Levelland Daily Sun-News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 243, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 20, 1965 Page: 2 of 6
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and Satin
ftun-Nf uia
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THAT CAT’S NOT TUNED IN, MAN!
An Independent Newspaper
PM« *
October 20. IMS
7wf Tttwiu
Reds infiltrating
O
pur society
Did /uu know the loyal Am-
erican citizens have been sitt-
ing and holding their hands,
untUJhe hour has become dan-
gerously late—the infUteratkm
of Rids into our economy and
society has been greater than
we ever guessed. ■
In making a statement Karl
Prussian declares:
“Almost ail the media of
com muni cation, as well as Left-
ist, -Liberals and politicians
wersttpilck to describe the Ne-
gro ‘Slots which took place in
the Watt’s area of Los Angeles
California, in August of 1865,
as .spontaneous, leaderless,
meaningless, not a civil rights
damanatratlon and not part of
fee intelligent movement an be-
half- of fee “Oppi eased Negro
People" and ttu t the com-
munists had nothlrg to do with
it? is
*Nthat is tbs tn th7"
___‘Tt was a spontaneous leader-
les« and genuine eruption again-
st economic and social grei-
vances, it was the longest and
mo«J. meti cuous ly planned spon-
taneous eruptions in history—
because it was born In Mos-
cow more than a half century
•go.
net on my experience, here
are gay observations regarding
fee Ujos Angeles riots-at the
samfl time let us call it by
its fight name, “Communists
Insugactton."
Agd, continued Mr. Prussian,
<40if nation is being subjected
to sc continuous and accelerat-
ed |ertes of demonstrations,
ptdmttng* marching, sit-ins,
1 around the issues of Free-
IvQ rights and intergra-
disarm and get out
Nam. Because these
i » pwzpeee*
it is dim cult for the uninformed,
confeassionate citizen to per-
ceive the Communist trap.
JSowever, simultaneously
with these so called peaceful
rtgfjiistrstirani, America la
also experiencing riots, strife,
and physical turmoil. Every
day we see agreeslons of agon
defiance, disobedience, disres-
pect- and attrition against law
and; our law enforcing a-
true—and the hour is now
if we will listen there
time to do something
it—we need a hard-flst-
A dm tnistratlon to
the tenacles of com-
and drive the expon-
of such doctrine either to
or into the ground. And,
way, the man we are
is a former FBI agent
served as an undercover
for the Communist Party
| twelve long years. He knows
i he speaks.
n I was a communist,"
Karl Prussion,” I
one of the many corn-
schools that operate an
r.soiL It was held at Loon
near Farmington, Mich,
the teaching was based on
collected works of Lenin.
the Cradle to the grave."
The following (Rotations are
taken from the collected works
of Lenin—VoL 11, pp 21-22:
“Take advantage of the
clumsiness of the enemy and
strike him at the time when he
leasts expects attack. Readi-
ness for action must be con-
stant. Thus, today, we are fac-
ed with the task of organiza-
tion and supporting studants to
demonstrate. Tomorrow, per-
haps, we may be supporting or
leading a movement of the un-
employed, but, today we must
take advantage of the strained
political situation. In order to
capitalize on public indignation,
a strike might have to be or-
ganized. Only communists thus
trained in action could at a
stragetlc moment issue the call
for a decisive battle."
As we, the American people,
■it back draw our checks, and
■at from a table filled with the
fet of fee land, a sure but
fatal death la eating away the
found aliens of oar nation-it la
more deadly than the plagues
of another age; It destroys and
leaves the people shattered, it
is communism. Certainly we
can fight if we wilL We can
bury It so deep that it will
never ba able to dig oat, but
our attitode-fost is the atti-
tude of the Government of the
United States Has been the fear
it would “Offend Russia."
