CAPITOL MEMO , . . Oregon Oldsters Shun State's Medicare Plan SALEM (UPI (-Oregon's Medi cal Care or the Aged program (MAA) has upset the belief that people flock to take advantage of .something for nothing. When MAA went into effect on Nov. 1, 1961, it was estimated 55.000 would take part. On Nov. 30, 1962 13 months later 4,576 were enrolled. During that same period 9.042 had ap plied, and 6,744 had been found eligible to receive benefits. During the 13 months $103,747 had been paid to doctors, $327,332 to hospitals, and $21,429 to nursing homes under MAA. Response to the program has been so low that the governor's advisory committee on MAA has recommended coverage be broad ened. The recommended changes have the "enthusiastic endorsement" of Gov. Mark Hatfield. The revitalized program is ex pected to up enrollment to 15,000 still a long way from the original estimate of 55,000. Major change suggested is in clusion of "major medical" bene fits. A spirited publicity campaign is called for to encourage more eld erly persons to take advantage of MAA. . Under the present law, anyone meeting these requirements can enroll: 65 years of age or older. A resident of Oregon. Individual having less than Fidel Lashes At Kennedy HAVANA 'UPIi-Prcmier Fidel Castro lashed out at President Kennedy today and ridiculed the United States for paying "indem nification" for 1,113 ransomed Cu ban invasion prisoners. "They call it ransom," Castro said. "We don't care what they call it. "They had to agree to pay in demnification. "For the first time in history, imperialism has paid war indem nification." Castro's speech was the high light of his regime's observance of its fourth anniversary in pow- i er. He spoke after a two-hour re view of Cuba s armed might be fore a reviewing stand of 400 Communist notables. Castro tried to poke fun at Ken nedy's action in welcoming home the invasion prisoners and pledg ; ing that their flag would be re ' turned to a "free Havana." ; Castro suggested that perhaps there was a bar in Miami called ; the "Free Havana" and specu lated that Kennedy may have had "loo much to drink" when he spoke with the prisoners. He said Kennedy "acted like a vulgar pirate chief" when he met with "the invasion cowards. . They have hoodwinked Kennedy," he shouted. Castro said the only reason the United States paid the ransom he demanded for the release of the invasion prisoners was "because they were defeated. . . "At Giron Beach la rcierence to the April. 1961 Bay of Pigs in vasion attempt' they i im perialists) suffered their first de feat in Latin America. Poet Fights Blood Clot BOSTON UPI Poet Robert Frost. 88, critically ill. fought back from a third major com nlieafim Wednesday. The nation'! unofficial poet lau reate was hospitalized three weeks fr a urinary hlock. then had a heart attack, and Tuesday night became a victim ot a pulmonary embolism-a blood clot in his luncs. H is comfortable today and has sustained the episode satis factorily." said Dr. F. Lloyd Mus sells of Peter Bent Brigham Hos pital. "Clnttins is a comtrnn compli cation in the ased. especially when they must spend long per ioH in bed." The hospital said Frost was well enough before the attack Tuesday In receive a visitor. GLASSES ON CREDIT! tC Grn Stamps COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 730 Main li. $1,500 annual income or a married couple with less than $2,000 an nual income. Liquid assets of less than $1,500 for a single person or $2,000 for a married couple. All that is needed is an applica tion at the county welfare depart ment office and a request to be enrolled. It costs the individual nothing. The plan is financed by federal, state and county taxes. Ignorance of the program is cited as the major reason for its low degree of acceptance. The advisory committee told Hatfield "despite early and con tinuing publicity by the Public Welfare Commission, many eligi ble persons are encountered who have no awareness of its availa bility or whose knowledge of MAA is so faulty and incomplete as to prevent their applying for cover age. 