Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1958)
COUP 0 0? OREGON LIBRASt CU3CNE ORE. la Tk I Day s lews By FRANK JENKINS In Arkansas yesterday Governor Orval Faubus who called out the Arkansas National Guard to defy a federal court order to admit colored pupils to Little Rock's Central High School and thus led to the sending of federal troops to Little Rock was overwhelming ly renominated to a precedent breaking third term. The election amounted to a ref erendum on Faubus' action in call ing out the state troops. It result ed in a resounding expression of approval by the people of Arkan saswhere a Democratic nomina tion is equivalent to election. Of the election, Harry Ashmore, editor of the Arkansas Gazette and a bitter opponent of Faubus since the integration dispute, says this morning: "Faubus' re-election will cut the ground from under South ern moderates and will stiffen in tegration resistance through out Dixie." That is probably true. The moral if any? I think this is it: You can't fix up ancient prej udices OVERNIGHT by passing a law or handing down a court de cision. Things like that take time. LOTS of time. In such cases, a good rule is to make haste slowly. We'd better keep that fact in mind in our tinkering with the Middle East. If we are wise, we will remem ber that for CENTURIES hatreds have been smoldering there. If we act too precipitately, these smoldering hatreds may break into the ilames of WAR. That would be tragic. More tragic than Little Rock. Getting closer home The Seaton bill that seeks a more orderly termination of government control of the Klamath Indian reservation has passed both houses of congress. The house version of it differs from the senate version. The sen ate bill provides that sustained yield management must be ob served by any purchaser of res ervation timber lands for 100 years. The language of the house bill stipulates that the purchaser must "agree to manage the forest lands as lar as practicable so. as to fur nish a continuous supply of tim ber. The two bills must now go to a joint conference committee com posed of members of both houses of the congress. The job of this committee is to reconcile the dif ferences between the two bills. If and when this is accomplished the compromise hill must then go back to both house and senate. It must be accepted by both houses and signed by the Pres ident before it becomes law. It can be assumed that if the conferees reach an agreement the bill will receive approval in both house and senate. It is a reason able assumption that it will then be signed by the president. The important point is that the bill didn t gel caugnt in tne ad journment jam that so often de velops in the final days of a ses aion of the congress. In that event, it would have died, and the reservation tim ber would have had to be dis posed of under the provisions of Public Law 587 which, by throw ing a huce volume of timber on the market, under unfavorable market conditions, could have re sulted in heavy losses to the In dian owners of the timber. C'MON HOME BURBANK, Calif. (API Here's a note for Bette Ann Summerlord: Come home, your mother will buv a dishwasher. Mrs. Sally Summerford, Bette Ann's mother, asked help locat ing her missing 12-year-old daugh ter yesterday. She said the girl left home Friday in an argument over washing dishes. If Bette Ann returns, her moth er said, she can have a new dish washer. Hike In Foreign Aid Seen Because Of Mideast Crisis WASHINGTON (AP)'-The "Mid-1 die East crisis appeared likely to day to give President Eisenhower at least part of the increase in foreign aid funds he wants, as well as make for a boost in de fense spending he opposes. The Senate starts debate today on a 40-million-dollar defense ap propriation bill, more than a bil lion above Eisenhower's requests. A foreign aid money bill is still before its Appropriations Lommit tee. Sen. J. William Fulbright D Ark1. a senior member of the Sen ale Foreign Relations Committee, predicted most Senate Democrats will vote to raise emergency for eign funds. But he said in an interview Sen ate action is likely to fall substan tially short of the half-billion-dollar increase Eisenhower asked over the amount voted by the House. Sen. George Aiken iR-Vt) said that unless the Senate Appropria tions Committee restores at least three fourths of the 597 millions cut by the House, there will be a floor fight for further increases. Sen. Leverctt Saltonstall of Mas sachusetts, chairman of the Con ference of All Republican Sena tors, said he thinks the Senate ill accept a $l,623.ono,ono