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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1952)
I? Ml Trvn 0) u n l A 7lly 1 HANK JCNKINH Tim Loa Anui'li' Hixuinlncr pub' f llslie un imuimnt I what It any sua mm 11-UoniD explosion at a re cent undetermined cliilo, The mill wry MtillHirltlfn ouy Ihry know nothing l uny uch tent, The atom m energy uuiiimlssloil Ucullnos to niniiiii-nl. 'II 10 Lo AllgohM paper quote ovtt-wlliioiifiea ua reporting Hint wlialovor It wiin blnw things gen ci ally to siiilllicrotm. , Miiybn snmciKHly Jus nut mixed UD uliout hint 'I'uesduy's election which shook IhliiKH up qullo it bit. Tim KxumliK'r quotes Inllar from stiincuno present at the tout ua saying: "All we could do was iitnnd there and k""1 In amusement mid awe nl llif enormous alio and force re IniNtd krloie ilk. Typical comment wnn: 'Unit euro inukcs the A-bomb a runt.' " The newspaper'! aclenca editor adilsi "It Ik likely Unit the tremendous, tinpurallalrfl lorce "I H-bomb vu puntcd Into gua and dual the whole mil leoral Island , a hnll inllo wide and three miles long, on which the detonation look place. 'if It'a true, the next thlnfr to do la lo nee to It Ihul nuiim communist spy doesn't (it'll the secret to Rua ia an happened In tlie ease ol the A-buinu. Back lo Dolltlca: lirnorul Eihrnhower'a friend think he may name a Southerner in hi cabinet In recondition ol the lump vole the South unvo him. I don't think Ike would put It tliut way. II he should name a Southerner to hla cabinet. It would up In rocouniuon ol in lact tnat alter all the.ie yeara the South hua linnliy come bark Into the union. That was a historic and 1101'E- rul, eventi It give ua, tor the limt time In nearly a century, the making ol a KKALi two-party sys tem, , Tlie new York Tlmei aaya Prea. Idcnt Truman ua been telling hla lnllmalea allien lha election that while ha recoitnlzoa Governor Bt- vriison aa the leader of tlie Demo cratic party he himself expecta to da a coiiuovcraiai uuure in aitifr ijtoliiics flti- 'Tlmei roiiiics lor tha next throe or Times adda: '"Ilia imemrrutlon nlaced nn iiu reinarK la tnat he plana lo be active in trying lo restore in uem ncratio party to power again In W9, I hope the Democrat put tin ireal scrap on every loot ot Ihr. mad that Ilea ahead of ua in Hit' uext lew yeara. That'a Uie best possible way to make tha J.OP ellectlire. It 1 lust aa true Jjw aa It waa belora election day ;tV t loo much power In too lew 1,3 "l la dangeroua. A lot of our .imp congresses of the IBM's. inch allowed everything that waa oiierea wimnut oppoaltlon. A two-party ayslcm can't be tru ly rllpctlvp utile tha parly of op position puts up a now for lia beliele and Ua principle. I dope, thouuh. that If ha Imda the oninaltion Mr. Truman MNputj a dilirrenl line. 1 didn't care rlnjchl lor hla oiler of tha Presidential plane lo Ike to make the trip to Korea "If latter the election) you alill plan to to there." Thai sounded lo ma Ilka a snide yiack. Be Careful Of That Cone LONDON I-You can Ret tinny In Britain on Ice cream Just atep up lo a Par and order aeveral pint bf It In any one of tour Jolting flavor creme de menthe, brandy, rum or whisky. 'Ilils novel way of eating your aelf Into a apln la now olfpred by a few pioneer pubs, restaurant and holds around the British I;.lrs. How much doea It lakr? Wrll. according to entprprlalng Peter Ploll, whoso firm turns out the Icy firewater. It depends on your capacity. Twelve pint of whisky flavored Ice cream pro 4uim about the same results aa -4 nottlo of whisky, he reported. 'Tie Ice cream aella lor aeven V lilting sixpence ll 061 a pint. We tlilnk there's a big future t this," commented Ploll. - S Si i -t w . i . k V fa ft . i; .. M . ft I V v4s7 .'