.PAGE I HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Wednesday, January t, 1963 Nominees Await Hod By Congress WASHINGTON (UPD for mor Virginia Gov. J. Lindsay Al mond heads a list of men left be hind when Congress adjourned last Oct. 13 without acting Itheir nominations. , : The Senate probably will Casked again this year by Presi .'dent Kennedy to confirm the ap- iointmenls. In most cases, the -nominees have been on the federal payroll for months under recess appointments. '. The list of nominations await ing confirmation includes several judgeships, an ambassador, twe customs collectors, a tariff com missioner and about 250 postmast er appointments in 32 states, Some are controversial, others simply were submitted by Ken .nedy too late in the 87th Con Igress to be acted upon. : Almond, who feuded with th ;powerful Byrd group in Virginia ;over school desegregation, was named by Kennedy last April 16 1 ;to a $25,500-a-year post as judge m the U.S. Court of Customs and -Patent Appeals. i Veteran Sen. Harry F. Byrd 'D-Va., withheld his endorsement of the nomination. It languished In the Senate Judiciary Commit tee six months until the Senate went home. Almond now is serving under a recess appointment. Prospect; are that he will be confirmed In due time by the Senate. '. But for sheer legislative leth argy, the nomination of Negro at -torney Thurgood Marshall to federal judgeship topped that of .Almond s in the last Congress. ; Kennedy first named Marshall ;former chief counsel for the Na tional Association for Advance ment of Colored People, to be a federal appeals court judge in New York on Sept. 11, 1961. - It was a year later Sept. 23, 1962 before Marshall was con firmed. The drawn-out confirma tion battle was sparked by a run ning verbal battle between north crn and southern legislators. "DENNIS THE MENACE" Ex-Dictator Bids Again For Release Momma Irons Hubby's Shorts For Free Yet HAVANA (UPl rilfliBOjflDiliS Industries Minister Kr- YA BAKE A CAKE OH XfeiRIHDAV! YA A CAKE ON BADS tmvw YOU COULD LEAST BAKE- ftlFF A CUPCAKE1.' Soviets Pledge Cuban Support For New Year ' MIAMI (UPD - Former Ven riuelan dictator Marcos Perezi Jimenez Mill make another hidi for freedom Friday in the Sth V. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, it was learned today. ; Perez Jimenez was Jailed here Dec. 12 alter losing a legal bat tle against extradition to Veno ;ziiela. - Jimenez is seeking to be re leased from the county jail here while his attorneys continue their extradition tight. ' '. The present Venezuelan gov rnment wants Perez Jimenez re turned to face charges of rob bing the government treasury. MOSCOW (UPD - The Soviet Union started the new year today with fresh pledges of support for Cuba and a stand-pat approach to most other East-West prob Premier 'Nikila S. Khrushchev mixed veiled threats and soft words in New Year's toasts and messages to world leaders, but he produced no political bombshells as he occasionally has in the past. There was no sign that 1963 will bring any major changes in Soviet policy on such questions as Berlin and disarmament. Speaking of Cuba during a toast at a Kremlin New Year's Eve hall, Khrushchev said the crisis showed that Soviet armed forces must have "new, modern wea pons." He did not elaborate, but he warned that Russia could de stroy a capitalist aggressor "in matter of hours short hours. The premier's year-end message to Cuban Premier Fidel Castro tressed "unbreakable, brotherly. I Soviet-Cuban friendship." I The Soviet army newspaper. Red Star, i)lcdned thai Uussia "will never leave Cuba in the lurch . . . Revolutionary Cuba will not remm'n defenseless. Khrushchev told East German Communist leader Walter Ulbricht that the German question was among those "whose non-rcgulated status carry a serious danger to world peace." But the Soviet leader mentioned no new proposals or a deadline for a Berlin settlement, and he made none of the usual threats about signing a separate peace treaty with the East German re gime if the West balks at accept ing the Kremlin s terms. On disarmament and a nuclear test ban, Khrushchev repealed the Soviet claim that "the capitalists have only talked about disarma ment wnile the liussians are ready to do something. In a reference to the deepen ing