Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 21, 1960, Page 1, Image 1

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    U.OF 05E.UBRART
KEf SPAPSR S5CTI0I
COIP.
Envoy Gets Big Welcome;
Cuba Fires New Charges
HAVANA (AP)-U.S. Ambassa
dor Philip Bonsai got a cheering
welcome back from 500 Cubans
Sunday but ran into a new bar
rage of anti-American blasts
from two top Castro government
officials.
Arriving with a smile, the
Chiang Given
Rousing Vote
For 3rd Term
TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) Gen
eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek was
reelected without opposition today
in a third six-year term as presi
dent of Nationalist China.
Flags of the republic blossomed
In Taipei. Firecracker barrages
were set off throughout the coun
try.
The National Assembly, sitting
as the nation's electoral college,
gave the 73-year-old leader a rous
ing 1,481 votes out of 1,504 ballots
cast. The remaining 28 ballots
were blank an anti-Chiang ex
pression and were declared in
valid.
This amounted to 98.14 per cent
of the ballots. Chiang won 88 per
cent of the vote when he was first
elected at Nanking in 1948 and 95
per cent in Taipei in 1954.
As an unopposed candidate, he
needed only 789 votes for election,
As soon a this number was
reached, announcement of the re
election was broadcast over the
nation's radios.
The National Assembly will
meet again Tuesday to elect Vice
President Chen Cheng, 62, to his
second term. He also is unop
posed.
The president and his running
mate will be inaugurated on May
20.
The Nationalist constitution pro
hibits a third term for the presi
dent and vice president, but ir
order to keep Chiang in office
the prohibition was suspended un
til the national regime recaptures
the Communist-held mainland.
Chiang has been top man in
China since the death in 1925 of
Dr. Sun Yat-sen, founder of the
republic of China.
In the event of Chiang's death
or incapacity, Chen will auto
matically succeed to the prcsi
dency for the remainder of the
unexpired term. He would also be
come leader of the Kuomintang,
the ruling party, of which he has
been deputy leader since 1957.
Flying Saucer
Info Debated
WASHINGTON (AP) The Air
Force was accused of giving mis
leading information about a mys
terious round flying object re
ported sighted Sept. 24, 1959, at
Redmond, Ore.
This was alleged Saturday by
the National Investigations Com
mittee on Aerial Phenomena,
private committee dedicated to
further investigation of unidenti
fied flying objects.
The committee released a letter
from the Air Force saying the air
technical center carried the inci
dent on its records as "insuffi
cicnt information" with the opin
ion it probably was a balloon.
Marine Maj. Donald E. Keyhoe
(ret.), the committee director,
said the Federal Aviation Agency
logs disproved this. He said, "The
Air Force was fully aware that
its own and the FAA evidence
proved this was some unknown
machine under intelligent con
trol."
The committee, he said, has
written Air Force Secretary Dud
ley Sharp, asking for an invest!
gation of "this release of mislead
ing information."
"We believe that the public
Interest is best served by honest
official statements disclosing the
full details in all UFO cases
investigated by the U.S. Air Force
and that concealing the facts will
only arouse public suspicion and
possibly harm," he said.
The Air Force has taken the
position that most flying saucer
reports can be explained as nat
ural phenomena, although it is not
able to explain a few. It says
there is no evidence to confirm
that they are interplanetary space
ships.
Leftists Defeated
COLOMBO. Ceylon AP For
mer Prime Minister Dudley Sena
nayake today told Gov. Gen. Sir
Oliver Goonetillcke he is ready to
form a new government for Cey
lon.
The British-educated Senanay-
ake's conservative United Nation
al party won only 50 seats in the
151 lower house in Saturday's par
Limentary elections, but it was
the biggest winner.
The leftists took a beating in the
lection.
American envoy made no mention
of finding the official atmosphere
as hostile as when he left Havana
in a protest two months ago.
"I am glad to be here," Bonsai
told, an airport crowd that in
cluded some foreign diplomats.
Prime Minister' Fidel Castro's gov
ernment did not send an official
representative, but this was not
unusual.
Bonsai said he would "do every
thing possible" to improve Cuban
American relations, now at a dan
gerously low ebb.
Only a few hours before the am
bassador's plane landed, Cuba's
economic czar, extreme leftist
Ernesto Guevara, told a radio au
dience the nation faces "eco
nomic war" with the United States.
