Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 150, Decatur, Adams County, 26 June 1963 — Page 11
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 36, 1963
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Yemen Problem Still Tough For United States By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign New* Analyst When, last December, the United States recognized the revolutionary regime of Yemen, it did so with both short and long-range objectives. Immediately, it hoped to give PRE-COOKED-JUST WARM TO SERVE IBiB ’! ■Ba bMrH MbH Now At Your Favorite Food Store!
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Yemen’s President Abdullah-Al-Sallal the prestige needed for him to remain in power, and to give both Egypt and Saudi a reason to cease their outside aid to the opposing sides in Yemen's civil war. When this failed to have the desired results, the United States took two more steps. It prodded the United Nations into entering the dispute in the role of mediator. And it sent one of its most successful negotiators, Ellsworth Bunker, to the Middle East for on-the-ground talks with President Abdel Gamal Nasser and with Prince Faisal, premier of Saudi Arabia. Egyptian Agreement Out of this came Egyptian agreement to withdraw its troops from Yemen and Saudi Arabia . and Jordan agreement to cease their aid to Yemen’s deposed Imam. It also led to a U.N. decision to send a peace-keeping team under Swedish General Von Horn, to Yemen to make sure the agreements were carried out. In the long-range, the United States also sought to cut off what rapidly was becoming an all-out test of strength between Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Direct conflict between these two held out almost limitless possibilities, and in direct notice of its oym interest in the conflict, the U.S. warned Egypt that any attack on Saudi Arabia would set it on collision course with the United States: Since there is reason to believe
that the” Egyptians not only were flying Russian planes in Yemen but that some of them were flown by Russian pilots, there then came the possibility of another U.S. confrontation with the Soviet Union. There the situation roughly stands today. The trouble with the over-all strategy seems to be that it reckoned without the determination of the deposed young Imam now fighting to regain his throne. Anxious To Leave Nasser is believed anxious to get out of Yemen where costs are running around a reported $1 million per day and Egyptian troops have suffered heavy casualties. But he dare not pull out until he believes Sallal’s position is secure. But the power .of Sallal’s regime so far is confined to the cities and his hold by no means firm. In London last week, the Imam’s foreign minister, Ahmad Moham ad El-Shamy told UPI correspondent George Bitar that the war will end immediately if the Egyptians pull out. He said the Egyptians have 30.000 troops in Yemen and that the Russians also have stepped up their aid to Sallal. including at least 600 technicians as well as pilots and tank drivers. As for the Imam, he quoted him as saying “In the Yemen will be my throne or my tomb.’’ In the Yemen, Nasser has a tiger by the tail. But so does the United States. /
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
0 0 Household Scrapbook By Robert* Lee tfh 0— X-0 Sketching Aid When sketching still life or portraits, place a tennis racket upright between you and the subject so that your line of vision passes through the strings of the racket. You can determine proportions by reference to the strings in away similar to reproducing drawings with the aid of squared paper. Dried-Out Chairs Walnut chairs that have dried out during storage and do not take a polish may be treated by using a mixture of three parts of linseed oil to one part of turpentine. Apply with a soft cloth and remove a few minutes after with a cloth moistened in alcohol. The polish should then take effect For More Security If a hole in one of your plastered walls becomes too large to hold the screw used for suspending a picture or mirror, take the screw out, pack the hole with steel wool, and drive the screw back in. Or, poke a wooden match into the bole, break it off at the wall surface, and ieplace your screw in this. Better-Behaved Ballpoint Should youft, ballpoint pen refuse to write because of oil from your hand on the paper, you can finish your work by going over the area with a pencil eraser.
