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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1958)
u op or.wSan 1 .- : to ; AMPLE WATER flowed this week during test pumping operations at Oregon Water Corporation's new artesian well at the Conger Avenue waterworks. Shown, from left, are E. E. Storey, well driller on the project; Glenn D. Bowen, Klamath Falls manager of Ore gon Water Corporation and Jack Sceva, a geologist from the state engineer's office. 'This is' the first new city water well drilled since 1928. Photo by Kettler la The- Day's lews City Water Supply Assured For Expanding Population By FRANK JENKINS The U.S. Air Force disclosed the other day that by 1961 some three short years hence it ex pects to develop an electronic brain that will be capable of TRANSLATING RUSSIAN BOOKS by the push of a button. Special tape on which the Rus sian text has been typed will be fed in at one end of the robot. and a tape bearing the ENGLISH translation will come out at the other end. Just like that! All this prompts a thought. Why bother any more to learn foreign languages? Why not let the machine do It all? Well, there would be problems. For example: The jigger is described as "about the size of several tall filing cabinets" that is to say somewhat bigger than a kitchen range. And Presumably You'd have to have a separate machine tor each language. Sup- pose you..were touring Western Europe and felt that you'd like to talk to people in Norway, Sweden, Denmark. Holland, Germany, France, Spain and Italy not to mention Russia. If you wanted to accomplish it painlessly (merely by the punch of a button) you'd have to carry some eight or nine of the robots around with you, Toting eight or nine machines the size of a kitchen stove around with you all over Western Europe wouia get tiresome. Not only that, but it would cost a whale of a lot in the way of tips. So - I think ' If you want to know what other peoples are thinking if, to use a modern term, you want to COM MUNICATE you'd better go ahead in the old-fashioned way and Jearn their languages. It will be easier in the long run. The next development along these modern lines of communica tion will probably be a dictat ing machine that will transcribe what you say into written words. You'll just talk into one end of It and your winged thoughts will come out, neatly 'typewritten, at the other end. (The telephone company's engineers are reported to be working on a jigger of that sort, and what the telephone com pany's engineers tackle has a hab it of showing up sooner or later as reality.) That brings up something else. I reckon maybe the final step will be a machine that WILL DO OUR THINKING FOR US! A new well has been brought in for Oregon Water Corporation at the Conger Avenue waterworks to insure a good domestic and indus trial water supply for this area. The new artesian well, with sub surface pumping, will be used with the four present wells which provide water by means of sur face centrifugal pumps. Because the combining of the two types of pumping from the same ground water strata is a departure from the usual procedure, there is much interest all over the state in the results, according to Glenn D. Bowen,- local water company man E. E. storey, Klamath Falls well driller, drilled the well to a depth of 435 feet, 18 inches in di ameter. Jack Sceva came from the state engineer's office this week to watch the tests. Solon Scores Aid Bill Loss WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Hu bert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) to day attributed to a State Depart ment "double cross" the one-vote defeat of a proposal to permit use of foreign aid funds for Red satellite nations. He contended the department endorsed and helped to write the proposal as part of the foreign aid bill, but backed down when President Eisenhower decided to ask the authority under separate legislation. . The Senate, after stormy debate voted 43-42 last night to remove the proposed new authority from the $3,712,900,000 foreign aid bill It hopes to complete action on the measure by tonight. Twenty-six Republicans 17 Dem ocrats joined in rejecting the idea. Twenty - seven Democrats and IS Republicans voted for it. The proposal would specifically have authorized the President to provide economic or financial as sistance to any country except the Soviet Union, Red China and Com mumst North Korea, if he found such assistance to be in the na tional interest. It was designed to help Communist satellites relax the control of Moscow. The Foreign Relations Commit tee wrote the provision into the bill in the form of an amendment by Sen. John F. Kennedy (D - Mass). The vote to remove it was on motion of Senate Republican Leader William F. Knowland of California. Bowen reports that, during test pumping, flow reached 4.600 gal lons of water per minute with a 46-foot drawdown. It is anticipat ed that the new well ' will be equipped with a 350 horse power turbine pump which will produce minimum of 3.500 gallons of water per minute. Test pumping equip