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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1960)
O o PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Wrrlrunrhu-'Mart-h IBClflfUS'.A . i " -Tl)-- 5 O o Forces Of Syngman Rhee Capture Landslide Win SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Syngman Mice's forces won the presidency and vice presidency of South Korea tr1y in a landsiido after a bloody election the opposi Cion charged was rigsed. The ami Rhce Ptmocralic parly promised a court contest. Post-election violence flared anew as - demonstrators, dis gruntled with the outcome of the votlofi, scuffled today with police In front of the Democrats' Seoul headquarters. At least 7 and perhaps up to 11 persons were reported killed Tues day in election violence. All but one died in a seven-hour battle between police, Democrats and students at Masan, 2M miles south of Seoul. 1 ' Okay Asked To Build Dam WASHINGTON (AP) - A public power group asked the Federal Power Commission Tuesday for authority to build a 276 million dollar dam at the Nez Perce site on the Snake River. ' The application by Washington Public Power Supply System Is expected to set the stajfG for another round in the public-vs.-private power controversy in the Pacilic Northwest. Pacific Northwest Power Co. has filed an application to build a dam at Mountain Sheep, above the Nez Perce site on the Snake. PNP is a Combine of four private utility firms. If either of the dams is built, it will make the other unfeasible. The Washington Public Power Supply System Is made up of 13 public utility districts in the state. The proposed dam would have an initial installed capacity of 1.200.000 kilowatts from six generators. 0 Ithee, whose Democratic party opponent died a month ago after a stomach operation, won his lourth four-year term with a roc ord fiopular vote. Assembly Speaker Lee Kipoong. 63, overWhelmingly defeated John M. Chang of the Democrats, who had bested Lee in (her 1!)56 vice pridcntial race by 200.000 votes. The vi(6, presidential race was of major importance because of the possibility the aged president might not live out his term. But Rhce is much fliore vigorous than Lee, who has difficulty speaking and walking and has rarefy left his home in the past two years He reportedly has a nerve dis ordeoas well as rheumatism. Returns fjrom 178 of South Korea's 187 counting districts gave Rhce 8,940.823 votes, Lee 7,797,940 and Chang 1.800.865. For reelection Rfite needed votes from only one-third of the nation's 11, 194,490 voters. His total was far above the 5.046,437 votes he polled in 1956, when he was opposed by another dead Demo crat and the leader of a since outlawed, party. Several hundred thousand inval id ballots were cast in Seoul,' ap parently for the dead Democratic presidential candidate, Chough Pyong-ok, whose name remained on the ballot. The total for Chough was not disclosed. Rhee and Lee will be inaugurat ed Aug. IS. Should Rhce die before then, Chang as incumbent vice president would succeed him and a new election would be called Rhee will be 85 on March 26. Rhce and Lee were in seclusion and issued no victory statements Chang angrily denounced the elec tion as "the worst we have ever seen" and said his party would file suit within 30 days seeking to invalidate the election. Chang said the Democrats have more than 1.000 exhibits showing fraud in the election, including ballot box stuffing and the ouster of hundreds of Democratic poll observers. Supporters 0 Of Dictator ; Rounded Up BUENOS AIRES (UPIi-Army led police strengthened by" a dec laration of internal war rounded up suspected terrorist supporters of ( justed ex-President Juan D. Peron in raids throughout the country today. The total number of prisoners taken in raids on Peronist hang outs was not announced, but it was believed to be in the huji- uieus. Former Foreign Minister Prominent prisoners were said to- include former Foreign Minis ter lldefonso Cavagna and Peron ist youth leader Hector 8, Lago- marsino. Unconfirmed reports said the unidentified "chief of the new terrorist movement" has been captured. Provincial police, placed under army command Tuesday, syn chronized their raids with the roundup of Peronist suspects the capital. President Arturo Frondizi's gov ernment, under army pressure to take cflcctive action against tcr ror-bombers in Argentina, invoked a law devised by Peron himself to declare "internal war" on his followers. Proclaims Grave Emergency A decree published Tuesday night proclaimed a grave emer- g e n c y" throughout Argentina making the nation subject to the "state of war" law passed while Peron was president. The decree makes terrorists subject to trial by military courts which could impose the death pen alty on those whose bombs have killed one or more persons. The maximum penalty for terrorism in the civil courts is seven years imprisonment. FRENCH EXECUTE REBEL ALGIERS (UPD Algerian rebel Harrir Djelloul Ben Mo- hamcd was executed Tuesday by a French firing squad for the murder of a forest ranger last September. Wm mm HMTilEtJ H8RSS FIG7UBE m w ups who is snn i DONNA ANDERSON l-iillllid I 111 V Lit Timet Tftnit riilttt lardot "A Wom.n Lik Setae'' "DENhflSTHE: MENACE"' f-rr 'jt wasn't out fault; He stopped when we were LOOKIN' ATA LADV WITH A CRAzy RATJ' Ortgon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Thursday' Max. Mln. Prep. Astoria Baker Bend Brookings Burns Chemult Chiloquin Eugene Lakevicw Med ford Newport North Bend Pendleton Portland Red Bluff Redmond Roseburg Salem The Dalles Eastern Oregon Partly cloudy through Thursday. Warmer. Low tonight 25-37; high Thursday 45-55. Western Oregon Partly cloudy through Thursday except local fog ard drizzle in extreme north late tonight and early Thursday. Low tonight 28-44; high Thursday 54-64 Southwesterly to westerly coastal Winds 5-15 miles an hour. Northern California Fair through Thursday. Warmer. Windy at times. Northern Oregon Beaches Cloudy Thursday wilh rain in aft ernoon. Gentle beach winds. Tem perature range 40-55. Grants Pass and vicinity Mostly fair and warmer through Thursday. Low tonight 35-40; high Thursday 60-65. 