlier press reports that he had Clinic. AHon, 51, author pf the "Allon asked to be replaced as a member The function held on this occasion at the clinic premises on plan", said Israeli villages should of four ministerial committees, in- key policy-maki- body Darulaman road by the Family Planning Association of Afghan- be established on the west bank cluding the of the river Jordan and in the Sinai. on the security affairs. was by Public Health Minister Miss Kubra Nourzai, istan attended Peninsua, He also suggested a new Some officials earlier said they Pub- members of the association and high ranking officials of the believed General Alton's resigna- vv lic Health Ministry. s ft f tion from the committees was in v protest against the refusal of Pre- President of the association and "The association is happy that De Gaulle denies mier Levi Eshkol to submit the director of the Kabul Maternity in cooperation with the Public "Allon Plan" for formal cabinet hospital, Mrs. Nazifa Nawaz Gh-z- i, Health Ministry, the University approval. in a speech said in modern health institutes and with the he'll step down Under !he plan, Israel would day living availability of the help of the International Planned give un the bulk of the populated service's by ma- advice and rendered Parenthood Federation it is tin December 1972 areas on the west bank but would such clinics is essential. king progress towards fulfilling retain a narrow strip along the river this need and is today opening (Reuter;.-Presid- ent r vim ' PARIS, Jan. 23, with a chain of fortified positions the second clinic of its kind in de Gaulle yesterday sl- on the ranse of hills commanding , Ag. Ministry Kabul. , apped down speculation that ha the valley. might resign before the end of Replying to questions at the "However," she said fully "we iuimijuifi' Mnr-""T- T "- - i his present term in December, youth club, General Allon said he understand family ri to soon start that planning 1972. favoured establishment of what he is more a product of social educa- Princess Khatol inaugi urated the clinic with the cutting of In a statement at termed a Palestinian entity, an Once - tion and social awareness., ribbon. today's cabinet meeting, he told autonomous Arab province on. the supplying fish- increa- such clinic established an his ministers that he had the in- west bank. planned-familie- fol- se in s won't tention and duty to fulfil his ma- KABUL, Jan. 23, (Bakhtar). low. ndate. ' He refused to indicate where in The Extensioo Department of the opinion the line bet- "The, task is much more com- Students in pitched battles The general's statement-relaye- d his boundary Ministry of Agriculture will soon ween Egypt and Israel should be plicated and we shall only achie- to reporters by Joel le The-ul- e, fish on the market start putting ve something with all round help secretary of state infor- drawn. This boundary should run reservoir. with police for raised at Darunta canal from other educational and hea- across Pakistan .of somewhere between the Suez Canal mation came amid a storm ' are ba-- V The department said there lth organisations and the people KARACHI, Jan. 23, (DPA) -- The students fought pitched' speculation about the political end Ihe "green line", he said. carps in the now nearly one million themselves." p The situation was tense in both ttles with police for the fifth day future of former Prime Minister The ereen line is the name given dam weighting from one to four East and West Pakistan Wednes- running, which so far have clai- by Israelis to the former demarca- Mrs. Shirih Majrouh, mem- Georges Pompidou, who has sp- kilograms. a day after student demonstrations med two lives with about fifteen tion line established under the ar- ber of the Volunteer Women's oken publicly in the past week The fish programme started two flared up again Tuesday with people injured. . mistice agreements of 1949 follow- Organisation also delivered a sp- about nis possible candidature in years ago there. The department is violence. Soon after the militia opened - ing the Palestine war. family plan- a future presidential election. still working on acquiring,' fishing eech on the value of Twenty-on- e people were inju- fire, thousands of people came General Allon told questioners ning social and economic adv- Pompidou, prime minister from boats and proper transportation fa in red by police and militia fire and out into the streets, to form a pro- clo- since the June 1967 war some op- , modern 1962 to 1968, has long been a cilities and it will introduce the ancement of communities. scores of others , in clashes with test parade. ..v-- portunities for' a political initiative se associate of , General de Gaul- Ka- '.- fish soon in some vicinities in law enforcers.' The procession went round in close to presi- by Israel had been missed- - - President of Pub- le and sources the bul. - Meanwhile,- About one hundred people, in- downtown Dacca despite a ban despite stat- He rejected ideas for economic lic Health Institute, Dr. Abdullah dency said that, the Fish shops in Jade Maiwand, cluding five elementary school on assembly of more than four ement, he remained the outstan- integration of the west bank areas ' Omar, has resigned his post of Maidan and Mlrwais children were arrested in the wa- people.. i , ding candidate to succeed the with Israel, as advocated by Def- secretary general of Afghanistan's ' Maidan and restaurants which have ke of the 'clashes, acording to Eyewitnesses said Dacca Uni president. ence Minister Moshe Dayan. so far imported fish will be supp- Family Planning Association. He reports reaching here Wednesday. versity campus represented a vi, In answer to another question, he Az- insisted, his re- lied, the source said. is replaced by Abdul, Ghaf far The . worst incidents occurred in rtual battlefield, with students Pompidou on said the French arms embargo had Monday Fish will be sold for Af. 16 a iz, president of the Rozantoon, Dacca, where militia opened fire including' girls, using bocky stic? turn from Rome on that no Israel's deterrent no-th- er in, efffctn -' ' the organisation in charge of putting up sto- he hadi only spoken the Italian kilogram. r , twice on students , kes, bamboos, iron rods and care ' probable' tandida-- J Fish shops which are supplied by and child services. barricades. . nes to fight" 'off police aear-ga- s capital of his a, Mi- . V cy in possihle ifuture election in the Agriculture and Irrigation arid baton, charges. ,. n , i which., General Gaulle would nistry are required to cpok.andjsell Six- - Dolfcemen were among the; do -.- ', fish in complete compliance.' with injured. not stand. i categorical statem- France continuing Public Health Ministry and Muni- Civilians have formed a comm- Yesterday's thr- cipal Corporation health reguta-- Nixon cabinet holds mating ittee to defend the detainees and ent appeared to be aimed at y weight U.S., ' to draw up a three-da- protest owing all the president's talks with tions, ;' da- !' '! behind official attempt to without interior secretary plan. - th Rawalpindi mp down the speculation. (Reu-ter- ). In West Pakistan, UK Bulgarian PM WASHINGTON, Jan.- - 23, ceremony in the White House East was the on summit students broke their relative ca- Observers noted that it President NiXon held the first Room. General de Gaulle had Will- lm Tuesday and fought hit and first time PARIS, Jan. 23, (Reuter). Fran- cabinet meeting of his ld Led by Secretary of State political intentions in India on v run battles with police near the announced his ce is carrying on talks with ' the administration' immediately after iam P. Rosers, the Senior member, informed place where one of their collea- so far in advance. But United States and Britain about its 1 1 of the 12 cabinet members were each cabinet officer, with his wife did sources said .the statement four-pow- ' gues was killed in police shoot- proposal for er consulta- 6 day visit sworn into office yesterday. holding 'a family bible, took the belief Pomp-- , ing last November. not alter their that tions with 'lihe to The president dubbed them his oath of office from Chief Justice approval for tear-ga-s and baton charg- idou had de Gaulle's bring peace tile Middle East, NEW DELHI, Jan. 23, (DPA). ''working cabinet" because they Earl Warren, was administered the When of to disperse agitating st- the content, if not the timing, Bulgarian Premier Todor Zhivkov 8 to Nixon on Mo- es failed to Foreign Minister Michel Debre said took their oaths at an :00 a.m. prssidential oath injur- his remraks to journalists last Wednesday on a six-d- ay udents, police opened fire yesterday. arrived here nday. week.. visit at the invitation of In- Missing from the group was Alas- ing sixteen. He told a cabinet meeting that dian Prime Minister Mrs. Indira Top Japanese ka Governor Walter 1. Hickel, wh- the French proposal last week for ' ' Coun- Gandhi. ' ose nomination as secretary of the consultations by the Security On hand at the airport to meet interior, federal government's Soyuz 4,5 cil representatives of the four po- " the honour the Bulgarian leader ' were Mrs. business body natural resources agency, hag run wers was accompanied by an agen- Gandhi, and a number of her cabi- into controverys in the Senate. da for the proposed talks. V cosmonauts in rally The agenda covered examination net members. , ' Sf-- Senate confirmation of the no- .'