U OF CSS33N LI32AR
EU33NS, ORE.
HofhB
Vetoed
WASHINGTON i Federal
District Judge F. Dickinson Letts
refused Monday to lift his order
restraining James R. Haifa from
taking over as president of the
Teamsters Union.
Letts then went ahead with a
hearing on pleas to convert the
restraining order into a prelimi
nary injunction against Hoffa and
to put the Pi million-member
Teamsters Union under court re
ceivers. Plaintiffs in the case are a
group of rank and file New York
In The
By FRANK JENKINS
Outer space note:
A sleek-nosed missile squats on
its launching pad this morning,
waiting for a green light from
the weatherman. The missile is
the Vanguard the one our scien
tists reportedly plan to use to
launch America's earth satellite
into its orbit.
There will be no satellite in the
Vanguard's nose if and when it
is launched. Today's firing if it
comes off will be merely a
test run of the first stage engines
of the missile that has been se
lected to carry our midget moon
aloft in .March.
How would you like to be one
of the scientists who are waiting
for the Vanguard's test'.' Of this
we can be certain: The weight of
responsibility is resting heavily on
their shoulders at this moment.
If the A m e r i c a n missile fiz
zles Well, in that event, their names
will be MUD and Russia will
have won another big propaganda
victory.
The result of that will be that
the cold war will get warmer.
Straw in the business winds:
Hopes for a fourth quarter pick
up in the steel industry have been
dampened by a scattering of op
crating cutbacks.
What that means is that in Oc
tober, November and December
of Ihis year less steel will be
BOUGHT from the steel makers
regardless of how much steel may
be USED.
Another straw:
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company
will start construction soon on a
multi-million dollar window glass
plant near Decatur Illinois. The
new plant was announced two
years ago, but has been delayed
because of a SLUGGISH DE
MAND for window glass.
But
They're going ahead now with
the new plant. That is interesting
because it indicates confidence in
the FUTURE.
Another straw:
Cotton fabrics prices are down
to their lowest levels since price
controls were removed shortly af
ter World War 2.
As a result of this situation, con
sumers have been refusing to
make FORWARD COMMITMENTS
for large orders of cloth.
How come'.'
it s quite simple. I
When prices are RISING 'as
they do in inflationary periods!
people buy unhesitatingly and in
larger quantities than they need
at the moment. They do so be
cause they're sure the price will
be higher later.'
When prices are FALLING lor
likely to falli people are inclined
lo WAIT on the' theory that the'
price will be lower later.
That could explain the present
"slowdown" in business.
Buyers may be using up their
present inventories instead of plac-.
ing new orders Hoping mat prices
lll.tv lie IUHC1 idLVl . i
ii wiai is uue. Dusiness win
pick up again when inventories
get low.
BULLETIN
MISSILE TEST CENTER,
C.inr Cnnnvpral. Via. (II
planned tost of a Vanguard
rypkrl bring developed to launch
a L'.S. rarlh satellite was post
poned Monday because of a high
Mind whipping in from the At
lantic Ocean.
Oitiria) sources at Patrick
Air Force Base, II miles south
nf (he sprawling test center, said
the firing probably would not take
place until Tuesday.
Day's lews
Lions Club Reveals Plans
Far New Boy Scout Building
' Ground-breaking ceremonies for
a new Boy Scout executive build
ing. current project of (he Lions
Club of Klamath Falls, are planned
for this fall and will be held as
soon as the weather permits. G. B.
i Brick' Leach said today. Leach is
co-chairman with Ed Robinson of
the Lions Club committee in
charge of the building.
The one-story building, contain
ing approximately l.fi.lu square
feet 01 lloor space, will be lo
cated at the corner of Dolores and
Manzanita. Exterior will be brick
veneer and gla.-s and the struc
ture will hou.-e the executive of
fices for the Modoc Area Council
ol Boy Scouts, a lare meeting
room ad kitchen and rest room
facilities. Landscaping of
the grounds is included in the plan
ning. James Wallinder has been named
as building supervisor to direct
the volunteer labor.
