Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 22, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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    Father Of Atomic Sub Claims
Technology Menaces Democracy
Jacoby
On Bridge
IITRAI.D AVTi VFTW, K1mffl r1h, Orr.
Tuesday, January 22, 19S.1
PAGE-
JUDITH RHYNERSON
ARMED FORCES NEWS
.Judith Rhynerson, a Wave hos
pital corpsman third class, was
selected "sailor of the month" at
Bremerton, Wash.
Miss Rhynerson is the daugh
ter of Winnifred Rhynerson, 615'2
High Street.
She is on duty in the hospital's
eye, car, nose and throat clinic
She enlisted in the Navy in Janu
ary, 1959, and is serving her sec
ond enlistment. Miss Rhynerson
received hospital corps training
at Great Lakes, 111., and had tours
of duty at Portsmouth, Va., naval
hospital and at Sand Point dispen
sary in Seattle heforu going toj
Bremerton in April.
A native of Southern Oregon
Miss Rhynerson graduated from
Grants Pass High School in 1958.
Navy Lt. ij.g.) Richard K. Scott,
24, Grants Pass, is returning to
San Diego with his ship the Bon
Homme Richard after a six-
month tour in the Far East,
The ship is due in California on
Feb. 11. Scott plans to visit his
wife, Merlcna, and her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Merton Fercbee,
2545 Eldorado Avenue, after he
gets Into port.
Scott Is the information and cdu
cation officer aboard ship and is
also the editor of the Cruise Book
He is a lOfil graduate of Southern
Oregon College.
Two Klamath County vouths!
who recently joined the Marines
are David G. Burnett, IB, 2S15
Kane Street, and Edward M.
Fletcher. 19, Crescent Lake.
The men are taking 12 weeks of
recruit training and four weeks
of individual combat training in
San Diego. They will receive a
20-day leave before assignment
to a school or permanent duty.
Burnett is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. George L. Burnett and
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RICHARD K. SCOTT
Fletcher is the son of Mrs. Na
dine Ellison. Burnett attended KU
and Fletcher attended Gilchrist
High School.
Spec. 4 Jerry Vieira returned
by plane to Butzbach. Germany,
Jan. 17, after visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Vieira. Dairy.
Three Mount Shasta, Calif.,
men are being reassigned to new
bases to attend technical training
courses following completion of
Air Force basic military training
at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex.
Airman Basic Jon R. Toreson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles N.
Toreson, 626 Cedar Street, Mount
Shasta, will attend a course for
aircraft maintenance specialists at
Sheppard Air Force Base, Tex
Airman Basic David N. Jen
nings, whose guardians, Mr. and
Mrs. Davis L. Roberts, reside at
301 Ski Bowl Drive, Mount Shasta
will attend a course for aircraf!
maintenance specialists at Amaril
lo Air Force Base, Tex.
Airman Basic Jack W. Stewart
Jr., son of Mr. and Airs. Jack
W. Stewart, Mount Shasta, wil
attend a course for communica
tions operations specialists at
Sheppard Air Force Base, Tex.
All three airmen are 1962 grad
uates of Mount Shasta High
School.
MORE
Hospital Plan
Talk Scheduled
W. B. Sweetland. publisher of
the Herald and News, a director
nn the board of the Presbyterian
Intercommunity Hospital, Inc.
will speak on plans for the hospi
tal at a meeting of the Klamath
Taxpayers League Thursday, Jan.
24, in the county courthouse.
There will be a question and
answer period following the talk.
Ml persons interested in the hos
pital are invited to attend.
Fare Increase
SALEM iUPI-The Red Ball
stage line will increase its fares on
Feb. 1, the State Public Utility
Commission announced Monday.
The bus line has headquarters
in Klamath Falls and operates be
tween Klamath Fall and Lake
view. Company spokesmen say t h e
company has been losing money
on its passenger operations for the
past two years because of com
petition from air service and pri
vate autos.
N. J. Rosenboum
INCOME TAX
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Off
NEW YORK UPIi-A leader
in development of the atomic sub
marine said democracy was being
undermined because the average
voter could not understand the
complexities of technological ad
vances. .
This appraisal was presented by
Vice Admiral Hyman G. Rick
over, who has been called "the
father of the nuclear submarine,'
in a speech before the fund for
the 'republic.
Rickover called the situation "a
crisis of intelligence."
'. . . In a subtle way democ
racy is undermined when an lm
portant aspect of the life of in
dividuals and communities can no
longer be judged bv the voter
but must be entrusted to experts
who work in areas of science that
the general public does not com
prehend," he said.
