Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 10, 1960, Page 2, Image 2

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    I
PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Monday, October 10, 1960
K's Threats
Imperil U.N.
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. AP)
If Premier Khrushchev means
what he says and is prepared for
the risks involved in carrying out
his threats, the days of the United i
Nations as an effective instrument
of world peace are numbered.
Khrushchev seems to be seeking
nothing less than a powerless
palace of words a sort of latter
day League of Nations and a true
descendant of the organization
which did itself to death a quarter
century ago with an overdose of
vcrbiape.
The U.N. has been an effective
and hopeful organization, which
has dramatically upheld peace on
many an occasion. But if Khru
shchev goes through with all he
threatens, the U.N. will die a lin
gering death.
The Soviet leader's newest
blasts are, in effect, as close as
he could come without saying so
to a declaration that the world
Communist movement intends to
continue messing in the internal
affairs of weak or susceptible
areas.
Khrushchev told the U.N. Cor-!
respondents Association Friday he
would uphold Soviet interests by
"relying on our own strength" out
side the U.N., if he fails to get his
way. Just what that mean's is not
entirely clear, but it has the tone
of threat.
At the same time, says Khru
shchev, he will deliver a punch in
the nose to anybody who ques
tions what is going on in areas
under his control.
He wants the U.N.'s peace-making
machinery stripped down. He
wants equal representation for
what he claims are three world
blocs Communist, capitalist and
neutralist. He wants each of these
armed with veto power over U,N.
actions.
He thus, in effect, wants U.N.
machinery which is powerless to
act against the Communists.
If such machinery already ex
isted, there would be no quarrel
today over events in the Congo,
unless the West wanted to go to
war over it. The Soviets would
have been swarming all over that
newly independent African coun-
try. U.N. action got in Khru-
shchevs way, and this has an
gered him and steeled his deter
mination to sweep the obstacle
from his path.
In" theory, if the U.N. -machin-
ery were broken up into three
equal participants, nobody could
get hurt. But the only purpose of
the world organization is to move
in and hurt somebody who vio
lates the charter.! If it cannot do
that, then there is ho U.N. and if
one of the two greatest powers
does not abide by the charter or
withdraws from the U.N.; then the
world organization no longer can
have any power to preserve peace
GETS LAOS POST
SAIGON, Viet Nam (UPI)-So
vlet Ambassador to Cambodia
Alexandre S. Anikine has been
named Russia's first ambassador
to neutralist Laos, It was an
nounced Friday night. Laos recog
nized the Soviet Union last month
after a coup ousted Its pro-West
ern government. ,
DAYS!
M-C M MM MMMIIU WMlm
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Ambulance
Report Told
TULELAKE A complete re-
port on ambulance activity in1
Tulelake and vicinity by the city
operated ambulance service was
given at the October 3 city coun-;
ril mpetinff.
During the preceding year cost
of operating the ambulance
amounted to $1,712.25. This
amount does not include replace
ment of tires and other mainte
nance costs, nor does it cover
insurance cosls. Collected from
services rendered was $1,357.85.
Mileage covered from July 1
to September 30 was 1,099 miles.
This included eight calls an
swered during September. Accord
ing to the physician in charge,
two patients would have died if
ambulance service had not been
immediately available.
Donations for a new ambulance
are coming in slowly. The com-
mtintinities of Malin and Merrill
have pledged support. Modoc and
Siskiyou counties will both con
tribute, but individual contribu
tions will be needed to purchase
the vehicle now being loaned to
the city.
Other business discussed byi
council was a proposed under
ground drainage system. The city
engineer presented estimated
costs for a system to be laid
four feet underground on major
city streets. The project was
shelved for future discussion.
Representatives from Tulelake
Garden Club, Mrs. Ken Thomas
and Mrs. Eugene Smith, outlined
plans for landscaping the post
office grounds. This project is to
begin immediately with the lawn
to be planted this fall and shrubs
and flowers added in the
spring. The council approved the
project.