50 41 .12 43 29 T 44 29 54 42 .71 44 22 T 37 24 41 24 52 30 .34 44 24 54 38 .03 52 40 .32 54 45 .46 50 36 .01 52 42 .24 65 48 46 32 54 37 .25 53 39 .32 51 43 .03 WARNS OF CONCESSIONS FT. DIX, N.J. (UPD Army Secretary Wilber M. Brucker warned Tuesday against making concessions to the Soviet Union which, he said, continues to strive for the elimination of the free world. Brucker. here to dedicate the new Walsom Army Hospital, took the occasion to warn that Rus sian Ibreals had nut diminished but appear to have intensified. EXPOSED TO RADIATION PARIS I PI) Two employes of the French atomic center at nearby Sac-lay were treated for an overdose of radiation Tuesday in the first accident since the center opened. 2 StaAh DOORS OPEN 6:45 P.M. LOREN SOPHIA ANTHONY QUINN stte was LUSCIOUS (HUltWHlR IN Sz) Ugreate T USTiMmiCir.JNrurcDTuT GRWESTOATIONJLCIIiCUSTHRILtSi WHO rue WILD WIST WUP!( IN PINK TIGHTS ( THE nr.nwM ddTm"- OFJTWQ CONTINENTS ' WHUrcWILJBT ffWililiTACfi tHIWMn, OWtt TECHNICCfl-OR STEVE FORREST MARGARET O'BRIEH CDMUND LOWt RAMON NUVARRO O Fixture, Timet: .7:00 and 1(H)S inositol Comin9!!! "THE TINGLER" New Cracks Appear In GOP Unity By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) New cracks showed up today in the structure of Republican unity Vice President Richard M. Nixon has been laboring so hard to build. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) outlined in a Senate speech Tues day a GOP conservative's idea ol what the foreign policy program should be. It differed sharply with policies pursued by President Eis enhower. Goldwater, who heads the Re publican Senatorial Campaign Committee, had what he called hard counsel" for both Eiscnhow er and Nixon. In some quarters his blast was interpreted as in dicating conservatives will de mand a strong voice in writing the party platform foreign allairs plank. Goldwater advocated breaking off relations and negotiations with the Soviet Union. He proposed staging a "test of wills" which he said could end in war with the Soviets under conditions and in a location picked by the United states, lie urged risks on our terms, instead of on Communist terms." There were more Goldwater sug gestions. But these were enough to draw the fire of Sen. John Sher man Cooper (R-Ky), who calls himself a liberal. He said Gold- water's proposals sounded a lot like those which former Sen. Wil liam F. Knowland of California. once the GOP floor leader, used to make in the Senate. Cooper said in an interview that 'the worst thing that could happen right now would be to withdraw American recognition of Russia and to refuse to negotiate." 'I agree with Sen. Goldwater that world tensions are created only by the Russians and they could relax them at any time they chose," he said. "But the world is in danger because of those ten sions and the only possible way to settle the issues is by negotiation." Cooper said world opinion would not support American refusal to deal further with the Soviets, a view in which Sen. George D. Aiken iR-Vti concurred. Aiken, a Senate Foreign Rela tions committeeman who lists himself as a liberal, said he doesn't think Eisenhower or Nixon will follow Goldwater's advice on that score. I think the majority of Repub licans recognize that we are going to have to continue to deal with a nation with which we disagree," Aiken said. Goldwater admittedly aimed his remarks at Eisenhower. He said he had been writing his speech for some time and wanted to get it on the record before the forthcoming summit meeting. He said he would be happy if he im pressed Nixon with his ideas. In the vice president's camp the Goldwater speech apparently was regarded as another symptom of the conservative-liberal split in the party Nixon has been trying to heal. South Police Crackdown Oif Negroes By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .More than 500 Negroes have been arrested in the laraest mass M police (Ockdown since demon strations against segregated eat ing facilities in the South began a month and a half ago. The blanket arrests Tuesday led one state official of the Na tional Assn. for the Advancement of Colored , People to charge that police wer engaging in strong arm, Fascist-like tactics. Police at Orangeburg, S.C., used tear gas and fire hoses to quell an estimated 1.000 demonstrating students and arrested 350 of them. All were charged with breach of the peace and released under $10 bond each. At Atlanta, in segregation- minded Georgia, 77 Negroes and 2 white youths were jailed in connection with sit-ins at 10 down town cafeterias. The Negroes were released later on $300 bond each. The white youths were given 30-day jail terms. Among those arrested was