Guarded" Eban Pce Ob Oehrfra

Guarded" Eban Pce Ob Oehrfra

WEATHER WATER Partly Cloudy 4 Charl ie High Tide 4+ Low Tide 9:141 a.m. / -Y5:4 a.m. U. S. NAVAL BASE, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA Phone 9-5247 Friday Date June 23, 1967 Radio (1340) TV (Ch. 8) Dodd Censure Seems Certain Johnson - Kosygin WASHINGTON (AP/AFNB)(By W.R. Mears) THE SENATE REJECTED yesterday a second attempt to blockthe censure of Sen.Thomas Meet Halfway Dodd, then recessed in angry WASHINGTON (AP/AFNB)(By Frank Cormier) PRESIDENT JOHNSON AND turmoil without acting on the Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin will hold a historic summit misconduct charges against the meeting today in the small town of Glassboro,New Jersey, about halfway between New York and Washington. White House sources said Johnson and Kosygin would discuss substantial matters--that it Barbados Seeks w ould not be simply a courtesy AS meeting. OAS embeship It isunderstood that John- ivim~esni son plans to raise such issues BRIDGETOWN,BARBADOS(AP/AFNB) as the Middle East, Southeast BARBADOS LETTER OF applica- Asia and Vietnam, prospects tion for membership of the fora nuclear non-proliferation Organizationof American States treaty and a possible agree- (0AS) had already been signed meant with the Soviets to limit but had not yet been presented, a race to ring the two nations Prime Minister Errol Barrow with antiballistic missiles. said yesterday. PressSecretary George Chris- He said he had received a tian said Johnson invited Kosy- request from Guyana's Premier gin to meet with him atlO a.m. to delay Barbados's applica- ESTtoday at the home of Thomas tion for a short time while Robinson, President of Glass- Guyana considered whether to boro State College. The school seek membership herself. has an enrollment of about Barrow said that Barbados 5,000 andthe community-located Senator Dodd: 'Dishonor and disrepute' has always had consultations 15 miles south of Philadelphia After two hours of confusion with other independent Common- has a population of about and parliamentary bickering, wealth countries on the ques- 10,000. the Senate quit work amid tion of 0AS membership but de- Thefact that Glassboro could shouts of protest. It will nied that there was any agree- be considered something of a take up the Dodd case once more ment between Barbados and midway point between New York today. (Cont'd on page 2) Guyana concerning(Cont'd pg 2) and Washington, apparently figured heavily in the success of efforts to get the two world leaders together. lerusalem "Safe.guarded"Eban pceJohnson ob and oehrfraKosygin are ex- UNITED NATIONS (AP/AFNB) ISR AELI FOREIGN MINISTER Abba Eban least a couple of hours and told a group of Latin American representatives yesterday that have lunch together. his government was ready to a assure that the holy places of White House sources said Jerusalem be "properly safeguar ded." there was no fixed agenda for But he reiterated Israeli det ermination to retain possession their talks--that each side of the entire city which had be en divided into Israeli and Jbr- will be free to raise whatever danian sectors prior to the o outbreak of the Middle East war subjects it chooses. June 5. The meetingwill be the first "International interest in J erusalem," Eban was quoted as between the top U.S.and Soviet saying at the closed meeting, "relates solely to the holy leaders since President John places and not to the city itse If, which must retain its pre- Kennedy and Premier Nikita sent unity." Khrushchev met in Vienna in An Israeli spokesman said Eba n and the members of the Latin 1961. American group had "an exten sive and friendly exchange of Prospects for solid accom- views on the necessity for a di negotiated(Cont'd pge 2) Eectlyplishments from(Cont'd page 2) PAGE 2 FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1967 GITMO GAZETTE UNITED NATIONSCCCont'd from page 1) peace set- tlement for the Middle East." He denied however, reports that Eban had said Israel was willing to consider an international status for the city. ComNavBase RADM E.R. Crawford Eban did not spell out what he had intended for Public Affairs Officer LT Paul E Lamey safeguards for the holy places. Editorial Advisor JOC William A. Liedtke Editor JOl Sam Herzog MOSCOW (AP/AFNB) THE CLOSURE OF the News Suez Canal Editor CT2 Vic Griffeth is straining the Soviet aid program for North Feature Editor SN Ed Sullivan Vietnam. Sports Editor J03 Sig Couch Diplomatic observers here thought yesterday The GI'lMO GAZETTE is published according to the rules that the Soviet Merchant Marine is making ad- and regulations for ship and station newspapers as out- justments to keep weapons and economic supplies lined in NAVEXOS P-35 and under the direction of the flowing to Hanoi. They doubted that the