Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Dec 1967, p. 17

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All maki id used, seid elephone Collect 5-4434 hd Times Action Classi- The Dreamers 31, The Rolling Stones Stitch N Time f "YOUTH LINKED Italian news media re- ported today that a grand- son of Joseph Stalin may be living in Italy. The pur- ported grandson, Giorgio Zambon, right, is a 22- year-old mason in Corco- nio, Italy. The reports said Stalin's son, Jakob, is be- lieved to have been the wartime partisan fighter "Capt. Monti," who father- ed Giorgio by an Italian girl who now is Mrs. Paola \conflict 2 \boss of the military, has been in TO JOSEPH STALIN Zambon, left, of Orta, Italy. Corconio and Orta are in northern Italy. (AP Wirephoto by cable from Milan) 'but Turkey had reservations be- broader function for the UN 'without overcoming the Greek ©tions to those provisions, and ' ers: "I don't think there is a © crisis. I mean there is no reason Cyprus President Delays Reply On Peace Proposals UNITED NATIONS (AP) --\and Turkey reach their agree- President Makarios of Cyprus|ment on moves to prevent war delayed his reply today to UN| between the two after the Turks Secretary-General U Thant's/ threatened to invade Cyprus be- peace proposals for his island,|cause of a clash there last although Thant omitted parts of/month in which 25 Turkish-Cy- a Greek-Turkish agreement to} priots were killed. which Makarios objected. | But to make Greece's conces- (However, Reuters news agen-|sions go down more easily with cy reported from Nicosia that/the Greek public, the strategy Cypriot government sources|was to have the governments said today acceptance of Ulresnond to an appeal from Thant's peace appeal was a/Thant rather than give way to bregone conclusion, evenieach other. Thant apparently though there was no official an-| changed the terms of the appeal! touncement yet.) Greece and/after Vance informed him of furkey accepted the proposals| Makarios' unyielding resistance. Premiers Constantine Kollias of Greece and Suleyman Demi- rel of Turkey sent word their cause of two sections that were, dropped--one calling for a} ace force in Cyprus and one oviding special rights for the TurkishCypriot minority. The ree now numbers about 4,500 \expeditiously,"" what Thant had jasked--asked an end to any |threats to each other or to Cy- ; ; rn = \prus and removal of an estimat- en including 900 Canadians. (64 12,000 Greek and 1,200 Turk- U.S. presidential envoy Cyrus) ish soldiers on the island illegal- Vance wound up his talks with|)y, karios in Nicosia Ssuiday objec-| 28 Cyprus independent, only 950 Greek and 650 Turkish sol- diers may be on the island. IZZA Phone 723-0241 or 728-0192 EPI'S Orthodox archbishop's another one for disbanding the 'Greek-Cypriot national guard. At the end of the 34-hour meeting in Nicosia, Makarios looked pleased, in marked con- trast to Vance. He told report- for it." Vance had helped Greece \governments would "carry out! tok kt tote kk tk Civ war broke out on Cyprus in December, 1963, after Maka- rios said he was replacing those special rights by majority rule. A UN peace force moved in to end the fighting then. Two bombs exploded in Kyre- nia, in northern Cyprus, Sunday night, causing slight damage but no casualties. SECIS II TAA Ib: Celebrate 5 New Year's Eve 'The Gayest Party Ever at . (Ai) § Soke ede eens st fe Fax * FAO IO will be to wrestle with the MILITARY BUDGET LOOMS By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Staff Writer One of Robert McNamara's final duties as defence secretary military budget for the next fis- cal year starting July 1. His fig- ures will give U.S. taxpayers a fresh look at the mounting costs of the Vietnam war. The simplified picture has been one of a little David holding an enormous Goliath at bay. In fact, the war more and more has the chilling look of a global between the United States and a Communist world) tions have invested in the war, the greater the cost to the United States. The costs now have soared to astronomical heights. McNamara, as civilian charge of spending one half the total U.S. budget, and of that half 25 per cent went to Viet- nam in the current year. | DOUBLE FIRST WAR The First World War is esti- mated to have cost the United States $32,260,000,000. At the) present rate of spending, if it) continues through the next fis-| cal year, Vietnam will have cost) more than double that figure. | The Second World War is esti-| Press Clubs May Organize OTTAWA (CP) -- A commit-) tee was formed Sunday to consider formation of a federa- tion of Canadian press clubs. The federation would promote} jnational fellowship programs, lan international exchange of in- formation among press clubs} land the publication of a national press club magazine. | SELLING | YOUR HOUSE ? | WE CHARGE ONLY 4% LIST NOW WITH CENTRAL ONT. TRUST Phone 723-5221 | | Under the 1960 treaties mak-| APPEARING THIS WEEK OSHAWA'S OWN "DANNY NICHOLS and the Country Kings" AT THE ESTABLISHED HOME Of Country & Western MUSIC IN OSHAWA ; lation to the economic capabili- ee ad na-\ties and problems of the Com- mated to have cost the United States $387,000,000,000. If the present rate continues through the next fiscal year, Vietnam costs for four spending years will have reached 20 per cent of the costliest war in history. These are apart from the costs incurred by the six other fighting allies of the United States. There is no way of making an accurate assessment of the cost on the Communist side. Al- though it would fall far short of what the United States is spend- ing, it would not be cheap in re- munist nations. 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As of now, the war costs Americans about $63,000,000 a year. If it continues through the 1968-69 fiscal year, it likely will cost more than $70,000,000 a day. Up to that time it will be close to half the entire U.S. for- eign aid investment for the 20 years from 1940 to 1960. The outlay for the war in the 1967-68 fiscal year would cover Pravda Lauds Senator McCarthy Ignores Deescalation Plea MOSCOW (AP) Pravda praised U.S. Senator Eugene J. McCarthy (Dem. Minn.) Sunday for his attack on U.S. Vietnam policy but avoids direct com- ment on the presidential candi- date's proposal for gradual de- escalation of the war. Calling McCarthy "'intelligent, witty," Pravda says: "He likes modern poetry and has a broad range of views." The official Soviet Communist party newspaper says Mc- Carthy's philosophy is that of "a typical modern American liberal." 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