PAGE -A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falli, Ore. Thursday, January 17, 1963 JET HYDROFOIL Boeing' is shown testing its new pump jet hydrofoil on Late Washington in Seattle lest week. The new creft is propelled by a stream of water ' jotting out over the rear of the boat. The hydrofoil will travel over 45 MPH. It is pow. ered by e gas turbine engine end weighs Vli tons. UPI Telephofo Numbers War Rages In California As Phone Users Fight Hew System KEW YORK (UPP-Some de termined and resourceful citizens have been battling lor months in growing California over the all' number calling system planned by telephone companies for their! subscribers. The dispute there and else where has drawn attention both from ordinary phone users andi from officials of telephone com panies. It has even given rise to suggestions in some quarters that had the overall problem of dial telephone capacities been handled differently some years ago, when direct distance dialing was intro duced, the current dispute might have been headed off or vastly diminished. The switch ultimately would re place the call number system used in most communities at present, an exchange name ab breviation plus five digits, with seven digits. More simply, it would swap two letters and five numbers for seven numbers. Telephone companies say the ANC system is an inevitable re Primitive Planet Life Possible, Says Expert LOS ANGELES (UPD-There is a strong possibility of a primitive form of life on the faraway plan els of our solar system such as Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Nep tune, a Lockheed-California Co. scientist said today. PGE Awards Line Jobs PORTLAND (UPI) Portland General Electric Co. announced Wednesday that ft has awarded three contracts for construction of an IS million transmission line from the firm's Round Butte Dam to Salem. Receiving contracts to build the 230,000-volt, 99 - mile long line were: R. C. Hughes Electric Co., Inc., and Power Line Erectors, Inc.. of Spokane, $294,017, for part of tho line between Salem and Gates; Charles T. Parker Con struction Co. of Portland, $1.481,, 122, or a 44-mile section of the line across the crest of the Cas cade mountains, and Rasmussen-B-E-C-K. Inc., of Sunnyside Wash.. $214,813. for part of the line through the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. Materials and property acquis! tion for the project were expected to cost $5,895,048. A spokesman for PGE said the contractors were scheduled to complete their job this year. 'Although the outer atmosphere of tliesc planets may reach 200 degrees below zero, the surface temperatures may be at life-support level," Dr. Rainer Bergcr told the nation's leading space scientists at the American Astro- nautical Society's annual meeting. He said this condition could re sult from a combination of a "greenhouse effect" heat held within a planet's atmosphere and heating from a warm planet's ulterior. Bergcr said that of all the plan ets, Mars had the best climate to sustain life and "scorching Venus one of the worst." Seas of water and ammonia also may exist and prebiological reactions, such as occurred on Earth billions of years ago, could lake place in ine oceans oi tar- off planets," Dr. Bergcr said. These reactions, he explained, could bo triggered by organic ma terial produced in the atmosphere by radialion or lightning, carried downward and dissolved in the seas. Such processes may have oc curred for the last several billion vears and resulted in lile forms." Dr. Bergcr said. "There is no scientific evidence to support Ihc Uiesis of intelligent life anywhere in the solar sys tern except Earth," he said. However, he said the possibility of intelligent life beyond llic snlar syslom, say among the six million worlds similar to ours in the Milky Way, still remains mvstcrv. suit of growth. An estimated ai million telephones ring more or less frequently in the Uniled Stales every day. At the end of 1961 there were 77.422,000, ac- cording to their statistics, and at the end of 1932 there were 45,636,-; 000. Opponents argue that there must be a better way to cope with expansion of the need for telephone numbers. At recent pub lie hearings in California, where opposition to ANC has been per haps as well organized, vocal and determined as anywhere in the nation, they proposed a different dial. They presented medical tes timony saying that the seven-digit numbers would be almost im possible for some persons to re member. . But an article in the United System Quarterly look notice of the current hassles and raised the question of imperfect timing on the presentation of the ANC system. It said that some years back. when direct distance dialing first was introduced, "was the time to revert to all-digit numbers and thereby assure an adequacy of numbers for years to come. But Ihe telephone industry clung to the exchange name prefixes." The ANC plan was the "best