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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1961)
Navy Plans Collection Of Radioactive Wastes HONOLULU (API - The Navy iH conduct history's longest "garbage collection" to a s s u r e strict American adherence to a new international treaty involving ice-capped Antarctica, it was re ported today. Radioactive wastes from two nuclear power reactors to be built in the world's coldest continent will be picked up. perhaps twice a year, by ships from the United States. These nuclear ashes will be hauled to the United States for burial in special underground nuclear cemeteries or disposed of in shielded containers at sea Roundtrips for collecting this component of the "garbage" of the atomic age will be about 24,000 miles, said Capt. Edward f Conrad of the office of the chief of naval operations, who stopped here en route to the Antarctic. Source of the garbage will be a reactor near the coast of the con tinent and another deep inland, designed to furnish light, heat and power for two key American in-stallations. The need to haul away the f wastes arises from a treaty under which 12 nations, including the United States and the Soviet Un ion, pledged to preserve Antarcti ca for peaceful scientific purposes only. Nuclear weapons tests are banned. The conducting of nuclearl explosions for peaceful purpose: and the dumping ' radioactive wastes also are banned, at least until some international control agreement is reached. Conrad told about the garbage collection in an interview as plane carrying a contingent of newsmen stopped here en route to tlie seventh annual Navy-Na tional Science Foundation expedi tion to Antarctica. Conrad is heading for the Ant arctic to inspect the site and building preparations to house the first reactor at McMurdo Sound on the Ross Sea. The reactor, slated to generate 1.5 million watts of power, enough to power a village of 1,500 per sons, is to be hauled to McMurdo in prefabricated sections on the Navy cargo ship Arned, leaving Davisville, R.I., next week. The reactor was built by the Martin Company of Baltimore. It is due to reach the Antarctic around Dec. 15 and begin generat ing nuclear energy in March A next year. The second reactor is to be lo cated at the Byrd station only 700 miles from the South Pole. Shipment is planned for late 1963, with initial operation in March 1964. o o DENNIS THE MENACE" O I S -v.;-- ' He knows mats soim'om all over the world, but he PONT KNOW HIS PAPER'S IN HIS COfffZ' ' Destroyer Escort Crew Eat Navy's Best Beans Expert Says Character Shaped In Early Years OREGON. STATE UNIVERSITY! In helping shape the personality! of your child, remember how im-! portant the first two or three years are but forget your fears of "spoiling babies" with "too much" love and attention, says the head of the family life department at Oregon State University. Basic personality patterns are laid in the pre-school years and changed later only with great ef fort, Mrs. Kalherine Read points out. Helping children grow and develop can be challenging and exciting, she adds. The guide that she offers tOj mothers in caring for babies is simple: do the things for the child that you instinctively feel need to be done and that you feel good about doing. Trust yourself. If you want to pick the child up but don't because you're afraid of spoiling him, the natural relation ship between mother and child is; spoiled, she says. i nere s no doubt, ol course, that children can be spoiled, Mrs. Read emphasizes. But "too much Jaycees Select Top Residents PORTLAND (AP) - The Wash ington Junior Chamber of Com merce named three outstanding young residents of the state Satur day at its annual fall board of directors banquet. Honored were: John Phillip Ghigleri, 31, Spo kane for "exceptional achieve ments in alerting his community to dangers of Communism through the creation of study groups in the Spokane area." Ward McDonald, 35, Redmond, Wash., for leadership in a get out-the vote campaign; doubling the membership of the Redmond Jaycees while president; and spearheading a clean-up cam paign in the city. Robert Schaefer, 31, Vancouver attorney, for his "tremendous in fluence in politics and service n the state legislature." Schaefer, ' a Democratic state representa tive, has been nominated for one of the Jaycee-sponsored ten out standing young men in the na tion awards. love and care isn't