Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 17, 1963, Page 1, Image 1

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    COmP
Weather
Klmfti Fill, Tultltkt and Laktvitw
-Mostly fair and continutd warm
through Tuotdav. Lows tonight -.
High Tututay mj. Light variablt wind.
High Vt tarda? if
Low this morning u
High yaar ago 7
Low ytar ago if
Prtcip, past 24 hours tract
Sinct Jan. 1 5.42
Samt pariod last yaar 1.11
Weather
AGRICULTURAL FORECAST
Naar hundrtd par cant stiitahln Tues
day. Contlnuad warm with only light
winds. Heavy daw again tonight and
only a slight chanca of showars. Haying
and spraying outlook ts good to oxcsllanl.
Price Ten Cents 14 Pages
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY. JUNE 17, 1961
Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 71711
winter
In The-
Day's km
By FRANK JENKINS
The big news today? ,
IT'S A WOMAN.
Who is she?
Her name is Valentina Toresh.
kova. Her age is 26. In the best
communist tradition, she is a for
mer factory worker. Her favorite
sport was parachute iumoine.
That qualified her for cosmonaut
naming.
When it occurred to the by no
means dumb Russians that it
would be a fabulous publicity
stunt to send a woman into orbit,
liter choice was a natural.
What is she like?
She has dimples. She wore lip
slick into space. She has a small
spit curl as well as a yen for
high adventure. She is aware that
at this particular moment in his
tory she has a bigger audience
than even Liz Taylor. She smiles
frequently and waves greetings to
her watchers.
She's a BLONDE.
What do the women in her vast
audience think of her?
Oregon's Senator Maurine Neu
bcrger thinks Russia's orbiting of
a woman in space amounts to "a
kind of a show ..." She says
she thinks it will excite world
opinion, but adds: "Just for the
sake of putting a woman in space
1 wouldn't urge it right now. I
don't think we should try to emu
late the Russians right away."
She adds that "the venture will
have a favorable effect on Presi
dent Kennedy's space budget re
quests. We have a lot of people
who can't stand to see the Rus
sians get ahead of us. Maybe that
will make them willing to spend
more money."
At Cape Canaveral, the MEN
joked about her exploit, with vari
ations on the usual w heezes about
women drivers. (As a matter of
fact, women are GOOD drivers.
Few of them, lor example, are
at the wheels of the cars that do
the wrong things and thus get a
lot of people needlessly killed.)
in Frankfurt, Germany, seam
stress Emma Groth, age 62, says:
"Valentina has shown that women
can do anything a man can do.
She has proved that we women
also have the stulf that courage
is made of."
Hmmmmmmmmm.
How about our Annie Oakley, in
"Annie, Get Your Gun?" Her
war cry, aimed.at Frank Butler,
was: "Anything he can do, I can
do better."
Do you reckon that's tlie way
Valentina Tereshkova feels about
it? If so, Russian women are
coming to the front in a hurry.
Interesting question:
What's Valentina really like?
Helen of Troy "the face that
launched a thousand ships
The Amazons who burned off
their right breasts in order to be
better able In aim a bow?
No-o-o-o-o-o.
I think she's maybe a part of
this newer world ol ours . . . ine
business world ... in which wom
en are indispensable.
Ask any business tycoon
i jr just the boss of any modern,
fairly big business office. He'll tell
you that business in these days
just couldn't be run without wom
en. Maybe this fantastic world of
outer space tliat intrigues us so
greatly (hat we're spending our
selves poor to find out about it
can't be run without women.
Rights Bill
To Be Heard
WASHINGTON il'PI' - Presi
dent Kennedy's civil rights pro
gram will be sent to Congress
Wednesday afler the administra
tion makes some modifications
suggested hy Republicans, con
gressional leaders said today fol
lowing a White House conference.
The Democratic and Republican
leaders conferred with tire Chief
Executive to seek a basis for
agreement on key controversial
points of the program.
Senate GOP Leader Everett
Dirksen. III., told reporters he had
"worked over" the first draft of
the program during the weekend
and conveyed his succested "mod
ifications" this morning. He said
be would confer further with Sen
ate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield. Mont.
"I Lhmk there is an area of
agreement on a number of items
that I can join with Mike on,"
Dirksen added.
