! Its-
Day's lews
By FRANK JENKINS
Government economy note:
Postmaster General Day says in
Washington this morning he won t
restore twice-a-day mail delivery.
He has two reasons:
1. He doesn't want to.
2. Congress tells him he can t
have the 176 million dollars
year it would cost.
That's what might be called a
meeting of the minds. A lot of
us taxpayers out in the brush
wish there could be more such
meetings.
This modern world note:
In one of our big Mid-Western
cities the other day an unem
ployed worker was caught trying
to put phony quarters in a juke
box to get himself a little music
to cheer his day. He was arrest
ed and charged with possessing
counterfeit money.
When he came up for trial, he
testified that on February 28 he
drew a $90 relief check, cashed
it and made a round of the neigh'
borhood taverns. In the course of
his round, he said, he probably
picked up a couple of bogus quar
tcrs without noticing it.
Anyway, he testified, he didn't
know he was pushing counterfeit
money.
The jury found him guilty.
Court officials estimated the
cost of the case, including indict
ment, incarceration and trial, ran
somewhere between $750 and
$2,000. This estimate upset the
judge, who remarked: "I, person
ally, don't understand why such a
case was presented to the grand
jury.
He then sentenced the culprit to;
ONE HOUR in the custody of the
U.S. Marshal.
Weather
Klamath Falls and vicinity
Generally fair with variable
clouds through tonight. Showery
Wednesday with periods of par- ,
tial clearing. Highs 44-52. Low to
night 30-35.
High yesterday 48
Low last night ' 30
Precip. past 24 hours . trace
" Since Oct. 1 8.49
Same period last vear . 5
V.0F 03E.t,rB3ART
HSnSPAPSR SECTION
0SN.RBF.AM0 J50CUMENTS DIV
coup.
E
Price Ten Cents 12 Pages
u ami Jf ete;
KLAMATH FALLS, OHEGCN, TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1961
Telephone TU 4-8 1 H . No. 6640
Weather
Northern California Rain like
ly tonight In the vicinity of L'kiah
northward, possibly spreading
Wednesday to Sacramento and
Monterey but otherwise increas
ing cloudiness in north portion to
night and Wednesday,
Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area Fair
today; cloudy and warmer to
right; rain probable Wednesday
with snow above 4,000 feet.
XTt k&--T "jJ - v .
Comment?
Let's go along with Seneca, the
Latin Stoic philosopher, who wrote
about 2.000 years ago in his Epis-
ties: "What fools these mortals I
be!"
The line was so good that some
1500 years later William Shake
speare picked it up (inadvertent
ly, let us assume) and put it in
the mouth of Puck in A Midsum
mer Night's Dream. He added
one word to Seneca's version,
causing Puck to say: "Lord, what
fools these mortals be!"
Anyway, the line hits the nail
on the head.
From Geneva: "
The Big Three nuclear test ban
resumes here today with the U.S.
and Britain ready to offer a new
package plan for a quick treaty.
The Soviets say they are stand
ing pat on their old proposals for
the time being.
Comment? , i
Let's let Dr. Edmund Teller,
our noted H-bomb physicist, sup
ply it. He said at a University
of California alumni banquet last
night:
"The present moratorium
nuclear testing might well prove
CATASTROPHIC for the United
States. The situation under which
we have foregone all testing
and hence all significant weap
ons advancement during the past
two and a half years, with no
means of knowing the Soviets
have done likewise might well
prove disastrous for us.
Amen, sir.
If it should turn out that while
we have been sitting honestly
tight and doing no testing the So
viets had gone on testing secret
ly and had perfected a fantastical
ly destructive new bomb and had
hidden it out on us, it would in
deed be catastrophic.
TWO SUBJECTS of top interest at the regular Monday night council
meetinq were the plot of land formerly occupied by the Klamath County
High School, at right, and the swamp area adjacent to Upper Klamath
Lake and across the road from the ice skatinq rink. The council wants to
sell the former high school site and employ the money to conduct a fill
operation at the swamp site.
Council Eyes Plan To Fill Swamp Area
Gable's Son
Favors Star
Explosion
Rocks Plane
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Clark
Gable's widow awoke briefly Mon
day night to inspect her new son
and exclaimed: "He looks just
like pa!"
