COUP. 0 OF ORE.LIBRART SPAPER SECTIOM SEN.BEf.AMO MCMMT8 DIV. . 0,i no Ml la Tk- Day's Sews By FRANK JENKINS Kroosh, in Berlin: "The Soviet Union will not go to war to bring about the victory of communism in any country. But 1 shall shout HURRAH when capitalism is buried." 1 think he's whistling in the graveyard to keep his courage Berlin along with all of East Germany is a graveyard ot communist hopes and boasts. A system that in order to keep its people from running away from it has to make of itself a PRIS ON, surrounded by high walls manned by guards who shoot to kill whenever a member of t h e system seeks to leave it, can't survive in the world of today. In his State of the Union mes sage yesterday, President Kenne dy pointed out the merits of a DOMESTIC Peace Corps. He said: "The present Peace Corps is a success overseas. As the idealism of our youth has served WORLD PEACE, so it can serve DOMES TIC TRANQUILITY." Twenty-four, hours later I this morning, that is) three rural Cal ifornia counties announce that they are likely to be soon greeting Die nation's first citizen volun teers in a DOMESTIC version of the Peace Corps. Farming communities in Tula re, Kern and Kings counties, deep in California's great Central Val ley, announce that they are set ting up plans to use the corps men in an effort to solve some of the most vexing health and edu cation problems of migrant work ers. These communities plan- for a small unit of only 30 corpsmen to help them tackle their migrant worker problems.. Selected (or ingenuity, imagina tion, TACT and special skills, the service corpsmen will be trained at a university center for a six week minimum. When their train ing is completed, they will work with local community agencies in the farm towns and always un der local direction. Their main goal will be to de velop a measure ot stability among hitherto rootless migrant families. They will help launch day-care centers for pre-school migrant children. They will oiler elementary courses in nutrition, health and family budgeting. They will provide stepped-up vocation al training so farm workers can qualify for a wider variety of agricultural jobs in an era of growing farm technology. Before scoffing, consider the an tics of our young people as re flected in the news. It gives us the shivers sometimes. Whv do thev do what they do? 11 may be because they have NOTHING BETTER In no. mis program might give them some thing better to do. We can t afford to scoff at it. More NEW PROGRAM stuff: k In his message to the newly assembled Oregon 1963 legislature, Governor Hatfield, who was an educator before he went into poli tics, said: ' "As 1 have pointed out before the legislature should point to ward YEAR-ABOUND use of cost ly school plants. Generally, our school plants are idle more days than they are occupied. For most communities, we can no longer afford to be bound by schedules which were derived from an ag rarian economy." New davs-NEW WAYS. There are so many things- many of them pleasant that we can no longer afford in these days of the abundant life which costs so FANTASTICALLY MUCH in the way of taxes. t I. T- -J irclCK ldppeu0n Law Making Process For 5108,000 MIAMI (UPI) Two men. whose work clothes blended them with cleanup crews, stepped for ward suddenly with drawn revolv ers Monday and took Sina.ono at Tropical Park racetrack. While stunned worker? gaped. the men rushed a cashier and guard, snatched two cotton bag: containing the loot, then pushed their victims into a close! behind a cigar stand, locked it and es caped through a narking lot. Police said the men got about jMnno in unmarked bills from U day's handle of WW.894. around Co.twn in checks and M..VO in cashed in tote tickets The track said the loss was in uri. Detective David Hclman calleH the robbery "professienal. we! planned and well executed." Weather High yetltnfiy Low Uit mqht High ytir a 90 Low ytir ago High pait H ytrt Low pa it 14 yaart Prtcip. put 34 hours Sinct Jan. 1 Sama period last ytr Svnnta Wefnaday Suniat WMntsday 41 II 30 1 41 0954) 1 112 .00 .01 .3? T:3J 1:11 Denies Pie Midwest Cold Dives To New Low By United Press International A new blast of w inter drove the mercury to 50 below zero and cracked records which bad stood as long as 75 years in the Middle West today. Siberian