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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1961)
! The- Day's to net iviamam 13U By FRANK JENKINS What of the two survivors of the American reconnaissance! plane that was shot down by the Russians over the Barents Sea last July 1? Let's be unqualifiedly happy over their return. aDDarentlv sound and in good health, to their lamuics. They have been forlu nate. Not only did they escape death in the crash in which two of their comrades perished, for whatever reason, the Soviet gov ernment released them from prison and sent them home. The gods of war, both hot and cold, have smiled upon them. But- Let's not jump to conclusions. Especially, let us not jump to the conclusion that the hard, cold, cruel men who govern commu nist Russia have CHANGED and will hereafter follow the paths that lead to a reasonable peace. That is improbable. What's in the wind? Here is an interesting dispatch from Pans: Prime Minister Macmillait of Britain and President De Gaulle of France meet today (Saturday) for secret talks said to be in spired by concern over Russia's persistent "wooing" of President! Kennedy. The scene of the meet ing was Rambouillet castle (pro nounced Rom-boo-YAY) a few miles west of Paris. The two men met in such secrecy that even interpreters were excluded: from their conference. (Premier Macmillan speaks reasonably flu ent French, and President De Gaulle can make himself under stood in English when he wants to.) So thev don't have to fear a leak through the interpreters. The dispatch goes on: Diplomatic observers said Mac millan and De Gaulle would pay especial attention to recent Mos cow efforts to court the new if.S. administration, no'tably eluding this week's release of the U.S. fliers. . French, newspapers indicated belief that the two European offi cials were concerned over the possibility that President Kennedy might agree to the Big Two ap proach long urged by the Rus sians U.S. -Soviet talks in which France and Britain would not be consulted. That is to say: ... The French newspapers suspect that the wily Mr. Kroosh is re verting to the tactic of DrVIDE AND CONQUER that ne trica without noUble success to work on President Eisenhower. His hope was that if he could entice the President ot the united states into a two-man "summit" con- ference he could so miff the oth er members of the NATO alliance that they would draw out and the alliance would fall apart. It was a crafty scheme, but President Eisenhower was too old a soldier and too close a stu dent of military history to fall for it. I think we can safely assume that Kroosh will get no farther in that direction with President Kennedy than he got with Presi dent Eisenhower. But. one supposes, Mr. Kroosh is going on .the theory that "you can't shoot a guy for trying." Boy Is Killed In Freak Fall CANBY (AP) A two-year-oldl Canbv boy died here Friday eve ning when he apparently rolled off a car seat and struck his head nn the floorboards, Clackamas Countv sheriff's deputies said. The boy, Richard Faist, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Faist, had been left in the parked car while his mother was shopping, deputies said. His mother returned to find the child lying on the car floor. The hov was dead on arrival at a doc tor's office. Js aLviaiiijijf -nnf tt!SCMV9T; il. . iit3ns.r Jk.' Lri;7i- High yesterday M Low last night 30 Preclp. last 24 hours none Since Oct. ! 5.34 i Same period last year 2.06 S?. aft Price Ten Cents 62 Pages KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SUNDAY, JANUARY 29. 1961 Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 659B Weather Northern Calilwala cloudy today with occasional rain jar the roast and la the extreme northern portion. Mi. Shasta Siskywi area Cloudy today with i ttw thowera or snow flurries, little tempera, ture change. By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. SALEM (AP) A compre hensive package to provide a state labor-management code was introduced in the Oregon Senate Friday. It was prepared by a legislative interim committee ployes, participation in "hot car- Labor-Relations Code introduced In Oregon Senate ganizational activities by employ es, do.nination of unions, discrim ination against employes who file charges with the state board, re fusal to bargain collectively with unions which represent the em- headed by Senate President Har ry D. Boivin. The proposed code is intended to end jurisdictional disputes be tween labor unions, .and abolish those same unfair labor practices which are banned in interstate commerce by federal law. It would set up a three-man state labor-management relations board that could order elections to determine whether the work ers in a plant want to be repre sented by a union. And if so, which union. An employe, union or employer could petition for an election. The attorney general would investi gate, and report his findings to the board. Then 'I the board finds that a reasonable question exists, it would order the election to be conducted by the state la bor conciliator. 