Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 96, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 10, 1967 Page: 1 of 16
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CEASE-FIRE TIME IS SET
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VOL. LXXVIII, NO. 96
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Giant Israeli Pincers Closing
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On Beaten Foes Inside Syria
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"They ran like rabbits when they saw our
Hostilities.
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, vide him with the necessary.
Soviet Breaks
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Tie With Israel
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Film Star
its perfidy and its glaring
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Tracy Dies
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Crowd surges through Cairo street in support of Gamal Abdel Nasser. (AP)
Nasser Bows Back In
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What’s Inside
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Katz had no comment.
CE 5-6722
Other calls CE 2-3311
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Todays
News •
Today
HOLLYWOOD
Spencer Tracy,
L"
t roops
< urity
squads of Viet Cong terror-
ists attacked a sugar mill 11
miles north of Saigon Satur-
day. The mill is run by Viet
Cong defectors, one of whom
was killed.
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Amusements
Bridge
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actor, began on the stage in
1922.
Classified Section
Comics
Religion News
Sports
TV Tidbits
Vital Statistics
Women's News
70
67
77
12
75
77
80
80
17
Early morning session of UN Security Council
finds U. S. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg rubbing sleep
from his eyes. (AP Wirephoto)
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brought him two Academy
Awards and eight nomina-
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0:00 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
11:00 p.m.
11:00 p.m.
1 00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
1:00 a.m.
ft.
e HOURLY MPERATJRE
7:00p.m.
• i
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“I do not consider Living-
stone to be a pipeline co,”
Freeman testified. "I consid-
United Arab Republic."
Deputies jumped from their seats and
roared approval as Speaker Anwar Sadat
announced the news of the Arab leader's
decision to a special assembly session.
Sadat said Nasser was unable to make
the announcement himself because huge
crowds shouting for his return to power
were blocking his way to the assembly
building.
i
Council's decision on
16 10:00 a.m
71 11 00 a m.
71 11:00 noon
7- W
PLEA HEEDED DY ISRAEL;
gross violation of the Securi
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tions more than any other
CAIRO (AP) — Some 200 Americans
awaiting evacuation from Egypt were
smuggled out of their Cairo hotels before
dawn Saturday to avoid tens of thousands
of Egyptians demonstrating for President
Gamal Abdel Nasser.
The Americans were taken by truck un-
der heavy guard to board a train for the
port of Alexandria.
They were to sail on the chartered
The Kingfisher storm halt-
ed harvesting in the area.
-------------------------F----------------------O---------------------------
Paid Circulation 300.691 A. M.-P.M. Daily Average, May 1967
Oklahoma City Times
ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED 1967 OKLAHOMA PUBLISHING CO., 500 N BROADWAY
)
■
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Greek liner Karena for Greece later Sat-
urday.
Their departure followed a night of ten-
sion. Troops and police fired grenades
into the air to turn back the mobs march-
ing on hotels where most of the Ameri-
cans were staying under guard.
Men, women and children twice were
shepherded to hotel basements for safety
as huge.crowds outside howled insults.
The demonstrations followed Nasser's
b 491
kkr
the Soviet government has
taken a decision on the sev-
erance of the Soviet U’nion’s
r6 PAGES—OKLAHOMA CITY, SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1967
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"shin
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ly Council decisions by it.
EDT (11:30 a m. Oklahoma gun-studded hills which the Israelis say terror-
Time) as the hour for ending ized Israel's northern Galilee for 19 years.
*.97
would condemn "any and all
violations of the cease-fire."
The council thus appeared
headed for consideration of
rival resolutions.
Shortly the council was
summoned into an urgent
session at 4:32 a.m. U Thant
relayed Israeli reports that
Israeli troops and aircraft
were in the vicinity of Da-
mascus, but denying the Syr-
ian capital had been under
air attack.
Sugar Mill Attacked
"We do not accept anybody but Nasser
as our leader," the speaker told the as-
sembly, repeating a slogan that had ech-
oed through the canyons of metropolitan
Cairo all night long.
In a message read by the speaker to the
360)-man assembly, Nasser said: "I will
slay in the post where the people want me
to be until the time when we will be able
to erase all traces of aggression. But after
l ha l period the decision should be made in
a general plebiscite."
Tens of thousands milled in the streets
close to the assembly building during the
noon-time meeting.
of Isi ael th.it il beats all the panied by large hail also fell
burden of responsibility for
at Dover.
rough-hewn face and forceful
manner personified the
add this warning:
"If the Security Council
does not fulfill its duty under
the charter of the United Na-
tions. and if the aggressor is
not s t o p p e d immediately,
this will create an extremely
serious situation and all the
responsibility for it, will lie
with those who impede the
adoption of the necessary de-
cision by the Security Coun-
cil."