As presently constituted, he
said, democratic institutions
through which the public express-
its will "are themselves not
well equipped to control the prop
er use of technology."
To illustrate his point, Rickover
referred to a recent case in the
U.S. Court of Appeals in Wash-
inton.
In the case, the city of New
Britain, Conn., was trying to pre
vent a private firm from receiv-i
Spaceman
ACROSS 40 His homo town
1 Next U.S. ipso .
flier, Mij. Leroy Oklahoma
Gordon Jr. 43 GI's address
7 He il s oi 40 Sphere ot
Okia horns
anion
47 Miss Wott
60 Meal
52 Exit
5430 (Fr.) '
55 Air raid alarms
56 Dispatcher
67 Masculine
.appellation
DOWN
1 Boy's name
2 Mountain
13 Reach
destination
14 Eluded
15 Mils-curdling
substance
18 Twist anew
17 African worm
IB Deroouaber
20 Pen
21 Bering and
Dardanelles
23 Levantine ketch
26 Accomplished
27 Grafted (her.)
31 Goddess
32 Approach.
33 Wharf
34 Italian stream
35 Wings
36 Beveraffe
(comb, form)
3 Trieste wine
measure
4 Fastener
5 Turn inside out
6 Hold back
7 Sea nymph
II Turn snide
S Small flap
10 Roman date
39 Pedal diaritsr
1 12 13 4 15 6 R 8 9 10 11 112
13 Ti
15 16 "
23 24 25 ""I 26 !" 27 28 29 30
31 U-JlsJ
33 34
35 " 36B373T 39
' 40 M 42
4T44-45 -46 f" 47 48- 49"
50 51 " 52 53
72
Harpo Breaks Silence
To Announce Retirement
PASADENA. Calif. UN '-After
two decades of silence on
stage. Harpo Marx has broken the
rule at last.
It took a special occasion to
bring words from Harpo the an
nouncement that he is retiring
from show business.
"I'm going nn 75 and I want
lo play golf, relax and travel."
he told a rapacity audience at
Pasadena Civic Auditorium Satur
day night.
Harpo gained lame as the silent
girl chaser with the Marx Broth
ers comedy team on stage and in
movies. He said Sunday he slill
would not have broken his stage
silence except that Allan Sher
man, a (nlk singer, told the an-
dience of Marx's sudden decision
"I told him iShermani that Su
san 'Mrs. Marx' and I nan de
cided lo call it a day and just
lake it easy." he sa d. "He he
can crvinc and cot orv nostalgic
and then went out and told the
audience.
"Whal could I do? I had to say
a few words. I very shortly told
Ihe audience 'Thank you." I did-
n't talk long and I didn't talk at
all during the second show."
"Actually I did lalk once in a
night club show alwut 20 years
ago in Toledo. Ohio, hut I can't
even remember what I said. For
all I know, people think I can't
talk because that was Ihe only oth
er lime I talked during a per
formance in 4- years."
Marx said the decision to retire
iCoait-ta-Qxut,
1 NEWSPAPERS
SjUjM0ST!
ing and storing 'radioactive wastes
in the citv for disposal elsewhere.
In rejecting the case, the court.
according to Rickover, said in ef
feet: VThe Atomic Energy Com
mission knows the facts and it
knows that they will not harm
toe city."
In other words. Rickover said
the court was admitting it wa;
not equipped to handle the lechni
cal aspects of the case but had
to rely on the best scientific and
engineering advice it could ob
tain.
'The wise use of technology
calls for a higher order of think
ing than we have so far accorded
it. he said. "We have left it to
the management of practical men
'I submit that we now have
scientific knowledge of such im
mensely dangerous potential that
we ought to bring a broader range
of intellectual power to bear upon
its use.
Practical men, Rickover said.
are concerned with ways to put
technological advances to use in
tlie most economical and efficient
manner. He said they give little
thought to side effects and future
consequences.
Rickover said there was more
need for the scholarly approach,
which looks at the long range
Answer to Previous Puzils
m
11 Aperture
12 Whirlpool'
19 Monkey
21 Frightens
22 Legislative
body
23 Must
24 Indigo
25 Genus ot
willows
36 Sharper
37 Female sheep
38 Toughen
41 Hurry
42 Bird of prey
43 Crafts
44 Father (Ti)
45 Unclosed
47 European
blackbird
48 Italian city
49 Essential being
51 Also
28 Roman emperor
a roiynesian
forest Rod
30 Love god
53 Legal point
was a sudden one made with his
wife of 26 years. I
"Mrs. Marx and I were talking
in the dressing room before the
first show when I said, 'Gee, we
could he home now. What are we
doing here? What are we trying
to prove?' "
He said his four children were
in college and he and his wile
were free lo go wherever they
wanted.
