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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1960)
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, November 24, MfiO PAGE 13 A Vofer-Cfturci Controversy Is Settled SAX JUAN, Puerto Rico (API An end to the election controversy between Puerto Rico's Roman Catholic hierarchy and its ruling political party appeared in sight today following a statement by Archbishop James P. Davis. The archbishop said Catholics dho voted for Gov. Luis Munoz Marin and his Popular Democrat ic party Nov. 8 w ill not be denied the sacraments of the Church, j Msgr. Rafael Grovas, the arch- bishop's assistant, had warned this would be the penalty for those who had disobeyed the woman mayor, Felisa Rincon de Puerto Rican bishop's ban on vot-Gauthier. She had been singled ing for the party. In the eves of out by tire Kev. l nomas Maisonet the Church, such a vote was a pastor of San Juan Cathedral, as sin because the Popular Demo- one 0( 'nose wno would have to crats' program is viewed by the 'confess publicly to receive com church as un-Christian. munion. The archbishop's statement. made at a meeting in Chicago Sunday, was greeted with pleasure by government and political fig ures in this island commonwealth associated with the United States. "Thank God the situation has been resolved," said San Juan's PREMIUM PRICE OCEANLAKE, Ore. (API-Merle Gwynn, a barber, enlisted the aid of the five other barbers in the town in a war on odd-ball hair cuts. Regular haircuts will remain at $1.50, while the freak cuts will cost $1.75. the perfect gift ! for every woman on your list irresistible seamless nylons in an irresistible Christmas box! 1.35-1.95 JkT'S A WONDERFUL STORE jjSPT 1 ' in i 6 I FT ADQUARTERS atVern Owens'! n ('r--;-S' PEASr-TO SET :SSy - DIAL V Jfjf 'Ji EASY TO SEE f FRYGUI0E You know the quality, th dependability of famous Sunbeam appliance t. They're the most perfect gift ever. Make your selec tions now ond lay them away! MIX MASTERS 2-in-l combination slips easily off its sturdy stand for use as a power ful, light weight hand mixer. Controlled Heat FRY PANS The most famous fry pan ever. Sun beam's squore shape cooks 20 more than on ordinary round pan and the water-seoled element makes washing easy. Available in four sizes. r 4 p, J i p Controlled Heat HAIR DRYER Automatic PERCOLATOR Vern Owens' Pop-Up TOASTER Cascade Home Furnishings 412 Main Ph. TU 4.8365 r ..Mi i' ) 1 1 " t ml Agency Opposes License For Dams V .!- - .1 ' I : TV i KENO SCHOOLGROUNDS received tons of fresh covering last week. Parent Teacher Association members and other volunteers coated the hard, rocky play area with soft loam. In the pictur. are, from left, Fred Taylor, principal; J. W. Crosslin, James Hopkins, John Crossline and Earl Hanay. Outstanding Experts To Examine 'Goals For Americans' In Series Publication of an important se ries of short easy-to-read columns on Goals lor Americans will be gin in the Herald and News Friday. Written by 12 outstanding Amer ican authorities on foreign policy, economic growth, human needs, education, labor, agriculture, sci ence or government, the series w ill provide background and inter pretation for the forthcoming re port by President Eisenhower's commission on National Goals. The commission, under Dr. Hen ry M. Wriston, president of Col umbia University's American As scmbly, has been at work on rec ommendations for U.S. develop-. mcnt in the 1960s since last Feb ruary. Vice chairman of the com mission is General Dynamic s President Frank Pace Jr. Other members of the commis sion include American Red Cross President Gen. Alfred M. Grucn- ther, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chairman James R. Killian, University of California President Clark Kerr, former Har- vard President James B. Conant, former Governor of Virginia Col gate Darden, Christian Science Monitor Editor Erwin Canham, AFL-CIO President George Meany and DuPont Crawford Greenewalt. Retired Judge Learned Hand par ticipated in its early delibera tions, but was forced by ill health to withdraw. Creation of the commission was first suggested by President Eis enhower in his 1959 State of the Union Message to Congress. But the commission's final report was postponed until after the Novem ber elections so as to avoid all political implications. Work of the commission has been financed by private foundations and it has no connection with government. In preparation for its task the commission asked leading authori ties to write reports on various fields it wished to study. Each of these authorities was advised by a panel. The total member ship of all panels was 100. The authors wrote their papers, in the end, on their own respon sibility. It is these papers which form the basis for the series of 24 daily articles to be presented by