Guevara hailed the trade agree
ment Fidel Castro signed recent
ly with the Soviet Union as the
best trade pact Cuba has ever
made. Guevara insisted it had no
political implications.
Guevara asserted that American
dollars are not really important to
Cuba. He said their only value is
for purchases abroad and Cuba
can do that with sugar. Cuba s
trade pact wilji the Soviet Union
calls for Soviet purchase f five
million tons of sugar in the next
five years. One fifth of it, about
75 million dollars worth, will be
paid in cash, the rest in goods.
Another blast charging the
United States with economic ag
gression came trom President Os
valdo Dorticos.
The Cuban people will die in
revolutionary trenches" rather
than submit through hunger to
U.S. economic aggression, the
president told a crowd of 17,000
at a rally to raise funds for arms
and planes.
The crowd of 17,000 chipped in
250,000 pesos $250,000 at the of
ficial rate in Cuba but a lot less
on the world money market and
thunderously cheered Dorticos
assertion that Cuba would buy
arms and planes "from whatever
country makes and sells them.'
There have been unconfirmed
reports here that Cuba already
has received M1G17S from Com
munist Czechoslovakia.
Dorticos also denounced the In
ter-American Press Assn., whose
directors in a report Sunday said
that the Cuban press, with two
exceptions, is "so intimidated it
cannot be considered a free
press."
The Cuban president charged
the IAPA was an "instrument of
monopolistic and privileged in
terests" of the United States.
Bonsai's return to Cuba op
posed by some U.S. congressmen
came generally as a surprise to
the American colony in Havana
Some Americans here claimed it
would be interpreted as weakness
on the part of the U.S. govern
ment. MacArthur Okay
After Surgery
NEW YORK (UPI) General
of the Army Douglas MacArthur
was resting comfortably today, in
"excellent condition" recuperating
from Saturday's operation for re
moval of his prostate gland.
Lenox Hill Hospital said the 80-
year-old general s condition was
so good 24 hours alter surgery
that no new medical bulletin
would be issued until later today.
MacArthur entered the hospital
Jan. 29, three days after his
birthday, suffering from a urolog-
ical infection due to a blockage of
the urinary tract. The blockage
was blamed on an enlarged pros
tate, and surgery was decided up
on more than a month ago. Satur
day's operation was not an emer
gency.
Woman Tells Of Horrors
Of Near Brush With Deafh
COTTAGE GROVE, Ore. (AP)-i
Her eye blackened, her body
bruised and her voice hardly a
whisper, Mrs. "Loyal Burns, 29,
sat up in her hospital bed here
Sunday and told of a 13-hour brush
with death.
The 5-foot brunette mother of
six spent 13 hours trapped over
night, Thursday, inside her over
turned and nearly water-filled car
clinging to safety belt rings on
the floor to hold her head up to
four inches of air space.
Her convertible had hurtled
from old U. S. Highway 99, hit a
large maple tree and flipped over
into the icy waters of Elk Creek.
125 feet below the road level. The
creek water, swollen by Coast
Range snow melt, swirled into the
car.
Mrs. Burns said all through the
night she thought she heard cars
and trucks passing on the winding
road above, although the roaring
water nearly drowned out the
sound.
She said she thought of diving
down to find a way out under the
car, but feared she would surely
drown if she did. She made an
unsuccessful attempt to kick out
a window.
What, a reporter asked, gave
her tile will to cling to the rings:
iwSfoBH 1 1 - !
Price Five Cents 14 Pages
Herter Says
Castro Ideas
Follow Reds
WASHINGTON (UPI) Secre
tary of State Christian A. Herter
says Premier Fidel Castro's Cu
ban regime appears to follow a
Communist pattern in some of its
actions.
Herter also said Communist
sympathizers hold high govern
ment positions but added that "I
don't think anyone could say af
firmatively that Cuba is Commu
nist at the present time."
He made the statements in a
recorded interview with Sen. Lev
crett Saltonstall (R-Mass.) The
program was recorded before the
State Department announced Fri
day that U.S. Ambassador Philip
Bonsai would return to Cuba.
Bonsai went back to Havana
Sunday in a new effort to im
prove U.S. -Cuban relations. He
was recalled Jan. 22 in protest
against attacks on him and this
country by Cuban officials.
Herter said Castro's attitude to
ward the United States has been
"very difficult for us to take be
cause v,e have been subject to in-nut-.idocs
and accusations which
really required us, as you know,
to withdraw our ambassador from
Cuba."
