O.Or 0RE.LIBRA2 1EV3PAPCR CSCIIOI COM. la The- MC3KSXI Day's lews By FRANK JENKINS Hats of( to the nation's latest (ad this Marathon walking craze. U enough people will do enough Marathon walking, there won't be time enough left tor so much hell-raising which is responsible for a lot of our modern troubles. Quick recall test: Right off the bat Without looking it up Whence came this word MARA THON, as applied to long distance walking or running feats'.' U derives from the plain of Marathon, about 20 miles from Athens, where in 490 B.C. the Athenian general Milliades defeat ed the mighty army of Darius the Persian, who was bent upon the conquest of Greece. When the two armies came to grips, the superior weapons and bodily strength of the Greeks were de cisive, although they were great ly out-numbered. The Persians lost MOO men. while the army of Mil tiades lost only 192. Miltiadcs chose his swiftest run ner, Pheidippidcs, to carry the news of the victory to Athens, 20 miles away. He raced the 20 miles and reached the city stum bling and exhausted. He gasped out "Rejoice, we conquer," and fell dead. Somehow or other although we still call it a Marathon we've raised the distance from twenty miles to FIFTY which is prob- ably a bit cocky on our part. It just might be, if you're think ing of tackling one of these Mara thons that seem to be so popular, you'd better cut the 50 miles to 50 yards at least for the first try. Book review note: In Washington, the latest edi tion of the Report of the Secre tary of the Senate, a 980-page volume listing the expenses of the United States Senate, is just; off the presses. It's quite a book as you can judge for yourself from 'he fact that its compilers spent $3,411,197.44 Inote the 44 cents, which is an example of the meticulous accuracy . w i t h which its authors worked in their labors of compilation . Every item of Senate expenditure during the year is listed including a ten-cent phone call to New York made by one of the investigators All in all- . The book reports The U.S. Senate spent $27,346, 411.11 inote the 11 cents! in the 19(3 fiscal year. The total was UP $158,233 from 1961. in spite of the efforts of (lie Joint Com mittee on Reduction of Non-Essential Federal Expenditures, which spent $26,967.52 in its patriotic efforts to hold down non essential spending. What to say in reviewing the book? Let's put it this way: There are 100 members of this exclusive club that is known as the U.S. Senate two members from each of our 50 states. If you will get out your pencil and paper and divide the Senate expenditures of $27,346,411.11 by 100 (the number of members of the Senate), you will discover that the COST PER SENATOR came to the rather considerable figure of $273,461.11. H i lilte wonder that taxes are high. Cuban Photo Release Eyed WASHINGTON 'UPD-The De fense Department may make pub lic additional reconnaissance pho tographs of Cuba in response to assertions there was a "blank space" in U S. intelligence on the Soviet arms buildup. The reported "blank space" was between Sept. 5. when there were no Cuban missile bases, and Oct. 14, when the bases were in an advanced state of construction and within two weeks of becom ing 0ierational. No photograph; made during that five and one-half weeks ever have been released. Columnist Walter Lippmann asked Tuesday where was the U.S. photographic intelligence during this period. The Pentagon had no immedi ate comment, but it was learned that officials are considering a re ply w-hich may or may not be ac companied by some of the miss ing photographs. September and early October included some bad weather in the: area Hurrxane Ella howled nut of the Caribbean. But it is known that I S. reconnaissance flight were conducted over Cuba, with the expectation of obtaining photographs, on lour widely sep arated dates during the period Defence Secretary Robert S MeNamara Mid last week at his rad;o-telewMon news conference that such flmhls were conducted on Sept 6. .V-nt 29. Oct 5 and Oct. 10. Ntth VHlarday Law lilt nttjht High ytir 9 Low year oo Hioh pail 14 ytar Law past U ytart roclp. pt 14 tiOiirt Strict Jan. 1 Simi pwriod last ytar M (MSJ) 43 Rail Union Chief Asked To Call SP Walkout Saturday SAN FRANCISCO UPH -The chairman of Ihe Soulnern Pacific unit of the Brotherhood of Rail way Clerks has called for a strike against the railroad at "the ear liest possible moment," but na tional on icers of the union con tinued efforts today to avert the walkout. James Weaver, head of the SP Driver Asks To Impeach President WASHLNGTON IUPI A man demanding that President Ken nedy and his Cabinet be im peached drove a car onto the steps of the Justice Department today and told police he had a bomb wired to the automobile. Police immediately closed oft the section of Pennsylvania Ave that runs in front of the building and sent bomb experts to the site The man, identifying himself as Nathan Wiskowsky, lay under