Urges Cooling Off Night in Brief, but -Pointed Ceremonies
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WEATHER WATER Fair +Charlie High Tide I Lw Tide 4:41 am V 4 ~ :~m11 16 a3t 5:41 pm 1:2p U. S. NAVAL BASE, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA Phone 9-5247 Thursday Date June 1, 1967 Radio (1340) TV (Ch. 8) 28 Graduate From Sampson US Resolution The 28 members of the Senior Class of William T. Sampson High School graduated last Urges Cooling Off night in brief, but -pointed ceremonies. UNITED NATIONS (AP)(By Milton Besser) AMBASSADOR ARTHURJ. Goldberg asked the Security Council yesterday to urge the Arabs and the Israelis to cool off pending a diplomatic solution of the Middle East crisis. But the Council adjourned at 4:55 p.m. EST until 9:30 a.m. Friday without acting on the resolution, which called for restraint by Israel and the HELP SUPP GIVE Arab states. By submitting the resolution the United States seized the initiative on the fourth day of the Council debate on the tense situation. The U.S. move can stand the risk of a Soviet veto, but, in a brief interview, Soviet Am- NAVY NAVY NAVY bassador Nikolai T. Fedorenko did not say he would vote RELIEF RELIEF RELIEF against it. He chided Goldberg for puttingthe resolution for- ward. The opening day ceremonies "is it not ironical that the The graduation exercises tDok for the Junior Baseball League official representative of the less than an hour but remarks that were originally scheduled United Statesof America strives by Rear Admiral E.R. Crawford, for Saturday, June 3rd, have to present Washington in the COMNAVBASE, and Captain H.W. been postponed until Saturday, role of an advocate of peace, Gehman, CO, NAVSTA, left the June 10th. a defender of justice and graduates, family and friends On June 3rd, plan to go to legality, and even on a world with some very important items THE GAME--Naval Station vs the scale?" Fedorenko asked. to ponder. All-Stars in Cooper Stadium at Egyptian Ambassador Mohamed Valedictorian Keith Bunchre- 6:30. Awad EI-Kony (Cont'd on page2) numerated many of the high points in the life and times ofthe Class of '67 and shortly thereafter accepted the $175 "Terris" conferencee Eds Valedictorian Scholarship from Mr. C. Piersall, the Chairman GENEVA (AP) AN UNOFFICIAL,.INTERNATIONAL .conference called of the Board of Regents. Pacem In Terris (Peace on Earth) ended yesterday with the con- Linda Eicholtz received the clusion that the war in Vietnam is "at best a mistake." $50 Scholarship that goes with Neutralization of Southeast Asia, an end to the Cold War and being the Salutatorian, the admission of Red China to the United Nations were also Then, a girl,' known to the among the points summarizing the four-da.y session. They were Board of Regents only as "stu- listed in the closing statement made by Robert M. Hutchins, dent 02" up until yesterday, President of the Center For The Study Of Democratic Institu- was presented with a $1,000 tions of Santa Barbara, California. Scholarship from the Community In summing up the results, Hutchins noted that it had been Fund. Carol Anderson received the scene of what he called "the first public discussion of the news of the award from Mr. representatives of the two Germanys since the war." Piersall that she had been He was referring to the appearance on the same panel Tuesday awarded the top scholarship of Wilhelm Wolfgang Schuetz, from a West German organization with a smile.(Cont'd on pg 3) called Indivisible Germany, and Gerald Gotting,(Cont'd page 2) PAGE 2 THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1967 GITMO GAZETTE GENEVA (Cont'd from page 1) a deputy to Walter Ulbricht, Head of the East German gov- ernment. 0 00 Sotmfo 10axttte Hutchins listed 11 points on which he said participants from 70 countries were agreed. ComNavBase RADM E.R. Lrawford There were 365 participants ranging from the Public Affairs Officer LT Paul E. Lamey Foreing Minister of Thailand to Robert Vaughn, Editorial Advisor JOC William A. Liedtke star of the American television program " The Editor JO1 Sam Herzog Man From U.N.C.L.E." News Editor CT2 Vic Griffeth The points: Feature Editor SN Ed Sullivan 1. The United Nations must be strengthened. Sports Editor J03 Sig Couch 2. Its membership must become universal, The GITMO GAZETTE is published according to the rules that is, Red China must be included. and regulations for ship and station newspapers as out- 3. The Vietnam War is at best a mistake. lined in NAVEXOS P-35 and under the direction of the 4. Southeast Asia must be neutralized. Naval Base Public Affairs Officer. It is printed four 5. The Cold War must be ended. days a week at government expense on government equip- 6. Racial discrimination is intolerable. ment. The