Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 21, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    More Soviet
Troops
Leave Cuba
Afro-American Chairman Man Charged
nMMAe kAn mammm d:ju n v-air uase
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Some
2,000 Soviet military personnel
mostly combat troops, appear to
have left Cuba in the last three
months, sources with access to
U.S. intelligence reported today
President Kennedy told his
news conference Tuesday there
had been "a decline" in Soviet
forces in Cuba in the past two
and one-half months. But he did
not give Die number.
Kennedy said tile U.S. military
intelligence community believed
the troops remaining were main
ly concerned with training the
Cuban armed forces rather than
being "concentrated military
units.
"But there are still Russians
there," Kennedy said, "and thisi
is still a matter of concern to
PAGE 4-A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamalb Falls, Oregon
Wednesday, August 21, 196J
Asked to estimate how many
Soviet troops had been with
drawn, the President replied: "It
is difficult for us to say
precisely."
The administration has been
reluctant to make public its esti
mates of Soviet troops in Cuba
for these reasons: Different in
telligence channels vary on how
many troops have left and on
how many were there in the first
place. Officials believe the Rus
sians are likely to remove more
troops if they can do so quietly
It was variously estimated
there were 21,000 or 22,000 Soviet
military personnel in Cuba at the
height of the October crisis. Ken
nedy said previously that 5,000
left in November and, taking into
account some new arrivals, a net
of some 4,000 left during March
and April,
This would have left some
12,000-13,000 in late April. The de
parture of 2,000 more would
leave 10,000-11,000 Soviet military
personnel in Cuba. Most of the
2,000 recent departures were re
ported to have been combat
troops. There have been 5,000 to
6,000 of these.
OAKLAND. Calif. (UPI) - The
American Negro will not get far
in his battle for equal rights un
til he acquires racial pride, the
chairman of the Afro-American
Association said today.
"What the Negro needs is the
same pride that helped the Chi
nese, Jews and Irish to overcome
prejudice," Donald Warden told
United Press Internationa).
Warden urged his followers to
"throw away your bleaching
creams, throw away your hair
straightener, quit dropping out of
school, quit flunking out and get
off welfare.
If you won't accent the chal
lenge to improve yourself, then
admit that you are inferior," he
said.
The 27-ycar-old attorney also
was critical of the National As
sociation for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) and
similar civil rights groups. He
called the NAACP e "middle-
class organization" which leaves
the Negro without a sense ol
purpose.
Ho charged that during the Bir
mingham demonstrations "over
$2 million was wasted and only
three Negroes got jobs out of it.
'It may cost a million dollars
to desegregate a lunch counter
and if successful, this will create
maybe a dozen jobs," he says.
"The Negro would be smarter to
spend that million on a factory
which might employ 1,000
Negroes."
Former Lord
Wins Seat
In Commons
LONDON (UPI) - Anthony
Wedgwood Bcnn, the first British
peer ever to renounce his title,
won back iiis old scat in the
House of Commons Tuesday night
by swamping three opponents in
a by-election at Bristol.
The victory by (he M-ycar-oId
"Persistent commoner" had been
expected. Ho will take his scat
when Parliament reconvenes in
October.
It set tlie stage for the rosump-
lion of a political career in tiie
opposition Labor party that many
observers believe holds a brilliant
future.
Benn was forced out of the
House of Commons after repre
senting Bristol for a decade wlicn
his father, Viscount Stansgatc,
died in November, I960. By as
suming the hereditary title, Bcnn
was forced into the Houso of
Lords which lie once termed the
"outer Mongolia" of British poli
tics. Lords is virtually powerless.
But Bcnn led a campaign for
a peerages reform act to permit
those who wanted to renounce
their titles and run for Commons.
Titled persons are forbidden to sit
in Commons under British law
and tradition.
The reform act passed last
month and Benn went on to win
election from Bristol by polling
20.313 votes.
Need Cited
For Emotion
In Religion
LOS ANGELES (UPD-Evange-
list Billy Graham said Tuesday
night that more emotion in reli
gion might spark "a return to
heartfelt faith in Jesus Christ"
and help combat materialistic
philosophy in a generation
schooled in violence, sex and
mischief."
Graham said emotion was con
sidered all right at a baseball
game or the theater, but "if we
shed a tear or show a smile in
church, somebody screams 'over
emotion.' "
Graham hit at "Godless theor
ies ana saia uie ion com
mandments have been laughed
at" in his talk before a crowd of
34,150. It was the fifth session in
his current 25-day crusade at Me
morial Coliseum.
Graham told his audience that
religion must go deeper than
mere attendance at church services.