in crease In defense funds recom mended by its Appropriations Committee over House totals. These additional funds would itep up production of long-range "Don't forget that new pos tage rates start August 1," Poatmasler C. L. Langtlet re minds. Letters will be four cents an ounce, air mall letters seven cents an ounce, post cards three cents each and air mall post cards five cents each. Present stocks of three-cent stamps and six-cent air .mail stamps may be used by add ing a one-cent stamp. Debt Ceiling Hike Okayed By Committee WASHINGTON (API - A rise in the government's debt ceiling to 285 billion dollars with tem porary permission to go to 288 billion was approved Wednesday by the House Ways and Means Committee. The committee acted after Sec retary of the Treasury Anderson told it a 12-billion-dollar deficit is in prospect for the current fiscal year. The only dissent on the vote came from Rep. Noah Mason (R 111). . The bill probably will come ud in the House Monday. Government fiscal officers have been talking heretofore of a deficit of 8 to 10 billion dollars for the fiscal year ending next June 30. Anderson not only boosted the forecast to 12 billions, he hinted it might be even greater, depend ing on the course of federal revenues. The secretary said the $2,800, 000,000 deficit for the fiscal year just ended was incurred because of a $3,300,000,000 drop in tax revenues. In the current fiscal year, he continued, he anticipates a further two-billion-dollar drop in revenues and a rising level of expenditures to a total of around 79 billion dollars. An increase in the debt limit is "the only sound course at the present time," Anderson said, add ing that wen the new ceiling may present problems to the treasury before the end of the fiscal year. The proposed new ceiling would be higher than any except t h e 300 billion dollar statutory limit authorized in 1945 in the closing days of World War II. Aid Bills Set For Hearing WASHINGTON (AP) - Quick action was expected today to line up labor and education aid bills for House floor action next Mon day. The House Rules Committee, which clears bills for House vot ing, scheduled both for hearing. The education measure would authorize a $1,070,000,000 program of federal aid to education to help develop young American brain power, particularly in science, to meet the Soviet challenge. The labor bill would require ad ministrators of employe pension and welfare funds to make annual financial reports available to members of the plan and to fur nish copies to the secretary of labor. Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex) has said the House should vote on both measures before Con gress adjourns. The education bill contains many of the recommendations of President Eisenhower, but pro vides for 23.000 scholarships a year, more than twice the 10.000 proposed by .the administration. The total cost of the scholarships is estimated at 280 million dollars. The Senate Labor Committee meets today in closed session to consider a companion education bill. PRIVATE AUDIENCE CASTELGANDOLFO. Italy (UPD Pope Pius XII received Joseph P. Kennedy, American fi nancier and former ambassador to Britain, in a private audience Tuesday at his summer palace here. jet bombers, airlift equipment, missiles and missile-firing sub marines. Saltonstall quoted Secretary of Defense McElroy as having told Republican leaders at a While House conference this will provide more equipment than is needed. Backed by Eisenhower. McElroy also objected to minimum limits the bill would fix for the size of the Army, Marines, National Guard and reserves. The Committee for Economic Development reported meanwhile that defense spending has aver aged about 11 per cent of total production during recent years, but could be boosted to 15 per cent to nearly 65 billion dollars year without impairing eco nomic growth. It emphasized it was not rec ommending an increase, but said there is need for better manage ment of whatever is spent. The CED is a privately supported re search organization of business men. FREE RAND SHELL TWIN FALCS. Idaho APt - Max Hanson, a Democratic guber natorial candidate, asked City Council permission to use the lo cal band shell for a rally. One commissioner suggested a $25 charge, another a $10 to $15 charge. The upshot: The council decided to make the shell avail able free to political rallies. Han son's will be the lint. t Price Five Cents 20 Pages r WORK IS PROGRESSING on the new McCloud High School in McCloud, California, which is shown here against a Mt. Shasta backdrop. Howard Perrin, Klamath