Anglo-U.S.
Atom Arms
Plan Pushed
f
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1
MADAME SILVERCRUYS
LONDON (UPD Prime Min
ister Harold Msrmillsn moved
ahead today with his plan to co
ordinate nuclear defense with the !
United Slatei after beating down
an opposition attack on his record .
peacetime defense budget.
MacmiUan's Conservative party
government Tuesday night defeat-
ed a Labor party motion of no- !
confidence in the House of Com-
mons. by a vote of 333-237. A
separate Conservative motion on
the government's policies was
carried bv 323-237. m
Be victoiics were expected, E SI? -ft
since Macmillan has a joi-mem-i WJMU jjtJ HI . .
oer majoruy in voininona. met
reduced margin on the second
vote resulted from the early de
parture of Conservative deputies
from the chamber.
The two-day debate on the $5.1
billion budget showed the deter
mination of Defense Minister Pe-
ler Thorncycroft to carry on with
plans to shift the emphasis of
British defense from the V
bomber squadron to the U.S. Po
laris missile submarine.
The budget reflects MacmiUan's
Nassau agreement with Kennedy
calling for establishment of a
multi-nation nuclear force within
the North Atlantic Treaty Organic
lation (NATO), based on the Po-laris.
Billy Graham
Plans To Rest
HONOLULU (UPD - Evange
list Billy Graham, who was
forced to withdraw from his
planned Far East crusade be-
cause of illness, plans to spend
the next several weeks in seclu
sion in the Hawaiian Islands.
Graham was released from St.
Francis Hospital Tuesday after
five days of tests and treatments
for inflammation of the large and
small intestines.
His physician, Dr. Richard
Chang, said the evangelist was
under strict orders to rest and
continue his convalescence In Hawaii.
Talk Slated
One of the world's great artists
Madame Suzanne Silvercruys, wii
present a fascinating program for
the Monday, March 11, meeting of
the Klamath Knife and Fork Club
The dinner at fi:45 p.m. in the
Winema Motor Hotel will be fol
lowed by her interesting anecdotes
about famous people, her philoso
phy of life, her knowledge of in
ternational affairs, her skill in
sculpture, and her belief that only
through beauly can one find happiness.
She will model a portrait or ac
tion figure on the platform as she
talks.
She was born in Belgium, the
daughter of the late President
of the Supreme Court of Belgium
and Baroness Silvercruys, but
has been an American citizen for
20 years.
Her lecture has received univer
sal acclaim from coast to coast.
The program, "Self Expres
sion," is definitely on the distin
guished side but neither "arty" or
"long hairedt" She is a polished
gentlewoman who has not lost the
common touch, and she knows
well how to handle any audience
Many tributes have been paid
to her work as a sculpture.
Mark Slaps
Budget Cut
PORTLAND (UPD-Gov. Mark
Hatfield took roundhouse swipes
at the Democratic leadership of
the Oregon Legislature in a talk
here Tuesday, and accused them
of using a "meat cleaver" in
chopping his education budgets.
Speaking before the Metropoli
Ian Republican Women's Club,
Hatfield invited "disillusioned edu
cators" to support his administration.
lie said a meat cleaver was
applied to educational budgets.
He also lashed at the majority
party for cutting back Civil De
fense and for taxation problems.
He called Democratic legislative
leaders "soft on defense" because
,f i,h3flre In tu cri n-o
rami He ;h nc ,'" c i!Uov
ing the position of their national
party and the President and said
they would be contributing to a
"soft America."
Il.itfield told the group that the
Democratic majority in the legis
lature "must bear oil the fail
ures" of this session of the legislature.
"No amount of double talk
about a Republican governor or!
excuses about a coalition and dif
ferent types of Democrats can
change the responsibility that the
majority gives them," he said.
Hatfield said his administration
followed Republican philosophy
with a progressive program com
bincd with fiscal responsibility
He said he recommended $90 mil
lion in budget cuts lo arrive at
the $405 million biennium budget
he gave the legislature.
We used a scalpel, not a meat
cleaver," he added.
He blamed changes in popula
tion, not the administration, for
the higher budget. He said an in
crease in the number of school
children was responsible for a $24
million hike in education budgets.