neath the car and said he would stay where he was until lie could talk with FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Police described Wiskowsky as 'neat, well-dressed and ticulate." Justice Department police first spotted the car. a 1956 Oldsmobile with Arizona license plates, as it swerved sharply from Pennsyl vania Ave. onto the sidewalk. It narrowlv missed some pe destrians and then mounted the three steps leading up to the main entrance of the department. The rear wheels rested on the side walk and the front wheels on the top step. The building police said thel driver quickly got out of the car and climbed underneath. By the time they arrived, he was holding several wires "and some kind of package," thev said. There were several gasoline cans on the rear seat. Building police said they put shocks around the wheels of the car and then called local police who said the driver told them he had a bomb wired to the car and planned to slay underneath it un til he could talk with Hoover. Election Won By Macmillan LONDON UPI Prime Min ister Harold Macmillan moved quickly from a fresh parliamen lary vote of confidence today into new efforts to spur Britain s I gins economy. Backed by the best display of party unity since the Common Market crisis broke. Macmillan ordered full steam ahead on his plans for a new wage policy, world commodity pacts and in creased trade with the United States. Europe, and Ihe Common wealth. Fallout Shelter Program Blasted In Testimony Before Legislators SALEM iL'Pl Men and women Irom three Orecon cities told a legislative committee here Tues day they don't want a fallout shelter program. They said the money and eilorl spent on civil defense should be spent instead on attaining perma nent world peace and disarma ment. Slielters are futile and decep tive, they told the Senate Com mittee on Military Affairs it continued its review of civil de lense. And. said Dr. George Streuing er ol the University of Oregon, it is ridiculous to talk about living underground and then emerging into a post - nuclear war world where civilization is gone, ani i r. n Price Ten Tents 20 Pages Killed Iks JeSfceir unit, said Tuesday he feels that further talks in the lengthy dis pute over automation are "a waste of time." He said he asked the president of the union to order Ihe withdrawal of clerks from SP service at the earliest possible moment, and under no event later than 6 p.m. PST. Feb. 16, 1963." But William McGovern. union vice president and representative of president George Harrison, con tinued negotiations with the rail road through federal mediator Frank O'Neill. Both O'Neill and McGovern ex pressed cautious ontimism Tues day that the oft-postponed walkout could be averted. A strike bv the ll.OOO-member union would tie up 50.000 SP employes in Oregon, California, Nevada. Utah. Arizona. New Mexico and west Texas. When asked Tuesday if the sit uation looked hopeful, McGovern replied, "yes." Then he added, "hope springs eternal." He said he had talked to Har rison by telephone and was told lo continue talks as long as he felt there was a chance for a settlement. K. K. Schomp. personnel man ager for SP and chief negotiator for the company, also was in fa vor of the peace talks continuing. As far as the Southern Pacific is concerned," he said, "we will continue to work in every way possible with Mr. O'Neill in our attempt to avert a strike and end the threat that it poses to the pub lic." - - - -- The union originally was sched uled to go out at midnight last Wednesday. Snow Threat Faces East By United Press International A broad arctic air mass pro filed southward today, covering the entire East Coast, posing heavy snow warnings in the Northeast and threatening cxtcn sive damage to Texas' citrus and vegetable crops. Scores of schools were closed in the Southeast. The frigid air spawned torrcn tial rains and high winds in Flor ida where a Northwest Orient Air-I line jet crashed and burned after takeoff from Miami. All 43 per sons aboard perished. Rain and snow choked off main highway arteries in Dixie, includ ing parts of a 200-mile stretch be tween Knoxville and Nashville. Tcnn., and a mountain highway in northwest Georgia. Sub-freezing temperatures spread across Ala bama, Georgia and Mississippi The only reading of SO degrees or higher was in Key West. Fla. where tlie mercury reached 65. The northern sections of Vcr mont. New Hampshire and Maine braced for as much as a foot of fresh snow, while hazardous driv ine warnings were oostefl lor southern New England because ol treacherous freezing rain. mals and plants are dead, and in-l -ets and disease are rampant. Many of the witnesses stressed: a lalse scne ot security iney said is caused by shelter pro grams. They said this impedes leace efforts. They make us "more and more resigned." said Mrs. Harlan Bos worth of Medford. She said shel ters also delude the enemy into "believing we will lake