I Impossible' Legend OfLemuria Surrounds PACE ! IIKRALD A.VD NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunday. January 27, 13 Respiratory Family Homes Ails Afflict r-1 Fasti By A(LEEN SIMMERS Mt. Shasta means many things to . many people. The chamber of commerce of the city of Mount Shasta has been receiving great numbers of inquiries relative to the mountain, prompting a delv ing into the legends, traditions tacts and tantasies. Facts say impossible. Legends and tra ditions persist as true. Fantasy is always present. The mountain stands alone, with Shastina nestled on its western slope. Peter Skene Ogden, accord ing to history, discovered it in1 1827. Geologists call it a dormant volcano with a boiling hot sul phur spring near the base of the main summit pinnacle. It is 16 r I' LEGENDS OF MT. SHASTA Wonderout Mt. Shasta inspires awe in the many that view its sometimes mys--terloui beauty end its majesty has been an inspiration to artists, poets, authors, nature lovers, photographers, skiers and hikers alike. Ta some, weird and uneplain- ions Of Graduates "Sweat Out' mission By LOUIS CASSELS ' I'nited Prraa International . The next few weeks will be a period of high tension In more than a million U.S. households! where high school seniors are sweating out admission to college. Some colleges and universities are already sending out accept ance notices. Many others will do so during February and March. Hy April, students who haven't re ceived a "yes" letter w ill be very1 worried and so will their Da rents. It would be nice to assure the troubled seniors and parents that they have no real cause for con- corn that everyone will wind up in the college of his choice. Kut the facta dnn't permit this. Getting Into college hat been growing progressively more dlt limit earn year, aft mounting enrollments press against the capacity of Amrrlca'a higher education system. In past vears. it could be re ported truthfully that, although the big name institutions were swamped with applicants, there w ore still many good colleges and universities with vacancies. This year that statement can not he made quite so glibly. "The first-rate Institutions, and e-.en the second-rate ones, are Idling up fast," said an official ot the American Council on Edu cation. .students with good high school records can still be reasonably certain of admission to a good college not necessarily their first or second choice, but one at which they can obtain a splendid education. Perennial Humors Intnie Tlte perennial rumors that cir culate among high school seniors to the olfect that you have to make stores of 600 or better on "college H.. ...!" jinlrantM atominl itn to I have a chance of getting Into any popular institution, are simply un true. Admissions officers, even at the big name colleges in the east, me much more flexible in their policies llmn that. And they are increasingly disposed to regard the student'! high school record, railier than his entrance test scores, as the best barometer of success in college. "Any studen' who ranks In th uroer 40 per cent of his high school graduating class that would usually mean a 'B average or belter has an excellent chance of getting into a good college thisj vrar." the American Council on Education official said. There are colleges and univer sides that will accept students who rank lower in their graduat ing classes, and some state Insti tutions are required by law to. , fantasy, million years old, say scientists. It towers high at 14,161 feet. To some Mt. Shasta is a winler playground and to others it is a commercial, profitable thing. Yet others incorporate it into their religions sort of a great white god. To many it is a thing of beauty, awesome in its enormity. It offers Its all to religious groups, authors, artists, nature lovers, photographers, hikers, ski ers. For not a few it is mysterious and weird, unexplainable things happen. These are the facts. The fantasy, legend and tradi lion are the people of the great continent of Lemuria who live eight miles under the mountain of the city of Mount Shasta who To American Universities take anyone with a high school diploma. Bui a C-student Is going to have trouble getting into any of the more select Institutions, un less he has phenomenally good scores on entrance tests or Is able to ehow the admissions of ficer some other reason why he might be a good gamble. Mend Many Applications "Apply early and often" is the motto of college-bound youngsters! nowadays. Most begin firing off !3 i. . lit' ! ;v, v ..v BROODING EYES Painters Walter and Marqaret Keane get busy with their palettes in "paint room" of their home in Woodside, Calif. In the background are some of the paintings of children with over.siied, brooding eyes that have become Walter's hallmark. UPI Telephoto Pair Of California Artisfs Place Emphasis On Eyes In Porfraifure WOOnSIDE, Calif. UTl -When a young California real es tatt broker njmed Waller Keane went to Europe slwtlv after