... W - i ; ii L ll i INCLUDED In The fe!vH!e it the PTA-ipontored dinner and tchoot carnival held at Henley latt night wat this trio of "athletes" who took part In tha amateur hour. They represent tha Henley High School girli basketball team which won tha county championship In I927, '28 and '29. All three were members of tha squad. Left to right they ara Dorothy Reader Dehlingar, Wilms Dawson Dillard and Bonnie Short Finchum. Money raited by tha dinner-carnival will bt utad to finance bleachers for tha football field. Ike Readies Plans For HST Conference lly RKLMAN MORIS AUOUBTA, Oa. Ml OOP Ben. Eugene Mllllkln of Oolorsdo wsa reported headed for Prealilenl-eleet Dwlghl D, Elsenhower's hradquurt era liare Hnturday and there waa a ponnllilllty the senaUir inliiht be asked" lo serve aa Elaenhower'a rerecutatlvo In the budgot bu reau. Mllllkln, It was learned, waa at'hodulcd to arrive In Augusta by plane. Klnenhowor Is vacationing at the nearby AiiKiista National Oolf Club. Prenldent Truman sited tile Krn erul last Wednesday, the day alter the election, to name a personal rcpreacntuilve to all In for prepara tion of tho federal budget, which will be submitted to Congreit early III January brlore Elsenhow er I Inaugurated Jan, 20. Tho prosldeiit-elect replied he would choae a representative short ly, tie also plans lo place repre sentatives In the defense and stale deparlmenU. Mllllkln was chairman of the tax writing Bensle Flnsnce Commit tee in the 1(147-48 itepubllcan-con-trollcd 80th congreaa, and he la In line lo become chairman again whun4he Kepubllcana resume con trol In January. s The Colorado senator la general ly regarded aa a Unsocial expert. At present he Is chslrman of the Republican conference of all Re publican senators. TAFT HACKKK Mllllkln supported Ben. Tall ot Ohio for tlie Republican presiden tial nomination and, with Tall, Is VilsoirVants To Help Ike .tnanAt e NV IS Phsrlea E. Wilson, lornier defense moblllt- er unucr ri'"'i -pressed a wllllnaness Saturday to w- DnlilnLi.lMl nwlnht n Kin. iini, , i " - er get "squared away" on hla new JOD. Wilson, former chslrmsn of Oen ersl :iccirlc and a member of President Roosevelt's War Produc tion Board, told a reporter: I aerveu iso atiiii m Tiwi,a-Ia- -nrf 1 hav nn nnktre In an hsck down there. But, U I csn help Ike net squsred away and he want me to. I am available." Wilson wss commenting on pun llshed speculation he might be nimiwl liv riMnhor In an im portant government post. Reames Placed On Probatioff PORTLAND I Thomaa O. Reames. 36. Medford. wss Placed on two yeara probation Friday by Circuit Judge Rex Klmmel of Sa lem on a charge of armed assault. Klmmel first acnlenced Reames lo one year In the county Jail, then suspended the sentence and ordered probation. Reames was convicted by a circuit court Jury in a esse growing out of a shoot ing frsy with police In which Reames' former wife waa wounded. Texas Democrat Is Sore Loser BAN ANTONIO. Tex. Ift A 45-year-old Ban Antonio Democrat resented- the winning smirks of his Republican landlady yeaterdsy and wag Jailed after he had tried lo burn her houae. Re barricaded firemen from his small garage apartment In the rear ot the landlady's house and fought with them aa they broke down the door. He was booked In city Jail on a charge of arson. "I Just didn't like her attitude," he told Patrolman C. O. Ramirex aa they rode to the city Jail. ' r one of the Senate's most Influen tial leader. Tafl has Indicated that he had assurance from Klspnhuwer lust August I1 nit key appointment to a new Republican administration would not bo named until the Ohl ou n and his supporters hud been consulted, Klspiihower went ahead with ar rangement lo niimo his represent ative for a senc of briefing con ferences, which may bruin curly next week, at the I'cntugun and Blule Department. The nuinos of the men who will act as liaison olllccrs lor him have wit been announced. Ite ha been In communication by telephone with his advisers, however, and members of his staff here Indicated they believe the talks In Washington can start Mon day or Tuesduy, In audition to dis cussions In tho Departments of Btale and Defense, Klscnhowcr Is Nondlnn a representative to meet with the director of the budget In connection with the 1U&3-M budKct. Elsenhower apieurs to be under some pressure from President Tru man to act quickly. Truman first reminded the gpn erul that the next budget Is being prepared and siud the figures are ready tor examination. Next, he sent an Air Force colonel to Auiiusta, where Elsen hower Is on