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The Daily Intelligencer from Doylestown, Pennsylvania • Page 1

Location:
Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
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1
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Hangover: Israelis Perplexed With Their Victory iMh Lew month after Uriel's vxtory ovtr ihr Anibs. of lriirhs rhuigt-d from one of Mitiifatiiori and exhilaration to dt-ep prr- The people appcsr bf a to tiplain why flush of has bct-n rrplac-ed the furs of an umvrtain poliUcal future even ihr of ntu outbreaks of Mam lend TO Manie eminent for what to be a failure to explain Israel's case to the They do not relate acrid opmioa to pouer politico. Uracl'b defense m.ms'.i-r. Gen. Mcobe indi-ed tt-1! the country ihjl the Sovif.

a double defeat wind) unlAfly to lake lying douii. Rfdfc Lou Arms Its Mideast policy has been shbtit-rrd and the modern arms it to Arabs be burned and broken, or in Israel's posse.ssion. He warned that Itouets. under ibnr Mideast dfbarlc. have a loufh line in -tore for Israel a long time lo Israelis more or Jess reconciled themselves to Moscou's hostility.

Their deep txincern is at the apparent change of heart ol some of the powers, especially France. they had regarded as As reports came in 0:1 a feehng of concern for the future took ThoM? uho that ihr "lo.ij: winded and sterile talk at the U.N. be ignored and lets lely on ourselves." are gradually becoming the minority. Patience with Foreign Minister Abba Eban is running ojt. as though his speeches utre responsive for the bad direction things are taking.

They Crt Letters. Only the many letters received by numerous Israelis from rela'Jxes abroad, praising Eban to the sky. may saved the foreign minister from popular demand for his resignation and replacement. As the Israelis see it, the recent exents in the, Mideast a siiarfr of hglil or perish. The Israelis rose a one ind in six dsy.s.

June 30. defeated the Arab armies, The fact in doing s-o liwy also occupied thousands of square miles of territory' is hardly by most people. Most had sympathy for lint largely rock and desert areas Uken. But no one was by the reunification of Jerusalem. Israelis were deeply moved by being able once more to go the Wailing Wall, the holy of holies of the Jeus.

and did so by the thousands. Their territorial concern was einouoaal and strategic. Israelis could undersia.id sudden worldwide fur tiif iir.rrr.aUuiiahra'joa of Jerusalem, remembering as '-hry did Uiai 'Jie Vatican had l.Jted not a finger tiit cjt was divided. They could nut understand why they should give up Sharin el and oace more leave the Red Sea entrance the merry of U.A.R President Carnal Abdel Nasser: or the Golan tad condemn the border the north to the nighinjarcs of terror.sm from Syria. But Israelis are aware of the tremendous new problems we occupied areas present over one million Incorporated :r.to Israel, the Arabs nrght.

a pentra- liu.i. become tiir ai.d achieve by populjit.cin fiplouou what Nasser Soviet harduare. Tins has given rise to of some sort of autonomy for the captured vit-st bank of the River Jordan, to be joined a Israel. Jews Udicoaot a indi hoaever has been troust-d Urael by the allegations against Arab They believe that while Arabs nere, no: encouraged to stny on the uest bank, they uere not forced to fee. Loor.r.z vas negligible, and sr.erely punished when discovered, whiic- of i hi.d btrii no ripe art- to uonder: la the mrn: tt.ih the uj.de world now setting ijot ur.h Krjifl but the Ariib iand'.

perhaps a sub'Je remt-m Thrre that a son of reverse ar-ii-CM 1 1 drveiup Middle Iztnd'- lha'. ire Arjb Iwaeli. BT. at prfse.T. the ir.ab:L:ty to understand the hov.Je outside world.

Israels, a after Mar.ed. were wv.h a vnile Th.it to defeat, ih.n; that cjr: happen victory. 'Musicale' Is Raided (Story Btlow) Are UFO's Really So? (Story Below) "A Newspaper For Every Member Of Family" 163RD YEAR VOL 80, NO. 159 DOYLESTOWN, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 6, 1967 2 Sections 20 Pages 10 Cents Copy Trapped By Landslides Near Laos 52s Hit N. Viet Troops Will Cost $194,925 Two Street Road Death Traps Set For Elimination By Highway Dept.

invasion Routes i Blocked SAIGOX Bo2 heavv bombers flying a record Two intersection hazard elim- of Fcasterville was thc low low bids on 30 totaled .1.8 miles and extends approx-, jg lu ra ds todav smas ec ination projects in for the job at a cost 7-million. jimately 1.417 feet northwest troops and trucks and Warrington Townships I Marvin eidner. State Rep-l lhe in se ction of Route 611 to trapped by i ands ii des triggered been announced by the State: Pennsylvania, which establish- the intersection of Route 202. earlier Stratofortress strikes. Highways Department.

