The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 March 1965 — Page 3
Castro's Position Similar To North Viet Nam
* Ry United Press Internotionol Cuba’s Fidel Castro is seeking an uncomfortable similarity between his own position and 3hat of North Viet Nam. ~ In North Viet Nam, United ■states and South Vietnamese warplanes are striking at the Jupply depots and the roads which feed the Communist Viet Cong Guerrillas in the South. Conceivably these attacks could be extended to include North Viet Nam's industry and to Hanoi itself. How the Soviet Union and Red China react to these attacks could be a barometer for Castro as to how they would react to an attack on Cuba. Toward the Soviet Union. Castro has shown an increasing irritation despite the fact that he continues to depend upon the Russians for both Military and economic aid. Part of this irritation may be due to disappointment with the 1965 Soviet-Cuban trade pact which provides only a small increase over 1964. Part of it also could be due to obvious Soviet reluctance to become involved in the Vietnamese struggle and the fact, that, despite Soviet promises, Soviet aid to North Viet Nam has been going by slow boat. At this month's commemoration of Havana's 1957 student uprising Castro took both the Soviet Union and Red China to task for the continuing split in Red unity. He said small revolutionan - nations such as Cuba and North Viet Nam would have to pay
States answered an attack on U. S. destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin with retaliatory attacks on North Vietnamese patrol boat bases. The reasons for Castro's uneasiness are obvious. On his own island he has the U. S. Guaneanamo Naval Base, and, as he himself remarked, his is but “90 miles from Yankee power.” Between the old-line Moscoworiented Comunist of Cuba there also is a widening rift. Castro has said Communist Cuba will be the “satellite of no one.” He recalls that in the student uprisings of 1957, 36 died in the attacks on the presidental palace and a Havana radio station or were executed later. The Cuban Communist party did nothing to help them. In February. Castro removed j Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, a top i old-guard Comunist, from his ; post as chief of Cuba's collecti- I vized agriculture and took over the job himself. Last year another old-liner, j Marcos Rodriguez, was executed for betraying four young i Castro rebels to the Batista regime which Castro later over-
thdew.
But whatever Castro's hopes | to lead an independent Latin America Communist move-, ment, he is in a bind. The United States certainly will do nothing to relieve his fears arising from the new U. S. will it ease its economic prestactics in North Viet Nam nor
sures.
Probe Reported l Drinking Party m Denunces
The Daily Banner. Greencastle. Indiana
Saturday, March 27, 1965
VINCENNES UPI — Au- _ _ 'thorities here and in Lawrence J|ll ||mj^
County. HI., investigated a re-
ported drinking party held last WASHINGTON UPI — PreslMonday night in an effort to dent Johnson, angered at the
for decades have used the rope and the gun, the tar and the feathers, to terrorize their neighbors.”
TAXING THE DOLLAR NEW YORK UPI—Investor
establish whether there was any latest death in the tense voting owne d & as utility companies connection between it and an rights situation in Alabama, is P a y 13 cents in federal - state automobile accident that fa- mounting a determined cam- Hnd local taxes out of ever V tally injured three Vincennes pai g n to wn p e out the Ku Klux dollar of revenue received from University students from Wash- Ki an _ customers, the American Gas ington, Ind. Johnson went on nationwide Association reports.
Two students injured in the television Friday to announce crash were improving today. the arrest of four K,an mem *, Mike Rislev, formerly in criti- in ^ dea th of Mrs. Viola cal condition at a hospital here. Luzzo of Detroit - *- ho was shot ' was listed in serious condition Thursday night on a lonely today and another youth. Ken- stre tch of highway between neth Showalter, was expected to Montgomery and Selma. Ala. be released. Later he ta,ked to the slain
woman’s husband by telephone
Meanwhile, Knox and Law- to express his sympathy, rence County sheriffs’ offices Anger and disgust in his' cdhducted interviews of V in- vo .j ce president told the cennes University students who gentry i n bis television apattended a party at Lake Law- p earance tb e Klan was "a hoodrence the night of the accident. ^ society of bigots . . . who
Sheriff Sherman Montgomery
of Lawrence County said students have reported that about 200 persons attended the party and that a full keg. a pony keg. and several cases of beer were consumed, along with a lesser
amount of whisky.
