Shadow Of Silence Falls On New York City i Ms Newspaper Strike Enters Second Month i By WARD CANNEL Kcwspaptr Enterprise Assn. NEW YORK (NEA) - The breakfast conversation, still tent ative after a month of practice, suddenly exploded: I'Oh, be still," the wife snapped. "It's unnatural to talk at this hoiir. I want my newspaper. Why don't they give us back our news papers. ..." And so it was that the black shadow of New York's newspaper strike invaded this reporter's home, much the way it has palled on; almost every aspect of this le viathan city. But just why they don't give us back our newspapers and just who "they" are is no clear matter, either for some of those who called the strike or for those who supported it. Even now, with the strike well InU) its second month, it is only a modest jest that a member of Lo cal-6 of the International Typog rahers' Union comes off picket ditty at a major daily paper now strucK aumrj ana says: ;!1 really don't know all the is sues. But it must have been the only thinK we could do." But a printer fin a non-struck shop) who earns less than $9,000 yearly and pays more than S500 of it to ITU in dues and assess ments says .he knows the reasons: 'Only way you get advances Is with the threat, tacit or open, of a strike. We haven't had a strike in this union in 65 years. After a stretch like that, the threat be gins to wear thin." But it is the cream of the jest that many of the 18,000 other newspaper people pressmen, drivers, engravers, reporters, etc out of work In sympathy sup ported a move they did not un derstand. Two weeks after the ITU walked out, for example, 1,500 New York Newspaper Guild re porters and desk men jammed into a meeting of their union (which had expected 3001 to ask what it was all about and when it would be over. It is the last grim laugh that both Local 6 headquarters and its adversary, the. Publishers Associ ation. are seemingly serene and poised both left to their own devices, unchallenged and unham pered by the traditional growling of the press. That watchdog has been muz zled and chained. Or, more ac curately, strapped. Of the Guild's 6.000 working press members only a small cadre has found a job: delivering telegrams, writ ing publicity releases, working in the post office, putting out hasti ly hatched mosquito newspapers! from printing shops. . - , " i . ! , , ' , V4- - -s S li i Jsr A I yf7 I:' 1? &4 ? " ' '"- " ' ' jt "' ' 'j$ jt inf (I Pa a Jtff,i i'-- f,fm, tirVfi -writ-"' ---"-- -mMm&S ,&t PAGE 8 A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falli, Ore. Thursday, January IT, 1961 THE DOCTOR SAYS Big Name Disease Produces Problems BRADFORD AND POWERS Yale vs. Boston Common. Willi nobody to force the Issues, Icmand press conferences, aski embarrassing questions and dog the footsteps of the principals, the drama continues to wear its way through the winter will', neither side giving any quarter. For its side, the Publishers As sociation will not bargain on any Mill Lti 0' 4 IT I f- 0 , "ft - :' THE PICKET LINE Striking printers walking the picket line outside York's dailies think "It must have been the only thinq we could do." 9f Ne California Scientist Plans To Study Beginning Of Life BERKELEY. Calif. UTI'- A University of California scientist said today he and a colleague a:e trying with elemental gases to duplicate the conditions under which life began. A possible, but still highly re mote result of such experiments, lire scientist said, would be crea tion of life in a test tulip. Commjjjnxhj. Qalsndah ; TIU'RSOAY PROSPERITY REBKK.MI I.OIXiK, No. 104. 8 p.m. meeting. IU0F Hull. i BV.THKL NO. 6. Job's Daugh ters, 7:30 p.m.. Masonic Temple. ROYAL NEIGHBORS OK AMERICA, 8 pm, installation, new KC Hall, Tenth and Main. Public invited. KLAMATH ART ASSOCIATION. 7.45 pm., movie. "Mexican Pot tery and Archaeology." Mcmiiers and guests. Y-NE-MA TWRI.F.RS, 8 pm s-iuare dance, YMC.V Bring sand w idles. LAKESHOItE IMPLICATE IlitlDGK CU B, 7 30 p.m., dupli cate bridge, City Library. TWYLA r ERG! SON PAR ENTS AM) PATRONS, 7:30 p m.. meeting, school gm. KLAMATH COUNTY POMONA . RAMIE, officers and subordi nate grange masters. 6 30 pm.. ptJuck, meeting. Lost Hiver rtngc Hall. FRIDAY J HOOL MATES. 1 p.m., des scij. Mrs. R. H. Anderson, 345 N.MOth St. Ragles auxiliary, 7 .10 p si., officers and drill team practice, Eagles Hall. SHASTA VIEW GRANGE), 8 p.m., meeting, Grange Hal'.. V.MCA FAMILY NIGHT. 