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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1961)
PAGE ( HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Friday, March 3. 1961 Senators Subpoena Critic . SALEM AP) The Senate Ed. ucalion Committee Thursday de cided to subpoena an Angus B. Campbell for what Sen. Jean Lew. is, D-Portland, called an attack on the integrity of a school offi cial. The committee voted unani. mously to issue the subpoena after Mrs. Lewis presented the letter attacking Chancellor John R, Richards of the state System of! Higher Education and the United Nations Educational, Social and Cultural Organization. ' She said the letter with Camp. bell's name printed on it showed an address in Oswego, but she found that no such address ex isted. She said the charges should not go unanswered. The letter was addressed to members of the Oregon Legisla ture and asked repeal of the 1937 school district reorganization law. It came up at a hearing on a bill to repeal the law. It branded UNESCO "one of the brood of deadly agencies spawned by the United Nations." It said Richards had been an official of UNESCO, while chancellor of the state system. Hie letter asked: "Who was it that appointed this man, Rich ards, to a position so powerful in Oregon education where he could aid UNESCO in subverting the loyalty of our students for their position on UNESCO? The chancellor at one time headed the United States delega. tion to UNESCO but no longer is connected with the organiza. tion. Chancellor Richards added this comment: "My appointment to UNESCO was an Eisenhower ap. pointment, and, of course, thor oughly checked out by the FBI." Sen. Lewis also presented a let ter which said Campbell was not a registered Clackamas County voter, not a member of the coun ty Republican Central Committee as claimed and not listed in the telephone book. The letter on the Campbell let terhead contended teachers, churches and government do not belong to those who operate them but to all the people. "Therefore, we, strongly urge that our legislators shall repeal tliis dangerous and destructive statue the 1957 school district reorganization law," the letter said. Completely Equipped DRIVE-IN FOR LEASE Excellent Location i ALSO Space for BEAUTY PARLOR Heat & Water Furnlihtd CALL AL VINCZE TU 4-4587 This overshadowed the hearing1 school reorganization, has not cut on the repeal bill to do away with xhx costs one bit and Uiat was the law which puts some compul sion on local districts to consoli date with other districts. More than 300 persons jammed into the hearing room with scores more standing in the hall outside There was a large delegation of Serve-our-Slate members who are leading the repeal drive. Sen. Ben Musa, D-The Dalles, chief sponsor of repeal, said that Mall Planned Despite Rule SALEM (AP) The federal court decision declaring unconsti tutional Salem's capitol mall zon ing ordinance will have little ef fect on the state's plans to ac quire property in the mall, city and slate officials said Thursday. City Atty. Chris Kowitz said the only property affected by the de cision is the property which fronts on Capitol Street between Center and Union streets. Center and Union arc two blocks apart. Kowitz said the decision makes that property commercial because the property on the other side is in a commercial zone. In that area, the state owns all but six pieces of property, J. N Peet, secretary of the state Board of Control, said. He said the slate would have to pay more money if any of those six pieces of property had com mercial development on them. So, Peet said, the state probably will have to acquire those