PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Monday, January lflfif)
REV. PAULINE LAWSON,
youth loader for the Ore
gon and Southern Idaho Dis
trict, will be conducting a
special revival meeting at
the Pentecostal Church of
God, 4637 Shasta Way, from
January 24 through January
31. A special invitation is
given to the youth. The Pen.
tecostal Church of God is
completing a new church at
1915 Homedale Road which
will be ready for occupancy
in about 45 days.
Tiny Car Owner
Tosses Sponge,
Getting Garage
P1TTSBUKGH (DPI) "I'm
going to get me a garage," Joe
Schmidt vowed today.
Schmidt is a two-time loser to
the pranksters, or vandals if you
prefer, who get a charge out of
turning small foreign automobiles
over on their sides.
"Someone turned my car on its
Hide," Joe complained to police
Sunday morning. That was about
S a.m. Within a few minutes, four
other small car owners called
They, too, were as upset as their
automobiles.
"The same thing happened to
my Volkswagen about a month
and a half ago. Someone had
pushed it from the street side and
flipped it over the curb," Schmidt
said.
"After that, I always tried to
park near a tree," said Schmidt,
man Who thought he had the
problem licked.
"But this lime, they pushed It
the other way from the curb
out."
EXTEND TRADE PACT
NEW DELHI (UP1I - The gov
eminent o India .has agreed to
extend its trade agreement witli
Communist North Viet Nam for
two more years it was announced
Sunday. The agreement was orig
inally signed in 1IIS6 for a three-
year period.
The "summer White House" of
President Theodore Roosevelt
uas at Sagamore Hill, Oyster Bay,
N.Y.
Doors Open 6:45 P.M.
NOW PLAYING!
Quietest Man
Prepares Var
HERTFORD, England (UPI) -
Sh-h-h-h-h h! Tiptoe gently and
don't slam the door when you
visit Sir Walter Hannay. He's the
quietest man in England.
Sir Walter, chairman of the Na
tional Council of the Noise Abate
ment Society, is silently preparing
another quiet assault on the noise-
makers of the country.
With his wife, a historical novel
ist, Sir Walter lives in seclusion
near here in a mansion fitted out
with gadgets to keep out noise.
Vacuum hinges stop the doors
from banging. Wall-to-wall car
pels cover the floors. The door
bell and the telephone bells are
mulfled.
The windows are padded to
keep out intruding noises. The
efrigerator is fitted with a silen
er to dull the hum of the motor.
His wife said that during a
World War II air raid she rattled
a bottle of sleeping pills one night
and her husband bawled her out
saying: "Stop that blasted noise."
Even Henry, the family bulldog.
doesn't bark. The Hannay's own
no television set and only a tiny
radio.
Hannay, a lop neurologist, said
London is getting noisier each
year and that his society is plan
ning the new assault by having a
sympathetic member of Parlia
ment introduce a bill to amend
the present noise control act. The
new bill would take in all new
noises developed since the old
measure was passed.
Shift Asked
By Governor
PORTLAND (AP) - Gov. Mark
Hatlield again said Sunday all
state agencies should have main
offices in Salem.
He said he wasn't altogether
speaking in jest when he told the
tale Board of Control at a recent
meeting that the state should sell
its office building in Portland and
move the headquarters to the
state capital.
Hatfield said that if enough
facilities become available in
Salem while he still is governor,
he will strongly advocate the
shift.
He said administrative efficien
cy would be served by moving to
Salem such agencies as the Wei
fore Commission, the Board of
Health and the System of Higher
Education.
The commission and the board
now have Portland headquarters
The education system of I ice is at
Eugene.
Hatfield reported good progress
in attracting new industry to Ore
gon and said that before the year
is over, he expects to be able to
disclose "the greatest develop
ment in Oregon industry in the
past 50 years.
He said the Portland newspaper
strike is starting to hurt labor-
management relations in the state
and should be settled before it dis
courages business from moving
into Oregon.
Looking ahead to the twit ses
sion of the Legislature Hatfield
said he already is preparing a
budget not based on any new
taxes.
Instead, he said, he will ask the
lawmakers to eliminate equities
in the state's structure to elimin
ate inequities and broaden the
base through a net receipts tax.
lie explained this will involve
mainly reorganization of the tax
structure.
Hatfield warned that unless this
is done, the state will have to
lind new levies, possibly including
;i sales tax.
The governor expressed h I s
views in a radio and television
interview with Tom McCall on
Mi-Call's Viewpoint program (on
KGW).
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) Fed-i
oral authorities apparently have
been unable to shake Robert V.
Spears' claim that he did not sab
otage the National airliner which
crashed into the Gulf of Mexico
Nov. 16 with the loss of 42 lives.
Spears, 64, appeared calm and
unwprried in his county jail cell
today where he spent the week
end without any attempts by FBI
agents to question him.
Agents have refused to discuss
the case publicly, but announce
ment Sunday that Spears would
be arraigned next Monday on a
DOORS OPEN 6:45
The mightiest story of
faith known to our time!