Mrs. Kay Gable, 43, who ear
lier in the day had given birth
to the 8-pound boy, inspected him
from her hospital bed while a
nurse held the black-haired tot,
"His ears are of an average
size, said a doctor. Otherwise
he has a definite resemblance to
his father."
Mrs. Gable was expected to
give the boy a name today. He
was the only child of the famed
big-eared Clark Gable who died
Nov. 16 in the same hospital, Bol
lywood Presbyterian.
Gable said before his death he;
did not want a son to be named
Clark Gable Jr., fearing the fa
mous name would be a handicap,
"Oh, he's so beautiful with that
black, curly hair and that
peaches and cream skin," said
Mrs. Gable's friend, Mrs. Ray
Hommes.
"She checked all his little toes
and hands and fingers he's an
absolute delight to everyone,
said Mrs. Hommes who took a1
room near Mrs. Gable's in the
hospital to keep her company.
"Kay was able to look at him
for about five minutes before she
went back to sleep," said Mrs.
Hommes. "She was very drowsy
from the effects of sedatives' and
the spinal anesthetic."
Birth was by Cacsarean section
during which Mrs. Gable was
able to watch. She was reported
as saying when the boy was de
livered: .
What a handsome boy. Just;
what Clark wanted."
Dr. Richard Clark described
both Mrs. Gable's and the boy's
conditions as good.
He said there were no compli
cations of any kind.
Mrs. Gable and the baby were
expected to go home in about a
week.
PERU, Ind. (API An explosion
lore one engine and 16 feet of
wing off a six-engine B47 Strato
jet bomber during a refueling ex
ercise Monday night, but .both the ling in a kickoff dinner at
bomber and its tanker made it Winema Hotel.
A possibility of filling up the
swamp area on the Upper Klam
ath Lake front adjacent to the ice
skating rink was discussed at the
regular Monday night meeting of
the city council.
Street Superintendent Paul Ham-
blin informed the council that it
would take about 60.000 cubic
yards of material to fill the
swamp and make it a usable
site. . ,
He also said that 20,000 yards
of material could be obtained
from the bank area behind the
skating rink, thus enlarging the.
rink, and that other material,
could be secured from other
sources. ,
Mayor Robert Veatch explained
be secured from the dredge at a
cost of 10 to 12 cents per yard
and another 10,000 yards could
come from a sanitary land fill on
the site for a period of about
two years.
It was estimated that the cost
of moving the dirt from behind
the rink would be about 20 cents
per yard.
Hamblin estimated that it would
cost about $7,000 for the fill and
to level the area.
Discussing the sources for such
funds, Mayor Veatch pointed out
that an evaluation of city parks
was under way and the city could
sell what parks were considered
surplus.
It was decided mat City Manag-
that the two other possibleier G. S. Vergeer should again
sources of fill material would be put the site of the old Klamath
from a dredge operated by Tu- County High School up for public
lana Farms and from a land fill
operation on the site.
He said that 30.000 yards could
sale. Proceeds from such a sale
would go toward the swamp-fill
project.
Boardman Purchase Bill
Given OK By Committee
SALEM (API A $900,000 ap
propriation that would pave the
way for the state ol Oregon to
acquire and lease the Boardman
Bombing Range to Boeing Air
plane Co. was approved Monday,
The bill was passed out unani
mously by the Joint Ways and
Means Committee with the enthu
siastic support of both Senate
President Harry Boivin, D-Klam-ath
Falls, and House Speaker
Robert Duncan, D-Medford.
Boivin led a six-man, bipartisan
delegation that came back from
Seattle after a visit with Boeing
officials strongly favoring the
legislation.
Boivin said that although Boeing
did not predict the future develop
ments, the company would begin
immediately to use the 96,000-acre
area for testing.
The bill will go first to the
House. Duncan told the committee
"to proceed with all dispatch,"
and indications are that it will get
quick favorable House action.
My overall impression is one
of great hope that this undertak
ing at Boardman will be profitable
both to Boeing and to the state
of Oregon," Duncan said.
Of the $900,000, the first $400,000
would pay the costs of moving the
Navy bombing range from Board-
man in Northeast Oregon to Lake
County in Southern Oregon,
The next $400,000 would pay the
difference between the higher
cost of Boardman and the lower
value of the Lake County land
The other '$100,000 would be for
appraisal costs.
The delegation also conferred in
Seattle with district naval officials
and learned that while the trans
fer would not be made until sum
mer, the Navy would permit Ru
ing to begin moving in immedi
ately.