anything ratlier than compromise." "There is no defense against a nuclear attack," said Mrs. Ben Bradlvn of Portland. "The real solution is lo arrance world dis armament under law." Official connected with civd defense disagreed. ttBXu W sK T "tjr X 1"W I ' "?' gP1f "Wf N"1 """" " " " '" v4 P or - DiV TO ..unit :..mtt Un LIONS SHARE DONATION munity Hospital rund, is only Lions Club. The club has pli has here, left to right, hospital fund general chairman, and Dr. Harold Catmull, contribution and pledge were made at tha regular Tuesday noon luncheon of the club at the Winema Hotel. Civil Defense Agency Nixed By Legislative Committee SALEM IUPI Elimination of Oregon's civil defense agency was recommended today by a subcom- mittee of tlie Senate-House Ways and Means Committee. The subcommittee voted 5-0 to abolish the present IB-man de partment, and replace it with the addition of one man to the gover nor's staff to coordinate civil de fense-related activities. Gov. Mark Hatfield's budget had requested $195,125 for civil defense. The action climaxed a series of stormy hearings during which the department was labeled a "do nothing" agency which was in o)cralive during the Columbus Day storm. A Senate Military Affairs Com- House Group Talks Taxes SALEM lUPD Discussion of cigarette taxes and a "one shot" revenue plan occupied the House Taxation Committee Tuesday but no mention was made of sending Rep. Joe Rogers' sales tax biU back to the House. Rogers charged Monday thai Democratic leadership was delay ing action on tax measures. House Speaker Clarence Barton threat ened to call Rogers' bill out ol committee Tax Committee Chair man Richard Eymann indicated the committee might take such action. Rogers' bill would establish 3 per cent sales tax on all but agricultural sales Tax Commissioner Fred Hocfkci explained Tuesday that monthly payments of stale taxes withheld from wages would produce an additional Si.5 million nexi men mum. Tlie taxes are now remitted j I quarterly. "Our job Is to save lives," said Dr. Richard Wilcox of the State Board of Health, "and a great numtier would be saved with some preparation." "I am fully aware of the horror of war." said Portland Civil De- lense Director Jack Iowe, citing World War II experiences, "but I believe it would save lives." He said readiness to fight is one ot me nest guarantees ol ieaie If the nation spends nearly SjO billion a year on military de fense, including second strike ca pability, he said, it should also attend to non-military defense Mreisint'er said shelters give the impression that ... we can af lord war." KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1963 - This huge check, made out (or $1,000 to the Intercom one fifth of the donation planned by the Klamath Fells pledged itself to contribute are ur. tolenroe uavis, vice president mittee is conducting a separate! review of the agency. The subcommittee s rccommen- dation now goes to the full Ways! and Means Committee for action Shortly before Sen. Alfred Cor Orbit Trip Postponed CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla UP! i The planned 22-orbit flight uf astronaut L. Gordon Cooper Jr I be delayed until the middle of May by a new move to make the booster rocket safer, it was announced today. Cooper's flight had been sched uled for April 2, but ran into an indefinite postponement about two weeks ago following a technical management board meeting. The federal space agency said today that a decision was made to rewire the critical flight con trol system under a proposed new technique by General Dynamics Astronautics, which makes the Atlas booster rocket. Officials said the rewiring was called for alter experts decided the control system posed a "pos sible source of trouble. Cooper, who will be 36 next month, will be sent into orbit aboard a bcll-shapid Mercury capsule similar lo the one that lifted fellow astronauts John H Glenn Jr., M. Scott Carpenter and Walter M. Schirra Jr. into space last year. If all goes well. Cooper will spend at least 34 hours in space covering 22 orbits of the globe to return to a landing in the Pa cific Ocean. Lumber 'Hold! Rule Rapped PORTLAND lUPD A lumber group today described as a " vere blow" a rejection by tlie Western Railroad Traffic Associa tinn iWRT.M of a petition seeking limited free hold time on east bound lumber shipments. Tlie Western Iximber Marketing Association. iWLM.M, a group of mills and wholesalers, had filed the pelition. Hcrshal Tanzer, president ol Uie lumber group, said the proposal would have granted a significant measure of assistance to hundreds! of smaller mills who must ship by rail rather than by water. "It is ironic, ne said, mat on Ihe tery dale lhat tlie first for eign vevsel loaded lumber from an American port for Puerto Rico under Ihe Jones Act modification an act of assistance (or largr water mills, the WRTA rejected this vital rail proposition. " He referred lo the loading at