cold which had gripped most of the nation for the past week began to case after claiming close to 100 lives in weather-relat ed accidents and fatalities. Deep in Texas, thick clouds prevented fresh disaster to crops along the Rio Grande Valley. But the midlands congealed in temperatures which included an unofficial 50 below at Black River Falls, Wis., an official 46 below RETURNS Former Togo lesa Prime Minister Nicolas Grunitsky, above, returned from exile to Togo late Monday and immediately met with the military junta which assassinated Presi dent Sylvanus Olympio and overthrew the government. Grunitsky, a brother-in-law of Olympio, has been men tioned as one of the two exiled Jeaders who may head the new Togo govern ment. UPl Telephoto Junta Seeks Government LOME. Togo lUPH-The mili tary junta which assassinated To- golese President Sylvanus Olym pio and seized power was report ed today seeking to form a gov-! crnment under lormer Prime Min ister Nicolas Grunitsky. Grunitsky. brother-in-law of the Iain president, returned from ex ile Monday in neighboring Dahom ey and was met at the airport by a crowd of cheering support ers. He went immediatelv into consultation with members of the junta. Antoine Meatchi, leader of the political opposition to Olympio and another possible candidate to head the new regime, also was report ed in Togo. Radio Lome said Sun day that Meatchi had been named president, but Monday the radio announced the junta's efforts to form a government under Gru nitsky. Grunitsky was prime minister from 1056 to 1058 while Togo was under French administration as a United Nations trust territory Olympio defeated him in the 1938 elections and Grunitsky later went into exile. Leaislators V - 'A ' SM.EM 'L'PIi Oregon's day-1 old J2nd legislative assembly con vened for 30 minutes at 8 m. today, then adjourned for a day long orientation conference. The conference was to teach new House and senate memners bow the legislative process works, and to help veteran lawmakers brush up on procedures. It was the second such meeting The first, held two years ago. was -o tuccessfiil that the spon.-oring legislative Counsel Committee ex panded the program for today's sessions. Morning and afternoon meeting? Acre held in the capilol building. and a luncheon session took place at (lie Salem YWC.X building. A preliminary session for new legislators began at 9 a m. and included the film "Legislative Process in Oregon'' made during the 1W! session. Steps in the passage of a bill Price Ten Cents 10 Pages at Lone Rock, Wis., and 42 below at Indian Lake, Mich. Record breakers included 24 be low at Milwaukee, breaking a Jan. 14 record which had stood since 1888, 32 below in Minnesota's twin cities, and 15 below at Lansing, Mich. Chicago's O'Hare Airport regis tered 19 below, which would have been an all-time low for the date. But it wasn't official because the city keeps its weather records at Midway Airport, where it was a mere 11 below. Chances that the temperature would struggle above zero today in much of the Middle West were slight. Midwesterners yearned for the weather of "sunny" Alaska, where it was 33 above at Juneau. To the east of the deep freeze, heavy snows swirled off the east ern shores of the Great Lakes. The snows lay 26 inches deep at Tshombe Asks Amnesty Before Quitting Fort UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (UPI) The Central Congolese govern ment has agreed to grant Ka-j tanga President Moise Tshombe the amnesty he has demanded tor ending his secession, the United Nations announced today. The disclosure was made soon1 after Tshombe sent a note to the United Nations asking for truce talks and demanding amnesty for himself and his followers. Prime Minister Cyrille Adoula and President Joseph Kasavubu of the Central Congo government sent messages to U.N. Secretary General Thant today pledging to respect the amnesty promised by Kasavudu last November. Tshombe was reported today to have surrendered his last strong hold of Kolwezi and announced the end of his secession from the Congo, but a U.N. spokesman said Thant was taking a cautious. view of the Katanga leader s state ments in the light of his past rec ord of broken promises. The spokesman said U.N. troops in Katanga were prepared for the time "when they can