PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamalh Falls. Ore.
'Mondav, Feb.
Jet Escapes
Near Disaster
tOS ANGELES (LTD - A Pan
American 707 jet liner carrying
123 persons scraped its left en
nines against the runway and
bounced out of control on land
Ing at International Airport Sun
day.
Capt. James 0. Roberts, Palo
Alio, Calif., a veteran of 20.000
hours as a pilot quickly regained
control over the giant airliner
and brought it to a sate landing.
A fire erupted in one engine but
almost immediately extinguished
itself.
A Pan American spokesman
praised Roberts for his skillful
handling of the plane and said:
"I don't think 99 per cent of the
passengers were aware of what
happened."
No one was injured, although
one passenger aboard the Hono
lulu to Los Angeles flight was
given a sedative. There was a
crew of 10 aboard and 113 passen
grs including two infants.
Roberts said "for some unac
countable reason" the left wing
of the craft dipped as he came
in for a landing and the No. 1
and No. 2 engine pods scraped
along the runway, sending up a
shower of sparks.
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
7 iw iz:
I fee;
''Margaret says you'RE NiMEty percemt water j
Tiny Child Dies;
Birth Premature
PES MOINES, Iowa (UPI)-An
ll' ounce boy, born more than
three months prematurely, died
today after nearly 28 hours of life.
The infant was born Saturday at
11:22 p.m. to Mrs. .Morris Vermcu
len, 23, in Still Osteopathic Hospi
tal. He died at 3:16 o'clock this
morning.
Doctors had listed the infant in
"poor" condition and said the
odds against survival were over
whelming. Dr. Bernard M. Kay, resident
pediatrician of Still Hospital, had
planned to try and feed the infant
later today by means of an injec
tion under Ihe skin.
But Kay said the infant was
Just too small to live.
''He died as a result of prema
turity," the doctor said.
Kay woke up Mrs. Vormeulen
to tell' her .of her baby's death.
"She took it fairly well," Kay
said. "She had expected it to hap
pen." Dr. Gordon Elliott, the family
physician, went to the Vormeulen
home to advise the father. Vor
meulen, 25, was homo caring tor
the couple's three other children,
Kerry, 5;, Steve, 4, and Janelle, 2.
Vermeulcn wont' to work as' us
ual Sunday at a service station.
He said it was "a matter of ne
cessity" because he was laid off
several weeks ago at a tire com
pany plant in Dcs Moines.
Kay said the infant was weighed
immediately after birth but was
too delicate to be measured and
was placed in an incubator.
According to American- Medical
Assn. records, the smallest baby
to survive was Jaqueline Jean
Benson, who was horn at 12
ounces on Jan. 14, ltt:if. to Mrs.
Lester R. Benson of Chicago.
LOS ANGI'lLES (UPD - Stanley
F. Wakefield, publisher and co
owner of the Oakdale Leader, has
been elected president of the Cali
fornia Newspaper Publishers Assn.
for 10.
Wakefield was named to the
post at the organization's 72nd
annual convention, which ended
here this weekend. .An active
member of the group since 1944,
Wakefield succeeds Carroll W.
I'aichcr, publisher of the Glendale
News-Press.
Other newly elected officers
were A. W. Bramwell, Chico Enterprise-Record,
first vice presi
dent; Ralph H. Turney, Temple
City Times, second vice president,
nnd Jack Craemcr, San Rafael
Independent Journal, secretary
treasurer.
In the major speech before the
publishers Saturday, Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon declared
the major issues of the 1960 pres
idential race would be the secur
ity and survival of the U.S.. for-
eiiin policy and the cold war.
He described the U. S. as "the
Doors Open 6:45 P.M.
LAST 2 DAYS!
PANICiZMIES!
701
Guy MMlSON-VirginaMAYO .
X George RAFT - llona MASSPf
Future 7:00 ft 10:00
I ILK 1U DI9 rtltli.il
FOUR
FAST
Shown At 8:45 Only
I I 1 4.
I I
I , comes
t J vlster I
Nixon Tells Publishers
U.S. Strongest In World
WASHINGTON UPi) - Sheer
imitative behavior, of the mon
key see, monkey do!' variety, has
played a big role in the recent
spate of anti Semitic incidents
and plane-bombing scares, a psy-
hiatrist said today.
The same basic pattern has
been evident in both situations.
according to Dr. Leonard Duhl of
the National Institute of Mental
Health. It goes like this:
The initial incidents are perpe
trated by deadly serious or de
ranged people who really hate
Jews or who really want to blow
up planes.