But the students of the future
may be turned away from our in
stitutions because of the actions
of the present Democratic leader
ship," he said.
Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
ter Day Saints is another name
for the Mormon Church.
IttTTIMfS TODAY. "DIAMOND HEAD"
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11:1! A.M.
STARTING TOMORROW
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Weather Roundup
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. PST today
Astoria .
Baker
Brookings
Medford
Newport
North Bend
Pendleton
Portland
Redmond
Salem
The Dalles
Chicago
Los Ange.es
New York
San Francisco
Washington
Northern California: Occasional
rain, snow higher mountains
through Thursday
The Dalles and Hood River:
High Low
57 32
45 la
55 48
50 40
59 36
60 45
50 32
56 30
54 17
57 28
60 30
34 28
63 43
44 35
" 60 50
47 38
east winds 8-18 in afternoon.
Bend, Baker and La Grande:
Fair, continued cold at night;
highs 50-55, lows 25-30.
Five-day weather:
Western Oregon: Highs mostly
in 50 s. lows in upper 20's and
low 30's; less than normal pre
cipitation, except near normal in
southwest part.
Eastern Oregon: Highs in 40' s
and low 50's; lows in 20' s and
30 s; less than normal precipita
tion. Ski Report
Mt. Bachelor: Temp. 17 at 7
a.m.; clear, calm; no new snow;
6 inch total; skiing surface pow
der and variable; skiing good,
chair and rope tow operating today.
Timberlinc: Temp. 33 at 7 a.m.;
clear, no wind; 46 inch total hard-
?W!ak-War; all fwfflrf.
6!vit Defense Employes Resign Jobs
mild; highs 5-fA lows 28-33; loperating.
Ribicoff Raps Phony
Packages At Hearing
AND THE WHOLE
FLEET SWINQSI
"fas
7M
Ship Plank
Identified
MIAMI (UPD-A shipping firm
cprcsentative definitely identified
i broken plank Monday as part
of the name plaque of the missing
tanker Marine Sulphur Queen.
The Coast Guard said it had
abandoned the search for the ship
and its 39 crewmen.
TIkj clghl-foot plank, broken at
I ho ends and bearing the word
fragments "arine sulph," was
found Sunday night off Key His-
ciiyne.
A representative of Marine
Transport Lines. Inc., owners of
Ihe tanker, identifed the board
Monday as being from the Sul
phur Queen, missing sinco Feb.
on a voyage from Beaumont,
Tex., to Norfolk. Va. The tanker
carried molten sulphur.
No survivors or bodies have
l)eon found, although several life
jackets marked with the name of
the ship have turned up in Florida
waters in recent weeks.
WASHINGTON (UPD - Sen.
Abrajiam Ribhvoff, D-Conn., told
Congress today Mrs. Jane Doe
buying soap flakes needs the same
protection against phony packag
ing as her husband now gets
buying bourbon.
Ribicoff, former secretary of
Health, Education and Welfare,
was the lead off witness at re
opening of hearings on legislation
to outlaw unfair labeling-packag
ing practices.
He said the pending measure
was a "public Interest bill in the
truest sense.'"
Ribicoff's view that the time
has come for action was backed
in prepared testimony by a phar
maceutical official who said the
packaging industry had adopted a
sit on their hands policy.
Lawrence H. Zahn. Summit,
N.J., director of purchasing and
package development at Ciba
Pharmaceutical Co., said the
household packaging industry gen
erally had "not yet grown to
sophistication and was not uni
fied for self-policing.
Zahn called the bill being con
sidered by the Senate antitrust
ind monopoly subcommittee
'livable piece of legislation for
the majority of the household con
sumer commodity producers.'"
Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich.
presiding at the U ulh-in-packaRing
hearings, put the argument on
high plane.
toning .
Connie FRANCIS
Paula PRENTISS
Russ TAMBLYN
Janis PAIGE
Ron RANDELL
Sj iA" ' COLOR CARTOON
Eight Seek
School Posts
DIINSMIMR - Dunsmuir ha
eight candidates for six school
board posts in the April 16 school
election.
Nominations on record in the
Siskiyou County Superintendent of
Schools' offiio on Friday, when
filing lime closed, show five can
didates for the four elementary
school posts and three candidates
lor the two posts on the high
school board.