ment nas been furnished by Inter state Pump Sales Company of Klamath Falls. "Apparently the subsurface pumping is not having too much effect on the water level of the other wells," Bowen said. "From some of- the intricate tests made, it appears that Klamath Falls is going to have plenty of water for a long time to come. The artesian water supply we are tapping seems to be sufficient for a popu lation three times the present size ot Klamath f alls. It will take another month and a half to complete the nroiect, bowen said and the cost will total approximately $25,000. One of the advantages of havine the new artesian well in operation is . that it can provide sufficient water for the community in case of failure of the existing wells or pumping plant, Bowen said. That is particularly important for ade quate fire protection, he added, Klamath Falls and the suburban area served by city water use maximum of 10.5 million ea ons a aay miring the peak of sum mer weather This drops to ap proximately 3.4 million gallons a day during the winter months. The new well is expected to increase the city water company's output from 8,000 gallons a minute to more than 10,000 gallons per minute. Oregon Water Corporation serves approximately 8,400 domes tic customers. Bowen said, and the new well will provide plenty of water for the steadily growing population. be Gaulle In Oran On Last Campaign Leg ORAN. Algeria (AP) Premier Charles de Gaulle told representa tives or the all-Algeria Public Safety Committee Friday its in-i surgent authority must come to an end. He said he will run Algeria. He named Gen. Raoul Salan, mil itary commander of the junta, as his own delegate-general in Al giers a new post. But De Gaulle will personally assume control of Algerian affairs, acting as his own Cabinet minister for the strife-torn territory. De Gaulle said the committee, which led the drive to bring him to power, must now concentrate on integration of the Moslem and European communities in Algeria. On the last day ot nis tour oi Algeria, he told representatives of the Algerian and the local safety committee: "You must not trespass or sub stitute yourselves for legal author ity. Your task is to work for a comnlete integration of souls." His statement cleared up his attitude on the future of the public safety committee movement that spread throughout Algeria as wen as metropolitan France and parts of the French Empire. "France is here," De Gaulle told t h e cheering thousands massed in the Place Foch. "She is here in you, men and women of Algeria! She is here in her ar my which goes about its magnin cent goal of security and unity with loyalty and honesty. "She is represented here with her timeless goal and mission which expresses itself In three words liberty, equality, frater nity." It s up to the government, he continued, "to take note of what is going on here and to hope that the movement which sprang up here will embrace all Frenchmen everywhere." Algeria Rebs Seek Support UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. tAP) Algerian rebel leaders, con temptuous of Premier de Gaulle's plan to make their people French men instead of independent Al gerians, are going to ask the U.N General Assembly again to back their fight for freedom. M'hammed Yazid. spokesman at the United Nations for the Na tional Liberation Front (FLN), said the only prospect for the rebels is to continue "a war we are sure to win in the end." Ho said the war would spread to ell North Africa and De Gaulle would be responsible for the bloodshed. Yazid's promise of continued and spreading war echoed a com munique from the Cairo head quarters of the FLN. spearhead of the 43-month-old rebellion. By joining the French extrem ists fighting the Algerian demand for independence, said the com munique, De Gaulle "closes the door to anv possibility of a nego tiated solution based on the inde pendence of Algeria." Yazid announced he would call for a meeting of the 28 Asian African U.N. delegates next week to start drafting a request that the Assembly take up the Alger ian issue at its session next fall More Korean Waifs Arrive Premier To Shelve Cohort BONN. Germany (AP) French diplomatic sources reported Fri day that Premier Charles de Gaulle is expected to put Jacques Sous telle on the shelf by naming him France's ambassador to the United States. Sending the 46 - year - old fire brand Gaullist deputy to Washing ton would please the moderates and leftists whose support De Uaulle needs in France. But it would infuriate the extreme right ists in France and Algeria who have been demanding he take position of power in De Gaulle': government. After the French revolt in Al giers May 13 against Premier Pierre Pflimlin, the government put a police guard on Soustelle. He eluded the guard, flew to Al giers and took the leading civilian role in the insurgency which brought. De Gaulle back to power, During De Gaulle's current tour of Algeria, Soustelle has joined the premier in all his public ap pearances. Repeated shouts of Vive Soustelle often as strong as the vives