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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1960)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AMI NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Fridav, A pril 1. 1!)fi0 ROBERT TERRY, Navy pho tographer second class, is spending 20 days of leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Austin Terry of Tule lake. He will report for 1 8 months of duty in Guam when his leave is over. He will report to Alameda Na val Air Station. Beat Hangout Closes Down In Venice VENICE, Calif. 'APl-The Gas House is silent today tone I he clinking coffee cups and banging bongo drums. The controversial heachlion! hangout for bcalniks has reached the end. man. the living end. In short, it's out of business. The sad news was relayed Thursday by co-owner Eric Nord. who blamed the closing on pres sure Irom outraged citizens and window-smashing vandals. He and co-owner Lawrence Lip ton are looking lor annlher South ern California site where the beard-and-sandal set can gel away from it all. The closing ended a brief but lively chapler in the history of this oilwell si lidded beach district on the western fringe of Los Angeles. After the beats moved in cn masse last summer, the squares ' organized. They declared the Gas House was a gathering place for oddballs and all sorts of improper things were going on inside. Be sides, they said, the Gas House was lowering property values. The heats counterattacked with gestures of civic amiability de signed to win over squares: They painted abstracts on sidewalks and offered to decorate garbage cans in similar aesthetic fashion. As for lowering properly values, they claimed Venice long had been a civic eyesore with scum-infested canals and decaying buildings. The beats said they were giving the town a little class. Nord summed up the heals' case at a police commission hear ing, contending the world isn't ready for the peaceful message of bongo drums. Bui whether the world is ready, one thing's apparent Venice isn't. Ends Saturday! Mi;i:l:l:li:fH - .Til:lii I SIC Mineoi" 1 Ftotuit Tinwi Friday 7:00 t 10:21 Saturday 3:00 . 6:31 and 10:05 - . - VVIEilL REBELS 'ia ...k don . els'" ' rvJ wrong) Fcaluro Timl Friday Soturdoy 1:30 5:00 It's The IU V w OnemaScopE " The surprise ending may knock you out of your seatl EDMONO O'BRIEN PLUS "FSTi t France Holds 2nd Blast Under Nikita's Proboscis PAItlS 'API Krance today hell1 its second nuclear test explosit under the nose of Soviet Frcmici Nikila Khrushchev. The blast in the western Sahara constituted another uoinlei French rebuff lor. the Soviet Pre micr, meeling loday and Salnrda.' with President Charles de Gaulli outside Paris for linal talks Khrushchev leaves lor Moscow Sunday. In the past two days Khrushchc had twice spoken out against lurlher nuclear explosions by any nation, including France. De Gaulle in effect rejected the So wet Premier' call, just as he earlier contradicted Khrushchev's contention that West Germany is bent on new aggression to avenge the World War II defeat. The explosion also underlined De Gaulle's insistence that the So viet L'mon as well as the Western allies recognize France as their equal in world councils. There was no immediate public reaction Irom Khrushchev, who was secluded with De Gaulle at Itainbouillct, the presidential chateau outside Paria. Technical, scicntitic or cultural agreements may be announced he lore Khrushchev ends his 11-day state visit. But no French-Soviet political accord is expected. The Soviet Premier hinself said alter Red 'Huks' Kill Three In Philippines MANILA U'PIl - Communist "Huks" killed three persons and wounded another today in the lirst serious outbreak ol Communist vio lence in several years. i iic i ii i uppiiiLs cuiisiauiuary im- mcuiaieiy ordered a mannunt in Pampanga Province, scene of some of the bloodiest lighting ol the Communist "link'1 uprisings during t lie early l'.)50's. Killed in the ambush this morn ing were wealthy landowner Jose Carrillo of San Luis. Pampanga. his wile. Carmen, and Miss Mari ana Salas. a 'i.Vyear-old school teacher ol Apalil, Pampanga. A l!l-year-old daughter ol the Carrillos survived by pretending she was dead. She was later found alive but wounded. The victims were close relatives of Filipino actress Cely Carrillo who is presently appearing in New Vork in the "Flower Drum stong." Colonel Hicardo Papa. Philip pine Constabulary Pampanga com mander, said the motive was deli nitely established as vengeance. Carrillo was known to have co operated with ttie constabulary in undercover work against the Huks" in the area. Papa ordered in constabulary reinforcements and dog teams in n attempt to track down the link" amhushers estimated at approximately fivje men. Doors Op.n Tonira 6:45 P.M. ......Huua jbt, a, jun, Irom 12:4 P.M. - f 1 j