...'" to survey mass rally: Se- In a brief address Zhivkov said mination is expected by the end of MOSCOW; Jan. 23, (Reuter). Brezhnev tell a of the implementation of the ' the lands of the he was confident his talks with TOKYO, Jan. 23, (Reuter). Ja- the week. It was delayed when The Soviet Union's four newest "The envoys of curity Council resolution of No- have worked in space as Is- Mrs. Gandhi and other government pan's most powerful busjness body, some western and New England se- spacemen received Moscow's tradi- Soviets vember 1967,' which called for best their ability. officials would serve to promote Keidanren, will send a survey team nators opposed Hickel. tional and triumphal cosmonauts' always, t0 the of raeli withdrawal from occupied ter- frankly they have ed mutual interest In the "struggle for to South Vietnam next week to ex- They charged that he is more in- welcome yesterday and were forma- Let us say ritories and Arab recognition of brilliantly". peace and progress". plore ways of rebuilding the terested in the exploitation of na- lly honoured for their role in last Israel's existence. Brezhnev and the cosmonauts Friendship and cooperation bet- economy there, Keldane-re-n tural resources than in conservation week's first link-u- p of two manned A study of how the resolution described the link-u-p of ween both peoples would be stren said Wednesday. and questioned his previous con- spacecraft. ' themselves could be put into effect. 4 Soyuz-- 5 in space last gthened further, he added, greeting 5 Keidaneren (Federation of Eco- nections with the oil and gas indus- Thousands of Muscovites shivered Soyuz-- and Examin$on of measures to i ii i it i a ' and the subsequent walk in Mrs. as a aear oia nomic Organisations) said the eight-ma- n tries, which are supervised by the in bitterly cold weather as they week be taken to avoid aggrabating the uanani iriena Khrunov and and acknowledged leader of her team would leave here on Jan- department he has been named to cheered air force colonels Vladimir space by cosmonauts situation. people and statesman of standing uary 17, it will be led by Testsuya head. Shatalov, Boris Volynov and Yev- Yeliseyev. The foreign minister recalled that in tribute to the United and stature". . " Senga, Executive Director of Keidr Also sworn in at the geny Khrunov and civilian Alexel Then, a the Soviet Union had approved the along Moscow's broad States Brezhnev said: French plan, but that talks were Among entourage were aneren. ceremony, attended by Mrs. Nixon Yeliseyev Zhickov's 'The recent outstanding flight of still going on with and The team will meet Vu Quoc and nt Spiro Agnew, Lenosky Prospect. Britain the Foreign Minister Ivan Basnev, and cosmonauts round the Thuc, Minister of State in charge were Charles Yost as ambassador The four cosmonauts were greeted ihe American U.S. Engineering Minister Yanko Mar confident start of the ca-- hugs and kisses by Communist moon, the kov, who will in talks' of postwar planning, and other to the United Nations and Robert with participate and Sov.iet interplanetary stations on binet ministers of South Vietnam. Mayo as director of the Budget Party chief the problems of Southeast Asia, and Venus-- 6 towards their During its stay until February Bureau. , President when the Middle East and European i Se suc- Vnu-kov- far away destination and the seven, ,the team will also visit Da-na- ng The Nixon administration's first they arrived at the city's VIP o France offers curity, cessful flight of the Soyuz-- 4 and ' and other cities to explore cabinet meeting was believed to airport. Possibilities of closer economic Soyuz-- S spaceships are all new big possibilities for Japanese aid to the have, been chiefly procedural, with After a brief ceremony In the cooperation between Bulgaria and ' of mankind towards untra-velll- ng arms to more agricultural and industrial deve- some discussion of a number of cold, frostly air, they were driven strides India would also be discussed, ob- the mysteries of the uni- lopment of South Vietnam. problems facing the new president. into the Kremlin, where they heard servers said. verse". Arab countries Ko-syg- Soviet prime minister Alexei in Ravi SJumkar and three other members of BEIRUT, Jan. 23, (DPA). The Malaysia termed front line of defence the ruling 11 -- man politburo were oil-ri- ch Sheikhdom of Kuwait will from the yesterday's cere- make future arms purchases sues shoe co. LONDON,' Jan. 23, (Reuter).-Mala- ysia for the safety of Australia and The Commonwealth conferenc' absent from was the front line of New Zealand as well." was the most important gather- monies. France instead of Britain, informed said to be NEW YORK, Jan. 23, (Reu- Australian and New Zealand The prime minister referring to ing on heads of government in Kosygln.was officially sources said here Wednesday in ter). Ravi Shankar, the Ind- defence. Prime Minister Tunku the planned military withdrawal the world today he said. on holiday, but the whereabouts connection with French Defence Pyotr She-les- t, ian sitarlst, has sued the Thorn Abdul Rahman told the Imperial from the Far East this ahdication In the economic and financial of Ukrainian party chief Minister Pierre Messmer'j visit to Andrei Mica Shoe Company and Wo- Defence College here yesterday. by Britain of her defence role sense at least the member nations and politburo members the Middle East Kirilenko were According to rld Pacific Dlskery for J750000 .In an address , to top ranking was "discouraging." were bound together by the fact and the same sources, for alleged unauthorised use military and civilian defence au- "It is not that we expect Bri- that all of them, except Canada, not explained. Paris had likewise offered to sell have of his name to promote his re- thorities he emphasised the stra- tain, to support us or to provide were in the sterling area. Kosygin has been said to arms to Saudj Arabia, which prev- cords and Mean shoes. tegic importance of Malaysia and for us," he said. '"It Is obvious th- This brought benefits to each been on holiday since before the iously has almost exclusively pur- Shankar, a main force in added: the defence of Malaysia at countries like New Zealand, and in particular to Britain whe- new year. chased military hardware from Bri- ' Mrs-Indir- popularising classical music in is equally important to Australia Australia Singapore and Malay- re the substantial sterling reser- When Indian Prime Minister a tain and the United States. the U.S. and elsewhere, charg- and New Zealand. For these two sia far from being a liability-a- re ves of Commonwealth nations Gandhi passed through A group of the French general ed that a promotion camoalgi countries Malaysia is the fiont an asset to any arrangements were held. Malaysia was the big- Moscow on January 4, she was told staff is In Beirut at present discuss- by the firms attempted to line of their defence. for defence plans ad tan contri- gest Commonwealth dollar earn- that he could not receive her be- ing with government officials mo- reduce him "to the level of The Tunku told the private me- bute substantially to success in er in the sterling area with its cause he was on holiday and she dernisation of the Lebanese army shoe salesman," eting that Commonwealth defen- other, fields politically and eco- rubber, tin, timber and palm oil was received by Mazurov, a first through French aid, a ' Thorn Mean is a nationwide ce partnership was not only very nomically." exports. deputy premier. Messmer, who ends hi$ visit to - chain of stores specialising in important for the security cf his Urging a strengthening of the The Tunku said the Common- A similar explanation was given Kuwait on Saturday, has been re- low-price- given po- to outgoing U.S. Llew- d, shoes for men and country and Singapore but also Commonwealth the wealth should be more ambassador ceived by the country's ruler, Emir children. Shankar filed bis necessary for the protection of Malaysian leader hit out at tho- sitive support so that it could pl- ellyn Thompson last week. He was Sabah Sallm He was also suit on Friday in New York trade routes so vital to the free se, particularly in Britain who ay a yet bigger role in world seen instead by , received by King Faisal in Saudi state Supreme Court world "and in a very real sense questioned its value. affairs. another first deputy. Arabia. PAGE 2 THE KABUL TIMES JANUARY 23, 1969 After the Vietnam war j Food For Thought Japan prepares to step into j the rbreach By Albert Axelhunk ' Japan is,; more any than other i j nation, actively- - prtprln : 'for and Cambodia. ,'; conservative party," Hke full-sca- Litaeral-Qu'imiwpt- s: - Whipping and abJit are laud' le partipipation(i;and perh- Tbisi does not mean Giamusho the that- sta- aps leadership, in post Vietnam officials optimistically expect the biliairtg the pcilifUlal situation jn onum; you have to double ihe dose war rehabilitation projects as a Vietnam war to terminate short- Indo-Chi- na after peace" comms to necessary way to help ensure fu- ly. Indeed, in mid-196- 3, Jaoan. Vietnam will be mandatory for ui Vie sensibilities. de.:Une. ture economic as well as political se diplomats stationed in Asian security in' Asia; and that 'for stability in Indo-Chin- a, and Pacific areas agreed that a such stabilisation the economic Some financial quarters in Tok- long would elapse development and ot ' I Hurti'it lleether Siowe time before all' improvement yo now foresee the rapid decline hostilities , ceased in Vietnam. the people's standard ot living THE KABUL TIMES j of Anglo-Americ- Influence in Nor does St mean' that Hanoi wo- must be promoted, Thus Prime South-Ea- st Asia i.tho pout-V- i- uld choose accept - '. in to "capitalist" Minister Eisaku Sato has pledged i '' f , provide , , Mutant!.