Rain Halts
Fire Peril
DUNSMUIR - Parched Duns
mulr got its first good drink of
water since May with the first
rain storm of fall Wednesday af
ternoon and evening.
The U.S. Weather Bureau sta
tion at Mount Shasta reported
this soulhorn Siskiyou County city
received 1.5 inches of precipita
tion since 1 p.m. and until 8 a.m.
Heavy showers were predicted for
today. , '
Rain fell generally over the
country, dropping fire danger
from extreme to negligible over
night. Deer hunters, as well as
forest service and California Di
vision I of Forestry crews, wel
comed the storm.
And skiers caught their first
sight of their favorite substance,
too. Everitt Memorial Highway to
Mount Shasta Ski Bowl was
closed temporarily by snow.
No snow-depth reading were
available at the bowl this morn-
ins, however.
Other cities In the locality also
received considerable amounts of
rain. Mount Shasta received 1.63
inches, McCloud, 1.57; Weed, 1.54;
Castella, 1.74, and Volmers, tra
ditionally the wettest spot east
of Eureka, 1.38.
IMPOSE . DEATH SENTENCE
PARIS (UPI)-A French mil
itary tribunal Monday imposed
the death sentence on Algerian
Mohamcd Azrar for the attempt
ed assassination May 4 of French-
Algerian National Assembly Dep
uty Robert Abdesselam.
AIM
"HEILIR IN
INK TIOHTS"
TUES. & WED.
"THE BIG
LAND"
Opn - 6:45
NOW PLAYING!
ytrt! A -
DC LUKE
it
iMt lllBllElli im
Hearings:
Noted Stars
Now Gone
WASHINGTON UFI)
vhe
s,ars are 8onc
Only the six supporting players
. rr . .7 r J . I
remain trom one ot me great
political drama, of the century-
the Army-McCarthy hearings.
And after six years, those
turbulent days which split the
nation, shook the highest offices in
the land and kept millions glued
to their TV sets, are fading into
the dimness of history.
Sage and witty Yankee lawyer
Joseph N. Welch, one of the lead
players, died Thursday. His gruff
voiced, aggressive co-star, Sen.
Joseph R. McCarthy, died three
years ago. To many, they were
the hero and villain of the piece.
The supporting actors Brig.
Gen. Ralph Zwicker, Maj. Irving
Peress, Roy Cohn, David Schine,
Robert T. Stevens, Ray Jenkins
and the bit players are dispersed
around the country, leading lives
of relative obscurity.
The Army-McCarthy hearings
were the climax of McCarthy's
controversial crusade against
what he considered the infestation
of the government by Commu
nists.
The Wisconsin Republican an
tagonized the Pentagon by up
braiding Zwicker, then com
mander of Camp Kilmer, N.J.,
for the promotion of Peress to
major. Peress, a dentist, had
been accused of Communist lean
ings.
Charge Cohn Coercion
The Army charged that Cohn,
a McCarthy aide, tnea to co
erce favored treatment for Schine,
another aide who had been draft
ed.
McCarthy countered that Schine
was being held as a hostage
by the Army to persuade the sen
ator to call off his investigations.
. Stevens, then Army secretary,
clashed with McCarthy over the
lawmaker's right to question
Zwicker. The secretary later ac
quiesced.
The senator s own subcommit
tee then convened the explosive
Army-McCarthy hearings to in
vestigate the exchange of charg
es. McCarthy stepped aside as
chairman for the famous inquiry.
Welch, dry-witted Iowa born
Boston lawyer, was engaged to
serve as counsel for the Army
without pay. His pixie humor and
quietly intense tilts with McCar
thy won him millions ot fans
He later portrayed a judge In
Ihe movie "Anatomy Of a Mur
der," acted as host on a TV mys
tciy program and discussed con
stitutional issues on another tele
vision show.
