- Temperatures during the 24
"hours ending at 4 a m. PST today.
- High Low
Astoria 56 44
Baker 64 36
Brookings 55 43
Mcdford 66 45
North Bend 59 47
Pendleton 6 55
Portland 67 44
. Redmond 69 39
; Salem 68 4:
.The Dalles 65 41
Chicago 38 27
.Los Anceles 78 56
I New York 39 33
San Francisco 66 41)
Washincton 57 33
.' The Dalles and Hood River
Cloudy; winds easterly 10 - 20;
hiRlis 55-60. lows 40-45.
Bend. Baker and La Grande
Partly cloudy, with chance o(
showers in the mountains; higlis
55-60. lows 38-43.
Northern California: Rain
.-spreading southward through Frl-
day.
Ski Report
- Timberline: Roads clear; total
snow 70 inches, no new snow;
Jsnow packed; temperature 34 at
'7 a.m.; skiing good
Ml. Bachelor; Temperature 32.
high overcast: no new snow; 87
inch total; variable surface; ski
ing good; facilities operating
roads bare
Weather Roundup Busy Time
Forecasted
At Canaveral
I PAGE SA
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
Brown Poses
Reform Plan
SAr-RAMENTO (UPI) Gov.
vMti.si-rl C. Rmum t n d A v
proposed an "extensive but cau
tious" plan for reorganization of
state government to the 196J
legislature.
He called the program a "con
servative and logical" extension
of the first stage reforms put
into effect by the 1961 legisla
lure.
' "I have no doubt they will
arouse controvery," he said in a
special message to the lawmak-
.... t .-I.. it
prs. II is, unionunateiy, me na
ture of government to multiply
rather than simplify its func
tions.
"But controversy must not di
vert us from answering posltlviely
the question that confronts gov-
ernment at all levels today: How
Mn u'a corva lh rwinln more
efficiently, more responsively and
more economically?"
One proposal was a sort ot
catch-all. It was a constitutional
amendment granting the governor
sweeping reorgantoation powers
nhlnH in thfl leoisiativa veto.
Under this part of the program
Brown would be able to transfer
any unit of government to anoth
er, consolidate functions within
unit, abolish part of all of the
; functions of any jurisdiction and
- abolish any unit whose functions
are obsolete.
Mailers OK
Pact Terms
NEW YORK 1 1 PI i - Striking
mailers came to terms early to
day with newspaper publishers,
causing pressure to muunl for
printers to end their 104-day-old
dispute with eight shut-down pa
pers.
Mayor Hubert I: Wagner an
nounced he had obtained the huge
Madison Square Garden and city
voting machines for a printers
meeting scheduled Sunday. He
urged them to reconsider their re
iection of a publishers' ofler.
Thomas Laura, president of
Mailers Local 6, said his union's
settlement included a money pack
age in the area of the $12.63 pack
age turned down lat Sunday by
Local 6 of the International Typo
graphical Union. Mailers will hold
a ratification meeting Sunday
The results of the vote in which
ITU Local 6 rejected settlement
by a slim 64 votes were attributed
in part to the smallncss of the
Manhattan Center, site of the bal
loting. Only 3,178 of 11,000 eligible
printers voted.
Elmer Brown, ITU president
has threatened action unless local
makes a move quickly. He
might direct withdrawal of strike
benefits going to Local 6 members.
But Bertram Powers, Local f
president, has declined to order a
new balloting. Sunday's meeting is
a regular monthly session. Any
rank and file member could make
a motion from the floor that a spe
cial meeting be held to reconsider
There are only three things
that can happen," Powers said.
The publishers have got to re
consider, the union has got to re
consider, or the strike will con
tinue."
Cubans Join
U.S. Forces
Youngsters
Admit Thefts
SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPD-A 13-year-old
San Jose boy and his
brother, 11, readily admitted to
police Wednesday that they looted
four San Jose schools, filched
money from a church poorbox on
six occasions, committed thefts
In several stores and touched off
a $130,000 fire.
