Civil Defense In Klamath Defended Some Oregon Civil Defence agencies hay have been asleep at the switch during te Columbus Day storm, but that was not the case in Klamath County, local Civ il Defense Director Joe Searlcs told the Herald and News Wed nesday. Searles' comments came as in dividuals and various organiza tions tnroughout the state were rallying to support the state Civil Defense Association', which has been the object of statewide abuse for its "inefficiency" during the tall hurricane. The civil defense officer said there was no single major disas ter to adequately test the effi ciency of the county CD system. "But had there been one, we were ready for it," Searles said The storm swept through parts of California, Oregon, and Wash ington at winds registered more than 75 m.p.h., causing millions of dollars in damage as it dis rupted power service, destroyed property, snarled traffic and ere ated general havoc throughout the three states. Throughout the Inferno, t h e Klamath County Civil Defense Of fice was in constant radio con tact with the Suburban Kire De partment, the State Civil Defense Acencv at Salem, the Sheriff's Office. County Koad Department, and Kingsley Air Field. In addition, it was also in touch with various cities throughout the slate by means of the N tional Warning System, Searles said. In the event of an emergency, the county's 26-man motorized res cue squad and its equipment were on standby duty and were available to go wherever they were needed in the county. One of the first local disasters partly attributed to the storm was the razing ot the Ellingson uim ber Company planing mill, leveled by a generally 50-foot high sheet of fire that was pushed along by Moody Youth Arrested For Killing Of Family GREEN BAY. Wis. (UPD- Somehow there was a shadow over the dream of Jack Hebard and Joyce Rudcll to weld togeth er their broken homes. Their earlier marriages had not lasted. To wed seemed like the tiling to do It would provide Hebards son. Harry, witn mother, and Mrs. nudell's three children with a father. Along the way came little hints that all was not well in the new Hebard household, especially with teen-aged Harry. No one paid much attention. Harry always tyid been close to his adventuresome latner, wno was known as "Lucky Jack O'Hara," a part-time daredevil in an auto thrill show. Harry onen helped his father in his specialty stunt, "The Human Bomb." A neighbor said Harry "sure liked" his stepmother's twin daughters, Janice and Judy, 11. The girls took the Hebard name. The same neighbor recalled that he never heard of quarrels in the Hebard house, a rcmod-' eled farm home in a sparsely set tled section on Green Bay's Exclusive! rait! Polaroid Reprints 2 for 25c LEC'S CAMERA SHOP 836 Main Ph. 2-3331 Southwest Side, "except maybe between John and Harry. John, at 15, was one year younger than, Harry. John kept the Rudell name. It was known that Harry felt "left out" of the family circle and had bad feeling toward the others. A minister said he was aware of trouble. A friend said Harry had talked of running away. Today, police held frail, moody Harry Hebard, 18, for murder The rest of the family his fa ther and stepmother and her three children were dead of gunshot wounds in the head Harry broke rimvn Tuesday when he admitted he killed his father Monday evening. He was to be handed an amended charge of first degree murder at an ar raignment today. IJisl. AUy. Hon- crl Warren would not say what the new charge would be. Hebard was arrested at a farm 20 miles away after police were called by a co-worker of his fa ther w ho became concerned when lights were on at the Hebard home Tuesday morning but no one answered the piione. Police found the bodies of Jack Hebard, IHi, his wile, Joyce, 35. and her children. All had been shot in the head with a IB-caliber pistol and riile. There was no ap I parent struggle. gusty winds. Damage was esti mated in excess ot sioo.ooo. Searles said he fought the