Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 06, 1961, Image 2

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    Reds Warn West
On More Testing
: MOSCOW (AP) The Soviets
have issued a veiled warning that
further nuclear testing by the
United States and its allies may
compel the Soviet Union to pro
Ions its program of tests, still
numerically behind the West.
President Kennedy's announce
ment last Thursday that trie
United States is getting ready lor
possible resumption of atmospher
ic tests was the target of a state
ment issued Sunday by the official
Soviet news agency Tass.
"The statement by the United
States president does not meet
tialf way the desires of those who
are sincerely pressing for an end
to the nuclear arms race," Tass
said. "To the underground tests
of nuclear weapons which are al
ready being 6taged in the United
States, nuclear testa in the atmos
phere 'are to be added as soon
as tlie U.S. government regards
this as necessary.
"In the case of continuation of
nuclear tests by the United States
of America and its alhes, all the
more in the case of resumption
of American nuclear tests to the
atmosphere, the other side will
watch these military preparations,
primarily the steps In Improving
nuclf ar weapons. Because ic can
not permit the occurrence of such
a situation in whlcn uie interests
of its security would not be re
liably ensured.
"This other side again will have
to draw the appropriate conclu
sions for itself with regard to nu
clear weapons tests, It gives with
out saying ,that full responsibility
for the continuation of the nuclear
armc race and for the holding of
nuclear tests will be borne then
by the United States govern
ment."
The warning was coupled with
another call for a genera' and
complete disarmament Frloay
long-' proposed by Premier
Khrushchev, and a reiteration
that the Soviet Union Is ready to
ditch all its nuclear weapons if
other nations do the same.
The statement said such
750 Engage
in Protest
PORTLAND (AP) An esti
mated 750 persons took part in a
"United Nations Walk lor Peace,"
through downtown Portland Satur
day afternoon.
The marchers, carrying signs
urging a ban on further nuclear
tests and asking for peaceful
neeotialions between East and.
West, walked along SW Broad
way. A majority of them were
adults, but the group Included
families, business and profession
;il people and students.
An estimated 30 per cent of the
demonstrators were students,1
somo of whom had taken part in
an earlier demonstration against
civil defense,
Students in that demonstration
were from Willamette, Pacific,
Reed and Lewis and Clark. They
marched from Kelly Butte, Port
land's civil defense headquarters,
to the downtown point where the
UN march group began.
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treaty should provide for "most
strict international control." It
did not elaborate. The Soviet Un
ion in the past has rejected pro
posals to establish what Uh West
ern allies consider would be an
adequate inspection system be
fore conclusion of a disarmament
treaty
Tass has been authorized to
announce that the leading circles
of the Soviet Union reaffirm the
readiness of the Soviet govern
ment to sign even today a treaty
on general and complete disarma
ment, on the basis of such nu
clear weapons tests too be ended
for all time," the agency said.
"is the government of the Unit
ed States, with President J. Ken
nedy at its head, ready to say
that? The peoples are entitled to
expect an answer to tins ques
tion."
The United States and Its allies
have staged considerably more
tests than the Soviet Union, the
statement said, and this gave
complete moral justification"
for the Soviet test program
launched Sept 1. The series in
cluded detonation of one device
of 60-plus megatons.
The U.S. Atomic Energy Com
mission said the Soviet Union had
set off 55 announced tests prior
to the present series, jn which
there have been 31, making a to
tal of 86. The U.S. total, Including
four in the current underground
series, is 157, Britain has fired
22 and France 4.
Gen. Walker
Gets Truman's Approval
CHICAGO (UPD-Formcr Pres
ident Truman, displaying the
same verve and sboot-from-the-hip
frankness that characterized
his years in offio. said Sunday
President Kennedy was right
when he "muzzled" Gen Edwin
A. Walker.
'He should have been muz
zled," the former Chief Executive
said. "I'd have muzzled him if I
were President." i
Walker was relieved of his
command recently following
charges that he attempted to in
doctrinate his troops with anti-
Communist beliefs. He was trans
ferred to a lesser job in Germany
and resigned several days ago.
Had Fired MacArthur
Truman himself was an expert
at "muzzling military loaders. He
tired former Gen. Douglas Mac
Arthur when the. well-known war
Board Eyes
OCE Chief
PORTLAND (AP) A new
name Is on the list of candidates
the state Board of Higher Educa
tion is considering as its new
chancellor.
It Is that of Dr. Roy E. Lieual-
len, 45, president of Oregon Col
lege of Education at Monmouth
since 1955 and the youngest insti
tution head in the state's highor
education system
Charles R. Holloway Jr., vice
chairman, said the board inter
viewed Licuallen Sunday after
several sources had put up his
namo and that he now Is being
considered along with 10 others
These lncludo, he said, Dr. Jcap
Paul Mather, President of the
American College Testing Pro
gram, and Dr. John W. Hicks, as
sistant to the president of Purdue
University.