Then all sorts of other people
get into the act for a wide
variety of motives."
Some of ' them are delinquent
youngsters looking for a new way
to express their "rebellion against
authority." They are readily at
tracted to a form of behavior
which has been demonstrated to
be highly effective in shocking
and dismaying the "respectable"
elements of society.
Some are inspired by what Dr.
Duhl calls "a vicious sense of
humor that borders on the psy
chotic." (.He adds, in this connec
tion, that there is good reason for
questioning the mental health of
any "practical joker" who thinks
it's funny to inflict serious mental
or physical distress or major in
convenience on other human be
ings.)
Bull Auction
Reflects Drop
RED BLUKF (UPD - Western
cattlemen paid an average of $776
for 374 animals auctioned at the
Red Bluff Bull Sale last week, fi
nsl figures showed today.
The four-day event ended Satur
day with the sale of 288 Hereford
bulls. Cattlemen bid an average
of $HW for the bulls.
Sale officials blamed scanty
range feed for this year's average
price dropping below last year's
average for all breeds of $903.
The Maddox Hereford Ranch
Brigham City, Utah, paid the
highest price, $3,500, during the
Hereford bidding for a bull con
:,igned by Jensen Brothers, Logan,
Utah.
The reserve champion Hereford,
shown by Brookliee Farm of Au
burn, took the second highest
price. B. F. Madglin, Upper
Lake, paid $3,000.
8 Children Lose
Second Mother
LEVITTOWN, N. Y. (UPD
Last September Robert Creamer's
wile, Lucy, 33, was killed in an
auto crash and Creamer, a lac
lory lorcman, was left alone to
bring up their eight young chil
dren.
Creamer moved his molhcr,
Mis. Catherine Creamer, 69, into
their home to act as a foster
mother to the children.
On Saturday night while Mrs.
Creamer was crossing a rain-
lick road, hurrying home with
groceries for Sunday dinner, she
was struck and killed by a car.
Dido, beautiful daughter of the
King of Tyre, is said to have
founded the city of Carthage in
Ihe year 345 B.C.
strongest nation in the world mil
itarily" and discounted criticism
that the Soviet I'nion was Widen
ing the "missile gap" between
the two countries.
We have enough over - all
strength that regardless of what
they launch, undersea Polaris-
type missiles, manned bombers or
ballistic missiles, there will be
enough strength that the launcher
realizes there will be retaliation,"
Nixon said.
Nixon curlier told a television
commentator that his entry in the
New Hampshire and California
primaries was "conclusive proof"
that he was an active candidate
for the Republican presidential
nomination.
'A formal announcement would
have been gilding the lily," he
said. However, he said he was
taking a wait and see attitude to
ward his nomination. "1 do not1
assume that-1 shall be the nom
nee," he said.
On other issues, Nixon said the
U. S. must "maintain a hands - off
policy" toward the Cuban situa
lion, that the role of government
was to support the U. S. economy
and not supplant local gov.
eminent and that labor - manage
nient relations and civil rights
would enter the campaign as is
sues. '
Gov. Edmund G. Brown was
seated with Nixon at the head
table during the luncheon cere
monies of the convention. Brown
joking about the start each made
in politics in 1946, said neither
thought we would get as far as
we did.
In other convention activities,
the publishers named new mem
bers to the Board of Directors.
They were Kenneth L. Adam,
Lompoc Record; Walter M, Bar
nit, Sierra Sun and Truckee He
publican; Gerald T. Deal, Deal
Publications of Los Angeles; Max
Goodwin, Lemon Grove Review;
Harry Green, John P. Scripps
Newspapers of San Diego; George
Grimes, Oxnard Press-Courier
James K. Guthrie, San Bcrnar
dino Sun Telegram, and Gordon
G. Hadley.
Also elected were Millard F
Hoylc Jr., Hollistcr Evening Free
I.ance; Robert T. Ingram, Grass
Valley - Nevada City Union;
Parke F. Keays. Atascadcro
News; William F. Knowland. Oak
land Tribune; Robert S. Magee,
Santa Maria Times; Ferdinand
Mendenhall, Van Nuys News; A.
Q. Miller Jr., San Gabriel Valley
Daily Tribune: Harlun Palmer,
Hollywood Citizen News; Frank
lin S. Payne, Los Angeles Exam
iner; Virgil Pinkley, Associated
Desert Newspapers of India, and
Bernard J. Kidder, Pasadena In
dependent.
