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Daily Sitka Sentinel
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Daily Sitka Sentinel

   Daily Sitka Sentinel (Newspaper) - November 8, 1965, Sitka, Alaska                             Member of the Associated Press THE DAILY SENTINEL Sitka Alaska a Copy VOLUME XXVI November 8 IMS NUMBER 217 To ban spread of nuclear weapons tells negotiators to agreement By MILTON BESSER NATIONS The Assembly's main political committee proved overwhelmingly today a compromise resolution calling on disarmament negotiators in Geneva to obtain quick ment on a to ban the ther spread of nuclear weapons The United Slates and the Union joined in the vote hut their statements to the com- afterward showed they weic as far apart as ever on on a treaty The vole was 83 to 0 with six abstentions on the top ment issue at this session of the general assembly France was the lone big power among the It has boycotted the in Geneva from the start Tho resolution sought to bridge the conflicting of the United Slates and the Soviet lUnion which have offered draft treaties on the issue lo the sembly Tho chief point of difference is that the Soviet draft would block the proposed multilateral nuclear or similar ar- rangements contemplated by the North Treaty U.S draft would not Tho compromise resolution was submitted by non- aligned nations which lake part in Geneva negotiations of disarmament conir The negotiators are ex- peeled to reconvene in Geneva after the first of the year As that any treaty on binning the spread of nuclear weapons be void of any lioles which might permit mi- powers to proliferate di- or indirectly nuclear weapons in any form The resolution contained added recommandations to the Massachusetts gains unclaimed race winnings BOSTON setts reaped close to during ths last fiscal year from unclaimed racing winnings un- claimed insurance un- claimed bank books and oilier forms of properly State fiscal agencies reported also that almost reverted to the stale in the last 10 years because people have abandoned their property or have died without heirs TOKYO AP China's Premier met with a a-1 mission in Peking over the the New China News Agency reported Ihc treaty should an acceptable balance of mutual responsibilities and of the nuclear and non- nuclear powers a treaty should be a toward the of and complete went should be acceptable and provisions lo en- sure effectiveness of the treaty in the treaty should effect adversely the right of any of states to conclude re- treaties in order to en- sure the total absence of nuclear weapons in their respective Stalemate on negotiations on Rhodesia LONDON AP Britain and Rhodesia reached negotiations on that African demand for independence Prime Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia told Prime Minister Harold Wilson in a made public by Wilson's only conclusion must be that we are back in the position We at the end of our talks in London when we both agreed views o-f our respec- tive governments were Smith was replying to a sage Sunday night from Wilson in the leader for a meeting in discuss further the crisis over the independence issue The South African Press sociation quoted Smith as ing after a mceling in Salisbury Rhodesian tal that he did not think he would be to Malta Smith said the Rhodesian was now waiting for a decision from Britain All we want is a straight an- swer Two stolen cars recovered cars were this weekend after having been re- ported hours pre- Volkswagen belonging to John Feists who live on Halibut Point road near Sandy Beach was returned about 8 Saturday having been reported missing about p.m Friday A 1955 belonging to Norris parked in front of Sitka Friday was recovered just noon Saturday at the Club Dorothy len dies at 52 MEW YORK AP Dorothy one of the nation's best known newspaper and a familiar on radio and television died today the age of 52 Cause of her death was not immediately made public She died at her Manhattan Joine in private life the wife of producer Dick mar had appeared Sunday night on the Columbia Broadcasting System's What's My Lins was the daughter of a w e 1 newspaperman James Kilgallen of the old International News Service and now with the Hearst Headline Service Miss column The of appeared in the York ican and was to numerous other newspapers the nation With toll of planes men lost U.S planes blast North Viet Nam missile site Charred may be clue PANAMA ties found charred in the Caribbean Sunday which were believed to have come from Argentine air force transport missing for five days 69 persons Authorities reported no bodies or parts of Ibc plane were seen The were found about 40 miles northwest of the to the Panama Canal the mouth of Rio Miguel Authorities said of the jackets bore the Argentine navy PILOT LEAVES DISABLED Lt Jack A Terhune of Texas prepares to leave disabled plane around Dong Hoi North Vietnamese town Plane shot down has dropped landing gear top photo because of loss of lic pressure Terhune and his ejection seat left above the ing plane bottom rapidly increasing distance between them as canopy shoots high in the air over accompanying plane Terhune was rescued from waters of the China Sea by a helicopter Photos were made of another plane and be- came available through Corpus Christi Texas Cafler Times Official