Dimpled Russian Girl In Orbit
May Rendezvous With Spaceman
MOSCOW (UPD-Russia's fifth
cosmonaut and the world's first
cosmonette, a dimpled single girl
who wore lipstick into space, rode
coniidently in their twin orbits to
day on a scientific mission that
may attempt a cosmic rendez
vous. Moscow Radio said the space
couple, Lt. Col. Valery F. Bykov
sky, 28, and Valentina Tereshko-
va, 26, slept well in their respec
tive capsules and began the day
with calesthenics. The radio said
both were in "top shape."
While it generally was believed
that 'Bykovsky and Miss Teresh
kova would try a link-up of their
ehicles in space, there was no
official, information on such s
plan, v
Miss Tereshkova, a brown
haired parachutist who insisted on
wearing make-up on her historic
mission, was fired into orbit Sun
day aboard the Vostok VI and
passed in "direct vicinity" of By
kovsky's Vostok V, which was
launched Friday.
Women Were Delighted
The cosmonette's feat set oft a
wave of delighted female reaction
across the world at the new
champion of women. Soviet Pre
mier Nikita S. hhrushchev ra
England's
Macmillan
Faces Test
LONDON (UPD Prime Minis
ter Harold Macmillan went into
the most important parliamentary
test of his career today, favored
to Win. out .over jvjc spread op
position on his handling of Die
Profumo scandal.
Virtually all political observers
and newspapers agreed the Con
servative party leader had suffi
cient support for a House of Com
mons vote of confidence that
would save his government from
collapse.
The 69-year-old "Unflappable
Mac" himself was reported confi
dent of victory on what the Daily
Herald called "the day of reckon
ing." Macmillan's political career was
at stake as well as the tone of
the Atlantic alliance. To a large
extent the outcome rested on
Macmillan's speech declaring he
i acted w ith the utmost honor and
integrity in the affair.
The Laborilcs said they would
concentrate on the security consid
erations rather than the moral as
pects of the scandal.
The prime minister's cabinet i
ministers, despite earlier reports
I of a possible revolt, pledged their
support, and Macmillan s lieuten
ants spent the weekend and this
morning muffling the party s rank
and file and members of parlia
ment. The scandal which brought on
the crucial debate started U days
ago when War Minister John Pro
fumo. 48, resigned after admitting
he lied in Commons about his
relationship with red-haired Chris-!
tine heeler, a 21-year-old party
girl.
Profumo told tlie House March
22 there was nothing improper
about his friendship with Miss
Keeler, but it turned out he was
having an illicit love affair with
her.
Tlie Profumo affair took on se-
curity implications when it was;
disclosed that Miss Keeler also
was the mistress of Soviet assist-l
ant naval attache Eugene Ivanov
during the time he and Profumo,
a married man. were meeting.
This disclosure led to demands by
the opposition Labor party for the
Commons debate.
Most political observers felt a
vote of confidence would he only
a temporary respite for Macmil
lan and that he would have to
step down under party and publicidav (hat ' wl a mass icondition issued Sunday by tlie
pressures some time this summer, j jy u,night to decide whether to jthree doctor, treating him said
The Laboritcs charged that Mac-; h0ir new demonstrations in dc-1 thai while Hoover remained in
millan was either negligent or i jance of a National Guard order, j very serious condition, he "is in
naive in failing to recognize thej Mrs. Glorida Richardson, head Inn pain and resting quietly."
seriousness ol the situation creat-;f ,jle Cambridge committee fori The doctors said there had been
ed by the rYoluiim(cler-lvanov jnon-violent action, bitterly cnt- "no evidence" of further intesli
love triangle. icued city leaders (or breaking nal bleeding within the .Ifi-hour
The whole affair set off a wave'off negotiaiions over Negro gricv-1 period preceding the bulletin but
of public indignation at the moral ances on Sunday. that Hoover's heart action was
aspects. This led to discontent
among the Conservatives who fear
'for their fate at the polls. The 'is "time for them to make known
j prestige of the Tories was at atheir position in a forthright
jlow ebb before the scandal broke. 'manner."
dioed her a message as she or
bited. "Now you see what women are
capable of," he said.
Khrushchev told the cosmonette,
"I am very glad and feel father
ly pride that it is our girl, a girl
from the land of the Soviets, that
is the first in space..."
Miss Tereshkova, a pretty lass
with a small spit curl and a yen
for high adventure, thanked the
Soviet leader and said she would
"spare nothing" to carry out her
assignment.
