Lima News, The (Newspaper) - February 12, 1967, Lima, Ohio -J The diligent farmer trees of which he himself will never see the fruit Cicero NEWS Serving Northwest Ohio For Over 31 Ever striving for Limalmid to be even a better place to live Read About Bucks Fall In Big Ten Battle 121 E HIGH ST 45102 PHONE THIS PAPER CONSISTS OF SIX SECTIONS 98 PAGES TODAY SUNDAY FEBRUARY 12 1967 LIMA OHIO VOL 83 NO 43 10 CENTS SECOND CLASS POSTAGE PAID AT LIMA OHIO Joliet Blaze Kills 6 JOLIET 111 AP Fire raced through a small hotel in downtown Joliet on Saturday taking a toll of six lives Nine other persons were injured three critically Patrolman Lee Harris was among the first to reach the scene at the two-story building that housed the Grand Hotel He gave this description There was fire coming out of the back windows and heavy billowing smoke Flames were where everything was just burning People were hanging from window ledges and dropping from the sides of the building I saw a woman her clothing on fire jump right through the glass of a window and fall into the alley There was a lot of screaming and hollering It was horrible to see The hotel was on the second floor of -a 50 feet wide structure at 21 E Cass St in the business district of the Will County seat about 35 miles southwest of Chicago The first boused an auto parts store The hotel manager Robert 31 told authorities 28 guests were registered in the hotel when the blaze erupted shortly after 3 Firemen said they rescued at least 15 persons many leaping from second-floor windows into Viet War Resumes Lull Losses Heavy FACES OF WAR A Vietnamese woman and child refugees from a war not of their own making dle together The woman clasps her hands protectively about the child's head Two Vietnamese children right embrace each other seeking mutual comfort and perhaps a ment of respite in lives filled with violence and fear UPI Photo Red China's Army Controlling Peking TOKYO dispatches AP reported Japanese the Red See BLAZE Page LIGHT SNOW Sunday generally fair west and south and partly Chinese army took control of Peking Saturday while orders posted in the name of Mao tung alerted military commands on the frontiers to watch for moves against China by forces of imperialism and revisionism Chinese terms for the United States and the Soviet Union A dispatch from the based correspondent of Tokyo newspaper Nihon Keizai said the Public Security Ministry and the People's Liberation Army garrison command issued a decree revealing the com- mand has taken over duties of the police and set up a mili tary control committee Red Guards posted orders in some concern in Peking for mainland areas facing the Chinese island of For- mosa munist party leaders they need not pursue his purge of internal foes simultaneously with the alert He also acknowledged Commie Build-Up Blamed SAIGON South Vietnam AP war in Vietnam picked up where it left off today after four-day lunar new year truce marked by 168 American alties As the cease-fire ended j a U.S spokesman said Full military activity in the lic of Vietnam was resumed The truce proclaimed byj South Vietnam and joined by its allies ended at 7 Saigon time 6 p.m EST day as scheduled despite a Viet Cong declaration that the Communists would hold off offensive activity until day morning Asked if the announcement The orders noted a sharp that this turn of events would crease in aircraft and troop movements along the Soviet Sinkiang border but did not say whether they were Chinese or Russian A Peking dispatch of the do news service said the posted orders quoted Mao as telling military commanders and Com- Cloudy with a few snow Mao's name around Peking another Japanese dispatch said The emphasis in the orders flurries northeast Colder 22 increasing cloudiness and not quite as cold Sunday night with a chance of light snow day mostly cloudy and warmer with light snow was on the der in the west and Sinkiang Province where Red China has its nuclear testing ground at Lop Nor the Japanese account I reported It added there is also delay the purge Kyodo said Kyodo said the orders were contained in mimeographed letins posted in the Chinese cap- ital as persons outside the Soviet Em- bassy Earlier Premier Chou See CHINA Page Force Reduced Fears Fire LANSING Mich dents of Michigan's capital city of population crossed their fingers Saturday and that military activity was re- meant new air raids against targets in North Vietnam the U.S man said I can't comment on that The truce provided four days peace in which such world figures as Pope Paul VI and Secretary-General U Thant had sought to have the cease-fire extended into talks aimed at ending the war As the four-day half in sive operations neared an end however it had become in- evident in Saigon that the truce period would end ai scheduled despite the cism it might bring in nist neutralist and other ters of international opinion The South Vietnamese and U.S Command had reported a soaring total of cease-fire dents they blamed on the Com- and the American side accused North Vietnam of using Lansing's force the truce period to move was reduced at one time amounts of men and hoped against cies RUSSIAN VISITS GLASGOW Soviet Premier Kosygin center foreground with arm raised and Glasgow's Lord Provost John Johnston ing chain of office at left mingle with a crowd in George Square Glasgow