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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1952)
PAGE SIXTEEN HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON rrnm.iTMT, wnvirwrtBH In, mn 4. ATTLE OF BIG GUNS Day after day, night a fter night, United Nations artillery men pour ther big shells into Red positions in Korea. The fighting along the central front had settled down to an artillery duel until 1500 screaming Chinese Communist soldiers captured Pinpoint Hill on Sniper Ridge. Communist big guns fired 4000 rounds into Allied lines during first two hours of attack. Gun crew above are answering back during a long Korean night. Ike To Be Consulted On Iranian Problem Reclamation Association Calls For End of Government Domination Trend LONG BEACH. Cnltf. Ml A res olution aimed lit ending what II termed federal domination trend was recommend"! bv National Reclamation Association Commit tee Thuradav. "Hie proposal o lle Water Policy Commttlce culls on local Interests to assume tlio Irad In tnltliitliiii, planning, financing, constructing and opcrnttni; water resource de velopments. AllhouRh It regards power de. velopment as "Integral in tlie na tional water policy." the commit tee says power projects should al ways be Incident to Impounding water (or Irrigation. Discussion of the proposed policy started Wednesday when Individ ual state caucuses considered the resolution which embodies nil points recommended by the committee. Formal action by all delegates at this 21st annual convention has been scheduled Friday aiiernoon If unssed. the resolution urcsuni' ably would be forwarded to ap propriate governmental aitenctes. Borne opposition popped up In caucuses against declarations on public power, but most approved the proposed resolution as written or m principal, uroupa mierusvea In reclamation throughout the 11 Western atale compose the asso ciation. In plugging for local Interest leadership, the cummltlee said; "Lmur veins of experience In our ayslci'n o( government- clearly reveal thai, consistent wun eiieo- tlvn operation, responsibility for planning, construction, ' manago- meni and operation anouia do ex ercised hy, or Jointly with, the people Immediately alfected." Also called for In the resolution are use of water as provided by Psychiatrist Has Warning For The 'Social Drinker' . WASHINGTON UV-State Depart ment officials are expected to con fer with President-elect Eisenhower or nls representatives next week on a new formula for solving the Iranian problem. It is understood also that the new approach Is a subject for dis cussion between secretary of State Acheson and British Foreign Sec retary Eden in their talks in New York. One central Idea of the formula seems designed to get Iranian oil flowing out and money for it flow ing In again at the earliest pos sible moment without final settle ment of the dispute between Iran and Britain over nationalization of Iran's oil industry. State Department authorities feel that the longer the present im passe continues and various Iran ian agencies like the army and1 civil service go unpaid the greater becomes the aanger oi a conapse of civil authority and the rise of Communist power In this strategic Middle Eastern land. In the past these authorities have worked on the theory that a legal settlement of the Anglo-Iranian dis pute, critical since Iran seised British-owned oil properties there last year, should logically precede or be a part of any settlement reviving the oil Industry under Iranian control. But the new ap proach would relegate legal set tlement to a lesser priority. Eisenhower will have a chance to hear about this plan when he meets with President Truman at 2 p.m. (EST next Tuesday, ac cording to the White House to pre. pare for an orderly change of ad ministrations. Eisenhower has des ignated Sen Lodge R-Mass.) as TV Star Mystery Figure In Slaying of Newsman HAVANA, Cuba Wl A beauti ful Spanish-born television star was a. mystery ligure today in tne lauu shooting of Julio Cesar Gonzales Re bull, president oi tne Havana newspaper "El Crisbol." She Is Maria del Carmen Pereda. SO. whom Cuban television writers recently voted the nation's top television announcer and mistress of ceremonies. Gonzalez Rebull, a handsome man of 45, was shot to death Tues day night as he entered the wom an's apartment. She also was shot in uie jaw. : Police said the man who did the shooting identified himself as Ma nas Mateo Carreno, fil. a spanisn banker and insurance expert who earae to Cuba in 1651. He set up a savings bank after his arrival but recently sold It and entered the construction business. Police told the Court of Instruc tion their investigation showed Ma teo Carreno and the television star had lived together several months. Recently, however, she moved to another apartment, where the shooting occurred. Triplets Born On Lonely Isle KODIAK. Alaska Wl It's trip lets ior Mrs. Alms Rudolph of lonely Unga Island, 300 miles south west of here.