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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1960)
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Mnnrlnv. March 2R. I Will PA GR 9 A" Phone Chief Gives Report LaPINK-C. H. Cloolling of the Rural Telephone Administration re ported on feasibility of telephone service to Kort Rock and Silver Lake communities at a board meeting here Monday following the annual meeting of Midstale elec tric Cooperative. Two proposals will he offered to the electric utility board and the dual community telephone board. One is based on serving 14(1 customers and the other. 120. The studies are based on a joint oper ation with the electric coopeia live, Goelting slated. Following a study by George M Larimer. Midslate's manager, and Robert Welly, The Dalles, consult ing engineer, the boards will con sider the two offers at a joint meeting. J. K. Graham of Silver Lake presided at the meeting. IV" ' ' "" ' """"" wr y 1 1 rmiu m, jM , pesearchers Find Clues Virus May Cause Cancer Ellis Predicts Tax Proposal RAKKR l.M Dean Ellis, state Tax Commission chairman, said Saturday Gov. Mark Hal field will recommend to the next Legislature a simplified net tax program which will cut substan tially the cost of compliance. He discussed the program at the closing session of a two-day Legislative Interim Tax Commit tee hearing. He said the governor's plan would ease the burden on the single individual taxpayer and bring into proportion the rale paid by this group. KM is estimated that the slate would gain "without costing our Individual citizens a cent" some seven to eight m-illion dollars net income through elimination of federal income lax deductions from slate income tax retrns. Raker and Union County larm groups urged the committee to consider relief from real property taxation. Harold Hursh of Huntington, Oregon Reclamation Congress president, called for legislation tn streamline the s t a I e's tax collections. Becomes Un-rctired PORTLAND (APi - John B. Alexander is coming out of re tirement again. And he says it's great. Alexander first retired in lO.iR. following 35 years of engineering work that started with his gradu ation from the University of Ore gon. Despite (hat retirement, he worked 2'i months in Ul.iH, some 7'j months the next year. Alexander now is on his way tn (he thing that brought him out of his lalest retirement: a job as coordinator of development of the Indus River Valley in Pakistan. TAKING AN ACTIVE PART In the quest for telephone service to Fort Rock and Silver Lake are, left to right, Edwin Eskelin, secretary, and Ken Graham, president, of the two community board, C. H. Goetting, Davis, California, represented the Rural Telephone Ad ministration in proposals last Monday. Robert Welty of The Dalles is consulting engineer for Midstate Electric Cooperative with which RTA would jointly operate. Parks Photo Hog Plan Started HKRMISTON i APi - A proj ect to raise tfi.ooo hogs a year for market has been started in a one-time housing project near here. Stafford Hansel!, a farmer and state representative from Uma tilla County, said he's stalling with 2011 sows, and hopes to reach production capacity in a few years. The hogs will be raised in the former Umatilla Housing Project, whose 57 buildings were pur chased by Hansell and his brother lor $30.30(1. The first book to he printed in the Western Hemisphere was printed in Mexico City in 1 344 By ALTON I1LAKKSI.KK LOl'ISVILLK, Ky. LAP' - Tup virus experts today presented now and surprising evidence that hu man cancers probably are caused by viruses. They also reported that some viruses, contrary to current scion tilic opinion, can produce sub stances which destroy cancers. If specific viruses can be pin pointed in human cancer; methods might be developed to prevent or control the di.-case. "Kvery man is a walking museum of nvany viruses." Dr. .Jerome T. Syverton of the Uni versity of Minnesota told a sem inar lor science writers sponsored by the American Cancer Society. Man harbors more than viruses, mostly just recently de tected, and "we are not sure what many of them do." he said. But "now we believe that some human cancers must be caused by viruses." Dr. Sarah Stewart ot the National Cancer Institute. Rethesda. Md.. reported that extracts from two human cancers, and f r o m the urine of three children with can cer have produced curious, cancer-like growth changes in healthy human cells grown in laboratory dishes. There are grounds to suspect- but no proof yet-that the ex I Dr. Mcrnard Rnody of Scion, traded from 11 acts cmun contain a virus. , ..iU College. South Orange, N'.J irus She also has lound that causing leukemia in mice can in duce cancers in other types ot ani mals. Humans handling the can cerous mice have been tound to have antibodies against the virus, indicating they had been mtecled with it but had resisted it. "There are tanlali.ing leads" new now to incriminate v iruses in hu man cancers, said Dr. Wendell M Stanley. Nobel Prize winner ol the University ot California. Now there is evidence for a theory that some viruses may lie sleeping innocently in the body un til triggered into cancerous growth by some insult or injury or even by age. animal cancers. caused by viruses, a substance said vaccination with viruses used which killed the cancer viruses against human smallpox had killed Dr. Jorgen Kogh of the NeJ cancer cells and arifsted mouse, l k stale Health Department, cancels so that vaccin.ucd can- Albany. 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