Scotland Sign Scotland Will Die When Kosygin's Bombs Hit The Polaris Base to America's Polaris Submarine base at Scotland's Holy Loch UPI Telephoto Wilson EDINBURGH Scotland UPI Premier Alexei Saturday night Prime Minister Harold Wilson rrune Minister narum Kremlin which would issue a joint communique unconcerned by the angrily has Decided to cut its Peking Itl May Go To Congress nearly half its personnel of 264 disciplinary by other Vet Groups Protest New Cemetery Rule men through offs and sick firemen The sick calls totaling ported 85 sions of 30 men on grounds they refused to do certain cleanup jobs and other tasks at their fire stations The Fire WASHINGTON UPI terans organizations charging discrimination indicated day they go to Congress if necessary to revoke the Army's order limiting burials at Arlington National Cemetery Spokesmen said they were surprised and dismayed at the order which limited Arlington burials to professional military men and the nation's most prestigious veterans National Commander Leslie M Fry of the Veterans Foreign Wars said it was of an obvious case of discrimination It means one man is better than another and we don't like that one bit Harsh Cold In Midwest East Area By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Harsh cold overspread the nation's region Saturday and cold wave warnings were issued from Ohio to New England In northern Minnesota where Roseau had 37 degrees below zero Saturday morning the mercury remained at 18 below in the afternoon on the an border Paul in the southern section of the slate bad an afternoon 5 betow The Boston office of the Weather Bureau warned of dangerously cold conditions said People who venture COLD Page A-4 William F Hauck executive director of the American Legion in Washington said We have a long-standing policy against burials on the basis of rank or prestige A Leo Anderson national commander of the American Veterans of World War H said the order was both ill advised and ry at this time Because of overcrowding the Army said Friday that starting next Friday Arlington burials would be limited to Medal of Honor winners servicemen who die while on active duty and veterans who held high ment positions This excludes the average war veteran Fry in a statement issued at Reno Nev said It's our intention to talk to the Secretary of Defense to get this order rescinded Arlington should be on a first come first served basis Hauck said the Army's came as a shock to veterans organizations We work closely with those people and we never heard about any such plans Anderson said the would ass President Johnson and Congress to urge the Army to reconsider the order A legion source said cemetery said veterans a year there but that in their wins that they be buried at Arlington As of Jan 31 a total of veterans had been buried at John F Kennedy The Army operates the about are buried only remain on the 420 acres Friday's order the Army said would make the remaining available land last for three years during which it will annex for Arlington the ad- jacent grounds of the south post of Ft Myer Va The cemetery established in 1864 is situated just across the Potomac River from ton on hilly land once by Gen Robert E Lee we decision certainly want this It was the legion's belief be said that the government should purchase more acreage adjacent to Arlington to make room for Some veterans the man said have even requested plies south The U.S spokesman said 269 cease fire incidents were recorded by American forces Fighters Union of Lansing and the city fathers have been engaged for months in a wage dispute Acting Chief Ronald Burnett suspended the 30 men and said those who called in sick would be suspended they coulel prove illness at medical examinations The Police and Fire Board during the truce period with 86 of them considered significant there were tits on one or both sides South Vietnamese military headquarters late Saturday had reported 100 incidents but were not ly available to give a final count The total reported by both commands far exceeded the number of incidents reported in Christmas and New Year fires of two days each The U.S spokesman said 20 Pair Views Joint Word clapping and even Chinese Embassy Stocked MOSCOW UPI China's embassy staff here apparently fearing a siege like the Red Guard blockade of Russia's Peking mission is laying in tons of extra food it was reported Saturday The embassy being stocked with canned goods meat flour beer and other reliable sources said The stockpiling is they said despite the fact that the Russians have given no sign they intend to retaliate lor the Peking riots with a embassy demonstration of theif own Four half-hearted tions outside the embassy this were pale imitations of past Soviet riots around embassies here let alone Peking siege which has made 65 Russian diplomats virtual prisoners dependent on deliveries by courageous ly foreigners for their food These foreign friends include I Englishmen and Frenchmen but no North Vietnamese North Koreans or Yugoslavs The Chinese Embassy a complex of four large buildings once housed hundreds of sons Now the sources said only 56 diplomats technicians and service workers are A Japanese reporter Peking said that this i to be cut to 19 in accord witti a Chinese government directive ordering two-thirds of ill dapping ana even asses diplomatic