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U. S. NAVAL BASE, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA Phone 9-5247 MONDAY Date FEBRUARY 20, 1967 Radio (1340) TV (Ch. 8)

Heavy Rains Allies Rip VC-NVN Topple Rio Homes i RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) A HOUSE and two apartment build ings on a hillside in a fash ionable SAIGON (AP) SOUTH VIETNAMESE soldiers,paratroopers and U.S. Rio suburb collapsed lii ke dom- Marines reported 8'4 enemy soldiers killed yesterday in two inoes last night af ter 24 battles 50 miles apart on South Vietnam's inflamed central hours of rain, burying an un- coast. known number of vict ims be- The reported enemy death toll soared to more than 1,300 in neath a pile of wrecka ge two five days of coastal fighting stories high. tin the vicinity of Quang Ngai Rescue workers hack ing at o. UIJt Ink a"#: City, 330 miles northeast of the jumble of concrete . steel Saigon, and Da Nang. and household furnitu re re- A government spokesman said moved three bodies dur ing the thatthe South Vietnamese para- night and brought out 1 2 to 15 troopers together with air persons alive, includ ing a strikes and artillery bombard- family of six. ments accounted for 400 more. "I believe there m ust be The Vietnamese battalion of tens of others buried in the some 700 men suffered moderate wreckage," said Dr. Eid er Let- casualties in repulsing at- tieri, the first doc tor to tacks by more than 1,200 Com- reach the disaster scen e.munists, the spokesman said. The continuous rains caused A multibattalion force of the death of at least 1 3 other U.S. Marines on "Operation persons, most of them i n Rio's Stone," 13 miles south of Da hillside slums, and le ft more '1Nang, also fought a pitched than 675 homeless thr Mughout battle with guerrillas yester- the state of Guanabara. baDon't miss the big parade day in rolling foothills and A hundred persons w r - opening the 1967 Gitmo Mard I report killing 118 while ported injured in a tr ai n de- Gras Wednesday at 2 p.m. suffering light casualties. railment between Rio Sao Thernd parade will start at Light fighting was reported Paulo. Admin Hill and proceed down n several other areas, but Gov. Francisco Neg rao De Sherman Avenue to the Mardi there was nothing comparable Lima said quick ac in Gras midway. I'll be there toiion the battling near Quang (Continued on Page 2) and I hope you will, too. Ngai City, where South Viet- namese troops and Korean and U.S. Marines are pushing a giant drive against an esti- Agreement Near On Summit mated regiment of North Viet- namese regulars. BUENOS AIRES (AP) (B Claude E. Erbsen) WESTERN HEMISPHERE More than 200 U.S. Air Force, FOREIGN MINISTERS put a working arrangement for a Navytogether and Marine planes flew 77 summit conference for t heir bosses today. missions over North Vietnam The signs point to a mid-April meeting in Uruguay to launch yesterday. Continuing bad a Common Market for 230 million Latin Americans. weather again limited the num- General agreement on )n agenda for President Johnson and his ber of targets as well as as- Latin American colleagu es was reached over the weekend at a sessmfent of damage. secret meeting and a so -called "working boatride"aboard Argen- Most of the air strikes were tina's Presidential yac ht. against coastal shipping and Inter-American Confe fence President Nico Costa Mendez, who targets in the southern pan- is also Argentina's Fo eign Minister, expects final agreement handle, but several Air Force on the summit plans to be ribady today or tomorrow. planes bombed *highways 70 to The week-end sessio n, unusual at inter-American meetings, 130 miles west of Hanoi. typified the no-nonse nse approach of the Foreign Ministers' Yesterday terrorists struck (Continued on Page 2) a billet near Tan Son Nhit. PAGE 2 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1967 GITMO GAZETTE

BUENOS AIRES(Continued from Page 1) Confer- Lovers Leave As ence and no major flareups have detracted the delegates from the work at hand: to lay the 9 groundwork for the first hemisphere-wide pres- Candidates Cheer idential meeting since 1956. While there is a consensus on the need for a Common Market, there is still disagreement on how quickly it can or should be set up. The United States has suggested a 1980 tar- get date, but most Latin ministers feel the Presidents should not tie themselves to a spe- cific date or other technical details. "The Presidents should not be burdened with negotiating details", said Panama's Foreign Minister Fernando Eleo in an interview. Secretary of State Dean Rusk,apparently sat- isfied with the results of the conference, is planning to head for home tomorrow. He will be replaced as head of the U.S. delegation by Ambassador-at-Large Ellsworth Bunker who ar- rived yesterday.