- periQd'.Whb;' thon, .is to aid. Obviously, to oiler aid Japan will as much Published every, day except Friday and Afghan pub , ., v such that ' ' ' U'hW . ryioi politics. econo- lie holiday by the Kabul Timts Pub Ikhing Agency. fillJithlS vacuum? is, is good No one seriously help as possible for the more and more, seen to. be - shU-tin- g thinks Hanoi will say yes. mic uplift of South Vietnam. lllllll'''lllllliilMIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIMIllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'l'MI"lll',illMlll::iiillll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIflllllllllllmilHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIlll.. HIIIMH. ,''.. indisp-ehsabl- towards Japan, tho e. The i' Japanese Government has s Naturally, the end of the Viet- . ' ally of America in the drawn up 'the' following . tentati- nam war will have an important Orient..: ve plan for Japan: (1) Participa- economic nmpact wrJapan. cut Industries we neeil! , Now emerging as i the' world's tion in an international peace co- this impact 'willoe small coinp-- "third economic force", Japan nference on Vietam; (2) IJelief ared with the impact on South . Kcoiidtnit progrers in the less developed , .. not be boosted iby providing incentive to the fai will, it is increasingly clear, con- aid through the International Red Korpa, Nationalist China, Thail- countries cannot be attained without a certain mers. A draft, plaonf or a tobacco industry was pre- tribute to peace, und security in Cross and like-mind- agencies; and and Singapore. ' ' amount of Industrialisation. The introduction of pared as early fts 19C4, but since then nothing has South-Ea- st Asia through its (3) Participation in' international Indo-Chine- strength.:. cooperation se re- blo-ster- ed essential industries Is as important to the nation-- . been heard of t. This is a shame sine a tobaico of economic for Such countries have been Japan's political us wojl construction; and (4) Aid for the by war, mostly through al economy as the promotion of agriculture and Industry is one in." which the private sector can But ' as power cannot be discounted economic development and stabi- increased military purchases by the building of an economic Infrastructure. but make a good starjtiln, ' ts ei- -' of Vietnam nei- United ' having a future and possiblyi lisation and the the States. The war has any projjnntme of industrialisation should first ' gniflcant bearing .on' events "in ghbouring countries. . brought .them big commercial be- production of goods which The same) glass we pos- of all te aimed at the is truest for which the ed "tinder box" of As- In its budget request for fiscal nefits and a very marked incre- have good home markets and wfcifh are now be- sess almost all, the; 'essential Ingredients. A glass ia. Several American Headers ha- 1969, the Giamusho has outlined ase in dollar reserves.

ing Imported, . factory could (meet both construction requirenv ve already raised ,the '.possibility a reported $ 40 million for Viet- Earnings" to Japan from post- . ents and a host of Other needs.' Bottles will be in of the participation "Vf Japanese nam rehabiiltati- -, A part of war rebuilding of Vietnam will mention a host indus- miltary units post-w- ar pe- the fund would be for plann- offset the, losses to the Japanese Although one. could of great demand if we ever have an organised dairy ima the Afghanistan are acekeeping force in Vietnam ed International Fund for Viet- economy suffered from a reduc- tries which arc needed in there industry not capital but also in the desirability oBlyjh flui A senior- Saigon 'official, 'Iran nam Reconstruction Another pa- tion of war-relat- benefits, inc--. some which may be singled for their large nu- province SucK affndustry will require Van Don, a former Defence Minis- rt would be for aid projects in luding. exports, .. which banking and economic feasibility, such as glass and "tobac ' mber, of bottle fof distributing milk. Similarly ter and now-a 'senator; suggested the other Indi-Chine- se states. experts say exceed $ 1,000 mil- co Industries. The introduction of botfMese ' ' Jr, J.ltltwS develop a pharmaceutical industry we will in Tokyo,' recently "that Japan Specifically, - the funds would lion in extra income; per year, dustries, can be Quite proftable; Afghanistan inK , fun- require glass containers;-- . . should even take over the be used for such things' as build- 500 porlsi approximately Af. million, worth of ci '" '' of... International Con- ing for refugee Most top. ec- V' - '.'''' 'i'-- : r .' ctions the; houses families industrialists and garettes annually. tne present consirucxmn - i ag- -' improvement of Laos-Thaila- onomists in is j With u In view ofUhese" favourable' ; factors- the trol Commission (ICC, if it Japan believe it haonv Quantities cf glass, too, have to be en- - reed to send peapekeeping troops communications, and for financ- in Japan's best interests to help lare planning a uthoritittf: should seriously consider ' . " s. Indo-Chines- e impnrt.-d.- . ' Indus-trie- 'to Vietnam. Of 'course; : this is ial aid to improve the airport at the development of - t couragin; privateMnVeston to' launch these Out ' question. But sho- Vientiane in Laos. close ' "a venture' bet- of the iti rehabilitation in Cooperation It may be found that Joint ... ,U liru:-.- J : .L. i. : ; An not ws receptivity of fellow As- David E. Lilienthal board wiuj. vvusuuigwjut me - ,' ...!. oicn ohvinne that we lack the foreign on. pattern the uumig. posi- ween local and investors the - - los- -. for brth these industries. We grow ians to .acceptance of a future of Resources Davelopm- ; Vietnam era. They say that raw mi'tc.ls of the Afghan I Wool Industries will be feasible. peacekeeping sesto-- Japanese may not be enough at the role, in for the "new ent Corporation, which is under ;few industries tobact.i anj vvh'le there ;We hope the idea will be considered favourable military. contract to the U.S. Agency for from the stoppage of the var size cigarette; in- " Japanese moment to warrant a medium i. - Fum-ihik- by the authorities concerned. ':, The Japanese Foreign Office International Development,- and will be. temporary. Indeed, o why production canv dustry- there is no reason its; has drafted details for an. .Inter-- i a man who 'is familiar with the Konb, president of. Mitsu- - patidnal Fund for' Vietnam Rec- - havoc wrought by the Vietnam i bishi Heavy Industries believes onstruction.ji' calling for free, gr-- j warsaid recently in Tokyo, that Japan's economy will feel the apjs totalling $ 200 .million i'over r South Vietnam "will need to" re- i pinch from the war's cessation two. years, with aid given not on- - j house its entire population of i only for a period of six months IPlHUESS ly to South Vietnam but' also) it abputi ; to one year, IHIOMIE ' & is said, to North Vietnam; Laos There are also; these mainstr-- ; (FWF) ' Vicinity of .Mahipar, Heywad' editorially co - 'ln. most cases, 'including 'this lished .in the rtofe'i week's accidents .occur due to carer such as near the Mahipar -- powe mZronthe tL- , i who are Krto - oars , niant, o that fhnse In ured- fpUf power cbnferehce i 1C3S UUVtUfi, JUU u.0ucvwuov vw rt. " ' for callins a , condition; can be Disarmament ' the crs in poor ..shape, or.-- overloaded not in serious" to' chalk "out1 a settlement of ' ' v " ' ' ' ; v j rushsd 'there;, y Middle East impasse.' .;;. ' ."'' - j Secondly people who are severely commando J Nevertheless, says- the editorial ; Following the Israeli; ... . pf USSR wants talks on limiting missiles u tm .- I'viinrarlv muc ..frrnmnt'' attention Beirut International wneu uu wwwu ura f- attack on the , :iul i j iMnimant In lh a upptV nr. ' Pnvoived to , dent in Mahipar the delivery of the The Soviet government has I; ntrolling this ban; government' "was not timed for fLn'xoorSTS T - AJ wjth injured to hospitai ,ook,as long as reaffirmed its readiness for a se-- 1 Prohibition of flights by bom- -' the inauguration of new U.S. Pr- to Israel. - - , . first aid centra, should be estab- - I five hours, rious exchange of opinion with ;j bers with nuclear weapons on' esident Richard Nixon. "But the U.S. government "concerning j board beyond national frontiers , if the Nixon government takes in- ,? followed by a suggestion This was mutual restriction and subsequent..; and restricti6n of the zbn j of mo- - to account the points made in calling for intervention i from France reduction of strategic.