staffs abroad whose Vietnam talks home for cultural with Wilson apparently home deadlocked appeared outwardly I which already Sunday that would mark the day as a historic highpoint in ttre friendly relations between Russia and Great Britain Leaving Scotland to return to London for the last day of his official visit to Britain Kosygin said Sunday would be the most important day because he and Wilson would devise ah ate document which would be the result of our negotiations The Soviet leader obviously elated by his friendly reception in a one-day visit to Scotland gave no hint what the final joint statement would say He Peking In Scotland he shook with Scots who hailed him with highland shouts of Com- toured the huge ston nuclear power station and watched a Scottish soccer game A cheering crowd of 10 staff to skeleton size is expected to respond in land From 500 to Russians See PAIR Page A-4 gathered outside the embassy here each Monday through Thursday to shout shame at diplomats inside arid de- liver petitions protesting the Peking siege Tbe demonstrations which appeared to be accomplishing little were called off Friday Against Leftists met with Chief Burnett and a Americans were killed by mediation committee of Fire action in the cease-fire Fighters Local 421 for two and a half hours Saturday without reaching an understanding It stand down He was indicated another meeting would be held Gary Thomas president of Local 421 who was among the suspended men said no strike existed The said Thomas has done everything it can to urge the men to stay on duty I think the situation would have See CITY Page A-4 and 148 said 101 were enemy were killed and 65 were de- Ail the figures vere subject to change he added as latter ports were expected to bring accounts of additional incidents occurring up to the deadline returned to London after ai banquet in his honor at Edinburgh Castle night i Among the topics Kosygin and Wilson have discussed are Vietnam a nuclear ation pact Anglo-Soviet trade and a treaty of friendship between tits two countries i JAKARTA Their official talks except for i S Sunday's joint session ended 1 Friday spent against Indonesians Alert Army UPI and trial ot President have for treason it was leftist Saturday on a trip across Scotland in which he was welcomed with cheers reportedly plotting to groups prevent congress from convening next month to act on the proposed THE LIMA Turmoil The cultural which has thrown Red China into civil and ec- turmoil remains a mystery to both East and officials Newsman on Dennen explains some of the causes behind the revolt on PAGE Births Capitol Staff Crossword A-4 B-U A-4 Earl Wilson Editorial Home Undersecretary of State for Asian Affairs William P Bundy explains why U S of- are carefully studying recent peace feelers from Hanoi in an attempt to end the Vietnam War For h i s views and predictions turn to PAGE Hospitals A-4 Playbill D4 Real Estate Sports Theaters TV Schedule Wait Ads Women's The World Today WASHINGTON ply movements Vietnam during North the current UPI within truce has convinced VS military experts that the Hanoi government is preparing for a National Aeronautics and Space Administration told the Senate Space Committee that the long war The experts cited a Saigon estimate Saturday that tons of munitions moved south along North Vietnam's east snuggles up to within 28 miles of the Moon today so it can snap pictures of possible Apollo findings of a special manned landing sites on the investigating the tragedy would provide the necessary ance that such an cannot be repeated WASHINGTON lunar landscape Informed government sources meanwhile said congress the nation's ultimate authority wjm begin a special five-day session March It win consider a parliamentary resolution de- manding that congress dismiss Sukarno from office and order bis trial on charges of ty in tbe communist coup Congress Chairman Abdul Haris a general who narrowly escaped assassination during tbe coup attempt said in nidi r m accident moon were scheduled to be taken Wednesday by toe pound spacecraft launched UPI its flight documents Sukarno's rote in to the Communist coast during the truce the four days of WASHINGTON UPI cause of the flash fire that kffled tbe three Apollo astro- at Cape Kennedy may never be established the deputy Teamster President James R 4 from Cape Kennedy Hoffa asked the Supreme Court Saturday to reconsider his TUCSON Ariz UPI appeal from a jury tampering President Johnson shouldn't go conviction that could send him to North Vietnam to negotiate to jail for eight years with Ho Chi according to The court initially refused to former Republican Presidential review his case on Dec 12 Barry M Goldwater ruling on his reconsideration It's up chief of the space agency told motion is expected to be handed end senators in testimony released down on Feb 20 this to Ho On Minn to the At the same time Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam MaKk flatly denied reports that Sukarno would leave for Tokyo in a form of self-exile Ev who is leaving Ufe country wul have to pass certain Mank place But Dr Bobert C Seamans PASADENA Calif UPI Yw Birthday I Jr deputy director of America's Lunar Orbiter w former Arizona Senator told a pay dinner Friday night He's would be Tiere among -i the one that started it 3 didn't start it ARMY Page A4