Just where the considera-
tion tor Russian feelings comes
hi we’ve never been able to
figure out, for there la nothing
Udine about what Russia
intanda to do to us-they Intend
to bury us-that is they intend
to 1st ue bury ourselves. They
can accomplish this without fir-
ing a single she
I National
out
shot, but fay feed-
ing their corruption to college
students, beablcks, and others
who will do anything for a
dollar. The time to stop them Is
now.
One man told us, “College
students likes for the world to
think they are rebellious—It has
always bean that way. The coll-
ege studants la no more than
anyone else—if he la of mature
age and insists onpreachii^the
overthrow of the Government,
ha should ba handled, as any
othar traJtor-don*t try to hide
Ms infest behind Us agw-lf
ha waa able to obtain entrance
to a collage ha la suypoaed
to at laaat have good sense,
end know the difference bet-
ween a traitor and a loyal citi-
zen. lha loyal citizens of the
Uatted States are paying for his
education-shell they pay for the
education of a man who hates
his bom aland, and desires that
the government be overthrown.
Shall fee work of oar colleges
be devoted to turning out a
crop of anarchist or Mull they
thin out their ranks and kick
out of tbs colleges the trai-
torlst lot who work for Russia.
We don’t know whether we
were raised right or not, but
when the flag goes by we stand
up and salute and we want to
the communist training sch- cheer—when they put the stars
I was taught to lie, deceive, and stripes on a piece of cloth
hide my Identity; to get into they have printed grandest em-
unions, church, politics, blem the world has over pro-
* mid civic orgmiza- duesd-They call it “Old
for the purpose of using Glory". And It is a glorious
organizations to attain thing to see-4t stands for free-
objective, the final don for all mankind; It tells
being a strong centralized us wherever it waves there is
administration in justice for all people. It has
that will control never been carried into a war
individual and family from (Continued on p^e 5)
3*/ /ZW
Soldiers man post
deep in Viet Nam
‘■'ft
If
\ A
■'
CAP; — SgU Jimmy L. Nipper
and Pfc. Taldion R. Devlin are
important men In the 1st Caval-
ry Division's massive encamp-
ment near here in the central
Vietnamese highlands.
Devlin, 25, mid Nipper, 32,
help the division exist at its for-
tress deep In Viet Cong territo-
ry.
They man “Water Point," a
tiny outpost an a swift stream
some distance from the m»in
camp. With simple but effective
apparatus they can turn out 900
gallons of pore water an hour.
Without fete precious water,
the 19,000 men of the 1st Air
Cavalry would either die of
thirst In the dehydrating heat,
or sicken from drinking Impure
water.
Devlin and Nipper are mem-
bers of the 8th Engineer Battel-
ten. Among its numerous other
Jobs, the battalion is fortifying
the camp into a strong position.
The battalion commander, Li.
Col. Robert Malley, says: “It
will be our Rock of Gibraltar in
the middle of Viet Nam.”
One company of the 8th was
with the 1,000-man advance par-
ty that arrived Aug. 25 in Viet
Nam. It directed the clearing—
by hand— of thick junglaonthe
chosen campsite.
The hand clearing, with brush
hook, ax nd GI shovel, waa
dona for a specific reason, ex-
plained by Col. Malley.
“We couldnT disturb the turf
with bulldozers and earth mov-
ers too much. We’ve got 450 hel-
icopters In this outfit and they
create enough dust, even wife
' ?
Succet*
Oscar winner absent
Sp TOUUam
HOLLYWOOD (APj — Maxi-
milian Schell’s explanation of
why he has absented himself
from Hollywood for the three
and a half years since he wan
an Oscar: “I dktoft want to be
caught up in the worship of suc-
• ■
Batting average is good
WASHINGTON (APj — Presi-
dent Johnson's batting average
with the 89th Congress now
pressing for adjournment of its
first session will compare fav-
orably with the best of any of
his predecessors.
But it wont show all hits and
runs. There are going to some
major bills left on base.
Probably no other president
got so much so quickly foam a
Congress heavily dominated by
members of his own party.
. But not even Johnson got ev-
erything he wanted. He still
could, for this is only the first
sesskm of the 89th, and all un-
finished business carries over
to next year when Congress
takes up where it leaves off
in 1965.