-mean- s of vement of missile-carryin- g sub-- the statement it will to a certain :he are also' per- ,i by big four who delivery v of nuclear weapons, in- - marines; extent, contribute to improving Na- manent members of the United - ' eluding defensive- systems". Prohibition, of chemical and ba- -; the international situation. Security Council for bringing tions i . In its official statement on q!is-- v .cteriological weapons; . It was also said that the Soviet thj Arab-Isra-t- li; about a solution to armament the SovietrVovernment . Removal of. foreign base's" frorn Union is prepared to sit down, at '' - , mum prpblem, ; , r stressed that agreement on con- other peoples!-- , territories; ... a conference table with U.S. re- ; crete questions ..of. curbing the Establishment ,.? of nuclear-fre- e presentatives to discuss mutual " ( says the ' i , he himself saying to The i. French proposal, Editorial writers and columnists "What 'was arms race, including the problem zones in different regions of the i limitation and subsequent redu- in- - the i and editorial, is accordance with in American newspapers hailed the people of the United States of restricting the nuclear arms ra-- world; ction of offensive and defensive body's I seemed be that, as i ' spirit of the world Charter Richard Nixon's inaugural address other nations to ce, is quite .feasible1 though' not And the establishment'' of such ) nuclear weapons as soon as the 1 permanent members proposes to lead this 1 tht'makes the Tuesday as an inspiring call for president, he an easy thing.. .', an order that will ensure the Nixon, .government , declare?" its 'responsible to act a recognition I country toward calmer but no less of the Council Unity at home and of a The Soviet government fully use of the sea-bu- d and ocean floor j readiness to do so. is threatened. I facing the assortment of when. world peace the "world community's" desire for . realistic of shares the view that "it is neces- for peaceful purposes only." ;';,.' The Soviet delegation in' the The French proposal comes at a ''' ; issues with which everyone is fami- ; i peace. ','; sary now to make efforts toward In its statement the Soviet gov- - , disarmament committee, time, the editorial cofttinues, when ' The New ' York Time said : liar: Full employment, better hou- the earliest entry into force of eminent points to persistent att- .want, to start immediate talks : the year old mission of the Swedish "The search for peace- - was his I sing, excellence in education, protec- the Nonproliferation Treaty and empts, extension of the jiiveady on ending the manufacture of nu- statesman Giinhar Jarring not on- central 'theme. He put aside the ( ting our environment and improv- its faithful and consistent imple- - existing breeding grounds'' ' of ' clear weapons, reducing Its stoc- ly has failed toj make any pro- militancy ; Of past - 'expressions of. I ing the quality of life, seeking peace mentation." international tension.and the hea- kpiles and, the subsequent full pr- gress, bur is confronted .with a vir- antkrommunism or hawkish sup- - and; better, wider relationships ab- The statement recalls the So- ting up of the cold war atmosp- ohibition and liquidation of the- of-t-he tual deadlock. r, .. port Vietnam war.' Instead, road. viet government's memorandum here run counter to the .interests se weapons. ,. he voi:ed the yearnins of all ''citi- - Tass commentator Vasily Khar- which mentions a ban on the use of peace and, certainly, create The French government decis- is" jg ' In thfe mean time Israel pre-parii- zens of the world community" for kov writes: of nuclear weapons as a top pr- new obstacles to the ;jearch of ion to stop arms shipments .to Is- war, The world public with ' ' agreed-upo- for another and with peaces'..., received iority task. , n decisions Sir the sp- rael can only have a favourable the talks .about the bomb in the "His" address sso made clear his profound satisfaction the fact that The memorandum of the So- here of disarmament." , effect on a peaceful settlement of hand of the Israelis, and Israeli re- recogruiion that road out of war ali the procedural matters were viet government was "submitted The Soviet government' stress- - .the Middle East conflict. actions to the calls of United Na- is not i th? oao .(into , isolation . for successfully solved at, the first mee- for consideration to the 23rd ses- ed that "the Soviet Union and The Soviet, government voiced tions and the world public opinion this IgreBtest of Hndustrial nations. ting of the four, delegations in Paris sion of the UN General Assembly other socialist countries ...xiust its agreement with the French sitting January 18. can at large, the Arabs are not Technology, . if nothing else, has on This satisfaction and was positively assessed and see to the further strengthening government's proposal for hold- ' idle either. made all men everywhere, 'riders on be seen in. most comments, by fo- supported by many delegations. of the security of the countries ing within the Security Coun- together".. al- reign press. happened at the consi- the earth There is no "What World tension will ease of the socialist . community, and( cil's framework a meeting of pe They are well aware of the fact ternative to human brotherhood on conference on Saturday js hearten- derably if such proposals, set fo- - give assistance, and support to rmanent representatives oi tna that in the event their attempts for this planet. . ing, "Le Figaro" writes. It is clear rth in the memorandum, will be states fighting for their indepen-- . USSR, the United States, Brit- achieving a peaceful solution to "In offering his assessment .of that the deleeations have the wish carried out as "prohibition of un- - dence,. against the forces of agg- ain and France on the Middle the problem fail, they will have to America's domestic crises, u Presid- to start a serious discussion as soon dergroiind this with the use of ression and war. East. ' free all the cantureH lanrfc and se ent., Nixon affirmed, this country's Us possible. The New York Times national detection means for co- - This statement1 by the Soviet (TASS) cure the rishts of the Arab Pales- commitment to .racial equality. To ' writes that way out of their proce- tinians by the use of force. go forward at ah Is to go forward dural impasse was found .which The proposal been he, that for the pro- French has together', declared". ; means the road U.S., Australian ties favoured by the . United Nations A Washington Post editorial ductive discussion of the problem ' Secretary U Thant, the Soviet said : has been opened- - Onion and Britain. The American At the press conferences held im- Canberra looks S.E. Dolicv reaction is yet to be known. "He made firm (and welcome) mediately after the first meeting, at Asian reference to the nation's obligations the delegations of. the DRVN and The style' of , United States po By Stanley Hutchison Crook and trade minister MceWen ' But ihe editorial concludes unless to its black citizens as well as its the Sou.h Vietnam National Libe- licies in South East Asia will Inev- There have been frequent mo- still firm in Australian minds. the' four" powers intervene, a' new, whit;. 'The laws have cau?ht up ration Front confirmed their sincere itably be the focal point of Aust- ments of bluster when deputy pri- MceWen, always a blunt spokes- in larrer,- crisis is bound ?o occur and with our consciencs'i he said.... wish to 20 over as soon as possible ralian interest the performance me minister John MceWen has pro-lestc- d' man for Australian trade' interests, perhaps engulf the world. "His strongest theme was the to a serious, profound and of the Nixon administration, accor- heatedly about commercial clashed with the ambassador when Today's telah comments on the search for peace, from his own ear- discussion of the Vietnam problem. ding to authoratative sources in relations between the two coun- he complained of. the share of .the traffic accidents which occur, on the lier writings Nixon borrowed the The DRV delation pointed out Canberra, tries. Untied States meat market which Kabul-Jalalab- And an is- ad highway during line about the honour which will that i! hed submitted to the con. important secondary One immediate issue will be the Australia has been fiven for 1969. the winters. ome to the peacemakers; and ierence a number of specific pro. sue will also have strong overtones reaction to s'ue2estions which Pre- McWen dropped his guard when that ' of self-inter- trade' and econo- sident Nixon made pos- he blamed heavy In im- most elusive of all eoals is clearly , posals that can serve as a basis has on the increases Traffic on the road becomes hea- what preoccupies him these days in for further talks. Both delegations mic relations between the United sibility of turnin? the Asian and ports from Canada- - and Central States , Pacific vier with more people hurrying to hit official pursuits not just in suggested that the next