Patrol Harassment
Expected In Berlin
BERLIN (UPD-Intcrfcrence
with Western Allied patrols in
East Berlin may be the next
Communist move to restrict
Western rights here.
The East Germans have
opened a propaganda campaign
against the tours of East Berlin
'made many times daily by
American, British and French
military sedans.
The Western Allies consider
the regular patrols a sign that
all of Berlin is still under four
power rule. The Russians claim
this rule no longer exists.
Significantly, the propaganda
attacks have coincided with
Russian harassment of Western
Allied convoys on the highway
to the West through East Ger
many. Western officials think the
propaganda campaign might be
an end in itself, part of the ef
fort to whip up anti-Western
feeling in East Germany.
But they do not rule out the
possibility that the campaign
might be designed to lead to
serious harassment of the pa
trols. The patrols have had difficul
ty from time to time since the
Communist wall was built on
Mothers Club
Schedules Tea
Oregon State University Moth
ers Club w ill stage the annual
fall tea on Saturday, Oct. 26,
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. R. P. Ellingson Jr., 1700
Fairmont.
Mrs. H. 0. Juckeland, chair
man, invites all women of the
area to attend the affair which
is given each, year as a wel
come to mothers of freshmen
and new students at OSU.
the East-West Berlin border
Aug. 13, 1961.
A few were stoned. Others
were hemmed in by Eastern
police cars and their passage
blocked or a short time.
But in the last few weeks a
concerted propaganda cam
paign against the patrols has
been going on and this has
been regarded by many in the
West as a sign the Communists
are planning to stir up new
trouble.
Maj. Gen. Helmut Poppe.
whom the East Germans call
their East Berlin commandant
a title not recognized by the
Western Allies last week
charged the Western Allied sol
diers were pulling down East
German flags in East Berlin
and engaging in other "gang
ster" actions.
The East German news serv
ice ADN accused Western mili
tary vehicles of causing a long
series of traffic accidents in
East Berlin.
And almost daily the Commu
nist press publishes letters, said
to be written by indignant East
Berliners, denouncing the pa
trols. Any attempt to halt the pa
trols or seriously interfere with
them would be sure to cause a
grave international incident.
The military value of the pa
trols probably is negligible.
They have nothing to do with
the vital right of access to
West Berlin. The highway on
which convoys travel does not
run through East Berlin but
runs out of West Berlin directly
into East Germany.
But under four-power post
war occupation agreements with
the Russians the Western Allies
have the right of free move
ment in East Berlin, considered
the Soviet sector of the city.
60 Flee Cuba In Small Boat To Escape Food And Water Shortage
BEAUMONT, Tex. UPI
Sixty Cubans who faced starva
tion on the seas to escape food
and water shortages on their
Communist-held island were
being considered today for po
litical asylum in the United
States.
Immigration authorities were
expected to announce today
what disposition would be
made of the refugees, including
16 children and 16 women.
They docked here Wednesday
night.
They were rescued Tuesday
from an overcrowded 2foot
sailboat in the Yucatan Strait
between Cuba and Mexico. The
British freighter Essequibo
plucked them from the turbu
ent sea where they had drifted
two days without food.
Stormy seas had hampered
their sailing in the fishing boat.
They said friends, armed with
Shaniko Crash
Takes 2 Lives
SHANIKO, Ore. UPI - Two
persons died on U.S. Highway
97 north of here Tuesday night
when a car swerved across the
road and struck another parked
on a shoulder.
The victims were Roy Sather,
17, of Kent, Wash., driver of
the moving vehicle, and Mrs.
Edgar Morris, 41, Sacramento,
Calif.
Morris, 52, and Gerald D.
Hammond, 7. of Pasco, Wash.,
were hospitalized. Both were in
the parked car.
Woman Killed
PORTLAND (UP1) - A two
car crash east of here Wednes
day night killed Mrs. Bertha Ar
nold, 77, of Portland.
Hearty Folks Return To Rugged Life
On 'Loneliest Island In The World'
SOUTHAMPTON, England,
(UPI) A party of 198 men,
women and children turned
their backs today on the com
forts of modern England to re
turn to the rugged, simple life
of Tristan de Cunha Island in
the South Atlantic.
They were scheduled to start
the long voyage to "the loneli
est island in the world"
aboard the chartered Danish
ship Bornholm.
The group was the main body
of the island's total population,
which was removed two years
ago when a volcano eruption
forced them to leave their tiny
British-administered island.
Two advance parties totaling
64 men have gone ahead to pre
pare the island to be lived on
again, now that the volcano has
subsided.
Eleven Tristaners chose to re
main in England. Five others
died here, mainly of pneumon
ia and related ailments attribu
ted to the harsh winter
weather. Eight babies were
born during the islanders' stay
in England.
Victor Rogers, 50. his wife
and their three children are
among the islanders who chose
to face the cold weather and
complexities of modern life in
Britain.
"We are happy to stay,"
Rogers said. "My younger chil
dren will get a better educa
tion. Life is much harder
on Tristan."
The rocky island w as inhabit
ed in the early U800's by fisher
men, shipwrecked seamen and
other persons who arrived by
chance at the isolated spot off
the normal shipping lanes and
lacking a harbor.
Tristaners learned to eke out
a living by fishing, raising
sheep and growing potatoes.
The modern developments of
160 years passed them by and
until they arrived in (England
they had never seen such things
as television, automobiles,
trains, neon lights, cement
sidewalks, movies or nylon
stockings.
When experts declared Tris
tan de Cunha once again safe
for occupancy, t h e islanders
voted overwhelmingly to return
and the British government
started making the necessary
arrangements.
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rowing eight hours, they ren
dezvoused with the sailing ves
sel and started sailing toward
Mexico. Sailing was thwarted
by the battering seas and er
ratic winds.
A refugee student explained
the reason for the exodus:
"In Cuba there are not
enough shoes manufactured and
some people go barefooted.
"Tliere is not enough water
in some areas and eggs are ra
tioned so strictly that only peo
ple under eight and over 65 are
allowed to eat them.
"After a while you get sick
of this."
Despite the rugged voyage,
the refugees appeared in good
condition.
The refugees declined to iden
tify themselves to newsmen be
cause 'they feared reprisals
against their families in Cuba.
They are members of 15 differ
ent families.
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Thursday, October 24. 1963
PAGE 3A
635 MAIN
4
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