COOLER
200 Yanks Smuggled Past Cairo Mobs
office, Freeman said he does
not have any shares at this
time.
He also said he does not
consider rides received on
airplanes owned by oil and
utility companies as free
transportation. He said he
does not consider his oil in-
terests or stock ownership in
oil companies as being in-
consistent with his duties.
Freeman told the senate
probers he has owned more
By Jim Standard
Harold Freeman, whose oil holdings have increased
about $500,000 since he became a state corporation com-
missioner, said Saturday he has never used his office for
personal gain.
The chairman of the corporation commission, under
fire from state senate probers, also denied he has ever vio-
--..--- lated his oath of office,
w- which prohibits acceptance
j assistance in the way of
communications and trans-
port.
Condemnation Asked
The reports from UN ob-
servers in Syria reached the
His chain of memorable
roles included a Portuguese
fisherman in "Captains Cou-
rageous." which brought him
an Oscar in 1937, and Father
Flanagan in "Boys Town,"
for which he won a second
Oscar in 1938. f
He was one of the stars of
the golden days at Metro-
Goldwyn-Mayer Studios in
the late 1930’s and 1940's,
along with Clark Gable,
Myrna Loy, Greer Garson,
Robert Taylor and Katha-
rine Hepburn.
To his friends and associ-
ates, Tracy was a complex
man who would shut himself
up for days in his Beverly
Hills home or disappear for
weeks from a movie set.
Some attributed it to his
longtime estrangement from
his wife, the former actress
Louise Treadwell, or his sor-
row over the congenital deaf-
Pess of his son, John.
i
1
SAIGON (AP)
* than 9,000 shares of stock in
Hour oil companies since
11962. One of them, Livingston
j Oil Co., operates more than
1 100 miles of pipeline in Okla-
homa.
The state constituion for-
bids corporation commis-
sioners from having any di-
rect or indirect interest in
47 4:00 a.m.
• 1 5:00 a m.
M A 00 4 m
79 7:00 A.m.
79 1:00 a.m.
71 2:00 A.m.
of free transportation or
ownership and interest in
businesses inconsistent with
his duties.
While admitting to stock
transactions in several oil
firms during his 12 years in
violation of the Security
Council decisions
"Unless Israel halts , and wheat loss is expected to
immediately iis military ac-run as high as 31) percent,
lions, the Soviet Union joint-The harvest was about half
Iv with cther peace-loving , ,
... (‘ompleted, an agneu tura
slates will take sanctions 1 -
Terrorists on Gum-Studdled Hills IDestroyed
diplomatic relations with Is- Fairview arca, but no hail
1 was reported
The noh1 was handed h\ . c.
, ,, Skies over Oklahoma Sun-
Deput v F onngn .Minister \ a-1
sily v. Kuznetsov io Ambas "ay will be Pal II cloudy anl
sador Katriel Katz at the for- thore’s a chance of rainfall
eign ministry here, an Israc- in the extreme east portion.
Ii spokesman said. He said (Cooler weather conditions
9
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329
204,
2, .3
3
9-15
6
4, 5
8
9
5
7
agains Israel w ith all rouse- spokesman said,
quences flowing therefrom ; Heavy Rain
Violations Charged ! Rainfall was measured at
"The Soviet government 166 inches in Kingfisher,
slates that in view of contin- Wheat yield had been run-
ucd Israeli aggressinn’ning 17 1o 20) bushels
against Arab states and the
dcle on average. but hail
damage may cut it to 10
Wo.
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483
Isicl fighter-bombers had the run of the
skis .iliri 1 Syrian MIG was shot dow.
Syrian antiaircraft fire was negligible.
I),I) light operations developed from the
flout lines which ran into Syrian territory
while the Israelis apparently bypassed Syrian
pickets in the cent ral and southern sectors.
At the southern end of the Sea of Galilee, a
strong Syrian artillery position at Tawafiq ap-
peared to be holding out Saturday afternoon
despite heavy shelling.
The "immediate objective appeared to be
the conquest of all Syrian mountain positions
in the area, which Israel says have been a
springboard for terrorist raids against Israeli
.el t h me nt since 1948.
Local: Partly cloudy
with scattered thunder-
storms Sunday. High 87.
Overnight low GG. (Details,
Page 5)
er it to be a development
company.”
Freeman said he was una-
ware of the pipeline holdings
(See RATE—Page 2)
bushels, the spokesman said.
A 1.37-inch rain also halted
the wheat harvest in the
will prevail through the en-
lire state.
Highs in 80s
Forecasters said highs will
vary from 75 in the Panhan-
dle lo the 80s southeast, after
overnight lows of 47 in the
northwest to 73 in the south.
Rainfall reports for the
24-hour period ending ai 7
a.m. Saturday had Fargo
with 2.50-inch, the state's
heaviest, and other amounts
included Woodward. .79 inch.