6 30 p m., potluck, speaker, recrea tion, Y.MCA. Bring hot dish, sal- ad or dessert, table service. SHASTA . IIOMEDAI.E EXT. UNIT. 10 a m., meeting. Credit Buying No. 2, Joan's Kitchen. (all-grounds. SATURDAY R U M MAGE SALE, Midland Home Ext. Unit. 8 30 a.m. In 4 pm, Clyde's Towing. SATURDAY SHASTA VIEW COMMUNITY BLIKi. ASSOC., 8 pm., card party. Community Hall, Shasta Way and Madison. KLAMATH LANK LOlXiE. No 4l. V.O.A., 8 p.m.. meeting. IOOF Hall. Nonay slides. Hans Norland. Public invited. A.UW, 12 30 Wmema Hotel. p.m., luncheon KLAMATH . LAKE TEACH ERS Federal Credit Union. 6 30 pm.. annual meeting. Pine Grove Room, Willard Hotel. Dr. C. Arthur Knight, professor of virology and a research bio- cliemist in the university s vims laboratory, said he and Pr. Karl Grossenbachor. a plant nutrition expert, are among many scient ists throuslioiit the world pursuing the secrets of lite. Among the pioneers in the field he said, are Dr. Mclvin Calvin, a Nobel Pruc winning chemist at the University o( California, and Dr. Harold Urcy and Dr. Stanley Miller of the university's San Di oco campus. Urey also is a No bel Pn;e winner. "We are trying to make some progress in tracing chemical ev olution." Knicht said of his and Grossptibucher's experiments. suppose wo could come up with something in a montli but more likely it will be years, or mabe never." An East Coast newspaper 'the Boston Traveler I reported in copyright story today that Knight and Gmssenbai licr "arc on t h e voice of creating lite in a test tuhe " "The implications of tins r port arc greatly exaggerated. Knight said. "Wc have a tre- menckwsly long way to go." Knight said he and Grosscn ktclicr began their experiments aixmt three years a-o and have pursued tliem "as a peripheral interest-almost a li- bhy." MIDLAND GRANGE. 2 p m. degree Grange Hall. J U V E N 1 1. y p m., meeting. I pracl:re. Midland issue until the typographers' mon-cy-and-hours demands arc . set tled another $18 and 90 min utes less work a week plus more! vacation and sick leave. Thi would bring printers scale up to $159. For its side, the ITU local wants those issues left until last. More immediate, they say, are the Pub lishcrs' demand to use more au tomation in the production of the daily paper such as type set by punched tape. - - - At issue, on the surface any way, are the two major proo- lems of management and labor today: Rising costs in a profit shrinking industry vs. money-saving, people-replacing machines. With computer capabilities har nessed to the composing room, this story could be ready for printing in less time than it takes you to read it. For a printer and for every other American in skilled labor it is the machine writing on the wall. . Beneath these issues lies an other level of complication, the personalities of the key figures. Leading the ITU s Local 6 is Bertram Powers who, in the words of one of his fellow-union leaders, "doesn't have a very good sense of public relations." What he docs have, however, is a solid gold strike fund that pays out-of-work tyiwgraphers over $90 weekly if they are married (as opposed to about $40 for striking Guild men). "It wouldn't surprise me." a typographer in a working job shop said, "if Powers wanted to be president of the whole ITU. "Well, there's a lot of us who go along with the strike without going along with Mr. Powers. As far as we're concerned, Elmer Brow n is still the president of this union." Curiously. Brown's only voice in the strike has been a delegated nod. sanctioning the walk-out in early December. On tlie other side ol the table. on the rare occasions wnen it is used, sits Amory Bradford pleasant, legal, poised. Yale with the combined armada ot trike insurance and tlie winter, when advertising revenue is way off anyway. It's quite a match, quipped an out-of-wxrk editor. "Yale vs. Boston Common." But beneath the wise remarks and the seeming solidarity of live newspaper unions, me grinning strike is slowlv but surely driv ing a deep wedge into the ranks of organized labor in what is probably the most sensitive tndus trv in the nation. The tip-off can be seen in many wavs. It can be seen in the face of the tvpocrapher who lives across tlie street who collects his strike pay. puts in his two hours daily on the picket line, and tlwn works the rest of tlie day in a non-union shop. The ITU strictly forbids this. It can be heard in the words ol a photoengravcr who say- "You wouldn't say tlv.it publishers have a history of being tlie friend ol the working man. But I couldn't say who's right in tins strike " And in tlie words of an edit ir. long active in the Guild and sym pathetic to the long, hard strug gle upward in the newspaper un ions: '.'The whole problem is automa tion, moving forward