RIO DE JANEIRO(Continued from Page 1) clear- ing blocked storm drains helped hold down the death toll. He said the downpour was heavier S than the heaviest rains of the four-day deluge of January 1966 which took the lives of 184 Rio residents. Heavy rains last month caused floods and landslides which killed 600 persons in the mountains west of Rio. Neighbors who saw the three buildings col- lapse gave this account of the disaster: A huge boulder loosened by the rain rolled from atop the hill and crashed into a two- GITMO'S LEADING MARDI GRAS queen candidate story house. The house collapsed onto the and the Air Force's oldest non-ace slipped away rear of an eight-story apartment building this weekend to tie the marital knot in Jamai- which toppled onto a four-story building in ca. front of it. From the top of the hill it Negative Nellie, the Photo Lab's queen can- looked as though a giant broom had swept the didate, and Positive Pete, one of the Air three buildings into the street below. Force's top instructors, borrowed the "Longus- No one was sure whether the first house was ta", a craft jointly made and owned by Lt.Joe occupied or how many people were in the two Marks and LCDR Sam Statts, and sailed to King- apartment buildings. A television station ston Saturday. near the scene estimated that about 300 people The nuptials meant the automatic disqualif- normally live in the apartments. ication of Nellie as a potential queen, but The wreckage strewn across the cobblestone Nellie felt she should give the less gifted street at the foot of the hill bristled with candidates a chance to wear the crown. S shattered television antennas and twisted The debonaire flyer was interviewed while in steel. Jamaica and said that they just couldn't wait "Ij ust saw the water coming down and coming any longer. down, " a weeping young woman told a doctor The charming duo promised to return in time whose white coat was smeared with mud. "I for the Mardi Gras festivities, starting with can't see anything and I'm sure my sisters are the big parade on Wednesday. dead." One of the local reporters wondered just what The doctor told the woman her sisters had would"develop"from this combination of a Posi- been removed from the debris alive and taken tive and a Negative? to a hospital. "I was at home watching television when I WASHINGTON (AP) GOVERNOR GEORGE ROMNEY'S heard a long, loud noise that sounded to me Republican presidential possibilities next like thunder," said a doctor who lived nearby. year were measured yesterday in Washington and "When I looked out of my window, I saw only a Alaska. The Michigan governor approved the cloud of dust. Then everything turned red opening of a Romney-for-President Committee when the lights went out." headquarters in the nation's capital. Almost seven inches of rain fell in Rio from In Alaska, where he is assaying the possi- midnight Saturday until noon Sunday, and no bilities, Romney complained yesterday that not letup was predicted for today. enough progress is being made toward social injustices. Romney balanced this by saying Due to George Washington's birthday on Wed- that those who take the law into their own hand nesday, all articles to appear in the "Club against injustice open the way to anarchy. News" page should be in by noon tomorrow. GITMO GAZETTE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1967 PAGE 3 NEWS SPECIAL: THE GUERRILLA WAR IN PORTUGUESE GUINEA LISBON, PORTUGAL (AP) PORTUGAL IS REAPPRAISING seriously its costly war against uniformed rebel guerrillas in its tiny West African territory of Portuguese Guinea. The swampy, topical enclave sandwiched between Senegal and Independent Guinea is keepingbusy more than 122,000 government troops and draining more than $30 million yearly from a defense budget that also has to deal with uprisings in the big territories of Angola and Mozambique in Southern Africa. Premier Antonio Salazar, anxious to cut African military expenses that take more than 40 per cent of the Portuguese budget, has sent Defense Minister Gen. Gomes De Arujo to Portuguese Guinea on a 10-day inspection tour. Based in Independent Guinea, the rebels claim their 