ideological rift between Mos cow and Communist China, t h e Soviet premier admitted differ ences existed within the Com munist camp. But he warned that the Communist nations will stand together in the face of any inter ference from capitalist states OPENS TONITl :4S Now Playing AN EARTHQUAKE OF EXCITEMENT! r , ' ... I ' , ir V!l s-M - A' Walt Disney, JVICS VtKNl S 1,1 j in searcn 01 in CHilHUiR MlUi WHOHS WHIIf Red China Backs Cuba TOKYO (UPD Communist China, in a New Year's blast at he United States, today pledged its full support to Cuba in main taining a foothold for communism on the American continent." The Peking government ap pealed for Smo-hoviet unity in ommunism's struggle against the American "paper tiger." An editorial In the Peking Ten. pie's Daily, olhcial newspaper of the Chinese Communist parly, said establishment ol a Commu nist regime in the Western Hemi sphere by Cuban Premier Fidel Castro was one of the most sig nificant developments in the his torv of communism. Noting the fourth anniversary Tuesday of Castro's revolution, the People's Daily said the Unit ed Slates "has resorted In everv conceivable means to strangle" the Castro regime. The paper said It Is "very important" Ilia! other Communist countries assist Cuba. FORMER DEAN PIES HOUSTON iLPD - Harold T. Lobdrll, lormer dean of students at Massachusetts Institute ol Technolopy iMIT', died at Meth odist Hospital here Tuesday. DOORS OPEN TONITE AT 6:45 BEGINS WHERE THE OTHER BIG ONES LEAVE OFF I par v'- '1 ' I.' I I H I 11 I j.jlAX. R hcmhumoi' hcmmiuu' 55 , 1 1' I ' I 1 1 1 1 "llMnB 1 CV l'f "BARABBAS" , ANTHONY QUINN . 1 SILVANA MANGANO ARTHUR KENNtOV KATY JURACO HARRY ANDRIWS VITTORIO PASSMAN JACK PALAMCE IRNtST B0RGN1NE 1 Governors Take Office By United Press International Two Republicans, prominently mentioned as 1964 presidential candidates, were sworn in Tues day as governors. New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller made a bid for the upport of both liberals and con servatives in his inaugural speech which went bevond slate borders But Michigan's industrialist gov. ernor. George Homnoy, stuck pri marily to state issues in his ad dress, saying he would concen trate "on the job at hand." not on campaigning Itockelcllcr said his second ad ministration would be "conserva tive, liberal and progressive." He said that "there are imiiort.mt elements of basic value in all three." The millionaire New Yorker aid conservatism should be re spected because it is based on the foundations of the past on which the future is built; libera- ism "because we should be more onccrned with the opportunites of omnrrow than the record of ves- l,i " and progressivism because "we can never halt and sav: 'Our labor is done ' " llomney admitted that Michi gan's troubles, primarily econom- had focused the attention ol he nation on the state. He ex horted Michigan citizens to join him in restoruig "the confidence of the nation. . . in Michigan be ause. like it or not. such conli- lonce is lacking today." t.KTS I.HiHT KINK LONDON i UPD - Tohce dug losoph King. i. out liom under two leet ol snow early Tuesday. Thev thawctl him out and lined him TO cents 'he amount ol mon ey in his pockets tor diuiikcn less. Said Kmc "I was celebrating" PvklilSto tiv ivicvpi Sal 1 lunaav Sarvln Scwlhtrn Orttn MM NarlsarN Ctliftn, Klamalti Pvtlithina. CamMV Mam at Itplanada Psna TO,ad aim W. t lwMan4. rwktithar Vntararf at aaan4cla maitar at rsa aatl afftca at Kiamam Fain. Oraaan. an Auvit H. Iaa. vnrfar act at Can- an, Martn a. ii' lacanaoan it- aaa n at Klamath Pain. Oratan, ant- at arfd'tlaoal maML.ff atfirai, SUIKKIPTION IMII Catftar I Matn . . I t II 4 fctitfttka . lia m t Yaar . Ill M Alail la 4IKt I Mawtn t 1 t a Maoist a aa I Yaar DIM Carriar antf Daatara waaariar A Svnday. fay lar UNITIO t INTIHTIOM4L UOIT IUtl4U OP CIRCULATION ifeKrikri nt maivlM tahvtrv at tsir HaraM 4 Nawv iaa phana Tuia a-lllt Hurt IM, By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: You hear from all kinds of nuts, but I'll bet this letter takes the prize. We have been married for 12 years and my husband still ,f carries his shirts and shorts over to his mother's house because I don't Iron them In suit him. The more I think of it the mad der I gel. I iron organdy cur tains well enough