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Show yo s . ,'",tp . " ,, , m. , o." - r Uzth -- . ,, . . '''' . ' - . - - , - , -- --- EDITCDIIAL PAGE , . : , - . itilkJ ' - . ,,,tyk- ''''' .,. - -- , u- ' ,,. - . - - - s - - , - ';'-'- - -- ' , - ,..- -- - -- , ,' - - - ,.,..,,, . . -' Been'bivinely Inspired. ,...; ifd, try" - A - , ,. . . MARCH1II,- -- - ' , ). . t , - , , . . '- - -- - - - -- - , : - eovernmentoffidals,and --- - be fully aired in public sometimes take a' while to determine who is right and who Is wrong, into perspee-- - , , - - tiveandthe-grea- -- , ' x., , . - - - , week indispensable instrument of government in a democracy. TUE CASE STEMMED from an advere - tisement printed in the New York - - - - - .. , ' - , ' - -- s , I. v - , - -- - - - , there-upheld-t- -- - - -- - ---- . . ' ' ' . '' ' ,ANe .!-- ' . . ., - - -- - - ' , ,, ' f ,,, " - I..NOkT 8 DIDLE.: 01' -.- , , ' . , trudt " . - . - -- - ,.." - - ' - . it4C.,,,i-el- o - - ' ,, , ', . , - 0 41111we - - - - : - - ' - - - ' ", -- - , . go- ,-. ,, - , - ' - - . - ., , . v. :- vc, - ,' ---- - :- ' , , , - this-preced- ent, -- - - u -- ---have , - . - tic . , - , - O - it - ' - t - .- labos d- - - , , - , Un ucky' Day.). I ' - - - - -- - :. - - ' - - , . - ' - ,- Royal Blessed Event -- BRITAIN - to the though one considerably Queen Elizabeth 11 --- - line---todi- ty. boreherfourth,xhildduring. the ' ' wee- grown in Britbh-- - nothing but warm approbation of the 11, from all shades crowning of -' of British political opinion.The new blessed royal event does B eses nothing t o lower - theory, I agree with all my high - minded,, liberty - loving friends who insist that we have "too many laws,", that regula- , and pro- tom tmd repressions -11 the---:hibitions-r auffocatbg ,,,In . ' -- imakeslaWs - - taseem. , lour-year-o- e-- . ld 14-yea- r- auPernuous. '' -- . : - - i , - - . -- We a social SMUG. ture donhasort in America; our national game is more dirty poel than cricket 1 don't know Confidence ' counts. It of the stock tio hi jss - - , - , ,, , ... , . , bistmormari- - lallo. Gals, Nothing Has Changed! . . ' , large instittiticm- or trade association that b capable, -- and w II I n g to police itself - against i abuses a n cl, , malprac, , 's, tees, . ' - - - Just because Margaret Chase Smith is rumling - t 4'4 r at gives exchanges-th- confidence Asidng such groups to police- . --r rat op tif INERENEMEIZEIGEMIMEEMIr- --. - - ' lion - , . , , . By FRANC'S McCARTHT UPI' Eat,la Americas editor.. '-- ' . . ' - '- - - . Cuba: conspiracies- ,- bombings, .. , ,' - , ', . , .., : insurrections 4 'Ilk, f- , ' i : - . - - . t - : .. AMP - - . , - hal dioppid. - e , .. , )& ' cation-to"play- - . , - --- -- - , ,i and more resolved to, accept -"un- . settled business" in the world. , -Brent s ' , 403 .14 . ' ' - ' - - -- , : - , I eealmed ' in their bank federal supervision , 7- - condsellittlyale-orsonir- - T : on----- own.--Wit- - 1 - . , ds: m,a-,in- , , --. - . den deposits that rives - ' - . Clear,' Concise Analysis .. . ... , - - :: City Water ClUeStiOn - , ; 1 - ' This is my appreciation for the frequent inclusion of Walter Lippmann on your editorial I have wanted to do this bee ore he. cause I enjoy him so much. However, tonight's .. comments especially impressed me; history b as no t taught him that in many of the great religious and Ideological conflicts of mankind there, has been no victory, no defeat no solution and no settlement-on- ly an untidy living with the rmsettled ' . 