Schine Runs Hotels
McCarthy was condemned by
the Senate after the hearings, lost
n" power ana mea in iraf.
Cohn has a private law practice
In New York City. Ho is counsel
and 20 per cent stockholder in
Feature Sports Inc., which staged
the second Patterson Johansson
fight.
Schine, married to a former
Miss Universe, is president of
Schine Enterprises, his family's
hotel business.
Peress has ,a dental office just
off Fifth Avenue in New York.
When last asked for comment on
McCarthy, he told UP1 holly, "I
won't say anything to anybody."
Then he hung up.
Stevens resigned as Army sec
retary a year alter the hearings
and returned to his family's J.P,
Stevens Co., one of the nation's
largest textile firms.
Zwicker retired as a major
general in April. His last job was
as commander of the 20th Army
Corps with headquarters at Fort
Hayes, near Columbus, Ohio.
Jenkins, who was the subcom
mittee counsel. Is a lawyer in
Knoxville, Tenn.
K Wants
Summit Meet
LONDON (AP) - Premier
Khrushchev wants a siocial sum
mit session of the U.N. General
Assembly early in UXU to discuss "P'". " ''' "
disarmament, British officials re,'0 '? hls P!1' Thore hav'
norted todv.
Informants said the Soviet pre
mier put up the idea to British
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan
at their farewell meeting in New
York Tuesday.
They reported Mncmlllan ex
pressed himself against the pro
posal. The British leader instead
rest.itpH hie mvnAnH thfl L.i.iu.r.il
Western-position about ways of
advancing negotiations to end the;
world arms rare.
The Western Allies want
West talks to be resumed on two!
levels political and technical. At
a nin-h ttiaiv mav niMl Vlirncl,.
,,. ...... i,,,,,,.,, ,
hev's demand to Include neutral
n.-,llon In ll.. nennlmtinn. ;
kkr.,cl,V.AU n,n II l l
m...iii u. i j.
tti'lLiiiiunii iim-iiu IU IUUH)C
the Idea ot a new u.N. summit
meeting when disarmament comes
up for discussion in the assembly
shortly. The 11X11 special meeting
should not necessarily be held in
New ork. in Khrushchev's view.
Geneva would suit him.
Scribe Discovers Sfory
Four Weeks
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPD-Not men
tioning any names, but perhaps
you've noticed that certain tele-!
vision newscasters tend to stress
I "the story behind the news."
. "e"' ' m "ol . "7'" mK
in on lhMr territnrv or anvthinc
: . t , . . '
llke tha" . but hfve, Jus ,
across a story that is almost four
weeks behind tin n:' . This i-
about as far behind the news as The Wainwright steered by ra
you can get. Aar to keep from slamming into
It concerns a report submitted
to the Commerce Apartment bv
the skippers of the good ships
Wainwright and Hilgard, explain
ing what happened to those two
launches they were towing last
month.
The Wainwright and the Hilgard
are small vessels used by the
U.S. Coast & Geodetic Survey to
locate sunken rocks and other un
dcrwater obstructions by drag
ging a wire along the ocean bot
tom. On the evening of Sept. 11, they
were operating off the coast of
Rhode Island when they suddenly
became aware that they were in
the path of hurricane Donna.
By then it was too late to make
for a sheltered anchorage or to
replenish the Hilgard, which was
short of fuel.
So the vessels dropped anchor
behind a breakwater off Point
Judith, R.I., and prepared to ride
out the storm. The tide, however,
soon rose above the breakwater.
leaving them exposed to open wa
ter. At this point, the Wain-
Wright's anchor chain broke.
By crawling over a wave-swept
deck in 100-mile-an-hour winds,
the crew managed to pull up the
chain and attach a spare anchor.
Thirty minutes later, the anchor
Squatters
Organized
ACAPULCO, Mexico AP Ten
thousand screaming squatters
with machetes, guns, knives and
clubs poured from their hovels on
a hilltop overlooking this resort
city at 3 a.m. to repel invaders.