World War II, his only inlrrest was in becoming a good enough artist to devote his lite to paint ins But he returned wilh more than he bargained for. He came back with a memory of the children he saw amidst the rubble of the war-torn comment. He remfmheifd their fares. small and thm from unoVrnour- ishment, and most of all he re membered the evcs-d.uk. brood ing eyes that looked gios.Oy over sized in tiny faces Today those tjes, Incorporated. Beauty say they recognize a Lcmunan when he shops in the town. And legends persist. Indian legend tells us a Great Spirit lives with his people in the mountain. The occult stories about the mountain seem to have originated with the centuries ago Indians, as they and most of I their descendants believed a race! of people did indeed live in Mt. Shasta. Many years ago tribes of Indians were in great awe and fear of it. Legends and some scientists and geologists have it that thousands1 of years ago the earth on the! West Coast began to sink and the sea encroached upon the land. The people of this land, the vast continent of Lemuria, took to the MIL able things surround the rock more real than ust more legend, some religious groups do vino, in the mystery claim as a subterranian city and spacemen that hover around the mountain. applications early in their scniorl year of high school. And it is in creasingly customary to send ap plications to at least three, and somelimes live or six, colleges But this multiple application habit has become such a problem for admissions offices that many in stitutions now require a fee of $10 or more with each application. In some cases, the tee is returnable if the Mudc-nt decides by laic spring to withdraw his application or if he is turned down. lit VXt M - W into Keane s pamlincs. have be come his hallmark. Tiiey appear in galleries and homes through out much of the world, either in original paints or in the llwu sands of lithographic reproduc tions he has sold Wile Is Artist Hanging alongside the works in many cases are paintings hy his wile. Margaret, an rqually mi cessful artit In the early days o( their mar riage, the Keanes dreiv $.i vkenh es of tourists on the streets ot San Kranoiscos Pohennan North Beach and in night clubs to earn money for paint and isnvas and gri-h cries Then a combination of ivji!.u Of mt hills and higher ground. Mt. Shas ta loomed in the East a natural haven. Many thousands of people made their way to its high sate- ty. Why tliey went underground to live and when they built their eight-mile deep shaft into the earth, with its hidden undisclosed entrance, and under the moun tain's vast terrain, are but two ol the mysteries. Rumors abound of the great inhabited self-con lained city deep in the mountain Out of the thousands who fled the coast a selected number were saved. These are today's Lcmuri ans. Spacemen, one source says. have been seen hovering around the mountain. Others tell of great spirit who has spoken to a and bring to it something s groups knowledge of such things One of the biggest mistakes stu dents make in multiple applica tions, according to admission of ficers, is to put all their eggs in one basket. They apply to several different institutions, all of which are equally hard to get into. It is much smarter to bracket the target hy applying to one pres tige college that's very selective, one g'Mnl but less-well-known in stitution, and one that can be con sidcred relatively sure (ire. till r. apical and super salesmanship unprecedented in the art world rocketed them to the position they enjoy today. They now re ceive $1,000 to $10.0011 per canvas ' r - 7 NEW LOCATION - KUHLMAN INSULATION 1721 MAIN Coll er Itep by our "Hou ot Alum inum" tor trto oitimotes on olummum Itdinf, rootinf, cor oortl, potiot, Itorm windowi end doors. NOW! DOWNTOWN IUSINISS CANOPIIS: KUHLMAN PS TU 4 703 Shasta chosen few on its snowy slopes Tales circulate that the whole area is surrounded by huge space ships, like planetoids, and that the people of these mother ships are sent here to help earth peo ple grow spiritually and to get used to vibrations from outer space. They are representatives of all planets and include Piutomans N'eptunians, Jupitarians, Martians and Vcnusians. Today the "I AM," Itosicrucian and other religious groups tend to agree with ancient Indian lore as well as the legends and facts of the mountain. Mrs. Mildred Coleman, a Rusi crucian. tells of the Lcmurians she knows live in the mountain. They come to town, but remain incognito. She tells of the Ascend cd Masters who have a mammoth temple under the mountain at the 12.000-foot level. The mountain is referred to as God's Mountain I one of His shrines. The temple was hewn out by spiritual labor, she says. She avers that Lemuria is due to rise and the ocean will come in. The coast range will be lev eled. Safety for the people lies within a 10-mile radius of the mountain. Miss Ruth Light joined the "I AM" religious activity in 1332. She tells of the