Over a five-year period Boeing
would repay $250,000 of the cost,
of moving the Navy.
Under terms of the lease, Boe
ing also would pay $60,000 annual
rental for the property, which It
would lease for 80 years. The
rental agreement would be subject
tu periodic renegotiation. Boeing
also would pay taxes on buildings
and other facilities on the land,
although the state would pay the
lays on the land.
A word of urgent warning wasi
voiced by Vergeer when he told
the council that some business
places in the downtown area are
storing as much as 1,000 to 1,500
pounds of gunpowder and using it
for reloading purposes.
His comment came in connec
tion with the amending of an or
dinance which now limits the
amount of such material that can
be stored in the city to 50 pounds
of gunpowder and 5,000 caps or
primers.
Any material in excess of .this
amount would have to be stored
in a separate magazine not less
than 500 feet from any structure.
Vergeer said, "I can show you
places in the business area where
they are storing large quantities
of gunpowder at the present
time.
He was instructed to send
copy of the new ordinance to
these places immediately.
A new agreement has been
worked out between the county
and the city which will give
big assist to the city's attempts
to maintain its stress i a riwhv
dling budget.
The county has agreed to ap
propriate $15,500 for the year July
1, 1961, to July 1, 1962. to be used
on certain streets by the city for
maintenance.
The ljgt of streets included in
the agreement were Alameda
from Esplanade to cast city lim
its and from Crescent to Wall;
Biehn Irom Oregon Avenue to
GENEVA (API The Big Three
nuclear test ban talks resume to
day with the United States and
Britain ready to offer a new pack
age plan for a quick treaty. The
Soviets indicated they are stand
ing pat on their old proposals for
the lime being.
The Western powers were re
ported sticking firmly to their de
mand for inspections and controls
to guard against sneak tests, the
big stumbling block in the 2Ms
years of negotiations. But inform
ants said the West would offer
some modifications of previous
positions without backing down on
what it considers basic principles.
ror the Kennedy administration,
the negotiations provide the first
test of the Soviet government's
(Continued on Page 4)
2 Deliveries
Still Banned
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Post
master General J. Edward Day
has indicated he will not restore
twice-a-day home mail deliveries.
Even if he wanted to, Congress
told him he can not have the $176
million a year that the extra de
livery would cost.
The exchange was disclosed In
House Appropriations Committee
hearings published Monday night
It apparently closed out prospects
for restoration of the two-a-day
residential deliveries that were
dropped in an economy move
about a decade ago.
Nuclear Test
Talks Resume
Congolese
Reprisals
Thretsten
On
LEOPOLDVILLE. The Congo
i UPI i Several ships with sup
plies for United Nations forces in
the Congo were reported ap
proaching the port of Matadi to
day despite Congolese threats
that "blood will flow if any at
tempt is made to unload them.
Army commander-in-chief, Mnj
Gen. Joseph Mobutu, warned the
U.N. command to keep out of the
ports of Matadi and Banana, cap
lured by Congolese troops from
the U.N. garrisons more than
two weeks ago.
"There's no question of U.N.
troops ever returning to Matadi
and Banana," Mobutu said. "If
they try it, blood will flow. Let
them send civilians to help re
ceive supplies if they want, but
no troops."
Congolese opposition to the
United Nations appeared to be
stiffening following President Jo
seph Kasavubu s demand Mon
day that all U.N. troops get out
of the Congo.
Kasavubu said tho United Na
tions had been invited by the
Congo to help bring peace, but
instead or helping they occupied
the country.
The Congolese president, was
quoted as saying he wanted the
United Nations to remain as a
civilian operation b e c a j s e the
Congo needs technical assistance,
food and medical supplies.
Mobutu said he and the army
Laos Chaos
Discussed
By Kennedy
accepted the proposed confedera
tion of Congolese states on the
condition that the national army
remain under a single command
and can send troops to Katanga,
which is controlled by President
Moise Tshombe.
Congo Blast
By Gromyko
Anticipated
WASHINGTON (AP) Presi
dent Kennedy and several of his
often-expressed desire for better l?p adviseis discuss the explosive
re at ons between Wash nff nn and """'" "I sinie-iurn uaas Hi a
Mnccnur H.nnmnn ih. White House conference today.
tiatinns was tho nminnns lrnml. tne second such SOSSiOn in tWO
;e that more and more nations
are approaching a point of nuclear
know-how permitting them to pro
duce nuclear weapons.