for De Gaulle have underlined that he is the hope of the French colonists. Soustelle worked closely with De Gaulle during World War II and was his chief political aide for some years after the liberation of France. But there have been re ports that the general has cooled in recent years toward Soustelle, although he has neter disavowed him publicly. Where Herve Alphand, the pres ent ambassador to Washington, would go was 'not indicated. IL TinnnriTTTTTnnnnnnTTTniiiBiMiiiiiiiwiiiMMMMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiWMiiiiiiiiiwiM mi KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE , 1958 Price Five Cents 20 Pages Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 6088 Spats Force AEC Leader To Quit Post Labor Group Back At Work WASHINGTON (AP) Chances of shaping a labor bill that can win the support of Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) appeared im proved today. The full Senate Labor Commit tee goes back to work on the bill again with a Saturday session planned if necessary to finish the measure. Sponsors of a middle-of-the-road bill consider McClellan's support important because he is chairman of the Senate Rackets Committee, The findings of that group have stirred up much of the support for iabor control legislation at this session of Congress. McClel lan himself has proposed stiffer federal regulation of labor unions than that provided in the pending bill of Sen. John F. Kennedy ID-Mass). McClellan's support of a com promise bill could be expected to influence some senators who oth erwise might demand stricter reg ulations and penalties. McClellan was reported to have told Kennedy he could support the bill if some additional changes were made. The bill among other things would require secret election of union officers and limit the length of their terms. It also would re quire full public reporting of un ion affairs. On the other hand, it would repeal or modify some Taft Hartley provisions opposed by la bor leaders. The committee, in its only vote during the first day of considera tion of the bill, defeated 8-5 an amendment by Sen. William A Purtell (R-Conn) to require a vote by a union's membership before striking. WASHINGTON (AP)-Lewis L. Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, has decided to leave the post which has em broiled him m a series of contra venes. Strauss' decision was announced by the White House yesterdayHe leaves June 30 when his five-year term ends. There was no immediate word on his successor. Strauss gave no specific reason for his decision. But he said in a letter to President Eisenhower that he believed "circumstances beyond the control of either of us make a change in the chairman ship of the commission advisa ble." This could rave been an allu sion to speculation that his renom ination might run into stiff opposi tion in the Senate. Capitol Hill reaction to his de cision was mixed, with some Con gress members lauding his "great contributions" and others voicing pleasure at his impending departure. The 62-year-old Stauss, a for mer New York banker, also will give up his post as special advis er to bisenhower on atomic en ergy matters. But he will become the President s special assistant in charge of promoting the atoms- for-peace program. As such, he will lead the U.S. delegation to an international scientific conference on peaceful uses of atomic energy in Geneva, Switzerland, next September. Strauss was named to the AEC by former President Truman in 1946, soon after the agency was created. He served until 1950 and then was appointed by Eisen hower in June 1953 to succeed Gordon Dean as thairman. For the past several months, he Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity: Partly cloudy through Saturday with occasional showers. Low Friday night 97-45; high Sat urday 65-75. High yesterday T. 73 Low last night 47 reportedly has been locked in dispute with Secretary of State Dulles over U.S. policy on nuclear testing. Strauss contends continued test ing is necessary to perfect anti missile weapons and to produce nuclear weapons with a minimum of radioactive fallout. He has said tests should be halted only in con junction with a halt in production ana wun a safeguarded Inspec tion system. . - . .... . ,f Dulles, on the other hand, known to believe the United States should change its test policy, pos sibly along the lines of a tern porary halt in tests while efforts are made to work out a more permanent arrangement with the Soviet Union. Precip. last 24 hours (to 5 p.m.) , . 