Juvenile officers said the boys
claimed they were inspired by a
television show which depicted a
gang of youthful thieves at work
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI I -
America's 10.000-mile space-age
shooting gallery is going to get
bigger, busier and better in the
next few years.
That's the word from Dr. G.
K. Hess, chief scientist of the huge
Air Force missile test center at
Cape Canaveral.
A total of 154 ballistic and
aerodynamic missiles and 343
weather rockets were fired from
the Cape in 12-but that was
only a sample, Hess told more
than 800 of the nation's top scien
tists and engineers at the closing
session of a three-day space flight
testing conference Wednesday,
He said forecasts indicate the
"work load of missile testing will
remain approximately constant
for several years.
But this is only the start. In
addition, Hess said, Cape Canav
eral will be handling two giant
new programs, the Gemini project
to put two-man teams of U.S.
astronauts into orbit around earth
and the Apollo project to land
men on the moon this decade.
The scientists and technicians
attending the conference, spon
sored by the American Institute
of Aeronautics and Astronautics
had a chance Wednesday to see
the growth of which Hess spoke.
Some 230 of them took a tour
of the sprawling 15,000-acre cape
testing station.
This 15,000 acres, the chief
scientist pointed out, will grow
to more than 100.000 acres with
the addition of facilities of ad
joining Merrit Island for the moon
bound Apollo program.
. : '.HO. f if 4
jtkf )m-
Defense Chiefs Testimony
MIAMI (UPI) - The U. S.
armed forces expect to take in
about 450 of 635 Cuban Invasion
brigade members who applied for
special training.
Col. Jess Unger reported
Wednesday that processing of the
applications from the exile invad
ers still Is under way, but that
it's certain" about 185 of the
men will be rejected for such rou
tine reasons as physical, mental
or moral deficiencies, or for se
curity reasons. The brigade num
bered about 2,500 men.
Unger said about 210 of the
men being Inducted would go into
the service as officers for a spe
cial 15-week training course, and
that of those 142 have picked the
Army.
Of 240 enlisted men being taken
in, Hie big majority chose the
Army and will be given 22 weeks,
of training at Ft. Jackson, S. C
Saturn Shot
Slated Soon
NEW YORK (UPIi-Dr. WernJ
her von Braun, developer of the
United Slates Redstone missile,
announced Wednesday that the
fourth giant Saturn I missile will
be hurled into space next week at
Cape Canaveral.
The rocket is an experimental
vehicle preliminary to the Saturn
C5 missile which is designed to
put two American astronauts on
the moon before 1970.
Von Braun said the missile is on
the launch pad at Canaveral tin
dcrgoing checkout. Only the first
stage will be tested next week as
was done in the three previous
launches. The other stages of the
rocket will be inert and filled with
about 100 tons of water for bal
last.
The moon mission, dubbed Proj
ect Apollo, will cost about $20 bil
lion, about 10 times the cost of
the Manhattan project which pro
duced the first atomic bomb dur
ing World War II.
DOOM OMM
TONITI 4i4S
Every boy needs a'mother"
even it Vaa h8S TO marry ntn i
of ddie!s FtW
m A
'Glenn FORD
IN
CO.0R
STELLA STEVENS - DINA MERRILL- ROBERTA SHEKtVOOO -RONNY HOWARD
Glenn FORD
Shirley JONES
Nation Greets
Cheery Spring
By I'nlted Press International
Spring cheerfully greeted most
nf an impatient nation today. But
the East still felt the effects of
one of the nation's most cruel
winters.
Spring bowed in at 3:20 a.m.
EST with fair skies and comfort
able, warming temperatures
across much of the land.
But snow fell this morning In
the mountainous area where Ten
nessee, Virginia and North Caro
lina meet, and spread lightly over
wide sections of those stales.
In sliarp contrast was Miami
Beach, where a 91-degree read-
ling Wednesday set a March rec
nrd for the resort city.