5,000-man force, equipped with arms from Communist countries, has "liberated" large areas of the territory, which is about the size of the Netherlands. The Portuguese deny it, but admit that guerrilla strikes can make travel over interior roads hazardous. About 200 government soldiers died in skirmishes with the rebels last year-----the largest toll in any of Portugal's three African territories. As evidence of support for their regime, the Portuguese point to a 9,000-man native militia. The government has begun a farm program to boost Guinea's lagging rice crop, and an American oil company has signed a $10.5 million prospecting contract, but the colony still subsists al- most entirely on imports and has become a serious economic liability. Some Portuguese officers claim the government can crush the rebels in a few years. Others counsel economy and withdrawal to cut further losses. But whatever the theories, Salazar's government is determined to stay on. The government considers Guinea and the other territories overseas provinces of Portugal it- self. All 600,000 inhabitants of Guinea, black and white, are considered Portuguese, and of- ficially there is no race discrimination. "The problem is not staying or leaving," says a defense official. "Leaving is out of the question because of the political and psychological consequences in the other territories. The problem is cost--and that is for the Defense Minister to decide. WASHINGTON (AP) BUSING OF NEGRO CHILDREN from big cities to schools in the suburbs tospread integration has been proposed by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. The Commission recommended that Congress appropriate substantial sums for this and other projects to mix the races, but it did not estimate the potential cost. The Civil Rights Commission listed nine metropolitan centers with more negro than white pu- * pils. They are: Washington, Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Newark, Phila- delphia, and St. Louis. The only negro on the Commission, Mrs. Frankie Freeman of St. Louis, said no matter what the President and the Congress do, segregation won't be solved until the human mind and heart are moved. Another Civil Rights Commission member, the President of Notre Dame University--the Reverend Theodore Hosburgh--addressed himself to private grade and prep schools. He said they should study the Commission's report and consider what their institutions could do toward solving the school integration problem. The Civil Rights Commission also pushed for the elimination of all discrimination in the sale or rental of housing. And it proposed that the government contribute more to providing housing in metropolitan areas for the low and moderate income families. Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts said in a statement, "All these problems must be at- tacked if we are to break the cycle of indignities which threaten the life of America's met- ropolitan areas." WASHINGTON (AP) DEMANDS FOR A THOROUGH CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATION of the Central Intelli- gence Agency's relations with private groups continued today on Capitol Hill. A House subcommittee that keeps an eye on CIA matters has praised the action of subsidizing a student organization, but Congressman Frank Thompson, Jr.(D-N.J.), says many groups and peo- ple appear to have been compromised by CIA activities. Another Representative, William Ryan (D-N.Y.), put it this way: "The question.is the extent to which an almost-secret, almost-independent agency of the government has been affect- ing our policy and has also been subverting the values of a free society." The furor arose following disclosure of CIA financial backing for certain activities of the National Student Association. There are also reports that the CIA channeled money to the American Newspaper Guild for its international activities. But Guild President Arthur Rosenstock and other top foundation lead- ers denied reports that money came from the CIA or any other government sources. They said in Washington that the Guild will immediately end its association with any foundation found to be linked with the CIA.