Coming back to the conference
table after a three-month recess,
each side put the onus of agree
ment on the other.
Britain's chief delegate, Minis
ter of State David Ormsby-Gorc,
spoke of "a very real chance toi
agree upon a treaty in a matter
of weeks" but added, "Everything
very much depends, of course,
upon the attitude of the Soviet
Union.'
Soviet Delegate Semyon Tsarap-i
kin told newsmen, "We have'
made all our proposals." He
placed the responsibility for
agreement on the West.
Community Concert Seeks Members
A drive to obtain 850 members
of Klamath Falls Community Con
cert Association opened Monday
with almost 50 workers and offi
cers of the association participat-
the
safely back to Bunker Hill Air
Force Base.
Association President Ross Rag-
land announced that preliminary
effort-! of the drive had broucht
The Air Force sent searching, jn almost 450 memberships, with
parties to southwestern Indiana to
hunt for the missing engine. No
determination of the cause of the
nearly two thirds of the workers
reporting at this time..
Memberships in the association
-.on C7 n-.nl, nn4 milrA tha mttm.
explosion can be made until it is bcr cligjb,e ,0 a((cnd up to four
found, the Air Force said.
The tanker was linked by fuel
line to the bomber at the time
of the explosion, but H was not
damaged.
Maj. John A. Kinzcr, informa
tion officer, said the tanker con-
concerts sponsored by the associ
ation. Top-flight international stars
are featured in the concert sc
ries. Ragland pointed out. Only
ticket holders for the entire se
ries are admitted to any of the
concerts, it was emphasized.
Ragland also emphasized that
ance of tenor Brian Sullivan and
"Cambodia," a colorful Scotch
tinued its refueling training flight ' while workers would be contacting
n M.,rr-A uilhn,,! InHHon! It per .or new menioersn.ps,
carried a crew of four.
Capt. John W. Schwartz, 30, Mi
ami, Ariz., brought the bomber
home with the assistance of Cdpt.
Edwin L. Waldo. 37, Chicago, his
copilot
, Bunker Hill Is 60 miles north
of Indianapolis.
they do not always know of those
who might desire to be members.
Those who have not been contact
ed and who wish to become mem
bers should get in touch with one
of the workers or concert drive
headquarters isee accompanying
list).
Highlights of the 1961-62 con
cert scries will be the appear-
music and dance group. In ad
dition, two other concerts will be
scheduled as soon as it is de
termined how much money will
be available to contract talent,
Ragland explained.
Community concert headquar
ters is located at Ace Mimco
Service, at 312 South Seventh
Street, phone TU 2-3458.
Workers include:
Mrs. Wilbur Haskins, Merrill;
Mrs. Byard B. Kelly, Dorris: M'.
Sybil Hall, Malm: Mrs. Bu
Soldiers Flown
Hoyle and Mrs. Ora Rinabargcr,
Tulelake.
In Klamath Falls:
Mrs. f. C. Adams. Mrs. Walter
C. Badorck. Mrs. C. A. Baker,
or'LSJv'lJL'-iOut To Formosa
Mrs. J. E. Creswell, Mrs. Dennis
Everett. Eva Dickson.
Also Mrs. Fred Ehlers, Mrs. planes bringing several -hundred
GOP Studies
Peace Corps
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi
dent Kennedy's "Peace Corps"
came under the critical gaze of
Republicans today at a hearing
on the nomination of R. Sargent
Shrivcr to head the new project.
The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee called Shriver, tho
President's brother-in-law, to tes
tify on the proposed agency's
aims and plans for sending vol
unteers abroad to help people in
underdeveloped nations.
The hearing was scheduled to
start at 11 a.m. EST.
Although little opposition was
expected to the choice of Shri
ver, a Chicago businessman-law
yer, some Republicans laid they
had plenty of questions to ask
about the program itself.
Sen. Bourke B. Hickcnloopcr,
R . - Iowa, said he particularly
wanted to find out what the
Peace Corps proposed to do and
its plans for screening applicants.
"I want to know more about
what age brackets will be recruit
ed, what It's proposed for them
to do, and how they will he
checked for maturity," Hickcn
loopcr said.