"We're like ncwlywcds now.
We're all alone and we can do
what we want."
Marx said he would honor five
more bookings made previously
through Ihe end of March, all for
charities, before retiring. He rlr.s
n't plan lo talk in any of them.
His retirement leaves only
(Irnucho ol Ihe famous live Marx
Brothers still active in show bus
iness. The only other brother who
slaved in Ihe business was Chico.
who died in 1!I6I.
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and public a.-pecls of t h e ad
vances. But the admiral suggested that
technological advances in tliom
selves might contain part of the
answer lo the problems they
posed.
"As machines relieve us of the
brutal, tiring, and time-consuming
labor that had been the lot of the
majority of men from time im
memorial, as they enable us to
universalize affluence and leisure,
we face a choice," he said.
"We may lake these benefits
:ind live the life of the idle rich
of old, pursuing a good time and
not bothering about the quality ol
our own Wo or the life of the
nation.
Or we mav decide to emulate
those and there were many
who in the past considered wealth
and leisure a trust, to be utilized
for self-improvement and for im
provement of their particular so
cieties," Rickover said.
He said the problem was com
plicated, however, by the grow
ing mass of population and growth
of bureaucracy.
Noting that sheer weight of num
bers today has reduced the im
pact of an individual vote, he
said "This can not but diminish
citizen's sense of importance
and lead to political apathy, itself
the greatest threat to democra
cy.
As we climb relentlessly to
ward the billion mark in popula
tion," he said, "we shall have to
give thought to strengthening lo-
al and stale government, for it,
is in these smaller units that most
people arc most effective as citi
zens.
Girls Visit
KF Airport
Kinnie-Kinnick Camp Fire Girls
with their leaders visited the
Klamallt Falls airport and Joe
Sawyer, airport manager, Jan. 29
to take a tour of the joint facilities
used by the city and the Air
Force.
They took the tour that many
other children's groups have tak
en to learn about the modern
lield. deemed one of the best on
the West Coast.
Present for the tour were Shar
on Finney, Beverly F'inch, San
dra Pallics, Tina Fredcrickson
Greet je De Groot, Mary Innis,
Lovi Corsi, Teresa Chambers, Re
becca Davis, and three adults.
Mrs. Moore, Camp Fire leader,
Mrs. Finney and Mrs. Lovil.
Wanted Man
Surrenders
Phillip Baker, 44, named on one
f three secret indictments issued
by
the Klamath County Grand
lury Jan. 9, surrendered to Sher-
(f Murray "Red Britton late
last Friday, the sheriff's office has
reported.
Baker was arraigned on charges
of contributing to the delinquen
cy of a minor in the circuit court
of Judge Donald A. W. Piper early
Monday and will enter a pica
to the charge in the same court,
10 a.m., Feb. 23.
The defendant was remanded
lo the sheriff in lieu of $2,500 bail.
A former resident of Klamath
Falls, Baker listed an apartment
Los Angeles as his most re
cent address.
TRANSFERS PLAYERS
DETROIT LTH The Detroit
Red Wings have shipped l-arry
Jeffrey and Floyd Smith to Pitts
burgh of the American Hockey
league to replace Ed Joyal and
Lowell MacDonald, who were re
called from the same farm club
Monday.
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Pas Pass Pass 1 4
1 2 2 4v Pass
Pass 3 34 pus
Pass Pass
Opening lead V K
Fourth Seat
Bids Often
By OSWALD JACOBY
Written (or
Newspaper Knterprlse Assn.
Ill the early days of contract
a player was supposed to be par
ticularly careful about his fourth
hand opening bids. The idea was
that if he could pass and break
even, why open and risk a loss?
This idea is exploded today. A
winning player opens in fourth
seat any time he thinks his
chance to gain is better than his
chance to lose.
One basic need is to have some
thing in spades. If no one else
can open the bidding and he has
doubtful owning himself the
chances are that the hand will
wind up in a part score and Ihe
side with spades will make that
part score.
East has 11 high card points
and two probable defensive tricks
In fourth seat he has reason to
believe that his hand is the best
at the table. But there is no rea
son to believe it is enough bet
ter than the next best hand lo
warrant opening without some
thing in either spades or hearts.