Holloway said that within two
weeks the board s executive com
mittee will recommend more can
didates to be Interviewed. He
added that members of the board
hopo to agree on a new chancellor
by the time of their next regular
meeting Dec. 11-12 in Portland.
The board is seeking u succos
sor to Dr. John R. Richards, who
resigned to take a similar posi
tion In September wllh Cali
fornia's higher education system
White House
Doubles Talks
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
White House press office is going
back to twice-a-day briefings for.
newsmen beginning thir. week.
Press secretary Pierre Salinger
had announced a week ago the
one-a-dav schedule.
Klama'.h Pain, oraoon
Publlihad daily (teot Sal.) and Sunday
serving muinarn oraoon
and Norlnarn California
bv
Klamath Pubiiihing Company
Main at ttrlanada
Pnont TUvtcto Mill
W. B. SweCTLANO. Puollinar
Enttrad at ttcend ctau mattar al fnal
post ottKa at Klamath Faili, Orvoonj
on August 10. IfO. unrtar ct of Cnnl
grata. March X tl. Stcond-clata poft-l
at pa id at K lamath Fain. OragcA. i
and at additional mailing (H-cm.
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Junior Name Tag
Murder In Business
By ANN LANDEF.8
Dear Ann Landers: Toe letter
from that obstinate mother who
insisted on naming her son Junior
over the violent
protests of her
husband lalso a
Junior) prompts
this letter.
You may re
call the husband
hated the tag so
vehemently that
he actually moved to another city.
He said it was 'e only way he
could separate hi;nself from iden
tification with h' prominent fa
ther. I know precisely how he
felt because I was in the same
boat. It's bad enough in the young
er years but after a guy gets
Into business It s murder.
Why give a boy a name if peo
ple are going to call him some
thing else? This gees for Sonny,
Buddy, Skipper, Sandy, Buzzle and
what have you; If parents like
these dizzy names so well why
don t they christen their sons mat
way? JUNIOR
Dear Junior: As I told the ob
stinate mother no woman should
Insist on a name if her husband
doesn't want it. Some men like
being Junior and want tq, nasi
along the "privilege." It. usually
depends on how Junior feels about
Senior.
Dear Ann Landers: Our son Is
14. I always like to know where
Billy is going and what time to
expect him home.
Muzzling
hero disagreed publicly with the
policies of the Truman adminis
tration.
Truman, in Chicago with Mrs,
Trunvui during a brief stopover
between trains, was'asked if he
believed the United States should
resume nuclear tests in the at
mosphere. ,
Of course, he replied. "I
never was for stopping them in
the first place.
On fallout shelters, Truman's
response was terse: "If you're
afraid of fallout, build your shel
ter," he said. "If you're not, .you
don t need it.
78-Years Old
Pacing down the long near-
empty platform in Iho Sunday
morning chill, live former Presi
dent, dressed in a brown over
coat and hat, indicated it wasn't
easy for him to answer questions
while walking In cold weather,
i m 70 years oia now, ne
said.
Truman, en route to Kansas
City, was in New York Saturday
campaigning for Mayor Robert
for reelection, and in New Jersey
r-riday to stump tor Richard J.
Hughes, the Democratic guberna
torial candidate.
Mi
Candidate Backgrounds
Show Humble Origins
NEW YORK (AP)-The major.
candidates for mayor in Tuesday's
election all have family back
grounds in the Horatio Algicr tra
dition of rising from poverty to
position. All are sons of immi
grants.
Mayor Robert F. Wagner, 51, a
Democrat running for a third four
year term, represents a second
generation of tho tradition.
His father, tho lute Sen. Robert
F. Wagner Sr., sponsor of tho New
Deal's Wagner Labor Relations
Act, came hero from Germany as
a boy, sold newspapers and then
worked as a bellhop to put him
self through collt'gc and become
a successful lawyer.
He wns able to send his son to
Tall School. Yale, the Harvard
School of Business Administration,
the School of International Rela
tions at Geneva, and Yale Law
School.
Stale Atty. Gen. Louis J. Lcfko
will, 57, tho Republican candidate,
grew up in grinding poverty on the
Lower Kast Side. Ho worked his
way through Fordhain Law School
and sent his son, Stephen, to Yale
and Harvard Law School.
City Comptroller Lawrence E,
Gerosa, 67, a Democrat running
as an independent, was born li:
ltnlv and ciime to the United
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After dinner last night he put
on his jacket and said "So long!"