Oras Bay of Japanese ship. imlm $5,000 to the fund. Shown or tne club; James itilwell, president of the club. Thi belt, D-Portland, moved for aboli tion of the agency and asked for an alternate budget. Sen. Walter Pearson, D-Portland, visited the committee. He urged that civil defense be abolished "as the big gest boondoggle and waste money the stale has ever seen Pearson added, "I've never yet seen them do anything. If you want to save money, this is one way to start. Get rid of it." Sen. Lynn Newbry, R-Ashland who seconded Cornell's motion. had suggested retaining $22,000 state matching funds fur federal appropriations. The committee de cided the state should get out of the business and Newbry dropped his amendment. The Columbus Day windstorm played havoc with the agency. Pearson said "everybody knew about it by radio long before civil defense broadcast anything, if; they ever did. Corbett added. "I have been critical in the past, but had sup ported it for its use in coordina tion in a natural disaster. Its performance in the last disaster was a disappointment, to say the least." Flu Spreads Over Nation Bv United Press International An outbreak of pneumonia and influenza felled thousands across the nation today, closing schools and culling into the work force Asian flu was delected in at least a dozen states. The Baltimore. Md., Public Health Service said it did not foresee any immediate decline in four-week epidemic. At its peak, 300 men in Baltimore's 3,740-man police force were stricken Kentucky State H?alth Commis sioner Dr. Russell Tcague said it appeared the state was in the 'beginning of a good epidemic He said he was fairly sure it was Ihe Asian flu strain. Trigg County schools in Ken tucky were closed Tuesday when 18 per rent of 2,000 enrolled itu dents failed to show up for daises. About 400 patients jammed the emergency looms at Ihe Louisville. Ky., General Hos pital. The ''Sweetheart Dance" at Be- vier, Mo., tonight was called oil along with all scheduled basket ball games after 86 students and 7 of 17 teachers became ill. School was dismissed for the rest of the week. A wave of absenteeism swept Indiana's Floyd. Claik and liar rison counties. HealW Otticcr Ur Sam Adair said Ihe wave In Clark County was the worst in 30 years The flu reached epidemic propor Hons in Floyd County. Hundreds of students were ab sent In Corydon, lnd., alone. Trlrphone in Probers Find Wreckage Scattered For 2 Miles MIAMI. Fla. (UPi- Scattered wreckage of a Northwest Orient Airlines jetliner indicated today that the plane may have shattered in flight before it plunged into Ihe Florida everglades with the loss of 43 lives. Newsmen at the scene found wreckage scattered over an area of about two square miles. A score of government aviation experts at the crash site 43 miles west of Miami declined to specu late on the cause of the crash as they began their painstaking ex amination of the w reckage. Fifteen miles away, a morgue was set up in a little two-room Indian school house to begin re ceiving the charred and broken bodies of the victims. There was no furrow to indicate that the pilot of the ill-fated Miami-to-Chicago airliner, which disappeared seven minutes after takeoff, had attempted any sort of emergency landing. ' Other witnesses at the scene also reported small broken pieces of wreckage scattered in a path for eight miles leading to the ma jor portion of the fuselage that lay crumpled like a cigar ground under foot. The detailed investigation that began at dawn continued into mid- morning. None of the bodies of 35 passengers, most of them mid westerners returning from a Flor ida vacation, and eight crew mem bers had yet been taken to the school by waiting helicopters. The must vivid scone at tlie site was the body ol a woman mat was thrown clear, about 100 feet ahead ot the main cabin.- Clad In a, black skirt and. white blouse, the dead woman lay as if asleep in the gently waving saw. grass. Her body was unmarked. Most of tlie passengers were still in the shattered remains of the charred fuselage that lay crushed almost flat to the ground The top and sides -ol the cabin were gone, apparently Burned away. A CAB spokesman said the in Ill "f iWI'MIN Si' 11 1 1 d YOUNG REPUBLICANS 'ORGANIZE Officers were named" Tuesday night when the Young Republican Club of Klamath County organiied. Heading the young GOP'ers for the next year ere, left to right, Mrs. Donne Morgan, housewife, secretary; Wal lace Hitt, vice president; Kurt Fiedler, assistant secretary; Phil Persons, president, and Tom Troxel, student, treasurer. The group is assisting in joint sponsorship of the Lincoln Day Dinner Thursday at the Winema Hotel. Young Republicans Lincoln Dinner Souvenirs A special souvenir has been de signed and prepared for all those attending the Lincoln Day dinner Thursday evening at the Winema by members of the Young Repub lican Club of Klamath County. A slate of officers (or Ihe or