six pieces soon so it still could acquire Die land at residential prices. one of the reasons for the law. Euccne Fisher, felkton, repre senting the Oregon School Board Association, gave these four points in support of the present law: It puts grades one to 12 under one management wnicn ny-ana- large has proved academically and economically superior. Progress has demanded units of greater size. The law provides for reorganiz ation committees to study meth ods of improving districting and to present for a vote of the people proposed reorganization plans. Local control ot education is fundamental and paramount and the reorganization is not contrary to this. Fear Stricken Africans Ask UN For Protection LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congolafter Congolese authorities told UPI) Hundreds of Africans, .the U.N. command to jtVI' v fearing the same fate as 44 na-,its troops from the Ndjili airfield. Mirif eWorld Aim Of Peace Corps WASHINGTON (AP) Theltheir life and living: American Peace Corps which what's its purpose? How will President Kennedy created thisthey be picked? Where will they v.ecK is siui loo new to nave pre-iR0 vnat wiH hey do? Congress last year authorized Missing Men Feared Dead SWEET HOME (AP) Two Dallas. Ore., loggers were miss ine today and believed drowned in1 the Middle Fork of the santiam River. Glen Cooper and W. H. Rowell went out in a 12-foot aluminum boat to eat lunch at noon Thurs. day. Later they signaled to olher loggers on the bank they were going to the next landing to tie up the boat. They were not seen; again. Some three hours later the boat was found upside down, under wa- ter, more than a mile below where they were last seen. Sweet Home firemen and loggers tried to pull it to the bank with ropes and grappling hooks, but it was snagged on rocks at the head of rapids. lives slaughtered by rampaging Congolese troops, swarmed to refuge with the United Nations command today. At the same time, friction be tween the U.N. command and the central Congolese government worsened as a result of new inci dents involving U.N. personnel. Frightened natives streamed into a special U.N. camp set up in Luluabouig, the capital of Kasai Province where the mas sacre occurred Tuesday night and Wednesday, The bloodbath, the worst in the Congo in months, and the troubles between President Joseph Kasa. vubu's government and U.N. au. thorities came at a time when Congolese leaders were preparing for a conference at Tananarive, Malagasy Republic, on Sunday. It was hoped that leaders of all factions would attend, including Antoine Gizenga, leader of the leftist pro-Lumumbist regime in Stanleyville. U.N. troops and Congolese sol diers jointly patrolled Luluabourg to prevent further bloodshed, ac cording to reports reaching here. Central Congolese Interior Min ister Cyrille Adoula said the mas. sacie was brought on by agita tion from pro-Lumumba elements among the Luluabourg population Three central Congolese soldiers were torn to pieces by followers or slain ex-Premier Patrice Lii- mumba. Their comrades were whipped into a frenzy by the mob action and went on a wild shoot ing spree killing civilians in the streets. In Lcopoldville, new Congo- United Nations friction developed In a note handed Thursday to U.N. Special Representative Ra jeshwar Dayal, the Congolese gov ernment said U.N. troops should be pulled away from the airfield "in the shortest possible time." .The note also advised U.N. troops not lo enter Congolese military camps. " "Any violation could have grave consequences for which the Congo lese army would not be respon sible," the note said. A U.N. spokesman said the United Nations