. Lead; indited that L.oDi and
'tw (taster
y Judge
Teamsters members. They claim
the recent Teamsters convention
which elected Hoffa to succeed
Dave Beck was illegal.
Letts quickly denied four mo
tions argued by Teamsters Atty.
Martin O'Donoghue. The motions
would have dismissed the existing
restraining order and put the case
down for trial on its merits.
O'Donoghue said Letts had act
ed improperly in granting the re
straining order last week after a
closed hearing in the court's
chambers without notice to the
union and without giving union
attorneys a chance to be present.
O'Donoghue said this violated
one of the canons of the American
Bar Assn. limiting issuance of re
straining orders without oppos
ing counsel being present only to
the most urgent cases dictated by
dire necessity.
Dave Beck, the union's retiring
president, also accused of corrup
tion in Senate committee testi
mony has announced he is hold
ing up plans to step out in Hofla's
favor pending the outcome of the
court challenge.
In an answer to the contentions
of the plaintiffs, the union has
challenged the right of the court
to intervene in the political affairs
of a private organization.
The union contends that while
there may have been violations of
a number of union constitutional
provisions over electing and seal
ing delegates, this was cured by
a ruling from Beck waiving these
constitutional provisions under the
union president's power to inter
pret the constitution.
Football Game
Ruled A Tie
PORTLAND Wi The Oregon
School Activities Assn. ruled Mon
day that the Marshficld-Spring-field
high school football game
played last Friday at Springfield
was a scoreless tie.
Officials had ruled that Marsh
field was a 2-0 winner on a safety,
but Springfield protested. The
OSAA upheld the protest.
The dispute arose when Marsh
field punted, .the Springfield re
ceiver signaled for a fair catch
but muffed the ball and it bounced
about 5 yards into the end zone.
There the Springfield receiver fell
on it.
The OSAA ruled that this was
a touchback, not a safety.
"As near as we can tell," said
Tom Pigott, executive secretary
of the association, "it was the
kicker who supplied the force that
put the ball into the end zone."
A principal difference between
a safety, which counts two points,
and a touchback, which counts
none, is in whether defensive or
offensive team gives the ball its
impetus.
It was the third tie for Marsh
field in its last 40 games. It has
not been defeated in that time.
Train Wreck
Toll Heavy
ISTANBUL. Turkey on An
Athens-bound express and a local
train heading toward Istanbul col
lided in Turkish Thrace last night
and railroad oflicials estimated
40 lo 50 Turkish passengers were
killed and ITiO injured.
Whilo ambulances from Istan
bul screamed to the scene, rescue
workers probed through the tan
gled metal for victims. Bodies
were crushed in the cars of the
local train and sprawled along the
rain-damped ground beside the
tracks.
A rescue train reached the
scene, about 30 miles northwest
of Istanbul, and brought most of
the severely injured back to the
Turkish metropolis.
The express was called the
Simplon Balkan not to be con
fused with the famed Simplon
Orient Express.
No bodies of foreigners were
found. Authorities said most of
the dead and injured were in the
local train, although some Western-bound
Turkish students were
killed.
A WET LANDING
CHICAGO UP' A homemade.
$20 zinc and sulfide-powercd two
stage rocket was shot into the
depths ot wetter space here Satur
day. The three 15-year-olds who
built the rocket said its trajectory
ended in Lake Michigan.
I their friends are being very gen
'erous in contributions of money,
materials and personal time and
labor. The building, if construct
ed under commercial contract,
j would cost approximately $22,000.
jhe said, and it will be a credit
:to the community in appearance
' as well as usefulness when com
j plcted.
I Arrangements were made with
the Kiwunis Club to place the
clubhouse adjacent to the Kiwan
ians' new youth park. Tiie land
is held under a !i-yejr lease Irom
the city and the architecture of
'the Buy Scout executive buildin.2
will harmonize with the buildings
planned by the Kiwanis Club
"It takes a lot of stuft to put
up the building we plan." Leach
said. "Some 40 yards 0! concrete
I will go into the footings and foun
dation, for example.
! "It is a little early to tell just
'what all we still need in the wav
of materials except money, and
iKi can aia; t ute that," he added.