solution to an otherwise incvilablc number shortage." it said. Subscribers who oppose ANC,' said the article, "do so only be cause we telephone people have (ailed to apprise them of its im portance. Surplus Pear Purchase Set WASHINGTON turi - The Agriculture Department plans to purchase 407 carloads of surplus winlcr pears, including some from Oregon, for distribution through the school lunch program. Sens Wayne Morse and Maurine Neu bercer of Oregon said today. They said 78.880 boxes will be purchased from the Hood River area at prices ranging from $2.68 to $322 per box. Some 149.408 boxes will be purchased from the Medlord area at prices ranging from $2 29 lo $3 49 per box. NOW... ADD A MOTION PICTURE TO THE WONDERS OF THE WORLDI Tona rum CURTIS !: BR9H11ER ..sHAROtD HCH! ;!.' TARAS BUIBA Si v s a. - ' V . - EASTMANCOLOR m WANAMAKER BRAD DEXTER GUY ROLFE FIRRY LOItZ s3i H V -CHRBUNl KAUFMANN WAiDO SALT m KARt TUNBIR6 . imhw . Irrv ui J UllHCWSON KtKXO KM , i. Door Op MS TODAY! Civil War Pay Asked For State SAN FRANCISCO UPD- The stale of California asked the fed eral government Wednesday to pay off a $7.5 million claim on money spent for defense during llie Civil War at the urging of President Lincoln. State Atty. Gen. Stanley Mosk said 2j olhcr states have been fully repaid for similar claims. The last was Nevada, which got; tlMO.OOO in 1929. Mosk said the infant state of California spent $4,420,891 to pay militiamen at the rate of $13 a monlh and to install 140 guns at Ihe mouth of San Francisco Bay and on Alcatraz Island. Some of the troops were sta tioned in the Los Angeles area, where a strong pro-Confederacy sentiment existed. Other units were used lo put down a Con federate uprising in Texas and to reopen sections of the Overland Trail which were closed by In dians. Mosk said the difference be tween the money spent and the $7.5 million claimed represents in terest paid on bonds which financed the state's expense. Cali fornia still was paying interest on some of the Civil War bonds as late as 1945. ' The attorney general said Sen. Clair Engle, D-Calif., was press ing the claim and that prospects for its payment are better now than ever before. Mosk also urged Sen. Spcssard L. Holland, D-Fla., chairman of a subcommittee on efficiency and supplemental to lake favorable action on the claim. It has been approved seven limes over the decades by the U.S. Senate, but never received approval of both houses of Congress. I' 9 t THE BETTER HALF feyBoV'Bames 6ii a I hi I can't really call Stanley an old 'has-been' because actually he's just an old 'never-was'." -6- Massive Ice Jam Forged By United Press International A massive ice Jam built up by tons of ice churning over Niagpra Falls threatened lower Niagara River property today while freez ing temperatures caused millions of dollars in damage in Southern California vegetable crops. Niagara rivermen feared the Ice bridge might malch the destruc live jams of 1903, 190. 1938 and 1935. It already has caused exten sive damage to waterfront prop erties from Tonawanda to Lake Ontario. The ice, 70 feet high and 25 feet thick in some places, knocked out production for about eight hours Wednesday at the Ontario hydro generating plant. However production at the $720 million Niagara Power Project, the larg est in the Western world, re mained on schedule. Southern California suffered its fourth straight day of freezing temperatures winch took a heavy toll of vegetables and nursery slock. A warming trend was expected lo break a brutal, week-long cold spell in the eastern half of the nation that has smashed records sol in the 1800s. The cold snap, worst in 14 years already has caused more than $3 million damage to Southern Cali fornia's citrus, tomatoes, melons. nursery Mock and floral crops. Below zero temperatures were confined mostly early loday to Ihe Dakolas, Minnesota and Wiscon in sharp contrast to last weekend when the mercury in 48 states. fell Vet Hospital Expansion Set POISTIAND U PI '-Plans lor n $15 8 million expansion of the Vet erans Administration tiospuai here are being made, the office of Rep. Edilh Green. D-Ore , said today. The addition would include 505 beds including 240 for psychiatric purposes. Mrs. Green reported the work also calls for consolidation of the outpatient clinic ith the hospital and in increase in re- eaiih space The outpatient cun-i- is now in the Lincoln huildinj Fight On Segregation Outlined For Churches CHICAGO (UPI)- An "action program" for churches and syna gogues to combat segregation was outlined today by the National Conference on Religion and Race It called for prompt elimination of racial barriers in all religious institutions, including church-re lated schools, hospitals, welfare! agencies, homes for the aged and fraternal organizations. Poland Raps China; Backs Khrushchev BERLIN (UPI I Communist Poland gave solid backing to So viet Premier Nikita S. Khrush chev today