Those filing fur elementary
school board seals are Mrs. Edmo
-nney, Noal Kluckman, and Ger
ild Spencer, incumbents, and Wil-
limn Ellington and Harry Arnold.
High school board candidates arc
Arthur Crowe and Herman Gray,
ncumbents, and Charles E. Inger
sol.
Nazi Faces
Murder Trial
FRANKFURT, Germany (UPD
Rcinhold Vorberg, the first ex
Nazi extradited by Spain, ar
rived here today to stand trial
for the alleged mass murder of
100.000 mentally retarded persons
during World War II.
In its request for Vnrberg's ex
tradition, the West German gov
ernment accused him of the mass
exterminations while helping Adolfl
Hitler carry out his plan for a
master race.
Vorberg was arrested in Barce
lona earlier this year on a re
quest from Bonn.
The former Nazi was taken
from Barcelona Prison this morn
ing and driven to the airport,
where he was bundled on to the
plane for Frankfurt.
End TONITE "COME SEPTEMBER" & "LOVER COME BACK"
ArW WILLIAM
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Ml capoci
s J ClNtMAScOPE H
Wt IQLOrc y PC LUXC
iwt 2xrz j 1 i v i i i i ii
rfff .lil'liH'M
BIG ROAR
OF
ENTERTAINMENT
EXCITEMENT
c nu
THE WAY!
Nurse Returns
From Workshop
Hildcgard Watkins, president
District No. 8. Oregon Nurses As
sociation, has returned from Port
land after attending a workshop
for officers of the district nurses
associations.
The workshop conducted by the
Oregon Nurses Association focused
on improvement of patient care
through the organized efforts of
members of the profession in nurs
ing. "Current legislation, Nursing In
Disaster, the Code of Ethics for
Professional Nurses, and Respon
sibility of the Profession for the
Quality of Practice of Us Mem
bers, were among the items under
consideration. Mrs. Watkins reported.
The need for recruiting more
men and women into Ihe nursing
professional and more ways to
help nurses meet obligations to the
patient and community were also
considered.
"The survival of our society
cannot depend on strength of
arms alone." his opening state
ment said. "We must also be con
cerned with values and standards
upon which our civilization is
based."
Those in industry flatly opposed
to any government action on the
packaging-labeling problem. Hart
said, arc the voice of Rip Van
Winkle in the Twentieth Century."
Ribicoff stressed that "standard
sizes and requirements of size in
relation to quantity have not hurt
Ihe liquor industry." Neither will
a requirement for "honest packag
ing be any hardship for the food
and allied industries," he said.
The Connecticut senator cited
three containers of baking powder
made by the same firm, all the
same size and price found in the
same store, but each with dif
ferent quantity.
Voluntary industry activity to
guard against deceptive packaging
has "existed for a long time,"
Ribicoff said. He cited the can
ning industry as one good ex
ample."
SALEM (UPD A demoralized
Oregon State Civil Defense organ
ization is beginning to fall apart.
Director Robert Sandstrom re
vealed that all seven of the agen
cy's clerical employes have given
notice, and that the first one
leaves her job next Tuesday.
"We also have two vacancies."
Sandstrom said, "but I am not
filling any vacancies now."
Sandstrom's comments came in
the wake of wide-ranging legisla
tive criticism of his agency and
threats to cut the CD budget lo
the bone. The agency was lashed
in legislative debate for alleged
failures during the 1959 Roseburg
explosion and the Columbus Day
windstorm last year.
Sandstrom said there is a de
moralized feeling tin ouaiiuul all
bs. i f;1;-'" f:' ''
izations.
Sandstrom said the Coos County
CD director called lo ";ind out
how to get rid of Civil Defense
property."
"I encouraged him to keep his
office open and to keep the pro
gram going in spite of lack of
leadership shown by the (Ways
and Means) subcommittee," Sand
strom said.
The state Civil Defense director.
who took over the agency's lead
ership on Jan. 1, said "never has
the legislature shown so much in
terest in civil defense.
"I'm not being sarcastic. I
think it's good that they are in
terested," he added.
Sandstrom explained "no mem
ber of the legislature, with one
exception, has been in this slate
office for years."
The exception, he said, was Sen
Vcrn Cook, D-Gresham, who visit
cd the office just before opening
Senate military affairs hearings
on the agency.