While I have never subscribed
to sensationalism, surface emo
tionalism or flashy religious dem
onstrations, I believe there is a
burning need for a return to
heartfelt faith in Jesus Christ.
Nazism had fire; communism
has fire, and Christianity had bet
ter catch fire."
Preserved In ke
AOSTA, Italy (UPI) - A squad
of Alpine troops training on Rutor
Mountain found the body of a man
missing for 12 years Friday. The
man, Angclo Viscardi, disappeared
Sept. 5, 1951, while climbing the
mountain. His body was pre
served in Ice.
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This philosophy and Warden's
criticism of "moderate" civil
rights groups has resulted in
strong criticism by some Negro
leaders.
Terry Francois, former head of
the San Francisco chapter of the
NAACP, has blasted the young
attorney as "a modern Uncle
Tom who should be tarred and
feathered."
Warden stressed the need for
the majority of Negroes to im
prove their lot through education
and self respect a void which he
said the NAACP and CORE have
neglected.
BLY John Debronski ol
Sprague River was arrested b
Deputy Sheriff Jim Conroy Aug
15, and taken to the Klamath
County Jail where he w as charged
with unlawful possession of a calf.
Bail was set at (3,500.
Conroy reports that he also is
investigating a number of gaso
line thefts in the Bly area.
Two residents have made com
plaints concerning the thefts, and
Conroy stated that gasoline had
been drained from both county
sheriff cars and his own private
car within the past week while
they were parked in his garage.
Home Of Integration Leader Blasted By Bomb
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. ll'PD-A
noisy demonstration by 2,000
screaming Negroes, angered by
the bombing of an integration
leader's home, ended early today
when police fired rifles and shot
guns in the air.
Arthur Shores, the lawyer who
guided the admission of two Ne
groes to the University of Ala
bama, was not injured when the
bomb blasted his home.
A policeman, one of about 100
who ruslied to the scene, was
struck in the head by a rock and
taken to a hospital.
Shores, who said the bomb was
what it sounded like dyna
mite, was alone in his home
when the bomb exploded at 12:30
a.m., EDT.
Helmeted policemen, armed
with shotguns and carbines,
marched against the yelling
crowd with tlieir guns at their
chests. One fired a full 20-shot
clip from his carbine in the air.
Other Shots Fired
Other shots, apparently from a
pistol, were fired from a dark
area of the street about a block
and a half away. It was not de
termined who fired the shots or
whether they were aimed at a
group of policemen guarding an
intersection about 60 yards up the
street.
The policemen spread out and
marched into the area but found
no one.
The bomb dug a hole about two
feet deep at one corner of Shores'
ranch-style brick home in a fash
ionable Negro section. It ripped
the doors from his two-car ga
rage, shattered several windows,
damaged his two cars and a
game room above.
"I deplore what happened,"
Shores said. "I see no reason for
anybody bombing my house."
Rocks flew like hailstones in
the Negro section, Uttering the
streets for a block. Negro girls
bounced rocks off a sheriff's car
moving down the street and scat
tered, shouting curses, when the
car screeched to a halt.
Finally Disperses
The surly crowd finally gave
up and dispersed under the shout
ed orders of officers and the
pleas of the Rev. A. D. King.
The minister, brother of Negro
leader Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr., leaped atop a car and shout
ed: "If you're going to kill some
one, then kill me."
Rocks sailed over his head at
the police.
"We cannot beat them, but we
are going to win this town regard
less of what they do," King
yelled. "They are standing here
with their pistols and other magic
power. Some are angry because
we were bombed and the police
arc angry with us.
"Continue your fight for justice
but use non-violence."
Tvf Foes Wa9e War Of Words In Haiti, See Little Action
Two Vehicles
BLY Deputy Sheriff Jlm
roy was called to investigate
two-car accident north oBeattv'
at 9 a.m. on Aug. 17.
Conroy's reports indicate th., J
car driven by a Beatty ran-h
Edwin Walker, was'tt
l" raiuie Koad wh- t
T" v " 'ow-Ooy truck
carrying a logging eatery'"'
Walker eolhded head-on wt a
pickup driven by Robert G Oaf
per of Klamath Falls.
The occupants were not serious
ly injured, but damage to both
vehicles was extensive. Tlie car
and pickup were removed from
the scene by Lakeview and Klam
ail, i mis vuwiiij; urms.
By PHIL NEWSOM
L'PI Foreign News Analyst
High, razor-back mountain ride
es cut the border between Haiti
and the Dominican Republic
which together share the island
of Hispaniola.
The ridges are not high enough
to be snow covered but high
enough to discourage the palm.