holiday, with a mes sage designated "lop secret," which was delivered lo the President-elect Thursday nlKhl. Finally, he messaged Elscnhowor to send representative to the Pentagon and State Department "at the earliest posslblo moment." Elsenhower himself will go to Hie White House for a conference Nov, 17, Truman ssld. By that time, he will have been put In possession of Information from the other three departments. The President's mrssaucs Indi cated an early beginning Is umcnt. All three of the government branches so fur mentioned desl more or less directly .with foreign sllsirs. The messaxe from Truman which waa delivered personally bv Csl. Albert L. Cox contained sev eral paragraphs relating to "for clon mailers" which have not been published, according to Elsenhow er'a press secretary, Jamea C. Hsuerty. The general replied Immediately to both communications, liagerly aald. Elsenhower planned to remain In seclusion at the National Oolf Club over the weekend. He was In vited to go to Atlanta today for the Army-Oeorgla Tech football game, but Hnnerty said he declined. Hie President-elect Is sticking to his "golf and no visitors" dictum, laid down before he came to Augusta. Evidently, It Is not quite aa strict aa It sounds, however. Hsgerty indicated some visitors may come to See hint In Augusta, "but nobody rs'gouig to be suylrnj at the club with bun," the secre larv said. Elsenhower was atlll working to day to answer the thousands of messsfres thai have come to htm from all parts of the world cpn grstulatlng' him on his election. The British ambassador. Sir Oliver Franks, relsyed to him a message from Prime Minister Winston Churchill which read: "I send you mv sincere and heartfelt congratulations on your election. I look forward to a re newal sof our comradeship and of our work together for the aame causes of oesce aa In the past. Writing. Winston." The general repllPd: "Dear Winston: Thank you very much for the typically generous cable, I shsll look forward to re ceiving your letter and I too look forward to a renewal of our co operative work In the Interests of a free world. Ike." The President of France, Vincent Aurlol, cabled: "We rejoice In our friendship over your magnificent election. France, which does not forget, and which you know, hopes thst your presidency will see the Incresse of our common security and the re sumption of peace of the world. My wife Joins me In sending you, ss well aa Mrs. Elsenhower, our most warm congratulations, Vin cent Aurlol. 1 M J. ,, i )liiiiaiil ,i anaii si ai n i i n I mf i. laumi sag fries Fin tenia 1 ragea KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, lATURDAT, NOVEMBER t, let Telephone Sill it97 Pfllir a SppIc fvfOW In Chilouin CHILOQUIN An unknown arson ist, chsmed with aettlng 11 fires destroying four vacant residences sua asmuging several omers, is being sought In this area, Tlie rash of blaxea began the night of Oct. 28 and was sporadic until last night when four mys terious fires broke out In scattered spots. Fortunately, the fires thus far have been confined to vacant struc lure. But some of the buildings fired have been near occupied bull dings and one blaze, adiacent to the main business district could have been disastrous. QUICK WORK Quick work by the Chlloquln Vol unteer and Klamath Agency Fire Department have thus fur pre vented heavy losses. Mayor BUI Lorenz, currently doubling as the town's police and lire chief, has been assisted by Mayor-elect James Chlpmun. Lorenz has been direct- Inn the sesrch for the firebug and Chlpman has been driving the fire truck. Lorenz said today he had request ed aid from slate officiate. Largest of the structures de stroyed, the old Esqueda place, survived two attack by the arson ist but wss fired a third time and reduced to charred ruins. FIRST FIRE First of the fires, the evening of Oct. 26, was In a email unoc cupied home nee the railway sta tion. Firemen saved the house that time but two nlghta later tt was tired again and destroyed. First of lsst evening's four blazes waa In the former Faganello home, which wsa totally destroyed by a blaze discovered about 9:15 p.m. While firemen