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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1960)
FAGf 8 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, October 13, 1960 What Comes First? This is not the moment for a sum :mit meeting. And this is not simply be :'cause Eisenhower and Khrushchev do not want it now. : The fact is that the idea of the isummit has over the years become a ikind of escape for many earnest men :troubling over the dangers of war. Of course we must maintain open, ; full communications with the Soviet : Union as much as we .can. No matter ihow many times they disappoint us, : we must yet be willing to return to the bargaining table. Still, there are turning points in our contemporary history when hold ing one more summit meeting is not the vital need. What is called for is a ringing de Inundation of wrongdoing and a stout assertion of Intent to stand up for iwhat is right. The Soviet Union has breached the code in two glaring ways one by acting in The Congo in defiance of U.N. purposes, the other by thereafter seeking revenge on the U.N. for dar ing to contest Soviet aims. This is pure international lawless ness and deserves to be highlighted as such. It should not be muted by calls for a new summit that will tend to bury this evil under a tent of com promise. The neutral nations acted wisely when they decided to drop their de mand for another summit. Their voic es should be raised today in a differ ent vein. The world still waits to hear from India's Prime Minister Nehru what he is capable of saying in sup port of the right moral course for na tions to follow. These countries are neutral as be tween West and East as participants in the cold war. They cannot in con science be neutral between right and wrong. We will not let Red China "shoot its way" or otherwise bulldoze a path to membership in the U.N. How can we permit Khrushchev, for all his power, gain his ends by defiance and threats of destruction of world order? Let the neutrals throw away the crutch of "one more summit meet ing." Let them speak out now for Tightness. And let Khrushchev have another summit when he has come back wit'hin at least the outermost bounds of international decency. One-Man Wreck Crew J Soviet Premier Khrushchev may 'not seriously mean it when he threat ens to take the Communist bloc of na tions out of the United Nations. But this is no reason to shrug off such threats. One hears many explanations of his tirades at the U.N. It is said he is trying to cover his embarrassment over the Communist reversal in' The Congo. It is also ar gued that Khrushchev sometimes makes the most noise just before he is ready to enter serious negotiations. Surely it is plausible that he should want to get the world's mind off the abortive Red effort in The Congo. There is no substantial reason to be lieve, however, that he has any in tention of proposing or undertaking major discussions now on world prob lems. - ' . Even If he were so bent, that Log Jam In Courts Short of ceding their freedoms to . a foreign enemy or home-grown dic tator, the surest way for a people to lose their faith in justice is to allow their legal machinery to bog down. ; An official government report says that nearly 71,000 cases are backed up in federal courts. The av erage wait for a hearing is 18 months. It is as long as three years in some cities. ; Says Chief Justice Earl Warren: "Delay in the courts is bad, because ;the lapse of time frequently causes .deterioration of evidence and makes it less likely that justice will be done :vhen the case is finally tried." Meanwhile, Congress, when it is in session, conducts politics as usual by sitting on bills to create additional judgeships. Still A Long Way For the scoffers who say, "What have ir'.ce, bats, deaf cats, eels and lizards used in your research got to do with missiles?", Brig, Gen. B. G. Holzman of the Air Force scientific team has an answer. : Despite the simplicity of their structure, these animals perform com :plex chores beyond the capacity of the best computers available today." would be no justification for his dis ruptive tactics. For the U.N. was not created to serve as a mere element in his private strategic calculations to be kicked about and maligned at his whim. He has done the U.N. and its able, fairminded secretary-general, Dag Hammarskjold, immense harm with ' his irresponsible attacks. No man genuinely moving toward peace would begin by tearing apart the world's only peace agency. If Khrushchev thinks by these ma neuvers he will impress new nations with the authority and dominance of