The Iowa senator said he felt
the screening and training of
TAIPEI. Formosa (AP) Nine'candidates could mean the sue-
rill, Mrs. John Mochl, Marie
Obenchain, Mrs. Claude Olson.
Also May Phinney, Mrs. J. C
Pinninger, Ross Ragland, Mrs.
Howard Rowe, Mrs. Laing W. Sib
bet, Mrs. Anne Sondgroth, Mr. and
Mrs. Martin . Swanson. Ger
trude Tollc, Jean Underwood,
Mrs. D. Van Vactor, Mrs. Jack
Warrick.
Ragland pointed out that only
(icket holders are admitted to the
concerts. Ticket sales will end
tjSaturday, he announced.
days
At Monday's secret meeting, at
tention was reported focused on
the intention of the administration
to display a firm stance to the
Soviet Union on the grave crisis
in Laos.
The administration, a highly
placed source said, was taking an
increasingly grave view of condi
tions in the Southeast Asian king
dom.
Monday's lop-bracket meeting
brought together such officials as
Secretary of Defense Robert 3.
McNamara, Undersecretary of
State Chester Bowles, Adm. Ar
Icigh Burke, chief of naval opera
tions, and J. Graham Parsons,
the State Department's top expert
on the Far East who has been
named ambassador to Sweden.
Sitting in too, officials said,
were Kennedy's own top advisers
on national security matters, Mc-
Gcorgc Bundy and his deputy.
Walt W. Rostow.
The same group meets again to
day with Secretary of State Dean
Rusk in attendance. Rusk was in
California Monday to speak at
rounders Day ceremonies of the
University of California at Berkeley.
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP)
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko reopens the explosive
Congo question before the U.N.
General Assembly today after an
overnight delay because of the
death of a Cuban delegate.
Manuel Bisbe, 55, Cuba's per
mancnt representative at the
United Nations, collapsed outside
the General Assembly hall Mon
day and died of a heart attack
just before the Congo debate was
to open. The assembly adjourned
after observing a minute of silence.
In launching the new Congo de
bate, Gromyko was expected to
attack the decision of Congo Pres
ident Joseph Kasavubu and other
anti-Communist Congolese leaders
to abolish the federal government
in favor of a confederation of
semi-independent states.
The Soviet Union already has
assailed the plan as a plot by
Belgium to dismember the Congo
and preserve Belgium's colonial
control. ' ''
Delegates feared a bitter Congo
debate, rehashing all the old
charges and counter charges.
would set the tone tor a long and1
stormy session. -
The United States and other
Western nations had felt it would
be better to delay discussing the
Congo question until the Congo
lese had a chance to work out
their own political future, but the
Soviet Union insisted on discus
sion.
In Leopoldville, Kasavubu told
six visiting American newspaper
editors and publishers the U.N,
military operation in the Congo
has been a failure.
Since the United Nations
came, conditions have grown
worse," Kasavubu declared. "It
was called to bring peace; it in
fact brought disorder."
Secretary-General ' Dag Ham-
marskjold sent the Security Coun
cil word that his Congo advisory
committee had recommended set
ting up a four-nation commission
of jurists to make an on-the-spot
investigation into the death of Pa
trice Lumumba, the deposed Con
go premier.
A group of 39 Asian and Afri
can nations put in a request that
the assembly take up the situa
tion in the Portuguese West Afri
can territory of Angola, where
pro-independonce rioting was fol
lowed by tribal massacres of
white settlers in North Angola last
week.
"There can be no private ar
mies, he said in nis tirst news
conference since returning from
Equator Province, where he said
he organized the defense of the
frontier with Oriental Province,
which is the stronghold of follow
ers of the late ex-Premier Pa
trice Lumumba,
Mobutu said he will soon call
a military conference here with
the commanders : of Tshombe's
troops and Albert Kalonji's forces
in South Kasai to work out de
tails of a military pact signed in
Elisabcthvillc.
In another development, an
American missionary who ar
rived here Monday from Kindu
Province denied reports that an
American woman had been raped
by Congolese soldiers,
The missionary, Fred Vinton,
28, of Lyndwood, Calif., said the
worst injury he knew any Ameri
can had received was a broken
arm suffered by his father, Sam
uel, 53, an Ebensburg, Pa., mis
sionary with Ihe World Graco
Testimony.