a basic cause. Lack of love may be, however, be cause the unsatistied child con-1 tinucs to seek love and attention and becomes "demanding" or acts ways we commonly call "spoiled." The basic task during the first year of the child's life is to give him a feeling of security and trust, Mrs. Read believes. Many mothers feel it doesn't matter if they work or spend little ' time with their baby while it's young because "it doesn't know the difference." But babies do. says Mrs. Read, and early rela tions do have an effect later. What children need most in the early years is "parental love and approval, Mrs. Read insists. Children between the ages ol about 2 and 4 need plenty of op portunity to assert Ihcmselves, she adds. "Exploration" of things around them is a natural part of growing up and should be en couraged within safe bounds. Parents need to accept the 2-to- 4-year old asserting himself in speech and action but certainly! need to be able to slop the child "without getting upset even if the child does." If the parents don't get upset, the child learns not to be upset either, i Don't be shocked or afraid ei ther of the strong feelings 2-to-4- year-olds have, she advises. Chil dren that age get "awfully mad and awfully glad by nature and. these strong feelings give rich ness and depth to living. I One of the important ways of helping the child is to see he has plenty of opportunity for uninter rupted play, according to Mrs. Read. Play is the way children restore themselves after difficul ties. And any child who plays freely is a healthy child emotion ally, she says. Don't try to teach the child at one time all the lessons he will need to have mastered as an adult to share, be polite, control anger Mrs. Read cautions. Take them one at a time and remem ber that a child is going to ex hibit some "childishness." MEMPHIS, Tenn. IAPI Thcl crew of the Portland, Ore. -based .destroyer escort McGinty cats the best bean soup in the Navy at least, that's what judges at Mem phis agreed Sunday. Ship's cook second class Joscpn Thomas Ventura, a chef aboard Ihe McGinty, submitted the prize winning entry in a contest spon sored by a Memphis newspaper and the chief of Naval air tech nical training at the Memphis Navy Base. Ventura's recipe was judge the best of more than 500 submitted from Navy ships and installations around the world. He will receive a $100 bond and a trophy. Ingredients of the winning re cipe: One and one-half cups Michi gan navy beans; 54 cups water; 4 ounces diced pork sausage; 3 tablespoons fresh carrots; one cube boullion; 3 tablespoons chopped green onions; one-haif cup canned tomato soup; I'i tea-1 Pli&ftd Apparently Has Won Fight To Erase Influence Of Joe StaJin BERLIN iAI'i Nikita Khrush-I For the Soviet people lhal would chev appafVntly has won his w;- with the internal Soviet oppositiw to his leadership, but the cosl probably will be heavy. Announcement that the mummi fied remains of Slalin will be re moved from the gloomy tomb in Red Square can be viewed as a signal victory for Khrushchev aft er more than si years of strug gle. It probably means thai while Khrushchev retains his posilion as leader, he has little prospect of being dictator. The dictatorship! must be in the hands of a group. Khrushchev becomes the boss of an old-fashioned political machine which itscll in some wavs will be beholden to rank and file party opinion and even to Soviet public opinion as a whole. Such a development can dilute the monolithic authority of the Kremlin and soften the hard shell of communism inside the U.S.S.R. spoons salt; one - halt teaspoon black pepper; 1 tablespoon dehy drated potato granules; and 1 tablespoon monosodium glule- mate. Ventura says to place the beans, water, pork sausage, carrots, boullion and onions into a sauce pan, blend, bring to a boil, cover. simmer lor two hours on low heat, cool one hour, drain and save stock. Grind remainder, then re-combine with saved slock. Blend in tomato soup, salt, pep per, potato graunules diluted with one cup of water, and monododi- um gluicmate. Cook on low heat while constantly stirring for 30 minutes. Airport Heads Elect Officers Students Asked To Withdraw COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP)- A letter to Radio Havana stating that the University of Maryland campus was a staging area for an invasion of Cuba has resulted in two students being asked to with draw from the