0 Since Oct. 1 16.26 Same period last year 14.96 Normal for period 11.65 Lightning Cracks Across Oregon After Hot Spell By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lightning still crackled across Oregon Friday as a series of storms followed some of the hot test weather of the year. Power failures were freauent Lightning bolts and wind combined to interrupt service at such scattered points as Redmond in central Oregon: Harrisbure. Brownsville, Eugene, Turner and blmira In the Willamette Valley, and Oregon City, Gresham, Hills- boro and Portland in northern Oregon. Heavy rains followed the light ning nous in some areas, includ ing Eugene and Portland. Lightning strikes were observed in some forested areas, but no fires were reported at once. There was hope that rain had doused any sparks. The thunderstorms sent temper atures down from highs of 94 de grees at The Dalles, 92 at Port land, 87 at Astoria and Salem and 80 at Medford. A number of points had only moderate warmth with Klamath Falls reporting 73, Eugene 74 and North Bend 68. A lightning bolt in the area be tween Eugene and Springfield Killed two cows. Another struck a 69,000-v o 1 1 power line of the Pacific Power and Light Company between Co- burg and Albany. It knocked pow er out nearly an hour at a num ber of points in the southern Wil lamette Valley. Winds reached gusts of 48 miles l hour in the Portland area knocking down some lines. Rain fell heavily at some points and another heavy downpour came at Portland again Friday morning ent PORTLAND (AP)-The number of Korean orphans brought to this country by Harry Holt passed the 900 total with arrival here Thurs day of another planeload of the waifs. Aboard were 81 orphans, 3U of them for homes in California. Four, suspected of being tuber cular, were scheduled to go by train to Denver for the National Jewish Hospital. Holt, the Creswell, Ore., farm er who has made bringing in the orphans a project, did not return. He stayed in Korea to arrange for more of them to be sent here. Two of his daughters, Barbara and Mollie. escorted the party. Barbara, 21. will remain in this country until her fiance, Jack Chambers, 21, returns in about a month for their wedding. Mollie will return to Seoul Saturday. Mrs. Holt said at her home In Creswell that in addition to the four on this plane load. 18 of the children brought from Korea ear lier were suspected of having tuberculosis. There are seven still at the hospital." she said. "Those seven have it." A law passed last September al lows tubercular children to come into the United States under cer tain rules, she said. These rules, she explained, re quire that the children be hospital ized, and this is being done through an arrangement between the Holt organization and the Na- tional Jewish Hospital. She said a representative of the hospital port that a plane went down in the will take the four children to Den- Black Butte area southeast of Cot ver. ( Mage Grove. AF Jet Crashes Near Roseburg KOSEBUKO ' AP) A jet air plane crashed four miles east of here Friday, the Douglas County shenlt s ollice reported. Sources at the Portland Air Force base said a Navy plane, FJ4R, en route from McChord Field, Wash., to Moffctt Air Force Base in California, went down about 8:15 a m Police at Cottage Grove, north ol Roseburg. also received a re- Navy Missile Breaks Apart ' CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. ( -A Navy Polaris experimental mis sile streaked skyward Friday on what was described as its tough est test yet. The slim rocket roared straight up for some 20 seconds but then seemed to break apart shortly after it programmed toward a more horizontal course. At least one section plummeted into the ocean where crash boats were standing by. The Navy said in a brief an nouncement that the mission was "to test certain components of the Navy Polaris missile system Un der more difficult conditions than on previous launchings." Officials explained later that the rocket motor exhausted its fuel in a short time and the Polaris be gan to tumble end over end high in the sky. The breakup was due to aerody namic forces pressing against the missile as it fell. The last time the trim Lockheed rocket was fired on May 8 it hurst apart with a huge flash of flame shortly after takeoff, but the Navy announced that the break up was expected and the t ap peared to be normal. West Leaders Slate Confab LONDON (AP) - Prime Minis ter Macmillan flies west tonight for talks with President Eisenhow er in Washington and Prime Min ister Diefenbaker in Ottawa. During his seven-day visit in the United States and Canada, Macmillan also will make com mencement speeches and receive honorary degrees at two Ameri can universities. There is no agenda for the talks with Eisenhower. But dis cussions are certain to include re lations with the Soviets; disarm ament; a summit conference; France; the Middle East, and eco nomic problems. Macmillan arrives in Washing ton tomorrow for preliminary dis cussions. Sunday he flies to Green castle, Ind., to address De Pauw University graduates on interde pendence in defense, economic and political spheres. He returns to Washington the next day. Wednesday he leaves Washing ton for Ottawa, and from there. after a two-day conference, flies home. Caruso Runs Second To Rock V Roller PALO ALTO. Calif. (AP) - Guess who's running a close sec ond to rock 'n' roll singer Johnny Mathis in a vote to determine whose records will be played for four hours over radio station KGO San Francisco, on June 14? Enrico Caruso! There's a reason: Stanford stu Air Carriers Role Reported