And in densely populated Haiti,
even the tops of these inhospita
ble ridges are inhabited by peas
ant families, eking out a bare ex
istence on tiny plots handed
down from father to son for the
better part of 200 years.
Their telegraph line is the torn
torn.
From these rugged mountains,
Haitian rebel leader Gen. Leon
Cantave, fighting in the manner
ot Castro against Batista in the
early days of the Cuban revolt
hopes to bring down .lie dictator
ship of President Francois Duva
lier who likes to be known as
"Papa Doc."
So far it has been a war of
conflicting claims, charges and
denials.
In the excitement of Cantave's
first strike on Au. 5, rebel
sources jubilantly fixed his
strength at 500 men. That num-i
ber finally dwindled to 100 or
perhaps as few as 15 or 20.
Charges Bosch Aid
In tlie Organization of Ameri
can States, the Duvalier govern
ment charged that Cantave's in
vasion had been aided and abet
ted by tlie neighboring Domini-1 nations. tlie northeastern mountains from
can government ol President If lantave had expected which the rebels appeared to be
Juan Bosch who last May threat- Haiti's beaten-down iieasantry to operating.
hock to nis colors, lie was dis- instead, it appeared to be
tippuimeu lor me naman peasan
try will go only with a sure win
nor.
ened to carry out an invasion of
his own against Haiti.
The Dominicans denied t h e
charge.
For (lie United States, the sit
uation was an embarrassment. It
has no love for Duvalier but on
the other hand does not want
Bosch accused of intervention.
In the total breakdown of Hai
tian communications there also
was concern for the safety
of scattered American families,
wives and families of some of
whom had been permitted to re
turn to Haiti only days before.
For both Duvalier and his
enemv. Cantave, there were fins-
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I'opular With Army
But Cantave, a professional sol
dier who fought the dictatorial
ambitions of both Duvalier and his
predecessor Paul E. Magloire, is
popular with the Haitian army.
fact which made the army less
than reliable for Duvalier.
Further, if rebel claims to have
shot down a Haitian air force
plane are true, then Duvalier has
lost exactly half of his air force.
Duvalier himself showed little
disposition to take on Cantave ill
Du
valier s hope that he can sit tight
in Port au Prince until his gov
ernment "speculators" can bring
in an expected xo million from
As for Cantave's chances, said
a Washington acquaintance:
"If any Haitian can do the job
it is Cantave."
Chief Resigns
the coffee crop in October. This isl A Mr MiniwillA
supposed to be a good coffee yearj' m"lllinVIIIC
in Haiti wnere the coliee bean
grows wild.
In the meantime, he will
demand that the OAS take ac
tion to protect him through the
same democratic processes he
himself has destroyed.
The total laundry bleach mar
ket is close to one billion quarts
annually.
McMINNVIIXE (UPI i - Police
Chief Hoy D. Brixey resigned
Tuesday with the stalement that
his department "apparently was
not operating to the satisfaction
of the city council."
Brixey's resignation was ef
fective Oct. 1. He had been under
fire because of problems encoun
tered in a labor dispute at Yam
hill Plywood Co. here.
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon
Wednesday, August 21, 1963
PAGE 5-A
U.S. Readies Safeguards
In Case Reds Break Ban
WASHINGTON (UPli - Presi
dent Kennedy assured Congress
Tuesday that the United States is
going ahead with preparations to
protect U. S. security in case Rus
sia should breach the nuclear
test ban treaty.
He told his news conference that
the government already is work
ing on "safeguards" demanded
bv some members of the Senate
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in connection with the test ban
pact.
These, he said, were:
Keeping U. S. laboratories ac
tivated. Kennedy said he has al
ready talked with disarmament
and other officials about this.
Preparing "standby" nuclear
test experiments which could be
put into effect quickly if Russia
breaks the treaty. Kennedy said
that construction work for this is
now going on at Johnston Island,
the U. S. testing site in the Pa
cific. U. S. underground tests, per
mitted under tlie treaty, will con
tinue to be "quite vigorous."
The administration plans to
make additional recommendations
for improving U. S. facilities to
detect secret nuclear tests. Ken
nedy said he thinks these meas
ures will meet the approval of
military officials.
Rejects teller Charge
The President rejected a charge
by Dr. Edward H. Teller that tlie
administration curtailed atmos
pheric nuclear tests for political
reasons. Teller made such a state
ment is Senate testimony Tues
day.
I don t think that cliargc is
valid," Kennedy said in describ
ing how the government decided
to make 28 tests in tlie atmosphere
and 97 more underground in its
recent test 6eries.
