Red China Accuses India Of War Aims TOKYO (UPD Communist China today announced a "posi tive response" to neutralist pro posals (or mediating the Sino-In-dian border dispute, but accused India of wanting to fight. The official New China News Agency broadcast communiques which the Peking regime signed Monday with Indonesia and Cey lon as representatives of the Co lombo Conference of Afro-Asian Nations. "The Chinese government gave a positive response to the propos als of the Colombo conterence, the communiques said. The statement added that it was "agreed that in the interests of Afro-Asian solidarity It was im perative that a solution to the i ft V " , . q " ' JK AwiaVmiiii Tin innin hi MAJ. T. PARENT-LEW Kingsley Man Attends School Maj. Tliomas V. Parent-Lew, chief of armament and electron ics maintenance, has been se lected to attend the Air Force's Operation Bootstrap an educa tional program which makes it possible for servicemen to com plete the requirements for a col lege degree. Major Parent-Lew will enroll at the University of Omaha this month to continue his studies w ith a view to earning a bachelor of science degree. A native of Chicago, 111., Major Parent-Lew and his wife, Mil dred, have three sons, Gregory, Sloven and Richard. Sino-Indian boundary question be found without delay in keeping with the spirit of the 10 principles of the Bandung Conference." The Bandung Conference in 1935 called for policies of non-aggression and non-intervention in af fairs of other states. Today's Red Chinese newspa per said India has failed to dem onstrate sincerity for peaceful no gotiations on the border dispute. Editorials from the papers were quoted by the news agency. The Peking People's Daily, the Communist party newspaper, said India was only "blustering inces santly" about settling the dispute, It said India was permitting "im perialism" to promote plans to make "Asians fight Asians. Police Fire At Burglars PORTLAND (UPD - Portland police surprised three men in the act of burglarizing a home near Waverley Country Club Monday night. One was arrested and two escaped in a bullet - punctuated flight across the golf course. Kloyd K. Peterson, 47, was ar rested and charged with burglary in a dwelling. Police fired at the other two but said they did not believe ci- ther was struck. At the height of the manhunt, the city police had seven cars of officers, state police had several units, and the Clacka mas County sheriff's office had deputies and a 30-man sheriff's reserve unit on the scene. The re serve unit had just completed a regular training session when the call for help went out. Camp Improved MOUNT SHASTA The work ac celeration program. Instigated by the United States Forest Service to aid unemployment conditions, ended In Southern Siskiyou County Dec. 31. A total of JI7.000 was spent, much of which was used to build better camp equipment for r blic camp sites. ; Communilif j ;! (Calendar WEDNESDAY COW BELLES. 1 p.m., execu tive meeting. Pelican Cafe. KLAMATH COUNTY HISTOR ICAL SOCIETY, 8 p.m., meet ing, county library. WOMEN'S BOWLING ASSOCI ATION, Klamath Falls, 7:30 p.m., city tournament discussion, Pine Grove Room. KENO HOME EXTENSION UNIT, 10 a.m., creative cookery, home of Mrs. Dave Shirk, Clinton Avenue. MILLS SCHOOL PTA, 2:1 p.m., meeting and film, school auditorium. 2 p.m. Jacob On Bridge Room visitation, 1 to GOLDEN AGE CLUB, 12:30 p.m., potluck, Mamatn Auditori um. Bring table service. THURSDAY FREMONT JR. HIGH PTA, 2:30 p.m., meeting, auditorium, bxec- utive meeting, 1:30 p.m. MERRY MIXERS, 8 p.m round dance, Pelican City Hall ORSON STEARNS, PTA, 2:40 p.m., meeting, school gym. Child care provided. LADIES AUXILIARY, Canton Crater No. 7, 8 p.m., meeting and officer installation, 1 O O F Hall. FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 12:30 p.m.. potluck and meeting, nome of Kathryn Smith, Midland Road MIDLAND HOME EXT. UNIT, 10 a.m., potluck, fairgrounds, Bring tableware. yO) M.J3 hTi i- H4-2I1 Ka t-M-n w uo yS.. AU& SI 7-IO-IMII ALU J4j HPT. 23 -Bj CLAY R. POLLAN- Your OaJjy Acfivrfy Guide According to fht Start. To develop message for Wednesday, redd words corresponding to numbers of your Zodtoc btrth sign. IB 3fPvmoJ A1Htm 2Ewg 32Wnt S2 fth04d 3 Lucky 31 Nm 3 Mi.ir? 4Hrv 34W-rh M rw bOM 35 lock ASTur ei Fftr 36 Kp 66 Vnling 7 Vwr4ting 37 ! t7 Of 8lrtN ?ft FtrtH M O 9njbWe trvoaif.vjj ft A-vi 10 In 40 Ftnancnt 70 Hnrttwny llfmoroblc ' An 7 1 And HYw AJOflaM 73Tv 14Rvh 44Lnv 7 A Ooxta 1,)PnvrM 4L)f'rMr ?S Dly lft Dov ft "T .