university. B. J. Borrenson, executive dean of student life, said the two stu dents asked to withdraw Thurs day had been involved in prior disciplinary difficulties. He called the writing of the letter "a stupid prank." Officials refused to release the names of the students. SALEM (AP) All three offi cers of the Oregon Airport Man agement Association were re elected here Friday as the group held its semi-annual conference. Joseph Fitzpatrick, manager of Salem's airport, was reelected president. Other officers named were An gus Crawford, North Bend city manager, vice president; and Earl Snyder, former director ol aeronautics for the state and now an airport consultant, secretary treasurer. Richard Bettendorf, manager of the Astoria airport, was elected a director, and Olin Harrison, Portland supervisor of airports, was reelected as a director. The airport managers discussed , state grants-in-aid for airport work, and the federal airport pro gram 12. Quake Felt By Machine VANCOUVER. B.C. (API - U.S. seismograpluc centers re corded an earthauake in the area of Ihe Queen Charlotte Islands Sunday. As far as could be learned, however, no one felt the tremor ! It was reported by seismo grapluc stations at the universi ties of Washington and California and Boston College at Weston,: Mass. i Frank Neumann, University ol Washington seismologist in Seat tle, pinpointed itscentcr as be tween the northern tip of Van couver Island and the southern end of the Queen Charlotte group. He said it was recorded at 1:13 a.m. and was measured at slight ly less than 6 on the Richter scale of 8'.. The Atomic Energy Commis sion said in Washington that the quake was one of two which prompted reports the Soviet Un ion had set off another superbomb. be all to tlie good. But it can have expensive effects. J The current Soviet congress! shows the attacks on Khrushchev up to now were based on fear that his policies would lessen the authority of the parly both at home and abroad. This much is admitted in the reading publicly of a letter attrib uted to disgraced V. M. Molotov. .Molotov complained that Khrush chev's policies were deviationist and anti-Communist Molotov, Gcorgi Malenkov and others who opposed Khrushi hov and came within a whisker of overthrowing him in 11157 object cd to his policy of relaxation in in international relations and even more to his economic projects at home, including his frequently (ailing virgin li.nds program for agriculture. The relaxations, they could ar gue, brought unrest in Poland, re volt in Hungary, setbacks for communism. The policy even lost real estate. Khrushchev gave up the Soviet hold in Austria, Ihe first time communism ever vol unlarily surrendered any import-! ant territory it had occupied. hhrushchev s economic policies abroad included aid to countries with anti-Communist regimes, to Ihe anger of the Chinese Commu nists. Such policies, along with Khrushchev s deviations from si mon-pure Leninism, rout l imited , he loll to the costly public display ol result Peiping-Moscow irritation. The economic politics al home called for decentralization in Khrushchev's eagerness to get his 20-year program on Ihe road. De centralization of authority in in dustry and agriculture could re move bureaucratic roadblocks hindering swifter Soviet develop ment. But it also represented a danger. It meant diffusing author ity, the right of lower levels lo make decisions without prior ref erence lo the Moscow center. In brief, the policies cmild im peril Ihe Kremlin's iron grip on the while country. They could foster such problems as regional rivalries even national rivalries within the Soviet Union itself. In the U.S.S.R., the people for the first lime learned details of Stalin's blood purges, known for so long to people abroad. Khrush chev's 11156 denunciation of Stalin it must be remembered, was not public property in the U S S R.1 and the Communist bloc. I Now the men who for so many years collaborated with Khrush chev, both under Stalin and after Stalin, are paraded publicly as murderers and monsters. Khrushchev hod to be somewhat desperate to risk such a shock to the public of Communist coun tries, lie must nave needed so badly to win out that apparently the risk was worth the Mnn., Oct. 30, 1961 Page 7 Herald & News Klamath Falls - Cg)MING NOV. 2 Never A Mix-up On Checks Here! You Bank by Number Instead of by Name! 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