11
from WARNER BROS. I km TECHNtRAMA um TECHNICOLOR
Pni)fil Dl TD.DnPrD AAIir
BDB8EK
uiiamraimii
J Wt laMy tfliertd . "The Mirarfc" should be htm Hi
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
WANNA BUY My THOUGHTS FOR A PMY 9 '
Officers Unable To Shake
Spears' Sfory On Ail Crash
Editor Who Blliea Fidel TellsReasonForChange
Editor's Note Last Wednesday
editor Jorge Zayas fled from Cu
ba, fearing arrest because of the
outspoken, often anti-Castro, stand
he had taken in his newspaper
Avance. In the following article,
first of several he is writing for
the Miami Herald, Zayas tells of
his feelings about Cuba today.
By JORGE ZAYAS
Copyright 1960 by the Miami
Herald Publishing Co.; distribut
ed by The Associated Press
MIAMI (AP) I helped Fidel
Castro get into power because I
thought he was good for Cuba. I
was wrong.
Now I must speak out in hopes
.i:..L. I
of helping my country rid itself.and those same hopes "'
now see shattered oy wc -u -
nist beliefs of Castro.
of him. It's not that I am a mar
lyr but because:
As a Catholic, I am opposed to
communism.
As an editor, I cannot conceive
of true democracy without free
dom of the press.
As a descendant of Cuban pa
triotsmy grand uncle Alfredo
Zayas was president of Cuba from
1M22 to 1926 and another grand
uncle, Gen. Juan Kruno Zayas,
died on the battlefield fighting for
Cuban independence I can not
disgrace their memory.
But let me tell my story from
the beginning ... of my hopes
which rose so high when the Ba
tista dictatorship was overthrown
Freight Wreck Being Checked
Beatniks Said
Dope Addicts
SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-A pri
vale investigator who gathered
evidence for a major narcotics
raid in the North Beach district
here, estimated today that 75 per
cent of the "beatnik inhabitants of
the area smoke marijuana at some
time or another.
Robert A. Estes, 23, a former
professional baseball player, lived
as a beatnik with two state agents
to gain evidence that resulted in
23 arrests in nightlong raids Fri
aa.v. ' ,
He told of being forced to take
part in robberies and witnessing
sex orgies while gathering
evidence.
Estes grew a beard, wrote poe
try and sat on the sidewalk play
ing a harmonica while acting his
ohemian role. He admitted that
his fellow beatniks did not like
lis poetry and found it "too
square."
I estimate that 75 per cent of
the beatniks on the Beach smoke
weed marijuana at sortie time or
another," Estes said today. "I
hate what dope does to people. !
will for the rest of my life."
He said he and state agents
Jack Sutton and Henry Lopez
were forced to go along on rob
beries or lose their status with the
beatniks. In one case, he said,
thay managed to 'tip police so that
their companions were arrested.
He said he attended a party at
the house of a prostitute in the
Fillmore District.
'There were about 30 people
there. By midnight, there was
weed all over the place," he said
"In the bedroom, there were six
guys and one girl. We were in a
fix. We were undercover, yet this
girl was being raped. Finally we
persuaded two of the other girls
to help her.
'The -started putting her
clothes back on. but the hostess
shouldered them aside. She took
the girl to her car and drove her
to a hotel. She sold the room key
to a man and he stayed all night,"
Estes said.
What is Estes' opinion of the
city's much-discussed beatnik population?
"For my money, they're dirty.
they're lazy, they're bums and
they're crooks," he said. "For the
most part they have deep inferior
ity complexes that only disappear
when they mix together."
federal charge of transporting a
stolen car was taken by observers
of the case as a tacit admission
that investigators have run into a
deadend.
Spears, a self-styled doctor and
an ex-convict, was arrested
Wednesday on suspicion of driv
ing the auto of William Allen lay
lor, Tampa, Fla., to Phoenix
Taylor was the man Spears has
admitted took his place aboard
the airliner which crashed.
Cause of the crash was still un
der investigation.
Agents confronted Spears in
marathon questioning sessions
Thursday and Friday with the
fact that: .
He was presumed killed in
the plane crash and hid away aft
er the crash.
He held a $100,000 travel in
surance policy whicn nis wile
stood to collect with his supposed
death.
A cache of dynamite and in
gredients for a home-made bomb
were found at his New River
Ariz., hideaway.
He was facing trial on abor
lion charges in Los Angeles which
he stood to have canceled with
his supposed death. '
Spears, however, appeared un
ruffled by the questioning ses
sions. Asked if he would like to
talk to reporters, he answered:
"It wouldn't do them any good
to be able to talk to me. I haven't
a thing to say to any of them."
Los Angeles authorities said
they would seek trial of Spears
on two counts of abortion and one
of conspiracy after federal author
ities are finished with him. Spears
could receive a maximum sen
tence of five years in jail and
$5,000 fine on the auto charge.
SUMAS (Whatcom County),
Wash. (AP) Fourteen cars of a
.")4-car Northern Pacific Railway
freight train were derailed Sunday
night 11 miles south of here.