The secretary declared that the
United States was very sympa
thetic to the aims of the Castro
revolution. He said this ''-country
never has objected to Castro's
land reform law, but does insist
that U.S. owners be compensated
for property taken from them.
Herter also commented that he
thought Cuba "got the short end'
of its recent economic pact with
the Soviet Union but he did not
explain why.
On other matters, he:
W a r n e d against expecting
dramatic results from the Big
Four summit conference begin
ning May 16 at Paris.
Predicted a united Western
front oh Germany and other is
sues at the conference.
Reiterated that the United
Stales would not agree to any dis
armament proposals which fail to
provide for effective control jr hi-
spection to guard against cheat
ing.
Police Study
Camera Clue
' STARVED ROCK STATE
PARK. 111. (UPI) - The killer
of three socially prominent Chica
go women may have been photo
graphed by one of his victims
moments before he struck, police
said today.
Police based their hopes for a
lead to the psychopathic killer on
one of four color pictures taken
by Mrs. Lillian Oetting just be
fore she and two other society
matrons were bludgeoned to death
in Starved Rock State Park a
week ago today.
The last picture taken by Mrs.
Oetting shows a tree in the back
ground with a strange shape
which might be that of a man
hiding behind the trunk, police
said.
Authorities rushed the film to a
Chicago film laboratory where it
was to be enlarged as much as
possible to see if it actually
showed a man trying to conceal
himself.
She replied: "I have six children.
That's reason enough. And I have
a husband that's about the best
reason."
Jeanne Burns said she felt God
was with 'her through the long,
cold night. "He (God) has been
real good to me that's all 1 can
say."
She said she didn't remember
going off the road, she was
hysterical when pulled from the
wrecked automobile.
State Patrolman George Scheer
came down once and was unable
to get the door open, so he went
to town for help. Mrs. Burns
didn't remember that. Scheer had
her husband with him when he
discovered the car, but sent him
home to stay with the six kids,
who had been alone. Both be
lieved Mrs. Burns undoubtedly
was dead.
The second time Scheer waded
out into the waist-deep water and
pried open the door he heard a
faint cry of help and an arm
reached out. "It's the darndest
shock I've ever had in my life.
Just like a ghost jumping out at
you.
Mrs. Burns had suffered shock
and exposure but no broken
bones. She took a few steps Satur
day, the first since the Friday
morning rescue.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON,
I 1
J-t '-'-'.'": .771 L'fci rJ T3
A BRONZE PLAQUE was unveiled at the dedication ceremonies at the Klamath Falls Ter
minal building Sunday afternoon before a large crowd. Here, Mayor Lawrence Slater re
moves the covering from the plaque, officially dedicating the modernistic facility. In his
dedication speech Mayor Slater pointed out the importance of the airport to the entire
area, listing the airport as covering more than 900 acres and valued at many millions of
dollars. Out-of-city speakers on the program included Charles Drew, FAA district en
gineer; Tom Croson, vice president of West Coast Airlines and Earl Snyder, state di
rector of aeronautics. Col. Jack Williams, Kingsley Field commander; officials of the Ore
gon Pilots Association, Bill Graham, president of the Klamath County Chamber of Com
merce, and others also spoka on the dedication program.
Nazi Prison
Survivors
Hold Reunion
NEW YORK (AP)-On the sur
face, the gathering Sunday night
in a Bronx hotel looked like any
other reunion clusters of men in
a .smoke-clouded room shouting
happy greetings, slapping one an
other on the back, and drinking
toasts.
Inside their sleeves, each of the
men wore the mark of their bond
a number tattooed in blue on
the left forearm.
.The numbers were burned there
more than 15 years ago when the
men were prisoners at Auschwitz-
Buna in Poland, one of the most
horrible Nazi concentration
camps.
"They didn't know our names,
recalled Leon Kcrstein, who now
owns a butcher shop in Brooklyn.
They called us by numbers."
Kerstein's mother, father, six
brothers and two sisters were ex
terminated in Nazi concentration
camps.
The gathering was the first
and probably the last reunion of
the former prisoners. Some of
them carried photos showing young
cadaverously thin men with shav
en heads in blue and white
striped uniforms. The pictures
were of themselves as slave la
borers in 1945.
Most of the men were in their
30s and 40s. Many had entered
the concentration camp as teen
agers. Those who survived had to be
young, said Ernest w. Michael
chairman of the dinner. "If you
were old, you didn't stand a
chance."