0 Elections to decertify unions as bargaining agents would be held in the same manner. Only one election could be held in a plant in one year. The three board members would be appointed by the gov ernor, subject to senate confir mation. Unions would be prohibited from picketing an employer in attempts to influence the employ es to loin or to influence the em ployer to sign up with the union. if an election had been held with in the preceding year. Employers would be forbidden from interfering with union or- go agreements, ana discrimina tion against employes to en courage or discourage union membership. Labor unions would be barred from' taking action intended to cause an employer to discrimi nate against employes, refusal to bargain, fcatherbedding, coercion of employers or employes selection of representatives for bargaining or adjusting griev ances, cnarging excessive ices against members, conducting cer tain secondary boycotts, picket ing where another union is rec ognized as bargaining agent and taking part in "hot cargo" agreements. The board could hold hearings on these unfair practices and or der them stopped. The circuit courts would back up the orders with injunctions. The majority of the interim committee favors the so-called three-way bill for industrial ac cident insurance. Under present law, an employ er can escape liability for an in jured workman only by taking the insurance through the stale in dustrial accident commission. The new proposal would extend this same immunity from law suits to those employers who self insure or have private insurance. Gov. Hatfield has gone part way on this by recommending extension to self-insurers but not to those who have private in surance. Sen. Neuberger Asks Supplement Pay To Indians By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senator Maurine Neuberger, D- Ore., Friday asked the secretar ies of Interior and Agriculture to recommend an immediate supple mental appropriation to reimburse1 members of the Klamath Indian iTribe for timberland due for fed eral acquisition in April. Mrs. Neuberger, in a letter to the secretaries, said: "We have a moral and financial obligation to reimburse the Indian owners of the timberland as nearly possible on the acquisition date set by law. We have statutory authority for the appropriation, She said she made the request because the Budget Bureau must forward supplemental requests through President Kennedy be fore congressional action can be taken. Upon payments to Indians, the land will be included in the national forest system, perhaps as a new unit, she said. Court Six Americans In Castro Face Beath For Sesariiy (rimes Survives Long Fall PORTLAND (AP) A 53-ycar- old construction worker fell four stories from an uncompleted building here Friday and sur vived. Henry Hite iell with a wheel barrow full of concrete from a classroom building under con struction at Portland State Col lege when plywood planking gave way. ! He struck planking covering the ground. Hite said he held on to the wheelbarrow because he was afraid it would land on top of him. A hospital spokesman said his condition was not serious, although he sustained multiple fractures. Hi New Yorkers are, by a WHERE IS IT? P!aued, as a steady diet of snow snow and more snow, Brownie, pet pooch of Anthony Mantis of Brooklyn, encounters diffi culty getting at his favorite fire hydrant Soft Talk Russ Order Is Rumored WASHINGTON (AP) The White House said Saturday a pcech by Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was rewritten partly on White House orders. And there was unofficial word that President Kennedy has passed word to the nation's top military leaders that he wants to soft pedal tough talk about the So viet Union. Burke spoke Friday night at a dinner at which he received an award for distinguished service. Pierre Salinger, White House press secretary, said Burke's speech was rewritten ;md "among those who looked at it were peo ple in I he While House." He said Kennedy himself did not see it. Burke sent a copy of his orig inally banned speech to Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense for public alfairs. with Eight Bodiei; Recovered! From Ruins Of Building i$ chosen and comment Sylvester said Saturday he had suggested to Burke some changes in the diufl because it included discussions in the area of foreign policy instead of purely military matters. Sylvester said he thought (hat in foreign policy "the Presi dent and the secretary of slate I should be the ones who talk" on those topics. Burke also had sent copies of . the proposed speech to While RECIFE, Brazil AP-Speci;!