I asked where he was headed and
when he'd be back. His father cut
in to say, "Leave the kid alone.
He's not a baby and you don't
need to watch him like a hawk."
I didn't want to start anything in
front of the boy so I remained
silent.
At 12:15 I heard Billy's key in
the door. My husband warned me
not to ask him any questions.
I'm worried and upset. I want to
do what is best. Please help me.
SPRINGFIELD MOTHER
Dear Springfield Mother: Par
ents not only have the right but
they have the obligation to know
where their children are going
and furthermore they should tell
them what time to be home.
If your husband thinks freedom
to roam around until all hours will
make a man out of his son, I
have a flash for him It could
make a bum or a criminal out of
him first.
Urge your husband to talk this
over with his clergyman or the
high school principal or better,
perhaps, with the chief of police,
He'll get an earful.
Dear Ann Landers: I am mar
ried to a 66-year-old juvenile de
linquent. He has left home 11
times in the last two years. When
ever lie loses his temper he says
I m leaving this lunatic asylum.
I soy, "Fine. I'll help you pack."
Then I do. He's usually back in
two days. - :
The problem is this: since he
has retired he s more cantanker
ous than ever. I think his idleness
has sent him off his trolley. He
has gotten inU fights with every
member of the family, including
bur sons-in-law. I have orders not
to let them in the house, even
when he's not at home. He says
the house is half his and that he
ought to have a say-so about who
comes over.
I say this Is unreasonable. I
like people and enjoy visiting with
family and friends. What can I
do? MARTHA
Dear Martha: Don't isolate your
self fust because your husband
has the -personality of a baracuda,
Invite whomever you please and
Instruct the "juvenile delinquent"
to stay In "his half" of the house
if he doesn't like the guests.
Are you going steady? Making
marriage plans? If so, send for
Ann Landers' booklet, Before
You Marry Is It Love Or Sex?"
enclosing with your request 20
cents in coin and a long, self
addressed, stamped envelope.
Ana Landers, will I be glad to
help you with your problems. Send
them to her in care of this news
paper enclosing a stamped, self
addressed envelope.
The girl has written a book. The
girl is Ann Landers. The Publish
er is Prentice-Hall. The book is
called "Since You Ask Me." Your
hook store has it.
States at tlie age of 19 months,
son of a fruit farmer. He has be
come a millionaire as a trucking
contractor.
Lefkowitz' father, Samuel, an
immigrant front Hungary, was a
vest maker In a clothing factory.
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New Norelco Sportsman Packs Its own power, Operetes on tvo flashlight batteries
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Norelco shavers are priced to fit every pursel See them demonstrated on TV I
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Norifco u known u PhihSMv In Cjnid. tnd throughout the rit el the In worts.
Honors Appear About Even
In Two Tuesday' Elections.
NEW YORK (AP) - Democrats!
and Republicans appeared likely
today to share evenly in the
spoils from two major election
contests Tuesday that might have
bearing on 1962 and 1964
national races.
The Democrats went into thsse
final battles, in New York City
and New Jersey, with a weekend
victory that demonstrated their
party label represents money in
the political bank in Texas when
matched man-for-man aainst the
kind of GOP conservatism repre
sented by Sen. Barry Goldwater,
R-Anz.
Henry B. Gonzalez,7 a liberal
Democrat who won a special con
gressional race from Republican
John Goode Jr., in San Antonio.
Tex., Saturday flew to New York
to help Democratic Mayor Robert
F. Wagner's bid for reelection.
Gonzalez planned appeals to Spanish-speaking
voters.
There was not much indication
that Wagner needed Gonzalez' ef
forts to win over Republican State
Atty. Jouis J. Lefkowitz and City
Comptroller Lawrence E. Gerosa,
a Democrat running as an inde
pendent. Gonzalez had said be hoped to
campaign also in New Jersey for
Democrat Richard J. Hughes in
his contest with Republican James
P. Mitchell for the governorship.
But New Jersey Democratic lead
ers didn't show much enthusiasm
for this idea. Hughes has can
celed his remaining campaign ap
pearances in view of the death of
his 85-year-old father Sunday.
president Kennedy, former
President Harry S. Truman and
College Adopts Unique
Method Of Moving Books
MARIETTA, OhioAP) - Prob
lem: How to move 120,000 books
and hundreds of magazines from
an old library in a new one.
Marietta College faced up to it
with all the intellectual ingenuity
expected of an institution of higher
learning.
The answer arrived at by librar
ian Richard K. Gardner was sur
prisingly simple.
Organize the school's 1,500 stu
dents and faculty members into
a giant book brigade, he said-
one that could tote the 120,000
books from the old library across
a street into the new $865)000
Dawes Memorial Library.