NEW YORK (AP) Deputy secretary of Defense Donald A Quarles said Friday that the Na vy's aircraft carriers compose a vital element in a system de signed to prevent Russia from seizing control of the seas. Quarles expressed this view in an address prepared for christen ing ceremonies for the 60,00fl-ton flatop Independence at the Navy laro in Brooklyn. "Sea power is an essential com ponent of this diterrent posture,' Quarles said. "The Free World Is dependent on the freedom of the seas. Our Navy is its principal reliance to keep the vital sea lanes open. The U.S.S.R. has built up a naval force that makes this a formid able task. With their submarine fleet that is numerically superior to that of any other nation in the world, the Soviets are chal lenging our ability to keep these sea lanes open. "We must destroy or neutralize threats against us from the sea and against our use of the sea. Our carriers participate as a vital element in this task, as (hey dem onstrated so clearly in World War Improves WASHINGTON (AP) The gov ernment reported Friday an im proved employment situation in May. There was a substantial rise among those employed and a de cline in the number of idle workers. A joint report by the Commerce and Labor Departments put May employment at 64,061,000, up 1, 154.000 from April. Unemployment declined by 216,- 000 to 4,904.000 lowest idle fig ure since January. The job gain was attributed to seasonal expansion in agriculture and service employment, plus a bigger than usual gain in con struction. The report said a sharp pickup in outdoor work represent ed in part recovery from the delay caused by especially bad weather earlier in the year. The employment rise In May was much greater than the drop in unemployment primarily because most of those-joining the farm la bor force were housewives and students who had been outside the labor force in April. The report said sizable reduc tions in unemployment among previously jobless workers were partially onset by an increasing number of students seeking sum mer jobs. This student influx into the labor force is expected to push the unemployment total well over the five million mark in June or Julv. Employment In manufacturing where recession effects have been most severe declined by 67,000 to 15 million, but this was described as only slightly more than the seasonal trend for the month. Compared wilh a year ago, man ufacturing employment is down by 1.700.000. with more tnan lour- fifths of it centered in durable goods industries. The May drop of 216.000 in un employment was a bit better than usual for this time of year. dents decided to prove there's a cultural streak in the young gen- II. The Navy has continued to eration. So they mailed cards voting for Caruso. 2.000 1 improve their design and arms mem. Auto Body Plant Closed By Chrysler DETROIT (ffl Chrysler Corp. shut down assembly opera tions at its Plymouth body and assembly plants in Detroit Friday. This was the first such action by any of the car makers during oper ations without labor contracts. The company said 2,700 employ es were sent home after 100 mem bers of the United Auto Workers Union walked off the job in the trim department of the Plymouth body plant. The UAW, which has instructed all members to work as usual dur ing a non-contract period, had no immediate comment. Chrysler said two employes who served as union stewards under the old contract refused to work at assigned jobs and provoked a walkout. The shutdown came as UAW President Walter P.Reuther sought to prevent incidents involv ing workers at General Motors and Chrysler Thursday from dis rupting the uneasy truce In auto industry contract negotiations. Reuther, after getting reports from top aides on the Chrysler and General Motors situations, re peated his order that the UAW members must keep peace at all costs in auto plants until contracts can be worked out. Nearly 500.000 UAW members have been working without a con tract since the three-year pacts expired, GM on May 29 and Ford and Chrysler Sunday. The first incident occurred Wednesday night when pickets ringed the General Motors Fish er Body plant near Pittsburgh, Pa. Leonard Woodcock, head of the union s GM negotiating com mittee, said the dispute centered about local grievances. Pickets at the plant were re moved last night and production was resumed by the overnight shut. Chrysler's dispute resulted from company action in handing out brief suspensions to some UAW stewards and committeemen in Chrysler plants across the coun try. Chrysler denied UAW charges that it was trying to provoke workers into a strike. The com pany said the' only ones disci plined were those who had flatly refused to go to work. Ford, whose workers have not been involved in any incidents, met with the UAW yesterday and had another session today, as did GM. Chrysler and the UAW will meet again Monday. Tornado Area Taking First Cleanup Step MENOMONIE. Wis.. uTt A young mother died of injuries Fri day and, in catastrophe's harsh . equation of life and death, a man believed dead was found