A primitive alarm system con
sisting of an iron triangle and sev
eral steel rails had been sounded
by guards. Heads of families in
hundreds of homes blew emergen
cy whistles.
This time it was a false alarm.
Celebrants observing a saints day
had touched off fireworks that
sounded like pistol shots. Once the
squatters learned there was no
danger, they calmed down and
joined in the fun.
There wi4no sleep in La Laja
that night. King Lopitos had
proved again the efficiency of the
best-organized squatters colony in
Mexico.
The history of La Laja (The
Flagstone) began a few years ago
when promoters decided to build
a bungalow-type hotel on a finger
of land curling around along a
tropical bay.
About 100 squatters lived on the
hill overlooking the colorful resort
city. City officials promised them
another site if they moved.
They moved peacefully and
work started on the hotel, now Las
Brisas, operated by the Hilton
chain. But the city didn't live up
to its promise.
A voune Mexican in his 30s
known simply as Rcy iking) Lo
pitos decided to take action. He
found a quick following.
On a hillside near the entrance
to Acapulco was a beautiful but
undevoloncd 740-acre ' piece of
land. It was ideal: Near the city,
with a perfect view, and because
of its terrain it could be protected
in case ot necessity.,
The squatters began building a
new shnntytown. To raise funds
for basic necessities King I-opito
charged 80 cents per month for
squatters rights.
He threw the settlement open to
anyone who qualified, not just the
100 who had been ousted. Within
weeks there were 2.000. Todayl
there arc 13.000 in La Laja.
A first step was to set up an
alarm system as protection
against ouster proceedings. All
able-bodied residents were
pledged to come to the hid of La
Laja when the alarm sounded.
The owner of the land, a rich
c. i I f:i-J .r,. :t
"rrn nrla- ' '
'taking pel ion.
An eviction attempt could end in
now, well entrenched and well or
ganized. DRY TRADITION BROKEN
GHACEVILLE, Fla. a'PD-Thc
'' y. Pioneers in esi
""' ca "ca "n"ual rfumon
I for Thursday, confident that ill
East-,w"'!,dn'L n' " hn'' ?
a" "v re"mon aa' ,or lnc P"Mi
nan century.
Just about
all the 1.000,
U- -l,,,,, n fw IK
7 .. i
milium eie ciuipf.-u wnn ram-
t-oats and umbrellas, for good rea-
son. ii milieu
Newspaper
SPOT ADS
are inexpensive
Behind News
chain on the other ship ripped
away part ot the Hilgard s bul
wark. Although the Hilgard was try
ing to conserve fuel, both ships
were forced to use their engines
to ease the strain on the anchors.
They were bouncing about in
spray so thick it made visual
steering impossible. As darkness
fell, matters grew worse.
tne Mly but the Hilgard had no
radar. It could have received di
rections from the Wainwright by
radio, but the radio wouldn't
work.
Consequently, the Hilgard drift
ed perilously close to the jetty
and found that it could not move
away while dragging anchor. It
was decided to free the anchor,
but a power failure kept the
winch from operating.
It also was discovered that the
launch being towed by the Hil
gard was pounding against the
side of the ship with enough force
to split her timbers.
Although the Hilgard was roll
ing more than B0 degrees and 25
foot waves were breaking over
her deck, a crew member fought
his way to the winch, released
the anchor chain and cut loose
the launch.
Meanwhile, the line to the
launch the Wainwright was tow
ing got caught in the screw. and!
was cut in two.
And that is the story behind the
loss of those two launches. Other
wise, the Wainwright and the Hil-
gard had an uneventful night. !
Til J, I. 1 JL '111 Mil IIIIW IMI llllilllM llli 1 1 lilltlMlllilimr': ' ! - I s
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the costliest cars plus the savings and
ease of the small!