l:llllillk-rTfmTTTTll SUSAN JAMES Kohner-Darren 8:55 Only and 8:35 V f'J - - JULIE LARAINE -LONDON -DAY ACTION CO-HIT! GUN BATTLE I A I mUNIKKKl I drill MAMIE VAN OORtN Ml w tAYINlWM mm tunc a , 'lis first talks in Paris last week hat he and Do Gaulle were "at ippositc poles" on international natters, and they were likely to emain there. De Gaulle's government an ;ounced that the nuclear blast ust belore dawn at the Reggane est site 1.500 miles south of Oran. was successlul and all safety pre cautions were taken. A communique said the device exploded was a Plutonium bomb of much smaller size than the first French plutonium bomb set oil Feb. 13 and of "limited pow cr." The lirst bomb had a force of about 70.O0O tons of TNT, about hrec times more powerful than the lirst U.S. atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 11)45, I he bomb presumably was mounted on a steel tower-, as the lirst one was, and the government indicated France still dies not have an atomic device portable enough to be dropped Irom a plane or propelled by a missile. The communique said the sec ond bomb "constituted a step to ward miniaturization with the ob jective ol preparing an operational weapon." ft was lurther disclosed that a new system was used to create the "critical mass" which occurs when the components oi the bomb combine to produce the blast. The government said the quantities used in accomplishing this were considerabely less than those used in the earlier bomb. The second French explosion was certain to arouse a new storm of protest from African and Asian nations contending- that it. endan gered human lite and luturc gen erations by putting more radio active matter into the atmosphere. The French brushed aside such arguments before their lirst test and a U.N. Assembly resolution laM fall urging them to call olf the lirst blast. The French said the lest site was well away from centers of population and that radioactive byproducts would be salely dissipated in the upper at mosphere. Alter the firsl explosion, the French government announced it would push ahead with its pro- ram ol atomic weapon develop ment The French also have said Ihey would not be bound by any agreement for a nuclear test ban that might be reached by the United States, Britain and the So viet Union at their Geneva talks until agreement also was reached on worldwide nuclear disarma menl. I he second French lest was no surprise. Weather experts had ad vised that if the explosion was not held before the start of the Sa hara summer in May. the .seasonal shift in the prevailing winds would force postponement until fall. Aircraft were warned to stay clear of the test area early Thurs day, but the ban was canceled alter only three hours in ellect. Later in the day. flights in the area were forbidden alter -M5 a.m. today. The explosion was set off 3(1 minutes alter that time. Fuse Blown By Hotel PHILADKLPIIIA (AD - The Sheralon Hotel blew a (use trying lo help census takers. The hotel placed a U.S. census form into each guest's mail box Thursday night. Then it switched on lights in individual rooms, in dicating each guest hail a mes sage. The load was too much, and a fuse blew. SSSCCfta ,. ,,,- JAM SPIEGEL wiwsts - ! ELIZABETH : KATHARINE TAYLOR HEPBURN CLIFT i.s ifl iiriMf .. . Inul lusro on the pi ay sy ITENNESSEE -WILLIAMS : K THIS IS STRICTLY 5 ADULT FILM & h FARE Poii r'f lively no per- ion under 18 gf yean of age y will be ad it mitted lo Suddenly Last Summer, re- V p gardlcn by whom he may be oc- y eompanied. I Doort Opn Tonitt 4:45 Ftaturt 7:25 9:55 Continuous Satur 4ar Fiom 12:45. Ftalurt; 1:50 4:20 . 4:55 - 9.2 "DENNIS THE MENACE" till Jr; rTihUS fi Art? tr Jin 'V-VPTJ'-T M- ' .'toADy YWSift$im&R...XlDl SUR H'iSHVJUU'EREONEI' 'Gremlins' Causing Snafu To Remote Control TV Sets NEW YORK (AP) Remote control television is a lazy man's delight. Without stirring Irom his easy chair, he pushed a button and the TV set across the room changes channels, another jab lowers the sound or shuts off the set. But gremlins those invisible imps that sometimes heckle scicn titic marvels have been causing some mischief without waiting for April Fool's Day. For example, a housewife in the Leukemia Said Caused By Virus LOUISVILLE, Ky. (LTD A scientist loday revealed what he considered to be conclusive proof that leukemia, a uniformly fatal hlood cancer of human beings, is caused by a virus. His proof contained evidence that eventually it will he possible to make an antiserum which could hall Ihc disease and a vac cine which could prevent it. Dr. Sloven O. Schwartz, the re searcher, said present sutferers of the disease would not be helped by his findings. Antiserums and vaccines arc still far in the fu ture, he said. Dr. Schwartz presented Ihc leu kemia report at a cancer research seminar sponsored by the Ameri can Cancer Society. He