EL CENTRO, CALIFORNIA (AP) A FLEDGLING MEMBER of the Navy's Blue Angels flying team, 28- year-old Ronald Thomson, was killed Saturday when his plane crashed on the desert near here. h Thomson, a Marine Captain from Beeville, Texas, had joined the Blue Angels just last week. PAGE 4 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1967 GITMO GAZETTE KINGSTON, JAMAICA (AP) (By Robert Berrellez) BUENOS AIRES (AP) TWO BOMBS EXPLODED early A MAN WAS SHOT to death and at least 10 others today in downtown Buenos Aires--near the head- were wounded by gunfire last night in continu- quarters of the Inter-American Conference--as its 9 ing bursts of political violence during Jamai- the General Labor Federation (CGT) started ca's pre-general election period. "fighting plan"against the economic and social Police threw up roadblocks in troubled areas policies of the government. of the Jamaican capital. Troops, members of Police refused to link the explosion with the Defense Force Reserve and special consta- the labor problem. bles were called out to reinforce police. The CGT said it was going ahead with its plan Two other persons were hurt when rocks were of staging a series of partial, lightning hurled at a political meeting and a dynamite stoppages in and around Buenos Aires, with bomb reportedly damaged a restaurant. sudden street demonstrations. The plan calls There were indications that some of the vio- for a climax in March with one 24-hour general lence was the work of young hoodlums riding strike to be followed by another 48-hour stop- bicycles and firing at random. page throughout the nation. The general elections,scheduled for Tuesday, The labor leaders said they were keeping have generated considerable agitation among their plan alive despite warnings from the partisans of the two major factions contesting government that stern measures should be taken for power--the Jamaica Labor Party and the to curb it as a subversive attempt. Peoples' National Party. Businessmen's associations continued their The party winning the most votes will form efforts today to have a truce concluded be- the government now controlled by the Labor tween the government and CGT. faction. In another development,a "little poll" among JAKARTA (AP)(By T.Jeff Williams) PRESIDENT Labor Party chieftains yesterday indicated the SUKARNO called another meeting with military premiership would go to Donald Sangster in the leaders tonight, and an authoritative military S event of a JLP victory. source said military authorities have alerted Sangster, who will be 56 next October, is the government radio station and military Acting Prime Minister and also holds the finan- newspapers to stand by for an important an- ce portfolio. He is said to be Prime Minister nouncement tomorrow. Alexander Bustamente's handpicked choice. Student radio stations in Jakarta announced Bustamente, 83, has retired because of ill last night that Sukarno had agreed to hand health and is not contesting a Parliament seat over his last remaining powers. This was de- for the first time since 1944. nied last night by military sources, but an The results of the "little poll" were pub- Army source close to strongman General Suharto lished by the Daily Gleaner'which did not re- said today: "Perhaps they were a little pre- veal the names or number of JLP leaders par- mature." ticipating. Foreign Minister Adam Malik told a group of A total of 541,328 Jamaicans in a population students demanding Sukarno's immediate dis- of 1.3 million are eligible to vote in the missal that Sukarno must choose between step- contest for 53 Parliament seats--eight more ping down now or being dismissed by Congress. than in the last election in 1962 won by the Sukarno met yesterday with Suharto and Ar- JLP. med Forces commanders and reportedly again The Labor Party holds 26 of the present 45 rejected demands that he resign. Instead he seats with the balance held by the National flourished letters of support from over the Party. country. The JLP, under Bustamente, won three of the Heavy concentrations of troops remained in five general elections held since universal Jakarta. More troops loyal to Suharto have adult sufferage began in 1944. been moved into the area between Bogor and is Jakarta, sources said. TOKYO (AP) DESPITE REPORTS of new Military sources said there was fear of an unrest in China's strategic border areas and armed clash because of the concentration of elsewhere, Mao Tse-Tung's supporters turned to troops and the continuing explosive political foreign policy today and urged Hanoi to stif- situation. fen its terms for peace talks. Talk of a holy war against Sukarno contin- After weeks in which the Maoist organs vir- ued. Some said they were prepared to "kill tually ignored Vietnam and other foreign