plenary, and Australia. . council into some form of America for the United States vo- OnN Niwsarhar for warm weather and his miblic addresses". meeting be held1 already at the be- . both issues Australian poli- defence treaty.: ; luntary restraint policy. u : auuftiuije. The Baltimore Sun commented: ginning, of this week, - tical and public service thinking is Neither of the two major deve- Ambassador Crook, in ' a public studied with question marks. loped partners in ASPAC, ' Japan jtat;fflent, told him that this was '''HI. I" .""I I Hill iilllli .11. nil. I Illll.llllllll.il IlllllllllinilllllllllllllllllllUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Australians will be watching clo- and Australia, has shown any enthu- "not correct". sely the reaction pf the new Nixon siasm for suggestions that ASPAC ' Drfxsiftrd: per line, bold type A. 20 EdUor-in-chi- - S. Khalil, administration. . become a regional It was the first time an Austral- ,( f- should SEATO. Display: Column inch, Af. 100 . I assessments are But ian of government Tel: 24047 First ( that the within the framework of head MceWen (minimum men Ilnei per truerlon) Residence: 42365 relatively untried, men, in it will be SEATO and ASPAC Australia is was acting prime minister w.:h Jo- subscription rarci I influenced by cold hard facts rather clearly hopeful for close and Con- hn Gorton overseas had been so Yearly Af. 1000 I Sham Rahil, Editor than by old boyisra .and, sentiment tinuous consultation at all levels on flatly rebuked In his own capital. " Half Yearly Af. 000 . on one hand, or. bluster, and pro- matters affecting security and def- And Australians have noted that ' ' Af. 300 test on the other. , ence. . th; ambassador's intervention Quartely Tel: 23821 , 'came Sentiment betweea. Australia and Australia, which has taken a, on a policy statement which Mce- - the United hard-lin- e oh Yven FOREIGN Editorial 24, 58 States reached j,ts peak mainland China ex- was clearly addressing to the t. when the former cept in terms !rade will wat- incoming For other numbers first dial switch- prime minister, the of be administration. late Harold HoltTwho ,W,at drowned ching the reaction of the.. Nixon OTicials in Canberra will be - Yenrlv $40 board number 23043, 24028. 24026 while skin diving' 1966 administration to the communist watching closely to see whether -- Half Yearly $23 jnpner the Circulation and Advertising -e- choed thecortfxcerjs$.,fl''all the world. . Nixon administration's replyv con- Quarterly .... SIS BxVnrion 99 way wjth LBJ" phrase." N;jjpV,. new On trade, President Nixon takes tinues the same lone as ambassador - a ' prime minister . John, Qotfqiv - i office wMh sour Exchange between Crook's statement. . :iiiiiiiiwHir,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimmtnmiiiliiiiiH. :iiriiiHiitiiiiMiiiiii,iiiiii,iimnirfi iiirtii(iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiittiiiftiitttiimiMMiiiMiiiiiiiiiiM,iir inn nut has : not made similar public remarks. American , ambassador William (Reuter) PAGE 3 THE KABUL TIMES JANUARY 23, 19G9 ....',.... Italians go from operand rock " f number one of Aho-sing- fionv peace right 'irTier1 singing of nn ! ' twenty-fou- Last year r thousand twenty-fiv- e yeari ago. In. Italy, on unhappy i love. ) j new "sont!! circulated r in ' Italy, the other-hand- , ' Claudio Villa, However, .side frorn .thf spt un- - j: Those "tliut had' tlr greater sue- - who has been active,, musically certainties, there U. no diubt ',th- - j i cess were American, English and firuaolrlntf blnnA 1 CA( , i a m avnan. at the - Italian song is changing. french record dealers cumpiain tion. Other singers of , this type The "green ljne" will not prcv 'j 6Q of decrease of"about por cent like Pizzl, Achille, Togiiani, ail; , undoubtedly j ' .Nilla but tht'Pii wjll in the volume' of "Business. In Giorgio Consolinl, Gino Lniilla, be .tendency away from the mo- - , i i other words, after the boom of and. Carla Boni have been almost ons, boots, . betrayed lovers), and j - j I previous years, a crisis has deve- completely forgotten. ,t entreaties for forgiveness (hot i loped and many .record compa- - Even .Domenlco Modugno, who have characterised the' notional j phangeg i popular-a.I- j nie are making in their eight years ago wav production of, popular t .music fori ( ! ,. plans. ,. ! over the worlds as "Mister. Vol more than half a century; .ThiB i Undoubtedly thg reasons of this are," today, jnust be satisfied with evolution has been determinoc' hy I can be sought the excess comedy ;"" crisis in musical if he still wants the demands of the youthful pub , t , ongs It sive number of put .on the; to be applauded.. Despite the br. lie which, in its preference for I i Twentyrfoui thousand 1966 Fes- - market. ief victory he had at the the Beatles and (Rolling Stones, ( t t r t items is a quantity that no mark- - i tival of Sanre.mo (which gained Bhows for ' its taste simple thiris, et can absorb in jus one year. ': practically, nothing from the pq language .more, in keeping with i However, this inflation , is,,-i- int of view of record sales), as daily, life, and feelings expressed ' dis-- j turn, determined by tho special1 j a singer he passes from one ! with reserve. It is symptomatic ' circumstances in which pop mu,-- j appointment, to another. Tnoti; that even those .who 'continue i sic finds itself in Italy, me has also passed for. the com. along the line of the. melodic so- It is a situation that has no i poser-singer- s; at least in Jhesen-- i ng choose compositions in ' ' whii'h Candles do comethin? more than merely 1'ght up the room. counterpart in iany other, country. se that the public is no longer there, is not n overabundance They create atmosphere. In fact, i contrary to what occurs i interested in whether or not the ff tears and, sighs (for example, i in France,! England, the .United! song has been written- - by ;th Johnny. Dorelli, Orietta ,. Berti. ( States and other countries, there nger, himself pr by a professional Giglisla;. Cinqu2tti;.'Wilma G6-ic- h, ot night is practically no adult market fort composer, .. Therefore, ; Umberto T6ny(Dol Monaco,, etc). Beauties the songs. 1 ' , ; Bindi, who was very; popular at A "winking" lamp announcing carry around the farm buildings i Adults listen to the. songs very j the time o "Arrivvederci" and Therefore, the panorama of - during a 3torm. .. The . a breakdown is a sinister remin- thunder willingly' ind perhaps ; even be; "H Nostro Concerto", now seeks Italian song 'presented to the for- ' der to what extent we have be- - tiny saintly flame was believed come enthusiastic (as shown by,1 success in England; Gianni Mere-th- e eigners today is very dillernt come entangled in the electric to be a protection against lightn- - outstanding i themse- - i stream of voting ia and Gino Paoli devot from , what . might he erpuntcd. i ing. Ives-to- . e network. The flickering flame of ballots) over the battles at th . comDosinit; and Sergio En, The tenor-tyo- singer, no longer a candle, on the other hand, cre- This bit of information acrid-- j festival and comnetitions onrani - driao: Bruno Lauzi. and Giorgio exists,, and .'the "public does not bo- I i ates a circle of blissful repose and entally. gleaned from an old - zed by the radio and television, Gaber are popular mostly in' tne" want to have. anythihg; to do wi- - : ' ' gives a sense of power ove ine ok gave the artist the inspiration j H.owever they do not buy records. cabarets. ; ... th serenades arid ' of reviving the folk V is" object. That explains the artist's old art oft The market for popular music The "protest" song a -- trend overly,. sentimental songs based to arch- sculpture. , a chemist. No , : t popu-throu- yearning for the return candle (which now lives exclusively in which many experts of on old tunes. Certainly, . tor many dye the- - wax; Only ' aic, techniques (though he does would stick to the activity of the record lar music, have confidence; The it) is a surprising. p4horama."Pir-- 1 show to be- many tests did she finally ? i . ' not an aversion the after industry), remains ,that. of the international acclaim of anirts. oof of this was offered at the ; nefits of 20th-centu- ry technology). succeed in lalending the colours very young, who are extremely . like Pete .Seeger, Bob .JJyian, .jo- - last Festival of Italian Sorigs in i techniques in a dye formula; Her can- - ' But archaic are secret fickle. an Baez, ''Barry, Mc.Guire, and Zurich where the Swiss . public. grown size Good : '. themselves modernised, subordi- die shop has in ' Therefore those who have to i others encourages them to. hgpe faced by a production of styles it nated to the rule of monotonous craftsmanship is the foundation t plan production are. forced to,' that in, Jtaly, .also it ispossible ,16 was not used to, was bewildered series ahcKmechanically produced of truly unique art.' work by and error and' to promote type ;of song. How- trial this and in the end gave preference Like-- poostinchas Afghan ' ; Jew- copies and replicas. Instead of the The artist uses folk, historical pn , of singers ilike to "the cquirt quantity '.rather trjain ever, the success only compositiPn in "the elry. Js finding many fans among inven-- topics to the sue--ces- s.; imaginative and physical " and biblical create, for Baez has; been, "pop1 . quality in their search Dylan; and j '"traditional" style. It was .''Italia, western girls. The silver Jewelry, of we : carved miniature colmns, castle cou-- . jiveness the . individual, From this comes 'inflation .; ulas" only .in i.AngloSaxon i Italia!" whicWipraisd 4Wano- - referred be-., to as koochl jewelry, is have a mold in the pattern of i towers, pagan Slavic doties with and thoMsands records' gd . un'-- other--: places, it has , of ntries.Un ramie beauties of our country and in great demand these days and a "Gothic' candle; presto, and j foutfaces, women from the Bes- -' sold. :"' '' en limited to a small circle ,.Qt"; expressed, in a certain sense, the; Most the-- , silversmiths are working overti- right is created in kid mountain region. of! " 'the nostalgia.