'Providers of service are also not properly informed in many instances, so that they may fail to recommend this potential re source to a patient when it might be needed and applicable." Another problem suggested by the committee is the "reluctance or refusal to enter the program because of its identification with a public assistance agency." And there is criticism of the benefits now offered by the pro gram. In the words of the com mittee: "The present plan de parts too much from the princi ples of protection for the patient where he needs it most in the area of major medical." Administration of MAA also came in for criticism. "Because of the small volume of the pro gram, several of the county wel fare departments have had to use part time or non-specialized per sonnel. Problems in operational ef ficiency have resulted, both with beneficiaries and with providers of service." The "major medical" approach recommended by the committee and approved by Hatfield would have the patient paying for the office call and other minor ex penses, and MAA paying for the big items such as hospital, nurs ing home and heavy medical and surgical care. At present the plan has a $50 deductible feature. Another suggested change would increase maximum hospitalization from 14 to 30 days, and expand the availability of nursing home care for senior citizens. The governor has already an nounced he will submit proposals to the 1963 Legislature to bring about expansion and improvement of MAA. The governor's committee calls for better publicity "to correct misunderstandings" and for "at tractive and informative pam phlets" to carry the message to the people who are eligible to participate but have not yet done so. With a better program, and more publicity, the MAA people hope they'll be able to sell more free medical service. Plant Rocked By Explosion RIVERSIDE, Calif. 'UPI' An explosion rocked part of the Aero jet General's ordnance facility near here Wednesday, and River side Community Hospital reported 17 persons were treated for in juries. At least two of those engaged in work of a classified ordnance project were seriously hurt, at tendants at the hospital said. Aerojet General later reported 12 persons were admitted to the hospital, most of them w ith minor injuries. It said it regarded the explosion as a "small" one. Security measures were quickly enforced. The California Highway Patrol was turned away when an officer sought to investigate re ports of an explosion. Six ambulances were sent to the Aerojet General facility in the hills about eight miles west of here. The building where the ex plosion occurred was separaie from several other structures, and damage was restricted to the one unit, a firm spokesman said. Self-Service Laundry 1711 M.in TU 4-JJ4 D it YtuntM ' Wa ll D it tor You! Wash-Dry Dry Clean Wt Gin S1H Cfi Stamps Birdlife ACROSS 1 Expert diving bird 4 Sea eagles v Extinct bird 12 Chemical 13 Female ruff 14 Feminine appellatioit 15 Expire 16 Quivering 17 Permit 42 Narrate 45 Grain 46 Born 47 Restrict . 50 Capacity measure 54 Pillar 55 Vestige 59 Age 60 Before 61 Toil 62 Birds fly through the 18 Heating devices , , 20 Frasi.nt 3 Small tumor 22 Through 24 Winglike part 25 Austere 28 Dispassionate 32 Boundary (comb, form) 33 Light touch 35 dinal 36 Metal 37 Brew 38 In three ways ( comb, form ) 36 Flouts 64 Short jac keta 65 New Guinea port DOWN 1 Military assistant 2 Distinct part 3 Sharp 4 Expunger & Legal point 6 Fiber knot 7 Night before an event 1 12 13 I 14 15 16 17 nr" 19 110 111 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 liUi.l 'iiiaLlJ 21 22 231 J24" ' 25 126 127 E ha 29 130 131 32 "T 'j 33" 34 "'"""""J 35 36 y'i 37 3 39 40 fw142 43 4?" 45 I 46 54 " 55 56 57" 58 S3 60 ' " 62 ' 63 6? 65 I I I I I I I 3 Study Of State Highway Fund Allotments Urged SALEM (L'PIi-A study of how highway funds should be alloted to counties and cities was called lor today by the Legislative High way Intcrm Committee. In its report to Gov. Mark Hat field, the committee recommend- fed the transportation research in stitute of Oregon State University conduct the study under the 1963 Highway Interim Committee, and that the study be financed by the highway fund. At present cities receive 10 per cent and counties 19 per cent of the total highway funds trans ferred to the highway commission for distribution. The funds come principally from registration fees, fuels tax and weight mile lax, with a minor amount from fines. During calendar 1961 approxi mately $12 million was distributed to counties, and $6.25 million to cities under the 19 per cent - 10 per cent formula. The committee reported Some witnesses testified that the burden upon the cities was much greater than that upon the counties and that the ratio should be altered to provide the cities with 12 per cent and counties 17 per cent. "At the conclusion of Uie hear- igs the committee was convinced that the respective burdens and nroblcms of cities and counties had changed considerably. The committee said, however