spoke of himself and his associate at Hek loen Institute try Medical Re search in Chicago. It is impossible for a hunuin being or any animal to get leu kemia unless specific leukemia viruses arc present, he said. On the same panel were two other recognized authorities on leukemia, and in the audience were a number of distinguished biologists and other scientists steeped in the known facts con corning cancer. Swartz was not disputed. His fellow scientists were clearly im pressed, but all wanted lo exam inc Ihc proof in minute detail be lore accepting it. u uses arc extremely tiny mi croorganisms. Ihey are known to cause lviiny diseases, including Ihc common cold. NOW PLAYING! MONTGOMERY! A GIANT NEW JOLT IN DRAMA-DARING 1 Hvl-ftWE-WIMtlM a FtATURfTTf I GOLDEN JFISH L?AnClJT- J i.HT i A. I .Midwest summoned a telephone repairman and told him: vinencver me pnone rings our remote TV shuts off. My husband wants lo fix il so that when the bell rings the set won't shut off- just lower its volume." Amazingly, Ihe repairman did just lhat after experimenting sev oral hours with variously pitched bell-rings. The housewife now can talk to her friends over the phone. Ihe TG muted softly in Ihe back ground. Edward McBride came up against a wild TV set while Jlat on his hack in a Long Island Hos pital. One day .McBride decided lo freshen his hospital room with a can of air deodorant, but when he squeezed the button on the can. his remote TV set changed chan nels. The can apparently emitted a high frequency squeak lhat not only worked on his receiver, bul on 10 others in the hospital. One TV repairman recalls such sets sometimes have operated "on the remotest and craziest of sounds." The models would be off and running if they received sig nals from: Chirping canaries, barking dogs, crying babies, wailing sirens, low flying planes or ringing doorbells. One man. whose remote hand unit broke down, was able to work his TV by simply banging his car keys together. Remote TV sets operate on ultrahigh frequency signalsf above the range of the human ear. These signals generally can be Irans mitled mechanically with a modi fied tuning fork or electrically from a liny battery. A micro-phone-lype device in the set picks up the signals and translates them into specific operations. Researchers are continually im proving remote TV but one scien tist said Ihc frequency range of normal noises around the house "is so broad that there will al ways be Ihc possibility ol duplicat ing a remote control signal." Writers Vote Strike Extension HOLLYWOOD (L'PD Members of the Writers Guild of America Thursday night voted authorization for the union to extend its strike to writers of "live" shows on ma jor television networks. Guild contracts covering writers of news and other live shows expired Thursday night at NBC, CBS and ABC. The contracts cov er about 300 writers. Negotiations were still under way, however, and no strike date was set. a guild spokesman said. A strike, permitted under Ihe same authorization, could also be widened to embrace some 50 in dependent TV film companies, the guild announced. WIC.GI.KS OFF HOOK KNOXVILLli, Tenn. (LTD Elwood Davis, acting as his own attorney, wriggled off the hook in court Thursday bv showing that Ihe officer who arrested him for fishing without a license cooid not prove lhat Davis' hook was baited. Klamath Falls. Or moo Serving $outhff Oregon md Northern California Published da.tv except Saturday By Sei'fhern Oregon Poblishinq Company Mam at Esolanade Phone TUxedo 4-ant PRANK JENKINS. Editor BILL JENKINS. Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE, City Editor Entered as second class matter at the post office at Klamath Falls, Oregon, on August 10. 1906. under act ol Congress. March 3, 1879. Second-class postage paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon, and at additional mailing offices. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier 1 Month i ts A Months J10.5O t Vear jji.bo Mail m Advance t Month i i 71 Months . . $10 00 ' Vear jii.oo Carrit and Oeieps Weekday & Sunday, cooy 10c UNIT EO PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Subscntiers not receiving delivery ot their Herald and News, please pnryit TUedo aini before 7 p.m. After 7 P M , phone Maurice Miner, Cir. culation Manager at TUedo 4-4722. i Rivals Establish Truce On Issue Of Religion .MILWAUKKK. Wis. 