were still mopping up this fire, the city dump flared. This blaze had barely been sub dued when another vacant home, only a block from the Faganello house, broke out In flames and waa also leveled to ashes. A tew minutes later, fire broke out In the former McClelland home and It loo was destroyed, . Rosenbergs Ask New Trial WABHINOTON Wl A new trial has been petitioned for Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, husband and wife facing death as atomic bomb spies, and an attorney has asked permission to file a brief in the case. The petition was left at the Su preme Court clerk'a office Fri day. It claimed to have about 60. 000 signatures and bore the name, "National Committee to Secure Justice In the Rosenberg Case," with a New York City address. Attorney Roysl W. France of New York asked to be allowed lo file a "friend of the court" brief. The Supreme Court refused Oct. 13 10 review their cases. A re quest to reconsider this refusal Is pending before the tribunal. Shooting Ends Yedding Party PORTLAND 1 A wedding pnrty broke up here Friday night alter a gun snot wounaea one oi tlie celebrants. Detective Dan M 1 1 o 1 a said a neighbor who objected to the noise of the party fired the shot. Mrs. Rosemary Balrd, 37, who lived next door, was arrested on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon, Mltola said. Airman 3-0 Lawrency Lunday, 30 of the Portland Air Base was hospitalized for a .23 caliber bul let wound In his ankle. Mltola said the wedding party was at the home of Mr. and Mra. Ray DeMara with 25 or 38 per sons present. He said some In the party told him Mrs. Balrd shouted for quiet and fired a warning shot in the air. Mrs. Balrd said several men began walking toward her house then, and she said she fired at one of thpm In fear, Mltola said. Crash Kills Calif. Man EUGENE W A car crashed off the highway 63 miles ess of here early 8aturdsy, killing Ralph Terry Tinslcy, 36, of Vallejo, Calif., tho driver. A companion, Jack A. Rniney, also of Vallejo, escaped with mi nor Injuries In the accident on Highway 68, some 23 miles east ot Oakrldge, fa it 5 You con Inereose the "volue of a dollar by qivinq it t' . Educators Set Plans - education Klamath County educators In both city and county school will swing Into a week-long program tomorrow In observance of the 32nd anniversary ol American Education Wook. Theme of the nationwide ob servance, Nov. 8 to 15, Is "Children In Today's World," which will present the part the schools of America take In the lives of all students. Present for conferences with school officials and visits to all schools will be Neva Dallls, Oregon State supervisor ol elementary schools. Coordinating plans for the week are Helen Montgomery, Chlloquln, lor the county and Martha Mc Laughlin, Fremont School, for the city. Each school participating Is hold ing open house at some time dur ing the week for parents and friends, churches will have special observance Sunday and PTA meet ings will conform to the theme. Etiihteen county and eight city schools are participating. The schedule for special activity programs In county schools follow: Chlloquln Elementary ha Issued special Invitations for an open house from 7:15 to 8:00 pm. Mon day, followed by a PTA meeting. Ouest speaker will be Neva Dallls. The fifth and sixth grades will entertain. There will also be a demonstration spelling lesson. Henley Elementary will hold open house all day Friday. Henley High School will nave open bouse every day during next week. Altamont Elementary will hold open house all day Thursday, Alta mont Junior Hla-h will have ooen Jailbreaker Gets 10 Years One of the men who participat ed In an escape lrom the County Jail Oct. 23 has been taken to Salem to start a 10-year prison sentence, but how long he'll stay there Is another matter. . He Is John H. Brandon, it, sen tenced to 10 years yesterday af ternoon for assault, armed with a stangereus. weapon; He admitted ly beat Sherman Kellenberg, Jail er, with a heavv key ring the night Brandon and Bobby Krai, 18, Drose out of the county lockup. He was sentenced by Circuit Judge Dsvid R. Vandenberg. The reason Brandon may