information was produced to indicate how a new formula hould be determined. STAR Br CLAY R. y2 MAR 2! f-APR. 20 T 5-15-26-37 95 1-60-81 -90 , TAUtUi APR 21 I MAY 21 C 55 66 6875 76-77-84-85 GEMINI &?. M1 v Eyy lwl 23 6-21 -M" v53-7B-83-87 M Your Da,ly Activity Guidt X According to th Stan. To develop message for Friday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodioc birth sign. 1 Finonctot 3 Looks 4Th,nk. b Lot ft Vwi'ft 7 Thoughtful fiTht 9 You 1 1 Dr t i: Oing'f 13 T(CM 14 Oai'Pnm 16L'k I7F.rtf ie a 19G-H 2! In 2? For 2.? Owf 2Fiowi no :?s H ?'A CANCII .yu"EJ3 ll.uu.34 48-59-70 uo 3 JULY 21 pMO-22.33 VWOO stri. 21 y) 7-19-30-41 'DOaod 512 Main Free Parking 5th & Klamath FASHION CLEARANCE NOW IN PROGRESS Fantastic Savings on Coats, Suits, Dresses, Sportswear, Children's Wear, Lingerie and Foundations. Antwr to Prvlout Punl 8 Infirm 9 Masculine 10 Heavy blow 1 1 Emmela 19 Simian 21 Vulgar tellow 23 Meal 24 Nautical term 25 Topers 26 Ireland 27 Climbing plant 29 Things done 30 Small pastry 41 Racket 43 Fishermen of a sort 44 Hawaiian wreath 47 Killed 48 Relief group 49 Solar disk 51 River duck 52 Pseudonym of Charles Lamb 53 Uncommon 56 Rodent 57 Cameroons Negro si ureal uiKe 34 Monndin dye 40 Eternity In a related issue, the commit tee suggested the City of Portland submit its own bill asking the leg islature to base the city's alloca tion of highway funds on 100 per cent of its population. At present all cities but Port land have their allocation deter mined on tne basis ol 100 per cent popualtion. Portland's alloca tion is now based on 70 per cent of its population. Knifing Death Charge Filed MILTON-FREEWATER (UPD- Manuel Alvarado, 31, Walla Walla Wash., was stabbed to death on a downtown street here last night and Umatilla County Prosecutor Richard Courson said he had filed a first degree murder charge against John Pena, 35, Umapine, Ore. Pena was held in the city jail here without bond. Courson said Pena would be taken before a grand jury Thurs day. The prosecuting attorney said the stabbine took place on the main street in the business dis trict about 9 p.m. during an argu ment between Alvarado and Pena The stab wound in the chest was inflicted with a pocket knife. Courson said. Alvarado was dead on arrival at a Walla Walla Hos pital. GAZER POLLAN OCT 33 4, 3-1 6-27-38 4 17-61-71 ,C KOltflO OCT. 24 Qfe JOV. 22 113-24 35'-' life hjIImi r t! t s ImIaItIsI iTTEEtsI InieIe 31 Obion 61 Hpot 3? For 6 2An 3.1 Cop-ng t : O 3A New t0- Towo'ti 6- ri6NglKt MOut .'-7 Bvgon 67 ,o 39 Com ft? Cor-cn 40 For 70 Trxwy i: L&ftr 71 At-nl d Fcjvom 7?A"ir 'Snm 73V-OV 44 With 74Stuoi 45 S 7bDfm 47CM 77And ' 4ig Necessary 7ft Ee(fmg 49 Up 79 Your SOinedO POCghf 52U 8?Psfcy 53 Wonderful 8 J Romonr-c M A 8 Mrv 55 Tim AS Intereilt V The fift TmM 7 Speed 7 frOlvvM f? Venture oO future B-iaMef-ng 1?)Auvere 6 )eunj k.6-58-69 V IAGITTAIIUS NOV. 23 7 EC. 23 J ?.18.79.JcVl' bo 63-82 89 CAPtKOIN DC 23 JAN 10 Viy 8 12-23-34 57-67-79-86' AOU AllUS B. If )j: , 9 20-31.42-1 NSCfS WAR 21 -r 4.1739 M9 ? n 'Blocking High' Weather Phenomena Frigid Blasts That Numb, Kill In Editor's Note Europe and the eastern United States still are suffering horn some of the worst winter storms of the century. To investigate their causes and effects L'PI as signed a team of reporters: Daniel F. Gilmore, for London and Europe; James W. Ryan and Jack O'Brien, for Maine and the East Coast; firman Itunnion, for the weather bu reau meteorological experts in Washington. Biography of the Storms A UPI Extra A UPI Team Report At 18,000 feet above the cold blue-grey waters of the North At lantic in the days just before Christmas, a mass ol air formed into what weathermen call a "blocking high." Circulating there between Greenland and Iceland, unseen by human eyes but marked on the charts of meteorologists, this wind pattern helped forge a vi cious machine of nature that has now clobbered two continents. Nearly 600 persons died in Eu rope for reasons attributed direct ly to the storm, either from auto accidents, drownings, asphyxia tions or freezing. In the United States, the death toll was scat tered and much smaller, but the property damage from wind and cold was huge. Joseph D. Panaro. of May- brook, N.Y., who had seen and survived a great many storms in the 65 years of his life, died when the car in which he was riding was involved in an acci dent caused by blowing snow. Arthur Barber and his wife, Daisy, of Robert's Place, Dor chester, England, froze to death on the back scat ol a Vauxhall sedan which was stalled in a giant