- the island is leased to the United ; House aml Sla(e rjc)a,.lmei of(j. Pirate Ship May Land Passengers At Station By ROBERT BERRELLEZ HAVANA (AP) Six Americans charged with trying to join anli-Caslro rebels were summoned before a mil itary court in La Cabana fortress Saturday. The prose cutor is demanding the death sentence. Sources at La Cabana said the young adventurers first regarded the possible death penalty as "a big joke" but were sobered by a pretrial conference with two Cu ban lawyers. The defense attorneys were given less than 24 hours to prepare for the trial. The execution demand was based on alleged confes sions from the six that they received miljtary training in Florida at a base "maintained, supplied and pro tected by the United States." Two Cuban officials were ' summoned as witnesses. Prime Minister Fidel Cas- " tro's regime, which by unof-jbeen harred from attending sim ficial count already has shot liar trials in the past. - V- :589 persons, including three Americans, said the six sailed from Marathon Key, Fla., and were captured en tering Havana harbor Jan. 7. They are George R. Beck, 24, of Norton, Mass.; Tommy L. Baker, 28, of Dothan, Ala.; Don ald Joe Green, 28, of Clover, S.C.: James E. Bean, 34. of Cedar Falls. N.C.; Alfred Eugene Gib son. 32. of Durham, N.C., and the request that he look it over! Leonard Louis bcnmidi, u. oi Chicago. CHICAGO (AP) Walls col- tapsed on more than a score of firemen fighting one of two spec tacular blazes in near zero weath er Saturday. Eight bodies were recovered from the mountain ot rubble and one firefighter was missing. ' Fourteen other firemen were rescued and hospitalized after the walls of one of two factory build ings destroyed in the near North west Side blaze caved in. Several firemen who answered cries of help from those buried under the debris of the walls were crushed to death when the roof of the second building fell in on them. Rescuers battled cold, debris. flaming timbers and onsetting darkness in their efforts to re cover bodies. Some of the equipment fighting the $300,000 factory fire was called away to battle a second blaze, a three-story brick building on the North Side which housed a bowl ing alley, a dance hall, stores and apartments. Four persons were injured, one critically, in the second blaze which caused damage estimated in excess of $200,000. Spokesmen for the bowling alley where the fire apparently started said the blaze may have been set delib erately hy disgruntled teen-agers. A series of alarms brought 316 men and 67 pieces of equipment to the factory blaze shortly after dawn. Later two fircboats tied up in the Chicago River nearby be gan pumping water on the fire. Sled Mishap Kills Youth WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi dent Kennedy Saturday named Edward R. Murrow, veteran radio-television commentator, as di rector of the U.S. Information Agency. He also announced a long string of other forthcoming norm nations. Among those he said he would appoint to high federal positions was Henry Richardson La Bouisse as director of the International Cooperation Administration, which handles the foreign aid program. BEND, Ore. (AP) A toboggan crashed inlo a stump at the Sky liner ski area near here Saturday, killing one youth and injuring twO others, It was the county's second win ter sports accident death in s week. The victim of the sledding acci dent was 13-ycar-old Richard Bar- nett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Barnett of Bend. He was with a (.roup of teenagers from the First Baptist Church of Bend who nail gone to the ski area for a day's outing. Death apparently was due to a neck fracture. The olhcr boys on the sled, David Horning, 14. and Douclas Underbill, 13, suf- Stab's. Fernando de Noronha has air landinf facilities and some ac commodations for sea traffic, but it is not clear whether a ship as big as the 20,906-ton Santa Maria, with a draft of nearly 28 loot, would put in there. Volcano Cone lion developed Saturday -that the captive liner Santa Maria may be heading for a U.S. missile track ing station in the Atlantic off Bra zil to release its 588 passengers, including 42 Americans. A Brazilian order Friday, night! grounding U.S. search planes that touched down at Recife halted aerial contact with the liner and the U.S. Navy was seeking to get ., i 1 ai ..! me oroer rescniuuu. i m- - . ports, 14 of the planes were idle f CrQter LOKe here. But a Navy fix at 8:45 p.m. EST, Friday night had the ship heading directly for the U.S. mis sile tracking station on Brazil's Fernando de Noronha Island, about 300 miles northeast of Recife. The vessel then was reported cials On the basis of the views ex pressed by those officials and Syl vester, Burke then rewrote the entire speech. Sylvester said. The Americans were charged1 with "crimes against the security of the state," a general accusa tion covering conspiracy a crime punishable with -death by firing squad. Councellor Gilbert De Dardel of the Swiss Embassy, which Is car-1 ing (or U.S. interests in Cuba said he had been advised the Cu ban prosecutor would ask for the death penalty. Two veteran Cuban lawyers, Anibul Pnehcco and Luis Raui Fletias, were retained to defend. the six. De Dardel said he would attend the trial. Foreign newsmen have ( Cuban police said the six Amer icans had attempted to land on the north coast of Pinar del Rio Province, a rebel stronghold, but bad weather forced them to sail inlo Havana harbor. The Ameri cans dumped their weapons and equipment overboard before land ing, police said. The Castro regime's continuing propaganda barrage against In surgents in the south-central mountains of Cuba suggested the government is preparing a new all-out assault on the counter revolutionary bastion. Castro opened a new school : Saturday in Santa Clara, capi- lal of Las Villas Province, not far from the rebels' mountain hide out, and may use the visit to sig nal the