must safeguard its communications, implying it would not leave Ndjili. . An instruction issued to all U.N. troops that they are to defend their weapons "by shooting if necessary" also indicated that the United Nations is not ready to back down under pressure from Congolese soldiers, who Thursday continued their disarming of U.N. soldiers. Iriiv form. But it is possible to. indicate the shape it will take. a study of the corps idea. It was It will, of course, require much! undertaken by Colorado State, time, many months, before the: University's research foundation. full picture emerges. Kennedy simply set up a temporary Peace Corps. He asked Congress to go beyond this and by law make a permanent Peace Corps. This week it made a preliminarvi report. It will make a final one in April. What follows is based on that preliminarv report, the result of Kpnnotlv howx his tpmrairan extensive investigation by thei arrangement he able tn tr.iinifoundation and interviews ttilh and send MO or more young peo ple overseas by fall. But the per- hundreds abroad. of people here ard including government mancnt peace may have 5,000 or'peop'e here and overseas more members. There are four general ques tions to ask about the corps whose members will go to back ward countries and, by living and working side by side with the people there, help them improve Airport Paving PORTLAND (AP) The Wil lamette Iron and Steel Co. of Portland has been awarded $3,020,053 contract by the Corps of Engineers. The job calls for building four hydraulic turbines for a lock and dam project in Arkansas. Con struction of the four 51,800 horse power turbines is scheduled to begin-next year. ' NO ROOM TO SWIM LONDON (UPD So many people have tossed coins into the fountain at London Airport's new hotel that all the goldfish have died. tULUTIN 10. DATS ? mil farhrt i ! Br Carrlei .-a 'sen Rail Truck TotC Br Oradeai u. a. i U. S. 2 u. s. cn. Klxad Total T Varlatyl Iteda WMtaa rtuaaett tUxti Tetal POTATO OOWrtTEE MANAQZR3' JOINT BISPOSmOM RIF0RT, 17S0 CROP SEASON WITH 1959 CROP SiASON 0DKPARISON3 CUKUUTIVS K0UU9 THRU f.brmnr 1L. 11M COMPILED BI ORtOON-CALICRHIA POTATO OOKXnTti, P.O. BOX 788, RiDHOWD, OREGON -. 0 ra -Calif, Vaahlniten Irlahs-E.Ore. 3nLute.Col. Ho, fofc, "V""" , ,"Vfl TskllJMSV iliO pnt i960 1959 I 960 ',9 p60 1959 Ujfl 12& 12J2 191 W J2i2 12i2 ........................ (CAfiurn too ot.) ........................ The purpose To help speed the social and economic development of the world's backward areas. Peace Corps members will not get a salary. Tliey'll get a sub sistence payment. This govern ment will look out for their health. They'll live with the people in towns and villages, educate them, work with them, teacli them skills from farming lo engineering and nursing. How they'll be picked The gov ernment will set up a Peace Corps agency. Kennedy ordered it done Wednesday. Standards and qualifications will be established for choosing Peace Corps mem bers. Each member must have some cl-ill noA,rl in l!,o n.-nr, In whirls added that the region's economy assi d c wi nd will slay down until there 'ts a lraining. Me must know the Ian- ooosi in me lumoer industry. ,he count , which he Morse said President John F.L son( ,no ,.,. ,slnms anri Kennedy has made a magnificentip,.9bierns. He must' physically Sldll dllU Una SUUWIl . VlgUI ailU ggy child care, sanitation, and so on). Community and rural develop-i ment (farm programs, problem.; of the home, building schools and roads, collage industries, adull and youth clubs and so on). Here are some of the specific needs pointed out in the founda tion's survey: Farming Livestock improve ment, improved garden and field crops, irrigation, tool care and i maintenance. 