and taking jobs away. But you can t stop it with a strike, because you re try ing to fight a battle of the 1960s with a weapon left over from the 1930s." And it can be found at its clear est from an ardent Guild member who has taken a job on one of the little papers operating in the news vacuum of the strike: You know what they call girls who do what I'm doing? I'd use the word myself. But I figure I m justified." For the rest ol tlie city, grow- ina more irritable daily on a fare of TV s half-covered news, oui-oi- town papers and a half-dozen jury-rigged, garage-built tabloids, the strike has simulated all the climate of mental illness. It is not uncommon 'to hear regular readers hurl harsh words at their new $ vendors, nor see commuters to tlie suburbs break out in niggling squabbles by be ing forced to talk instead of read their way home. The subways at rush hour, once a symphony of turning newspaper naccs. now nave me aunospuei c of an asylum tor mai pauem marked by vacant eye ana siac iaw. More serious. However, is me strike's effect on the city and the newspapers' machin ery. An unpopular expressway pidn. defeated bv Dtiblic indignation re nnrtori hv the press, nas sua- denly been revived by city plan ncrs. Jobs and applicants are begin ning to pass each other w nn uie ahsem e of tlie classified ad pages. Publicly supported arts, cratts and sales are in daily jeopardy uiihnni the announcements which hrini oeoDle and revenue. At least two ol me cny s aany naners arc reported to be un ante to withstand a strike that lasts much longer. II they go hundreds of jebs go w ith them. A suburban furniture store own er finds that his sales have not uffered with his inability to ad- vcrtise in tlie city, iiegaraicss how tlie strike ends, he may re vise his advertising program, di verting the money that once paid paper bills. In the civilized world's most complex pueblo, awake now to how much it depends on the dai ly, passing, printed word, not the least voice is that of tlie pet shop ow ncr: "Going williout today's paper is bad enough. But if you've got puppies, y ou can't stay in business without yesterday's papers, loo." By W. G. BRANDSTADT, Written (or Newspaper Enterprise Assn. A disease with a big name can produce some big problems for its victims. This is lumpus erythema tosus LE, for short and should not be confused with lumpus vul garis, which is a form of skin tuberculosis. LE, too, affects the skin but it also may affect ' the joints and internal organs, notably the heart and kidneys. The cause is un known. Its red, scaly patches oc cur most frequently around the ace and neck. They must be dif fcrcntiated from the patches of some other skin diseases by a qualified specialist. The patches are made much worse by exposure to sunlight, and must be protected from the direct rays of the sun and even from ultraviolet lamps. X-rays also aggravate the condition. As is the case with many other diseases, the victim may have spontaneous periods of improve ment. This makes it hard to judge the value of any new form of treat ment. Because involvement of the internal organs is likely to be se rious, it is nut wise to treat the skin eruptions intensively. All-out efforts at treatment should be re served for the more threatening developments. In general, three types of drug are used: salicylates, including aspirin: cortisone and related ste roid hormones, and antimalarial drugs. Once a person starts treat ment with any of these drugs it is usually necessary to keep it up tor a long time. Tins exposes the victim to the dangers of unde sirable side effects. If the joints are affected, as pirin often gives great relief, but if the drug is discontinued the joint pains return. Similarly w hen tiiere is marked inflammation of tlie skin, joints or the internal organs, treatment with hormones may cause marked improvement. In some persons the drug can be discontinued and the improve ment maintained, in others the disease returns even though the patient is still taking treatment. The use of the newer antimalari al drugs in the treatment of LE has been hailed as a real ad vance. One advantage: very few side effects even with prolonged use. Oood results are reported in about 80 per cent of tlie per sons on whom this treatment has been used. Relapses do occur, however, if! the treatment is stopped. In the successful. Since lumpus Is a disease that may be present for many years before a diagnosis is made and since a person who has it in a mild form may, after many years, find that it is progressing to a serious stage, it is essential mat