Revolt Fails
In Bolivia
LA PAZ," Bolivia (AP) - Bo-
livia's capital was back to normal
today and the government of
President Hcrnan Siles Zuazo in
complete control after crushing
police revolt.
Sixteen persons were killed and
106 wounded in sharp fighting Sat
urday between a police regiment
led by Col. Ilermogenes Rios Led
ezma and government forces.
Ledezma fled and escaped cap
ture. His second in command, Col
Burgos Navia, was slain in the
five-hour battle.
The motive for the revolt was
not clear.
But President Siles said it was
blood proof" of the government's
charge two weeks ago that former
President Enrique Hertzog was
conspiring with former tin mag
nate Carlos Victor A r a m a y o
against the Socialist-inclined gov
ernment.
Red China, Nepal
Sign Agreement
TOKYO (AP) Communist
China announced today it has
signed a border agreement and
economic aid program with the
Himalayan kingdom of Nepal.
Peiping radio said Chinese Pre
mier Chou En-lai and visiting Pre
mier M. A. Koirala of Nepal
signed the document. No details
were disclosed.
MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1960
BACHELORS: TAKE NOTE
LONDON (UPI) Edward G.
Carter, 39, was denied a divorce
when he claimed his wife
lapped his face In front of his
stepmother, had a temper tan
trum in the presence of his
brothers, hid the tea and sugar
from him and threw a plant pot
at him during their first 12
months of marriage.
"This It Just the ordinary wear
and tear of married life," said
the judge.
Navy Seeking
Collision Clue
NORFOLK, ' Va: (AP) - 11c
Navy today sought the reason for
a baffling, clear-night collision In
which a Swedish freighter
rammed a destroyer escort and
almost tore it in two.
Two reservist crewmen of the
USS Darby died and another was
seriously injured when the prow
of the SS Soya-Atlantic knifed into
the naval vessel Saturday at the
mouth of Chesapeake Bay.
The weather was clear and the
captain of the Darby reportedly
was on the bridge at the time.
Lawyers for the Soya-Atlantic,
which had been outbound for
Venezuela, said the merchant ship
came at the Darby from the star
board side, was showing her port
light,' and that the Darby's task
was "to keep out of the way."
The Navy, however, detained
the slightly damaged freighter un
til it can complete an inquiry by
a special board that began after
the Darby was towed into dry-
dock before dawn Sunday.
Aboard the destroyer escort as
she returned from a 16-day train
ing cruise with 120-odd reservists
were Rep. James E. Van Zandt
IR-Pa), Assistant Navy Secretary
Richard Jackson, and the com
mander of naval reserves, Rear
Adm. Robert T. S. Keith.
The Soya-Atlantic, a 16-266-ton
tanker and ore carrier, was emp
ty except for 10,000 tons of wa
ter ballast in her oil tanks.
Those killed were enlisted men
Charles Edward Crandall, 37, of
Westminster, Md., and Thomas
Edward Johnson, 50, of Annapo
lis, Md., both navat reservists.
James D. Trusty, 27, of Balti
more, one of 36 Tegular Navy
crewmen on the Darby, was hos
pitalized with a possible fracture
of the right knee.
De Gaulle Denies
Session Request
PARIS (UPI) President
Charles de Gaulle s refusal to
summon Parliament into session
on farm problems stirred up
political storm among the Social
ists today 48 hours before Soviet
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's
arrival.
Former Premier Guy Millet, So
cialist party chief, summoned
meeting of his party leadership
for Tuesday. There were reports
he might call an emergency na
tional party convention.
The conservative daily newspa
per Figaro said De Gaulle's in
creasing trend toward one man
rule had "pushed the Socialist
party. . .toward the Communists,
In all political circles there was
some indignation at De Gaulle
Some rightwing politicians feared
there was growing danger of a
"popular front" which the Com
munists have sought for so long.
Telephone TU 4-81 1 1
Red Proposal
On Testing
Given Study
GENEVA (AP) New Soviet
proposals tor a partial ban on nu
clear weapon tests came under
close American and British study
today. The two Western powers
sought enlightenment on safety
provisions which the Soviets main
tain are contained in their plan.
The Soviet government proposed
Saturday that the three powers
enter into a treaty banning all
atomic and hydrogen weapon, tests
except small underground bldsts
This would be accompanied by
moratorium on the excluded un
derground tests while a joint sci
entific study of this difficult prob
lem was undertaken.
Washington and London want to
know exactly what the Soviet gov
ernment has in mind to guard
against a violation of the mora
torium.