1, , .. business." - His remarks were made In relation to the ex- tremists but I find them to be very applicable to , myselL I have experienced a sense of continuing about foreign hnd nation- alfrustration in reading , h this clear, as well as my pmblems ot , - - '.: -- z- -- n ' -- - 2, . - ' reLrul - - , , ,, , , - - for President doesn't mean the average American Milan Lit going toforget The infant boy becomes third i line and go out , her femininity body politic. ke -- g), , American men. a behind 15 year-ol-d chasing Prince , symbol of Britain 's past imperial while calling them-of -- succession, But being themselves neither is they, . -- - practical .--' ,: Women always semi selvés "practical" and "realis- nor registicfor no group is la Prince Andrew. ' glories, Queen Elizabeth in a special way Charles and to get married even if it tic" conservatives, are the kir- ?Alai& .. good enough and disinterested reminds her subjects that she is, like them, ' 'He moves in ahead of his sister, isn't Leap Year. Men , Government in : lest in Utopians to do so. always steps my view; they 41161 - enough . a wife and mother with the same warm old Princess Anne., so lazy, nowadays aren't than to MI a vacuum. This vacuum are much more starry-eye- d 1 agree-wit- h , lity tollservative , at emotions for her children as they. Her , can't ask the that they v. In taking its place In the ancient Brit. theliberals of whom -they speak b provided by a deficient sense there are too many ,. women they love to marry 1- - Ish line of succession, the baby enters a ' third child ivas the first born to- a reigning -- -- sel D3niemPtucnisiY-- --f public morality,. and an ex-- t aws itoo tontuaing 1 , monarch since the birth of Prm- cess Bea- them. They haven't in- , In order to have a minimum Ce3Shre sense of private greed. . toe restictive, ', c000idieticawf-'12.1c, -- line considerably more secure than some . trice nine of Victories vented Queen medicine"---ctprIcionsa machine th4t youngest of laws, you have to have & If we get "socialized Iti - .,4.4,,,' , But the only real British monarchies have been in the past , , ' art ' win do that for them yet . cltildren, in 1857 maxim- um of gentlemen. I use : in this countrYein any form, it alternative --- apart from silly i: ... . When Britain's last previous queen was ,, : -- - !vM be because the 'triedical pro- - ' : ' - Let's - face itMost, word that to purposede. campaign speechesis crowned," 1838, there was strong- senti- - TO HEE AND, indeed, to new mothers lession itself did not do enough velop a citizenly that will play - men want a wife to wait on in their old age...! I,Y. for I think it is onlY the - ' ment to abolish the monarchy. But Vic- "; . everywhere, we extend best wishes on - - gentlemanly insthict (the dedi- - , '. about - the public health- - needs ' the Gardner . garde fairly without them. ing . tale's long,- popular reign reestablisheda. happy and very blessed .event - . f , , , ., , tut garnerr---oour MonroOltah the , 0 , , fvedayaaheadof schledue. ,. rdght,--- - - . . - 1- e,,.L, ' - a new VAR throne down the - aTT'h, ' G ame F.. alrayt Ey Sydney ,J.' Harris '' and '' ' ' ationis--stitbithat federal '. Ili Iry h oWil , . - , - , ; : - , ' T ' - i'' --- - ' - . . 19644-------:-- , ' - , it not - awe-- - --lurki- -- - - - , , , ' - ine , , ''. ' - ' ' i, Have you been up to Park City? Did you drink , the water? Did you know that the head of the sad- - -- section of the State Health Dept, tary-1 engineering -cal-v-n sid wee ks said, Any pathogenic organism can be carried in such astphold, cholera, that ng and here s, cOuldbe make this situation potentially dangerous," (Deseret - News , Feb. 26, , ,, City's new ski facility Is drawing huge crowds, largely families with children. It's an;Ideal family resort, and the people of Park City can be justly