Editors Seek Mayor Wagner For Speaker - By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — New York Mayor Robert F. Wagner may; be the chief speaker at the fair meeting of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association at French Lick, Aug. 23-24. Association chiefs are attempting to persuade him to address their gathering, partly because he was largely Instrumental in tending the prolonged New York newspaper strike. He ’ also was uninvolved in any party factional strife that might affect the Hoosier political situation. Mayor Wagner, who is 53 years old, is the son of the late U. S. Sen. Robert F. Wagner, D-N.Y. He studied at Yale and Harvard and served in the Bth Air Force during World War 11. He was elected mayor in 1954 and reelected twice since. Will Discuss 1964 Nearly all of the Hoosier Democratic chiefs will attend the French Lick rally chiefly to discuss the 1964 contest for the gubernatorial nomination. No contestant against renomination of Sen. Vance Hartke has appeared to date and that situation probably will remain unchanged, according to the politicos. They point out that President Kennedy went out of his way to endorse Hartke, who served as chairman of the senatorial campaign committee during the 1962 fracas in which Democrats scored substantial gains. State Rep. Robert L. Rock, Anderson, 1963 House Democratic floor leader, is expected soon to announce for governor and to appoint a fellow Anderson Democrat, Rep. William T. Sebree.as his campaign manager. Anderson Mayor Ralph R. Ferguson is Rock’s father-iri-law. During a meeting of Hoosier mayors at Anderson Saturday, Mayor Ferguson was host at a buffet luncheon and Rock staged a reception that night. Lemon Is Campaigning Gormer Bloomington Mayor Tom ■•A
■’ I PORTRAIT QF THE YEARS—Wide-eyed wonder of one new to this earth and the face-lined, record of longevity blend in this charming study of grandfather and grand-. child, attending church in St. Petersburg, Fla. Consignment AUCTION FARM SUPPLIES-HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS MISCELLANEOUS—NEW MERCHANDISE Maytag washer: desks; General Electric electric lange, utility, Stainless steel kitchen sink; table model cream separator; Gun, (Mossberg—Slso, ?2 shot, Model 46 B-Bi; Admiral television; wardrobe; Colonial beds, (single and full size); above items very good. Gas range- sofa; occasional chair; bookcases; dining room suite: bedroom suite; medicine cabinet; reel type mower; sweeper; ’9xl2 rug; bicycle; dishes and many miscellaneous items. Paint (aluminum, latex, enamel & outside); upholstery remnants; plastic ’remnants; new child’s picnic table; and some miscellaneous new merchandise. TO BE HELD AT, I ) EMIE’S AUCTION x jT ON: FRIDAY NIGHT, JUNE 28 at 7P. M. \ Location: 2 miles east of Monroe on 124, then 5 miles south on blacktop and fa mile east. Emerson Lehman and Fritz Lehman, Auctioneers Terms; Cash. <
I* ** : M ’'K'* w w sA* ■ ■ 4 L ' tfY tel A // 4> J * • • .J -■ -1 II J 4 “ .4 1 F | t’ ■ a f l v I] 4 ? '■ ' h". > -• " /• J 4 . X F- ' 4 ' *1 ' * f ■ '’' f s J ‘7 > * v,,1. .. »4 iJ • ' 'f < > j iP*. ■ ‘ Fun jewelry is new for the summer sport and spectator scene. Colored cork, wood and real nuts are the ingredients used in this summer sport necklace (left). Red enameled and natural colored peanuts and filberts are combined with bamboo and wood. For patio or poolside, unique necklace and earring set (right) combines lacquered walnuts, bamboo, wood beads and brightly colored cork. These conversation pieces are by Coro. ■ L , - u- _ .- V * r-‘• • . ■• - — — — ■ ■
Lemon already is campaigning for governor and former Appellate Court Judge John Ax, Linton, is seriously considering entering the fracas. Other Democratic possibilities for governor include Clinton Green, Fort Wayne and Indianapolis, administrative assistant to Governor Welsh and secretary of the Indiana Port Commission; State Sen. Marshall Kizer, Plymouth, Senate party floor leader in the recent legislature; and two reluctant notables, Dr. Herman B Wells, former president of Indiana University, and Roger D. Branigin, Lafayette attorney and former president of the Indiana State Bar Association. Alex Campbell, national committeeman, Who is not a- candidate, has been praised by National Chairman John M. Bailey and Hoosier party chiefs for creating a “new look” in politics. He has been head of the Allen County automobile license bureaus for four years and has turned over $160,000 to the party coffers from license notary receipts during that period. Nearly all other license bureau heads pocket the money.
» "4* - ,v> ; -r .am. W * J F I B - : - < FOIL THE SUN— Here’s how to avoid those light areas left by sun glasses while getting a tan: Take some silver foil pieces from a cigarette package, wet the backs and attach them to the eyelids. Above, Myrna Mishkin of New York City soaks up the sun at Ocean Bay Park on Fire Island while “foiling” Old Sol. I BE READY FOR WINTER I I I I I with |j 11 | 11 | HEATING OIL It's the heating oil .. . PACKED with 'HEAT.' > B Our customers also receive: x ■ I 'SUMMER-FILL' PROGRAM .. . have your tank '• ft filled NOW ... pay for it October 1, 1963. \ [ ■ GUARANTEED PRICE PROTECTION . . Philheat | S heating oils price 'guaranteed' not to exceed B B May 1963 price, for coming season. \ K 8 INSURED MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN . . sick- ® H ’ness, accident or death disability insurance ’ B B coverage ... at NO CHARGE! ' B For your complete farm and home petroleum \ ; H products needs, buy the 'top quality' PHILLIPS |S ■ 66 line! .... CALL TODAY! \' , B I DICK LAFONTAINE I MONROE 5 PHILLIPS f Phone 6-6127 i (tijfji) u DISTRIBUTOR for National Oil & Gas, Inc., Jobber , T ; I » « Bluffton, Ind. V ’ B
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