-vwn I J 4 UnftxrurtlarJ 7 7 Vf-rmif.ty IR WnrlH 4 Your , 78 Attmrt )9PrMnal 49Snort-cur 79 Doity TO Fotrh 50 Rivnanc HO Op-w 21 Prwoa 51 T HI Renptrwd 71 (Wmgt 5? AHim H2 How ?3 Evening 53 0am HI In 24 Fnr it R fit Octroi 25AIrf 5SNwh ff. 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CPV lac UHITIO PMXS INTIMNATIONAL AUDIT 1URIAU OP CIRCULATION lubicrltart nat raalvlna dalivary at ttiatr Harald and Nawi. alaaia phtna luiaoa 'aiti aarart p.m. NORTH S A 1012 V4 A985 Q9854 WEST (D) EAST 4a None 4. A K J VKJ32 y A Q 10 7 6 5 KQJI43 t7 K107 A2 SOUTH 4.QJ8754 98 10 2 J63 East and Weit vulnerable Weil 10 3V PM 6 V Pass Pass Opening lead4 10 North Kait PM 1 Pans 4 NT. Paw 6 N.T. Pas 7 Double Pass Sooth Pass 5 Pass Pass Paas Cuckoo Clock Driving This Woman Cuckoo Weak Shun Bridge Play By OSWALD JACOBY Written (or Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Bobby Nail of Houston is the only member of the 1962 Ameri can team w ho is on the 1963 team. About a month before the trials started, Bobby broke his leg and had to play in a wheel chair. The discomfort did not hurt his game any. The strongest part of Bobby s tame is Ins courage. Nomine. scares him and he is willing to take chances any time he sees an opportunity to create a swing. In our 1962 match against Great Britain, we were a trifle behind going into the last day's play. The East-West British pair were. on their way to a vulnerable slam and East had just asked for aces by bidding four no-trump wheyi Bobby made the move that won the match for us. Holding one queen and two jacks Bobby threw a live spade; bid at them. Assuming they had a slam, Bobby could afford a sev en trick set and actually it would lake perfect defense to set him six tricks at his five spade bid. He would show a profit assuming that East and West could make a slam. As it was. the bid really created swing. Instead of stopping at six hearts, the British went on to seven. North doubled and wc gained 160 points on that one bid by Bobby. Q The bidding has beta: South Wral North East 1p Pass lt Pass T Yoa. South, hold: 4AQ7S VAQ7S 42 KJII What do you do? A Bid on heart. If ronr part ner holds lour hearts, he will ralie 70a. If ha holds ftir spadr. H will ba easr for him la bid spadts. TODAY'S QUESTION Tour partner does bid etui ipada. What do yoa do now? Answer Tomorrow By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: I need your moral support. Last fall relatives who were vacationing in Europe brought us a gift a Black For est cuckoo clock, made in Germa ny. It is lovely to look at, but have you ever tried to live with one? Every hour. on the hour, we get a little song, like from a music box. Then the cuckoo coos, and chimes ring out the hour. On the quarter hour we hear from the chimes and the cuckoo again. On the half hour, another Strauss waltz, more cuc kooing, and more chimes. The clock also has a loud lick, like a fast ping pong game all day and all night. My husband and four little bovs. love it. It's driving me out of my mind. If I have to spend the rest of my life with this clock I'm afraid I'll be cuckoo. Is there a solution? OUTNUMBERED Dear Outnumbered: The human being Is a remarkable animal. He can become accustomed to almost everything. Retool your thinking. View the cuckoo as the family pel. Many women make heroic sacrlllccs for their families. This can be yours. Dear Ann Landers: I can't re sist commenting on the letter from the married students who arc getting their degrees with no help from home. They were proud but exhausted. All around them were married kids driving good cars, wearing good clothes, and collecting good- sized checks from parents. They wondered if doing it alone was "worth it." I've been that route and I say it is worth it. Hang on to your independence. Kids. I didn't and I'll always regret it. My family could do nothing for me. My sweetheart's family was well-to-do. When we wore juniors in college, she wanted to get mar ried. Her folks