proud of it Yet, toauote the above newsar- tide again, In Park City the water supply comes from deep within the mines (United Park City Min-..'' ing CoInes) It channels, uncovered, under the mine track, which the men cross regularly. The water is stored in an open reservoir; then is pipe- d-' int tcwn-'' No one Is accusing Park City of harboring an ept-demic. And, to quote Park City's mayor: flApplica- to finance a study n an :a the remedy for the es take - Pointed." But federal loans take ' time ' and why . is the present dangerous potential . . tolerated v. -G- wen S. Zenteri--1-, Utah Granger, . ,, . - , rris - - - - , - ended-the-democra- , -- - -. ---II'ra- - -- - ' ret . . .. , ' , u - -- -- '" ', By - VI - .. Apparently the tobacco industry as a whole was ' impressed, for six large cigarette companies . equally . .. have donated 000 to the AMA to hel IS finanei $ 10 - its Caneet study. ,0001 This may polse a delicate choice . s - -- , : : for Mr. , JohnWatts, a Democratic congressmn from Nicholasyille,- Kya-- ' He is the .' thought to hold the key vote on medicare in the House Ways antiMeans Corarrdtte& Presidentilohn--- son would like to see Mr. Watts use his vote tO get ' ' the legislation out of the committee on to the floor of the House. The AMA regards the medicare bill --- -sodalized medicine, and strongly opposes it a , , .. , , , . . --L. R. Johnson , ' , ' ' '' ' 1155 Lake St. . ' - . .,,,,N. - -- - Kgenintucky,ciaptibancect;pthroedurce" the Rotarians were "highly impressed, , , , , - , WEST , , i .. cigearedpottesii.Abiccordelppinrogatchoesthethairtankfmtgobrttlesatadietojtounilafaler,. . - .., . ; i , ' - : 00 tv,A,. IN "It ' " C AA , - , ';,''''', .,.... SOUTH , , -- ', ,... . ' N ' ' ' 1 's . a port. Dr. Ands cheered people up. He told the state le psi a ture in Frankfort that a link between smoidng, , and cancer was old stuff that would tot alter--tb- habits of smokers. A massive pregram of basic ref e . ses,-othe to was search still required, identify cancer and perhaps Inaleate, some means of ctire a nd prevention. The AMA had initiated just uch:a study. Dr. Annis explained that "the AMA is not op- posed to smoking and tobacco. It is opposed to die. ' ' ease " To members of the Frankfort Rotary club he out . - , Inc inciation, wthas Itectu;ing , ' e- , : , , DEMOCRATS' ON NOTICE ' r ' . ,----- - - iPve.elays before the Public Health Service ISSIteit,,0-, , Its re Po it linking smoldng and cancer, Dr. Edward R. Annis, president of the American Medical Ass. . -...-- , .'o as -- to your monfaubscribers. , ' - , abor ,Revo t. rewirlg - - ti , t ,,, ; . - 4, .4"", R. I) , -- est ,.:,,,..,,,,,,,,,, - , . f, a . .. - . - ,, ' ' , , ' ' . .., N - - ' , ,- . 1 ,..,,,, '- -,. - ' ' , " ,. . k ' . , , ,, . '..,1-,,- ,, - ' 1 . :;! Smoking And Medicare, there In the March I issue ofthe- - ew Republie was an article which I think would he of great inter-- - .', ,l ,.. . - - - , ".1 I 4t - ; , ' ' I , -- ,,; .., ..ft- - -' I , , ...a---,--- - ' i ... r?da -c- omtroorn-Of-taiblic ful way of conducting public business' , yes. .. .- t ' ' : , , , 4---- , . . , . - - -- - ----- -- .,,,-- , '.,-'--- -4 , $ r- . -- .' ', , ,,,..,, :.. , . 1 ,,,,, ' inaes"' and then lidded that ; WESEL The only worse kind of government Is , "It is regrettable that be is part There'll 'a labor reidr , NEW YORK , other kind known to man. any -- --;' 2 , agalust the- Democratic Party which could - .. 