blaze with 75 to 100 other men and reported continually by radio to the CD Office in Salem about the fire and other damage caused as the result of the storm. After a power failure developed during the peak velocity of the winds the county CD Office sought and obtained tliree auxiliary gen erators for use in the migrant workers housing project in Ma- lin. The power was restored as the generators were being deliv ered. Searles said. The local oflicc also performed services lor individuals as re quested. One such service was for a Klamath Falls man who sought information about his relatives who were in Gold Beach when the storm struck. (Power lines were also down in that Western Ore gon city and news was not getting in or out of that area. Searles said he relayed the request to a local radio ham operator, who contacted a ham operator in Gold Beach. Within 10 minutes word came from the stricken city that the local man's relatives were safe. Searles said. Although the storm may have caught some civil delense organi zations woefully lacking through out some parts of the state, it has served lo point out those areas in which CD should be preparca in the event oi anouier uisaswr, Searles concluded. Rule Review Bill Okayed SALEM (UPH-Tlie Senate to- dav oassed a bill which would enable the legislature to review rules of state agencies and commissions. The bill, which would create a legislative review commission to meet between sessions, passed 22 to 7. It now goes lo the House. The bill is a result of growing legislative concern over the law making ability of some state agencies. Sen. Walter Pearson. IJ-Port- land. urged passage. Sen. Don Willner. D-Lake Os wego, opposed the bill and termed it "dangerous legislation. , Also opposing the measure was Sen. Alfred Curbctl. D-Porllond He termed it "a toothless tiger wilh a new set of dentures," and said it would substitute "rule of men (or rule ol law." PAGE t HERALD ANT) NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. VTeariefflSV: FpnrOafy JO, 19M -.,.'"" l-:-.niM- ST. ,....?. . . J - ' m". , """I KATMANDU, Nepal tUPli -A Kl-man American team sets out today on one of history's most ambitious mountain-climbing ex peditionsa triple assault on Mt. NEARING COMPLETION The new mausoleum at Eternal Hills Memorial Gardens it expected to be finished by Memorial Day. Th'e structure awaitst arrival of marble from Italy and Portugal. All concrete work, the office, flower room and rest rooms are completed. Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. White, owners, will also place a lighted stained glass window in the end of the building and will landscape the grounds. The cemetery, newest in Klamath Falls, is located on the Merrill Highway. Teachers Hear Talk On Revision The regular meeting of t h e Klamath County Retired Teachers group was held Feb. 16 in the YMCA. In the absence of Emma Car ter, president, May Phinney, vice president, presided. William B. hweetland. publisher of the Henald and News and a member of the committee appoint ed for revision of the Oregon Constitution, gave an informative talk on tlic new constitution pre pared by a committee of 17, and presented to the state legislature now in session for study. It is important, say tRose re sponsible for the revision, that the people of Oregon be informed on this document should it be pre sented to the voters for approval. Mrs. Willeska LoosTcy intro duced a guest. Mrs. Larson, a prospective member. Mrs. Henry Perkins and Mrs. Hal Ogle were hostesses. Bid Call Set SALEM l;PIi Bids on a pub lic building for concessions and a marina on the Brow nice Reser- oir at Farewell Bend Stale Park will be called March 12, State Highway Engineer Forrest Cooper said today. When completed, the conces sions will be operated by Bruce Kirkpatrick of Bilker. -,. 