the Rev. A. D. William King, a broth er of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Negro integration leader and exponent of passive resistance. Arrests also occurred in two other South Carolina cities and at St. Augustine, Fla. The Orangeburg arrests came after police tried to break up a protest march by about 1,000 students from South Carolina A. & T. and Claflin colleges. . The stu dents refused to disperse. Fire hoses were turned on about 300 of them and two tear gas canisters were exploded. The Rev. H. P. Sharper, a Flor ence Baptist minister and presi dent of the South Carolina NAACP Conference, said that because of "strong-arm. Fascist-like tactics" of peace officers "we conclude that appeal to federal agencies is our last resort." In other South Carolina develop ments, 70 Negroes were arrested at Rock Hill as they picketed City Hall. Ten Negroes were ar rested at Columbia and charged with trespassing at lunch counters in variety stores. The Atlanta demonstrations were described as the largest simultaneous sit-ins yet staged in the South. The protests were held at cafeterias in the state Capitol. City Hall, the Courthouse, in two buildings where there arc a num ber of federal agencies, at two railroad stations, two bus stations and a variety store. Many of those taking part came from the city's six Negro col leges. All the Negroes were charged wilh disorderly conduct and refusal to leave premises when asked to do so provisions of an act approved at the recent ses sion of the Georgia Legislature. In addition 18 of them were charged under a law originally drawn to halt Ku Klux Klan ac tivities and an old unlawful as sembly act. Absolute zero has been fixed at -459.6 degrees Fahrenheit. In the ory, absolute zero is reached when all molecular motion ceases. ShelterJf Highest Court Left Behind By Sen. Lusk Q SALEM. Ore. (Ar)-Hall Stoner Lusk, 76, is leaving the quiet and,. shelter of the Oregon Supreme Court, for the U.S. Senate. Lusk savs 'it should be exciting. The departure alter 23 years on the court, Lusk says, is not without a twinge of regret. "We're sheltered from public pressure, entirely different from the Legislature The only pressure that's brought to bear on us is the pressure of argument and of brief. "I realize, of course, that I'm getting, into an entirely different field of activity. And so I wel, come the chance to render public service there. Whether 1 can do it remains to be seen. 1 tope I can." Lusk, a life-long Democrat, was appointed by Republican Gov. .Mark Hatfield Tuesday to fill the vacancy left by the death of Sen. Richard Neuberger (D-Ore). For Lusk, the return to Wash ington, D.C., will be sort of a homecoming. He was born there and attended Georgetown University. Lusk came to Oregon in 1909 and set up a law practice in Portland. It was not a smashing success. Lusk says he went broke and "went to work stacking lumber." But the law practice was re sumed, successfully, and in 1930 he went on the State Circuit Court, to be named to the Su preme Court seven years later. He was last reelected to a six- year term, in 1956. The races for the court posi tions were nonpartisan. Lusk saiiP ne oniy once ran on tne Demo, 'cratic party ticket. HoaecallcH- "I ran for the Legislature in ltm l almost was elected. SomeO Democrats were nettled byn Lusk's appointment, saying Neuberter's widow, Maunne should have been given the post.' But Mrs. Neuberger, who has entered the race to succeed her husband for a six-year term, said the appointment was a sound one, and added: "Judg Lusk is ree! ognized as one of the most schol. any and capadle of Oregon's Su. preme Court judges." Lusk's Senate term will he t hort one, lasting only until h. November general election. Alter that, Lusk says he may return here to be a justice pro-tcm on the Supreme Court, PRISONER. SCRAPER MISSING MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPD- Officials at Kilby Prison disclosed today that burglar Herbert Under wood escaped Monday night by driving from the prison on a huge road scraping machine owned by the state. Underwood was seen maneuver. ing the unwieldy machine along a downtown street but neither ha nor the road scraper has been found. OSBURN HOTEL EUGENE, ORE. Mr.. J. K. F.rl.j Jo E.rltj Jr. Proprietor Thoroughly Modern BOTH one wears CONTACTS! Attuilly, both pictures tr of Dr. Nolo.' 13-yoir old slaughUr who has worn ontt Unsos 16 hours a day for tho past fwo years. And . . . sho woars dirk groon tinted tontsct lenses for swimming ind skiing. A dremetlc Illustration of the cosmetic nd psycho logical benefits to be derived from weiring contact lemes. why not Mncl the WH01E girl back to ichool? Convenient Credit We give :itvi SUmps. COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 730 Main St. TU 4-7121 n. Omar J. Nolti and Robirt Ptttrt Herald anbSeUJ$ Klamath Falla, Oregon Strvtnf Southern Orrgon and Northern California Published daily except Saturday bj Southern Oregon Publishing Company Main at ejpianaae Phone TUxedo 4-8111 FRANK JENKINS. Editor BILL JENKINS. Managing Id i tot FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor Ktttered aa second elm matter at the poit office at Klamath Falla. Oregon, on August 30, 1900. under act of Cnngreu, March S. 1879. Second -claw pontage paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon, and at additional maillnp offices. 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