Dot stay long In Salem la thst tech nically he is a federal prisoner. He waa being held in the Coun ty Jail tor transfer 'rom the Tule lake Prison Camp to McNeil Is land Federal Prison when he and Krai broke out. After the escape the state charge was put against him. Yesieroay. lonowing ine circuit Court sentencing, Superintendent Lem Fox ot the Tulelske Prison Camp was notified and he said that Brandon was still considered in federal custody, that a U. S. marshal would be along to pick him up. However, local officials decided to send the man on to Salem, and let the matter of Jurisdiction be argued out there. Brandon was serving a federal sentence for theft of a government check, and would have finished his time this month. He was trans ferred to Tulelake from McNeil Is land. but wss being sent back to McNeil because there Is an armed robberv charge against him at Oakland, Calif. He is supposed to be sent to Oakland after he fin ishes his federal term. Harry Ready To Retire WASHINGTON President Truman was described by trU- males Saturday as ready to retire politically. They said he has no desire to be anything more than a consultant to his party In the fu ture. The Informant suggested that Truman will assume in some re snects Ihe role of elder statesman of the Democratic party, somewhat as Herbert Hoover did with the Republicans. That would leave to Gov. Adlai Stevenson, as the new titular leader 0 the party, the di rection of the Democratic organ ization in Its new role of the mi nority opposition. As Stevenson, the defeated presi dential candidate, met in Spring field. 111., Saturday with party aides to discuss future operations of the national committee, the 68-year-old retiring chief executive was reported to have told recent callers that he expects to remain active but only In a consultative capacity. Presidential aides say the same sentiment Was reflected1 In the President's poM-elcctlon statement asking the people to close ranks In the interest of national welfare. In that Nov. 6 statement the Presi dent referred to Stevenson as the party's "great new leader who will contribute much to our national life in the yeara ahead. COMMUNITY CHEST to your Community Chest, Week Program house 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. Student bodv officers will preside at a cert- eral program- of music, skits, and reports. Parent will visit the rooms, with reiresnmems served by tha room mothers, Merrill Elementary and ' High School will hold open bouse all day Friday. A special invitation has been Issued to all service club members to visit the school. Falrhaven I having visiting week all week. Special Invitations have gone out urging parents to visit. - - Shasta Elementary will have a special visiting- day - Monday, but invites parenu lo visit at any time during the week. Keno Elementary will have opea house all week, with a special in vitation for parenu to visit all rooms. In order to get an allover pattern of changes In schoolwork at different levels.-' Peterson school will hold open house for parents and friends all week. Summers Elementary has Issued special - Invitations for a visiting dsy Monday, but urges parents to visit any time during the week. Chlloquln -High welcomes par ents at any time during the week, but urges them to come to the open house and PTA meeting Mon day, 7:15 to 8:00 p.m. Gilchrist has open house Nov. 13, all day in the grade and nigh schools. Bonanza . has ' Open house all week and a special program at p.m. Wednesday ' for parents which will include a broadcast from KFJI'a news service, on democracy. Klamath Union High School and the Parents and Patrons Club plan an inieicsiing program and open house at 8 p.m., Wednesday, The Retail Selllnr Club tmder the supervision of John Lake will give live uiraey u a lucay visitor as a prize. Following a musical program by high school a-rouos. the public is invited to tour the building and visit with faculty members In their rooms Refresh ment will be served in the cafe teria by members of the Parents and Patron and high school Li brary Club. Fremont wilt present a program Thursday evening, Nov. II at 