Refugees set study at PU FOREST GROVE (UPI) The Pacific University College of Op tometry will admit 10 Cuban re fugees next month for two years of study, Dr. William R. Baldwin, new dean of the college, said to day: The students will study under a program sponsored by the De partment of Health, Education and Welfare, with co-operation of pro fessionals in the field of optome try. ACTIVE DUTY DUE PORTLAND (UPI) -Some 200 members of the Oregon Air Na tional Guard's 142nd Communica tions Squadron will move into the Yakima Firing Center Saturday for two weeks of active duty. No doubt about it, mobs hurting in Justice official says EDITOR'S NOTE! The dlf closure that a convicted gang land axacutiontr li "tinging" on his former atioclatn has focused new attention en the Justice Department's Criminal Division, which is directing the war against the underworld. In the following dispatch, the head of the division discusses Hs progress.) By Louis Castelt UPI Staff Wrlttr WASHINGTON (UPD-At long last, the good guys are giving the bad guys their lumps in the war against organized crime. "There's no doubt about it,' said Asst. Atty. Gen. Herbert J. Miller Jr. "the mobs are hurting.' As head of the Justice Depart- The Best Way To Join The SPAFs Is With Amana At KENCALE HARDWARE & APPLIANCE JnsuwlGllnlGl ment's Criminal Division, 39- year-old Jack Miller is the fed eral government's field general in the fight to smash the power of nationwide crime syndicates. He knows better than others that the fight is very far from won, and hie is not indulging in premature victory celebrations. But he also knows that tiie feds are going after big-time criminals these days with unprecedented vigor and determination. And he says it's paying off. "We've got them on the run," Miller said in an interview with United Press International. "If we can keep the pressure on for another five or six years, we may break the back of this monster." Takes Over Division Miller Is an amiable, quite- spoken Republican lawyer from Minneapolis. He was in private law practice with a distinguished Washington firm when Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy asked him in early 1961 to take charge of the crminal division. At that time, Miller knew no more about organized crime than the average citizen. He'd read fantastic stories about its multi billion dollar annual take from gambling, narcotics and other rackets, and about the mysteri ous "Mafia" which was supposed to coordinate the whole enter prize. But he was included,' as many citizens still are, to treat it as a myth. "But it's not a myth," he said with the dogged emphasis of a man who is telling the truth but expects to be disbelieved. "The lurid stories in the press don't exaggerate if anything they underestimate the scope of the underworld operation, the de gree to which it seeks to bribe and corrupt law enforcement of ficers and public officials, the ruthlessness with which it em ploys murder and other forms of violence to protect - its vast sources of income and silence witnesses." Says Mafia Exists Even the "myth" about the Mafia has turned out to be true, he said. The revelations of Jo seph Valachl, imprisoned gang land executioner who decided to talk, have given federal officials a wealth of inside information about the sinister organization whose very existence was previ ously questioned by some inves tigators. Valachl not only con firmed its existence: He told just how it operates, and named more than 100 of its top figures. Valachi's long song was a "ter rific break" for the criminal di vision's new intelligence unit, Miller said. The intelligence unit was organized two years ago to bring together in one place all of the information about crime and criminals available to the 26 dif ferent federal agencies which have law enforcement re sponsibilities. The government had never be fore had such a "CIA for crime," and Miller has found it "ex tremely helpful". The unit now has dossiers on the activities of about 1,200 major racketeering figures, he said. Credits New Laws Also of major importance in the stepped - up fight against crime, Miller said, is the new legislation enacted by Congress 12 The Bulletin, Wednesday, August 14, 1963 BRAWL EVERY NIGHT VISBY, Sweden (UPI) - A bar owner in this tiny community has opened up a "Western Sa loon" in an effort to attract cus tomers. Each night four men stage a "Western" brawl. in 1961 which makes It a federal crime to send gambling informa tion or paraphernalia across state lines, or to travel in inter state commerce in support of racketeering. These laws have given the Federal Bureau of Investigation a legal license to go after big time gambling, which long has been the number one source of income for the crime syndicates. "The FBI is now going after organized crime the way it went after the Communist party," said Miller. Migrant health project begins PORTLAND (UPI) Oregon's migrant labor health project is un der way. Dr. Ralph Sullivea, director of the occupational heilth section of the State Board of Health, said a public health nurse and sanitarian will work in migrant camps in Yamhill, Washington, Polk, Ma rion and Malheur counties. The project is operated under a federal grant of about $70,000. Choice Steak DINNERS Top Sirloin, Rib, TBone Only 1.9S PASCALE CAFE 1219 S. 3rd 382-3562 FREE-O'-FROST FREEZER-PLUS-REFRIGERATOR With Automatic Ice-Maker 8.7 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR 6.9 CU. FT. 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