ed several national for the H5tn L. is- Tne construction vvnll consist! merican spokesmen said The work to be done on .28 construction records during the'latvc District, advises that 0 crushed aggregate base i i of a mjle of Street Road year ended June 30. a a Highways Deparunentja bituminous surface. The tvvo-j a aller i ol lno I i uai-di ciiutu OUIIc OU. Ud3 fc a uibuiiiuiuuo ountn-t.

include the widening and con- set its'sights on a $420 million vvill advertise and receive bids lane road will be 24 feet 1 next 12 months, on July 28 for the and at some points 26 feet struction of left turn standby- lanes at the intersection of program for the next June saw the state set a one- tion of Route 313 (Swamp Rr.id) Street and Old York Road in month record by opening bids runs through Plumstead, on 90 projects totaling $109.8 Buckingham. Doylestown Townships and Doylestown Borough Warminster and at the intersection of Street Road and Route 611 in Warrington. million. June 30 was also a record in Bucks County. Neshaminy Constructors Lie.

day for the state when apparent' The length of the project is wide. The maintenance department for the state in Doylestown vvill soon start resurfacing eight miles of Bristol Road between Tradesville and Churchville. Congolese ps chedelic Pgrty Turned off? Ask Help Tinicum 'Musicals' Is Interrupted In Uprising KINSHASA. The Congo (UPI) --Congo President Joseph D. Mobutu today appealed to his African neighbors for help in putting down a rebel uprising in As Agents Nab Five In Dope Raid two eastern cities before ill leads to civil war.

Mobutu made the appeal for "moral and material assistance" in a note to Secretary- General Daillo Telli of the A house in Tincum Township in Upper Bucks County, which was believed to be a distribution point for illicit drugs, was raided Wednesday afternoon by Federal narcotics agents (and five persons arrested. Raiders kicked in the door while a psychedelic party was allegedly underway at the home of Frederick H. Edwards. 26. of Organization of African Unity.

ugtown Hill and Tinicum A i A A i (OAU). Mobutu said in the note that he had learned former Congo i Moise planned to move foreign mercenaries into the Congo to create civil war. Tshombe was under arrest in i Algiers. But informed sources said the Congo's attempts to extradite him to face a death sentence for treason had triggered Wednesday's attacks on the two eastern Congo towns. On Wednesday.

Mobutu appealed to the United Nations Church Roads in Upper Black Eddy. Besides Edwards, the other four arrested were Joan Elaine Stockton Edwards, 24, his wife, of Upper Black Eddy; Bruce Upton Daniels. 33, of Weehau- ken, N.J.: Donald Christian, 30. of New York City and Patricia Anthony Melas. 25, of Provincetown, Mass.

Armed with search and seizure warrants issued earlier by Justice of the Peace Clyde C. Leaver of Buckingham, the federal agents seized the five dur- Could Be Deployed Anywhere Navy Orders Research Into Missile Defense WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Navy is ordering industry research on a sea-based antiballistic missile system raising Security Council for help in new international implications, squashing the rebellion. Defensive anti-ballstic mis- Mobutu announced the attacks siles (ABMs) would be placed himself Wednesday shasa Radio. Thu over Kin- strongman president said foreign mercenaries attacked the cities of Kisangani and Bukavu.

Mobutu clamped a strict 12- on specially built ships or submarines and could be deployed anywhere on the world's seas. against attack or nuclear "blackmail" by the Soviet Union or Communist China. For example, they believe it would enable the United States, with or without treaty, to provide a "defensive" nuclear umbrella for Japan against Chinn, for Europe against Russia and for other areas. At present the only such hour curfew on all this one could be Paie lused to protect third countries ui cavuv unij ou i i Advocates claim that, protectjon thc United states can knv A cvctninc nmr nAincr provide is thc prospect of U.S. other ABM systems now being Mayor Breaks A Tie Dublin Borough Rejects Zoning; Citizens 9 Wish ing a musical and drug session.

According to Daniel Addario, chief agent in charge, the house was furnished with psychedelic orange and purple curtains and a stereo set. When raiders burst in, they engine jets dropped tons of bombs on the Xorth Vietnamese pinned by the slides in A Shau Valley in South Vietnam's northern vinces near the Laos border. The Communists had used' bulldozers smuggled from Xorth i Vietnam to construct an weather supply road through; the rugged valley to fuel Officer Explains armies battling American Ma- 1 rines for the North-South! Vietnam border area. But! earlier B52 raids brought down! the slides and the record bombing caught, the troops and! supplies trapped behind. NEW CB EDUCATOR--Dr.

H. Ronald Huber, 37, formerly of Huntingdon, on Wednesday began his career of superintendent of Central Bucks School District at a salary of $22,000 a year. The school district includes three boroughs and six townships. Dr. Huber succeeds Dr.