take over the town (Kolwezi) peacefully, thev hope." Thant issued a statement today welcoming Tshombe's statement1 that he would end Katanga's seJ cession and grant the United Na tions full freedom of movement in his territory. The secretary general said that Belgian Ambassador to the U.N Walter Loridan had delivered f Wildlife Meef Set A meeting of all Interested sportsmen and those who signed the petitions of protest on game management policies will be held at the Willard Hotel on Thursday. Jan. 17, at 8 p.m. Doors open at 7 p.m. A citizens committee, elected at the November meeting of the Midland Grange, will give a com plete progress report to date. The support and attendance of all persons in this area is ur gently requested by committee members. Brush Ud were outlined by Legislative coun sel Sam Haley. Haley told legisla tors he hoped the conference would "stimulate your thinking." The formal conference opened at 10 a m. and featured a panel on "The Image of the Legislator." Television newsman Tom Mc- Call was moderator of the panel which included former Gov. Rob ert D. Holmes: Dr. Richard Frost of Reed College: Irv Luiten of Weyerhaeuser Company: Merv Shoemaker, political editor of The Orezon lan. and former House Speaker Rudie Wilhelm Jr. Constitutional Revision Commis sion Chairman and ex Rep George Layman discussed separa tion of powers in state govern ment at the noon luncheon. It is after today's orientation session that the House and Senate will begin the routine of handling the more than l.ono bills expected to be introduced this session. ttmu ail m tw$ dge Speed On Marquette, Mich., and in New York a storm that dumped 19 inches of snow on the Buffalo area moved inland. The extended sub-freezing cold covered the Mississippi River with two to three inclies of ice from bank to bank downstream from the Alton. 111., dam. Author ities said the river had not frozen like this since the dam was built 25 years ago. Upstream from the dam the ice was about eight inches thick. Thick clouds covered the citrus rich lower Rio Grande Valley again Monday night, protecting its multi-million dollar crops from a destructive freeze for the sec ond consecutive night. The Rocky Mountain area en joyed its second straight day of respite from the bitter cold Mon day. Temperatures edged past the freezing mark in eastern Colora message from Tshombe Monday in which the Katanga leader indi cated "a readiness to end seces sion, to give freedom of movement to U.N. personnel throughout Ka tanga and to undertake the full implementation of the plan of na tional reconciliation." Board Named For Hospital The Board of Directors of Pres byterian Intercommunity Hospi tal, Inc., Monday night reelected five members to additional three year terms and reelected o(fi- ccrs to another one-year term. 1966 included Irvmg Braucr. Dickl"1"? fnd commi,lcd 10 the state Henzcl, and W. B. Swcctland Klamath Falls, Dave Car man, Tulelake, and Ted DcMer ritt, Merrill. unices nnioing over .or anon er year are Ross Ragland. prcsi - dent; Rev. Robert Groves, vicel jii l'mucir; ;ii. rjiemiui ciuei s, secretary, and Jim Monteith, treasurer. Schematic plans for the p r o- posed 141-bed hospital facility were approved by the board and will be submitted immediately forjcramcr and sat down beside him approval by the State BoariJ of Health and the U.S. Public Health Service. The plans had been re viewed and approved by medical staff members at a session last Saturday with architects and Jim Moore, hospital design consult ant. Board meetings in the future will be stepped up to two each month. Meetings will be held on the second and fourth Mondays of the month in the conference room at First Presbyterian Church at R p m. mmmmmmMmTmmulm 4 - '" ' niiiiiwM)ii)"inimni!i' "1 .'""- 1 :-. U -? : . zZ . - I WU 1 . $ & Is; ft ? .. .--'V - . rm . , , EDUCATOR LAUDED For his effoifi in existing servicemen obtain higher edu cation, Dr. Viron Moore, seated, receives the USAF Air Defense Command Certificate of Commendation from Col. Edwin J. Wihenburger, commanding officer of Kingsley Field, in a brief ceremony at Eugene. Obtervinq the plantation are, left to right, Maj. Thomas J. Green, director of personnel at the airfield: Donald M. Bowman, base education director, end Dr. Roy Lieuallen, chancellor of the state system of higher edu cation. Throuqh Dr. Moore's efforh, military units throughout the state een now nego tiate a contract with the state's higher education General Entonsio'i Division to have on-base courses taught by accredited persons. 