Fl
pries Five Onts 12 rages
Ike Blamed
For Hassel
In Arkansas
WASHINGTON W Democrats
accused President Eisenhower
Monday of being "substantially
responsible for the trouble at Lit
tle Rock."
A statement approved Sunday
by 16 of the 24 members of the
national committee's advisory
council said the President's re
sponsibility stemmed from h i s
failure "to take an early and firm
position for observance of the pro
visions of the Constitution and
laws of the United States."
One member, Mrs. Benjamin
B. Everett of North Carolina, dis
sented from the accusation.
The civil rights statement was
released through the Democratic
National Committee. It was the
council's first pronouncement on
civil rights since the President
sent federal troops to Little Rock
to enforce a federal court school
integration order.
The Democrats also eluded the
President for not having appoint
ed the civil rights commission pro
vided for in the 1957 Civil Rights
Act and urged him to move "with
out further delay" to implement
that law.
! Six weeks have elapsed since
the law became elfective, the
council statement said.
"The President has made many
other important interim appoint
ments, the council said.
The appointments to the six-
member commission are subject
to confirmation by the Senate.
which will not be in session until
next January.
Gov. Averell Harriman of New
York interpreted the statement as
emphasizing that the Democrats
don't intend to yield ground in
their demand for an effective civil
rights program.
Two other weekend statements
from the council dealt with for
eign affairs, national defense and
economics.
The economics declaration
flayed the Eisenhower administra
tion s asserted negative . attack
on the "worse peacetime infla
tion in history and called for a
change in the "tight money" pol
icy, tax aid for small business
and price stabilization.
Scene Quiet
In Little Rock
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. t-Ninc
Negro students, two of whom were
ill with influenza last week, pre
pared to attend their filth week
of integrated classes at Little
Rock Central High School today.
Federal troops consisting of
paratroopers and federalized Ar
kansas National Guardsmen pro
tect the Negroes at the previously
all-white 2.000-pupiI high school.
Gov. Orval Faubus returned to
his mansion here last night after
a weekend in northwest Arkan
sas. An aide said he doubted if
jthe governor would have any
thing new to say today about the
racial crisis.
I There is no solid indication yet
of an end to the tug-ol-war be-
I iween r auuus ami we jeuerai
government.
tu- ma. u .. k ii, , in two cars to Miami alter a play
The White House has. said that - . ,,. c, ... .,,, : V..-
r- i i. , I
FmhIimc nac Divpn tin iinnnimwal I
I assurances he will carry out in
tegration peacefully if federal
troops are withdrawn. Faubus
blocked integration . at Central
High for awhile by using National
Guardsmen before they were re
moved from his control.
The Negro attorney who repre
sented the nine Negro students in
federal court predicted that the
crisis will continue until the gub
ernatorial election in 1113(1 is over.
AN EXECUTIVE BUILDING for th. Boy Scours is Ihe cur
rent project of the Lions Club of Klamath Fa lit. G. B. Leach
and Ed Robinjon are co-chairmen of the Lions Club com
miHee end this is a picture of the renderinq made by Ken
I Wallin of lans drawn by Rod
KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON,
Syria Denies Taking Pari
In Talks On Mideast Crisis
DAMASCUS, Syria Wi-The For
eign Ministry denied today that
Syria is about to take part in me
diation talks with Turkey under
the auspices of King Saud.
An official statement said Syria
will carry through its complaint
to the U. N. that it is threatened
by Turkish troop concentrations
on the border.
Maj. Gen. Afif Bizry, army
chief of staff, left today for a visit
to Saudi Arabia. But the Foreign
Ministry said his trip had no con
nection with reports that Syria
and Turkey had accepted Sand's
invitation to attend a conference
to discuss the Middle East crisis.
A Syrian spokesman said Biz
ry's trip is in response to an invi
tation which Saud extended dur-
10 Sentenced
For Death Plot
CAIRO, Egypt eP Former For
eign Minister MohammeJ Salah el
Din and 10 others today were un
der sentences ranging from five
years to life imprisonment lor al
legedly plotting President Nas
ser's assassination.
Their convictions by a military
court yesterday and the sentences
cannot be appealed. Nasser ap
proved the verdicts.