U.S Navy Photos from AP Wirephoto On anniversary of revolution Tug Craig Foss capsizes sinks SEATTLE AP The steel tug Craig Foss of Seattle capsized and sank from an un- laot night in Cock near Anchorage Alaska The 10 men aboard most of them from Seattle were taken off A spokesman for the FOES Launch Tug Co said the Craig Foss was being used in laying a pipeline 10 miles west of Anchorage the first pipeline offshore oil drilling forms to a tank farm The tug by Everett Gudgel of attle was just finishing Uie pipe line when something her to heel over boats ing in the vicinity had time to remove the crew before the tug capsized By EDWIN Q WHITE South Viet planes blamed an- other missile in North Viet Nam the seventh raid on the air defense tem in four days But the series of attacks which destroyed two sites and five others took a toll of five U.S planes two helicopters with seven American airmen listed as in territory On the ground in the South troops of the U.S borne shattered a strong Cong force manning a ified jungle position north of Saigon U.S officials said they counted enemy bodies and were still counting The Viet Cong force is believed to abandoned the position The latest on a missile site was EO miles east ot Hanoi and the pilots reported four siles and four launchers at the site were heavily Since U.S have Russians display three new opens missiles one older one meeting at Seattle Cooperative robbery RAPIDS Mich When supermarket manager Hershey answered the phone the voice on the other end ordered him to give all his money to the man in the blue sweater said he looked up and there was a man wearing a sweater Hershey gave him and the man walked out In 1942 it was announced that the Allied invasion of North rica was to plan Where he received his degree Johnson signs education at Texas State WE NOTE Sen Boh has visited all the cities in eastern except Sitka and is now in tho Interior shaking hands What's the Afraid we might want lo know where you were Oct THE GRAPEVINE tells us that now can be obtained going to the top of the mountain and down other side IT'S GONNA ibc a long hard winter or is That is a question answer IF YOU remember when Harold CaVin was a- between Seattle and you are an old timer By FRANK CORMIER SAN Tex President Johnson signed a education at his old college here and said it will help one million more stu- dents go to college each year Johnson said scholarships jobs and loans will those who otherwise might not be able to go to college Ho said scholarships will -30 to students next year Johnson signed the legislation in gymnasium of Southwest Texas State College where he got his degree in 1930 heavy rain wilh high out lor an out- door ceremony who once was a school dropout briefly of the new ft means that a high school senior in this country can to any college or uni- versity in U.S and not be turned away because his fain ily is poor A key feature of Ihc act he will provide for needy Johnson flew to San Marcos by helicopter from his ranch near Johnson City -10 miles away His first stop was at the Gary Job Corps camp on the outskirts There young men of limited education are trained on vocational skills ringing from underwater welding lo of heavy equipment The to en of the trainees By FRED MOSCOW The sians displayed three new siles Sunday plus an older one which they said can orbit earth with a nuclear warhead Soviet missiles shown during the military parade marking the anniversary of the vik Revolution Attacks on the United Stales were relatively mild The orbital rocket shown first May was given the place of in the parade of 250 pieces of military hardware Behind it came a sile which the de- scribed as invulnerable The Russians say it is o new inter- continental ballistic missile Western experts it range at to miles The term invulnerable was taken lo mean il could be on ground lo avoid It appeared to be a revised version of the Iron Maiden first shown last May H was about CO feet long 20 feet longer than the Iron Maiden five feet in ter and solid fueled on The United Stales tested missiles destroy attacking missiles in space but has nor claimed lo be able lo launch nuclear attack from space Since the Soviet Union the United Stales orbit and manned spacecraft il is assumed they can do the same thing with a nuclear sources Mid But U S consider and listic missiles produce Ihc same at less cosl and with greater accuracy lhan an ing missile Defense the only speaker at the parade charged the ed States with imperialistic in- in affairs other countries and with raids on Viel Xam His remarks were milder tlun in May when he the Stales was threatening a wider war SEATTLE AP The Inter- North Com opened its annual meeting here Monday Pacific Northwest and Alaskan fisheries leaders mel Thursday anci Friday in Juneau with Thomas Mannn an assistant of state in preparation their sessions with Canadian and Japanese representatives here Reports from the Juneau ing seme of those present moving the North treaty line 10 degrees west from present 175 degrees west longitude The vides for Japan lo abstain from fishing for and most ibut west cf the line Japan favors renegotiation of the treaty out no has been set for the Today's in In the G L of Rights and sent it lo the House PHILADELPHIA liam F Kelly 5S died in pi University day after an of several He was