Vinton said the "Kindu area is
just one mass of rumors and
counter rumors with civil author
ities ' changing seats every day."
Vinton, his wife, Louise, and
their infant son, Freddy, were
brought out of Kindu with other
Americans after being held for
five weeks by Congolese.
AF Charges
3 Officers
In Disasfer
BRIAN SULLIVAN, e nor
t i n q i n q star of stage,
screen and opera, will be a
major ftur of fhe Com
munity Concert 1961-62
series. Sullivan will appear
March 16, 1962, in one of
four concerts of the Klam
ath Falls Community Con
cert Association.
Jim Fredlund, Mrs. Arthur Gcr-
lach, Mrs. Carl Hagel, Miss Em
ilie Haldcman. Mrs. Raymond
Hall, Mrs. Eileen Herringshaw,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hopkins, Mrs.
LaMar Jensen, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Johnson.
Also Mrs. Truman Johnson,
Mrs. Betty Kellstrom, Mrs. Rob
erta B. Kennedy, Mrs. George
Kovich. Mrs. Herbert L. Landia,
Mrs. Ann Lylle, Mrs. C. G. Mcr-
anti-Communist Chinese soldiers
and their families from the Burma-Thailand
frontier have landed
so far in southern Formosa, au
thoritative reports said.
The Nationalist Chinese irregu
lars have been operating in the
north Burma jungles since the
Communists took over the China
mainland II years ago.
The airlift in expected to bring
out some 9,000 Chinese.
cess or failure of the program.
Sen. Homer E. Capehart, It-I
Ind., another committee member,
said, "I want to know what kind
of people they are going to send
and what responsibilities they
will have when they arrive overseas."
Capehart said he felt the pro
gram should be limited for the
time being to doctor, dentists.
nurses and other health workers,
and teachers and ministers.
Four-Bit Suit
Costs Plenty
CHICAGO (AP) - The federal
government won a four-bit con
viction Monday that cost an esti
mated $750 to $2,000 to prosecute.
The defendant drew a sentence
of one hour and government at
torneys drew a reprimand.
The case involved William Wal
lace, 34, an unemployed laborer,
who was arrested Feb. 28 after
he tried to put two phony quar
ters into a juke box.
Wallace testified at his five-
hour trial In U.S. District Court
that the day of his arrest he had
cashed a $90 relief check, made
a round of lavcrns and probably
picked up the quarters without
realizing they were bogus.
The jury found him guilty of
possessing 50 cents in counterfeit
money.
Judge Michael L, Igre said, "I
personally don't understand why
such a case was presented to the
grand jury," then sentenced Wal
lace to "one hour In the custody
of the U.S. marshal."
Court observers estimated the
cost of prosecuting Wallace in
cluding his indictment, incarccra
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Air
Force has charged three officers
with neglect of duty in connection
with the. deaths of 28 men Jan, 15
when a Texas Tower radar station
tumbled into the Atlantic during
a howling gale.
The Air Defense Command, In
an announcement released Mon
day by tho Defense Department
said the charges were made as a
result of a preliminary investiga
tion. The accused officers:
Col. William M. Banks, who was
acting commander of the Boston
Air Defense Sector at Stewart Air
Force Base, Newburgh, N.Y.,
charged with culpable negligence
and dereliction of duty.
Maj. William A. Sheppard, com
mander of the 4604th Support
Squadron at Otis AFB, Mass.,
charged with dereliction of duty.
Maj. Reginald L. Stark, acting
commander of the squadron "dur
ing the critical period prior to the
loss of the tower," charged with
dereliction of duty.
The Air Force said tho charges
were based on the way the men
"performed their duties lmmedi-
tely prior to the disaster off the
New Jersey coast.
The 4604th Squadron had direct
responsibility for the tower, which
was part of the coastal radar
screen system to detect hostile
aircraft. It was located about 85
miles southeast of New York.
Lii.i..in.i,.!., mm, ill
AN ENVIABLE RECORD of having no chargeable traffic
accidents during I960 was compiled by the Klamath
Falls office ef the Oreqon State Police. The Klamath ,
Falls office won first priie In its category tn the annual
State Police Defensive Driving Fleet Contest. Here, Sgt.
Bruce Lattin, right, of the local office. haEmilu iceinii
ion and trial ranged between, the first place award from Lt. Paul E. Morgan of Medford,
1750 and $2,000. the district commander.
1