Topping the list of deferred
legislation are two bills close to
the heart of organized labor
which supported Johnson in the
1964 elections.
One is the controversial meas-
Dear Abby • • •
Helpful Hint!
Abigail Van Buren
ure to repeal Section 14B of the
Taft-Hartley Act This section
allows states to ban Inclusion in
labor-management contracts of
provisions requiring all cover-
ed employes to belong to or
contribute to a union.
The House passed the bill July
28. But the measure ran into a
filibuster in the Senate. So the
Democratic leadership took the
bill off the calendar and laid It
aside until next year.
Labor's other top-priority bill
cess.”
Moat tollers bitheHollywoods
would consider that a curious
viewpoint, If not downright sub-
versive. Oscar winners are sup-
posed to do their almost to cash
L'lStfSU&SSB
bankrolls.
NotSchelL
“After I wan the Oscar, I
didn’t make a film deal fops
year," be save. ~~Tee Hwi i
were aUk^de^ftfSmMndpre- ,—--
ssure^Wget me to sign. But bulldozer w
A ¥
DEAR ABBY: Our servicemen are now on
what is called the “honor system.” They no
longer make out allotments for their families.
They are issued full pay, and put on their
“honor” to see that their families are taken
care of. Well, I am very 6orry to say that some
of our servicemen don't have much honor. Mine
included.
Abby, it took me seven months before I was
able to get money out of my husband to feed my
family. I finally found out bow to go about it,
and I hope you’ll publish my letter because there
are a lot of other wives with the same problem.
Write to the ADJUTANT GENERAL. T.A.G.,
U.S. ARMY (or whatever branch of service your
husband is in), WASHINGTON, D.C. Tell him
what your problem is, give him your husband’s
full name, rank and serial number. Make four
copies of that letter. Keep one yourself, send one
to your husband and one to your husband's Com-
manding Officer. THEY will remind the service-
man that his family back bonne must eat. I got
results!
SKIP MY NAME
DEAR SKIP: Thank you for your wllUagueao
to share some valuable information with other
wives who might need it. If you’d hove written
to your CONGRESSMAN, you could have ac-
complished the same results. And possibly
sooner.
DEAR ABBY: I am an 18-year-old girl with a
problem—my father. He’s really a doll, and I
don’t have any of the problems my girl friends
seem to have with their fathers about make-up,
hair styles, curfews and the kind of boys they
date. But the one thing that bothers me is my
father's staying up ana waiting for me to come
home from a date. If he’d only sit in the dark
somewhere in the house, I wouldn’t mind so
much. But the minute the car pulls up, the front
door pops open, and there’s Daddy. Of course
this kills my chances for a good night kiss. How
I’m not a baby any
can I let my father know
more?
got sidetracked in fee House
after being approved by the Ed-
ucation and Labor Committee In
much more liberal form than
the President waited. It would
raise the minimum wages at
workers in interstate industry
and extend coverage to millions
of additional workers.
Also still high and dry is the
President's proposal for home
rule for residents at the District
at Columbia, for whom Con-
gress has been acting aa a city
council for years. The Senate
went along with the President
on this legislation but the House
passed a much different bill
calling for a referendum of cap-
ital voters to decide if they want
a home rule charter. The two
branches haven’t been able to
get together on a compromise
version.
On some of the things he did
get from Congress, the Presi-
dent got more than he wanted.
This was true of fee military
NO KISSES pay raise bill and the bill setting that."
success can be a trap, and I was
determined not to fell into it.
“Money? it never did concern
me. No matter how bad firings
get, you can always sell your
car."
Max Schell has no! reached
that state. Except in Ms very
early days as an actor, he has
lived comfortably. Stoutly
maintaining his bachelorhood,
he keeps his needs at a mini-
mum. He has an apartment in
Munich, which he seldom sees.
Moet at his time he is traveling
or working, or both.