Enid .89. Guthrie 1.01, Ponca
City .32, and Gage .58.
The weather bureau said
two tornadoes were sighted
early Saturday near Leedey
and Okarche but no damage
was reported.
council piecemeal during a
meeting that began before
dawn in an effort to bring an
end to Middle East hostili-
ties.
The Soviet Union, after
breaking relations with Is-
rael. warned the council it
must halt what the Russians
consider Israeli aggression.
The Soviet Union sought
condemnation of Israel by
the 15-nation council.
Goldberg Lectures Red
Soviet Delegate Nikolai T
Fedorenko said he wanted to
U. S. Ambassador Arthur
J. Goldberg accused Fedo-
renko of making "very pro-
vocative, and unjustified"
statements. He added that
what is needed "is not hot
w'ords but an end to the con-
flict."
Session ‘Urgent’
Goldberg said that Fedo-
renko was well aware that
the United States intended to
submit a resolution which
Israeli Ambassador Gideon campaign hats,” said a young Israeli lieuten-
Rafael gave the council a re- ant.
port on a meeting in Tel By dawn Saturday the two hills — Tel Aza-
Aviv between Dayan and Lt. ziat and Tel Hamra — had been wrecked by a
Gen. Odd Bull, head of the combined Israeli tank and artillery assault.
UN Palestine Truce Supervi- Blackened steel girders twisted over a
sion Organization. clump of dead Syrian soldiers around a H'us-
Rafael said Gen. Bull will sian-made mortar.
establish contact with the Machine guns were chatiering in the fool-
'Syrians and Israel will pro-1
""X
■ ie.............UN S In Wheat
the termination of military
operations. are proceeding
with these operations, seiz-
ing Syrian territory. and are
advancing in the direction of
I amascus.
Warning Sounded
| "The Soviet governmeni wheat.
has warned the governmeni Two inches of rainaccom-
(AP) — pipeline companies.
67. whose1 *
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U' 02928
U "a
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dramatic radio and television announce-
ment of his resignation.
An emergency session of the National
Assembly Friday night appealed to him to
remain in office.
Cairo Saturday was thick with police
and troops as convoys of demonstrators
chanting "Nasser . . Nasser" rolled
through town waving banners and huge
photographs of their leader.
A heavy raiikterm, with
hail and strong wints, lashed
Kingfisher early Saturday
ausing considerable dam-
age io roofs and unharvested
Piecemeal
o
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
(AP) — Israel reported to
the Security Council Satur-
day that Gen. Moshe Dayan,
its defense minister, had
agreed to accept any hour
for a cease-fire set by the
United Nations in consulta-
tion with Syria to halt that
phase of the Middle East
war.
The word came to 15-
nation council as it received
reports also of deep pene-
tration into Syria by Israeli
troops and Israeli air attacks
around the capital of Damas-
cus-.
Report Received
Later Secretary-General U
Thant said the UN truce
chief had fixed 12:30 p.m.
lier in the week unless the
Israclis ceased fire in the
Middle East wa i
Tass said this was the note
handed to the Israeli ambas-
sador:
"The news has nisi
reached here that Israeli
hills of Mt. Hot mon, the highest Syria peak on
the three-bordered junction with Israel and I.-
banon.
The front was"running in a jagged line
south from the hills along a 30-mile ridge in-
cluding the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee.
The Syrian escape route was lined with
weapons, equipment, boots and even socks as
the Syrians found it easier to retreat barefoot-
ed.
In the central sector of the northern front,
opposite the smoldering kibbutz of Gadot. Syri-
an positions were blanketed by long-range ar-
tillery and bombs.
Smoke plumes rose along the ridge where
Syrian ammunition and fuel dumps receivod
dire, 1 hits. ,
American man of action in
scores of movie roles, died
early Saturday of a heart at-
tack.
T r a c y's career, which
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Spencer Tracy
MOSCOW (AID The Soviet Union informed Israel
Saturday it has decided to break diplomatic relations be-
cause of fighting in Syria and warned that, unless Israel
immediately halts all military actions, the Kremlin "will
take sanctions against Israel."
The development was reported by Tass, the official
news agency. It said a note on the Soviet decision was
handed to the Israeli ambassador in Moscow. The Kremlin
threatened to sever ties ear-
By Hans Benedict
WITH ISRAELI FORCES. Syria (AP) — A
giant Israeli strike force began closing its pin-
cers on Syrian troops inside Syria Saturday
and brought death and destruction to two
CAIRO (AP) — Gamal Abdel Nasser
advised the Egyptian National Assembly
Saturday he is bowing to "the will of the
people and will stay on as president of the
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 96, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 10, 1967, newspaper, June 10, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846767/m1/1/: accessed June 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.