poli- or be killed" in any showdown. cy questions, except for Moscow-Peking rela- Meanwhile, grumbling continued to grow loud- tions, the Peking People's Daily took note of er because of the steady rise in prices spark- recent moves to bring the U.S. and North Viet- ed by the government's recent decision to nam to the negotiating table. stop subsidies to a.host of firms. "The whole point of the Vietnam problem re- volves around the withdrawal of (U.S. and al- THANK YOU lied) agressive forces from Vietnamese terri- O-ur greatest thanks and appreciation is ex- tory, not on the question of the cessation of tended to the members of the Ellis and Field U.S. bombing," the People's Daily said. Navy Wives Club, NAS-VC-10 Wives' Club, Ladies This implied a rebuke to Hanoi, which last Auxiliary of the FRA, and the many wonderful week said it was prepared to talk peace with friends who so graciously gave their time and the United States if the Americans "put an im- effort upon the death of our daughter Sherry. mediate end" to their bombing of North Viet- Again, thanks." nam. Mr. & Mrs. McCurdy GITMO GAZETTE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1967 SCRANTON, PENNA (AP) THE UNITED STATES won the first World Biddy Basketball Championshin Saturday, nipping Ecuador, 44-39. The Biddy Basketball teams are made up of youngsters between the ages of 8 and 12. Trailing at halftime, 25-17, the U.S. scored SPORTS 17 points in the third quarter to Ecuador's four, surging into the lead. In a consolation game for third place, Puerto Rico bombed the Virgin Islands, 74-31, while earlier in the day, Peru, defeated San Salva- dor, 47-40, for sixth place in the tournament. WASHINGTON (UPI) THlE NCAA ANNOUNCED an in- The tournament has been recongnized by the terim agreement yesterday that will allow Ivy U.S. Department of Educational and Exchange League teams to participate in Winter and Programs, which has sponsored basketball clin- Spring Chamionships this year. i.cs throughout South America. The two groups had been at odds over the NCAA's 1.6 academic ruling regarding the el- HONOLULU (AP) VINCE LOMBARDI, THSHead Coach igibility of varsity athletes. The current of the World Champion Green Bay Packers is the agreement figures to pave the way for either. Chairman at the NFL's winter meeting which Princeton or Cornell to participate in next starts today. month's NCAA Basketball Tournament. Lombardi is seeking to cut down a proposal The two schools are currently tied for first to change the present system of drafting col- place in the Ivy League. Ige football players and appears to have enough votes to do it. However, the new sys- the AFL and a (AP) NO LESS THAN five World Indoor Track tem has already been approved by records were broken Saturday in three separate compromise may have to be worked.out. meets. At the meeting, the new head of the NFL will Pete Three of the marks fell in the Mason-Dixon have to be chosen. Present commissioner the head of games at Louisville, Kentucky. Sprinter Tom- Rozelle takes over next season as even a mie Smith Won the 440-yard run in 46.2 seconds, the combined leagues. Anyone who has Tom Van Ruden captured the 880-yard run in one small interest in a pro team can probably be . worth minute, 49 seconds, and a team from Southern ruled out as their shares are considered University ran the one mile relay in the rec- over twice the commissioner's pay. ordtime of three minutes, ten and two-tenths Trades will also be discussed. Quarterbacks seconds. Fran Tarkington of Minnesota, Gary Cuazzo of In the Knights of Columbus meet in Cleveland Baltimore, and George Mira of San Francisco pole vaulter Bob Seagren eclipsed his own along with fullback Ken Willard of the 49'ers world mark with a leap of 17 feet, 3 inches. have all asked to be traded. At Lawrence, Kansas, Lee Adams of the Uni- versity of Kansas won the 60-yard high hurdles NEW YORK (AP) NEW YORK RANGER forward Rod in the record time of six and 6/10 seconds. Gilbert has been sidelined with a cola ifi his NEW HAVEN, CONN. (AP) HARVARD IS THE Big back. Three Indoor Track Champion for the sixth The Broadway Blues brought up Ken Schinkel straight year. this weekend from their Baltimore farm team The Crimson managed to win only four events and he put in'the winning goal yesterday in but piled up 58 points on over-all balance to their game against the league-leading Chicago retain the title Saturday. Host Yale was sec- Black Hawks. ond with 51 points, followed by Princeton with Schinkel has been up and down during the 28. past eight years, scoring some:29 goals in NHL play. But he hit a big one last night in the second period, breaking a 2-2 tie. TOKYO (AP) JAPAN'S TEAM TO thd 1987 World In the same contest, Bobby Hull scored his Icd Hockey Championships left today for Vienna 350th lifetime goal. to participate in the Tournament beginning **** .**.*.*.estat.tS - ###. March 18. The 23-member contingent will tour Western ***********************e Europe before the Championship for Goodwill Matches. GITMO GAZETTE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1967 GITMO GAZETTE