After Ms Oscar for “Judg-
ment at Nuremberg," Schell
appeared in the unsuccessful
“The Condemned of Altana,"
for which ha had been previous-
ly committed. .......
“Then I waited," he ex-
plained. “The offers were very
flattering. But most of them had
me playing an earnest young
German; after ’The Young
Lions’ and ’Judgment at Nu-
remberg,' 1 had enough of
good turf. Also we can’t have a
morass of mud whan ifs rain-
ing.”
Together with the banyan,
teak and mahogany trees, the
tackled liana vines and leaser
brush, the troopers chapped up
18-foot pythons, cobras aid poi-
sonous kraits, which the men
call “bamboo vipers." One man
was bitten but swift medical
attention saved his life.
On s recent move of battalion
strength, an engineer truck
leading the way was blown up
fay a mine. But the engineers
had padded the truck's floor
with sandbags so that the driver
escaped with no injury at all
and flw passenger had only su-
perficial cuts.
A particularly difficult task
for the battalion was clearing
the top of nearby Hon Cong
Mountain and the establishment
of a heliport and “antenna
farm” as the heart of a commu-
nications network.
Han Cang, commanding the
entire An Khe Valley, la valua-
ble aa an artillery observation
position.
Cap*. Paul J. Cerjan’s Bravo
Company had the job of
preparing it. Helicopters
dropped fendbags until a heli-
copter foold land and let out
troopsw Tim company cleared
hand until they had a
which to land a small
IT.
This dozer tumbled big trees
«nd moved grmrite boulders un-
til a semblance of level ground
established. Then a big
lifted in.
DEAR NO: ftp knows. That’s why he’s watt-
ing up far you.
DEAR ABBY: I am planning to marry a mm
who has been married before. We are both
Unitarian. He has four children by Ms first wife.
Abby. I have never been married before, and
I've always dreamed of announcing my engage-
ment in the paper, having a large church wetl-
and wearing a beautiful white sown and
But someone told me that I will have to
ding
veiH
forego that dream because the man I am going
to marry has already been throurti all that. Is
that so?
BRIDE-TO-BE
DEAR BRIDE: Ne. It dsesat «—hew
maiy times your fiance has been married or
hew many children he has. If this is jam first
trip to the altar, yen may realise year dream.
CONFIDENTIAL TO LILY. WHO’S DE-
PRESSED: II a man is forever looking behted
doors, it’s a good bet that he has stood behted
a few himself.
Problems? Write to Abby, Box 69700, Los
Angeles, Calif. For a personal reply, enclose a
stamped, self-addressed envelope.
Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to
Abby, Box 69700, Los Angeles, Calif., for Abby’*
booklet, “HOW TO WRITC LETTERS FOR ALL
OCCASIONS.”
e McN®ught Syndic®U In®. IUI
up a program of health care for He broke the feat with “Top-
the elderly within the SocialSe- kapi,” choosing a comedy aa a
change at pace. It was a happy
choice. He followed with a dra-
ma, “Return From the Ashes.”
In between he played a highly
commended Hamlet and per-
formed a new John Osborne
play “A Patriot for Me," in
London.
Schell emphasized that Ms
absence did not imply he was
anti-Hollywood.
curity System.
He might get another setback
before Congress goes borne.
The House has refused to ap-
prove funds to put Into opera-
tion flw rent subsidy provision
at tea new housing Jon. lha
Senate may restore some of the
money. If it does, there is cer-
tain to be mother hassle in
the House.
Bravo Company interrupted
work to beat off an occasional
Viet Cong probe.
Soon flw company will builds
road to flw site. It will start
from flw top and «d at flw bot-
tom.
“It sounds a little like build-
ing a house from flw roof down
instead of flw usual way,” said
Cerjan, “but it's easier to work
down than up and we have the
Mg choppers to taka our «gilp-
ment up there.”
Many of the men here are
career soldiers formerly sta-
tioned at Ft Banning, Ga. Nip-
per, Malley and Cerjan all list
Columbus, Ga* aa their hones.