The chief executive said a na
tional security committee headed
by Atomic Energy Commission
Chairman Glenn T. Seaborg was
created to consider recommenda
tions for specific tests.
Kennedy said of course the ad
ministration did not want to con
duct air tests unless they were
essential. The United States, he
said, would be remiss if it tested
carelessly.
Space Program Threatened
He recalled that one test lost
year created an artificial belt of
radiation and could have threat
ened the space program of the
United States and other countries
"Quite obviously, we did not
make as many tests as Dr. Teller
would want," Kennedy said. "I
think we did the major tests it
would be hard to satisfy Dr. Tel
ler in this regard."
In other news conference com
ments, the President said:
The $4.1 billion foreign aid
bill that tlie House began debat
ing Tuesday is vital to the secur
ity of the United States and the
Free World. Ho urged its passage
without f u titer cuts.
Said he would meet with lead
crs of the Aug. 2H civil rights
march that morning since he had
been asked to see them. But he
said he already has expressed
his views on the mass demonstra
tion expected to bring more than
100,000 persons to the nation's
capital.
Kennedy had earlier said tlie
march was an example of peace
ful protest that he favored so long
as it did not result in violence
Rejected any suewsiinn that
Congress postpone action on the
civil rights and tax bills until
next year.
Wants Voto This Year
"Tliere should be votes on hntli
this year," he said. He said th
civil rights bill was proposed in
response to a "serious national
crisis" and the tax bill has been
penning since last January. He
said the large oroblems nf nn.
employment, jobs and the econo
mic prospects of the nation were
dependent on the outcome of the
tax debate in Congress.
(Jill
DR.
f"y C
Welfare Food
Schedule Set
People on the Klamath County
welfare rolls and those dcslgnat
cd as low income families will
receive their September allot-i
mcnt of surplus foods in accord
ance with a special schedule re
leased by Jim Watson, county
purchasing agent.
The foods are distributed
monthly at the Veterans Memo
rial Building.
The schedule is as follows:
Sept. 3 through B Monday, A;
Tuesday, B; Wednesday, C;
Thursday, D; Friday, E, F and
G.
Sept. 9 through 13: Monday, H;
Tuesday, I, J and K; Wednes
day, L; Thursday Mc; Friday,
M.
Sept. IB through 20: Monday,
N, O and P; Tuesday, Q ond R:
Wednesday, S: Thursday, T, U
and V; Friday, W through Z
Recipients of the surplus foods
are to adhere to the schedule un
less special permission is gi ant
ed by the wclfure certification
clerk, Mrs. Helen Hornby. In
quiries should be made to her at
TU 4-7774.
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WINSTON PURVINE
Dr. Purvine
Will Speak
To NAACP
Dr. Winston Purvine ot Oregon
Technical Institute will hn ih
banquet speaker for tlie 7 p.m.
banquet Aug. 24, during the area
conference of the National Associ
ation for the Advancement of Col
ored People to be held in the
Wincma Hotel.
Delegates from a number of
areas are expected to attend.
Dr. Purvine received an A R
degree from Albany College in 19
ma was granted an honorary
uucior oi jjawji ocgree by Lewis
and Clark College, Portland, in
1960.
He started his career of slate
service in 1936 when he was as
sistant siiperinendent of the Vo
cational Mining School at Grants
Pass. Since then he has been ad
ministrative assistant to the State
Director of Vocational Education,
stale supervisor of public service
training, and state supervisor of
trade and industrial education. He
was director and founder of the
Eugene Vocation School beginning
in 19.1R.
In 1947 he became director and
founder of OTI. He has received
professional recognition In appoint
mcnts to a number of national
committees. He has been respon
sible for the evolution of OTI
from a trade level iastitution to a
college level institution of nation
al acceptance, from a politically
controversial and under-financed
institution to an accepted and ade
quately supported Institution, from
a beginning of 31 students to fall
term enrollments of over 1,000,
and from an unknown institution
to one that hosts dozens of em
ployers and personnel men annual
ly as they seek to hire graduates
for research, development, operat
ing and supervisory technician
ship. The public is invited to attend
the banquet.
BOWLING LEAGUES NOW
FORMING!
We have openings as follows:
MONDAYS - 9 PM
Men's low average handicap league. Open
ings for teams and individuals.
THURSDAY - 9 PM
Men's Trio-Handicap 4 Games.
FRIDAYS - Early & Late Leagues
Beginning women; Mixed 4 Somes; Men's
Hondicap League.
Call 2-5536 or drop into Lucky Lanei; we can find
a spot for you or your team for league play this
season.
Ph.2-5536
3319 So. 6th
LUCKY LANES
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