snowdrift on the A353 road three miles north of Weymouth, England. ( Londou Hit Hard London, which has fogs, found itself covered in snow. At times it was too cold to ski in the fa bled winter sports grounds of the Austrian Alps. Fourteen inches of snow fell on Marseilles, on the Mediterranean coast of normally sunny southern France. It was the most in 61 years. Spawned by a combination of weather factors around the globe, timed almost with the precision of a rocket countdown, the great winter storms that blew out 1962 and slid in 1963 were among the most severe of the century. They were still around today, and the "blocking high" that helped cause them still is hover ing above the Atlantic at latitude 64 north and longitude 31 west. This huge pressure area that was born before Christmas week end pulled in arctic blasts from Siberia that now have swept across Europe. But at the same lime it disturbed wind patterns in the Western Hemisphere and caused the big East Coast storm to crunch up the Atlantic sca Iward and bury parts of New England. Europe took the first blow. "It's been the worst cold wave , since 194V, '' said Gordon H. Kob- bins, deputy senior meteorologi cal officer in the British Air Min istry. "The worst snow blizzards,. according to our records, since 1927." Nothing Stopped Invasion The high pressure area that had built up between Greenland and Iceland blocked off compara- j lively warm winds from the At-1 lantic. These winds, and the Gulf stream, provide England with its ( usual damp but temperate win-i ters. But with the "blocking high" in place, there was noth ing to stop the windy invasion from Siberia. While Europe moaned, and Rome newspapers reported "the coldest Christmas ot the cen-l The same is in store for Eu-1 long-range weather forecaster, Ibors influence us, and we Influ tury:" while snow conted the r0P- Jerome Namias, chief U.S.foresaw it this way: "Our neigh-lence them." crater of Mt. Etna in Sicily and avalanches cut olf millionaires and the young set in ski resorts throughout Switzerland, a storm began moving up the eastern sea board of the United States. At weather bureau headquar ters in SuitUmd, Mel., outside of Washington, the experts consult ed the prevailing patterns, exam ined data from the computers, made their own calculations, and agreed that an onslaught was en route. Last Saturday, at Suitland, ex perts such as Haiian Saylor, chief of the analysis and forecast branch of the National Meteoro logical Center, decided to alert weather bureaus around the coast that a big storm, then located near Cape Hatleras, N.C., was building up. Their notice moved about 1:30 p.m. EST. By then it was snowing, and later raining, in Washington it self. New York City was soon to be hit, and the Giants and the Green Bay Packers would play for the National Football League championship in arctic cold. Storm Moved North The storm pressure area con tinued to move north. It attract ed bitterly cold air liom Canada. The "blocking" area over the At lantic prevented it from sweeping out to sea. And the storm turned toward Maine. The highest weather bureau in the northeastern United Slates is atop 6,228-foot Mt. Washington, in New Hampshire's magnificent White Mountains not far from the Maine border. In 11134 the tern uerature there fell to 47 below. The record almost was broken Sunday night. , At 10:30 p.m. Guy Gosselin, 28, j a 6-foot. 180-pound member of the observatory staff, struggled along a 20-foot long walk and found the thermometer reading 41 below. The storm was in full force. At Bangor, Maine, the snow be gan at 4:10 p.m. EST on Satur day. When it ended at 3:23 a.m. Monday, 29 inches were on the ground which already had been covered with 10 inches Irom a previous snow. In Washington, the weather bu reau was grim. A 30-day forecast issued Monday said that temper aturcs should continue "below season normals" over the eastern third of the nation. W- MONTGOMERY WARD 9th t Pine TU 4-3188 AIRLINL PICTURE TUBE SALE On Popular 21" Tubes Installed by Factory Trained Technicians Enjay iharp TV plcturai with tuaar aluminiiad pictura tuba . . . mada tar Wardi hy a laading tuba -nu-facturaf. Guarantacd far ana yaar COMPARE AIRLINE QUALITY AND LOW PRICES ON ALL OTHER SIZE TUBES Si! 01! 88 You' Old Tub. VtJ Trod.ln TM owrm mm itnottt s or wrruw Mirtiir Maral IhiiK amca CarpofWM I1KRALD AM) NKWS. Klamath DcMNTcv'crrm1 r All Jrmfey Sheets THESE ARE WHY TAKE nation-wide1" reduced! our long-wearing white cotton muslin. 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