in his campaign against the warlike policies of Red China. Polish Communist leader Wla- dyslaw Gomulka, in a speech to the East German Communist par ty congress, said Khrushchev's defense of "peaceful coexistence" Wednesday "also expresses the attitude of our party." Gomulka was the first speaker when the congress opened the third session of its six day meet ing in Last Berlin. Western newsmen with the exception of the British Reuters news agency which maintains an office in East Berlin were barred and had to rely on the censored reports of Communist news agencies for accounts of the meeting. The East German agency ADN said Khrushchev and Gomulka arrived together for the session and were greeted with thunder ous applause" by the 2,500 Com munist party delegates and hand picked visitors. Khrushchev and Gomulka spent two days conferring in die Polish countryside before traveling to East Berlin. East German Com munist chief Walter Ulbricht launched the denunciation of Red China's belligerence Monday. Khrushchev carried on the sec ond phase Wednesday and then the Western newsmen were evict ed before Red China's Wu Hsiu- chuan had a chance to answer back. Mrs. Grenfell Asks Divorce PORTLAND i UPI I - Mrs. Kay Grcnlcll Wednesday filed suit for divorce from William A. Grenfell Jr., former state senator, charg ing "cruel and inhuman" treat ment. The suit asked for custody and support of the couple's three children Grcnlcll. an unsuccessful candi date for Multnomah County com missioner last November, recently was acquitted of a charge o mak ing a false police report in con nection with a fatal traffic acci dent last Oc tober. He still faces a Circuit Court trial on a charge ol failing to remain at the scene of, an accident. Studies Dog Track Plan PORTLAND (UPIi A proposal to build a $2'z million dog racing track in Clackamas County was before the county's commissioners today after the Oregon Racing Commission called off a hearing on the subject Wednesday night Thaddeus Bruno, chairman of the racing commission, announced that the hearing would not be held by the commission as scheduled Friday and suggested that the county commissioners look further into the proposal. The action fol lowed a storm of protests. "Since announcement of the hearing date, the proposal has re-J ceived its first exposure in the metropolitan Dress and this nuh- It also proposed that religious licjty has generated considerable opposition by phone calls and let- bodies Help Negro families obtain! homes in all white suburbs. Work for the "stabilization" of changing neighborhoods in the in ner city. Invest pension and endowment funds m projects, such as inter racial housing developments, that will promote "equality of opportunity." Insist that all contracts for church construction or supplies in elude a pledge of no -job discrim ination. Work for enactment of federal and slate laws against discrimi nation of employment and housing. These and many other specific proposals for religious action on racial problems emerged from a lour-day meeting, unique in U.S. history, at which 700 Protestant, Catholic and Jewish leaders sought to make religion a more dynamic force in the struggle for racial justice. The conference was the first of its kind ever held under the joint sponsorship of the National Coun cil of Churches, the National Cath olic Welfare Conference and the Synagogue Council of America. Representatives of 70 religious or ganizations participated. The action proposals, unveiled at the closing session of the con ference today, were developed by work groups which met behind closed doors Tuesday and Wednesday. They are not binding on any de nomination or local congregation but are simply recommendations from the interfaith conference. A follow-up committee was estab lished to seek wide implementa tion of the proposals. The conference was to conclude late today with the issuance ol "an appeal to the conscience of the American people." Its text was withheld from publication pending debate and voting by the delegates. Musa Clarifies Revision Stand SALEM (UPI) Senate Presi dent Ben Musa said Wednesday he is not opposed to altering" the Oregon Constitution. However, Musa said he thinks it would "be impossible to pass the proposed revision" that has been submitted to the 1963 legis lature by the Oregon Constitution al Revision Commission. SpeakinR over stale radio sta tion KOAC, Musa predicted the revised draft will get a "rough going over" because of individual opposition to specific sections. 