Falls, is architect for the $502,298 building and he also is archi tect for four other schools in the Siskiyou Union High School District Mount Shasta, Weed, Yreka and Butte Valley in Dorris. L. Kowolowski Company, Madras, is the contractor for the building, which will include a section of seven classrooms plus offices and storage space; a Army Claims All Quiet On Isle Of Haiti PORT AU PRINCE. Haiti (AP) The army claimed everything was quiet again in Haiti today. At least 14 dead were counted after a pocket-sized coup attempt that wilted under gunfire from troops and civilian partisans loyal to President Francois Duvalier. Some of the Duvalier partisans paraded jubilantly through the streets after the battle yesterday, wearing blood-stained shirts and firing their guns in the air. But most people kept off the streets to avoid trouble. The U.S. Embassy warned Americans to stay indoors and the army ordered a 6 p.m.-to-6 a.m. curfew. The Port au Prince air port was closed throughout yester day, stranding . nearly 400 U.S. tourists. . i 1 All news dispatches leaving Haiti were censored. The army said that a party of men landed from a 'Miami, Fla., launch and tried to overthrow Du valier. Seven attackers were killed. The dead plotters, according to the army, included one known American, former Deputy Sheriff Arthur Payne of Miami: another man, an American; two Span ish-speaking "foreigners ; and three exiled Haitian army cap tains who supported former Pres ident Paul Magloire. ' Magloire, in New York, denied any connection with the plot. rredenc Duvigneaud, interior minister of this Caribbean Negro republic, spoke to newsmen with a pistol stuck in his belt. He gave this account of the attempted coup: The rebel launch landed 45 miles northwest of the Haitian capital near the town of St. Marc late Monday night. Army commanders were alerted and a commando unit was rushed to the scene. The plotlers fled, leaving the launch and a cargo of weapons and ammunition to the troops. Rocket Shots Said Success EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE. Fla. (API Two slender Nike-Hercules missiles roared out over the Gulf range on successful flights yester day. , Fired in salvo, the ground-to-air missiles sped toward three drone F80 fighters flying in for mation about 47 miles from shore. The first missile destroyed the lead drone with its explosive war head. The second missile scored a near-miss on the next drone as planned and fell into the Gulf. Its nose cone, bearing instruments, was recovered within 45 minutes. The firings marked the sixth successful launchings from near by Santa Rosa Island in less than two months and ended a joint Army-Air Force test of air de- lense weapons. One of the firing batteries left immediately for Philadelphia to man a new Nike-Hercules site (here similar to sites already es tablished at Washington, New York and Chicago. The Nike-Hercules is reported unofficially to have a range of less than 100 miles and a speed nf about 2.300 m.p.h. It is an im proved version of the operational Nike-Ajax. FEW WORDS ABOUT TEXAS KANAB. Utah APi Construc tion worker Bill, of K a n a b. a Texan by birth, trird a somer sault off the diving board of Kanab's new swimming pool. He landed on the concrete below the hoard, missing the water. He said, as they carried him away with a broken wrist and ankle sprains: "They sure don't build swimming pools here like they do in Texas." KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON. President's Note Draft Suggests August 10 Meet WASHINGTON (API President Eisenhower has decided to pro pose that a summit conference on the Middle East crisis be opened in the U. N. Security Council in two weeks. Eisenhower has drafled a note to Soviet Premier Khrushchev suggesting a range of dates be tween Aug. 10 and 15. The note is now being discussed with Brit ain and France. The consultations I may result in some changes, but it is expected to be dispatched to Moscow within the next day or so. One possible modification would be to propose a specific date. One well-informed U. S. official said the United Nations headquar- ters in New York is the logical! Now History SAN FRANCISCO (UPD - The view from the ferry-deck of San Francisco's famous skyline-gleaming in the sun or grayed in the fog became history today. lhe San Leandro, last of the many ferries which plied across the bay for more than a hun dred years, bumped her way into the Ferry Building slip for the last time shortly after midnight. About 1,300 persons, some who lived with the ferries daily as commuters in years