'AD Ri als in Ihc Wisconsin Democratic iresidential primary re-eslab 'shed today at least a temporary ruce on the touchy religious issue The man who injected it lull ,cale into the campaign battle be ween Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey jf Minnesota and John F. Ken- lcdy of Massachusetts said: "I intended to help Humphrey. but maybe 1 made a mistake and hurt him." That was Charles P. Greene, a lormer Democratic stale chair man speaking up. A small ad he had inserted in weekly news papers across the state set oil Ihe biggest uproar of the campaign Thursday. It sought to muster Protestant support behind Humphrey against his Roman Catholic opponent. Greene said persons in Wisconsin and Florida whom he did not wish lo name had put up $1.4(10 to fin ance the ad. ano nub'ody in the Humphrey organization was con sulled about the matter. Both Humphrey and Kennedy denounced the ad. Kach exone rated the olher of bringing the issue inlo the forefront of the campaign. Gov. G a y I o r d Nelson ordered his attorney general to determine whether the ad violated corrupt practices or false advertising i laws. In the first real political show down of I960, Kennedy and Hum phrey arc struggling in next Tues day's primary for 30 of the votes Wisconsin delegates wfll east in Ihe Democratic National Conven tion in July. Kennedy is buoyed by wide spread impressions that he has a comfortable edge in Wisconsin. But Humphrey thinks he may be slashing away some of Kennedy's strength with challenges of his Senate colleague's voting record on farm and other issues. Vice President Richard M. Nix on has Ihe Republican side of the ballot, and 30 GOP convention votes, all to himself. The only real Republican worry is whether an unopposed candidate can make a respectable showing in the total, two-parly vole. Bureau Hit By Bandit ST. LOLIS. Mo. (AP) Alone and virtually surrounded by po licemen, a bandit robbed Ihe Mis souri Slate Auto License Bureau in downtown St. Louis of about $12,000 Thursday. A police officer walked out of the bureau just a few minutes before the bandit appeared. An olher officer was on Ihe second floor of Ihe bureau, another was directing traffic outside and high way patrol hoopers were in an adjoining building. The robber, who wore either a partial mask or theatrical make up, escaped undetected. Cashier Francis Schoo, 51, said the bandit, armed with a pistol, lorced him from the bureau foyer into his small office. There the gunman bound Schoo. swept cash and checks into a small bag and walked out. Schoo was freed by another employe and sounded the alarm. SPECIAL! from Jones' Office Supply For Your Office or. Home . . . jDftA 1 Office 629 Main Kxcept under questioning, both lumphrey and Kennedy have avoided discussing the religious ;actor that Kennedy is a Catho ic. Wisconsin is more heavily Ca iholic than the country as a whole, and voters can jump party lines in the primary to vole religious rather than political convictions if they choose. The reaction was quick' and vigorous when Ihe ad appeared in many of the 250-odd weekly news papers in Wisconsin. In ellect. il appealed lor Protestant' support lor Humphrey on grounds that Republican Cath olics might hop into the Demo cratic primary in sullicienl force to "determine who Ihc Demo cratic nominee (or president shall be." The sponsor: a "Square Deal for Humphrey Committee" of re cent and, lor a time, somewhat mysterious origin. The committee chairman: Charles M. Schullz; vice president of Ihe Wisconsin AFL-CTO. The man who posled the check lo pay for the ad: Greene. Greene disappeared. The Mil waukee Sentinel reached him by telephone in Chicago Thursday night. The names of the financial contributors will be reported lo the Wisconsin secretary of state by April 19, he said. The idea lor the ad, Greene said, was conceived by two or three Wisconsin residents whom he declined to identify. He told the Sentinel that some strong Humphrey supporters in Florida knew he was coming to Wisconsin some Ihrce weeks ago and said "I should see what 1 could do." When the ad was decided on, he said, ihe Florida people were contacted (or money. He said he asked Schullz lo he come head of Ihe "Square Deal" committee because Schullz i.s prominent adding "He knew I didn't do anylhing inlenlionally lo hurt him." . Schultz repudiated both Ihc ad and the chairmanship of (he "Square Deal" committee. P1EE THEATRE PASS TO 'The Gene Krupa Story' With the purchase of any Gene Krupa album, any "Red" Nichols album, any James Darren record or any Paul An ka record. OFFER ENDS SATURDAY, APRIL 2 tiephy's Music Co. 126 No. 7th EASTER PARTY Favors & Decorations Easter Cards Napkins Wrapping Paper Wall Decorations Get Them Now!! i v 1'?- DON MORGAN, brother of Frank Morgan, Macdoel, re cently enlisted in the Army and is in paratroop training at Fort Ord. Photo by Larry Myers Made) to pamper your cat . . . they're not just flavors they're the real thing. LIVER ' MEAT KIDNEY 'n MEAT CHICKEN MEATY MIX CHOPPED FISH Ph. TU 4-5121 I I I I SPACE SAVER DESK Compact - Only 49 x 26 Inches! Dp fil drawtr and 4 box draw 9 Center drawer with utility drawer Locking center drawer locks en tire desk Walnut finish with brushed brass or silver pulls and legt Now exceptionally Low Priced at Only n is Supply Phone TU 2-4408