pushed it. I didn t see how I could support a wife and go on to law school. They of fered to foot the bills and like a ap I agreed. Today, six years later, they are still running our lives. They bought us home and furnished it. They have taken our children over completely. They are over here every night. If we don't con suit them about everything they're hurt. I know now that nothing is free. We paid an enormous price for their "help." - IN BONDAGE Dear In Bondage: Thanks for your letter. Here's another point of view. Dear Ann Landers: To those college kids who are killing them selves doing it on their own I'd like to add two cents worth. What are you trying to prove anyway? Both my parents and my wife s parents helped us through school and it was won derful. I'll be a practicing physi cian next spring and we already have two little boys. We could not have managed this on our own. I've kept a careful record of what we owe our parents and eventually we will repay them in full. In the meantime, we've been able to lead a normal life, with plenty of time for rest, study and fun. If parents can help, and if they want to Help, why not? Pride goeth before a fall.-PLAIN HAP Dear Happy: Thanks for your letter. Some Individuals are able to accept help without . feeling crushed by the burden of grati tude. And some parents are able to give help without demanding a pound of flesh In return. It de pends on the personalities In volved. Confidential to Trusting Clco: You're clutching an asp to your bosom. Lady. A decent man wouldn't make such requests. To learn the booby-traps of teen age drinking, write for Ann Lan ders' booklet, "Teenage Drink ing, enclosing witn your request 20 cents in coin and a long, self addressed, stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon Tuesday, January I, 1963 Harry Blames Ike For 'Closeting' Mighty Ho In Bremerton Navy Yard Weather Roundup Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST today. High Low I Astoria 51 33 Bilker , . 3.1 26 Brookings 60 40 Medford 46 24 Newport 61 31 North Bend 57 40 Pendleton 33 20 Portland 45 33 Redmond 57 20 yalcm 41 26 The Dalles 3!l .12 Chicago 35 .13 Los Anceles 77 61 New York 30 .15 San Francisco 63 51 Washington 44 2S WHO'S ON SECOND? WASHINGTON 'UPD - Who does Vaughn Mcader sound like anyway? Recently President Kennedy said that Mender s voice on the best selling record. "The First Family," sounds like his young est brother, i'eddv. At a news conference Monday, the latter. Sen. Edward M. Ken nedy. D-Mass.. told a questioner he thought Meader sounded "more like Bobby than he docs me." Contacted at the Justice Depart ment, Ally. Gen Robert K. Ken nedy aid actually Meader sounds like R. Sargent Shriver, the Presiden t brother-in-law. Northern California: Mostly fair wilh local fog. Corvallis: Cloudy or fopgy with some drizzle; high Wednesday in upper 30's; low tonight 27-32. Bend: Variable clouds with fop; some drizzle; highs 33-38 in north to near 50 in south; low 28-33. The Dalles and Hood River: Mostly cloudy tonight and Wed nesday; highs in lower 40 s; low .10-33. Baker and La Grande: Variable clouds; highs 33-38; low 28-33. Portland-Vancouver, Willamette Valley: Cloudy and foggy; some light rain or drizzle: high Wed nesday near 40; low 27-35. Western Oregon: Local fog and drizzle; highs 38-48; low 25-42. Eastern Oregon: Fair with some fog or low clouds; high in 40' s; low 18-35. Western Washington: Mostly cloudy with some fog: chance ight rain; high 40-48: low 34-42. Eastern Washington: Local fog with chance snow or rain tonight and Wednesday; high 34-44; low 23-35. Ski Reports Timbcrline Lodge: Total snow 41 inches, no new; hardpack with ice: temp. 31 at am.: wind west 510 mph: clear skies; roads clear, no chains: all facilities ex cept Sno-cats. Mt. Bachelor: Temp. 32. few high clouds: 38 inches snow; ski ing fair to good. INDEPENDENCE, Mo. H'PI- Former President Harry S. Tru man today blamed former Presi dent Dwight D. Eisenhower for anchoring the battleship Missouri, on whose decks the Japanese sur render was signed, in the Bremer ton, Wash., Navy Yard. Truman, who advocates moving the historic ship, answered Rep. Thomas M. Pelly, R-Wash.. who earlier denied Eisenhower's re sponsibility for the