past and some on their first ride, stood on the San Lcandro's deck on her last trip. Gay youngsters from the University of California and graying oldsters with tears in their eyes sang "Auld Lang Syne" and "California" as the boat steamed under the great Bay Bridge on the 21-minute crossing. Skipper Frank Diaz, 58, of Oak land, a 37-year veteran of the fer ries, commented that it was "an unusually pleasant night." and, of the end of the ferries, that "prog ress is supposed to be." Diaz and the 14 other members of his crew have been given their -in kivch uifii .c.n.ic p, .,, uvu.,.c.,. n ific Railroad, which operated the boats as a means of getting pas sengers from Oakland, at the end of the transcontinenlal track, to San Francisco. The SP, which has been losing money on the boats for years, petitioned the Interstate Com merce Commission last fall to abandon them and switch to buses. At an ICC hearing here March 13, the only voice of pro test was raised by an Oregon man, Howard Morgan, of the Ore gon Public Utilities Commission. But, while they made no pro test earlier, the thousands of pas sengers who made "one last trip" on the boat during the past few days were of one mind: "It's too bad they have to go." UAW Asked To OK Strike DETROIT (API The United Auto Workers International Exec utive Board is expected to ap prove next week a strike authori zation request from union nego tiating teams at Big Three auto lirms. The teams asked the hoard yes terday to approve strikes at Gen eral Motors. Ford and Chrysler. The board is expected to give per mission when it meets hi're next Tuesday, and the decision then will co to the I'AW s GM. Ford and Chrvslcr national councils. They are scheduled to meet in Detroit next Thursday, and ap proval also is expected from them. The union has been working vithout contracts since the Me morial Day weekend, and the re quest for a strike authorization is another step In union strategy tn force a showdown in the dead locked contract talks. WEDNESDAY, JULY 30. 1958 II IL gymnasium with dressing rooms, showers and a platform which can be used as a stage to convert the gym into an auditorium. Construction on the 30,000 square toot school started in February and the contract calls for completion in a year's time. Future plans are for the addition of a kitchen and a music room the gymnasium platform is now used as the music section. This picture shows the gymnasium at the left and the classroom area in the background. A long corridor will connect the fwo units. Kite Photo place to hold the extraordinary session but that Eisenhower Is willing to go to some other city probably Geneva if others prefer. Eisenhower's latest note is in answer to an angry Khrushchev message Monday. The Soviet leader accused Ei senhower then of virtually reject ing the heads of government con ference, of being responsible for aggression in the Middle East and plotting new military adven tures there.' Khrushchev also called again for a five-power meeting outside the U. N. But the Soviet news agency Tass said last night this was not a rejection of a U. N. meeting, and said Khrushchev still is willing to attend a Secu rity .council meeting. The U. S. official' who declined to be specifically identified called the Khrushchev" note "a shocking disappointment" to the President and Secretary of Slate Dulles. He indicated they were deter mined generally to ignore the abusive tone and accusations of the Khrushchev letter and concen trate on two points. These are: 1. Khrushchev's insistence on holding a five-power conference to deal with the Middle East situa- jtion represents a policy of big power rule of the world. The Unit ed States rejects that concept. The United States insists that the pro jected conference should actually be an extraordinary meeting of the U, N. Security Council and not just a meeting of the chiefs of the great powers under the cover of the United Nations. 2. The United States is pre pared to go into such a meeting of the V. N. Security Council on any convenient day in the period Aug. 10-15. Eisenhower would be agree able to a later date, officials said. if the Security Council feels that more time is required to organ ize the special session. U. S. oflicials said that in addi tion to the formal meetings of the 11-national Council, of which all the great powers are members there would certainly be private talks which would bring together . ... . 