4 racial situa------- -it Cengresaran' ', "'aka,. , wide front; The Maritime ' , tionwas being baficlledby Alabama, ()illapoted by the government leader who strategists the noa., , d ' a..., I , l ', -:. libel r.s wrote :, . suit tte dais The officials brought he for . , - - litical rebellion is ,,,,,, , 7 Hall LS president, a direct hu , Sea, lid This and the state courts stripping 1 by ......,,' . , . . , . , law concerning the press Is such , - -- xarers Our some , , with eftlitationto soclus '' ' as who umon emu Paul sail, Is A, , claim. ,,.. r: ' ,- 400,000 members who are part that divergendes of opinion between mein. - ,powerm politically as he Is aer.;,;- -- He d allowe if physically. Obviouslyi, . 'of 29 inte tional unions with . of the government are no longer Se- - - - loves to talk in the salty jargon of a sailor t'a t, 'ha4 ended the usefulness - ben to stand,-coul- d ' a total of over' 4.5. milli: mem- which are or casion f exhibitions, ..,asa, public none in this deceives a but SingaPM pub, of the press as an instrument of informa. ' ', ;.11, : beta. Mr. We've Riesel.la business. to noneofthe him , newspapers' 0ehiaeriendsamalliesavhomow - tion about government can the ','We bridge gap - be eliminated that - conception of political " . , knowledgeable in the po- chiefs-cent- -ered M.T.D. umon and the , carried to its logical conclusion, it could - freedom which holds that tween our other nag - , - lineal sciences --a- nd - in the rebellious everybody AFL-CIas we . , in process warned., MariHall the "Anymillions," the right to say whatever - comes Into his - , strategy of going for the pole. mostly know who believes we can be taka one , ,de3 , as Harvard cal , ,1""e jugular-eel) b ad.', , any As Justice Goldberg wrote: "ff liability . -, sert they are . --- , ,, mg talten for en Ior gran: ted will have to take Pm feasor ' federal DANGER can THE us on politically. The Cabinet Hitler an criticism because Adolf can attach to political that granted by departments won't be able to bide a strong ' and executivea gencies , becausemembers a' cJai as a botweffltmiwr-"-T'llt-d-thicoalition of union clu ornt-tlie-bont-r , philosophy. as the paragraph just quoted public official, then no eritioal : 11ff the waterfront, hal been an tathe running foreffice and nbayhold tonal citizen can safely utter anything but faint from his writing IS, fortunately, more ' -' tho se hi en d s an d allies White House. their pos itions tor years. ' pm Ise about the government or its, oh- mote this the to thanlia ' week, 4 Supreme ,,vv e have been ' doing much ., - come time has the "the for that ' eavE, PLAN to go hito their . . ' dials." - , decision s Court , , . labor movement ,,,to .sto p bel og thinking about this," Hall told -home states , and hold - tha , 7, - , the tail on the Democratic don-- this reporter the other day, "and Democratic P arty responsible ' ' .. ' ,, ' I wa are ready to put up money for them... for Mr. Freeman, keY , . , .- He is a Demotrat , and be for the .opposition. We get a'' viell just urge every working I CIIIIRCRY la Femme, if memory the distrust of the nuMber. In the centu- worked hard for the election of , Prcm jab from the White Hose ,-. men in his state of Minnesota . to vote Republican. As for Mr. Joim Kennedy, but now he is and it is rarely carried through' turned ries or stubbed,' every serves; who suffep from, triskadekasince, finger , his ',' b-y Cabinet memb - We can - Hodges- we will go into the he and toe that bluntly saying - on Friday the 13th has no doubt fed , , , phobia tst the extent that he fears Friday- T-0 to to some even of talk th get Coalition primaries-1money may the superstition. pour , , ' Orville . the 13th even when it falls on - - and 'ruesday, . ,1:ry and beat his Mends. We'll manpower' into campaigns AgrICUitUre SeeretarY But take heart Th e last pre vious time an d -a Freeman le, to eMp But éven those