founder of the organization, Guy W. Ballard, be ing sent to the Mt. Shasta area by a mining concern 30 years ago. and of his encountering St. Ger maine at a mountain spring one day while he was hiking on the trails of McCloud River Valley, seeking peace and inspiration. An electric current went through his body when St. Germaine spoke and gave to him a cup of the Water of Lile. Thus was born the I AM" activity. The group re fers to rcimbodimcnt, rather than eincarnation, as do the Rosicru- cinns of this vicinity. To conquer) self is its goal as well as to pro ject light, to bless, to Ileal and to pros)cr. The annual "I AM" pag eant .staged in the huge outdoor amphitheater in the city of Mt. Shasta draws thousands of visi tors from all over the world. Ihc Great White Brotherhood believes in extra-sensory percep tion and metaphysics. More occult than the others. They declare there is no death and lose all (oar of it. They have psychic gilts 1 here is a survival o( human entily after death of the body, lliey. loo, have a great affinity to the mysterious power of Ml. Shasta. Soulcrafters send out love. They arc on a higher plane of living man most people and have higl auiiiiMic spiritual lorccs. mis re ligion links the times of King Ik hnaton anil Queen Nefcrtiti of the 17th Egyptian dynasty with the 20th Cenlury. and arc spiritually associated with the mountain also. A feeling of veneration abounds Whatever their tastes, beliefs or traditions, they all revert back to the mysticism of the mountain and its Lcmurians or whatever inhabitants arc there. According to one source Le- murians appear as earth people. io anoiner source they arc seven Icet tall with extra large head and long arms, with a marble-like km-covcred hump in the middle of their foreheads, and extra sense'' along menial telepathy lines, which enah es them to sense the presence ol earth peo ple long before (he earth people Know iney are around, and to disappear at will. In every hook written about tribes of Indians living in the area around Mt ShaMa mentioned always is the mystic, strange at mosphere ol the mountain. In all the religious organua nous ano seels that have sprung up in me region ot the great while mountain, mysterious pow ers are attributed to it. Lights are seen on its towering sides, bells ring, strange occurrences which cant be explained have taken place. Some ersons make yearly pilgrimages and mnnv others have moved to the area to make their homes in its shadows. People of undeniable integri ty vow there is a race of scll-1 reliant, highly intelligent people living under the mountain. The lcmurians. The remnants of the lost continent of LcmuriH. Hie world's oldest civilization, highly advanced in botany, agriculture, radioactive minerals, engineering ami all scieiues. He is self sus taining, this l.emun.in, in evcrv "ay and needs no help liom the - mitside world legends, fantasies and laets aie as old as man and will live as long Marvin KuKlmon INSULATION 1721 Mom - - 1.1 1 - ' DESIGN 288 Houi. 1 .152 So. Fl. 21,945 Cu. ft. Coroga 30 Sq. ft. i Big Chimney Top Feature Of Exterior A massive chimney is the fo cal point in the exterior of this three-bedroom ranch house with attached garage. Wood siding and brick veneer combination add to charm of this design. There is a separate dining room with trellis partitions. Its two large windows overlook the ter race, which runs across most oi the rear of the home. Kitchen is at the rear, with a door opening onto the terrace. There is space for a breakfast table. A china closet is built into one wall. From the kitchen there is access to the full basement. A large natural fireplace dom inates one wall of the living room. wide picture w indow looks ou' upon an even wider planting box. Attached garage forms a nat ural wall al one end of the ter- ace and includes a work bench. service door leads onto t h e terrace. This plan conforms to general FHA, VA and Building Code re quiremcnts. You can obtain build ing plans with specifications and material list see order coupon. Professor Wins Prize For Picture n.v BART KINCIl United Press International Prot. Ralph C. McGoun of Am herst College won the Grand Prize a round trip to Tokyo in the Saturday Review's 10th An nual World Travel Photography Contest with the only picture he ever submitted in a contest McGoun. a Professor of Drama tic Arts, won the top award in color photography with a picture entitled "Devastation Trail." The shot was taken with a Kodak Ret ina on Kodachrome and depicts a scene of desolation left in the path of Ihc Kilauea Iki volcanic eruption in Hawaii in 1953. The sci'ond Grand Prue for black-and-white photograph round trip to London went to James Gianelos of Cleveland Ohio lor his shot of a mistv val ley in Einseideln. Switfcrland. ( anelos, a spcctograpluc engineer and an a m a t e u r photographer since IMS, used a Pentax loaded with Panatomic X lilm. The winning prints were select cd from more than 5.IXX) entries in both color