NEW YORK (UPI) THREE OF THE nation's top WINCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS (UPI) IN THE WO- Ten college basketball teams took it on the MEN'S National Indoor Tennis Championship Mrs. chin Saturday. Third ranked North Carolina Billie Jean King retained her title yesterday lost to Clemson, 92-88, fourth ranked Prince- by defeating Trudy Groenman of the Netherlands ton bowed to Cornell, 62-56, and ninth ranked in a match that required only 32 minutes to Vanderbilt fell before Tennessee, 70-53, and complete. top ranked and unbeaten UCLA made it 21 in a row- Second::ranked Louisville clinched at TUCSON, ARIZONA (UPI) IT WAS A struggle, but least a tie for the Missouri Valley title by managed to pull out a one stroke dumping Tulsa, 82-64. victory yesterday in the Golflbureq Number six Western Kentucky Whipped Morehead nament. Palmer increased his earnings by State, 86-65, seventh ranked Texas Western $12,000 for winning his second PGA Tournament clipped Seattle, 80-54. Eighth ranked Houston of the year. Despite a double bogey six on rolled past Miami of Florida, 105-86, tenth the final hole, Palmer finished one stroke ranked Utah State downed Portland 86-63. Bos- ahead of runner-up Chuck Courtney, who lost ton College held on for an 83-82 victory over hischance for victory by taking a triple bogey Providence. Syracuse outlasted Georgia 105-95 seven on the same hole. Palmer wound up with Duke crushed Maryland University 150-84,obledo a 72 hole total of 15-under-par 273. Pinish- beat Northern Illinois 84-71, Florida whipped ing in third place with a 275 was Australian Auburn, 79-59. North Texas State upset Cincin- Bruce Crampton followed at 277 by John Schlee nati 67-66, St. John's of New Yorkgt by Ford- and at 278 by Paul Bondeson and . ham 54-52, and Wisconsin squeaked past Iowa All alone with a 279 was Dick Hart while tied 96-95 in triple overtime. at 280 were, Tommy Jacobs, , Five of the nation's Top Ten college teams Randy Glover and Bob Harris. are in action tonight. Fifth ranked Kansas MIAMI (UPI) PITCHER JOE HORLEN of the Chi- plays Oklahoma State, sixth ranked Western cago White Sox carries a one stroke lead into Kentucky tangles with Eastern Kentucky, number today!s second round of the baseball Players- seven Texas Western meets tenth ranked Utah Golf Tournament. Horlen moved ahead of the State, and ninth ranked Vanderbilt goes up field by firing a 74. Tied for second place against Alabama. Other contests indude Toledo with 75's are, defending champion Ken Harrel- at Detroit, Kentucky at Georgia, Auburn at son of Washington and Uincinhati pitcher Sammy Mississippi, Louisiana State at Mississippi Ellis. The tournament ends Wednesday. State, Michigan State at Ohio State, Indiana at Illinois, Purdue at Michigan, Notre Dame at HONOLULU (UPI) NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE own- Western Michigan, Colorado at Oklahoma and ers begin their annual winter meetings today. Colorado State is at Seattle. Two items of importance facing the owners are In two contests yesterday, DePaul edged Dh- the drawing up of rules for next months colege quesne, 67-66 in overtime and St. Francis of player draft in connection with the American New York beat Niagara, 81-72. League and the choosing of a president. Cur- rent boss Pete Rozelle will have to be replac- NEW YORK (UPI) IN THE NATIONAL Hockey Lea- ed when he takes over as commissioner of both gue the New York Ranger's-snapped the Chicago leagues in line with last year's merger agree- Black Hawks win streak at fifteen-games by ment. beating the Hawks 4-1 on Saturday. In other NHL action Saturday, Montreal edged Detr6it, DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) OHIO DRIVER RALPH La- 3-2, and Toronto topped Boston, 5-3. tham picked his way through a series of wrecks Yesterday in the NHL the Black Hawks lost and bits of flying machinery yesterday to win their second game in as many days as the Rang- the 250-mile stock car race at Daytona Beach. ers outlasted the Hawks 3-2. Despite the two Averaging over 134-miles-per-hour, Latham losses Chicago still boasts a commandinghwelv- clinched a spot in next Sunday's point-lead Daytona 500 in the NHL race. In the only other by winning the 250. contest Detroit climbed to within two points Two drivers were hurt when their autos went of fourth place by trimming Montreal, 3-1. out of control--but both managed to escape The league is now idl& until Wednesday. serious injury.