unfortunate readers who go anywhere there are close eltict Republicans, the two tame together, last December , pro- we find that M. alciNamara , : elections 's Remember that Mr fed no kinship with Pogo and his friends no ow of broad NALL ANI) MS colleagnes bave Defense Department isn't giv-- - yreematee Democratic . any kind calamity -- yam- ; ' concern trace some small at, of may fed ' scale. The ancient Norwegians considered been angered by what theY lng mirth heed either." ' - Labor Minnesota he canied of-tParty the coinddence this weekend Nor did Hall have idnd words call the failure of members of ,Vriday the lucidest of days; its very name ' by onl y a few votes an d- -only - and the uhlucky number. , - lucky day the Cabinet to pay them and 'for Secretary of Commerce Lu- . . after a reeoun t e came from Fri g g, th e ' goddess 'Of love in , with Friday , The b'ad luck assodated their demands much heed. The ther Hodges, ' whom be called . Norse mythology . . farm . .,' , ; ' ' , . . dates from the Crucifixion on .' apparently i WHAT A CAD a man would have to be to that day 7 though there are certainly . ' . claim there is anything Unlucky about , , other sources. There were 13 men at the . s' , , "' , I 4. love. 1 PlLast Supper, which ma he one orighi of . - N'- - , .1 - ,..- i'''''-- ... ' - Letters' - - - ,- ,' , , a ., , , ToThe-idito- ,............... ' I-- 40' - - .. - I , 'rseelee''. .:fr,u,- - - tria.--.. -- , -- 8, , 1,, ' ' - - ,,..1 , ,,. illea , - - -- - 'el ...) d ' - , sL 7111!t - - 2 a 6..9 -- t--'- - 1 . l'At - ,i4ate opinion finds the erring party and imposes ', its punishment of IcAs of confidence. , - Is this a cumbersome, sometimes pa - , struck down what had been consid- - , one of the most flagrant attacks of ' this generation on the fourth estate ,as an - t ' , . TN, a 0..,, , - print- It may - - - . , - , differences should tthe- represented three classes of government He pointed to ' the press, gallery and declared: ,''There, , More , sits gentlemen,-'1-. , than other, any important , . , , ' - - - r , r, )...,.,,.., . .-- . . , ' , ' - 1- -- , !,V,.,k , - .., ak. '' : - and-the----official . , - , , . .........o.........m........... - . - , 1 - , , 10: . ' (-7- , 1 - - - . . ; ;: 7 a ------?7, 1 . ,a, ,r a f 3., - a " V - -- UPPOSEOTO , .,,,, 4, , - P : i r ' vepo!-- . . ilitht c, c er ;11 . , - - , -- -., ,,, l'' - - Mil,,v, 66, '- - 1 A -- . '..... Own Areas - 4. ' , . - - ' -- 7- - . THiMKABOUT THE COW WAR IN AfR1ICA 1 ASI , blimter--termsr-Il- , -,1 ----.,- 1 'Ni . , ' - . - 1M , . sa t . -- Logically and correctly, the Supreme Court reversed the derision. It hildth,it criticism of public officials can be .judged libClout only 11actual malice" is proven. , Justice Brennan, in writing the unanimous can press ; as a decision, defined "aetual malice ' "If it Were left to me to thoose between made "with kriowled ge'that it . . a government without newspapers and , statement . or with reckless disregard 0.1 was false s e rs without a government,", ' n ew p ap -- -". Thomas Jefferson declared, "I should not ' whe ther it was false or not. uncerno hi ' eld court h the ' O therwise, hesitate a moment to choose the latter." about the statements critical tain terms, In somewhat Harry , S Truman put it f n't of - government-office- rs 7' conduct 'you-ca) ' are ' protected by the constitutional 'guar. heatget put of the kitchen." - antees of 'free free and - press. speech were same Both basically the the watchdog of government thing-t-hat WIIAT, TitEN, is to protect pulic offi- . , is and must hi the public press, and that ', , dais against imjustified attacsek? Why, any public officiawho cannot stand