president of the Pennsylvania Banking and Trust Co and served as danl of American Bankers Association in James Johnson rites to be held in Wise services for James 0 Johnson 21 have been scheduled for day in Wise The employe of Alaska bec Pulp Co Inc died in Sitka Community Community hospital as a re- sult o injuries incurred in an accident Thursday morning He never regained consciousness Born July 3 Mr son had been in Sitka about seven months A member of the Lutheran Church previously served in the U S Army in Europe He is survived by his parents Mr and Mrs Otto Johnson of sisters Mrs nie FalkenbErg of Kirkland Wash who was this end snd Mrs Johnson of Zion III a brother Robert of Ariz and a grand- mother Mrs Mary Winter Wise Services will be under the di- rection of Funeral Home in Prewitt Funeral Home has assisted in local ar- rangements Salazar's party wins in LISBON Portugal AP More than 70 per cent of electorate voted Sunday for Premier Antonio Salazar's unopposed National Union despite pleas from the sition to boycott the government the turnout proved the party which allowed no series op- position lo develop in more 30 years hsd won the battle The Assembly candidates picked by Salazar and his were elected in quiet orderly voting The new assembly an advisory group takes Nov destroyed five missile and damaged eight others reported The Communists bashed greatest number ot U.S aircraft c- weekend during on missile sites near Thanh Iloa There a downed one U.S -Air Force Friday while conventional bUsled down two AL and two rescue helicopters One jet was knocked down in an attack on a 35 miles east of Hanoi and another was lost day 30 miles of Hanoi ing allack on a missile site Rescue helicopters picked up five of the 11 airmen whose crait went down in Red In the South paratroopers of the Airborne met what was described as a main force of Viel dressed in uniforms never seen before in South Viel Nam The was in D the Com- iron triangle 21 miles Saigon Brig Gen Ellis Williamson the Brigade commander ed the paratroopers counted -110 Viel Cong and they're nol through c minting U.S casualties in the fight 15 miles of Bien were described as moderate For curity reasons American are not in bers The paratroopers came upon the Viet Cong force while on a search and sweep operation that stalled several days ago They found U.S officers scribed a gle position Another sharp ground action was reported 135 miles east of Saigon where 500 Viet Cong overran a hamlet Tha heavy losses The government Liter regained the hamlet with help from U.S strikes In another development a U.S spokesman disclosed that Marine planes ly bombed a friendly village Sunday killing one woman 10 persons The bombing was due to a mistake in target data one similar to incident last week in which U.S Air Force planes bombed a friendly village after ing incorrect map coordinates the Vietnamese E German guards desert AP Two East German border gua-rds deserted their posts in a day and fled with their weapons into West Berlin police ed One defector suffered a hand injury coming through barriers The two were undetected by their com- rades other new missiles were described as ballistic missiles with a range of between 300 and miles A fourth new weapon like in appearance ami mobile contained four antiaircraft guns of about 50 caliber An announcement said the orbital missile could put a clear warhead into orbit and it Ihen could be fired from the ground The at 115 feet was the longest nuclear missile over displayed here It is three-stage and similar to the launch Soviet space A United Nations agreement signed by bolh Soviet Union and Ihc United Stales prohibits the orbiting oJ a nuclear Canadian scientist reports Can detect underground nuclear blasts No damage occurred at Ihc residence on mill Creek Highway where called Saturday ning regarding an stove Chimney was quite ed VANCOUVER B.C A Canadian scientist who took parl in 29 underground clear in Alaska said Sunday preliminary information from the lest indicates it is possible to secret underground clear blasts The purpose of lest on Island in Alaska's Aleutian chain lo sec if re- mote detect difference between an -n 1 clear implosion There have been so from official sources on Uie results of the tests R D Russell the ty of British Columbia who was ent on Ihc said in his opinion it would be very hard not to be tj tell deference between a nuclear blast 2nd an He said preliminary lion some cf it from a airing of 23 recording stations akla indicate lhal shear waves 3 of twisting motion com- mon to all earthquakes were nil following the ka blast It looks pretty hopeful at first of course we have a of work ahead of said The University of British Colombia here is one of E of centers processing the Alaska This is expected lo take four months he hod discussed the significance of the blast with Canadian officials in We were very excited about he Sold The ability to tell the en 0 underground nuclear explosion and quake shocks have long been a stumbling block in miclear test ban negotiation W E A T H E R In SITKA Marine forecast from Monday to Tuesday waters Silka lo Dixon Entrance east to winds la 20 knols waters Silka lo lo northeast winds 15 to 25 knots with occasional high cloudiness Not much change in tures   

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