SALISBURY, MARYLAND (UPI) DEFENDING CHAMP- ION CHUCK Pasarell retained his title as the SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA (UPI) JACKIE STEWART OF Mens National Indoor Tennis Champion. Pasarell Scotland beat out fellow countryman Jim Clark became the first playerin 31 years to iuccess- to win the 32nd Australian Grand Prix. Stew- fully defend the men's title when he beat Art- art averaged over 87 hur Ashe. miles per hour to beat Clark by 16 seconds in the 101 mile event. GI0XMO GAZETTE MONDAY FEBRUARY 20, 1967 PAGE 7 FOR SALE THE KILLER IN YOUR-HOUSE uP Early American Drapes. Call 98128 anytime. GIVE AWAY According to'U.S. Public Health Service Sta- 8 weak old puppies of small statue. Call tistics based on past experience, half a mil- 85465 anytime. lion children will swallow potentially poi- sonous substances this year and about 500 of WANTED these children will die. This needlessnan- Part time barbers, military or civilian for slaughter can be stopped if parents "poison Navy Exchange Barber Shop, to work from 4:30 proof" their homes. We have aonstant reminded to 8:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday. In- that parents are being negligent with regardto terested persons please call personnel manager their children's safety from this standpoint. at 85857 DWH. The Utah State Health Department has compiled a check-off list to help you make your home Windshield for 1952 -53 - 54 Ford. Call 90274 "poison-proof" for children. Every parent is AWH or 85857 DWH. advised to study this list and conscientiously carry out the prescribed precautions. Snow suit and other winter clothing (size 18 to 20 months) needed immediately. Call 96181 YES NO anytime. Do you keep household products and LOST medicines out of the sight and reach * Wallet in the vicinity of Officers Club. $50 of children? Even if you leave the reward. If found, call A.W. Pederson 85761 room for an instant be sure the con- DWH or 85178 AWH. tainer is in a safe place. -Do you store medicine separately DID YOU KNOW?????????????? from other household products? ENSIGN This title dates back when priviledged Do you store household products only squires carried the banners of their Lords and in their original containers? Cups, Masters into battle. Later, these squires be- glasses, and soft drink bottles are came known by the banners (The Ensign) itself. for food and beverages, not for Information from the McCalla Naval Air Sta- bleach, kerosene, turpentine, etc. tion library. Building AV-76 Corinaso Point. ____Are you sure that all your household products and medicines are properly HAVE YOU HEARD labeled? The Comnisary will be closed Wednesday,February D____o you always call medicine by its 22nd in observance of "George Washington' s" proper name? Medicine is NOT candy. Birthday. Do you clean out your medicine chest and storage cabinets regularly? All Base telephone subscribers are advised to Do you use caution when you throw put the correct Official address when mailing away' old containers? The contents their payment of monthly telephone bills. should be flushed down the drain and Public Works Center Collection Agent the container rinsed. Attn: Helene L. Traugh Box 37 Accidental poisonings kill 5 times as many Local American children under age 5 years as poli- Note: Bills remain unpaid until actual receipt omyelitis and 2 times as many as tuberculosis. by the collection agent. Only personal checks These deaths can be prevented. can be accepted, they should be made payable Parents should regard all household articles to: Base Telephone Office. and medicines as poisons in the stomach or as burners of the skin and eyes. Keep household WANTED goods out of your children's reach and ALL Part - time or full - time waitresses for thE medicines locked away. The more observance of CPO Club, starting salary is $1.25 per hour. these precautions educates the child to beware Call the Club Manager for more information at of any product in a vial, bottle, can, or med- 95114 or 95164. icine container.