alive, keeping the toll of Wednesday night's tornado at 30. The grim search through the devastated area continued. Aid for hundreds of the injured and homeless poured into an Eau Claire collection station as com munities near the stricken north western Wisconsin area poured out their compassion. More than $3,000 was collected Thursday alone in milk cans put out on Eau Claire streets. Boy and Girl Scouts and volunteeri sorted clothing, bedding and food contributions at a collection center and 30 truck loads were sent to Colfax, one of the hardest hit communities. The latest death was that of Mrs. Rolf Lunn, 21, who died at a hospital in Eau Claire Friday of injuries received when the winds shattered the home of the Erling Lunns in Colfax, where she was visiting on a trip from Great Falls, Mont. Her baby son is hos pitalized. Erling, her brother-in-law, and one of his children also were killed. Taken off the list of dead was Ralph Huseby -of Minneapolis, who had been carried as a unidenti fied truck driver killed when the winds smashed his truck at Col fax. Officials located him Friday. State, federal and private agen cies offered assistance from head quarters set up in the four-county area. At least 30 persons died when three twisters ripped a 90 mile path Wednesday night. Six persons were reported missing. More than 350 were injured, lit of them requiring hospital atten tion. At least 20 of the injured were in grave condition. Damage will be in the millions, according to Gov. Vernon Thorn- anil, WI1U iiiBJcticu uic ai uj plane and car yesterday. The Red Cross said that 615 families were affected. More than 100 homes were destroyed, another 165 dam aged extensively and 340 less se riously. Some 1,000 head of cattle were killed. Thomson called the devastation n unbelievable holocaust, but said local authorities have the sit uation well in hand. - Cool, Clear In North Sites By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It was clear and cool across northern areas from the Rockies to New England today while wet and humid weather dominated sections from Texas into the Gulf states.. The cold Canadian air, moving southward from cast of the Rockies, extended from the Ohio River westward to northern Okla homa. The eastern boundary of the cool air mass was the Alle ghenies. Chilly weather continued in New England. Showers sprinkled areas along the southern edge of the cold air extending from southern Missouri and northern Arkansas eastward along the Ohio River Valley. How ever, no violent weather was re ported in areas marking the clash of the contrasting air masses. Fallout Rain Halts Project LONDON (AP) Moscow radio reported today that a boatload of Soviet scientists had to abandon their observations in the Pacific because of dangerous, radioactive rain. It implied the hot rain came from U.S. nuclear weapon tests In an English-language propa ganda broadcast beamed to the West, the Communists radio eaid the Soviet ship Vityazi was doused by radioactive rain "over 1,8cm miles west of the Marshall Is lands where the United States has been testing atomic bombs." The Soviet Union announced earlier this year it was suspend ing nuclear tests alter finishing its spring series of atomic tests explosions. Since then it has been trying to chide the United States into making a similar suspension, Businessmen Back Tax Cut WASHINGTON AP) A num. her of leading businessmen have given qualified backing to lax cut ting as an anti-recession measure. - But even as their views were made public yesterday, the House voted to continue present tax rates on corporation income and certain items such as automo biles, cigarettes, whisky, beer and wine. Although many House members would like to cut taxes this elec tion year, they went along with the decision of their leaden and the Eisenhower administration against any reduction at thia ses sion. The main reason: prospec tive big budget deficits. The Senate is expected to fol low the same course, although ef forts probably will be made there to sain tax relief for the ailing automobile and rail industries. The business leaders, respond ing to a questionnaire from the Senate Finance Committee, were by no means enthusiastic about the idea of tax reduction. Most of the 14 men polled by the committee favored caution in employing government action to bring about an economic upturn. There were expressions of con cern that such action might spur inflation. Nine of the businees leaders voiced support for the tax-cutting idea in varying degrees. Several said such a move should be con sidered if the recession deepens. A few called for repeal or modi fication of transportation levies. In general, tax reduction was preferred over public works. PHOTOGRAPHER Don Kettler was doing a little earner experimenting during the brief Thursday evening lightning storm and came out of the developing room with this remarkable picture. The lightning strike it pictured in the north sky pinpoints a location en KOTI hill near the antenna. The picture was taken I 1 0 sec. at fl4 wltH ; royal pan film. ) r