Bolivia Reds Resent Yank Aid, Interference By PHIL N'EWSOM VP1 Foreign News Analyst Rack in 1952 when Bolivian President Victor Paz Estenssoro took office the first time it was with the support of Bolivia's tur bulent tin miners whose Ti-ot-skyite leadership had aligned it self with Paz's national revolu tionary movement. A first step of the Paz go em inent was to nationalize the coun try's tin mines, upon which rrws'. of its wealth depended, and g.ve the miners unprecedented veto powers over the mine manage ment. Back of this was the burly lig ure of a man named Juan Lech in, son of an Arab father and a Bolivian mother, said to have first been hired by t h e Palino mining interests for his ability as a football player. With this as a start, Lechin had advanced swiftly from executive secretary of the mine union in 1945, to senator in 1947 and to successful revolutionary loader in 1952. His was a powerful voice in calling Paz Estenssoro from Argentine exile to assume the presidency. In Bolivia's present crisis, Paz Jacoby On Bridge NORTH AK10976 5 5 AQJ1043 WEST EAST 4 A3 VKQ9763 VJ108 K2 A 10 9 8 K952 86 SOUTH CO) A AQJ852 V A42 QJ3 7 North and South vulnerable South t North East 1 2 V 4 N.T. 6 V 7 A Pass Pass Double Pass Pass Pass Opening lead V K LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE South Overbids, Then Uses Head B OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. ' Here is a hand for which I am indebted to Marshall Miles. The moral seems to be: If you must overbid, play well. East's six-heart bid was de signed to upset North-South's or derly flow of bidding and it suc ceeded admirably. North went hog wild and jumped to seven spades. When it got back to East he decided to double. This double told his partner not to lead a heart, hut West opened the king of hearts anyway. Declarer won with the ace and was duly thankful for small fav ors. Still he had work to do. He needed to set up three clubs in dummy for diamond discards. If clubs were to break 3-3 or if the king of clubs would drop sin pleton or doubleton he could set tJie suit easily. Suppose an opponent held four clubs to the l;ing? He could still make the hand if he could guess where the king of clubs was. South decided it was a sure tiling. West knew that his part ner was asking for a club or dia mond lead but had opened a heart. West had to have a rea son and this appeared to be that he held both minor suit kings and was afraid to open the wrong one. Therefore South took a first round club finesse against West. It was well that he did. Other wise the grand slam would not have been made. You'll become an expert at slam play with tips found in Jacoby's new 64-page book "Win at Bridge, lust send your name, address, and 50 cents to: Oswald Jacoby Header Service, c-o this newspa per, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y. Q The bidding has been: East Sooth West North 1 Double 1 N.T. Pass Pas? 7 You, South, hold: 4AQ87 VAK65 43 410882 What do you do? A Pass. Yon mar be monkey lnr with a bjii aaw if Too bid lain. TODAY'S QtXSTIOM Instead of bidding one no trump West bids two diamonds over your double. North and East pass. What do you do? Answer Tomorrow and Lechin once more are cen tral figures. Paz is serving his second term as president and Lechin has ris en to vice president, but the two are in bitter conflict and the out come could determine whether the moderate lelt-of-center gov ernmcnt of Paz is to continue or whether Bolivia is to become the first Communist-controlled nation on the South American continent Paz, long-since disenchanted with his former Communist sup porters, now relies upon the Bo livian peasants who have bene fited from his land reform pro gram. For Paz, as for Hernan Siles Zuazo, Uk in-between presidential office holder, the job has been to stabilize the Bolivian economy and by development of its other rich mineral and agricultural re sources to rescue it from its one sided reliance upon tin. It has been uphill going. In the 11 years since the revo lution, what little stability Bolivia has enjoyed has been possible only through U.S. aid amounting to around $20 million per year. A constant opponent of Un supported stabilization programs has been Lechin. who today joins the Marxists