the Soviet Union in world affairs, he is misjudging. They do not doubt Russia's power. But the only authority he has ex hibited is that of the bully, the nuis ance, the wrecker. It is beyond imag ination that they should see in him, in Soviet communism, an ally in the fight for security and human better ment in a troubled world. Some reports have it that Khrush chev is mightily pleased with what he has done since he came to American shores. If he is, this can only be a com ment on the blindness of the totali tarian mind. From the moment he landed here he has swung the wrecker's iron ball. To listen to him, you'd think with each swing he was trying to launch a satel lite with the dove of peace inside. But even the novices at the U.N. know the ball is solid and intended as a de structive weapon. New Battle Boy Scouts in Britain, nearly 160, 000 of them, are voting on the issue of short trousers versus long. The odds favor the longics. "Some of the bigger boys do feel embarrassed at having to wear shorts," says a spokesman of the Boy Scout Association. BARBS The commercial fisherman has more opportunity to be disappointed with his net income than anvone. iThe Congo A boss simply couldn't hold his job if he was as ignorant as some of his employes often think he is. Revealing facts about The Congo are contained in a report to the United Nations by Rajeshwar Dayal of India. :Dayal replaced Ralph Bunche as top :U.N. representative in that troubled :land. Among the figures cited by Dayal: ;There are only 17 native Congolese j(out of a population of over 13 million) ;who are university graduates. There are no engineers, architects or college-level teachers. We wonder why people waste time painting signs reading "Keep Off the Grass" when there are kids in the neighborhood. When you're past your prime, prime yourself for the future by tak ing things easy. Many a double chin is developed over a cup of coffee with thy neighbor next door. CAPITOL NEWS... Act Would Abolish ' Grand Jury (Kditor'i Note: There are IS state measures on the Nov. 8 general election ballot. This Is the second of five articles de scribing their background and effect.) By DOUGLAS GRfl'P United Press International SALEM Proposition No. 4 on the Oregon ballot, permitting prosecution by inlormation or indictment, would permit by passing of gund juries. A grand jury is a panel of citizens with previous experi ence on juries chosen to hear evidence against an individual, and may issue indictments if it feels there is sufficient evi dence to warrant a trial. The measure would allow dis trict attorneys to prefer an "in formation," or written charge, aainst a defendant and bring him to trial without grand jury action. At present, district at torneys must ask grand juries to prefer such charges, usual ly in criminal cases. The more expensive grand jury system also takes longer, and supporters of the measure say No. 4 would allow a faster handling of criminal cases in circuit courts. Many attorneys feel, however, that the grand jury provides a "safeguard" to the public since no one person can point the finger at an accused per son. Some feel the proposed . plan could be "abused." Lawyers are divided. The Oregon Slate Bar Association, by a close vote, supports the measure. Number 5 on the ballot au thorizes the Legislature to pro pose a revised Oregon constitu tion to (he people. Paris of the stale conslitution are obsolete and it has been amended five limes more than the U.S. Conslitution. The lat ter carries 22 amendments. The measure would permit the Legislature to put on the ballot at a future election a new constitution. Under present law, only a constitutional con vention may submit an entire ly revised constitution to the voters. Advocates of a constitutional convention oppose the measure but most Oregon legislators feel measure No. 5 is the best ap proach to overhauling the slate's constitution. . Number 6 is state bonds for higher education facilities. It would allow the Oregon System of Higher Education to more than double its bonding capaci ty to build student dormitories, and similar facilities lhat pay for themselves through -rental or other fees. It would not raise or alter taxes. The proposal passed the 1959 Legislature unanimously. Supporters say dormitory space at Oregon's colleges is al a premium now, with a pre dicted doubling of enrollments in 10 years. There appears to be no or ganized opposition to this measure. EDSON IN WASHINGTON Presidential Campaign Getting More Personal, Rougher In Late Stages By PETER EliSO.V Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON (NEA ) "This 1960 election is just like 1932," say old-time Washington waiters who have pretty good ears for political gossip. In 19.S2, they ex plain, all the table talk of people with enough money to eat in good restaurants and hotel din ing rooms was for Herbert Hoo ver's re-election. But the people on the street all talked Roose velt. This year, the table talk in the swell eating places is all Nixon and Lodge, but the talk of the people the waiters meet when they quit work is all Kennedy. So say the waiters. President Eisenhower isn't the type that forgives or forgets old grudges easily. That's why the odds are against a reconciliation with Khrushchev during the pres ent U.N. General Assembly ses sion, unless Khrushchev does an absolute about-face in his posi tion. Eisenhower's feud with ex President Truman is cited as the index to Ike's reaction. Truman picked Eisenhower as first supreme commander of NATO forces. Then Truman tried to persuade Ike to run for president as a Democratic candidate in 1902. When Eisenhower went Re publican and won the GOP presidential nomination, Tru man campaigned against him and was highly critical of his policies and philosophy. Eisenhower never forgave what he considered lo be these insults. When he drove to the White House to pick up Tru man to go to the inauguration, Eisenhower sat in his car and did not get out to greet the out going president, as is customary. Since then, Eisenhower has never consulted Truman, even though Truman, as president, frequently called in ex-Presi dent Hoover and used his serv ices for government reorgani zation planning. When Eisenhower now says he won t meet Khrushchev unlil the KB-47 . pilots are released and other conditions are met, the guessing is that he'll stick to it. The hottest political rally the Republicans have held so far. was the series of 1960 campaign dinners, held simultaneously in 36 cities. They were linked by closed circuit television. Eisen hower, Nixon, Lodge, Rockefel ler and Goldwater all spoke briefly and to the point. The GOP hopes to clear about three million dollars. But all this probably didn't win the party a single vote. The reason is that no Demo crats or independents got to see the show. Only the 35.000 peo ple who had paid up to $100 apiece for their dinners got the message. But they were all Re publicans who were already The Farm Problem lit" '&:, ?s '.ili (Tomorrow: Voter qualifica tion, bonds for state building and compulsory retirement for judges.) THE DOCTOR SAYS Abnormal Heart Cause For Study Al manac QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q-Who was fhe only U.S. president to serve nonronsecu tive terms? A Grover Cleveland. By HAROLD T. HYMAV, M.D. Written For Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Any complaint even remotely related to the heart always has been highly charged with feel ings of apprcl.-nsion. These feelings have been magnified to panic proportions since some skillful phrasemaker first re ferred to circulatory abnormali ties as the "No. 1 Killer." Here and now I hope to quiet Things Answer lo Pravlout Puzile TdTaI ACROSS 1 European Ash 6 Ship's hull 11 More facile 13 Perched 14 Small 19 Short business trip It Simple sugar (chem.) 17 Golf mound 19 Route (ab.) 20 Sob 22 Electrified particle 23 Asseverate 24 Bedaubs 2(1 Heavy blow 27 Drink made w ith malt 28 Membranous pouch 211 Color 30 Tito 31 Tit 33 Stage performers 36 Writing implements 37 Exclamation ot disgust 3d Rots by exposure 40 Easier (ab ) 41 Dutch uncle 42 Obtained 4.1 SO (Ft.) 48 Mental state 49 Compound el hers 50 rieasant person 31 Piuses 82 Fat DOWN t Beneath I Elevate 3 High regard 4 River islet 5 Honey (pharm.) 3 Wax (comb, form) 7 River In Switzerland 8 Perish with hunger 9 Middle point 10 More unusual 12 Withdrew 13 Observed 18 Goddess of the dawn 21 Globules formed by ovstcrs 23 Ship appurtenance l u- L-I ' IU Mll INIAIPI SMSsIHsBsGiaAiv- B A 3T PERfl" SC Q pte ANT USEE TsMjJH E!NJg ir e'sitI ibIaIsIe-. 