4-H clubs, cooper.i lives. marlretinc. and Grain stor age. Engineering Irrigation, com munity water supply. Hood con trol, road, surveying, bridges. Building and Industrial Trades Masonry, caipentry, electri- Morse Says Outlook Poor PORTLAND (AP)-Sen. Wayne Morse. D-Ore., said Thursday the United States is in a deep reces sion and the outlook is not bright. The senator, who arrived by plane, said the downturn in the economy has hit the Pacific Northwest particularly hard. He cians, machinists. Home Demonstrations Nutri tion, food handling and prepara tion, sewing, and food preserva tion. Home Industries Weaving. f handicrafts, pottery. And there are needs in these fields: Public administration and industrial management; secretari al, clerical and office manage ment; social welfare which would include orphanages, wellare agen cies and community centers; rec reational activities: marketing and handling of fish: reforesta tion and forest management; sur veys and research; government planning; community planning, nursing. statesmanship. Kennedy defeated Morse in Ore gon's Democratic presidential pri mary election last spring. rtU, 36H 76S 919 2U5 29 M3 3922 uoj ijii ua 3204 3J22 SHE 353 iSo4 Ji3 aS5 3532? U9i 4101. 1907 1HH 1680 1938 3021 2104 74 87 5555 353 lSZC 13UU 17268 2,193 3389 4371 i7ii 33329 3109 3U& 7058 jepi 15167 927 8559 7851, 415 1393 . U93 210 5124 2993 3652 2131 2398 304 5746 Sow 13400 12S2& 10253 809? 23053 20925 13152 . 13940 3378 25ia 7123 446,7 9280 12040 24H 6800 15761 18840 15761 18509 331 10157 9247 5124 5555 25a5J 20925 15761 18840 1 6 , 243 412 1 6330 7544 SoJ 8042 (641) (60.0 424 551 1465 1948 10115 11114 l5504 15STT (58) (691) 3 403 611 1687 22894 29518 1132 lSil 24662 33329 () (55i) 7171 6963 343 271 . 2653 2013 iST57 1 527 (75 (75 1920 3318 1867 1755 1337 977 5124 67J55 (75) (71X) 16944 14966 6183 5509 526 450 23653" 20925 (7U (73) 13827 17543 1934 1297 157ol 1B845 (58) (56) 2. Export 3. Pood Prooaaalnft 4. Nonfood, StarcD Llvaatoek faad Total 727 1 403 829 2 511 98 2615 4055 515 31 3645 473 24 1374 360 3P32 2 107 7 31159 19077 2763 5448 3085 3051 37035 27o90 50 410? . 4116 J, 902 2938 800 471 3073 12S2 30M lfji 3389 .3083 ITO4 2406 2472 2530 1293 2322 4199 1922 216& 1155 228 8629 7575 11612 14871 57859 71262 40178 38784 98037 110046 71626 85674 14014 15053 8392 4554 4005 4765 98037 110046 26785 26495 24331 29125 45789 52913 UJ2 15U 98037 110046 (57) (63) 6341 6375 327 J04 38156 24051 9484 11398 20496 23461 740U4 B5euy (36) (34) (42) (31) (60) (451) (25) (25) (25) (29) (26) (271) ' (42) (441) (431) (37) rfAl PIWIITIOH 1039; 15W7 20709 19676 61698 61019 13556 12310 6828 ' 8522 32282 28500 27373 337U 172841 175855 iCartlflad aa Mating N.O fraah aarkat raquiraaanta. Prioarllr labia aiock but aajr Inoluda Van ahlpaanta to non-tabla atock outlata Cartlflad aaad ablpaanta onlor and raporta froa aoaa araaa lncoaplata. ' Manr lota contain hlh paraantaga U.S. 1 and U.S. 2 fradaa. Xnoludaa oMpa, canning, fraatlng, flour and all typaa dahjdratad product-, t Uta contain lovar paraantaga of U.S. 1 and 0.3. 2 gradaa or fall to Boat N.O. fraah market raquiraaanta. I Inoludai dlvaralon to llvaatoek faad, fara saa, aaad Wd for planting adUiln araa, ate. The SMEUltf NOW OPEN We Are Now Ready TO SERVE YOU! We Invite You To Come Out For The Finest Dining Combined With The Finest Atmosphere And Good Service Now Completely Carpeted New Fiberglass Drapes "You Will Note Our New Menus" i j A Complete Dinner Only $2.25 I "Moreover, a dividend . . . The ) Satellite's New Generation j i of Hospitality GRAND RE-OPENING Friday & Saturday, Mar, 3 & 4 Labor Lawyers Oppose