The partial ban was first pro
posed by President Eisenhower
Feb. 11. Western sources said that
if the Soviets actually favor safety
provisions acceptable to the U.S.
and British governments, the 17-month-old
nuclear test ban con
ference may be on the threshold
of achieving a treaty.
After introducing the Soviet pro
posal, Soviet delegate Semyon K.
Tsarapkin told the Western dele
gates his government would al
low some on-site inspections to
guard against the small under
ground explosions.
The Soviets said their plan also
included acceptance of a Western
proposal for joint East-West sci
cntific studies of ways to detect
the small underground blasts,
which the West says give seismic
readings that cannot be distin
guished from those given by the
numerous small earthquakes the
earth experiences constantly.
House Argues Law Change,
Government Health Plan "
WASHINGTON (API A party
splitting battle, with organized
labor taking an active hand, starts
in the House this week over pro
posals to add government-paid
health care to social security cov
erage.
After a week of preliminary dis
cussions, the House Ways and
Means Committee gets down to
cases Wednesday when it re
ceives administration recommen
dations for social security law re
vision from Secretary of Welfare
Arthur S. Flemming.
There were weekend indications
these may include some form of
government payments for health
care of older persons.
Many influential Republicans as
well as conservative Democrats in
the House have opposed a plan
advocated by Rep. Aime J.
Forand (D-RI). This plan is
backed by labor union forces
headed by ' President Walter
Reuther of the United Auto Work
ers, an AFL-CIO vice president.
Strong conservative opposition
could be expected also to any administration-backed
health plan,
and the American Medical Assn.
is actively fighting any such pro
posal.
On the other side are election.
year political pressures for broad
Africans Storm Station;
Police Fire Into Crowd
VEREEN1GING, South Africa
(AP) Police opened fire on 12,.
000 African Negroes besieging a
police slation today. Brig. C. J.
Els of the Witwalcrsrand police
said 30 Negroes were killed and
at least 100 wounded.
The police station was at
Sharpeville, near Vcrecniging, 30
miles south of Johannesburg,
where police called in jet fighters
and armored cars in an effort lo
disperse thousands demonstrating
against South African pass laws.
Els said that his figure of dead
was conservative.
Witnesses saw at least 11 ambu
lances leaving the scene for hos
pitals, but hospital authorities re
fused information.
About 25 police were besieged
inside the police station by the
Africans. When the Africans be
gan to stone the station, the police
opened fire.
The rioting was part of the start
of a Negro passive resistance
campaign to lie up the nation's
commerce and industry.
Demonstrators in Johannesburg,
Capetown and other cities
inarched to police stations with
out Ihcir passes and dared police
to arrest them.
Drastic measures were taken in
Vereeniging after tear gas failed
to break up the crowd, resulting
the killing of one African
leader and the wounding ot at
least four others. The mob had
tossed stones and injured several
policemen.
Then thousands of men and
women, shouting the nationalist
cry "Afrika," besieged Sharpe
ville police station. Sharpeville is
a native location where thousands
of black Africans live.
Jet aircraft screamed down in
an attempt to frighten away the
Africans. At Bophelong, which lies
Weather
Klamath Falls and vicinity
Fair except for some high rleuds.
Highs (8-73; low tonight 30-35.
High Sunday 73
Low last night 29
Prccip. past 24 hours 0
Since Oct, 1 S.9S
Same period last year 3.94
Northern California Fair except
fog and local drizzle near the
coast; cooler Tuesday.
Five Day Forecasts:
Eastern Oregon Above normal
temperatures, cooling to near or
below normal Wednesday, er Tburs
day. Showery periods after Wednos.
day. Total precipitation mora than
normal, maximum temperatures
mostly In 60s or 70s, cooling lo
50s afternoons.
Northern California No precipi
tation except rain likely In north
portion latter half of week; tern
pcratures near or above normal,
Quake Rocks
North Japan
TOKYO (AP) - An earthquake
centered in the Pacific Ocean
rocked northern Japan today and
sent a small tidal wave into sev
eral coastal cities, but no major
damage was reported.
The Central . Meteorological
Agency said the epicenter was in
the Pacific about 350 miles east
of Tokyo. The quake was barely
felt in the capital.
"If the center of the quake had
been on land," an official said,
"it might have caused consider
able damage."
Seismic stations in Britain, the
Soviet Union and Honolulu re
ported registering an intense
quake.
ening social security benefits.
rorand said today he will try
to by-pass blouse leaders and the
Ways and Means Committee if
necessary to bring his government
old age hospitalization bill directly
to the floor.