DOORS OPEN TONITE AT :30
ADULTS $1.00
KIDS (Under 12) 50c
LMISHm
That
Preposterous
Professor
is on
the loose-
again! v;
V 7 X - A Professor jr?
tort f
A- fiP; the loosed V
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HlIU'MVMiar,ir.liCO Ml 1 1.' WO OJJet WCytKmi
CHICAGO UPI - Chicago's
police, who had hoped they were
clean, searched the underworld
and their own kind today for the
men who ambushed "babbling
burglar" Richard Morrison outside
the Cook County Criminal Courts
Building.
Roswell T. Spencer, chief inves.
tigator for the state's attorney's
office and last year's Democratic
candidate for sheriff, laid it on
the line when he said:
"It's logical to assume there is
a connection between the shooting
and the scandal incident that
Morrison broke."
That was when the dapper,
youthful squealer reported illegal
activities of eight policemen and
turned the Chicago police depart
ment. upside down.
There are a lot of people who
would like to see me dead," Mor
rison said.
Made Underworld Enemies
Veteran investigators with or
ders to "bring the culprit to jus
tice" said Morrison had made en
emies in the underworld, where
"squealing" is frowned upon. And
they said there were probably ex
policemen their careers blighted
by his stories of burglars-in-bhie
who would rather see Morrison
dead than alive.
Police guarded Morrison's room
in Cook County hospital where he
underwent surgery on his arm
Morrison was gunned from a slow
moving car late Wednesday as he
and another informer, Jerry Bos-
suyt, walked away from the steps
of the criminal courts building
The shooting came less than
two weeks before Chicago s ma
voralty election and only three
weeks after Alderman Benjamin
F. Lewis, powerful West Side Ne
gro politician, was handcuffed
and killed in a gangstyle "Chi
nese execution."
Bossuyt said he and Morrison.
!6, had just returned from Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., where they had
been celebrating Morrison's acqu
tal in a burglary trial earlier this
month. A West Palm Beach jury
acquitted Morrison of trying to
crack a drugstore sale.
Hears Shot
Bossuyt said he and Morrison,
who had testified in an insurance
burglary trial here, were walking
west on 2tth Street to Morrison's
car when he heard . a shot.
I ducked into a squat." he
said. "Then I heard another shot
and Dick yelled. 'Help. Help me
I've been shot.' "
Bossuyt said he was sure the
gunmen were aiming at .Morrison
and not at him.
Morrison credited Bossuyt with
saving his life by shoving him
Itiickly to the side as the ambush
car ncaren me euro.
He said the first blast struck
him and "four or five others'
missed. Bossuyt. who was taken
into protective custody, said he
couldn't remember pushing Mor
rison. "It happened so fast," Bossuyt
said. "1 just ducked and ran."
Tears Into Arm
The blast tore into Morrison's
arm and left sltouldcr. The rest
hit a utility pole.
Morrison touched off the scan-
Klamath Falti, Orefen
Pukluhttf daily (e.capl Sal I at Sunnav
Ssrvlno SMitftern Ortfftn
an Northern Caliterni.
Klamath Ruhliihino Cemeany
Mam at Itplanaee
Rh.na TUtada 4-aitl
W. 1. Swaatlaml, Publtasar
ntatM at tacand-claia matlar at rsa
oil a'ttta at KlamatH Pant. Oraaan.
an Autuat ta. llaa. vndar act Can-
ratt. Marts , i$7t. scana.iai
aaa aa at Kiamttn pant, oratat.
and at ddditianal mailif dtfxai.
Carridr
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Carrlar and Daalara
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WASHINGTON 'CPU - Depu
ty Defense Secretary Roswell Gil-
patric was scheduled to appear be
fore Senate investigators today to
answer questions about the "uni
dentified Pentagon spokesman"
who criticized the TFX airplane
inquiry.
Defense Secretary Robert S. Mc
Namara. at his own request, was
to appear later in the day to testi
fy about his decision to award
the multi-billion dollar TFX con
tract to General Dynamics rath
er than Boeing Aircraft Co.
Chairman John L. McClellan, D
Ark., of the investigating subcom
mittee said the anonymous author
of critical comments about the in
quiry should be known to tne
public. I do not think they should
he issued and the author hide be
hind anonymity."