- The 30-year-old mother and her babies, two girls and a boy, were doing well after a Navy doctor and plasma were flown to her, the Coast Guard reported yester day. She was attended only by neighbor women at their birth and suffered from loss of blood and shock. An emergency radio call sent pilots Donald Fraser, Barker. N.Y., and William Wallace. Norfolk, Vs., on a flight in a Coast Guard PBY IP Unga Island. First reports from Unga were that quadruplets had been born to Mrs. Rudolph. She has six other children. . Police said the evidence Indi cated that Mateo Carreno went to the apartment, forced the woman to telephone Gonzales Rebull. and shot the newspaper executive on his arrival. The publisher's chauffeur, hear ing shots, rushed to the apartment. overpowered Mateo Carreno ana called the police. Police said that both Mateo Car reno and the woman Rave what the officers described as obviously false accounts of the snooting. Mateo Carreno, according to po lice, said he went to the apartment to collect a document but was told by the woman that a man was to bring It there. When the man Gonzales Keouu arnvea, Mateo Carreno said, "he seemed angry at my presence, attacked me, and I shot him." The officers said Miss Del Car men told them she believed Mateo Carreno had shot the publisher be cause he was annoyed that Gon zalez Rebull had kept several docu ments pertaining to a business deal the three had been discussing. Police said Miss Del Carmen made no attempt to explain why she was shot. WOMAN DIRECTS AIRFOBT NANTUCKET. Mass. Wl Mis. Jean Adams Cook, manager of the i airport here. Is believed to be the ; only woman in New England to direct an airport used by regular ; commercial airlines. She Is a for- mer president of the v9ers, an In ternational organization of women filers, and the author of a book , about aviation heroines. SAVE MONEY ON Insulation Do It Yourself Fuel Savings Will Pay For The Materials AVERAGE COST $72 , No Down Paymtnt Lew Monthly Payments BASIN BUILDING 4784 So. 6th Ph. 2-2563 QEMVAL! 8:00 P.M. NIGHTLY MONDAY THRU FRIDAY at 923 EAST MAIN i ' For something new and different In a rtvival . , . bt lur to attend! REV. ART SIMPSON his State Department liaison man. Despite appeals from Prima Min ister Churchill of ' Groat Britain and1 President Truman, Iranian Premier Mossadegh has failed to agree to any. settlement formula thus far put forward. Mossadegh last month ' broke relations with the British government.. Informants do not appear highly optimistic about the new proposi tion. For the proposal to succeed, the British would have to agree to let oil begin moving out of Iran to world markets again without hav ing final agreement on the amount of compensation Iran should pay for the nationalized properties. It is understood. United States authorities are thinking about the problem of getting agreement of oil companies to cooperate in (1) opening up and operating oil pro duction facilities under Iranian government control, (2 making ar rangements for transporting the oil which requires about 13 tankers a day, ana (3) nanaiing the ulti mate sales.. By FRANK CAREY Associated Press Science Reporter MIAMI, Fla. an The "social drinker" who imbibes two high balls every night before dinner mav be In danger of becoming an Incipient alcoholic, a psychiatrist irom Richmond, va., saia loaay. Dr. Howard R.-Masters said "It has alwavs been my belief that the normal. well-Integrated Individual who drinks socially will not become an alcoholic unless through disease. Injury or conditioning Uiere Is some personality change for which be is not entirely responsible." But, he told the Southern Medical Association - there's a possibility that regular drinking every night before dinner can build up" such a "conditioning" in a "normal social drinker." Such an Individual, he added, might establish a "conditioned re flex demand" for alcohol so that "when an environmental situation becomes intolerable and he Is physically or psychologically un- able to meet the situation, he may become an incipient aiconuno ana potentially a sick man." Tho doctor read a prepared ad dress at the closing session of the 8MA s 4titn annual meeting. Speaking of the "problem" of nicononsm to ousiness. inousiry, and also to the professions, the Medical College of Virginia doctor asserted: "Any time an Individual drinks enough to be absent or late to his work and low on the lob he Is drinking too much and, if this "stale law and a llberalltatlon of a land limitation procedure under which a single water user la not entitled to Irrigation waler for more Ihan 100 acres. All future projects, the resolu tion atates, should be for basin wide development Insofar as pos sible. Other points covered by the dec laration presented by Marshall Dana of Portland, Ore., committee chairman, Included: Interstate compact nrocedurn In organisation for mulllplc-purpOMi, basln-wlde developments of inter state character. Ultimate ownershln of water fa cilities determined by time surveys and Investigations completed, Ownership bv local Interests sub ject only to satisfaction of con tractu! obligations. All Interests respect states' wa ter laws and federal claims to un appropriated water be abandoned in favor of recognition of superior title of reclamation atates. Use of basin account onllonnl but If used be restricted to power and domestlo use revenues only. Power revenues to be used to aid In repayment of Irrigation costs beyond reasonable ability of land to pay. power requirements or anv com munity or region left primarily to local enterprise. sale or federal power to public and private users at the bus bar where practicable with rates pre scribed by the Federal Power Com mission. , , Carelul Calculation on division of construction coals iulo reimburs able and hnu-rrlinbursabis cate gories and addition on non-relm- GIANT ROAD ATLAS MOVING ESTIMATE Ntt1 wawlni Of t1r0 iwIm Lhn i Ur Iwffty ltvi tillasl. Whtft r Agent1 Ht, will ! yow o k'9 lanrf McNrJIy Um4 AtUi Mil. TM, IUi ft talUbl only thiawfh Agenli ! 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