1AW1 iriifi if ntf "' AT YOUR FORD DEALER'S NOW! The Liveliest of the Lively Ones! Meet Ford's ajl-new Command Performance cars fresh from their world premiere in Monaco! At center is the hot new Talron Sprint V-8 lh.it won first in its class at, the famed Monte Carlo Rallye. Bucket seats, sports-type steering wheel, 164-hp V-8 and tachometer are standard. More news! V-R engines now available with any f alcon! Top. the new I airlane 500 Sports Coupe that took Alpine grades like a native. There's a choice of two V-8's and a vinyl covering in black or while for ils Thunderbird toof. Foreground, new Super Torque Ford Sports Hardtop with V-8 zoom up lo 4.15 hanrl sleek new rnof- line. This beautiful new hardtop looks like a convertible! Amonc.a's livrliost. mo-it l am Iron e.i". FORD 'ittpt FikM Stilton Rut ind Club Miaon Ex-Diplomat Claims Cuba 'Subversive' MIAMI, Fla. (L'PD A . Cuban ex-diplomat once assigned to Washington said Monday night Premier Fidel Castro's foreign service is a soviet-dominated agen cy of subversion. Hugo Bell, 28, one of half a dozen Cubans who deserted the Castroite legation in Baghdad in liccemlier, told a press confer ence Castro "should be pro claimed the liar of the century." Although numerous Cuban dip lomats have deserted the Castro regime. Bell and his companions were believed to be the first Castro-trained agents to do so. Bell said he was trained for the 'diplomatic service at a camp in Minas del Frio, where thousands of other Cubans were undergoing military and political training. He said thorough indoctrination Soviet ideology was an im portant feature of the course. The indispensable requirement (or a diplomat in Communist Cuba is not intellectual but physical." he said. "It is necessary to pass a stiff physical examination to be a diplomat. . . "Cuban diplomats are trained to serve as agents of subversion. . . and for no other purpose." In Iraq before the recent revo lution. Hell said, the Cuban lega tion was "completely subordinate to the Soviet Embassy, which also controlled the nation's press." Before going to Iraq, Bell was a member of the Cuban mission to the Organization of American States in Washington. He said members of the mission were sub ject to constant surveillance. "We couldn't go out alone to buy a pack of cigarettes, he said Newspaper Strike Hit By Wirtz MIAMI BEACH UPI - Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirta said Tuesday the New York newspaper strike, now in its 75th day, was becoming "increasingly intolerable." Wirtz told a news conference while attending the mid-winter meeting of the AFL-CIO Execu tive Councu that the New York strike was "extremely unfortu nate." He said the New York and Cleveland newspaper strikes had "struck serious blows" af collec live bargaining. Collective bargaining itself is on trial. Wirtz said. AFL-CIO President George Mea ny disagreed with the labor sec retary. I yon't think one incident in dicates that collective bargaining is losing its effectiveness," said Meany. Colorado is the only state of the Union bounded by four straight lines. Yankee Mountain Climbers Start Triple Assault On Mt. Everest 19fil, and started assembling his team of mountaineer-scientists. Under present plans, three teams of two men each will make the assault on Everest. Two teams Everest and two sister peaks Mo ,w0 mc cach wiU make the the Himalayas. , suhswiuent attemnts on Nuptse The Americans, accompanied by aIK Lhotse. a virtual army of Sherpa guides and high-altitude porters, planned to spend about six months gath ering scientific data on the per formance of men under extreme stress. The starling point was Banepa. the end of the road (or vehicles and a 21-day hike from the slopes of Everest. A truck caravan car ried supplies to Banepa, 20 miles from Katmandu, Tuesday. The unprecedented assault on Mt. Everest, the world's highest mountain, and the nearby peaks of Lhotse and Nuptse is the brain child of Norman G. Dyhrenfurth 44, of Santa Monica, Calif. Dyhrenfurth began planning the expedition in June, 1960. He re ceived official permission from the Nepalese government in May, The actual scaling of