Dr. Burns, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR Tues. thru Sat.
9-12 1-5
Tues., Thurs., & Fri.
Evenings 7-9 South Jackson 4 Sunsot Orrvo
Phono 01 3-SM4
21-it.
for the mistakes of the big
Communist powers. He de- Cuba is in the middle of harmanded that all Comunist s vesting a sugar crop which it nations come to the aid of hopes will reach five million North Viet Nam despite the tons. But of that, nearly half
risk of nuclear war. • He made a similar demand last August after the United
will go to the Soviet Union to! help square a debt now estimated at around $900 million, j
On The U. S. Farm Front
Will Press For More Air Raids SAIGON UPI — U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor was flying to Washington today to press for more and bigger air attacks on Communist installa-
It w'as indicated that the beer and liquor were purchased in Illinois, the sheriff said, but no proof of illegal sales to minors has been discovered. Montgomery said he favored legislation outlawing drinking at the public pavilion sector of
Lake Lawrence.
“It has been going on over
there for a number of years.” he said. “I will not be satisfied
until we get it stopped.” Montgomery said most of the
persons at the party Monday night w r ere Vincennes University students, but added that not all were students and said
year-old impacted areas aid bill eral workers and servicemen, there were several persons over for schools claiming to be over- That aid plan now" pays out 21 there who may have bought crowded by the children of fed- nearly $400 million a year. the beer and liquor legally.
AMERICAN LEGION DANCE
TONIGHT
March 27,1965
DETAILED STUDY of the Moon photos televised by Ranger-9 brings out these interesting comparisons. Top: The crater Alphonsus from 258 miles away. Smaller crater at left is Alpetragius. Numben on the boxes in Alphonsus correspond to the four photos below. No. 1, one minute, 17 seconds before impact. Eastern edge of crater is seen from 115 miles out No. 2, at 38.8 seconds before impact from 58 miles. No. 3, from 12.2 miles, 8.09 seconds before impact No. 4, the last photo, from three-fourths of a mile, 0.453 seconds before impact Small white circle at top is the pomt of impact
TERMITES CAN BE STOPPED General pest control for Moths, Roaches, Ants, etc. PRICES REASONABLE - RESULTS GUARANTEED Reliable Exterminating Company PHONE COAN PHARMACY - Ol 3-312S
WASHINGTON UPI — The Agriculture Department has is- Friday guests last week of
sued an urgent warning for Mr and Mrs Raymond Hopkins tions in North Viet Nam ' ^Americans to be on the lookout we re Mrs. Wilma Page and the The aml!)assador is returning for any unusual insect damage Minister, Evangelist and Song'- to sit in at a series of high ~ to crops, ornamentals, or trees. i eader f r 0 m t jj e Christian level conferences on the situaThe agency said any damage church at Roachdale tion in Southeast Asia -
should be reported at once to •county agricultural agents or state or federal entomologists. It could mean that a new foreign pest has sneaked into the United States, or that a native insect is building up to danger-
ous proportions.
Several of this community! The conferences are being have been ill with the flu. held against a background of
continued infiltration of men
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Williams and family from near Crawfordsville called on Mr. and Mrs. Robert Page and fam-
ily Sunday afternoon.
and arms from North Viet Nam
• The department is anxious to .“stop pests before they start.”
into South Viet Nam and a Russian-instituted campaign of Communist threats to send “volunteers” from other coun-
Mrs. Maude Falin called on tries into the embattled nation. ^ and Mrs. Chari.* Hopkins, American s o Urce5 here say
The Agricultural Research Ser- and family Sunday afternoon, t,..,™ feels strongly that North
Viet Nam should be severely punished by South Vietnamese
Mrs. Helen Robbins and chil- and American bombers before dren called on her parents. Mr. tiie U. S. government seriously and Mrs. Jewell Page, Thurs- considers any bid for peace
vice scientists want to stamp ; They are all sick with flu and j
out dangerous insect enemies, mumps
whether native or imported, be-
fore they cause extensive damage and become objects of ex-
pensive eradication efforts. ARS said it was a Florida
homeowner's curosity about the larvae he found in grapefruit that triggered the successful campaign in 1956 against the
Mediterranean fruit fly. The Agriculture Department
says the red meat price situa-
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Couple Charged With Murder
There has been a sharp decline in Communist military activity in South Viet Nam since
the raids began.