Obviously the legislators - are
not familiar with our program,"
he said. "I think they should be
come familiar with our program,
and our problems.
"We've never used a hard-sell
program, and we don't cry wolf
to panic people into joining Civil,"
Defense activities.
"Maybe that's been our prob-;
lem. Maybe we should have used
some hard-sell.
"But I think the jobs of the 2o!
people here are to work on plans
to save 1.800.000 lives.
"I think we need a Civil r.
fense program"
PAGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
Wednesday, March f, mj
French Coal
Rule Defied
PARIS (UPD-Franee's 200,000
coal miners defied the govern
ment's order that they return to
work or go to jail and held out
stubbornly today in a crippling
nation-wide strike aimed at win
ning a pay raise to beat the
climbing cost of living.
They were joined during Uic
day by an estimated 500,000 work
ers in other industries in brief
sympathy strikes against Presi
dent Charles de Gaulle's decision
to "requisition" the miners unless
they returned to the pits promptly
at the end of a 48-hour work sIod-
page called last Saturday.
Miners in the rich Lorraine coal
fields of eastern France started
the walkout lo back demands for
an 11 per cent pay boost over an
average monthly salary of $142.
Tile government told them to go
back to work promptly or be
'requisitioned" a form of draft
with penalties of possible jail
terms and loss of job and pension
rights.
The government order took ef
fect Monday in Lorraine. Miners
in the big Lens and Dnuai coal
fields in tile north had a holidav
Monday, but the requisition move
look effect against them today
when Ihcy stayed out.
In the Marseilles area and in
the coalfields around Grenoble in
the south, miners entered the
pits but refused for the second
day in a row tu go to work.
s the requisition order took full
effect, the Finance Ministry pub
lished the latest cost-of-living in
dex. It showed the figure for Jan
uary was 113.24, up 8.23 points
from last year's average. The in
dex uses July 11137 as the base
point of 10O.
PAY-AS-YOU-GO
ALBANY, N Y. (UPD - Demo-
cratic assemblyman Jules G.
Sabbatino said Monday night he
found the answer to what Repub
lican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller
means by "pay-as-you-go" in his
proposed revision of fees.
"When you die," he said, you
pay a dollar on your death cer
tificate and that's 'pay-as-you-go.
"
Ladies . . .
See Our
CARS IN WHITE!
see our
LA9Y IN WHITS
courtesy
WHITE
is riqht!
WHITE
aoes with
everything!
The prettiest car
display in town!
"WHITE
1 r 7
' V'A'''! &
We have a gift for you!
dies coming in to see
For all L
display . .
hi!
A Gift for you!
SALE
DICK B. MILLER CO.
Your OLDS-CADILLAC Dealer in Klamath Falls Since
7th and KUmath
936
Ph.
4-4154
Kit math Paifi, Ortft
Pll)Hht Mlly (MCtt Sat 1 tn4 SvfMlIf
Srvtn tvwtkira Or4
Nrthrn Calltornta
kv
KtamafU Pvtodtftln amay
Main at Itpianao
Pm TUittf Mill
W. ft. Swtlt4. fvtittr
InttrM at a-iia matter at fM
pl at Klamath Pant. OrM.
a Awtt ta, in. MMf att t c-
Mart S. lift laft4lati
aa pa at Klamrth ati, OrtfA
and at miittAal mailtf aNKt.
Camar
I Ma M
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Mall m AtfvaiK
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a MawttM tau
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WMMir 4 SMv. Iflc
UNHID - INTIt NATIONAL
AUDIT tURIAU OP CIRCULATION
tcrfart Rt racwviM. Hvar al
tMir NafaM t4 Nam. ta bjmmm
Tua Mill fcarara t P.M.
Dr. G. D. Massey
Said Improving
Dr. George DeWoody Massev.
well-known Klamath Kalis physi
cian, is progressing satisfactorily
at Hillside Hospital following a
heart attack at the family home.
Route I, Old Midland Hoad on
Saturday afternoon, March 2.
According to his doctor he will
probably be able to resume his
practice In two months.
No visitors are allowed.
WEDNESDAY
NIGHT
It Specie
LADIES'
NITE
i Sptcial Int
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(JBJJ