the ' the innate good judgment nse of , out fairness of the American people thertt- - ' criti c is m o f tbat press had btter get -' ' of goverment. '' ' ' selves.' id- -ce 7-between-hidivDifferences will arise the- - House of Commons, teed In ke s Bur these uals and 4 . . ',' , t , - , , . - , ; ' . t ' Our- . .;. ,... ,. I964,,,,Ito . . - ,- ; , IP. , ''' . - de , - li St gHwan- - A'C'ENTURY and a half apart, two Demo- cratic Presidents of the 'United States uttered sentiments that bear strongly on this week's Supreme Court decision up- function of the Amen- the proper holding . , : - - The Case For Democracy , ,, "' -- . ,, 1 - . ' -'- ' - We Stand For The Constitution Of The United States As , - - fri 16E:: ) Ir. g - . - , . - ,-- , o? , -- - - . . : - - , - e DECISIONS opiNioNBALL0T 'Indicate all the policiel with which - you agree and return to "Great De. -cisions," Deseret News, 33 Richards ' St., before Monday noon. Your opin- - hemispheric polieleifibonlit adopt to deal with Castro's , , the 1 . iUS.Whit ,, Storeshelvis-lr- e: - . , t ae 111000100100001111000041411000060000004000110001111110001600011060600000 -- - - - -- immoblii7ition of thilarFes of free-- baniT rationed. tubs? , e with Kremlin policy, dom in has- - boconi-- : In five years Western with The of tut economyHemisphere L as a negligible 'Castroism C Ignore order ant confusion. what-i- s -- - - of Fidel Castro-1- : '- to appli;d railliarY completely -- subservient to --that of the ionswillUtabu!atedandseutto :', . . to the 77., . : ',' . ........... D1 immobihzation. security 7,washhigton. rule, Cuba has i;',' . , Soviet Union. - 3 - CASTRO ,...n.,0 ; ravraua"131 Fvuuw' ' COMMIMIst Cuba ( has Amerlea-been the et Latin -' ' 'given . ,,.,,, ' comz 0 What poll'eles should the t.S. lug on 'the theme of United State( - om st , , , In the ,strietly military senses, :: modern arms in the comm mist :':':' first Commu; i2 t,. low s, ) RelY' Imperialism, have fomented anti North toward the all-oon regime , Quiz, the Alliance ,' Soviet for ' PrimariV D arms munist Cubaslespite , - 1 - American 'nist satellite in the bemi- - woriltdis prejudice throughout to remove of to the the In. have .., not does Progress appeal f capability titzlay America'i Latin - : (27.; IA New WorIct'r, strongest -- , : : J 1 sphere and brought near, g not already nilli - , te Latin America. i vade the 'United States. Lc It is a fullfijl' essv' the allru- accomplished, ' -' : relatio. ' -, Sa;ekd : -- r corn- fiedget politi-,t,;:':- ,, ....., I EuT THE mAssivE hoild.op of arms ! Deny Affiance for Progress aid to--TODAY, CASTRO'S Cube is 1 : -y '' Tlindizilli- And although themselves subjugated nrffitary juntas that overthrow dem- pletely communized as the 'Soviet ;, there-- as highlighted by the 1962 rats- -- --en t economic 0- ,Remove the . ocratic Latin American - govern- - 0 in the political sense to an extra-conl- idoes indeed - constitute a . . ,' sile crisis ,. , hostil-show otherwise but squeeze, ' ' ' ' of the Soviet ' - ments in the name of anti,Commu ' rental and foreign power, Communist threat to the military security of the ity as long as Communist influence MATC H KUED THUSDAY union. Fidel Castro .. Cuban all4 have United Immobilized , States. agents , virtually nism, antiCaztroism., , renv:dns : in Cuba. , , The Cornmunist'. sub- - in a political sense the western Herat. This Is the !Mk bs the seven-papossible Huge arras shipments lations to Prese'to Seek 193a.' n Castr's 1 to with the Great su........ibverstrengthen Decisions of LIU series which America version have reached out from Havana, ' sphere e a n destine transshipment relations with diplomatic -tion by pressing