23 Toward the sheltered side 23 Hops' kiln 28 Sagamores 31 Funeral vehicle 32 Attacks 33 Old Dutch measure 34 Entertain sumptuously 35 Long loose garments 36 Man's name 37 Honey makers 39 Cubic meter 44 Seine 43 Transposes (ab.) 47 Shoulder (comb, form) 43 Chest bone I p p W S I IS n J J ho n rn p jrj !H nm'H prpr nT srpr S T" nps jt xr jrHf-j il 55 51 ' ' 55 ' ' ' ' I I I I I i) the fears of several correspon dents who have written to in quire about a group of what I prefer to call "normal abnor malities" of the heart. The average mot normal) heart rate is 72 beats to the minute. Many quite normal per sons (and many athletes) get along perfectly well with a slower rate (bradycardia). During the most active years of my own life, for example, my resting minute count rare ly exceeded 60. And one of the greatest longdistance runners o( Olympic fame had a count even slower than mine. While the presence of a bra dycardia occasionally is the re sult of an abnormality (such as a sluggish thyroid or overdos ing with digitalisi, rapidity of the heart rate (tachycardia) is usually a sign of trouble whose discovery may require painstak ing investigation. However, if the tachycardia Is unexplained and unaccompa nied by distress of any kind, it may be dismissed hs another of the normal abnormalities. In addition to normal abnor malities of the heart rate, there are also normal abnormalities of rhythm. If you will take a deep breath, for example, and hold it for several seconds, you may notice that your rale speeds. Hold your breath after you've breathed out and you may find that the rate slows. This condition of alternating tachycardia nd bradycardia, de pendent on the respiratory cy cle, is known as sinus anhvth. ' nua. It's a perfectly normal ab normality that's frequently ob served in infancy and early childhood. The last of the normal ab normalities is the occasional "skipped," or "dropped" beat (extra-systole) that's perhaps more fear-inspiring than any of the other conditions we've discussed. By United Press International Today is Thursday, October 13. the 287th day of the year with 79 more in 1960. The moon is approaching its new phase. The morning star is Mars. On this day in history: In 1775.' the Continental Con gress ordered construction of a Naval fleet, this originating the U.S. Navy. In 1852, actress Lily Langtry was born. In 1912. in a move to increase the population, the government of Australia, announced a $25 bonus would be paid to the parents of every newborn baby. In 1937, Nazi Germany prom ised that in case of a future war, she would not violate Bel gian neutrality. Thought for today: English writer Lylton Strachey said: "Perhaps of all the creations of man language is the most astonishing." Usually caused by some pass ing physical or emotional dis- turbance (like overeating, over exertion, sudden panic or hear ty laughter), the extra-systole (pronounced sis-toe-lee) may produce a fluttory chest sensa tion (palpitation). However, I would not advise you to dismiss too lightly a sense of palpitation or the actu al demonstration of pulse skip ping. , If only for reassurance, you owe it to yourself to submit to a careful examination by your doctor. And. if he finds your rate and rhythm normal, it's not be cause he's missed the boat or because you've imagined what you described. It's just that the passing condition lhat caused your temporary sensation is not present at the lime of examina tion. Tor a copy of Pr. Hyman'j leallet "How to Combat t h e Common Cold," send 10 cents to Dr. Ilyman. care Herald and News. Box 489. Dept. B. Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y. "converted" to Nixon and Lodge. While Republicans were hav ing their private parties Demo crats Jack Kennedy, his wife Jacqueline and their daughter Caroline were at home. They appeared on the CBS Television show, Person to Person, with Charles Collingwood, and they probably had an audience of 15 to 16 million. Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvan ia is the author of two books. The first was "How to Get Out of Jail," a serious tome on crim inal law. The second, "How to Get Into Politics." was written 16 years later. There's no con nection between them. "But wouldn't it have been ter rible," says Scott, "if I had writ ten the two books in reverse or der 'How to Get Into Polities' then 'How to Get Out of Jail'?" The presidential campaign is now beginning to get personal and rough not like the first Nixon-Kennedy TV debate. Republicans are attacking Kennedy on his record. . . .The 238 times he voted in opposition to his vice presidential running mate, Lyndon Johnson ... his opposition to Agriculture Secre tary Benson, but his 27 votes for Benson programs before 1957 . . . on his new farm program that would raise farm income at the cost of increased food prices for consumers ... on his ab sence from 25 per cent of the Senate roll calls in eight years ... on the charge that he would have "apologized" to Khrushchev to keep the summit talks going. Democratic charges against Nixon are aimed principally at the image built up for him as an experienced leader. They hammer at the fact he made no decisions, in spie of President Eisenhower's praise for his advice