8:30. Conger, special visitation day, Nov, - 12; Riverside. Roosevelt, Falrvlew. Tettcan. Daxents invited to visa throughout the week. 8peo lal emphaala. by teachers to the atudenta, the responsihlitiea and op- ponuniuea given to uem by UK schools. Mills, open howe Wednesday, 1 to 8 p.m. and a PTA meeting fol lowing. Henley High School Band tinder the direction ot Dick Harmon will give a concert, Tuesday evening, at Keno School for atudenta and the public. - 5 Killed In Auto Crash NEWPORT. Wash. Wl Three men and two women were killed late Friday night when their car swerved out of control on Highway 6 north of Newport and smashed Into a tree. Sheriff Da mil Holmes Identified the men aa Clayton Colvln, 17, lone. Wash.; Duane Schrlber, 34. Clark Fork. Idaho, and Jack Edwards of MeUllne Falls. Wash. The girls were Identified as Paula Ftlion. 15, and Barbara Nelson, 14, both of lone. The state patrol said the oar was traveling at excessive speed be cause the Impact tore the vehicle In two when it hit the tree. One piece flew off and struck another tree, the patrol said, and fragments were scattered over a wide area. The car, a 1852 model had no license plates, but Sheriff Holmes said it was registered In Edwards' name. The sheriff added that there were Indication that the car traveled 135 feet after leaving the road. Russians Hold American Gl HEIDELBERG, Germany !.! me u& Army Saturday identities a missing American soldier feared fallen . into Russian custody as Master But. Allan A. La Gov of Guadalupe, Calif., a member of the Hth Armored Cavalry Regi ment. The first announcement Friday after having been seen driving nls Jeep near the Soviet ' Zone gave his name officially as Legoy. A check of Army records disclosed the correct name. The Army announcement said La Gov was on an authorized mis sion Wednesdsy when. It was be lieved', he lost his way and crossed into Communist territory. SHOOTING HOURS Nor. 1 4:1? a.m. 3:52 pjn. Nor. 10 :20 un. 3:51 pjn. Hydrogen Bomb Blast Described LOS ANGELES Ml The "first eyewitness account of a hydro gen bomb explosion at Enlwetok," carried today by the Los Angeles Examiner, says the H-bomb makes ine A-Domo look like ' a runt." The Examiner's story, written by Science Editor Chris Clausen, savs the H-bomb test took place on a small atoll In the Enlwetok group recently. It did not give the date. It is Pltely," Clausen wrote, that the tremendous unparalleled force of the H-bomb the world's first vaporized into gas and dust the atoll, a half mile wide and three miles long, on which the de tonation took place. The eyewitness account of the big explosion, the Examiner aald. was furnished by a Los Angeles resident who received a letter from a friend at the Atomic Energy Commission's Pacific proving grounds. The A EC has kept mum thus far on the scheduled autumn tests. BLAST The blast, the letter writer said. was viewed through dark glasses and "appeared a huge orange ball, which grew larger and brighter . NO KNOWLEDGE HONOLULU (fft-Two military public Information effleera said Satwday they ZaA aa knowledge f any hydrogen bomb explosion ia the Pacific area. Ma J. Douilas Mitchell at the Army's Pacific headquarters aald If the testa had taken place, "It'a complete news to me." He (tressed that any Information svoald stave to come from the Atomic Energy Commission in Waahlngloa. - until It appeared as If no dark glasses were there at all." Intense heat was felt almost Im mediately, the writer continued, aaaing: "ine bail ot tire started to rise and slowly lost it intensity. We took off our glassea and saw water Tspor suddenly Xorm around tlie column. Then it rushed mm the ease o tha column and up. ciear Uig the air so that, you could aee countless, tons' of Waler rushing saywaro. . "The column went nn nA tin aiut finally mushroomed. About three minutes later, the report, like a nearby cannon shot, hit us and was followed by aeveral second of dull rumbling. lUKaAUV 'Tben the mushroom expanded into a free halo, growing with tornado-like apeed and reaching near ly over our ship before it appeared so cease growing, men It appeared to connect itself to the main column oy a web oi Iilmy vapor. "All we - could - do waa stand there and gasp in amazement and awe at the enormous size and force eicasea oeiore us. Typical com ment from old timers: 'Holy cow! That sure makes the A-bomb a runt. 