4 K K KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON, do for the first time since the arctic storm hit. Honolulu residents did the hula Monday in chilly 56 degree weath er which equalled the all-time January low. Southern Florida continued to beckon frost-bitten tourists from the Midwest and Plains states with balmy 80-de- gree weather. Squalls dumped heavy snow Monday at scattered spots along the lee side of Lakes Erie and Ontario. Buffalo, N.Y., reported six inches of new snow in 12 hours. Erie, Pa., had five inches. Isolated snow flurries swept across the rest ot the Great Lakes area. Guy Cramer Re-Arrested By Sheriff Guy Cramer, 84, slayer of a Klamath County commissioner in 1957 and escapee from the Oregon State Hospital since last August was arrested by Sheriff Murray "Red" Bntton and two deputies in the Eagles Hall Monday night, the sheriff's office has reported Cramer, Bonanza, was the bcr serk gunman who shot and killed Fred Peterson, member of the county welfare board, and wound cd two other members of the board in a shooting five years ago, because he believed the group had discriminated against him, Following the shooting, Cramer asked a member of the sheriff's office if he had shot a- specific board member. When the ques tion was answered, "yes," Cra mer said. "That's good. When vou co into a den of coyotes you want to get them all. He was later charged with first degree murder but was later found innocent bv reason of in- hospital Early Monday night, Sheriff Brilton, acting on a tip. went to the Eagles Lodge and observed a man he believed to be Cramer. ,,,, lccl)hon(,d ricDulv Lou R n m(i flskcd him to , ,,, j hri0 . -i,- tograph of the escapee with him. Soon after. Bogart and Deputy Del Summers arrived with the picture that established the iden tity of the man as Cramer. Sheriff Bntton walked up to jlc savcr then looked at the sheriff and remarked casually 'Well. hi. Red. I knew you'd be around alter me." The slierilf look the prisoner to the county jail and contacted the slate hospital at Salem which arranged to have the prisoner returned to the mental instilu tion carlv Tuesday morning. Before his arrest, Cramer told the sheriff he was en route to Salem to seek payment for more than t"or he believed was due him by the state. TUESDAY. JANUARY 15, 13 ' y i - Timnm Hi , ml in in aniiiin m a i aima i rwniiit ifmn mum Z. ..,,,ira. DELIVERS INAUGURAL ADDRESS Gov. Mark Hatfield delivers second inaugural address to members of the Oregon State Legislature in Salem Monday. He urged law makers to consider net receipts tax, a four-cent cigarette tax, and a new constitution for the slate among other proposals. UPI Telephoto Red Boss BERLIN (UPI) East German! Communist boss Walter Ulbrichtl today accused Red China of aim ing at war. He charged that the Communist Chinese attacked India without consulting other Commu nist nations. Ulbricht delivered the charge in the early part of a five and one-half hour speech to the open ing session of the East German Conventional Veapons Gef 'Boost' WASHINGTON (UPD Prcsi- dent Kennedy's record new mili- tary budget w ill ooost producnon ot conventional weapons ana planes but cut manpower and re-. ducc funds for new ship construe lion. Continued expansion of the Min- uteman and Polaris missile forces provided in the defense blue print for the year starting next July 1. Kennedy will send it to Congress Thursday. It was learned today that the budget calls for appropriation of $.12,181,000,000 for the armed forces. That is a hike of $2,328,- 000.000 over the sums Congress appropriated for tlie current year. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara spelled out his appro Di iation needs in a letter to Budg et Bureau Director Kcrmit Gor don. The letter, which has not been made public, was dated Jan. 4. Actual expenditures in the new fiscal year, as distinct from ap propriations, will amount to anout $61 billion. As has been disclosed previously, spending will rise be tween $2 billion and $3 billion over this year's estimated military out lay of $48.3 billion Telephone ncome Tan Cwifi ii Raps China Aims Communist party's sixth congress. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush chev, the No. 1 guest, beamed ap provingly. All the delegates from East Ger many and visitors from other So viet bloc countries applauded en-1 thusiastically but Red China's del egate, Wu Hsiun-chuan sat im passively. In fact, the Chinese delegation In Budget There is a difference between appropriations and expenditures . , ,, , . . d spent in a given year. Appropria tions are funds to be spent in the. current and future years, and thus indicate the future shape of the forces. Expenditures cover the current and prior years' orders and are the significant figures in determining whether the over-all budget is balanced. Since McNamara wants more money appropriated than he will be spending, the trend in future defense outlays still is apparent ly up. Though huge sums continue to be needed for the big defense ex pansion Kennedy started in early 1961, it has been decided to reduce slightly the number of men in uni formone of the major cost items in the budget. And any large-scale attack on the problem of obsolescence ap pears to have been deferred. The Navy will ask for $A0O million less than last year for shipbuilding. Woman Dies Of Exposure The frozen body of Tena Hood Barkley, 71. was found in her unhealed Chiloquin home Mon day afternoon by a granddaugh ter, the Klamath County Sheriff's Office disclosed Tuesday. Mrs. Barkley, who was con fined to a wheelchair and lived alone, had apparently been dead about two days. Her body was discovered by the granddaughter. Darlene Sanchez, after relatives had recalled they had not seen the woman for about a week. Chiloquin police chief. Max Smith, said. Investigation by Smith, Sheriff Murray "Red" Britton and Dr. William Kendall, deputy medical examiner, indicated that tlie Kiel oil supply had become exhausted several days ago and the woman had frozen to death. Mrs. Bar kley was found on the floor near her wheelchair, next to a bucket containing water that was frozen solid, her pet dog survived the freezing temperatures and was in a bedroom of the house. Tlie ther mostat was turned up to 90 but there was no fuel in the stove. Funeral services are being ar ranged by Ward's Klamath Funer al Home. TU 4-8111 No. 7038 remained almost motionless while delegates all around them inter- upted eight times with applause for Ulhricht's onslaught against Albania and Red China. Without using Red China's name Ulbricht said the quarrel between Moscow and Peking is not merely an internal one among Commu nists but one that affects world peace. "The arguments between the So-' vict Union and (lie dissidents are about questions of peace or war, he declared. He referred repcately to the Al banians "and those who stand be hind them" meaning Red China, Criticizes Indian Attack He brought tlie Chinese Commu nists into it by name when he criticized them for attacking In dia "without the otlier socialist slates being informed or con suited." Ulbricht portrayed this as con trary to the policy of peaceful co existence agreed upon by Com munist bloc nations. Ulbricht. referring to the Red Chinese and Albanians as 'dogmatists" and "dissidents" charged they are "fundamentally gainst the policy of peaceful co existence." They are oriented toward war, lie declared. Despite this, Ulbricht said, the Enst German Communist press had deliberately refrained from commenting on the Chinese-Indian border dispute so as not to ag gravate it. 'We maintain good relations with India. We want to keep them in the future too. This frontier con flict is highly superfluous and Is abhorrent to the socialist world system." Here again he appealed for com promise between the two states. The goateed East German lead er thus touched at the beginning of tlie conference a controversy that has had the Communist world choosing sides, ft was ob vious Ulbricht was on the Krem lin's side, despite his past repu tation for being tough-minded Stalinist. Haf field Children See Father's Inauguration SALEM (UPP-An Impressive assemblage of dignitaries, a pair of wide-eyed youngsters, and a jazzy Hawaiian band set the stage Monday as Mark Hatfield became the seventh second-term governor In Oregon history. The slim, elegant