Compensation Bill FUND DRIVE STARTS WASHINGTON (UPD Presi dent John F. Kennedy launched the 1961 Easter Sea campaign Thursday by accepting a sheet of stamps from the National Easter Seal Twins, 8-year-old Paula and Patricia Webber of Sumter, S.C.I Where trey'l! go Simply, they will be 3cnt where needed, pro vided the country which can use them wants them. What they'll do-Tlie founda tion found the greatest needs, in 10 countries its investigators vis ited, in these fields: Education (especially teaching English, science, literacy, adult education, and vocational tram ing). Health and sanitation (nursing, technical assistance, mother, and STAR GAZER V to: ,20-21-29-44 47-72-73 TAUIUS APR. 21 MAY 21 25-27-53 54-62-65 CIMINI MAY 22 VV JUNE 22 -15-17-23-26 43-49-87- CANCil JUNE 21 JULY 23 4- 7-lo-3a 17-4174 uo (Si -,ut-r24 f-l. AUG. 23 Oy' 3- 6- SM S46-75-8-90l VIROO AUG. 24 SfPT. 22 38 "iii-i4.i8-: ;42 50 55 Br CLAY R. POLLAN JM Your Daily Activity Guida M According to thm Stan, f To develop messoge for Saturday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. UMA SEPT, 23 OCT. 23 I7.i3.?4.mr IW-73-83-84VS 1 Peoola 2 Money 3 Cheat a Don'r 5Pov a Up! 7Loy 8 You' 9 Condition! lOYouriell 1 1 Nice 1 2 Advonce 13 Matters 31 Pall 32 Purje 33 To 34Mov 3b Wide 34 You 370pen 38 Should 3 Head 40 To 41 To 42 Moke 43 You 14 D?velopments44 And 15 Fait 16 Will 17 Action IB Today !9Helo 20 Keep 21 Your 22 Eorly 23 Con 24 Which 25 Hours 26 Bring 27 Give 28 Poor 29 Secrets 30 Promise (9) Good 4!5tr.na 46 Receiva . 47 Those 48 Put 49Tha 50 You 51 You 52 Promisa 53 Tight 54 01 55 Hopoy 56 Accomplish 57 You 56 Advise 59 Seem 60 Most Adverse 610) 62 Friendly 63 By 64 Your 65 Enioymant 66 Copoble 67 Portner 68 01 69 Com 70 Hondling -71 Keeping 72 Ot 73 Higher-ups 74 Criticism 75 Unexpected 76 A 77 In 78 And 79 The 80 Background 81 Ideas 82 Across 83 Little 84 Opposition 85 Trying 86Situotion 87 Goins 88 Wonted 89 Good 90 Fortune Neutral KOtt'lO NOV. 22 51-56-60-63 if PI -77-79 80 SAGITTARIUS NOV. 23 S OEC. 21 (gli 2- .28-31ft? B2-45-53 V3 CAniCOIN DEC 23 JAN. 20 5-33-39-58 of KI-64-67 AOUAMUS 57-59-66-683 70-76-85-86 Vi'J PISCCS IAAR 21 1-1619 36(0 048 81-82Vbr' flatfjfi&it Endt Saturday nTHTl n.r.,, on. i. ii-as p ka CONTINUOUS FROM 1:00 P.M. GENE STRATTON-PORTER'S . IWr.S -KUI! A laff L-JACK IAMBERT STEVEN PECK . STARTS SUNDAY -J'? -' SCREEN ttmMiki ASTHE Pf.-5 T IirK iff Li'-""- '" ' MAKES . if Cv F,LM 'i-ff ' HISTORY! zzT&ri i mmJh? J James Robertson! t&'M L0RIAME5TRe ' 'f-'MWiM ALBERT LEVICN J. PAT O'MALLEY ROBERT WILKIE ROMO VINCENT TOM DUGGAN W4.lWahi SALEM (AP) Four attorneys representing Hie Oregon AFL-C10 Thursday testified against a pro posed three-way industrial acci dent compensation law. The bill would not improve the lot of the injured workmen but would only allow employers to buy workmen's compensation from private Insurance firms, said Jumcs Griswald of Portland. Griswald said it would result in higher administrative costs of pri vate insurance and the setting up Eugene Fire Loss Heavy of a non-competitive and monopo listic rate structure by law. The proposed law would permit employers to carry industrial ac cident insurance with the state, private companies or themselves under the industrial accident act. It sets compensation subject only to court appeals. Dr. Forrest E. Mieke. Portland industrial physician, said admin istrative costs are not a very good test of the kind of treatment j the injured workman gets. Dr. Itiekc said neither the pres ent law, which allows only insur ance with the state under the act, nor the proposed three-way bill, which he supports, spells out fully the need (or the best possible