Forand gave the Ways and
Means oCommittee an April 1 ul
timatum, saying: "I have served
notice that I will file a discharge
petition by April 1 if I don't get
some favorable action on my bill
One way or another, I'm going
to get a vote this session.
Signatures of a majority of the
i;i nousc memocrs would Be nec
essary to bring the issue directly
to a floor vote without committee
action.
Forand's bill would provide up
to 120 days a year of government-
paid hospital and nursing home
care for old-age social security
pensioners. It would be financed
by an additional 15 per cent social
security payroll tax.
The Ways and Means Commit
tee is considering a number of
other social security law revisions
chief among them being repeal
of the requirement that disabled
workers must be 50 years old be
fore they can qualify for disability
benefits. This faces little or so
opposition.
nearby, police mad baton
charges and used tear gas against
demonstrators.
Police described the situation as
tense and sent armored cars to
patrol African townships.
Lunch Strike
Boycotts Are
Intensified
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The eighth week of Negro anti
segregation demonstrations began
in tiic South Iwiay with no sign
of an immediate solution.
Authorities appeared more than
ever determined to maintain law
and order. Negroes especially
ihe younger ones showed grow
ing impatience with the slowness
of court action in furthering
equality.
Boycotting of stores operating
segregated lunch counters was
proposed by Negro groups In Sa
vannah. Ga., and Lynchburg, Va.
At Durham, N.C., the Rev.
Douglas E. Moore announced
lunch counter protest leaders will
meet in Raleigh April 15-17.
In Florida Gov. LcRoy Collins
said he thought it was "unfair and
morally wrong" for a department
store owner not to allow Negroes
lo patronize one part of the store
while being permitted to trade in
other sections.
The governor delivered a state
wide radio and television addrou
Sunday to try to calm racial ten
sions stemming from sitdowns in
several Florida cities.
Collins conceded the department
store owner has a legal right ts
single out one department "and
say he docs not want or will not
allow Negroes to patronize that
one department. But I still don't
think he can square that right
with moral, simple justice."
At Charlotte, N.C., Thurgood
Marshall, chief counsel of the Na
tional Assn. For Advancement of
Colored People, said he believed
people taking part in sitdown
demonstrations cannot rightfully
be convicted of trespassing. Ha
conceded it is uncertain whether
a store owner can be required by
law to serve Negroes as well as
white persons.
Nation finds
Spring Chilly
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Spring is off to a slow start in
most of the eastern half of the
nation.
Although skies were clear in
most areas, it was chilly as far
south as northern sections of Flo
rida on the first full day of tha
new season, which started official
ly at 9:43 a. m. Eastern Standard
Time Sunday.
With a heavy snow covering
over wide areas in the Midwest,
temperatures were below freezing
in most of the north central region
and edged near zero in some
areas. The coldest air was cen
tered around the upper Mississippi
Valley, with a low of 6 above in
Alexandria, Minn.
The mercury dipped to 36 above
i Tallahassee, Fla., and it was
freezing in Atlanta and Louisville
and smany other Southern cities.
Miami's early morning low was in
Ihe 50s. Light snow fell in Norfolk,
Va.
Snow flurries fell in the cold air
from central Illinois southeast
ward to the Appalachians, north
eastward into New York and west
ward into lower Michigan.
Temperatures were near or ,
above seasonal levels in most of
the western areas, with the warm
est weather in interior sections of
California and the desert regions
of Arizona. Readings were iti the
60s and 70s after Sunday's high
of 96 in Yuma, Ariz., and a record
springtime mark of 89 in Fresno,
Calif.
Chou To Visit
India April 19 9
NEW DELHI (AP) - Premier
Cfiou En-lai of Communist China
will arrive in New Delhi April 19
for talks with Prime Minister
Nehru on the border dispute be
tween India and Red China.
Nehru told the lower house of
Parliament Chou would remain in
New Delhi until April 25. Nehru
had suggested April 20 as a suit
able date to begin the talks on tha
1,000 square miles of disputed
territory in the Himalayas.
Nehru has already said h
doubts that the conference will
produce any immediate solution
of the border dispute.
TO VISIT ISRAEL
STUTTGART, Germany (UPD-
Former West German President
Theodore Heuss will make a three
week visit to Israel early next
month at the official invitation of
tha Israeli government, It wai
learned today.