1, ,., OrltUh Prim. Minictnr Macmillan. French Premier de Gaulle and, assuming his invita tion by the whole Security Coun cil, Prime Minister Nehru of In dia. This moves a bit closer to lhe British view. Conservative leader R. A. Butler told the House of Commons that "while we think it most desirable that the conference should he associated with the United Nations, we also strongly support the principle that there should be private meetings simul taneously. Weather FORECAST Klnmath Fall and vicinity: Variable cloudiness through Thursday; occasional af ternoon and evening thundershow ers In the Cascades. Highs ft08.i; low near 52. High yesterday M Low last night 51 Preclp. last 24 hours . Sinre Ort. 1 Same period last year Normal for period fl 19.47 15.1ft 12.64 Fire Danger Today HKiH Fires start readily from matrh or glowing cinders, tend to spread rapidly and tend to crown In young growth. Northern California Fair through Thursday except for seat tered thunderstorms In mountains and high coastal fog; little change in temperatures. Wind near Coast variable, -!. m.p.h. CHANGE IN AMBASSADORS RABAT, Morocco 'UPD Charles W Yot took up his duties as new V S. ambassador tn Mo rocco today. He succeeded Caven dish W. Cannon, who retired last month. Telephone TU 4-8111 Estes Blasts Steel Hike As Damaging MIDDLETOWN. Ohio (AP) Armco Steel Corp. has announced the first 1958 steel price boost for tomorrow a move Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) says, "will do our economic recovery a great deal of harm if sustained. The Armco price hike, the com pany said last night, averages 2.75 per cent on 12 products, in cluding hot and cold rolled sheets, and adds up to about $4.50 a ton. Kefauver, head of the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly subcom mittee,, said in Washington the Armco action was not justified and would be a topic at a meeting of his committee today. In the-interest of holding the line against inflation, I hope Arm co will call eft 'the increase and that olher companies will' not follow it, the senator added. Other ma lor producers of steel made no immediate commitment to follow Armco's lead. But many repeated what they have been saying for months that they must pass on to consumers at least part of cost increases they attribute to a wage boost for United Steelworkers unionists July 1. Republic Sleel of Cleveland, the nation's third largest producer, and Youngstown (Ohio) Sheet k Tube, the sixth largest, scheduled officers' meetings today to con sider raising prices. U.S. Steel, which produces more steel than its three biggest com pel II ors combined, said in New York, "We will study the situa tion." Only a few hours before Armco's announcement, Roger Plough, board chairman of U.S. Steel, had said on price increases: "We haven t anything in mind at the present time." Because of Big steel i dominant position in the industry, the small er producers have until Armco moved hesitated to take a lead on prices. U.S. Steel was criticized by Ke fauver's subcommittee for the industry's price increase July 1 of lhe boost exceeded cost increases last year. The senators said then the boost exceeded cost increase and contributed to inflationary pressures by adding half a billion dollars to direct costs of steel buyers. A government economist in Washington estimated about 200 million dollars will be added tn the bill of direct steel buyers if all sleel companies match Arm co's 2.75 per cent increase. A general boosting of steel prices would tend to accelerate he steady pace at which the cost of living has climbed for two years, unless the sleel fabricators absorbed the added materials cost. One sleel producer called Arm- cos price changes hardly ade quate. A Youngstown Sheet 4 Tube spokesman said it would not meet the increased costs to his firm since the July 1 wage boost nf 9 1 cents an hour to the United Steelworkers. Armco, the industry s seventh largest producer, reported Mon day its first-half earnings of $20.- !fi.744 were about 17'j million dollars under a year ago. The company operated at 60.8 per cent of capacity at its plants here and in Baltimore, Ashland. Ky., and Butler. Pa., compared with !)3.2 per cent in the first halt of 1957. Taxpayer Feels Conscience Pang SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-A con science stricken taxpayer s aia- nond ring will be auctioned off hy lhe federal government. The ring was mailed from Co ouille. Ore., Ihree weeks ago to the Internal Revenue Service of fice in Portland. With the ring was a mile explaining: "I feel I owe more taxes to the government lhan I have paid. This ring may silisfy the deficit, (signed) Careless." Indian Bill Heads For Compromise By FLOYD WYNNE The Klamath Indian Reservation