medical care. He urged amend ment to the proposed law to do this. He also urged that the law be broadened to cover so-called non hazardous jobs because techno logical advances have brought hazardous conditions, even to sec retarial work. Berkeley Lent. Wesley Frank- No more exotic places or stranger moralities have ever reached the screen . . . nor any more tender, touching story of love! . I "Dining for the Discriminating" j 1 Your Hosts . . . Dick & Dorothy Smith j 1 EUGENE (AP) - Fire de stroyed a bakery and resulted in heavy damage to a quarter block containing 13 businesses in the downtown district here late Thursday night. Firo Chief E. L. Smith esti mated damage will run between $100,000 and 00,000. No one was injured. Fire destruction was confined i lin and William Babcock were the to the bakery and a small ad-j other three Portland attorneys joining hardware. But there was who appeared. Lent attacked smoke and water damage to at! claims and review procedures of least eight Oliver businesses. 'the bill. Franklin said handling Miss LaVcrn Smith, 51. one of of benefits would be slow and three persons at home in five sec-: Babcock said the three-way sys- ond story apartments, said she tern would be more eNncnsivc. was looking at her w indow above the bakery when she heard an explosion and saw fire and smoke. site ruuira uus ure Ulirei n-iv, KiamalM falls. Oreoen ants and telephoned the Eugene! servtna. southern oret - .. , . and Northern California ire department. la-ubiitnaa aanv ieceoi tan an tunaa, Firemen fought the blaze for 0,, ?,,,,,,,,, om.n, an hour and half before ion-, wai at fsoiaoaoe trolling it. Fighters and equip-1 ,'?':Ee'tJLTN00'''au!J ment from Springfield and other, eterai a econ ctt mmet at me .... -.- . 'past office al Klamath Fans, Oregon. neighboring communities came to a auouit k. ic unner aci of can L,n litest. Varch 1 lira Second-clan past I y' j 1 oai at Kiamem Fails. Orev Aooui one oozen persons in a mm arjomonei eiiino at'cei music record shop in the quarter- block fled to the street when they heard tlic explosion and 'saw, smoke seeping through tlve walls. Chief Smith said firemen were hampered by false ceiling above the tops of business structures. More than 3,000 (pectators, at tracted by flames and smoke. JH.'l I-H P" IUU . JlWIWaill llJWaajaiaaajl HJUUJUJIWIHII IIWU Mill .III II lulllll.ll.llllmll.IIIHIII.il Mlllll lltl.J,l,tllllliu(ijtJui,L,a)IIL I iyMiaT 4Trir...,...--.-..- . mmm imrnmrnr 'iiin'B" -lfiimr ill ' ;r 'Tiffin'Mnn laaajTL f:f i&Mf. ''. tf . Hill IIP M t-' "xfWS.- .4 . .as only'just begun..." El: VaJtjk.rT I ' Wi. LI M W& slB Ira&r Kna SB m --r X- v. ."4J ,Jfim tatl . ' iff bJ A. ...varaalk jr J Jrf u . Jt.twrnmntHtS irmna,-lrn sijhi iiMiieHalifainaati ' 11 mm, nun atw iKiinu.m'Si-ii-i i m n n n n" The World Of Suzie Wong" became one of the most enjoyed and provocative best-sellers of our time because of the sustained intensity of its story and characters. to enhance your enjoyment of the motion picture version. we urge you to enter "the world of suzie wong" at the beginning! Alio CO'SUrrmn SYLVIA SYMS MICHAEL WILDING john Wrick-richard quine A World Enteroris's. Inc.-Worldfilm Limited Co-Production TfQHfdQOLOR A PARAMUNT RELEASE . -..w wi, mm r-yn r roiTI t A.J Directed by SUJLHH.ION HAT II Crir Month! HO JO I VHt l oo Mu in fvnca I iVontn I 171 aVonlht tlO 00 1 TMr 111 Oft Carntr ne DMtr WMhiitv ft Sunday- eev 0t UNItlO t'RfeM INI (UNAI lINL ASSOC IAT CO PRESS AUDI1 eurAU 0 CmCUtAKON Which poured OUt of the burning Hereto ana Ntwt, prwa buildings, gathered. TUado Mm Mmt pjk I Staffs Se. "Suxie" L"tTimet "."M I f4amaGE-GO-ROUND HfeSHL SUNDAY! ot 1:48 4:20 6:52 9:24