chief execu tive, wearing a dark suit, took his oath of office before some 700 state officials, legislators and guests who crowded into the lofty, wood-paneled House chambers for the colorful ceremony. A battery of television cameras recorded the event. Watching from seats near the rostrum were Mrs. Hatfield, wearing sapphire silk and a large white orchid, and Elizabeth, 3. and Mark Jr., 2. The Hatfield children were born during the governor's first term. "I think It's very wonderful the children can see their father in augurated," Mrs. Hatfield said. A solemn processional to the ac companiment of organ music pre ceded the Inauguration. Weal her Klamath Falls, Tulelake and Lakeview Fair through Wednes day, Cold again tonight with 10 la lower Klamath Basin to near 15 In Klamath Falls. High Wed nesday near 40. Light and varlj able winds. Odds Favor $10 Billion WASHINGTON (UPI) - Demo cratic congressional leaders today promised President Kennedy speedy consideration of his income tax reduction program. Kennedy discussed the tax legis lative situation with House and Senate leaders of his party at their regular Tuesday breakfast meeting at the White House. Speaker John W. McCormack said that after the President pre sents his special tax message Jan. 24, the House Ways and Means Committee probably would proceed quickly with hearings on Kennedy s detailed proposals for net $10 billion reduction in fed eral tax rates, phased over a three-year period. McCormack told newsmen that tax reduction was a "matter of urgency" in the administration's legislative timetable. Other congressional Insiders were willing to give odds that the administration will succeed in pushing the President's tax cut program for individual and cor porations through this year's ses sion. However, they felt that there might be some major alterations in the three-year plan outlined In general terms Monday by Ken nedy. Some predicted that the job would not be completed before October. In the meantime, Kennedy wilt be subjected to a continuing bar rage of criticism from conserva tives tor daring to propose that tax revenues be cut when Treas ury spending' already is running billions of dollars a year in excess of tax collections. But many spokesmen for organ ized labor and organized business will demand that Congress cut taxes. Tie AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce last month came to. surprisingly similar agreement on the amount that taxes should be cut aTid how the relief should be distributed among individuals and corporations. Making use of this unusual la bor-business harmony, Kennedy drafted a tax-cutting formula that s compatible with the proposals of both organizations. Kennedy's program by 1985 would reduce taxes for a majority of individ uals by more than 20 per cent, and would cut levies on big cor porations by nearly 10 per cent. For example, a single person earning $5,000, who now pays $818 in federal income taxes, would pay $642 when Kennedy's program became fully effective. A married couple with two children with an income of $5,000, now paying $420 In taxes, would pay $296. These examples apply to taxpayers US' ing the standard deducation. In his State of the Union ad dress to Congress Monday, Kenne dy affirmed that tax relief to spur economic growth and cut unem ployment is his No. 1 legislative goal this year. He gave no more than passing mention to the rest of his abbre viated l3 legislative program. Select senators and representa tives escorted into the already packed chamber former Govs. Charles Sprague, Elmo Smith and Robert Holmes, the black robed justices of the Supreme Court, the state's elected officials, and final ly, Hatfield. Edith Fairham Gunnar led the audience in singing the national anthem. Hatfield was formally declared reelected when House Speaker Clarence Barton "canvassed the vote" and announced the result The governor looked solemn and intense as he raised his hand and took the oath of office from Chief Justice William McAllister. The audience listened quietly as Hatfield delivered his 45 minute inaugural address. The ceremony ended with the singing of "Oregon, My Oregon" and a recessional Then a lighter note took over as the governor greeted guests tn hit executiv offices midway between the House and Senate chambers. .