A Pentagon spokesman implied
in weekend news stories that Sen.
Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., was
pushing the hearings to help his
chances for re-election in 1964.
Other congressional hews:
Drugs: A psychiatrist warned to
day there is evidence of wide
spread misuse of tranquilizer
drugs in the United States, and
predicted "things will get worse
before they get better." In testi
mony before a Senate government
operations subcommittee. Dr.
PVil7 A PVnvHnn nf Ihp Katinnal
dal that rocked the Chicago po-stores and businesses, and then: Institute of Mental Health said a
AMBUSHED INFORMANT Richard Morrison, the "babbling burglar" who touched
off Chicago's cops-turned-robberi police scandal, was ambushed and wounded as he
walked out of the Cook County criminal courts building in Chicago Wednesday. Mor
rison is shown being attended by a doctor a,t the county hospital for a bullet wound
in the left arm. UPI Telephoto
'Babbling Burglar1 Ambushed
In City's Crooked Cop Case
prescriptions suggested "evidence
to support the impression of very
considerable overuse if not abuse
of some of these dings."
Packaging: Oddly designed glass
bottles, such as those with pinched
middles or long necks, are serving
the public "as never before," a
glass maker told Congress in pre
pared testimony. Robert E. Gra
ham, Owens-Illinois Glass Co. ex
ecutive, told a Senate committee
considering a "truth-in packaging"
bill that government regulation of
the industry is not needed. The
bill should only require a "clear.
legible statement nf the quantity
of contents" on the package, , he
said.
School Aid: The House Rules
Committee Wednesday relused to
let the House vote on President
Kennedy's $237 million medical
school aid program. Democrats
had set a vote on the measure
for next week expecting Rules
Committee approval. The commit
tee, however, relused to permit
the bill to go to the House floor
for a vote. With the action, it
now appears it will be after the
Easter recess before Congress
votes on the proposal.
Brrntanoi West German parlia
mentary leader and Henrich Von
Brentano, after meeting with
House and Senate Foreign Rela
tions groups, told newsmen the
recently signed German-French
friendship pact would strengthen
Europe and the entire NATO; al
liance. ;
Youth: Congressional absentee
ism has made chances slim that
President Kennedy's youth em
ployment tiill will be passed hy
Easter. Although behind in. its
Ischedule, a Senate subcommittee
cleared its version Wednesday.
But the House Education and La
bor Committee, after two days
of work on the bill failed to get a
quorum and adjourned. President
Kennedy had asked that congres
sional action be completed by
April 14.
lice department and Mayor Rich
ard J. Daley's administration in
January. lOfiO.
Arrested on burglary charges,
he told investigators that eight
policemen helped him "case"
prospective burglary sites, stood
by in squad cars while he looted
helped him cart away loot rang- study he made of mental health
ing from cigarette lighters and
television sets to outboard mo
tors. Secret squads of police arrest
ed the policemen on Jan. 14, 1962,
and rounded up four carloads of
loot.
COLLECTOR'S ITEtylS
Salem pressed glassware. Guar
anteed to turn purple. Goblets
and jam jars. Colonial hob
nail vases.
GAY'S GIFT SHOP 219 Main
OPEN TILL
10:00 P.M.
7 Days a Week
Always An Attendant
To Serve You!
J. W. KERNS
LAUNDRY AND CLtANINO
W I L I A G B
734 So. 6th
TU 4-4197
Farewell to
ART KAY
, and his
COMEDAIRES
It's th FINAL WEEK for thii
group of wonderful entertain
trs. Come in and enoy the
FUN IN THE PINES. Dancing
9 till 2 . . . and tha most
wonderful charbroiled steaks in
town.
WiSSard Hotel's
PONDEROSA ROOM
205 Main
Sga V i "s'Tf.rtu..". II SHU
N.w lam llpqa 5iSf ' Heavenly bridal set features
'!".,.., j DIAMOND RINGS
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1 ' 701 Main
SEE
Open 9:30 A.M. 5:30 P.M.