strain Naval Base Public Affairs Officer. It is printed four would cause any Soviet pressure on Cairo to re- days a week at government expense on government equip- open the canal. ment. The opinions or statements in news itmes that The Soviet Union is supporting and perhaps en- appear herein are not to be construed as official or as couraging, the Egyptian determination to use the reflecting the views of ComNavBase or the Navy Dept. canals reopening as a bargaining point against Ads and notices will be accepted between the hours of Israel rather than trying to get it opened as 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. MON thru FRI only and willbe publish- quickly as possible. ed in either Monday's, Tuesday's or Thursday's GAZETTE. Further strain of the Soviet Merchant ?Marine No ads or notices--except command notices--will be pub- might be caused by the shipping demands of re- lished more than once a week nor will they be run in equipping the battered armed forces of the United Friday's paper. Arab Republic. Ships from the Black Sea used to take 20 days WASHINGTON (Cont'd from page 1) from the meet- to reach Haiphong through the Suez Canal. Now ing appear somewhat remote against the background they are taking 36 days around Africa. of heightened differences over the Vietnam war This means almost twice as many ships are re- and the more recent Middle East situation resol- quiced to deliver the same valume of goods from ting from-the swift Israeli victory over the Black.Sea ports to Haiphong wifle the Suez Canal Soviet-equipped armies of Egypt, Syria and Jor- remains closed. dan. Still, it seemed that neither leader wanted to NEW YORK (AP/AFNB)THEHEEBERAL GOVERNMENT Plans pass up this opportunity to meet the other in to demand far-reaching auto safety features that person for the first time. will dwarf innovations so far required, the Wall Street Journal said yesterday. WASHINGTON (Cont'd from page 1) The sole vote, Federal auto safety planners are considering during what was heralded asthe climactic session more than a dozen novel features that probably of the eight-day debate, turned down an ammend- will berequired equipment in three to six %years, ment which would have sought only to reprimand, the newspaper said in a story from Washington. instead of censure, on the charge that Dodd used The story said These items were on the govern- political money for his personal purposes. The ment's improvement list: amendment was proposed by Sen. John Tower, *R- A built-in speed limit,probably about 80 miles Texas, and was rejected 87 to 9. It was another per hour. indication, the second in two days, that the A replacement for the gearshift stick, which Senate is likely, in the end, to impose a judg- safety officials say can stab occupants in the ment of censure. cars. The replacements could be buttonsordials. The Tower moveto ease Dodd's punishment paral- "A unitized' seat,roughly resembling an astro- led the attempt of Sen.Russell Long, D-Louisiana, naut's chair, wrapping around the occupant's to diminish the penalty to a mere admonition. shoulders and back to help him keep stationary That proposal was rejected Wednesday, 92 to 2. in a crash. Dodd left the chamber on both votes, saying he The story said the government's plans aim at did not wish to embarass anyone. pushing Detroit into making a radically different Tower said his amendment would permit the Sen- and much safer car. ate to express disapproval without invoking "one of the most severe penalties you can impose on a &L DE JANIERO (By Victor L. Griffeth) FRANZ man," the censure of his colleagues. PAUL STANGL, alledged Nazi' war criminal, left The last-minute move was a surprise because Brazil last night aboard a commercial airliner Tower had not previously come to the defense of bound for Paris. the embattled Connecticut Democrat. Stangl was accompanied by two German criminal police officers. BARBADOS (Cont'd from page 1) action on the Earlier this month the Brazilian Supreme Court question of its application. granted a West German request for his extradi- Guyana is at present engaged in a border dis- tion to West Germany where he will stant pute trial with Venezuela. He said this may be pre- for crimes commited while he was commander of judicial to that country gaining entry. the Treblinka extermination camp. Pages Missing or Unavailable GITMO GAZETTE FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1967 PAGE 7 Over in the American League Al Kaline hit a pair of home-runs driving home three runs and Norm Cash added two run homer to give the De- troit Tigers a 5-2 victory over the Minnesota Twins. The Triumph lifted the second place Tigers to within three games of the League- leading Chicago White Sox, who were idle THE yesterday.

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