The best nf two worlds mrel in this nrw-sizr,
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ful on gas and upkeep? Yes but, so much morel
Here's how it came about:
NEW ALUMINUM V-8 gives the Special twice
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Crazed Gunman Blamed For Death Of Man, 25
VANCOUVER, B. C. (API
Police said a crazed gunman fired
a volley of shots down downtown
Granville street early Friday, kill
ing one man and narrowly mis-
sing another before going to
hotel room and killing himself.
They said John Conroy, about
35. took deliberate aim with a
.303-caliber rifle equipped with
telescoptic sights at a group of
men 200 yards away and killed
Arthur Jorgenson, about 25.
Then he dropped the rifle and
rushed to a hotel room where he
NOTICE
Due To Circumstances Be
yond Our Control, We Will
No Longer Be Able To
BUTCHER HOGS
We Wish To Take This Opportunity To
Thank You For Your Past Patronage.
T4
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hopping
- - p r -
- Desimed exclu. LIOHT.TOUCH HANDLING A fi.,..,l,
a i a I iTiJDl"7cr
IN KLAMATH FALLS IS:
i killed, himself with a
rifle. -
Police .said they have not de
termined whether Conroy was
shooting at anybody or had an in-
a, tended victim. But they said he
and Jorgenson lived in the same
hotel.
Jorgenson was shot through the
throat by a slug that ripped
through his juglar vein.
Police said the killer only fired
three shots but some witnesses
said up to six were fired,
Jack Saito. bellhop of the Aus-
PACKING
COMPANY
sively for a new-size car, the Special's Dual
Path Turbine Drive is the peppiest autumatic
in any car. It weighs just 100 pounds, is simplest
of all, and Buick sm-o-o-o-otli!
NEW ALL-DAY RIDE-Bui.k's big Comfort
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,22-caliberitin hotel, said Conroy, limpinglrushed through the lobby carryui
from the effeets of a broken ankle, ihe rifle at 4:20 a.m.
ifledical Mirror
i"..'m.'.,,.'jK.rrTrrmi
Arthritis
Parkinson's Disease
Rectal Fistula '
Diabetes Explained
Q. It arthritis a modern
ease and can it be helped
thrtmph diet?
A. The answer is "No" to both
questions. The very first evi
dence of arthritis in any crea
ture has been preserved in the
spine of a Comanchean dinosaur
IUO.000,000 years old. Arthritis
is reported in the remains of
neolithic man, ancient Egyptians,
Peruvians and early American
Indians, to name only a few
examples. A well-balanced diet
is indicated for arthritics (as it is
for all other persons) but no
.special food or vitamin has been
found helpful.
Q. My father has Parkinson's
disease. He takes medicine and
does fairly well but complains
of excessive amounts of saliva.
Can this be helped?
A. Various drugs used in treat
ment of Parkinson's disease tend
to dry the mucous membranes
but there is nothing very effec
tive, so far as we know, for
diminishing excessive saliva flow
which occurs in some persons
with this condition.
Question directed to Science Editors, P.O. Box 396, Madison Sif. Srn.,
N. Y. 10 V. )'. will he incorporated in these colitnns when possible
n ih il i(wy nnrnn
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Smjller than big
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- m nrn m k.i-v.
Q, Can m rectal fistula turn
into cancer?
A. Any open sore, iri any loca
tion, that tails to heal in a rea
sonable lime should be attended
to but it is unlikely that ihc
fistula will predispose to canc-jr.
Most people probably postpone
necessary rectal surgery because
of the fear of postoperative pain.
Rectal surgery can be well tol
erated if proper measures are
taken. Our advice'.' See jvur
doctor!
Q.- Is diabetes inherited or
caused by being overiceisht ?
A. Both. Diabetes is basically a
disease of heredity in wliich
carbohydrate (sugar and starch)
utilisation is upset by inadcqiuic
insulin. However, obesity is a
very important factor which, in
the presence of a predisposition
to diabetes, makes its develop
ment more likely.
AV - IY O X JLYIV
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1330 Main Street