11 turns out that East does
not have the best hand. West has
passed a belter one, but that does
East and West no good.
South overcalls with one spade
and North can compete as far as
three spades.
At three spades South has to
lose a spade, a heart and two
diamonds. A club finesse works
and he makes a nice part score
Of course. East and West could
have gone on to four diamonds.
That would only be down one
hut it would still represent a loss
' O The blddlnsT has been:
South West North East
1 f) Pass 1 Pass
2 A Pass 3 Pass
7
You; South, hold:
eAK107 M7 4KQ104 43
Wont do you do?
A Bid four heart. There Ls
strong temptation to bid four no-
trump and take full control, but
if your partner holds rood hearts
and an aoe he ahould find an
other bid over Tour four hearts.
If he doesn't hold an ace jou
don't want to so past fame.
TODAY'S QUESTION
"You bid four hearts and your
partner bids five dubs. What do
you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
Cambodia Backs
Cuba Struggle
PNO PENH, Cambodia (UPH-
Visiting Czech President Antnnin
Novotny and Cambodian chief ol
state Prince Norodom Sihanouk
issued a joint communique Mon
day supporting the "struggle ol
Ihe Cuban people for independence
and liberty."
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kU :.-. 'l.l'"l f it - - - ,.-
1963 SCOUT CALENDAR Stan Maiten, left, representative of trie Klamath Basin
Grade "A" Milk Producers Association, presents onu of the 1963 Scout Calendars
to Jim Young, Conger Elementary School principal. The calendars, provided by the
milk producers, have been distributed to all schools in the Basin.
Death Penalty Moratorium
Introduced At Legislature
SACRAMENTO 1UPH-A bill to
grant a limited moratorium
the death penalty in California
was ready for introduction in the
Legislature today.
It probably will be Ihe most ex
plosive single Issue of the I'.Ki.'l
session.
Assemblyman Lester McMillan.
D-Los Angeles, long a sLiunch op
ponent of capital punishment, had
tiie bill ready lo be tossed in
lite Assembly hopper and hoped
for backing from Gov. Edmund
. Brown.
Although McMillan had spoken
to Brown about his proposal, a
last minute dispute developed be
tween the lawmaker and the ad
ministration over when it should
be introduced.
The McMillan bill would grant
four-vear moratorium for all
crimes but double murders, kid
nap-murders, killing of a law en
forccment officer and killing pris
on guards.
lt was in line w ith a recommen
dation by Brown in his inaugural
address and would substitute life
in orison without possibility of
narole for the death penally.
"I'm convinced that the death
nenalty is not a deterrent to
crime, said McMillan, tne ex
pcrience of stales and nations
where tliey Abolished it bear this
out. They had no increase in honr
ocide rates."
The Los Angeles assemblyman
called execulion a "degrading.
barbaric" practice and called
upon California to "get in line
with tlie more enlightened stales
and nations in the world."
McMillan's Inst try at a mora
torium died in a 40-40 tic vote
in the Assembly. Brown lost his
last all-out effort to abolish the
death penalty outright in HKiO in
Ihe Senate Judiciary Committee.
But the governor's loss came in
a secinl session called alter he
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had delayed the execulion ot Caryl
Chessman, Los Angeles kidnap-
apist who died in the San Quen-
tin gas chamber in May, ism.
I-ast year II persons died in Die
as chamber, including another
controversial figure, Mrs. Eliza
beth Duncan, who hired two young
men to kill her daughter-in-law.
There are now 36 men on death
row at tlie prison but the McMil-
an bill specifically excludes from
tlie moratorium any persons who
have been sentenced to die before
Ihe effective dale of the measure
next September.
Other major legislative develop-
ments:
F2ducation Assemblyman
Charles B. Garrigus, D-Reedlcy,
introduced a hill lo increase stale
support to public schools by $115
million and enact a countywide
school tax. The bill was backed
by the California Teachers As
sociation and conflicted with sim
ilar bills being prepared by the
Slate Board of Education and the
Assembly Education Committee
Politics Richard Carpenter,
executive director of the League
of California Cities, charged that
Assemblyman Philip Burton's pro
posal to require party labels for
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city and county officials would re
turn the slate lo "political boss
ism." Burton, a San Francisco
Democrat, was ready to introduce
the first such bill today.
Reorganization An 11-member
commission on state government
organization gave unanimous en
dorsement to Brown's agency plan
for reorganization and suggested
be expanded.
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