-ofL- j the mood And' yet Italian song doos haVe fans and experts because the emigrant.. me. ' exotic . ". ' aparltmeht. Unless .an artist candles are incised with us v mois. . many, oi wnom are themes of - these "beatnik" sins-- puts his to i patterns, others are Dnly painted. X .of hand it. also knov.n abroad.' But ifc Would , ersrej aa.'.expression another . Habura-Dyme- k, grc-'- . does hold to- - one - . Krystyna The artist not j be difficult to point out with' cer- - ; 'Cirtturejianother society, jmdan- ; 'Academy of ui i - .u-- duate of the Cracow esiaDUsneo. cataiugue ptueina. tainiy. a type 'Oi sonng that most j otner- iramnon- , .anfarmers best in Asia (a' looking for new.-niot-- j "Fine 'Arts restless and quest- She keeps pleases, the young... Fpr example, t I.?Thus, ithei .Italian .'.'protest'.' fihbr br.nms'A wh-Ri- ta ing spirit, interested in painting, ifs and new' forms. I Giaflnf'Morandi' 'is asj-- ' uW :take;.a.difTereh"t. direction li-- sculpture and. ceramics) one day. Miss. Habura-Dyme- k would f Pavone and yet he has a !:atv.haa bben called 'the. "green li- ' typ-ire- came across an old "othnogvaphic ke to abandon the convuntional" v for.,love, .' But very different style and repertoA - genfetal.call growing population may change:' ihei-fo- 'ii''- . work in which she found a des- perpendiculir and At the" 1966- Festival 'of Sanl therhoodand good deeds. rAdua-- of mof candles tovtesemblemeo'- - j a cription a custom observed in Remo Caterina Caselli "became ai o.: CeletanPo t.h8 Giganti, and region - of ' for instance- - : . cni the 'Beskid mountain allions, r hit and earned the title "queen of t few other groups jhaye started ; - Habura-Dymek- create problem ; '"Polandy of eariy Christ-fa- n i 's candles ... are;' - road-j- . ,of Jhjs: 1978 a' blend .the shake,"- yet, her success is. no'i this but the..results ) ' 'and pagan superstition.' p both decorative t and tutUitarian. greater nDeration-ar- e uncertain.: As ,:" a; ;: than: that nf Min0 ,W - our. Afghan farmers hour-lon- rfeople of the region made'' We accept the first, but hand , Italy there is, among the The g The. sings, modern-- ballads',: qr, of; Bob-- 'i matter of fact, in discussion rang-e- d puLa-matc- how-to.tal- - h k fFisls evident Afghanistan's' wax candles in the shape of ea- trembles when we to; by. Solo i no poet who1, knows. in over' the of agri- who 4s somewhat the Ita.-- food entire field beauty. e situation, four exrjcrt ints which they would light and this melting lian, version of ..Elvis Presley. .7 to way Bob,, .Dylan pani culture,. . food production, and lties igreed a talk on "FocAa' are, no, .bingfis ..v at the problems., Equipe,r 84. the Rakes th Npw does;, and there - ' confronting Afgha- 'T.v-- enough . copulation; and Human Re?eur, . uaaa,-:tne-.- ' uis-ui- k, - i th .stronc; personalities' nistan ;.as population .feicreass-s;- . mediaeval modern rj and other wi . bands that' !, (sine . without becoming nqicu-,- ww American uenire: The need for indigenous agri- mortar-boar-d and gown Song at six o'clock in the morning.; play ."beat" rnu; tn , . - A don in ' ' r nave . r - Tuesday. . had extraordinary imis. ot" tne -- Denenis-oi uuivcifmi J cultural research; improved edu-- , comes out- of a , supermarket, his Students and tpwnfpjk gather below.' popularity, but j ' pointed to good prospects i cation 'in cansier-bagitf- - s ii is xony song nutrition health and of groceries. . i. lo hear the- singing. Andvihch joyous j Mine with a exports like a' riot: Profitable of Afghan home economics,' technical who-da- is pealing of he xbJieee;-.belsJ- V;j "Ridera'! that has tradi- - educa- man spent on the TAKING food products 'to neighbouring eo- - tion large- 'vies-V'wit- v-- "a " in agriculture for yo- lin-o- f Britain's University .. Cbllele f ixcivuui, ..T,m. rural one of ; - niiu tner ' .- y ( YV. Entries-- oVerthe:near term- ' uths, , song along- and the establishment .. st-car hurries past the Msrtoh in its claim ifo' J?3 the oldest traditional linss is ! of factories1 ' But; they ore-- ' the American FRICTION 'cautioned, if the . production and marketing coope- Saxon- tower of in the city, . Alfred"''ihe: Grat'iwas V "Strangers in the sent rate of population growth in an- ' i,s endow- .Night," wmch has made the best ratives, agricultural bank, in- - Gate to catch his bus. founder, jts', Afghanistan'-i- s !" maintained until proved agricultural ' i seller list in Italy se- - : where the, med- ment records date back to 1249t' its. (as it. has in ' extension This is. Oxford, OUT OF WATER the end f the current Century, rvices, price supports the- wh- incorporation dates only' romnl280, the rest of the world) precisely , for agricul iaeval mixes with modern; t ; the nation s DODuIation will havp ' ' in .the year. seenied tural commodities, and in- - - in, that, set aside r other ere on; market days farmers from while Merton's was i2&4y Scientists' investigating sdoubled real-'dangn- are the and a will rcentives t ; Vi for the success of the shake and firmer's all Outlying-- districts: dis:uss: th0: ;, finer y Brosd Sireet "The :Bi3dJ'tris possible uses iof "lubricated' , wa-- r other very exist of malhutrition .';and even received attention , and,:,, along dominated BallibL College A and rhythmical and even , points, of 'dairy cattle, by " ter. It has been discovered that i some starvation, ' wild dances. by - ;. thtystrest known..' asThsi?; High'V ,Trinity,- with water. can, be ''lubricated' by radi- i ' Ffllarts to increase yields ' of - is ( The partidipants v. - ," It .rather difficult to draw suggested "that undergraduates hatter the . 'for- th'Bir.LimeWalk.iv: ding quantities var- - food-situatio- minute of a fnods, improve the marketing of the n ' conclusions from a general pane-- . in Afghanistan of,! university ,jifet'; y StyAlchrte'srStW?; hdss Christ gum, food-stuf- f, ; v iety of polyethylene oxide and enhance", appears be'--g- ood rama, and many depend on I'car-- , the nutt to for net haps t his Js Oxford- - where . hei popu. Church; where Ci LI. Dpdgspn! was ' ' or other substances.-Th- result is ritional content of diets .were another - ' bon copies," say decade; but the present I- as .. in the lation of 106.000 Js- swelled an meS-'mi:- 'iL lney,. that the friction. between flow- therefore - , term' - j i seen as necessary. rate of agricultural-an- de- V- - m mneT woras tney uro-- 1 i , rural Btories''ha Vaue" water-an- V mi time' yv'notiier;000i'V'', ' ing solid, bodies is.re-- - tbldoxD.Mdtirs duce songs very ine panel memDers spoKe- on velopment may not be" sufficient-t- - similar to those - VThis!Pxord, .Vheret the:, River;; sma1J 'daughter ilce.f.hav.'publlsh- duced- by up to 40 per cent. vanous aspects or aewcuiture in' meet the rjooulati that the public has liked i in the Thames is known aV the lsis and tu as "Alk s AdventifWsiNn i.Nv'o'i ' ' rossiDie; customers ror "lUDnca-- 1 Aignanistan. food DroduCt on: ees of dnj , successful ., the the ,river, ;pr. 8djai't.fder;ad?-n-.iMAllc.',-THrtwpfri'h- ted", water ' include s', i distibu$ion and marketin;?rec,u-- , The need ' However,' therefore" is to cent- Bo ' Hifl, Glass'V uslng:,the! j- - these' attempts have.' could - use ar's who pump water more smo- iretnenta for "improved nutrition the next-fe- years " positive results only one time out in a city's dreaming spires ... ; onym Lewis shop ,d :s-- y. othly) through .hoses wriv tha: camll.!!lne ,ten, .their ..and. in itfeuface 6f the" rapidly row concerted, effort 'to orepare High".':,:.ct;ibed.)'sQ. vividly (Through , of and the singers themsel- - so for the In'iOxford parlance, "The in. "Alice produce higher or stronger je ing,population in: , - , rural areas, and problems which' he' pointed ' vts are bewildered in' their cho- r out refers 'to sweep of the- the' Looking Glass" can still1', be ts. Conceivably,-wate- supply au-- ) the implications of increasing ice of repertoire. In addition, . ,.can already be foreseen in Afena High seen in Street, it r ati Street with the colleges of St. Aldate's at No. ....,,, .....v.. ..a.w . ffyi Hum im-a- as as has been, . . . . 1 , nuBiatiuii ..msian well cIsewhTP - 83- 1 -- noted that the artistic taw Inn.. tint . . n .J in All i Souls, and Magdalen,- Queen's . tA areas. a coritin-hop- Asia, Africa and Latin ....'