the peaks will not begin for some time. The first several weeks will be spent establishing camps high up the mountains. The 29.028-foot Everest has been conquered only twice. First to get to the summit were New Zealand's Psychologist Bill Backed SALEM (UPI) Anybody could hane out a shingle and set up business as a psychologist under Oregon's present law. Sen. Alfred Corbett told the Senate Health and Welfare Committee Monday. Corbett and a series of witnes ses representing psychologists tes tified in favor of a bill to re quire certification of psycholo gists. The bill would set up min imum standards that would have lo bo met before anyone could practice as a psychologist in the state. Corbett called the' bill a "modest beginning" in view of the broad field of psychology that ranges from counseling and test ing to (caching and advising in dustry on the selection of em ployes. Sir Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norkay in 1953. A Swiss expedition made it to the top in 1956. The 27,890-foot Lhotse i fourth highest i and the 25,850-foot Nupt se 1 18th i have been scaled only once cach. The Swiss expedition which topped Everest also climbed Lhotse. A British mountaineering team reached the summit of Nuptse in 1961. ( The American team includes three medical doctors, a psychol ogist, physicist, glaciologist and sociologist. - Mrjwad Ends Tonite! MARGARET RUTHERFORD Km tvi'ts Starts THURSDAY! JERRY'S BIGGEST, BROADEST, (r FUNNIEST EVER! Vk0 Jerry f) jay ??? Technicolor ..PAT STANLEY. t.,uo(ii usin . Motor tHm iw i. ,.r-i HELEN TRAUBEL MtrtlUN I HUMAN . MOPt HuilOAI FBACTUPCS MOLLVWOOO WITH A MILLION HOWLS ROAR By ROAfl k i mCs&b ..J, K:,mm .! f " -i":. . " ' " '-- -tv - v 1 'w-ssi'-y - fiiii'' IN KLAMATH FALLS SEE . , . BALSIGER MOTOR CO., MAIN & ESPLANADE IN LAKEVIEW SEE . . . FARLEIGH FORD SALES, 210 NORTH F ST., LAKEVIEW, ORE. Automation Study Asked SALEM ilTI' - "I am asking you to siiend $.15,000 to save the jobs and job seciuity of perhaps one half million Oregon workers in tlic next seven years," S e n Ted Hallock. D Portland, told the Senate Committee on State and Federal affairs Tuesday "t'p to $10 billion in payroll L-. involved.' Hallock said. He tcs tided in favor of a pair o f me.'iMires In set up an interim committee to recommend solutions In Hie growing problem of auto ma! inn. T h e committee's proposals would follow a detailed survey by the Department of Planning and llevelopmrnt on Oregon's job po tential and ils relation to the la bor force i A key facet of the committee's javMpimcnt would be to recom mend was of financmg programs i to meet automation. Suggestions include a surtax on the pension health and benefit funds now paid partly by employers and partly jhv unkrrs. Hallock said the problem o ( 'automation is the "most Intisrd- up. tortolten. ocn.itod ana ig nored area" of the country's econ- ' Whcie i.s the legislation to imove ahead, to step into tomor-!t-.Min" asked He s.od if his proposal were 'api'iovisl. "Oret;ont will lead the n.itinii in comUtHiiii; automation, not shi'H me il PifftlitttM duly t-ct St Strin4 uthrn Ort-fM rnJ Narthfrn Calfrfi v KUmafft uMiftt Cttmptflr Mam al iii"af Phtna TUito int W. ft. M"d. PuklttMr VftarfMl a -- tail matttr i alfifa at Kiamattt Pant. Orrt, (M Aui-il II. 1M rtr et CAK trail, March 1 tITf Sac (! ! twit at a KlamalH Pi'it. Ortfan. ind aMiticnal mil!. mtt. Carr.r 1 MantO Mh(N 1 vaar lit m Mail AttvtfKt t Mt t 1 T' Mdtlh 1 Yaar H Carntr m4 Patft Waefefiav A 5vav, rrff 'f UHiTIO INTHAT!0-t UtlT UtCU O CltCOLATlON Ulunktri nf rtKtivn a)iitry ! tttf.f Htiat4 a Htwt, tau B 1Ua liU t P . f( n fl WS) I Klamath Falls LAURENCE HARVEY FRANCE NUYEN MARTHA HYER 1 I: At u t .c.iu THE 7 C7 P'YO s ' 1 . i ffitrf,;4i.''i iff ft r 'IV t (, I MW 1 . v. -VI. ' - v m m m mm n E - . - ' fe iTT"" - - '- " i. .1 nii.. GARY MERRILL-MICHAEL WILDING MIYOSHI UMEKI techniH JOHNSTURGES C ARD ANH ALT faa.$'CV-a paravcunt plllasl -7- ..: -. ;-sr- ;.r.,::.x.c- ; . ' "V