ganization was named at a meet ing Tuesday night. Phil Parsons will head the group as presklent He was chosen on the first ballot Other officers of the young GOP'ern are. Wallace Il.tt, vice president; Mrs. Donna Morgan secretary; Kurt Fiedler, assistant secretary, and Tom Troxel, treas urer. An Invitation has been extended by the club to all young people Ixtwern tlie ages of 18 and 36 to; loin the group. Officials of the TU 4-8111 No. 7063 isvergiaa vestigators would review all pos sible causes of the crash, includ ing sabotage. A Coast Guard helicopter pilot found the wreckage of the four engine Northwest Orient Airline Boeing 720R about five hours aft er the plane lost radio contact with Miami International Airport. Lt. Cmdr. James Dillon, Akron. Ohio, located the wreckage 43 miles west of Miami. "There are no survivors," Dil lon reported. "I saw one body that appeared to be intact. Lug gage was strewn everywhere." UPI photographer hugo Wessels later flew close to tne wreckage in a chartered helicopter and said nearly all the bodies seemed to be strapped in the cabin seats. John McWhorter, CAB coordi nator, said helicopiers would be used to remove the bodies be cause it took swamp vehicles more than three hours to reach Ihe wreckage through thick un- dcrbrush in tlie snake-infested wilderness. The airliner, Flight 705, was due to land in Chicago at 4:05 p.m. before continuing on to Se Tourisis See Fireball As Jet Faffs In Swamp MIAMI tUPI Six tourlstsl from the Midwest looked ruefully at a black thunderhead cloud! Tuesday afternoon trying to make! the most of a rainy ttshing trip, Tlie time wa about 1:55 p.m. EST just about; the ..time a Northwest Orient jetliner plunged lo earth lo the north of them with the loss of 43 lives. The six persons were fishing In Rookery Creek, near the "Little Banana Patch" fishing hole in the upper reaches of the Shark River that meanders through the vast- ncss of the Everglades National Park. Suddenly all saw a fireball! club pointed out that this is a real opportunity for those interested to make a contribution toward achieving stability and progress both government and the na tion's economic life. Parsons told the group. "The millions of youngsters have the greatest stake in the future of our country. The Democrat program! of bigger and bigger government more and more controls, and less and less individual freedom must he slopped. Membership in the Young Republicans is how the young people of Klamath Coun ty can join In this fight to pre serve our American way of life. In reorganizing the group, the Young Republicans laid down four basic principles, listing them as1 Weal her Klamath Falls, Tulelake and Lakeview Variable cloudiness through Thursday. Generally light w inds. Cooler tonight, Iowa about 23, highs Thursday near 45. attle and Portland. The jet took off at 1:30 p.m. into a line of squalls a few miles west of Mi ami. There was a layer of black clouds at about 800 leet at take off. The pilot, Capt. Roy W. Aim- quist, 47, of Rosemont, Minn., was in the midst of his post-take- off check with the Miami tower when radio communications with the plane broke off. "Leaving 17,000 feet," a routine report that the plane was climb ing to the prescribed 25.000-foot level, were his last words. Tower authorities said every thing appeared normal up to the time radio contact was lost. About 13 minutes later, Gordon Schwan of Mansfield, Ohio, fish ing at the headwaters of the Shark River In tlie Everglades, said he saw a "fireball" in the sky and debris flying and heard an explosion. The headwaters ot the Shark lie deep in tlie center of the huge Everglades Park in an area ac cessible only by boats with veter an Everglades guides at the helm. burst inside tlie thunderhead, then a streak of red and smoky lire all toward the horizon followed by the thump ot a heavy explo sion. Aboard the boat were Gordon Schwan and his wife. Marilou, of Mansfield, Ohio, and their guests, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Schwardt of 'Cleveland and Mr. and Mrs. John Mortorff of Indianapolis. Their report three hours later when they reached the marina at Flamingo, Fla., led the Coast Guard to search the right area and find the wreckage of the dis aster. Prepare (1) Bringing young people into the; Republican Party and providing an opportunity for them to find political expression and recog nition, (2) Training young people as effective political workers. 3). Fostering and encouraging loyalty to the Republican Party and Its ideals, and 4 Collecting, analyz ing, reporting and disseminating information concerning govern ment and political affairs." The club will jointly sponsor the; Lincoln Day dinner Thursday eve-; ning at 7 p.m. at the Winema.; The Honorable John Pavij Lodge, previously ambassador to Spain, congressman, governor and pres idential adviser, will be the guest speaker. Reservations for the dinner may he made by phoning TU 4-4181.