drive. Peasants arc being evacuated i from the Escambray mountains, I which are reportedly ringed by l militiamen and army Iroops. Nu-1 mcrous clashes have been report- v ed, but there has been no official ' . which beganxfys ' mid Mutuary. -!f i Reports horn Miami (hat Iwu top members of Castro's revolu tionary movement had fled Cuba swept through Havana. t- SERIES STARTS MONDAY . - cone, rising irom the Douom oi the lake. m, ....... ,i.. tw ni- Donald M. Wilson, former chief iheading south from the equator atjH . w,'i,iams of ij,.Darlment of Geology at the University ol California. He named the newly By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The National Park Service re ported Saturday that underwater mapning of Crater Lake shows there is an underwater l,320-fool The modern way to meet a real volcano, a nearly symmetrical'difficully in an important matter is to call in an expert. With many youngsters having difficulties, as always, in the mat-1 Expert Can Help You Get Better Grades In School With Pointers of the Life Magazine bureau here and assistant news secretary in Kennedy's 1D60 election campaign was named as Murrows cmei deputy. Jet Crashes With 6 Men 32 degrees 10 minutes west longi tude toward the island, which is manned by U.S. military person-; nel and some Brazilians. U.S. sources in Rio de Janeiro said "it is not out of the ques tion that the ship would anchor at or at least go near the island. They said, however, this might depend on whether Brazilian au thorities intended to intern the ship. Though Brazilian territory, AMAGANSETT. N Y. (AP)-An American Airlines Boeing 707 jet training plane crashed in the At lantic Ocean Saturday after ap parently exploding in the air. Six men aboard were killed. A witness was quoted as saying the big craft blew up in the air fered culs and bruises in the ac-just offshore in this eastern Long cident. I Island area. Chimps Get Ready For Space Jump CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.' (AP)lchimps have been trained to per-jperformance during flight. Theilf the chimp fails to depress the !Six young chimpanzees beganjform a series of lever-pushing ; animal will be zipped inlo a plas-lleft-hand lever in this five-second final preparations Saturday lor asks (luring tne ride. lic coucn iln ony his head and penoa, ne receives a shock. rocket ride one of them will take this week to blaze a trail !or flu man space travel. fin Monday night, 12 hours be- man's. fore Tuesday's scheduled launch Four of the candidates for the time, medical men win decide which of the six is best fitted A chimpanzee was selected for ,. fr. , m. Thrpe hours "Afler three months of training, the journey because his body and Le(ore iauncn tnii the couch will'these chimps are expert at strik mind most nearly resemble u. (a-n-j sprarelv to the flooring the levers in plenty of time," flighl are male, twr female. They are between 3'i and 4 years old, of the one-ton Project Mercury space capsule atop tire rocket. Mounted on the inner wall of the airticht couch, at the chim- the official reported The white light come? on brief ly whenever the chimp flicks his paw on a lever. This tells him he , 1 II ... ... r . 1- MIC Oil physically ana psycjwiogicaiiy loriwitn weights ranging irom it w, che5t ,cvcli wj is jng the righl ,hing T IrZ-Zr ZrZZ,Zr.L .1' K"lr,a'0 Panel with three lights-red. white, Thc Iledstone gearcd to push ine ape " " .'v"i miivuU.. . . . l, Qnri tun Vpri. nne nv the Redstone booster rocket, they the ane miles down the Atlantic missile range. K the chimp and his space cap sule come through the 16minute.'pushing chores 4 200-mile-an-hour ride unscathed,; will undergo repealed medical checks and bone up nn their lever- and blue and two levers, one by each paw. The red light will flash on just the capsule to an area in the At lantic Ocean northeast of Grand Bahama Island. A fleet of recov- before liftoff and will remain on cry ships, planes and helicopters one of America's astronaut! prob ably will take am identical trip into space within two monlhj. The upcoming tngnt is designed When the lime come, for .throughout ne , ,gm. n is irainea u uu uic nKm-uaim lever at least once every 20 sec onds when the red light is on. If lection," a National Space Agency official reported, "we will pick a orimarv ehimn and an alternate. If the primtiry animal gets cold will be waiting to fish M space chamber and its passenger from the water. Medicu! examination of the 20 seconds pass without a hit, the'chimp will begin immediately. in determine how the small pas- feet, we'll use the other." enger reacts under extreme. Electronic sensors will be al i forces of acceleration and re-entry lached to the ape's body. These and during a five-minute period I will measure heart beat, body of giddy weightlessness. The temperature, respiration and task ape receives a small electrical Then the space hero will be re turned to Cape Canaveral for fur- Iher checks and to tell his five shock through a metal plale fast ened to his left foot. The blue light will blink on ev-;simian friends who stayed behind cry two minutes for five seconds. .what they missed discovered volcano the Men-jam Cone, afler the lale John C. Mer riam, former president of the Carnegie Institute of Washington. The mapping also shows the deepest part of the cobalt blue lake is 1.932 feet. That makes it the deepest lake in the United States and the seventh deepest in the world. 