So that s just what will happen
Nov. 15. , '
All of Marietta's students will
be excused from classes when the
bell in Erwin Tower rings at 8
a.m. to muster them, i-
The brigade will be divided into
Announcement'
Wilbur Haskins
', PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
Merrill, Oregon
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Klamath Falls, Oregon
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(AC DC). Deluxe travel case.
former President Dwight.D. Ei
senhower all have had a hand in
the New York City and New Jer
sey contests. Kennedy gave a
long-distance endorsement to Gon
zalez and Eisenhower campaigned
personally in Texas for Goode.
Vice President Lyndon B. John
son got into the act with what
some regarded as a pitch to help
position himself lor a possible 1968
bid for the Democratic presiden
tial nomination. He did some on-
the-ground campaigning for Gon
zalez.
Johnson, who has endeavored in
recent months to erase his segre
gationist voting record as a sen
ator from Texas, pleaded for the
election of Gonzalez, San Antonio
native of,Me)rican-born parents,
as proof that "a man can be
elected to the U.S. Congress des
pite his race." Rep. D. S. Saund,
D-Calif., a native of India, and
Sen. Hiram L. Fong, R-Callf., an
Oriertal, seemed to have proved
that point previously.
Goode. who ran as an ultra con
servative of the Goldwater school,
said he was "shocked to hear my
vice president inject tpe racial
and national origin issues into a
campaign in which they were not
originally issues."
Unlike Sen. John G. Tower, first
Republican senator elected in
Texas since Reconstruction days.
Goode suffered from a paucity of
Democratic opponents. Goode had
only a handful running against
hun. Tower more than 70.
Kennedy could claim something
of a victory in the election of
Gonzalez, a liberal Democrat of
the stripe Johnson was not accus-
two groups, one for magazines and
the other for books.
They will move in a continuous
line, in one door of the old build
ing, pick up books, out another
door, cross the street into the
new library, deposit books, out
another door, and back to the old
library for another trip.
Each boy and girl will be lim
ited to carrying a stack of books
about 12 inches high. Gardner
said, adding: "If ihe majority of
the students turn out, each person
will have to make only about 11
trips."
The librarian figures the -major
ity of the books can be moved by
noon. We will finish up in the
afternoon, straighten things out
that evening, and be open for busi
ness the next morning," he said
All who work on the project will
be compensated a free lunch on
the college.
VER
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tomed to associating himself with
in Texas.
The President seemed likely to
field a left-handed victory if Wag
ner wins reelection in New York
City, as now expected. This would
tend to simplify Kennedy s prob
lems in dealing with the divided
Democrats of the state.
In 1964 he would have to look to
Wagner to reorganize the party
and to supply him with New
York's 45 electoral votes, without
which Kennedy could not have
won the Presidency in 1960.
Michael Prendergast. the Dem
ocratic state chairman, and. Car
mine V. DeSapio. the party's na
tional committeeman, seemed to
have become candidates for obliv
ionif .Wagner wins with their
opposition to the mayor.
Prendergast said he would vote
for Gerosa. DeSapio said he
wouldn't support Wagner, who had
the backing of former U.S. Sena
tor and Governor Herbert H. Leh
man and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Lefkowitz was given only an
outside chance to nose out Wag
ner, but GOP Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller cheerfully put some
of his 1962 and 1964 blue chips
down on the line in the hope that
the Republican candidate would
make it close in a city that is 3-1
Democratic.
A good showing by Lefkowitz
would be calculated to encourage
Republicans in the metropolis to
work harder for Rockefeller's own
race for reelection next year and
his possible bid for the 1964 GOP
presidential nomination.
In New Jersey the journeys of
tlie political Mohammeds to the
mountains seemed to have had
little outward affect on the out
come of a race for governor. Ken
nedy, Eisenhower and Truman all
visited the state with receptions
that varied in enthusiasm.
Supporters of Hughs were pre
dicting that their candidate would
win by a whisker. Sen. Harrison
A. Williams Jr., D-N.J., said he is
willing to bet that an upset is in
the making and Hughes will be
the winner.
Sen. -Clifford P. Case, R-N.J.,
said in a separate interview he is
confident Mitchell. Eisenhower's
former secretary of labor, will
take it handily. Sam Zagoria,
Mitchell's campaign manager,
predicted a 100,000 margin for his
candidate out of an expected
2,225,000 vote.
Elsewhere there were contests
of compelling local interest but of
little national significance.
New York State will elect 470
mayors. Micnigan wui .iui a va
cated Democratic congressional
seat. Pennsylvania will picki a
State - Supreme Court judge and
Kentucky will elect 100 state rep
resentatives and 38 state senators.
-
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