CHIPS ON A SHOULDER
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP75-00149R000200930103-7
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
November 17, 2016
Document Release Date:
April 5, 1999
Sequence Number:
103
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 1, 1962
Content Type:
NSPR
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
Approved For Release 2000/08/27 CIA-RDP75-0014
;Y.
salter,..'Wi n-chell
of New York
Chips on a Shoulder
For the 0, Brotherrrr! Dept: Senator J. William Fulbright,
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (and chief
spokesman for New Frontier int'l policies), on June 29th 1961
scolded: "We often hear that the existence of a Communist regime
know It is embarrassing and annoying and potentially dangerous.' Communist exiles. Castro's agents tweaked the nose of Uncle Sam
but is it really intolerable? I suppose we would all be less coal- by plastering such slogans as 'Viva Russia' and 'Down with the
fortahle if the Soviets did install missile bases in Cuba, but I am' U.S.' These enemies of the U.S. should be booted out. Why was the
greater danger."
Send more Democrats to Congress f f f
White House Advisor Brooks Hays (in a speech. at Gastonia,
N.C. Oct. 21st 19621: "Danger is not imminent in the Cuban .iter-
ation. Cuba is weak and our attitude must be explained i:, our
need for hemispheric support. I think Khrushchev really has no
stake in Cuba."
That's a White Notts( udt isnriffflf???
Senate Democratic \\'hip Hubert Humphrey (Minnesota, o"" tie
Senate floor, Sept. 11th, 1962 (after admitting the existence of int( ,?-
mrdiate range missiles it; Cuba): "I think it is ridiculous, and iii-
suiting to the American l-eople for grown men to "ring their hiw(',
publicly -bout Cuba being a threat to the U.S. I do not '~' +nt I!,#-
people of my State to lose a night's sleep worrying about the
night of Cuba "
I:-p 1'(,n Ih(1nphrru.
From a Newsletter! "Roy Rubottom (you met him in our
Column about Castro the other a. m.) told a Senate Internal Security
Subcommittee that on the day before Castro's takeover of Cuba,
'there was no evidence of an organized Communist element within
the Castro movement or that Castro was under Communist influence'."
Tios Latin-Amtra:un (:rpert, you will be irritated to learn, is
still on the U.R. payroll!
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. who helps JFK run the Gov't) wrote
an article called "The Communist Party" for Life mag of July 29th
1946: "A real revolutionary party in this country might be a good
thing and, if conditions ever are allowed to develop which make
a revolution successfu'., we deserve to have one."
1 014"P!
from a N.Y. 't'imes editorial: "The U.S. hits been engaged in
a species of cold war with Cuba for more than three years. During
that time %%e have again and again been caught by surprise through
a miscalculation of the strength of the Cuban regime."
I3r( (lose its "( , 1,t, t" Ti. L. Matthews (who still iarites runny
of its LittunnA,)ter,'nrr rditorials) was Castro's No. 1 back-puit(I
Headline: "Reds Ifav' Taken Over In Cuba."
The rcntriloquist ito longer needs the dummy.
I:nbert Ruar;c's revelation: Ihe temper of our times runs thus:
T))-. Alan Nunn May, a 1omicted traitor, who was sentenced to 10
,,ors to, c,lling atomic (acts in the Klaus Fuchs spy case (just
after AV'V\' IT), is new estahli?-hed in Ghana as a university professes."
1',,n, Win, Uhrnr,, ((l, ,,,anti/ millions i,t U.S. ord. in. short, i,0(4
tarp%,,,(,s (ire l.rlpintt ~T,(,/ that traitor's s;tlary.
Laid IIcrlr; : I I'usst it 1,,1,1,?1 of th, anti nuclear hosnb crusaders
.r !,'it into the r,r?t htcl s',,,1..ii;f)calirg to Moscow and Washington
not to fi?I,t I f, 1, 11;N in It,d' (t, fore Russia had the Big Bosnh, ?
"A . b,' t,,1(1 a, : r,:ol, (,f "i:; heat r than submission.
I:it'uer we roust hake a War ;,vainst Masi( before she hits the atomic
1 ,nth r-; rue 's,i h,i 'r (, Ii, (1=,,1 n .mud let thorn govern uS.''
(Lill t/n( J?-lo-.,!,he r rieans u?ar>nongers.
F '(:1t a torr6:n taws- section: "Arab Radio Abuses
l;_ ; .',nu rir.s i;,,r,; inS ni "
U.,:. (I id to A',t.s.s, r lu.st lo( (I I: ill "),t.
TV , dit(v Lot Hull Ill 'I w L.A 'L ;,,iii Examiner replied to a
sui. who inquired, "1V'} ., was. the movie 'Phfft' with Kim
Nm.;ak .11A .1,r!r 1.emin,,n r.11('(1 they stir 'S'wish' at
t1:, (ee Rr,,l~ _ "tit errs (.ill,',: '111111f, I;.-,! 'Phfft' ...he title omos
n(' 197 )'r ,., ,!s ,,, .t,1)itf),I s:,l,l' '!f
-I!^,1 jot (r; tits, I,:yre( 1n,:-is', lie ('?Uldn't
Item: "JFK's Advisers Believe In Staying Physically Fit."
In the Pink of condition.
From the editorial page of The N.Y. Journal-American: "\Glulc
our officials try to excuse the failure to act on Cuba_ the long +,
police guard that had been placed there withdrawn?"
Votes. And Election Day is so close.
From the papers: "Herman Frederick Marks is a man with i t
a country, one who has lost his U.S. citizenship without becomhtg
a citizen of another country."
Ile had a long police record in the U.S. before going to
where he was Castro's chief exeri(tioner. After breaking with ('n.,st,o
lie returned here. Now hold onto your millinery: Although r ,,.a
stateless alien is a criminal killer-he now is free to trar(1
work in the U.S....And not only that, he is entitled to the b( Or
tr