OF MVR 0%UE NOT THE CHAMPION qaU%~ TMe AM NOT 'G _==7 WCMNHK UNTIL OVE BEATEN *TH"E AREND EVERq . Za DON'T YOU? AROUND HERE! A5KED MARVEL"

C' PAGE 8 MONDAYj FEBRUARY 20, 1967 GITMO GAZETTE

WASHINGTON (AP) THE PAN AMERICAN FOUNDATION of the President's staff was aware of the is one of the academic and international foun- facts until very recently. dations which have been receiving money from However, there were other reports that Vice 9 the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency it was President Humphrey knew about it because the learned here today. National Students Association told him of it The disclosure brings to 11 the total of last July. such agencies known to have received financial And one of the highest officials in the ad- support from the spy agency. ministrations of both Presidents Kennedy and The Pan American Foundation operates out of Johnson is being quoted as saying that the the University of Miami and is headed by Prof. White House and the State Department have A. Curtis Wilgus. known for years how the CIA was giving mil- It finances student exchange programs be- lions of dollars to the student groups. tween Latin America and the U.S. and academic He said the decision to do it was made at research. It also published books, pamphlets the highest level of government but he stopped and periodicals including a journal of inter- short of saying both Presidents knew of it American studies. personally. According to records here it received a This source suggested the idea was that of grant of $20,000 in 1964 from the J. Frederick the State Department but it was decided the Brown Foundation--one of the channels admit- CIA would carry it out because it had the tedly used by the CIA to finance groups work- money and the ability to operate undercover. ing for it. The source also said Presidential Assistant The National Students Association--the first McGeorge Bundy sat on a supervisory committee group to admit having been helped by the CIA-- of the scheme--the committee including State says Paul Helmuth, a trustee of the Frederick Department and CIA officials. Brown Foundation, was one of their contacts He said that when Bundy retired last year he S with the spy agency. was succeeded on the committee by Presidential Prof. Wilgus said today he did not know of Assistant Walt W. Rostow--now one of Johnson's the connection between the Frederick Brown closest confidants and advisers. Foundation and the CIA. And he added that his foundation had no con- TOKYO (AP) IN THE LATEST flood of bewilder- nection with the agency "that I know of." ing reports of dissension within Red China are Meantime the storm over CIA involvement with these samples: students groups continued here. During a Peking demonstration of some 200,000 Members of Congress said they will investi- persons yesterday there were shouts for the gate the CIA's subsidizing the student groups. liberation of the south of China. Peking wall Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield called posters told of a walkout by workers from it "a move towards big brotherism" and said their jobs on construction sites along the 0 Congress should have an inquiry as well as the Chinese frontiers. one now being conducted by three members of On the other hand, an Indian news agency re- President Johnson's cabinet. ports that portraits of Mao Tse-Tung reappear- However, members of Congress who are on com- ed atop Chinese fortifications near the Sikkim mittees which supposedly oversee the work of border. the CIA were not so enthusiastic about in- The pictures were pulled down last month, quiries. leading to speculation that Chinese soldiers Presumably these members have known all a- in the Chumbi Valley in southern Tibet had long that the money was being funnelled into swung against Mao. student organizations and foundations. According to Dr. L. La Dany, described by Senator John Stennis of Mississippi, a mem- U.S. News and World Report as Hong Kong's num- ber of the Senate Subcommittee on Intelligence ber one authority on China: S called the whole row "a tempest in a teapot." "Mao Tse-Tung is finished. It only a ques- "If you are in the intelligence business you tion of time now." have to go where the information is to find He suggests that Mao may be insane, and he it" he said. says: "China is on the verge of economic an- Other law makers expressed concern that all archy." students abroad and foundations operating in other countries would be tarred by the spy- TERAN, IRAN (AP) RUSSIA HAS MADE two deals brush. with Iran totaling $390 million. They said there were many groups operating The Iranian Prime Minister disclosed in Latin America and elsewhere who had never that his country will buy $110 million worth had and were never likely to have any connec- of munitions from the Soviet Union. Also a tion--financial or otherwise--with the spy steel mill and machine tool factory for $280 agency. million. There were conflicting statements about just As one of its Middle East allies, the United how much President' Johnson and the top level States has supplied Iran with about $1 mil- of U.S. government knew of the CIA-student ac- lion in military supplies in recent years. tivities. Johnson was reported by a responsible White House authority to have been "totally unaware" WATER STATUS: of the involvement. In Storage.12,819,000 gals. The same White House official said no member Produced.2,271,000 gals. (Continued at top of next column) Consumed.2,003,000 gals.