opinions or statements in news itmes that 7. Aid to poor countries should be given on appear herein are not to be construed as official or as a multilateral basis. reflecting the views of ComNavBase or the Navy Dept. 8. The poor countries are suffering from Ads and notices will be accented between the hours of intolerable terms of trade--the low prices they 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. MON thru FRI only and will.be publish- get for their exports as opposed to the high ed in either Monday's, Tuesday's or Thursday's GAZETTE. prices they must pay for imports. No ads or notices--except command notices--will be pub- 9. No military solutions are adequate for lished more than once a week nor will they be run in the problems of today. 0 Friday's paper. 10. No national solutions are adequate to the problems of today. UNITED NATIONS (Cont'd from page 1) submit- 11. Coexistence between Communists and non- ted a resolution proposing reestablishment of Communists is necessary but is not enough. the Israeli-Egyptian mixed armistice commis- sion, and also holding Israel responsible "for ROME (AP) REPRESENTATIVES OF FIVE 6f the the aggravation of the situation in the Middle Common Market nations think their summit meet- East." India, a member of the Council, said ing in Rome gave a significant push forward to it would sponsor the resolution, thus opening Britain's application to join the European the way for an eventual vote. Economic Community. The French disagree. French Ambassador Roger Seydoux proposed the The two-day meeting of government chiefs adjournment until Friday to give sufficient from France, Italy, West Germany, Belgium, the time for consulations. Netherlands and Luxembourg ended last Tuesday Ambassador Hans R. Tabor of Denmark will be night with an agreement for their foreign min- in the chair by that time as the June Presi- isters to discuss applications from Britain, dent of the Council, succeeding Ambassador Liu Ireland and Denmark at a meeting in Brussels Chien of Nationalist Cnina. The Soviet Union's June 5-6. opposition to Liu has been a bar to its par- Representatives of President Charles de ticipation thus far in private negotiations. Gaulle's French government,which opposes Brit- ian's admission, took the view that this was STUTTGART, GERMANY'(AP) A BRITISH TOURIST little more than a formality. bus overturned off the rain-slicked Stuttgart- Officials from the other five governments-- Munich Autobahn last night killing eleven per- all of which want the British in--appeared sons and injuring 30 others, some seriously, united in:the view that the agreement to put police reported. the British question formally on a Common Mar- The bus, carrying mostly women and children, ket agenda was a big move in the right direc- was headed toward Munich when it left the su- tion. per highway aboutl5 kilometers south of Stutt- gart, near the Neuhausen turn-off, and over- COLUMBUS, OHIO (AP) A PENITENTIARY INMATE turned several times,police said. in Columbus, Ohio was in solitary confinement It was the second serious bus accident on yesterday for manufacturing a wooden ladder in West Germany's autobahn system in less than a the attic of the Catholic chapel. year. Last July 25, a Belgium bus carrying Officials said Orville Davis was caught by children to Brussels from a vacation in Aus- guards making a ladder frame inside the admin- tria crashed off an autobahn bridge near Lim- istration building, where Davis was custodian, burg, killing 33 of those aboard. it was a 32-foot rope ladder with a grappling hook attached to one end. AMSTERDAM (UPI) SOMETHING STRANGE IS going Davis was serving a 20-years to liife sen- on in Amsterdam's Vondel Park. More peopleare tence for illegal entry of a financial insti- going in than are comming out. tution. Figures released Wednesday showed 27,504 er- sons entered the downtown park last YThursday. WASHINGTON (UPI) TWO AIR FORCE . helicopters According to the park ' keepers's count only took off Wednesday in a dramatic bid to make 24,882 came out. aviation history with the first trans-Atlantic There was no official explanation. helicopter flight. U GITMO GAZETTE PAGE 3 THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1967 Watts) PRIME MIN- from page 1) "Student 03' LONDON (AP)(By Granville GITMO .(Continued Wilson warned last night that $750 ISTER HAROLD Eicholtz, was the recepient of.the in the Middle East might result in a so scholarshipLinda award. fighting "tragic war whose consequences would engulf the The $500 award went to Margaret Gehman, mak- clean sweep of the awards for the whole world." ing it a ending up a debate on the Middle girls, as Patricia Bruffey was presented with Wilson, the House of the Student Council Scholarship by Mr. F.L.