Friday's heavy strike by carrier - based U. S. Navy jets — the fifth raid in six days —tore a gaping hole in North Viet Nam’s early warning radar net by dropping tons of bombs on
Jl fv
%
MUNCIE, Ind. UPI — Lloyd
tion in 1964 is a classic example Key, 30, Marion, and Mrs. Phyl-
of the seesaw interaction be- 1 lis Hazelbaker, about 30, Alex- two^big"installations,
tween supply and demand. andria. were arrested Friday Beef supplies were well above 1 and charged with first-degree those of 1963. Retail prices | murder m the slaying last Monw ere down, but not as far as | day of Key's wife, Ethel, 29, on those to farmers. And when the Interstate 69 near Fairmont,
prices fell, they fell fast. j
The same thing happened to Ke - V was ^sted at Elizapork. Production was up slight- bethtown, Ky., as he returned ly. retail and farm prices down. f rorn hLs u tfes funeral in AlaThis was not true with lamb, b 31114 - Mrs - Hazelbaker - was With production below that of I held in Delaware County Jail at
2963. prices to farmers and Muncie.
tronsumers were up.
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bonded bi ake linings
Three American planes were j shot down, but their pilots
were rescued.
School Measure Passed By House
WASHINGTON UPI — The ; keystone of President Johnson's education program, a $1.3 bil-1
Key told police at the time of lion school aid bill, is past tis The government ^ ® ^ ^ the slaying that two men riding toughest test. in a car behind them pulled The proposal, pegged primarhim and his wife over on the ily to the improvement of highway by flashing a red light, schooling for poor children. He said the men forced him to passed the House Friday night lie down beneath the rear of i n a 263-153 vote. It now goes the auto and then one of them to the Senate ' which tradition - 1
weather and crop bulletin said unseasonably cold weather over the Great Plains during the week ended March 22 slowed the growth of small grains in the southern area and stopped greening in the central section.
CheveUe Malibu tiport Coupe
. . . : ally has been friendlier to fed-
VVinter grains in the corn g ot mto the car w ith h . eral schoo , aid than the House . -belt area were kept from mak- j And shot her S1X times - The main el ements of the bill Hing early season growth by i He had been scheduled to un-1 would, provide:
•much colder -temperatures.
than - normal
:Barnard News — by Mrs. Jewell Page — Barnard Correspondent ~ Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Frazier •“called on Mr. and Mrs. Robert —Page and family and Mr. and ^Mrs. Jewell Page Monday eve-
•ning.
— Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Plunki tt. Bessie Wright and Tressie ^Richardson were in Indianap«*nlis Tuesday of last week. Z Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bu"chanan of Indianapolis and Mrs. •“Anna Kidd from Illinois spent -Alunday with Mr. and Mrs.
dergo a “lie detector” test soon after he returned from Ala-
bama.
Prosecutor Hugh Tuck Schulhof said he had information that the murder weapon, a pistol, was thrown into the Mississinewa River near Marion and that Key’s billfold, which he said was taken by the men,
has been discovered.
The Keys had four children and Mrs. Hazelbaker is said to
be the mother of three chil-! non-public school students dren i share the use of special class-
rooms. laboratories and shops. -$7U million to expand edu-
—$1.06 billion to upgrade the schooling of 5.3 million children from families earning $2,000 a year or less. About 95 per cent of the 3.100 U.S. counties would
get this aid.
—$100 million to buy library and textbooks approved by public educational agencies for the use of children and teachers in public, private and parochial
schools.
—$100 million to encourage locally-operated “share time” projects in which public and
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The slaying of Mr - . Key took place early Monday as the cou-
ple returned from a celebration en state departments of educa3larve F'alin. Mrs. Lillie Wilson I of their 13th wedding anniver- tion.
tailed in the afternoon. jsary. j —An extension of the 14-
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