Devlin Is foam Fart Pierce, Fla.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration says one of flw
earth photos taken by Gemini 4
waa so dear a city street map
of El Paso, Tax., could be
drawn from it.
The photo and others taken in
June from m altitude at 150
miles were displayed Monday at
a NASA symposium for sefen-
tlsts.
Another picture shows dark
patches south at Midland md
Odessa, Tax* where rate had
wet the land the preceding night.
Astronauts James McDivttt
and Edward White made, flw 62-
orbit mission.
Voters face crucial
decision in November
Brooke
0%*lmc& j4lct€Huten
under pressure to switch
AUSTIN (AP)—State welfare
officials say Texas voters face
a crucial decision Nov. 2 about
medical care for flw needy.
They win vote an a constitu-
tional amendment to clear road-
blocks to Texas' continued par-
ticipation in federal matching
programs of medical assistance
to flw aged on the welfare rolls.
Also at stake la whether Texas
will be eligible for federal mon-
ey for medical care for other
welfare recipients: The blind,
and, totally dls-
f ASHINGTON, D.C. - Mass-
Attorney General Ed
(R), the GOP’s top Ne-
r office holder, is under pres-
from Democrats, espedal-
from Negroes close to the
dy clan, to switchparties.
;Brooke has told friends In
that he feels sty-
in the Republican Party,
lefa already holds flw senior
md the governor-
in flw Bay State. Brooks
i won two sweeping victories,
has tired at flw post be
have held four years by
■ext election. He aright go
to private law practice
nconw «i wider age Eldar
at boom. But Seue-
i Bob and Ted Kennedy could
a big Job for him in flw
Administration - md
Americans
Ad Hoc Committee for Freedom
For Freedom (YAF), the student
in Viet Nam held a “reverse
teach-in” in Washington over
flw October 16-17 weekend. It
was organized as a counter-
offensive to the Leftist college
group* which demmstrated for
surrender in cities and an cam-
puses pretty much around the
world an the same two days.
The patriotic Ad Hoc Committ-
ee, however, was reluctant to
antterse President Johnson by
nam* wMle praising his mili-
tary policy of battling Com-
munism In Southeast Asia. The
feeling la that Mr, Johnson is
too anxious for peace-at-any-
price, and that he will buy it
with huge sums of money and
hidden concessions.
Republican insiders do not re-
gard flw 1968 GOP nomination
as “worthless”. They believe
feat LBJ's headlong pace, ipiite
aside from his heart condition
and gall bladder operation, wlU
slow him down considerably in
another three years, so that he
will not be the invincible cam-
paigner of '64.
They feel that he has squan-
dered a large bank account of
good will with Congress by de-
manding too much, and that the
business community will turn
restive when It sees new Fed-
eral budgets above the $100
billion ceiling.
A great war-weariness and
crisis-weariness are anticipat-
ed long before Mr. Johnson
can wrap up the situations in
Southeast Asia and the Cari-
bbean, and Democratic Presi-
dents have always suffered
from the public Image of be-
ing both war-makers and truce-
bunglers)
Much of this Is undoubtedly
wlshAilness on the part of Re-
publican seers, but they frankly
expect to see Richard Nixon
against Hubert Humphrey in the
next national campaign. Nixon’s
manifest handicap la lack of a
home-state base, but Ms selling
point is his survivability. Noth-
ing that’s happened to Nixon
has shaken the party faith in
Mm to find flw victory stride
and to deal with the big affairs
of government. Once in office
a - Nixon vs. Humphrey show-
down would present the country
with fresh “choice” between
conservatism and liberalism.
The advantage this time would
be with flw conservatives.
Administration back room
thinkers have Mexico in mind
aa a model for a reconstruct-
ed government to the Domini-
can Republic. Mexico is run by
a tight oligarchy wMch pete up
a sure-to-wln presidential can-
didate but allows flw opposi-
tion to go through the motions
of spirited electioneering.
rmanently i
% abled, and families of dependent
5 children.