B. Anton Hess who accepted a position in Harrisburg with the Dept. of Public Instruction. (Staff Photo By Don Renner) Fingerprint, 'Flying Saucers 9 Seen Confession; By 'Careless Witnesses 9 7 Arrested By ERIC GUTSCHE Swenk. a General Electric i Intellieencer Staff Writer i engineer who spoke before the! Unidentified flying objectslCAP squadron last month, that ranging in age from 16 to 18 the result primarily were a definite possibili- years, and a 20-year-old youth i careless witnesses, according, ty.

have been apprehended by dumps and guerrilla trails Daniel C. King of Star Seen Police Department mej Johnsv jii xaval Air Sia-i u.and are believed to have been The Stratoforts also hit troop concentrations, bunkers, automatic weapons positions, base camps, bivouac areas, supply; 8 the Communists were making into a vast offensive base. ition. I Speaking before the North wnen raiaers oursi in, iney main tampr irea lau uirrus, ana niur found Edwards and the Melcs JTM TM the North Siuth! Penn uadron of thc Civil A P'ancs." King said, ivnmnn nlnvinff pnilars Patrol, hanfiared at Montjom-; HO maintained th woman on drums, and Christian withj a "set of works" needles, dr vcs ta ani 1 I Vietnam border where Leather- were blocking invasion by units of five Dublin Borough Mayor Harold E. Bishop cast the vote that officially turned thumbs down on zoning for the borough at a meeting Monday night.

The mayor, who had to cast the deciding vote, voted against zoning saying that he felt council should reflect the wishes and decision of the majority of the property owners. In This Issue Amusement 18 Bridge Comics 19 Horoscope 14 Sodil 5, 6 Sports 8, 9 Council sent out 154 post cards to property owners. Seventy-four property owners indicated they were opposed to zoning. Twenty-nine property Owners voted in favor of zoning. Thc mayor said: "I feel that I'should bow to the wishes of the majority of the property owners and should carry out their decisions." Council authorized Borough Engineer John Lenhart to pur chase a generator to bo used in an emergency or failure at the sewer plant.

Council also accepted with regret the resignation of Coun cllman Daniel Stauffcr who is leaving council because of thc pressure of business duties. retaliation against a nuclear aggressor--a protection some Europeans arc chary about. In theory a "portable" ABM system could provide a more persuasive reason tlinn now exists for countries to sign a "nonprolifcration" against developing nuclear weapons. When the United States has urged such a treaty, some countries around the world have replied, in effect. "Who will protect us?" Land-based ABM systems such as Russia is Continued on Pan Tuo-HAYY syringe and kitchen spoon- preparing an injection of drugs as methampheUmine.

The other woman was in a back room. Addario said the house had been under observation for a week as a suspected Philadelphia and New Hope area distribution center for the stimulant drug. Addario said 30 bags of the mildly addicting drug, which comes in white crystalline powder, was confiscated, along with several hundred glassine vials, scales and test tubes, thought to have been used for weighing and measuring. Addario said the raiders confiscated seven large bags of one to two grams of metham phetamine each and 23 smaller bags of 200 to 300 milligrams each. The drug usually retails for about $10 to $15 a bag.

he said, and is sniffed or injected by drug users. The five arrested were taken before Justice of the Peace Leaver, and given a preliminary arraignment about p.m. Wednesday. Edwards' bail was set at $5,000. while the others' bail was set at $2.500 each.

All five were detained at Bucks County Prison awaiting a further hear ing. Communist divisions. Just below the border. Communist mortars ripped into a Marine patrol, killing three Americans and wounding 51. These did not figure in casualty figures for last week announced by the American military command in Vietnam.

Spokesmen said 161 Americans were killed in action and 1.529 wounded last week. The totals did not include the 109 Marines killed and more than 350 wounded in border fighting since Sunday. live evidence that flying saucers exist. Six Lansdale area juveniles. "Of 41 sightings in the jnvoked jn Qr more burg ar 'ies in three counties.

William F. Cossman III. 16, that meteoro-1 Lansdale RD 2, who was ap- oddities like inversion prehended Wednesday about 5 nnd charged i bein? a ivay, confronted i own fingerprints by Lans- Idalc police in connection airplanes' 3 burglary at the Keyser auto- at eryville Airport, King said 0 gi ca i nesday he has found no posi- i aye rs ofu-n confused onlookers Pm to the poini believed distorted object they see Many sightings, he was a UFO. were merely visual distortions! Reflections from normal phenomena lens distortions in cameras 110t3 a cnc cal illusions spotted by startled i were two of the frequently other youths, police i citizens. Displays Photos He displayed photos of hazy 'solved errors in identification.

he said, and suggested jei air-, Tho burglaries took place in craft after-burner luminescence the Qu.ikerto\\r., Telford. Lans- moons. 01 widely sighted dale. Horsham nnd other areas. COmetS, douda.

dUit donl jfj cal on rrimct nrrnrreri in Bucks. The 11.695 the servicemen Heavy Toll I new lists brought to number killed in of U.S. Vietnam since the war began and raised to 69,870 the number wounded. A total of 670 Americans were listed as missing or captured. Spokesmen said 1,331 Commu- devils and other natural occur rences, all turned in to the Air Force's UFO examiners as possible flying saucers.