. life 'of popular song is e ! America and Upiversity fronting it. An important day in scholastic also be interested in "lubricat-- t eq-- , that these songs will be - , All Souls is unique Ox- Oxford falls "on Wed- ion"- amone in June the ually ' successful. : ford colleges for it has no under- nesday in the ninth week from the ' "Lubricated" water might ', also,-allo- , .In France',' the" Gilbert Becauds graduates, only Fellows. bsginning of the Trinity full the use of smaller and he-- i term". and Yyes' kontands (not to mbn- - On May Day the choir of the This is Encaenia Day, when Oxford nee cheaper pipes for convej'ingi tion 'the venerable Maurice Che- -' Magdalen College climbs gives honourary degrees to distin- water in central heatings systemsr valier) continue to have the same-succes- the 44 tower to sine the guished persons, - ) and in other installations in wh metres they had twent years ago. Latin hymn known as the - May (Continued "n pnBe 4) ich piped water is required. ., ; Tn America, Frank Sinatra isl In 'central heating systems, ciiy culation speeds are limited; ,;at present by noise generated by; friction between the water : and i the pipe walls. "Lubricated" wa- - ter, could flow more quickly,mo--( r smoothly and more quietly,, ' The navies of several nations! are looking into the, possibilities' of "lubricating" torpedoes. Eachj such weapon would carry a small tank of lubricants in the nose, and release it slowly to smooth the - torpedo's way (through . the ' water. ' - Since much of the power of MOUSE' yt torpedoes is at present expended in over-comin- g. water .friction, considerable ;.' increase in range " , might result from "lubrnction. "Lubricated" ships,,- - although te- AD. . chnically x i conceivable, neerh likely ' "a-- "'")) to be uneconomic: a long voyage would entail the discharge of en- ormous quantities of texpensive ... That means we're going to .advertise' ourselves. . lubriant. Certain algae (aoyatic- - plants) Actually, everybody does tt. A exude substandbs which could be used as lubricants. By - plan- - ' , (Evert you, sometimes?) ting algae' in rivers'-an- d ,ranal, one might. b4 able. to. create ' : But; waterways,- - reducing we're going to be a bit different and admit that ' ': 'the cost of towing charges- - Nobody hasiyet diswvcvd wh- we need some helo. Yours. at 'gives various additives , ' th3 1 to water, .thpir "lubricating:, qua- - We're looking for new subscribers. Hties; One-- - possible exdantatlonC (, is that the additive build up a Could you speoial layer of liquid which Ji recommend us to a friend? Scientists West Germany Jias been .compared to the smooth- - in have developed hands which are operated Ay signals front the brain. ness of finely sandpapered wood Hell geia .10 discotot if you do. grain next to olid surfaces. JANUARY 23, .1969. PAGE 4 THE KABUL TIMES it 9 Airlines si World News In Brief Dcknco plans Britain' says new U.S. civil rights NUREMBERG, Jan. 23, (DPA). day called fox. South Vletnamcso FRIDAY Th mayor of Nuremberg" has liberty to be ) safeguarded at the in JFK immigration bill group warns of asked South Korean President Park Paria peace, talks, i action ' had shied away Arlana Afghan Airlines: Chung He to release composer South Vietnam I sang Yun to enable the South Kor- from pasf negotiations becuuw it DEPRTURE FUGHT TIME com army ean to take part in the world feared its liberty would be 'plotters' trial clarifies policy racism in Kabul-Peshaw- premiere of his opera "Dreams" in promised, the paper said. FG-50- 23, (Reuter), 0 0900 city "It is reasonable to think that NEW YORK, Jan, ' .hli southern West German Bri- organi- Kabul-Tehra- safegu- (Re-uter- ). LONDON, Jan. 23, (DPA). A multi-raci- al civil rights next February' 2. this same liberty will be NEW ORLEANS,' Jan. 23, FG-20- Immigration appeal bill, cur- Nixon Beirut 3 1030 arded at the Paris round table Defence Lawyers for Cay tain's sation has urged President g Kabul-Amrlta- second reading at the "rapidly deteriora-tin- (Reu-ter- years to rently in its to investigate a VANCOUVER, Jan. 23, ). because, if it Is not, five of Shaw, charged with conspiring FG-30- 0 1430 ' ev- House of Commons, will remove climate in the armed USSR national ice hockey bloodshed and devastation of assassinate President John Ken- racial of the present suspicion and call a special White ARRIVALS team completely outclassed the ery kind will have been mean- nedy, issued subpoenas for a wo- much services" and Peshawar-Kabu- ' misconceptions on appeal , cases, on growing en- l squad ni- ingless the newspaper said. man who knew Lee Harvey Osw- House conference Canadian national last Callaghan black FG-50- 1 1149 chi- Home Secretary James mity beiween police and the ght, scoring a 0 victory before ald and tor a girl friend of a Herat-Kabu- l told the house yesterday. community. 15 608 fans for the second straight KOTA KINABALU. Jan. 23, ef prosecution witness. FG-28- 1 (Reuter).-Saba- Pl-ain-e, appelant was refused en- report, on welfare and racial 1330 win of their tour. h's Chief Minis- One was sent to Mrs. Ruth If the In a Irv- try to Britain, he would still be tensions, requested by Nixon, the Led by Valery Kharalnov with ter Tun Mustapha aid Wednes- who owtos the house in until his appeal had League, a' moderate SATURDAY three goals, the Russians domina- day he was satisfied with defen- ing, Texas, where Marina Oswald able 4o remain National Urban by federal Kennedy's assasi-natio- n been heard, he added. civil rights organisation, also said I with superior passing ce measures taken the Btayed before ted play system was playmaking. government to protect his state. in Dallas on November 22, Qulntin Hogg, the conservative the present welfare Arina Afghan Airlines: and he In- 3-- shadow home secretary, said was punitive, ineffective, The Russians jumped to a 0 Speaking to reporters on his 1963. "obsolete, end of first per- return from Kuala Lumpur, Tun The other was- - aent to Sandra rather appalled "at the quagmire efficient and bankrupt." DEPRTURES lead at the the league's 4-- fe- Raym- into which he have allowed our Whitney Young, the iod, extended it to 0 at the end Mustapha said the state and Moffet, a friend of Perry 4 FLIGHT TIME confer-enc- e banged in governments were taking Russo, who was the star pro- Immigration law t0 fall". director, told a press Kabul-Kandaha- of the second and then deral ond un- care of everything including de- secution witness at Shaw's preli-196- 7. Part of the difficult for almost here that the report entitled Beirut-Frankfurt three more' as Canada wilted ' separate to der pressure. A Russian goal in fence and development. ten years had been that a "a call to action", was delivered London FG-70- 1 1630 becau- and more complicated law applied the White House on Monday the Kabul-Kandah- the third was disallowed Russo, who is likely to be a ma- (DPA).-UA- Commonwealth immigrants, wh- office. too many men were on the CAIRO, Jan. 23, tr- to day N'xon took FG-10- 4 1000 se jor prosecution witness at the President Gamal Abdel Nasser ich gave them a qualified right of customarily ARRIVALS ice.' ial, testified at Shaw's prelimina- Although the league Wednesday received Singapore entry but an unqualified , right to to new Beirut-Tehran- - ry hearing that he was present makes recommendations (Reu-ter- ). Yew remain, Hogg said. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 23, Prime Minister Lee Kuan Shaw, Os- this report was expand- Kabul FG-20- 4 0845 in New Orleans when presidents, Six boy campers, marocn-e- d for talks on the world situation W. made the specific request of Nixon. Kandahar-Kabu- l -, wald, and David Ferrie ed at by floods, and four men try- with the Middle East in the fore- ' investigations FG-10- 5 1500 plans to kill Kennedy. The report said that ing to rescue them were feared ground. airli- Department of Defence in- Amrllsar-Lahore-- i Ferrie, a former eastern of the Wednesdiy when Lee informed Nasser on the Lebanese PM infiltration of FG-30- drowned here nes pilot, was found dead in his dicate that deliberate Kabul 1 1430 swept of London Common- a torrent of rising water results the flat on February 22, 1967. a few the armed services by black and ' prime ministers confer- them from a gtant bulldozer wealth days after New Orleans District white extremists and the widesp-rea- d PIA: An- last week. carrying them to high ground. ence which, ended Attorney Jim Garrison's investi- fills vacated distribution of extremist lite- ARRIVAL other boy was snatcned to safe- gation of the assassination was rature were factors in the develop- Kabul NEW DELHI, Jan. 23, (DPA). Peshawar ty by a helicopter. made public by a local newspa- ment of a potentially explosive sit- PK-60- 6 1050 Coretta King, widow of mu- Mrs. per. uation. DEPARTURE (Re-uter- ). A.S. civil .rights leader VATICAN CITY, Jan. 23, rdered Garrison described his death a minister posts "Accordingly, while stressing the Peshawar Osse-rvato- re Luther King, was receiv- Kabul, The Vatican weekly Martin suicide but a New Orleans coro- necessity for strict impartiality in PK-60- Hu-sa- in BEIRUT, Jan. 23, (Reuter). Le- . 