'Some changes should be made," he said, "but they can be made piece-meal and can be ac cepted " ters to the commission office and the office of the chajrman," Bruno said in a letter to C. E. Latour- ettc, chairman of the Board of Commissioners of Clackamas County. "In view of this opposition, the commission suggests thai your board may want to conduct a sup plementary study to further con firm or refute your original ap praisal of the situation as it cur rently exists in Clackamas Coun ty." he said. Bruno said that the racing com mission would "accord this mat-i tcr Us prompt attention" following1 action by the county commission ers to his suggestion. uavia F unK, w no heads a eroun which plans to build the track near Wilsonvillc. said he was "ex tremely disappointed" that the hearing was called off, He said that "there has been considerable support" for the. project, "particularly in Clacka mas County where this investment is to be made. This support, both in writing and person, will be de livered to the racing commission when it chooses to hold the hear ing to which we feel fully entitled." Opposition to the proposed proj ect came from several state legis lators at Salem including State Rep. Ed Whelan, D-Portland. and angry ministers at Oregon City. Jap Fishers Get Support WASHINGTON' UPI Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall today supported the decision by the U.S. section of the International North Pacific Fisheries Commission to allow Japan to join the United States and Canada in halibut fish ing in the Bering Sea. Udall, in a letter to Alaska Gov. William A. Egan. said the deci sion would only open the Eastern section of the Beting Sea to Japan, leaving 90 per cent of the halibut fishery to U.S. and Cana dian fishermen. Egan had written Udall Dec. 2! protesting the decision. Udall's reply, made public today, said that under the 1952 treaty there was no alternative to opening the Eastern Bering Sea to the Japa nese. He said the United States and Canada had been unable to prove that the fishery was being fullv utilized. ENROLLMENTS arrrfttrit al hrclnntnf of iiit month, tmr an Intrrfttlng . reward ing vtrtr In (tmctalagr . . . C all TL t-llll Klamath Btauty College Meet Stalled WASHINGTON (UPP-The Ore gon congressional delegation Wed nesday postponed until next Mon day a meeting to discuss the space age industrial park in the Bnardman area of Eastern Oregon KiamalM parra. fl'MM Pwkhtfcwt ticPl Sal I an SuMaf ItrVItt IWttHtTB 0'?f)H K 'a matt vhiiln CemMiiy Mam al iaat hna TUM I'M W. t. Swtlft. PtkMr ffttarto ai tveena clati marttr t pott Mtt at Klamath ortv an Awauit 1ft, Itfta. ndtr act C trtti. March J, lira si-lai Mil- ana a Klamath Fim. waft. and al a(it't'aai ma.in.f 9K9, IUHCHIFTIO KATIT Carr-' I Ma-ih nn t MM HI If I Vaar Ul M Mail in AdvaMt t Mwtth f 1 U a vanthi M Vaar HI a Cirriar aM DaHtn WMMar SvMv. cv it UNIT IP PftMl INTIHNATIONaL UOlT BURttU OF CIRCULATION JuOKflMrt Mt rrt'l l-vary 1 ttr Mara ftavt, Uat av L made naturally... lo naturally H't fcatfar Coats-Suits-Dresses to y2 and mor Off During Our Storewide January Huge Savings in Every Department Use Your Charge Account S12 Main Free Parking 5th & Klamath 1 -T MP JTn 1 f i i . POLITICAL LICENSE Lorraine Foulks of Glendale, Calif., a good Republican, appears shocked as she re ceives her new license plates from William Luti of the Auto Club. The JFK license disturbs her no end, for Glen dale is one of the strongest bastions of Republicanism in the Far West with the highest GOP registration in CalU fornia. UPI Telephoto Weather Roundup Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST. High Low Astoria Baker Brookings Medferd Newport Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem The Dalles Chicago Los Angeles New York San Francisco Washington Northern California: Mostly fair with some low clouds and fog. Corvallis: Some night and morning fog; highs 40-45; low 33-38. Bend; Mostly fair; highs 40-48; low 10-20. The Dalles and Hood River: Some night and morning fog and clouds; gorge winds west 10-25; temperature range 33-50. Baker and La Grande: Partly cloudy; highs 40-48; low 10-20. Portland-Vancouver, Willamette Valley: Some night and morning 44 35 j 39 i 13 53 ' 32 43 17 50 37 45 31 43 36 45 11 41 36 43 36 19 9 64 45 35 29 54 44 41 27 fog, mostly cloudy; highs 40-45; low 33-38. Western Oregon: Some night and morning fog and drizzle, cloudy; highs 38-50; low 20-38. Eastern Oregon: Fair south, partly cloudy north; highs 35-43; low 10-32. Western Washington: Mostly cloudy; highs 38-45; low 30-38. Eastern Washington: Partly cloudy; highs 28-44; low 12-32. Tatoosh to Blanco: Variable winds 5-15; mostly cloudy with patchy fog. Ski Report Timberline Total snow 35 inch es; no new; road Clear with icy ties operating. ML Bachelor Temp. 17 at 7 a.m.; total snow 39 inches, no new; skiing poor; fair; icy spots, carry chains'. For Professional TREE SERVICE Baker's Nursery Coll TU 2-5553 198 WHILE THEY LAST! WESTINGHOUSE 19 'PORTABLE TV fr ! w." li v Pill TV,! j " Termi of Course? 0N tCM GUARANTEE ON OEEMICHED CIRCUIT 1010. If circuit boi'd fl!:s ii rctri iki ittwi en yfi' f'O-n dm ol fjrci'ist. WestiKji-eau will i(!ct ! f: Of C"-S. Arnrjti P-'Wl Hwi!lt dfj'Oll. You tan be sure...if it'; sWestinghousell KIRKPATRICK'S nrJEast Side Appliance flit IMUIUWIfl rife 'VBUW S2