timber was insured against any quick-cutting with tne pas sage Tuesday by the House of Representatives of their revised version of Senate Bill 3051. Approval of the amended ver sion came despite a concerted last minute maneuver to delay the bill which would have endangered fi nal enactment this year, and might have opened the way for a "fire sale" timber disposal. The purchase bill will now be sub mitted to a joint House-Senate con ference from which will come a compromise proposal. As passed by the House, the bill first calls for a review of the appraisal by three competent ap praisal estimated the total tribal praisal estimated the total Tribal net worth as $123,725,018.10 less budgeted expenditures for fiscal 1957 of $2,081,100, leaving a net of assets available of $121,643,918.10. This figure will be reviewed as lhe first step under terms of the House bill. Then the timber on the reserva tion will be divided Into approxi mately 10 large tracts. These will be advertised for sale on January 1, 1959. If there are bidders, sales can be completed by April 1, 1959. Sales will be made on the basis of an appraised valuation, at a figure determined by the appraisal review board, probably in the neighborhood of the present figure. Any private sales will have a condition incorporated in the deed management of the units so as to insure a continuous supply of timber. If there are no private bidders. the timber will be purchased on July 1, 1961, by the federal govern ment and be made a part of the national forest system, and be op erated by the Forest Service. The Klamath Marsh will be pur chased by the .government and placed under the management of the Bureau of Fish and Wildlife. The sharpest difference between the House-passed bill and the Sen ate version is in the provisions for sustained yield. The Senate meas ure called for any purchasers to agree to manage the timber on a sustained yield basis for a period of 100 years. The amended Housa version does not carry this provision but rather requires that the stands be so man aged as to provide a "continuous supply of timber." In commenting on' this provi sion, congressman Al unman said, "To make sure that there would be no misunderstanding about the intent ot the language, I secured unanimous consent from the full committee to insert the following explanation in the published re port on the bill: 'This (a contin uous supply of timber) Is a guid ing conservation principle under which the national forests have been managed for years. The com mittee believes it appropriate to use this same language to describe the purposes for which tribal for est lands will be managed by the purchasers thereof under plans prepared by the purchasers and approved by the secretary of ag riculture. Ullman further reports. "Al though the Forest Service would prefer the original language, I am assured by their top people here that this change in language will not affect the standards that the administration will set up in any private sales of timber on the Klamath Reservation. However, it is my hope that we can still ob tain the sustained yield language during conference committee con sideration." He concluded his observations on the bill by saying, "This pro gram will In my opinion provide just compensation to the Indians, protect the economy of the Basin and insure the protection of the resource." Sen. Richard Neuberger, who steered the bill through Senate de liberations, pointed out in a tele gram tn the Herald and News Long Years Of Waiting End For Yugo Woman Today SAN FRANCISCO (UPD - A' long journey comes to an end to day for a young Yugoslavian wo man who has been trying desper ately to rejoin her husband for more than two years. Mrs. Mira Stnakovich, 21, counted the hours until the liner Ornnsay docked from Australia and she could fly to the arms of her husband. Veljco, whom she last saw in Germany In 1956. In her quest, Mira has broken both legs running from Yugoslav police, fled through Austria, Swit zerland, France and Germany without a passport and stowed away twice. But at last, her husband nb- tained a U.S. visa for her andiherself up. She was put in the sent her the money to pay herShip's hospital and carried on to passage from Australia. He has been living in Sacramento, Calif. Mira and her husband were married when she was 18. They have a hahy daughter in Yugo slavia. The slory began several years ago when Veljco fled Yugoslavia jto avoid being conscripted into the army. He escaped across the bor der into Austria. Leaving their daughter with relatives. Mira fol lowed him. Police