and black-and-white. The panel of judges included pho tngraphy columnist Norris Hark uess. Leopold Godowskv. co-in ventor of the Kodachrome process and Ivan Dmitri, leading maga zine and commercial photograph er and director of Photography in the fine Arts. Other prizes totaling nearly $1,- oiio in cash went to 18 oilier con testants, plus lour Special Men tions for technical or topical in terest and 42 Honorable Mentions. Second prize in color iRtiOi went to Gertrude C Bray of Piov idence. R. I., lor her street scene in Mykonos. Giocce taken wilh a Kodak Retina on Kodachrome. Leonard S. Barnes of Kreder iiksburg. Va.. won the third prize in color '?lno lor his Asahi Pen tax Kodachrome shot of lail fol iage in New Hampshire. Lawrence Schauftlcr of Frcdon i.i. X.Y., was awarded second prize in black-and-white iKKli for Ins picture of a country church m Calgary. Alia, taken on PUis-X with a Kolleiflex. N THE NIW Wrgte I Friescn-Wclmon Co. 1715 Mom St. TU 4-704J I I 'JJ'1 if - '' f v ! - jpve'4U ' TCLUCC :( l b 't - J 1L I 3 st. it p""-r iv BUILDING PLANS PLAN BOOKS ORDER FORM Herald and News Plan Dept. FAMILY HOMES 2900 Alpha St., Lansing, Mich. I want items checked: Design No: 4 sets of Building Plans & Speculations, with Material List . 1 set of Building Plans & Specifications, with Material List Family Homes Plan Book, postpaid Enclosed find for items checked. NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE HEW BOOKS United Press International Alter Nehru Who? by Welles Hangen dlarcourt. Brace & World $6.95 1: Jawaharlal Nehru is the only prime minister India has had in more than 15 years of independ ent existence. Conjecture on his successor lias long been a fruit ful topic for after-dinner conver sation. Tlve author lists one wom- in Mrs. Indira Gandhi, Nehru's daughter and seven men as pos sible future leaders of India. His selection of V. K. Krishna Menon as one of them is surprising since lie knew the former defenic min ister was forced out of the gov ernment before the book went to the publisher. The others arc Fi nance Minister Morarji Desai, Lai Bahadur Shastri. Y. B. Chavan. Jayaprakash Naravan. S. K. Pa- til and Lt. Gen. Urij Mohan Kaul The Scrolls of Lysis, bv Barna- hy Ross iSimon and Schuster. $4 05': A fictional exploration of a historical era into which novel ists seldom venture. It is also the second chapter in a minor literary mystery story. The setting of the novel is live Greek city of Thcves. .To-odd vears before it was razed hv Alexander the Great. The prin cipal historical figure of the story is Lpaminondas, one of live last great Thchan generals. Ross, who established himself as a chronic ler of historical scoundrels with his previous novel. "Quintin Chiv as." uses as a hero Thomas of (!) arus. hearer and interpreter of the prophetical scrolls which were the key to Enaminondas' fate. The mystery is the identity of the au thor. The publisher will neither confirm nor deny the obvious as sumption that Barnahy Ross an admitted pen name is being used by' the cousinly te:im of Manfred B. lx-e ami Frederic Dannay, bet ter known as "Lllcry Queen." The Me.-srs. Queen used the Barnabv Ross name some ears ago for a series ot at leal tour novel. about a rather theatrical detec tive named Drury Lane who came to an officially bad end. Are they now carrving this tradition of amiable scoundrels hack into his tun .' Margin Rplcard. hy .1. B Priestley i Harper i Row, $-195'. Prie.-tley. an enormously prolific writer, is at his Ix-st in the first of three sections of this volume o reminiscences. It spans half f century, beginning in into. The first section dcais with his early departure Irom school to become a junior clerk in lite wool trade. Shortly thereafter he (vegan the writing career that made him a leading, if controversial, play 'JAM" OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT! lp fo 5 Months lo Pay I Ho Carrying Charges! Tut St .vv-,V;u4ms fo Mom TU 4. 7704 II lIM i r4..h : - rT. di-jini (Si $29.75 17.95 .75 wright, novelist, essayiit, critic and producer. Sections two and three deal with his army days during World War I and his later writing career. At times in the last section, his wit seems to verge on peevishness, as he talks back to his critics. But he still is interesting. Crowds and Power, by Klias Canetli ' Viking $7.50': A thought ful and documented work on why people get together in crowds, mobs, herds, packs and heaps Canctti has observed and record ed the actions and motives of hu man groupings and related them to prehistoric tendencies, histori cal events, human institutions and current happenings. There are many eye-0eners and insights in this dispassionate dissection of the laws and phenomena which gov- ern the flow and ebb of humanity ,on masse. History has recorded vvliat happens when live crowd is controlled and directed, as appar ently it must be in accordance with its nature. What that nature is, is the theme of this book. Lead ers and rulers understand