our allies to halt and self.de- - - eontbsues Timraday at 7:31 p.m.ins -- sive movements in other Latin A mmo the Moscow of the Western Hemisphere , theme of the Castro regime and loin , - altrade with Castro. all termination." are arms Some such can countries. KUED, Channel 7. Featured will be - '- ' to touch el , U.S. trade embargo against ' ,; in use by guerrill a forces et - ' ---- openly an economic blockade some The Iron Curtain has been extended have ,,, A Impose ' Cuban affairs, U.S. See Department, ; 'In the the enlY --- -- -7 AcL LI ::: through Beld,sueltatinV enBolivia failed to realize thatSovier stihiuga---- -' the island tintil all Communist bloc and s ' panel of four local experts. of American States to ana., . lombic Iron duras,ylusztma, of Cuba has affected the whole hemi-removed. are personnel , ' challenge of Castroism in - CUIllim TI'LY, CUBA- - stands charged 'sphere. The constant Communist Cuban ittie11 oar krigre &tart 'our Ecuador. - ' :: ' ". ., cults , America.' an internal uprising in ail with aggression against Venezuela by , Encourage the to 13 also a threat intervention TlIZRE hammering security L ' ms Decisi The Organization of American , States has.' araamte of the United States implicit in: the 13 oEtnceaustrogeint:htlentr. 17reidetNISeiilarefortaUll , CugrobaupsbYwith, suaiglayirlildgartLider,-g,ivuncrav at the wi)enrekmfoler&-'.4AlTiamerican (OAS) and 'accused of complicity at the to the Soviet Unton of land W " Cuban political trObleInt rrilitstsnva - anb person and 25 cents by malL -- - availability e ast the bloody anti Amen. Intervention by me American states in the forceful overthrow of the Cuban and Mount another invasion of the ii-physical facilities which could be of 0 In Panama.-------:-- : can riots street 1.., benefit to than C.S. event the in the ,, - -- - - land using Cuban exiles- of prejudice government , . great strategic importance Since Castro seized power I' of the PeoPles Intervened-- T. Union or Red China. . of any future military showdown between if necessary for its sruccess. s t!oops ' In- , Use the record shows Communist Cuban the Instance thvt of à' 4 Cuban The 0 continued Cuban In I. thorn the .. , othan peasants work on state form. the East and West, ' terterence In the Internal affairs Establish a Cuban government-In- Intervention In one . form or, another. bi side and the attendant emi- - Trade ,unions no longer function in de.- The consolidation of the Castro re- all-oto ,1 erdle and Latin a the Internal affairs or each and even. nous nunblings from all over - Latin fermi of American it nationan support as give op. which Proceeds apace the worker. A "big brother.' , gime in Cuba , . oust, by force if necessary, the portunity to deal with the Castro , - - ' :,- ,American republic. America emphasize that the United secret police force keeps every Cuban - creates the image of an invincible corn- - 4; , ' ' ' - Castro in-- .State;; haebeen. tosmgthe cold- - war-lit-The- 'result--Iregime by force. regime. evtaent;-spream' : under ort znarch.throuzir the ' , expansion ! . 4 ' '' rest throughout the Western 11,,ernIsp. here-t- he the New World. Agricultural Intl industrial produo !ester!' Remisikere,, 1100114111 I eeeeeeeeeks,ee------ Iv, -- . - - - tan-taniot- . "---- ...;4 , -- . , -- -: , ',,,, A . . - . -.- I, '' F,-:- -- : f-- u Prow-gr- tarl.-11sPr- , , , - - - sof me rt coordhlator -- dear-to-Lati- - - - - ; b -- ; - , ing ' -- -" , or.' 0 curr : : t , - .S.--shores. ; : , . t'' ail -- ':: : : , -- - ': , 0 : the it . : --- -- --- '7--- -7 ' -: e II ' ',. -- ., : -- - , of: ut -- s,-- ' or -- - , , , . , , t : - - - ' - , .- - - - - , r , Amin -- . - , t |