the Herald and News. First daily installment in the series will point up the U.S. ro!e in world affairs for the next dec ade. It is written by Dr. William L. Langer, professor of history at Harvard. Oilier authorities whose recom mendations will be presented in succeeding installments of the sc ries are: Goals Commission Chairman Wriston writing,' on the American individual citizen and freedom, Antioch College President James P. Dixon .Ir., on human needs, Carnegie Foundation President John W. Gardner on education, International Business Machines President Thomas J. Watson Jr on technological cnange, hioan Foundation Vice President War ren Weaver on scientific develop ment. University of California President Clark Kerr on the econ omic role of government, D e s Moines Register Editorial Page Editor Lauren K. Soth on the farm problem, Herbert Stein and Edward Denison of the Committee for Economic Development growth, Chase 'Manhattan Bank Chairman John J. McCloy on for eign economic policy. Goals Com mission Staff Director William P. Bundy on problems for the fu ture, beyond 1970. This comprehensive series will provide local discussion groups, school history classes and individ ual readers wilh material for full understanding of the forthcoming report by the President's Commis sion on National Goals. The Department of Interior has advised the Federal Power Com mission that it is unnecessary for a power development at either the Mountain Sheep or Nei Perce sites on the Middle Snake River to be undertaken at the present time and for some years to come. In a letter signed by Acting Secretary Elmer F. Bennett, the department pointed out that the proposed Columbia River treaty with Canada will permit other major hydropower development on the Columbia River system and hence the proposed Middle Snake projects can be delayed pending further efforts to resolve the fish ery problem. The department's letter calls at tention to the White House state ment of Oct. 19 announcing Presi dent Eisenhower's approval of the proposals on Canadian storage which have been agreed to be tween the United States and Can adian negotiators, the White House statement said. "Due to the location of this proposed storage, there w ill be no interference with the cycle for salmon and other anadromous fish, which constitute such an im portant and recreational asset for the people of the Pacific North west. 'The large block of flood con trol storage and power that will as a result ot this cooperative undertaking affords us a greater (degree of selectivity in the plan ning and timing of potential do mestic projects in order to take into fullest consideration conser vation as well as uurelv eennnm. ic needs. Sorely needed time will te gained which can he devoted to the research and study which must eo into the solution nf th problem, particularly pressing to day in our northwest stales, of harmonizing construction of largel storage dams with fish and wild-1 life needs. In this way the agree-' ment can make a maximum con tribution to the fostering of con-, servation in its highest sense, the optimum harmonization of our, multipurpose needs." The Snake and Salmon rivers are of critical importance in maintaining the salmon fishery resources of the Columbia River system and a high dam at eith--er Mountain Sheep or Nez Perce ' si'es would drastically affect both -upstream migration of the ana dromous fish to spawn and tha return of young fish to the sea. Gets The Bird For No Birds BERLIN (AP) - The parakeets in Kurt Oeser's care produced only five or six young a year a crime in Communist East Ger many. He was convicted of em bezzling the national assets. Oescr, SO, ran the animal shop attached to the state zoo in Reichenbach. An expert testified a pair of parakeets would pro duce 10 young a year and the state lost 1,348 birds as a result of Oeser's "reprehensible work. Ocser also was accused of selling inferior birdseed. Gold Situation Causes Decline MILAN, Italy (AP)-Shares on Milan's stock exchange plunged to 1960 lows Wednesday. Losses brought some down as much as 50 per cent from the year's high levels in September. Financial circles blamed, among other things, the United Slates gold drain and uncertain ty here about recent Wall Street activity. Neurosurgeon Raps Doctors MONTREAL (API -An Ameri can neurosurgeon said Wednes day night 50 per cent of the op erations in the United Stales are performed by doctors not ade quately trained in surgery. Dr. Loyal Davis of Northwest ern University told a meeting at McGill University: "How much of this type of surgery is bungled no one knows and not all if it results in disaster." :3 $ I hi V IW t' W TM tf U, ... -I 'Two-door hardtop! Four-door hardtopl! When are vou people going to come up with a hard fender?" 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