Another amendment also ln-
6 vulvas medical care for flw
S needy.
The two are Noa. 3 and 7 on
% the ballot
Here la what they do:
When It’s all over, the govern- No. 3—Authorizes flw legisla-
ment picks up flw campaign hire to revise state laws to par-
expenses for both sides, and the ticipate In federal-state match-
semblance of a democratic fay programs at medical care
struggle has been maintained, and services for flw needy. It
Right now the Administration’s extends old age assistance for
policy for the Dominican Repub- the first time to non-citizens
lie is the flick off the extre- who have lived in flw United
mists of right and left states 25 years or man. The
The clumsy kktasppteg and amemtownt also raises the age
explusion of Miami of General of eligibility for aid to families
Wessin y Wessin is explained by of dependent children from 16 to
White House spokesmen aa the 21 and lowers flw aid to flw
dire necessity of avoiding a da- blind wt limit from 21 to 18.
magoglc slugfest between Wea- No. 7_Exampts certain char-
sin, a prototype of flw hated fly hospitals from local proper
Trujillo, and Juan Bosch, the ty taxes. Only flw Hermann
former President, who proved Hospital Estate of Harris Can-
to be putty In the hands of tha ty would bsnsflt,
Caribbean Communist eetab- Tbs medicare Mil passed this
lishment. summer by Congress covers a
With Wessin at least tempo- large share at fee medical sa-
rarily removed, Bosch has 1ms psnses of old people. It doesn’t
chance to run tor office ► pay them all md many welters
gainst Trujillo,” but the Admin- recipients will need help eover-
lstration Is looking hard for the fog flw difference, says John
Mexican solution. Winters, state public waiters
commissioner.
The medicare act also pro-
vides matching tends for medi-
cal assistance programs for the
other welfare categories. Texas
has 231,000 an old age assist-
ance, 71,000 receiving aid to
families of dependent children,
10,000 permanently sod totally
disabled and 5,000 getting aid to
the blind.
But to get federal match*®
funds for medical assistance to
the elderly, as well as the other
welters categories, Texas must
bring its programs to line wife
federal standards by July 1,
1967.
Texas age limitations for aid
to the blind and dependent chil-
dren vary from those prescrib-
ed by the federal government
for medical care. Also, state
medical care programs must
treat all welfare categories a-
lflce.
The constitutional amendment
would adjust flw age require-
ments to the federal standards
and would allow the legislature
to peas laws necessary to con-
tinue Texas eligibility for
matching tends for medical
care.
Extension of old ago assist-
ance to non-ettizens la aimed
primarily at hearing needy Mos-
lem* who never received Amer-
eral money would “be loet to the
(Continued an pego 5)
Published By
■- lc
debates, beckers of flw
ment said many never lesraad
English and could not qtalify
for citizenship.
“This is as close to e must
pees proposition as flw people
of Texas will consider," assert-
ed Sen. Welter Richter of Gon-
zales. _____
Richter said If flw amend-
ment falls, $25 million to fed-
, INC.
Altaeff. Gardner... Jhddtebor
Lyndbll Konley. ..... JMNor
Tray Morris......CttyEdMor
Buddy K el say. . . Xlraslatton
M wi fear
Levelland. TgweTMjM
except Kgednf
Second Claes Peetap* pefi at
Levelland, TeXfeTsufaecrlgt-
sHla.'SsS;
89-10; one year, $18.28. Med
SSTiSf’&'iSZ
$7.50; one yoer, $14J».
The Associated Press la st-
dUnlvely aafffled to flw ®m
fr $m\m. at Ml local
iPawe fborlee.
wows sees not
mlffmrsssnt a
or tltt Corn
oheertefiy made
Intentlnillj
mr hMM
wtioa
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Kenley, Lyndell. Levelland Daily Sun-News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 243, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 20, 1965, newspaper, October 20, 1965; Levelland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1132112/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting South Plains College.