7 1150 la Domenica ' yester- - ed by Indian President Zakir justice, de ner said Ferrie died of natural Ka-ra- the imposition of military for lunch yesterday. On banese Prime Minister Rashid The trial continued with we consider it essential that mili- -j Mrs. King is due to acc- causes. early yesterday appointed Friday prosecution and defence lawyers tary authorities take all necessary ept Nehru Prize, awarded to four new cabinet ihinisters to fill the continuing to question prospecti- steps to reduce tensions and im- Pharmacies Oxford her husband for his work on be- the posts vacated by a series of mi- jurors. . resignations. prove the racial climate in the ar- (Continued from page 3) half of international understand- ve' nisterial OPEN TONIGHT: The new ministers, all members med services" it recommended. But not all the important days in ing.. ; ': ; Oxford's year are connected with of the 99 member chamber of de- (Bakhtar).-Pr- Farhad Jade Maiwand university life. For 800 years, al- MOSCOW, Jan. 23, (Tass).-T- he puties, Lebanon's parliament are: KABUL, Jan. 22, of. ( Heir to sultan dean of Jawad Kute Sangl most without a break, St. Giles ministry of communications Khalil Khouri, labour and social Sayed Sharif Sharaf, Tareque Moh. ' affairs, Youssif Salem, foreign af- the College of Economics, Kabul Jan Khan Watt xFaif has been held in St, j.iles and of the USSR has issued a special Asrl Hablb Jade Maiwand: Magdalen Streets at the beginning block of postage' stamps devoted fairs, Habib Kayrouz, tourism, Mo- University left Kabul for the Fede- Roshan Jade Maiwand of September. Stalls, booths, side- to the achievements of Soviet sci- of Sabqh said hammad Safieddin, planning. ral Republic of Germany yesterday 'Afghanan Cologne, Tawakul Dah shows.... .here is all the fun of the entists, engineers and ' workers at the invitation of Bonn, Nasim Section Pule' Kheshtl English fair. It take who created spaceships Soyuz-- 4 In a minor cabinet reshuffle, the and Buchum universities. 1 1- traditional Ansarl , ',' , com- prime bache- During his visit FRG, Share Nau place in the Manor of Walton, out-si- and Soyuz-5- the successful ; minister, a to the Prof. to be alive lec- Nazer Share Nau, the old city wall of Oxford. pletion of the flight of the Sov- lor lawyer, relinquished the foreign Sharaf will deliver a series of Watan Jade Nader Pashtoon In former times beggars and crip- iet cosmonauts, Vladimir Shata-lo- v, affairs portfolio for finance, and tures and have talks on problems Buali Darwaze Lahcri . s Alexeielise-ye- v Rene Moawad, who related to affiliation programmes ples were welcome within a Boris Volynov, KUALA LUMPUR, Jan. .23, was minister Qesmat Bibi Mahro nt of social affairs and labour, became between his college the above city. So fairs devoted to their pat- -' and Yevgeni Khrunov. (Reuter). The Malaysian foreign and Zaman Labe Daria minister of public works. , universities. ron Saint Giles, were sited outside office spokesman said yesterday Sakhl Jamal Mina '(DPA).-Jap- an city walls." . ' ROME, Jan. 23, there was nothing new in a maga- Karte Char and Share Nau Wednesday available Fairs and Fellows, colleges and on made zine story this week of a General Medical Depot branch Food Pro- customs Oxford has them all, But $ 30,000 to the World resident of Sabah who claimed Telephones: 41252 and 20079. UN Food - and libraries and museums play an im- gramme of the to be the sole surviving heir to the Agriculture Organisation (PAO) Friday Night: portant part too. Sultan of Sulu and who - might VOLKSWAGON displaced pers- The Bodleian Library, founflCJ&n towards relief of therefore have a possible claim to i; y, well ons in the Middle East. ..,. Pharmacies Open the now contains the state. 'i ; ';y. ovir 1,000,000 bookfe.- - The - New Quraish Wart ''."T, Bodleian, opened in 1946, is con- The spokesman said Malaysian Silo ' Parwan Karte Parwan nected to the parent, library by U.S. satellite Prime Minister Tunku. Abdul Rah- passages ,' All Ahmad Sara Ghazni f , beneath Broad. Street. ..,Y man himself had referred to the Shahabzadah sec. Sarai Ahmad- - In 1942 a group of Oxford citizens keep man's existence in parliament . last shahi got together to help alleviate suffe- to theck October, describing him as "the Soma Dah Bori ring in Greece. They formed the man who is supposed to be the Farabi sec Jade Nader Pashtoon Oxford Committee for Famine Re- on solar' rays sole legitimate heir" to the sultan, Arlana Maiwand lief (OXFAM). In the present year and livine under the "kind and ge- Jade V Sanayee Share Nau Its target is 3,00,000. to deal with CAPE KENNEDY, Jan. 23, nerous protection" of Sabah's chief ! Baria Jade Andarabi hunger and want wherever they (AFP). The United States yes- minister, Tun Datu Mustapha. Pashtoonistan Bazaare Shah occur, and finance projects of last- terday put into orbit an "orbital In any case, the spokesman said, De- ing valus developing countries observatory", designed to " Karte Char General Medical to solar the people of Sabah had already z , pot Telephone 41252. throughout the world. warn astronauts exploring the declared their desire to be in Ma- moon's surface of danger from so- laysia and as such Malaysia did iff lar radioactiyity. not recognise any claim by the sul- The observatory satellite, code tanate to the state. named OSO-- 5, was launched here Important -- AT THE, .,,...... ,v by a Thor Delta rocket. It wei- The spokesman was commenting ghed 289 kilos and looked like a on a cover story in the British-owne- d Telephones large beetle with three curved Far East Economic Review feet. It was intended to orbit the on an interview with Datu Muha-ma- d earth at 560 km altitude. Julaspi Sultan Kiram, whom ipl IliPilii Police Station , 20 Designed for at six mon- Traffic Department 41700 least. it described as "Malaysia's trump work, the satellite was inten- Phi- Airport 2128320873 th's card" in the dispute with the ded to protect the Apollo astro- 13 ARIANA CINEMA: lippines over the rich territory. Volkswagon has proved itself all over world. Fire Department might land on the mo- the At 2, and 9 p.m. American nauts who The article said Kuala Lumpur - Telephone repair 29 ; 47 who wo- film and England colour . cinema- on lated this year and had been keeping a tight lip on the Main post office 24981 from Agent'''for Afghanistan: Kabul Automobile' scope film dubbed in Farsi IN- uld be exposed to radiation man's existence, possibly to produce the- NOCENTS with Deborah Kerr solar eruptions while outside him if there ever appeared any and Peter Wyhgarde. Sunday at ir capsule. substance to Manila's claim to Sa- Service Company, P.O. Box 82 Tel. 2090 of 7 p.m. in Englsh. : Dr. Marold Glaser a director bah. the OSO programme, said: "The Weather PRK CINEMA: danger is from high energy par- or mo- northea- At 2, 4J, 7 and 9 p.m. Ameri- ticles which take an hour Skies in the northern, moon." This was stern central regions will be can colour cinemascope film dub- re to reach the and the OSO-- 5 parts of bed in Farsi THE BIG GAMBLE long enough to enable when lose. cloudy and other the a warning to 3e a winner even you country clear. Yesterday the wa- with Stephen Boyd. Saturday at satellite to send ' astronauts, he said. rmest was Farah with a 7 p.m. in English, the area The satellite's apparatus would high of 21 C, 70 F. The coldest - carry out eight test programmes areas was Shahrak with a low of ZAINAB CINEMA; 4, 8 p.m. American prepared by American universit- -- 17 C, 14 F. Yesterday Lai had At 2, 6 and dubbed ies and those of Paris, London 2 mm rain 52 cm snow, Fariab 7 colour cinemascope film ' and Leicester. mm 2 cm, Shahrak 6 mm 95 cm in Farsi THE TEXAN. Kunduz 7 mm, Mazare Sharif 7 mm 2 cm, Herat 4 mm and North Sailing 3 mm, 125 cm. To-day- 's temperature in Kabul at World famous ARROW shirts .11:30 am was -- 1 C, 30 F with clear skies. Yesterday Kabul had 2 mm rain and 4 cm snow. Wind all styles and sizes speed was recorded in Kabul at 6 to 10 knots. Yesterday's temperatures: now available at Kabul 0 C --7 C 32 F 19 F We have been selling lottery tickets for vears at Af. 10 a piece because unlike ot- Herat 17 C 7 C Stores 61 F 41 F Hamidi Mazare Sharif 10 C 10 C her lotteries no one loses in Afghan Red Crescent Society raffles. Yon may be 50 F 15 F Ghazni 3 C -- 7 C lucky and dn one of our brand new cars, an expense paid trip to Beirut or 37 F 19 F DRY CLEANING MAESTRELLI Kunduz 10 C 3 C Tehran, or utsh prizes up to Af. 159,0I.Even If you aren't lucky you still win. 50 F 37 F we clean woollen, cotton, leather, 15 C 4 C Jalalabad to do a better job wherever tnd 59 F 39 F pooshnciias and suede garments, etc. Tour money adds up to the society's ability Laghmajn 13 C c job by removing 55 F 30 F we do a fntst class whenever its help is needed. Lai 1 C .10 C stains on garments, and steam pressing 34 F 14 F garments North Salang .3 C -- 12 C all very Society Lottery 20 F 10 F our price is also reasonable, Buy Afghan Red Crescent Bam Ian 3 C -- S F we can make quick deliveries within 37 F 23 F two Falab 1C C hours. Ticket. They help. CI F 43 F address: deiimazang square, share