and counsel . . . they charge that U.S. foreign re lations in six areas actually worsened after Nixon visited them ... he is accused now of trying to stifle debate on Amer ica's present economic and mili tary postures ... he is said to have no programs of his own save promises to carry on the Eisenhower policies . . . digging into his past, it is claimed he used McCarthy tactics before McCarthy. Sen. Barry Goldwater is prov ing to be the Republicans' most effective campaigner in the South. He speaks the language southern conservative Demo crats can understand and agree with. There are more demands for Goldwater as a campaign speaker than anyone else. He is already booked for 18 October appearances in Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisi ana, North and South Carolina. Q NOTHING SPECIAL (W. B. S.) In our home (and, I'm sure, in many others) every time the telephone rings the youngsters, it seems, are there first hoping the effort earns them an oppor tunity lo converse with the un fortunate person on the other end of the wire. Sometimes, when one is in kind of a hurry, this amiability can be rather trying to the caller. And, some of the spontaneous remarks that emit can he more than a little embarrassing. Principal frustration as far as I am concerned, however, is when the 16-monlh old wanders around the house looking for something to do and generally winds up taking the receiver off the hook on one or more of the phones. But, the height of such 'frus tration undoubtedly was expe rienced by the salesman who called a prospective customer and the phone was answered by what was obviously a small boy. "Is your mother or father at home?" the 'salesman asked. The child said no and the salesman asked if there was anyone else to speak to. "My sister" the youngster re plied. "Let me speak to her," the salesman said. There was a long period of silence and the little boy fi nally relumed to the phone. "I can't lift her out of the playpen," he announced. I don't want a lot of money I'd be satisfied, I vow. If I could afford to live The way I'm living now. LOOSE ENDS: Although I guess they're here to stay, the more I see of these plastic toys, the more I think they have only one use to be stepped on .... Let us live today in such a way that tomorrow will bring only pleasant memories of yesterday ... In spite of what many countries think, man still chooses his own form of government blonde, bru nette, or redhead ... A mother is a person who sees that thoi are only four pieces of pie for five people and says she isn't hungry . . . The number of people who watched the television debates between Vice President Nixon and Senator Kennedy ranges as . high as 75 million people, I hear. Which is quite an audi ence. Figures this large have a tendency not to register, but a few comparisons may help: It's 72 times the number of Indians in North America at the time of Columbus. It's over 17 times the popula tion of the U.S. in 1776. It's almost four times the to tal number of fans who attend ed major league ball games during the whole year of 1959. BUT, it shouldn't be over looked that for day-in-day-out coverage of the political story, the newspaper is still the main stay. The total estimated read ership of 150 million persons daily reaches every corner of the nation every day. If American motorists keep It up, they may turn In the safest year mileagenise In history. For the first eight months of 1960, the rate was 5.1 deaths per million miles of motor vehicle travel. Last year at this time, It was 5.2. Though the decrease isn't spectacular, it was accom plished in the face of a 2 ' per cent increase In miles traveled. In terms of actual deaths, however, 24.010 per sons had been killed through August 1960, against 23,860 at the same time in 1959. Ever wonder almit the origin, of the simple pencil: The first woodcased pencil was invented around 1686 in France. Before that advance, graphite was pushed into quills or tubes, wound with string, or put in metal containers called portcrayons. pTAR GAZER0 ft a v- D n, M t v " , 4-21-30-44 47-M-74 APR -21 I V MAY 21 l- e-13-ia -i 33 36-54 -By CLAY R. POLLA.V rt Your Ooir Attivtiy Guidi t-f According lo fhe Slorj To develop message for Friday, read words corresponding to numbers of your zodiac birth sign. UIRA :tPT. 3i OCT. R3-37.46 SBd I69.72.80-99S r-r jlm i: .-1,14-16-19-2? 1- 45-4856 CANCII IA18-26-34 41 l 57-65-79.1; 110 VlfOO !lr k 17 25-49J 77 9? 94 &2 IP. 3 Pt 4 Don't 6 S!l 7 Arp.xh 8 Thc,t 0 P,t 10 Pa'f 1 1 Aniiaro't 1 7 Postpone 13 Dov 14 S. 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