About 300 feet of track were torn
up.
Cause of the accident was not
immediately determined. Railway
officials from Tacoma were to
investigate.
No one was injured. The freight
carried a standard crew of six
a conductor, three brakemen, an
engineer and a fireman.
J. J. Ackley, chief dispatcher
for the Northern Pacific at Taco
ma, said the tracks would be
closed for at least two days. A
wrecker and crew left Auburn,
near Seattle, Monday morning.
Heratf) anb$etr$
Klamath Talla. Oregon
Serving Southenn Ortfon
and Northern California
Published dally except Saturday by
Southern Orel on Puhiuhtni Company
Main at Esplanade
Phone rUxtdo
FRANK JENKINS. Editor
BILL JENKINS. Manaiinf Editor
FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor
Entered at second clasi matter at the
pott office at Klamath Fall. Oregon,
on Aucuat 20. 1006. under act f
Con fret. March 3, lfTTtt. Second-claaa
postage paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon,
and at additional mailing nfttCM.
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Navy Planning
Probe Of Gulf
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The
Navy today planned to probe the
bottom of the Gulf of Mexico for
wreckage of a National Airlines
plane that carried 42 persons to
their death two months ago.
Investigators hoped the' wreck
age might tell them whether a
bomb explosion sent the DC7B
hurtling into the water Nov. 16.
They also sought to determine
if a missing Tampa man was one
of the 29 persons whose bodies
have not yet been found.
The missing man, William A.
Taylor, 69, was a friend of Rob
ert Vernon Spears who was listed
as a heavily insured passenger on
the plane but turned up alive in
Phoenix, Ariz., last week..
The FBI said the 65-ycar-old na
turopath, , who took out $100,000
flight insurance in his own name,
had blasting equipment in his lug
gage when he was arrested.
Taylor's divorced wife -said she
believed Spears may have hypno
tized Taylor into taking his place
on the doomed plane.
Two Navy vessels headed to
ward the tip of Louisiana to in
vestigate an object, located by
sound gear, under several hun
dred feet of water.
"It's a bad mess," Ackley said.
'They (the cars) are tipped over,
upside down and every which
way.
The derailment occurred about
7 p.m. on tracks between Nook
sack and Dcming in northern
Whatcom County. The engine and
first car remained upright. The
following 14 cars were derailed
and the next 39 cars remained on
the tracks.
The Northern Pacific was re
routing its trains from Sumas to
Bellingham over Milwaukee Road
tracks, then on to Seattle on its
own facilities.
The train was bound from Su
mas, on the Washington-Canadian
border, .to Auburn. It was loaded
with a variety of freight, including
potatoes, ore, quartz and shakes.
An estimate of damage was not
immediately available.
u-hon the Castro forces began
to make a real fight against Ba
tista my newspaper worked close
ly with the 26th of July Move-
ment. We were the only news
paper which cooperated by refus
ing to publish in the protest strike
called against the Batista govern
ment. Later my newspaper was the
only one of the Havana dailies to
send correspondents to the Castro
rebel camps in the hills. I didn't
do us any good, however, because
about that time Batista clamped
down censorship.
When the Castro forces were
victorious on Jan. 1, 193. I was
elated. It was, I believed, a glori
ous day for Cuba. On that occa
sion, I formally took over as edi
tor of our newspaper from my
mother.
I had not wanted to be editor
previously because I felt I could
never do justice to the position
with Batista stifling my voice.
When it became more and more
apparent that Castro was carry
ing my country toward a com
munistic dictatorship, I began to
protest editorially. Last Novem
ber, at a journalistic seminar in
New York. I was very critical.
Castro didn't like it. When 1 re
turned, I was detained for more
than an hour at the Havana Air
port while his agents cross-examined
me.
It quickly became obvious that
he was trying tq scare me.
I knew then my days were num
bered and I had better start plan
ning for a quick getaway.
Castro was particularly bitter in
charging that I was entering into
a conspiracy with the U.S. Stati
Department, un uus cnarge, I an.
iwered mm inrougn ine columni
of the Miami Herald. Certainly, (
had visited the Slate Department
while in wasningion. with me
were 14 other Latin American
newspapermen. We went there nnt
to conspire but to observe its oper.
ations. Most wrote articles about
our visit. ,
A few days afler my detention
at the airport, Castro police pound
! on my door at about 1:30 a m,
I was reading in bed.
They were polite and apolonetis,
They said they had "a stupid re
port" that an arms cache was hid.
den in my home. Their search
was casual.
It was just another way of Iry.
ing to terrify me.
About Dec. 20, Castro and I had
another clash.
During a labor union rally at i
large Havana theater, David 6al.
vador, general secretary of thj
Cuban Federation of Labor and S
longtime Communist, urged that
my newspaper be confiscated and
iU editors shot.
Later, Castro spoke. He support
ed Salvador instead of cautioning
him. Castro called Avance a coun
terrevolutionary newspaper.
The next day a law was passed
decreeing that all properties of
counterrevolutionaries would bt
confiscated.
I knew - time was running out
for me.
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