'And so I saw our first H-bomb explode." "NO COMMENT" WASHINGTON W The Atom ic Energy Commission maintained Ua alienee Saturday on the nucle ar weapons tests in the Pacific, specifically refusing to comment ea a report the world's first hy drogen bomb had been exploded there. - "Ne comment was the only reply from the commission to in quiries based an an H-bomb story in the Loa Angeles Examiner. iii. .', ;. '. BOOT CAMP behind and fourteen dayi of laav at home in Portland befora them, brought out theje big tmilei thit morn. Jng en Slen Schriver and Fred Daniels. Big Three Slate More Korea Talks UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. W Foreign ministers of the Bite Three Western powers scheduled meetings In New York today and tomorrow for top-level policy dls- ' cusslons on Korea and outer major problems facing; tha United) nations. Britain's Forelcrn Secretary An thony Eden is due to arrive here today to take part In the Korean debate which already la off to a running start in the General As-, sembly and its Political Commit tee. ' The other two ministers- France' Robert Schuman and U. S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson already are on band. Schuman arrived In New York yes terday and Acheson returned to the U, N. for his first appearance since he went to his Maryland homo to vote in the U, S. presidential elec tion. Eden and Schuman -nurooserv had delayed their arrivals at the U. N. until after the American voting. Now they are confronted with the fact that Acheson with whom they have discussed major issues many times before la in a "lame duck" position as a result of the Republican victory. NO PLANS As yet. there are no -plans for all three ministers to get together around tha same table todav or tomorrow. American delegation spokesmen said Acheson had! scheduled separate meetings with oom taen and ccnuman. Debate on the deadlocked Ko- rean armistice question was sue. penned over the week ena. But Russia's Andrei Y, Vishlnsky re turns Monday morning as the ini tial speaker in the Political com mittee. It will be the Russian' first appearance in the U. N. con ference room since he blasted at Acheson" and presented Moscow's terms for ending the Korean War nearly two weeks ago. scnuman is scheduled to speak: Monday afternoon in a General As sembly plena rv session. France' position on Korea already has been outlined in committee debate. nut scnuman goes before the fun assembly to map out detailed French policy on all issue con- frontlng the U. tt. POLICIES Eden hopes to present Britain's policies to the full assembly Tues dsy. During his visit to the TJ. S., ine Britisn loreign secretary also may seek a meeting with Presi dent elect Dwlght D. Eisenhower to discos Joint British - American; problems with the head at the in coming administraUon. The Bitr Three ministers are ex pected to etvo top attention today touched on thus far in the Korean debate and to the welter of pro posing Russian proposal backed posals and counter-proposals that have sprung up regarding a settle ment of the conflict. Besides the American resolution backed by Britain, France and some 18 other nations and the op posing Russian proposal backed bv the Soviet satellites there are numerous compromise plans intro duced by smaller nations seeking to bring the two views together. The American resolution simply asks the General Assembly to ap prove the stand of the U. N. Com mand in the Korean negotiations. particularly against forcible re patriation of war prisoners. This Is the only issue presently Holding up an armistice in Korea. The Rus sian resolution calls for appoint ment of a new commission to work out a peaceful settlement and uni fication of Korea. Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern California: Fair through Sonday. High bells day g. Low tonight Z6. High temp yesterday 54 Low last night .... L. . 28 Precfp yesterday To date t.0