Bremerton anchorage.' He (Eisenhower' was com mander-in-chief and you know and I know that no one else but the commander-in-chief was responsi ble," Truman said. The Missouri rides at anchor at the Navy yard here despite recent controversies over proposals to move the historic battleship to San Francisco, New Orleans, St Louis or some large Atlantic Coast city. In a letter to the Seattle Post Intelligencer Monday. Truman in dicated strongly this Puget Sound Navy city was not the place for the "Mighty Mo." "I don't want to appear too per sistent in Uiis matter but it seems to me that if (former President Dwight D.I Eisenhower wanted to place it in a closet he couldn't have found a better place than the Bremerton Navy Yard," Tru man wrote. "It seems to me that the battle ship Missouri has been put as far away from the public to see as Revolving Door Grabs New York Bank Robber it could possibly be," the former president wrote. "It should be some place w here it could be seen by the most people. The best place, it seems to me. for Ihe battleship to be is either in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, the Norfolk Navy Yard or in a place in the San Francisco Harbor." Truman said he would prefer the Brooklyn Navy Yard to San Francisco because the Missouri's history started there. The Mis souri was launched at the Brook lyn yard Jan. 29, 1944, and was christened by Truman's daughter, Margaret, when he was a U.S. senator. Rep. Thomas M. Pelly, R-Wash. denied Eisenhower was responsi ble for placing the Missouri here. Tobacco crops are grown in 19 slates of the Union. NEW YORK lUPP-That old gag about revolving doors once you get in them, you can't get out is not funny to a 19-year- old bandit named Isaac Worthcn. Worthen, armed with a sawed off shotgun, robbed a midtown bank Monday and was highball ing it toward the street when quick-t h i n k i n g hank guards trapped him in a revolving door and twirled him into the arms of police officers. The gunman walked into the Bowery Savings Bank across from Grand Central Station just before closing time and. strolling up to teller John Percival. pre sented his credentials: a double barreled shotgun and a note. I "Shotgun. . .$7,000 cash, the note read. I got real scared when I saw! that gun and I pretended to be counting out the $7,000," Percival said. But instead, he pressed an alarm button near the money drawer and handed Worthen a bundle of "hot" bills money with serial numbers previously recorded in case of a holdup. The robber shoved the money into his pocket and made a bee line for the door. That's when he got into trou ble. Mike Frank, 60, a bank guard. tried to trap him and Worthen stumbled, firing both barrels of his shotgun while off balance. The pellets from the blast whis tled past Frank's leg and carved a hole the size of a grapefruit in a nearby wastebasket. As Worthen ran into the re volving door, three other guards grabbed a section of it and kept it from turning until police ar rived. Then the guards spun him out into the street. I FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS To Every Creed and Purse WARD'S Klamath Funeral Home f Marguerite Ward and Sons 925 High Ph. TU 2-4404 New Women's Daytime League Now Forming ORGANIZATION MEETING Thurs. -10:30 a.m. Day, Time, Rules, etc., will be decided. If you want to bowl in a League, try out your new ball, or just bowl, come on out. It's all for fun! Call us 2-5536 for full details LUCKY LANES Jffst. NOW OPEN! Shirley's Coinomatic Laundromat HilyarrJ & Allomonl Dr. Nrtt Manatrr af CRAThR UKIVE IN Help Us Help Oth. rs Shop . . . The SALVATION ARMY THRIFT STORE 4th & Klimstr) Dollar-Saving Value in a Breathtaking Package! NIW STYIE TO DELIGHT YOUI ROCKET ACTION TO EXCITE VOUI Crisp new styling is only a elue to the sppesl of the Oldsmohile Pynsm.r 8S. Oldsmobile's lowest -priced lull-ii series, it boasts s 'JSO-h.p. Rocket V-8 . . . four-coil-spring romfort . . . plus the quality you look for in er Isbrlerl "Oldsmobile "! Check a Dynamic 8S lor site (and vsluel at your Oldsmohile Dealer's todsy ! LDSMOBILE 'aara i )f)HlS !- saasf aaiaa aa OlSKOIllll SEI YOUH tOCAl AUTHORIZED OlDSWOUll QUALITY DEALER DICK B. 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