The prosecution charged that
the group, arrested in April and
indicted m July, planned to kill
Nasser and all Cabinet members
in order to restore Gen. Mohammed
;xa;uiu iu me piesiucncy.
They also planned to bring the
Communists into the government,
army prosecutor Brig. Ibrahim
Helmy charged.
Salah el Din was sentenced to
15 years in prison and former De
fense Minister Abdel Fattah Has
sen to 12 years.
Life sentences were announced
for Brig. Ahmed Atef Nassar.
accused of being the ringleader,
army ofticers Hassan Syam and
Amin - Fawzi and civilian Abdel
Hamid Islambiuli.
Retired Maj. Ghane.n el Saidy
got 10 years, Capt. Ahmed aw-
kab and civilians Mohammed Sa
wady and Ahmed Sakka 7 years
and retired Col. Hassan Abdel
Chaffnr 5 years.
Mohammed Hilmy Ibrahim and
Ahmed Ghannam. both retired
army officers, were MMiiitlod.
Salah el Din and Hassan were
Cabinet ministers in the govern
ments of the old Wafdist party
before King Farouk was over
thrown. The prosecution charged
that Salah el Din was slated lo
be prime minister and Hassan
minister nf the interior if Naguib
were restored.
All defendants pleaded innocent
before Ihe five-man military pan
el. During the trial they repudi
ated conlessions signed earlier.
Seven Perish
In Car Plunge
NAPLES, Fla. W A car
plunged into a canal beside the
Naples-Miami road early Sunday
and all seven ol its occupants
drowned.
A Negro dance band known as
the House Rockers was returning
1 1 IK Udll .itlllllMdV 1111:111 III I u
- .
ort
Myers. One of the cars went oil
the side, drowning three men and
women, all members of the band,
and the 8-month-old son of one of
the victims.
Police said the car's driver ap
parently dozed at the wheel. The
victims, all of Miami, were Her
bert Blatch, 30: Mrs. Barbara
Jean Blatch, 33: Mary Louise
Campbell. 21: her son Hugh
Mack; Vila Lee. 21: Kenneth Sim
mons, .13; and Ben Williams, 28.
V
MacPhail who is an tmploya
". ' ' A
-' :
MONDAY, OCTOUER 21, 1957
ing the King's visit to Syria last
month.
Turkey neither confirmed nor
denied the report of an impend
ing mediation conference, broad
east last night by the Saudi Ara
bian radio in Mecca. There were
rumors, however, that Premier
Adnan Menderes had received a
message from Saud.
The Saudi Arabian broadcast
said official delegations from Sy
ria and Turkey would arrive to
day or tomorrow in Damnum,
Saudi Arabia.
King Saud returned home yes
terday alter a 10-day visit to
Beirut, Lebanon.
Moscow continued repeating its
charges that the United States is
pushing Turkey to attack its
southern neighbor, which has been
under increasing Soviet inlluence
for two months.
An editorial in Izveslia, the offi
cial Soviet government newspa
per, implied strongly that Russia
might use nuclear rocket weapons
if Syria is attacked. Izveslia said
Turkey has turned the Syrian bor
der "into a hotbed of military pro
vocations." Pravda. the Soviet Communist
party newspaper, charged British
Prime Minister Macmillan will
try to work out a plan of aggres
sion against the Arabs in his con
ferences in Washington this week.
In Syria and Turkey there still
were no signs of general alarm.
The U.N. Assembly prepared to
begin debate tomorrow on the
Turkish-Syrian crisis. One source
at U.N. headquarters said the 82-
nalion body might hold morning,
j afternoon and night sessions in an
euort to get speedy action.
Shooting Fray
Protest Aired
JERUSALEM W-Both Jordan
and Israel have complained to the
U.N. Mixed Armistice Commis
sion about an encounter between
a Jordan civilian airliner and an
Israeli jet fighter.
The American pilol of Ihe air
liner, (apt. Jesse Stallworth of
I'ine Bluff. Ark., said an Israeli
jet fired on his aircraft live times
Saturday as he flew over the town
of Aqaba, Jordan.