pursued her to the border. "As I was crossing inlo Austria at night. I had to jump olf a cliff and I broke both legs," she said. "Austrian police dogs found me the following morning. I was In a hospital (or two months." Barely able tn walk sgain, she early yesterday that he would con sult with the Forest Service and be guided by their wishes in the mat ter of sustained yield language In the biU. He said. "House committee re port accompanying revised version of Klamath purchase bill now available. Some portions seem am biguous and vague; therefore, I have asked Forest Service which will be charged with administra tion of timber under pending legis lation to provide me with formal opinion as to adequacy and sound ness of House bill provisions deal ing with sale and-or operation of Klamath forest. I will be guided by- this reply when we go ta conference on bill." Senator Neuberger reported that he had received a message from Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson in which he expressed preference for the Senate lan guage on sustained yield over the House wordage. Benson warned in the letter that 'delegation by the Congress of all reference to sustained yield would be widely interpreted as a weaken ing of the conservation objective of the bill." He also pointed out that the dif ference in language could mean different interpretation on the bill and result in extensive litigation. "Any litigation can consume a considerable period of time and - involves inherent uncertainties as to its outcome, no matter how confident either side might be. Abandonment by the Congress of specific references . to sustained yield and substitution of the other language could not be escaped in any litigation so precipitated," Benson wrote. Senator Neuberger will be chair man of the Senate conferees desig nated to help iron out differences in the bill and prepare a com promise measure. The House action Tuesday was by voice vote after only a few minutes discussion on the bill. Representative Ullman told the House just prior to voting on the amended bill, "If we fail to piss this, it will mean clear cutting of one of the finest timber standi in all America. If you vote this down, it will destroy that watershed. Goldfine Fine Held Likely WASHINGTON fAPl-The Issue of citing Bernard Goldfine (of contempt of Congress goes before the House Commerce Committee for possible action today. Rep. Peter F. Mack (D-III), a member of the Investigations sub committee which recommended the action yesterday, said he ex pects the full committee to en dorse the contempt proceeding immediately. But others spoke of -delays be cause of a possible fight .within the committee or because neces sary documents may not be ready for immediate action. Goldfine, a friend of presiden tial aide Sherman Adams, faces possible contempt proceedings be cause of his refusal to answer 21 questions about business matters he contended were not relevant to the subcommittee's Investiga tion. If the committee -approve the citation, the House itself would have the last word on whether to send the case to the Justice De partment for possible prosecution. Conviction for contempt of Con gress carries a possible penalty of $1,000 fine and a year's im prisonment. Goldline's attorneys in Boston said he had spent a tremendous amount of time assisting the sub committee and could not be blamed "for protecting his rights as a witness." ried through Switzerland and France and slipped into Germany by hiding with the animals in a traveling circus. She joined her husband in Essen, where he was waiting for permission to come to America. The two were reunited for four days in 195S belore Veljco left. She was to follow him. But every thing went wrong. Papers and passport did not appear. In desperation, Mira stowed away aboard an Australia-bound ship with the intention of getting off in Spain and picking up a ship for the United States. Eleven days later, after living on cigarettes and coffee, she gave Melbourne. Last year, she slowed away on an American liner leaving Sydney hut gave herself up a few hours from port. Australian immigra tion officers put her ashore at Auckland, N.Z. "They shipped me hack to Syd ney, she said. I got a job in a factory working 10 hours a day and repaid the shipping company that brought me lo Australia. It was hard work but I didn't mind it. 1 Inst 56 pounds in two and one-hall months." Then American authorities gave her permission to rejoin her hus band. "My baby is with my mother-in-law in Yugoslavia," she said, "but Veljco can get her any tlm, I hope it is soon." r i