and Trotskyites in accusing the government of bow ing to the dictates of the U.S. State Department. At the core of the dispute are the efforts of the Paz government to rehabilitate the mining indus try through $38 million in aid from the United States, West Ger many and the Inter-American De velopment Bank. The industry is heavily featii.ir bedded and production has fallen steadily since nationalization. The history of the state mining corporation is one of woeful ma lmanagement and corruption so ! that not even expert auditors J have been able to trace income -and outgo. The miners, with guns left over from the revolution, are resisting government efforts to reduce the work force by 6.000 and introduce modern efficiency to the mines. Upon the outcome of the Strug- ;le depends the future of $65 mi lion in promised U.S. aid. r- r j b n i I 6i I 5"k . 5 ACROSS ! 0WM .DOWN i I (TdownH & I i i C-r 9ACEO&Sjji. Menon Defends Record Before Parliament NEW DELHI, India (UPli -I V.K. Krishna Menon, whose sharp tongue once claimed a worldwide audience, came out of enforced obscurity recently to de fend his now-tarnished reccd be fore Parliament. He was applauded mildly by his own ruling Congress party, but he was booed by the non- Communist opposition. The oratory which formerly swayed debates on international issues in the United Nations now made little impact in his own na tional legislature. The speech was Mcnon's firs' major address before Parliamei,.. '.a nine months since he was sacked as defense minister for failing to prepare India against Communist Chinese aggression. Shrunk In Stature During those nine montlis, the veteran, 66-year-old politician and diplomat has shrunk from the strong right-hand of Prime Min ister Jawaharlal Nehru to a small voice on the left in Nehru's Con gress party. The acid phrases which rcver- berated across the world for years from the United Nations rostrum now are heard mostly at neighborhood political meetings. The ambition which not long ago aimed at succeeding Nehru as prime minister now is reduced tu lighting local precinct elections. The steep and rapid decline has Iwen a humbling experience for the former international figure w ho, aloof and proud, snapped at his critics and newsmen and de- Ill ItT IN FALL WASHINGTON tUPH-Uelired Marine Corps commandant Gen. Lemuel Shepherd was reported in satisfactory condition at the Beth esda Naval Hospital today from injuries suffered in a fall from a horse. Shepherd. 67. a World War II combat hero who served as com mandant from 1951 to 1955, was thrown from his horse Monday during a fox hunt near his home at Wanvnlon, Va. He suffered a broken arm and head injuries, autliorities said. fied American and other Western i leaders. Since his decline, Menon has tried to win friends in hopes of organizing the Congress party's left-wing into a potent po litical force. Inadequate Military Leader The immediate reason for Men- on's downfall was his inadequacy as leader of India's military ma chine, a position he held for five years. He left his country so vul nerable to attack that Red Chi nese troops were able to pene trate far into Indian-claimed ter ritory last fall, creating one of India's gravest crises. The Chi nese olfensive showed India's armed forces to be ill-equipped and poorly-trained. Despite a friendship 'of nearly three decades, Nehru found it necessary to fire Menon last No vember because of mounting criticism. Menon fell even more swiftly than he rose. Where he formerly commanded attention in the high est circles, his main platform now is his seat in Parliament He has represented a North Bombay constituency for the last six years. Tuesday, September 3, 1963 HERALD AD NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. PAGE 7 MONEY FOR SCHOOL! X need tm drain th fainllr savlnci at trhoftl lime. Jutt flgura out how murh you Mill nerd and borrow It front Hnburban. Krnd them to tchool knowing yon can pay for It with convenient monthly payments wall keeping your eavlon Id tbo bankl Borrow No. of Payments Amount $100.00 12 mo. $10.02 $300.00 18 mo $21.81 $500.00 24 mo $28.86 SUBURBAN FINANCE 3870 So. Olh. Ph. TU 4-7 7 19 Town ond Country Shopping Cantor . - - aavdoai ? 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