Slallworlli said none of the shots
hit and he completed Ins Might
Irom Amman to Cairo. Fourteen
passengers and three other crew
men were aboard.
The Jordan government claimed
fire by its ground forces at Aqaba
drove the Israeli plane off. It said
antiaircraft fire also drove oil two
Israeli fighters which later at
tacked the ground positions.
The Amman regime said it was
considering diplomatic action.
An Israeli army statement said
the fighter spotted the Jordan
plane over the Negev Desert 20
miles inside Israeli. It said the
fighter ordered the airliner to
land but the pilot refused and es
caped across the border.
SHOOTING HOURS
OREGON
October 22
OI'F.N
5:56
CLOSE
5:20
CALIFORNIA
October 22
OPEN
5:51
CLOSE
3:20
tL
:
of Howard R, Perrin. Labor and materials are being con
tributed and when completed and dedicated, the Lions
Club will turn the entire project over to the Modoc Area
Council, Boy Scouts of America. The executive building
will ba located at th aorner of Dolores and Manzanita,
Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 3923
Segregation
Act Killed
By Tribunal
WASHINGTON ( . The Su
preme Court dealt a death blow
Monday, to Virginia's pupil place-
The tribunal did -so by refusing L?1 Stn;,Te,,iA 'J1";
se8 tSTJ" SrfS! j&
stale's 11)56 placement law was
declared unconstitutional
The decision, dealing with pupil
placement act tests in Norfolk
and Newport News, was given by
U. S. District Judge Walter E.
Hoffman of Norfolk and was af
firmed by the U. S. Circuit Court
in Richmond.
The refusal lo review the de
cision lets it stand unchanged.
The Supreme Court's refusal was
announced in a brief order which
gave no reason and made no com
ment .
School officials of both Norfolk
and Newport News, joined by the
slate's attorney general, had ap
pealed. Ihe appeal said Judge Hoffman
acted "with undue impetuosity"
and said the cases gave the Su
preme Court an opportunity "to
lead a large seel ion of our. country
out of Ihe chaos into which the
(lil.VU decision (against compul
sory school segregation! has
plunged it." The appeal added:
Ihe time has come- for the
Supreme Court to recognize and
expound Ihe practicalities of life
in these areas and to establish
a framework within which public
education can continue."
The Virginia pupil placement
act removed power lo assign pu
pils from local school boards and
division superintendents' and con
ferred the authority on a pupil
placement board. The appeal said
Ihe board was authorized to act
on stated bases, "none in any way
involving race or color."
The Circuit Court said the act
provided no adequate remedy to
Negroes because of the fixed pol
icy of Virginia school officials' on
segregation and because another
act ol the Legislature calls lor
closing of schools and withdrawal
of state funds upon any departure
Irom segregation
Demos Back
Cut In Taxes
SALEM iB Democratic mem
bers of the Oregon Legislature
agreed Sunday lo support a 10 per
cent income lax reduction and an
increased allocation of $10 per
child to the school fund
Thi'v ev.-imined hill rejected a
s,,L.s'ii,in that nart of the state's
sun)lus be used to give a boost
i to housing construction and to
industrial development.
Democratic Senate members
met in Portland earlier In the day
lo silt ideas for the special session
of the Legislature, which opens
next Monthly. They then came
here and in a joint caucus wilh
House Democrats agreed lo the
income tax cut and school fund
'boost. These were the proposals
of Gov. Robert I). Holmes when
he called the special session lo
ideal with the surplus.
The proposal for using part of
the surplus for a direct aid to
business and industry through
housing loans and other means,
was brought to the joint session
by the Senators.
"It was an exploratory idea."
said House Speaker Pat Dooley,
"and members of the House
pretty well vetoed it."
Dooley said the trouble wilh the
idea of trying to help business
with the surplus is that the sur
plus is something being built up
and doesn't hilly exist now.
The proposed income lax reduc
tion is aimed at holding down the
'expected surplus.
J
. t i
....
Queen Receives
Big NY Welcome
NEW YORK (ffl - The Queen
of Britain got a king-sized wel
come Monday from New York's
millions.