1 w "-yv - - - urn 1 "' 'jmm THREE SHEEP MET this some fate early Thunday when they were attacked by dogi. The ewes belonged to Earl R. MeNedly, above, 2437 Kane Street. He valued the dead animals at $35 each but will be paid just $7 each out of the dog license fund by County Poundmater Don Libby. This graphically illustrates why dog ow"81,1 ar required by law lo buy licenses to responsibility can be placed. McNeely said he doesn't believe in shoot inq doqs but he intends to protect his enimals in the future. tcr of grades which are of para mount importance these days we have called in an expert for you. He is Prof. Leslie J. Nuson, a specialist in getting better grades. His series, headlined "You Can Get Better Grades," will appear daily in this -newspaper startirig Monday. Getting good grades isn't just a matter of intelligence, Dr. Nason asserts, nor even of knowledge alone. To a considerable extent it's a matter of technique. There are different techniques for dif ferent subjects. Subject by subject, Dr. Nason shows you how to get belter grades, or how to help your child get them. Dr. Nason is a professor in thc University of Southern California's school of education. He is ac customed lo practicing results. His experiments wilh Icarni ig techniques have focused thc at tention of cducalois. They work. Take the case of the failing fraternity. It was losing 50 per cent of its pledges because they failed to make a "C" average. The spon sor called in Dr. Nason to tell them how to make belter grades. That was two years ago. Since then, the fratcrnily. one of the prominent Greek letter groups at Ihc university of Southern Call fornia, has lost only two out of 38 pledges because of poor grades. 40 Years' Experience Dr. Nason has worked in the leaching field 40 years as math, science, and engineering instruc tor and as special consultant on study methods. He began his teaching career while still a senior at Central High School in Grand Rapids, Mich. He held an instructor's cer tificate and taught in a junior! high school Following a term of duty 1917 1919) with thc 16th U.S. Cavalry. he enrolled in Michigan Stale Col lege. He graduated with honors in 1923 with a B.S. in engineering! and higher grades than any en gineering suiclem. had made at Michigan Statn in 10 years. 11c began tcachiug that same year at East Lansing high School, then went lo California high schools and colleges, where he LESLIE J. NASON acquired a reputation for coming up wilh practical solutions on ed ucational problems. It was a gift he applied to individual students with some striking results. Thc head counsellor of the college be gan sending him the tough cases. During World War II the gov ernment put Nason's talents to work In thc Navy's officer and pilot-training programs. Between 194.1 and I94B he supervised V-12 and V-S training, his duties taking him to 25 of the nation's college campuses. It was his job lo show young men how to do three sem- eslers of work in two how to work efficiently and avoid crack ing up under the intensive, vaca- tionlcss 12-month study period. The success of V-12 and V-3 training was one of the miracles of the crash program of the war years. After the war he went back to linu Beach City College, then took sabbatical, got his doctor ate at the University ol Southern California, and :oon started to teach there in the school of education. He likes to joke about the length of the title of his doctoral thesis; "Patterns of Circum stances Associated with Academic Achievement of High School Stu dents of Superior Ability." Outstanding Contribution Actually, thc thesis as a prac tical, helpful study indicating the factors that contribute to good grades in school. Educitors con sider it an outstanding piece of work in Ihe field. Normally, theses go on the li brary shelf in their typed form to cathcr dust. Dr. Nason s Is the only education thesis published in the past five years at U.s.c. i ne monograph bssed on las thesis was cited in 1957 as the outstand ing publication of that year. Since 1941 Dr. Nason lias oeen conducting a clinic for lagging students in his hours outside the classroom. Hundreds of college. hich school, and grade school students have come lo him. or been brought to him by their par- enls. He never turns down i Ihe student answers yes nuestion: "Do vou really want ta , help yourself and let me ncip you do belter?" The student who answers yes and accepts Dr. Nason's guidance goes back to school ana makes better grades. He has At had a failure yet! His successful methods ana prin ciples of learning are drawing more and moro attention as this ra of scholarship mokes Its se vere and exacting demands. in "You Can Get Better Grades Dr. Nason explains! How to work both sviwy ana accurately. How lo read lor maximum . meaning. How to organize and write class papers. ' ... .. How to Improve your wndwnt ing. How lo listen. How to aolvi math problems. i How to prepare for and take tests. i a case if ir i& to the y want 'I-