such a person have expert medi cal guidance. The treatment of this disease with its variable manifestations and variable final outlook cannot be expressed in an easy formula. It often taxes the ingenuity of the most skillful clinician. M.D..20 per cent who are not benefited by antimalarial drugs alone a combination of one of these drugs with a steroid hormone is often Italy Visit Scheduled By Kennedy WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi dent Kennedy plans to visit Italy later this year, the White House announced today. This was revealed in a joint Italian-American statement result ing from a meeting and lunch Kennedy had today with Italian Premier Amintore Fanfani. Tlie statement said that Fanfani. on behalf of the Italian President Antonio Segni, had conveyed an invitation to Kennedy to visit their country. "The President has accepted this invitation and will go to Italy sometime during the year 1963," the statement added. The statement was read to news men by White House Press Secre tary Pierre Salinger and Fan (ani's press secretary. Asked whether Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy would accompany her husband on the trip, Salinger said that "everything is so new about the announcement that he could provide no further details. Jump Asked In Pensions An effort to increase and expand the pension program for veterans of the First World War is the ma jor objective of the Veterans of World War I, Inc., when the new congress convenes, i Edward J. Neron of San Diego. national commander of the Vet erans of World War I, urges all eligible veterans to contact the Na tional Headquarters of tlie VWW I at 40 G Street, N. E., Washington D.C., in order to be informed on just what plans are being made for the proposals which will be presented to the new Congress. Neron asks that all men who served in 1917 and 1918 forward their names, addresses and serial numbers to the headquarters and in return they will be supplied with complete and specific infor mation concerning the legislative program of the Veterans of World War I. The latter organization is a com On The Record KlAMiTM FALLS BIRTHS SOYS SCHMOC Born to Wr. ond Mr. Rn en schmot in Kiamih vaiity Houitai paratively new veterans group but Jan. 15 a bov woiofiina I lbs, j', on. 1. . . ... r saylcs Bom 10 Mr. and Mrl G.r.in Dec. 6i naa enrolled over 25.- a'O sayiai n Klamath Vallav Hosoilal Jan.- 15 bov weiQhmo I lbs. GIRLS HOTCHKISS Born lo Mr. and Mr, Harold Hofchklss In Klamath Vllv Hn. oilal Jan. u girt weighing 5 lbs.. OIS. SIMMONS Born to Mr. anrf Mn Charles Simmons in Klamath Valttv Hos pital Jan. 15 a girl weiohmo 7 bt., 9 ois. mi SUMMARY Boys: 11 Girls: 17 000 members. It was given a Con gressional charter by the Congress in 1938 and now ranks as the third largest veteran organization in the country. Court Records KLAMATH FALL? Municipal count January I. If Euwt A. Jonri, drunk. 2S or flvt or 10 davs. Donald Mtrvln Long, drunk. US or flvt or 10 days. Vlchatl W. Murray, rhi driving, minor in dot! i non. fi?5 forfrif. Roland FIsMr, vagrancy. I1M and 30 dRVl. World production of diamonds uould fill about 75 bushel baskets a year, with 73 of them comi.ig from Africa. MOOSE CRAB FEED SAT., JAN. 19th Strving Starts ot 7 P.M. $1.50 Per Perton DANCE TO FOLLOW (w-wmooeRYWAfto Stephen Austin "rounder ot Tca is called the KLAMATH RRIDC.K CI I B. 8 pm., duplicate budge, city li brary. RKTIRKD TKAt llKlt.S. t 311 p m . nmsic.il program, YMC.V Members and (nends. INCOME TAXES Comt (n ond it ui CHAS. HATHAWAY T,l. Tn -m:s i; s inti n GLASSES ON CREDIT! .' Green Stamps vrt 5i7t COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 730 Main St. DIAPER SERVICE '10 tt fmnixh all ritjtpvrv vuith. fold, pickup and AtUvrr Month CHERUB DIAPER SERVICE Bob'l Sclt'Smff Loundrf 1711 M., TU 4 9234 9th & Pine TU 4-3188 AIRLINE PICTURE TUBE SALE On Popular 21" Tubti OC88 Pl" w K Old Tuk. fO Tr.W.1. Imtolltd by Factory Traintd Technician! Iflv tli.r. TV pictur.! with tuMr .lumiisitast p,ctr ) . . . m4t Ht W.rali r l.dmt t.turr. Gtl.rnraa1 Ur r,. 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Vi Slacks 7' 18" Wool Shirts"' 9" Sport Shirts 2 " Sox Reg. 1.00 cottons pr. 3 Dress Shirts 3" Sweaters S i. 3"--8" Boys' Suits a'M-'23 Winter itylci rcg. 10.98 to 16.98 Boys' Jackets 7".. 11" Boys' Shoes .";:v 5" Western Wear .'X" Vi,.. Acmes for boys and girls Cowboy Boots 3". 5" M , 1 Famous names 99 A 99 Hats -w & y All these ond many more. Buy them on our regu lar 30-dav or revolving charge plan with up to 6 months to pay1 DREWS Manstore 733 Main and Town & Country