so Uiat every one who comes into the house comments on how lovely they look. My daughter won first prize in the school Halloween costume contest. She was a rosebud ironed close to 2.000 rose-petals before I sew ed them on her dress Do you think I ought to insist that my husband leave his shirts and shorts for me to do as a matter of pride? PEARLIE Dear Pearlie: So long as your husband's mother Is alive and able to iron his shirts and shorts she's going to do it. Accept the situation aod consider It your good fortune. Millions of women would he happy If they could get someone to help them with their ironing- tor free yet. Dear Ann Landers: A group of us girls were sitting around talking about our kids. Mrs. X mentioned that her 6-year-old son walks exactly like his dad. His dad, incidentally, walks like his dad. V.'l.en the three of them arc together it's quite a sight. My 15-ycar-old daughter has the same walk 1 have. Many people have commented on it. Is this because our children imitate Some of the girls say it's in the genes, in the same way that voice quality is inherited. Can you clear this up? PARK RIDGERS Dear Rldgcrs: Our children do imitate us, walk, talk and the works hut there's mare to It than that. My expert lolls me that the similarity of walk is not only mimicry but also hip joints the way our bodies are put to gether. This, of course. Is Inherit ed. Dear Ann Landers: What can I do about a boy friend who isn't exactly cheap he's just thought less. We both smoke. In the middle of a conversation I will look at him and there he is with a cig arette in his mouth lit and everything. How he gets the cigarette out of his pocket without being seen I never know. I then must ask him tor a cigarette or get one out of my purse. I have never mentioned this to him but it annoys me terribly especially when others rcm& OBierve Fourth Anniversary are present. I'm sure they must nonce 11, too. is mere a oolite so lution? MAGICMANS GIRL FRIEND. Dear Girl Friend: Absent-mind ed people should be reminded. Remaining silent about something which "annoys you terribly" is foolish. The next time this occurs, simply say, "You forgot to offer your cigarettes, dear. Dear Ann Landers: This loi ter is from three registered nurs es who would like to add a word of reassurance for the patient who is worried about what he might say under anesthesia. Olten the first question a pa tient asks when he awakens from the anesthetic is, say? Our answer is always. "Nothing" and it's true. The pa-1 tients who talk rarely make sense. Their words are slurred and in distinguishable. We have never heard of a patient who disclosed a secret, and the three of us have been in nursing for many years. So, please Ann. tell your wor ried readers once again to relax. Their fears are groundless. We know. THREE R.N.'s Dear Three: You told them again, and I hope it helps. To learn how to keep your boy friend in line without losing him, send for Ann Landers' booklet, Necking and Petting And How Far To Go," enclosing with your request 20 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed,. stamped envelope. Ann Landers will bo glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. . parade and a speech by Premier Fidel Castro will I ipht cere monies today formauy observing the fourth anniversary of the ov- erthrow of ex-President Fulgencio Batista. The anniversary observance ac tually comes a d.ay late, presum ably to avoid confusion with the traditional celebration of New Year's. President Osvaldo Dorticos gave reception at the Cuban presi dential palace Tuesday night for foreign diplomats and official visi tors, including Soviet spaceman Pavel Popovich. A number of high Castroite officials attended the reception neslo iChe) Guevara and Castro's brother Raul, but the premier himself was not present. Today's speech will be Castro'sj first since Nov. I. when the U.S. WK'lljWHL'l "arms blockade" of Cuba was still in force. The premier was expected to review the events of 1962. includ ing the continuing shortages which forced his regime to ration food, shoes and other clothing. He also was expected to touch on such matters as the Cuban crisis and the release of the 1.1 LI survivors of the ill-fated 11 invasion. 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