It was a thrill-a-second event
for both monarch and plain citizen.
Busy New York, bursting with
civic pride and hospitality, staged
one of its historic great greetings
to a celebrated visitor. It had all
the earmarks of a giant, gala pic
nic spread amid the towering sky
scrapers of a city determined to
outdo itself in cheery welcome.
For Elizabeth II, it was her first
visit to the metropolis linked so
closely by name and history to her
own empire,
naioor tooted a welcome in
cacaphony of sound. Hordes of
people jamming skyscraper win
dows on lower Broadway sent tons
of conletti hurtling down during a
traditional ticker-tape parade to
City Hall.
Elizabeth, followed by her hus
band. Prince Philip, stepped off a
t
rain from Washington at 10:10
a.m. onto a long red carpet at
Stapleton, Staten Island, across
the harbor to the south ot Man
hattan. Her first view of the city was
of drab, unpainled buildings of a
Ireight terminal once the Army s
busiest embarkation point for
servicemen going to Europe.
But it the Oueen noticed, she
gave no sign. Instead, a radiant
smile lit her face as Gov. Aver
ell harriman and other dignitaries
advanced to greet her.
Her lust words when she got
her first glimpse of New York's
skyline were: "Isn't it exciting!
1 never realized how closely knit
the buildings were!"
She and Prince Philip displayed
keen interest as they crossed
from Staten Island to Manhattan
aboard a specially-outfitted ferry
boat.
As they passed the Mayflower
II, a replica of the Pilgrim's craft
of lti20, Elizabeth laughed at sail
ors clambering up the mast rope
ladders. Their ship was rolling
and tossing.
I wouldn t like to be in the top
of that rigging, she said to Gov.
Harriman.
During the harbor voyage the
royal craft took her close by the
Statue of Liberty for her first view
of the great American landmark.
She also received a 21-gun sa
lute from cannon on Governor's
Island at the other side of the
harbor, where an Army installa
tion is located.
Ten thousand New Yorkers
thronged the famous Battery area
where the new Queen and her
party boarded automobiles for the
ticker tape motorcade up Broad
way to City Hall.
Police estimated 250,000 persons
jammed the parade route along
Broadway in the heart of the fi
nancial district to City Hall.
Thousands of others leaned from
windows to cheer and send stock
market tapes fluttering down.
The Queen and the Prince, in
separate cars, smiled and waved.
As the royal party passed his
toric Trinity Church at the inter
section of Wall Street and Broad
way, the church bells pealed out
"God Save the Queen."
When the Queen s car rolled to
a stop
Iront of City Hall;
crowds shouted . greetings and
another 21-gun salute roared out.
Reduced charges of powder had
been put in the guns so as to avert
damage to windows.
Next on the program was a
motorcade up Park Ave. to the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel for a re
ception and luncheon tendered by
the .city.
Elizabeth's single day in New
York, climaxing a six-day visit to
School Bus
Caution Urged
City Police Chief Orville Ham
ilton cautions all motorists that
vehicles are required to stop for
school buses at all times when
students are cither boarding or
leaving the buses.
The chief adds that the police
have received numerous com
plaints about vehicles not stopping
lor the buses during recent weeks,
and 1 hat police ollicers have been
instructed to nay particular atten
tion lo vehicle trallic conduct
when in Ihe vicinity of stopped
buses.
Hamilton adds that
particu
larly large number of olfenses
have been noted near the Eighth
and Pine streets intersection.
Frogman Dives Into Vat
To Stop Flood Of Wine
ItlVA DEL GARDA. Italy 11 -The
residents of this Alpine resort
today toasted a frogman who went
diving in a val of wine.
Thanks to his prowess the juice
of the local grape won't run in
the sirens.
Una del Garda boasts a cooper
ative wine cellar housing 20 huge
vals of M.HUO-gallon capacity
each. The farmers now are bring
ing in their new wine, which is
I piped cln.wi into the underground
vals.
Yesterday a worker went below
lo the corridor adjoining the vats
lo inspect things. He tound the had clogged Ihe valve which chan
passageway three leet deep in new neled excess wine into another
wine. He started looking around, val. lie cleaned the valve and
lo see where il came from, then
lie collapsed, overcome by the
liimes Iron) the still fermenting
liquid.