The Air Force, he said. 11,000 sightings in its unclassi fied files in Ohio, and has found explanations for all butj 600. King, who has looked into the UFO question as an shoot of his Air Force work at Johnsville. said he found those 600 to be unsolved mostly because the people who reported them did not provide thc Air The crimes occurred in Bucks. "The University of Colorado Montgomery and Li-high Counis currently working on an month UFO project financed.

A Lansdale police department a $315.000 grant by a federal spokesman said nearby police las agency. That report should be departments may be involved in the investigation. Thc seven vouths arc all of Lantdiilc Police Continued on Tuo-'FLYINO LOST FOUND LOST: CollW-OW Bptmn wtlu, cellar. Anmra Cindy. lUnrd.

Can tB-CTO. LOST: 2 kxit blind tui. Area ol tnvillt. 1 1 CMIdrra'i jOll. OU POUND: Shortwrtl puppy.

Atnil I montM ok), New Drtmln M- POUND: rot Imind lypo. Moult. Irl nlond found In Uhiikn. 7W41II. nists were killed last week, oriForce with enough information.

I He refuted the claim by Rol- Contlnucd on Page Two--NORTH Pleasant Generally fair and mild today, tonight and Friday. Highs each day from mid 70's to low 80's and lows tonight in mid to upper 50's. the custody Department. IN CLOVER MOUNT CLEMENS. Mich, Lawrence 28 clovers mid nine five-leaf models in her backyard 20,000 Expected At Sunday Rite Crash Fatal To Motorist A 47-year-old Philadelphia motorist, Robert Hunter, who died after' a two-car collision on Route 413 in Bristoj Town' ship, is highway Bucks death County's 34th since Jan.

1. Last year this time there were highway fatalities. Hunter was operating a car thnt was struck by Mrs. Claire Osburn, Rond, Bristol Township. Police snld Hunter's cnr veered into the path of the Osbum vehicle.

He died in Lower Bucks County Hospital. Shrine To Dedicate Stained Glass Walls In a special all-day religious and cultural ceremony on Sunday, The Very Rev. Michael M. Zembrzuski. vicar general of thc Pnulinc Fathers, and founder-director of the National Shrine of Our Lady Of Czesto- chovva at Doylcstown, will dedicate thc largest installation of leaded stained glass windows ever done In the United States.

The windows are a colorful and inspiring sight, and cover a wall area of more than 3.000 square feet. The Departure design of the windows Is a departure from what one usually expects to find in church or cuthedrnl. Although they hnve a religious Ilieinc. they arc not ovcr-powerinRly roligoux. In fact, tho religions feeling is so carefully blended with thc historic and cultural themes, it is almost unobstru- sive.

The windows, located in the upper church of the internationally famous Basilica, fill the west w.ill nnd the en.st wall of the church. The west thc history window wall of Poland's tells 1.000 years of Christianity, from 966 to 1966. This is most apropos, since the Shrine itself was dedicated last October as the Shrine of the Polish Millennium. The east window wall tells the story of Christianity In America from the discovery by Columbus to the present day. nnd highlights the contribution of the Polish people to thc history nnd development of Amer- the do- ica from the year 1608.

The beautiful Basilica of ecumenical thought of universal National Sliruir. brotherhood is displayed in thcisifined by artist architect J. panels that dramatize the Szepiycki, althoujh tribution of Roger Williams, (unfinshied. is a true work of William Ponn nnd Lord Father Monument Mich.iel has rough form, always'sculpture of nri. own in The relief thc Holv Tnniiy maintained that the shrine at'above thc in the Mam Doylestown is a monument is an work of Christianity.

He and the Pauline'art. Designed by the Znkian. it Fathers prove their sincerity "Sculptor, Stephen this thought with the portrayal imoasurccs 28 feci high and 36 of the contribution to Christian- long. In the Lower Church of thc Basilica hang a few of paintings of famed Polish Artist, Ity of these great Protestant leaders. Father Michael and the Pauline Fathers have also maintained from the beginning that the shrine was designed and build ns a center of culture, nx well a center of religious flevofion.

Adam works Stykn. to thc who Killed his Polish-American Museum to he built in thc future at thc Shrine, Artists and art lovers will 1.

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About The Daily Intelligencer Archive

Pages Available:
47,029
Years Available:
1945-2009