Herman Silverman. Walnut
Creek Sun; Robert M. Speidel,
Visalia Times Delta: Warren L
Taylor, .Monrovia Daily News
Post; A. M. Tierney. Garden
Grove Daily News; Newton Wal
lace, Winters Express; Chapman
Wentworth, Dunsmuir News: G.K
Williams, Coronado Journal, and
George A. Wright. Artesia News
Imitative BehaviofSaWtdu Acts
Cancer Group
Lists Advance
RICHMOND, Va. (UPD - The
American Cancer Society report
ed today that an as yet uniden
tified blood substance has suc
cessfully immunized rats against
six forms of cancer.
The society said It could not
speculate whether the same
substance would be effective
against human cancers and that
side effects of the substance make
it impossible to say how soon tests
on humans "can even be considered."
The research work is being
done at the Medical College of
Virginia by one of the society's
research fellows, Dr. Jerome H.
Sacks, and his collaborator, Dr.
Richard E. Egdahl, the society
said.
It said their work is the first
successful cancer immunization
with a blood substance, although
animals have previously been im
munized with whole tumor cells
and extracts from tumors.
The agent, known as FHA for
filterable hemolytic agent, ap
pears to be cither a virus, pr a
part of the nucleic acid- core of
a virus, the announcement said
The announcement-' said' that
"an average of about 55 per cent
of rats vaccinated 16 to 101 days
before tunor transplant become
completely and possibly perman
ently immune to the cancer transplant.
Some people paint swastikas on
synagogues or stir up phony bomb
scares in the deliberate hope! of
getting caught. They are suffering
from guilt complexes or other
emotional disturbances, and they
"want to be punished." So they
go out and do what seems to be
the currently fashionable thing to
do to bring the police on the run.
Finally, said Dr. Duhl, some
desecrations and bomb scares
other than the initial ones that
start the fads doubtless are mo
tivated by genuine hostility. "La
lent anti-Semitism" which has
previously been expressed only in
a verbal way may be stimulated
by example, and result in an
overt act of hatred. Or a person
with a real or imagined grievance
against an airline may seek ven
geance with a bomb scare.
Does the publicity given to such
incidents tend to spread and pro
long the fad?
It probably does, said Dr. Duhl,
but that is no argument for trying
to hush them up or suppress the
news.
"Most of these people are look
ing for an excuse to engage in
anti-social conduct," he said, "and
if they didn't have these outlets,
they'd probably find something
else.
"Moreover, I cannot subscribe
to the notion that facts are dan
gerous. I think facts are impor
tant and should be made known.
"But the press and law en
forcement agencies do have a
great responsibility in matters of
this kind to make sure that all
of the facts are made known
that the whole picture Is pre
sented. They should be very care
ful to report each incident in its
ARCH THEATRE
BLY, OREGON
TUES. & WED.
"SHANE"
With ALAN LADD
&
"TORPEDO RUN"
With GLENN FORD
Technicolor
Plus 3 Cartoons
and 1 Short
full perspective, so the puonc wn
differentiate between acts which
might indicate a serious conspir
acy and those which are simply
the result of imitative behavior by
sick, disturbed or delinquent per
sons." If each case is treated calmly
but firmly in the context of its
own actual motivation, he said,
this too shall pass.
General Taylor f,
HitByTaxicab l
WASHINGTON (UPD -. Get!
Maxwell D. Taylor, for- a-.,.
chief of staff who suffered a bra,
ken arm when struck by a tajt
, euiaineo. in satisfaa
tory condition today at Walter.
Reed Army Hospital. 1'
Taylor posed for photographer!'
m his hospital room Sunday. He
was smiling and in apparent good,
spirits. H
Wonderful New
UNIFORMS!
WHITE SWAN
BOB EVANS
LA GRACE
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United Press International
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A motion picture dedicated to
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25 .02
The populations of California
Florida, Arizona and Nevada in
creased more than 30 per cent be
tween 1950 and I960.
Klamath rail. Oregon
Serving Southern Oregon
and Northern California
PubMshrd daily oxcept Saturday by
Southern Oregon Publishing Company
Main at Eiplanade
Phone TUxrdo 4-aill
TRANK JENKINS, Editor
BILL JENKINS. Managing Editor
FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor
Rrttered aa second data matter at the
post office at Klamath Falli. Oregon,
on Auguit ao, 1006, under act of
Congress. March 3. 1879 Second-elate
pontage patd at Klamalh Falls. Oregon
and at additional mailing office.
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