Minutes later a second workman
entered the corridor lo lind the
lirst man. The lumes got him toe.
the. United States, embraced
enough activities to provide a life
time of memories.
The schedule called for visits
lo the top of the Empire State
Building, the United Nations, a
banquet and a ball in the evening
and a motor itinerary devised to
give her as much of an eyeful of
the city ilself as possible. Sha
leaves by plane Monday night for
England.
Minister Eyes
Science Pool
LONDON W) The British gov.
ernment announced Monday
Prime .Minister Macmillan will
take three top nuclear policy plan
ners to his conference with Fres
ident Eisenhower in Washington.
This tends to substantiate re
ports Macmillan will propose at
the meeting a U.S.-British part
nership in nuclear and rocket re
search. He is said to have such
a proposal all shaped up.
The men leaving with Macmil
lan Tuesday are Sir Richard Pow
ell, permanent secretary of t h
Defense Ministry; Sir Edwin Plow-
den, chairman of Britain's Atomic
Energy Authority, and Sir Patrick
Dean, a deputy under secretary
at the Foreign Office who is
charged with political aspects ot
Britain s atomic energy program.
Macmillan took a final look at
his Washington plans at a cabinet
meeting Monday. He was also
keeping a close watch on develop
ments in the Middle East a
subject he and President Eisen
hower are expected to discuss at
length.
Under the reported plan. . the
two allies would coordinate their
scientific effort through a joint
planning directorate with head
quarters in Washington.
There was speculation that other
members of the British Common
wealth and of the North Atlantis
Alliance might be invited to join
if the United States agreed.
For the United states to taka
part, Congress might have to re
peal or revise the McMahon Act,
which sharply curtails the sharing
of atomic information, even with
friendly nations.
Little Boy Has
Tough Yeek
BUFFALO. N. Y, UAUhougl
Ihe hospital calls his condition
satisfactory, George A., Fiske, K,
doesn't see it that way at all.
From ' his bed today. George
contemplated the following event
of Ihe week just past:
Wednesday he cut his finger on
a broken bottle. His mother, Mrs.
George F. Fiske, bandaged it for
him.
Thursday, while romping about
the living room wilh his brothers
Glen, S, and Paul, 3, he smacked
into a chest of drawers. At Sis
ters Hospital four stitches wera
taken in his head and George was
sent home.
Friday, Mrs. Fiske was in the
basement washing diapers for
baby Karen, 7 months, with all
four children watching.
When she said "Let's go up- '
stairs and get an apple," George
was caught in the stampede up
the stairs and fell. At Sisters Hos
pital, they stitched up a cut on
his chin.
Saturday, George fell strangely
silent, confessed to his mother he
had a headache, and finally ad
mitted he'd cracked his head on
the edge of a bathtub.
At Sisters Hospital, they found
he hud a slight concussion and
this time look him in.
"Poor Georgie," sighed his
mother last night, "he's always
the fall guy."
Meanwhile, back at the hospi
tal, George sobbed to a visitor,
"1 need to go home."
Weather
FORECAST Klamath . Falls
and vicinity: Fnlr through Tues
day. Low Monday ntght 26-34;
high Tuesday $3-60.
1 High yesterday S
Low lust night 29
Prerlp. last 21 hours 0
Since Oct. 1 1.41
Same period last year 0.60
Normal lor period 0.70
Other workmen sized up the sit
uation quickly and rescued their
befuddled comrades. But the wine
continued to rise in the corridor.
Somebody thought of the frog
man. The town is located on Lake
Garda, in the Italian Alps, and
has several experienced divers.
Tullio Cestari, 33, put on his
breathing apparatus and waded
through the heady flood. He lo
cated Ihe overflowing vat but
couldn't see what was wrong. So
he climbed lo the rim and dived
into the 12-foot-doep tank
Searching around, he found dirt
stopped the Hood.
The over! low was drained away
and fans were brought in to blow
the gases out.
Itiva del Garda's 1957 vintage
will only be 40,000 gallons less
than anticipated, s