it. mostly by instinct Hitler, Musso lini. Stalin, lor instance. March to Calumny, by Albert D. Biderman iMacmillan. $5.93 Experience in the Korean war led some to conclude that many Americans who became prisoners of the Communists lacked moral fiber to resist threats and brain washing. Tlve author of this book seeks to remove the stigma from the POW's. His own studies led him lo conclude that, with few exceptions. Americans in Korea behaved pretty much as otliers have under similar stress in the past. Actor Sorry For Showing HOLLYWOOD 'UPI' - Acloi Paul Newman has taken out newspacr ads to apologize for his acting in the first motion pic ture he made. Without naming the lilm, "The Silver Chalice." made in l'.iij. the ads read "Paul Newman apolo gizes every night this week Channel 9." The picture is being shown this week on tne television station. Newman said Monday he isn't apologizing for the whole picture, but "just lor myself. I don't think it's mv best work " RENT th HOST Electric Brush V'ht ((onto' kr row . . . TOvt tO'Otlmf thv0 K01I ClfN(B J.-,, I kv. OuO-Vit. If. ! 0-fl .i'0 f laoot 4 ,ft. N tfcr.ftleof. 0 Itl flip 'I .' It'ort .0 ' . . . r. 4.$l 11 ., J.J5J) (r Comtlolo Information CASCADE LAUNDRY I CLEANERS 0. 0. lit), t Klo.ovl Many Cats We have a cat now," a read- er says, "although we've always had dogs before. During the last week the cat has developed an alarming sneeze, but doesn't seem at all sick otherwise. Are cats supposed lo sneeze'.1" While cats, beyond a certain point, are not the most predictable animals in the world, they do not normally sneeze. They arc, however, subject to a number of respiratory diseases, among them a cold, or coryza. This mild dis ease docs not make the cat very sick, appetite and animation remain normal and a sneeze and discharging eyes are the main symptoms. The condition lasts from a few days to two weeks. If this persists the cat may ac tually have a more serious res piratory disease. Influenza starts like a cold but drags on longer. The cat may re fuse food occasionally; sneezing may be coupled wilh coughing and the eyes develop more ot a" purulent, rather than a watery,: discharge. These cases are ben efited by veterinary care, com bined with vitamins given at home and pampering of ihe cat s appetite, i Owners should realize that the cat's fondness for liver and kidneys will usually survive the disease.! ' One of the more acute res piratory diseases of cats is pneu monitis, which begins with fever and loss of appetite, This re quires immediate treatment since inadequate treatment may result in development of a fatal pneu monia. Pneumonitis treatment in cludes scrum and antibiotics. feeding by a stomach tube, and vitamin injections. In typical cas es, recovery may be complete in about two weeks. Pneumonia is far more serious and may, in addition to pneumo nitis treatment, require periods in the oxygen chamber. Although more than half the pneumonia cas es recover, a possible complica tion is empyema, in which the chest cavity is partially tilled with pus. About two-thirds of the empyema cases are fatal; the other third may require a month of hospital care for recovery. Another serious illness which may confront cat-lovers is cat enteritis, a virus disease of the bowel, which is highly contagi ous and can produce death with in 24 hours. Because of its con tagious character, the disease is most noticeable when the new kiltcn-crop gets old enough lo start cruising around the neigh borhood. Symptoms arc a loss of appc: tile, vomiting, diarrhea, almost complete immobility, and a high fever. An early symptom is do; hydration; yet the cat may sit poised over a water or milk dish and refuse to drink. With prompt treatment, recovery requires from four to eight days. Slower cases are helped by giving whole blood transfusions. Fatal cases usually deteriorate rapid ly, however, and a cat that is still alive after the first three days will usually recover. Recovery from enteritis some times called distemper or panlcu- kopenia will confer a lifetime immunity, or cats can be inocu lated against it. Cats which re cover from flu or coryza usually have a short immunity, and cats that have it twice rarely catch it again, tats thai have frequent bouts with coryza are actually al lergic to something. Recovery from pneumonitis conlers immunity in about half of the cases; the other half may get it acain. but will not require hospitalization. A short-term vac cine is available against pneu monitis, but immunity is limited to less than six months. DECIDE TO SW ITCH CAMBRIDGE. England (UPI Five Grilon College girls have changed their minds about ap pearing in a play nude. "The eirls hi i-raliTvt II-...1 they would bring nothing hut sname to themselves by appear ing with nothing on." said college head Miss Mary Carlrcipht. RUGS AND mm HOST PROCESS New Method CLEANERS 14SJ oloooo'o Ph. 4-4471 U0 CltANING WALL-TO-WALL CAT CLIANINS rURNITUf CLtANINS I TINTING Gold Bond Stamps, Too!