Moscow Radio said at 8 a.m.'
1'Hmi"mFmmmf- 's v.
UP IN SPACE Here
Tereshkova, first woman to
former textile worker and
may meet fellow cosmonaut
Women All
Pay Tribute
LONDON (UPD Women
around the world led the salutes
today to their new champion
Russia's Valentina Tereshkova,
the first female in space.
Queen Elizabeth of Britain sent
a message to Soviet President Leo
nid Brezhnev conveying her "very
warm congratulations" to the pio
neer cosmonette.
In Amsterdam, Fanny Blakcrs
Koen. the gold medal - winning
"flying housewife" of Hie 1948
Olympics, said:
Women can do great things jusi;she wccomc() the cosmonette's
Space Flight
Called Show
WASHINGTON ' U PI - Sen.
. : x li it.... r,A
Sunday that Russia's orbiting of
a woman in space amounted to
kind of show-
She said she thought it would
excite world opinion but said "just
for the sake of putting a woman
"!
into space I wouldn't urge it right I
now. . .this doesn't means that we I
sliould try to emulate them im
mediatelv." Mrs. Ncubergcr said she
thought tlie venture would have
a favorable effect on President
Kennedy's budget requests.
"We have some people who
can't stand to see Die Russians
get aneaa oi us. sne explains,
Negroes May
Hold Rally
lanemia and was bleeding from
CAMBRIDGE. Md. 'l'PI i the gastro-intestinal tract.
rimknliiA Vn rrrrt irva4irB ctlft tfvl Tli mnHir-al rMilllin fin Hi
j Calling on the city's white mud-
rates to speak out, she said it
' I a.m. EDTi that Valentina had
completed more than 14 orbits
and Bykovsky 45.
"All flight systems in the two
ships are functioning smoothly,"
the radio said. "The present hy
gienic conditions are being main
tained in the cabins of the ships."
Had Slept Well
The Tass news agency quoted
the cosmonette as saying she had
"slept well and was feeling fine."
lt said her pulse rate showed
"her sleep was calm."
The launching of Miss Teresh
kova as the world's first space
,-, ,.4 v- s ,. --aajjMaaiiaaaaa
is lipstick-wearing Valentina
be fired into orbit. She it a
experienced parachutist. She
in space. UPI Telephoto
Over World
To Russian
as well as men. That is nothing
new. 01 course, space was a man s
domain up to now and therefore
it seems wonderful ... 1 admire
that Russian girl. I think she is
great."
In Frankfurt, Germany, seam
stress Emma Groth. 62, said "Val
entina has shown that women can
do anything a man can do. She
has proven that we women also
have the stuff of courage."
In Copenhagen, television
weather girl Anne Jerichou said
i feat after the London scandal over
Christine Keeler.
"It looks as if Valentina is go
ing to be the woman face-saver
alter the recent adventures of a
more down-to-earth female," she
said.
Newspapers throughout Europe
hailed the Soviet feat of placing
a woman in orbit along w ith male
- ' '
"To the millions of underpriv
ileged women of the world, she
is a soaring symbol of feminine
emancipation," said London Daily
r-L - Duwlun-
v i""a v""'
Report Given
On Hoover
NEW YORK 'UPI I A team
of doctors and nurses continued
a round-the-clock watch today on
former President Herbert Hoover
who was reported still in "very
serious" condition sulfering from
anemia.
It was revealed Friday that
Hoover, 88. was suffering from
"somewhat irregular," and he
had a low-grade fever.
j The mediral team did not say
w hen the next bulletin would be
jissued.
woman brought to an even dozen
the number of persons who have
gone into space since Russia's Yu
ri Gagarin pioneered the cosmic
feats more than two years ago.
Soon alter she went aloft Sun
day the cosmonette chatted with
Bykovsky, a married man and jet
pilot, by radio. She laughed and
smiled as her picture was flashed
back to earth on television, and
happily accepted Khrushchev's
congratulations.
What plans Soviet scientists had
for the space couple were kept
secret for the time being. Miss
Tereshkova's code name is "Sea
gull" and Bykovsky's is "Hawk."
Second Group Flight
This was the second "group
flight" that presumably will test
new rendezvous techniques in
space. The first wa.. accomplished
last August by Maj. Andrian G.
Nikolayev and Lt. Col. Pavel
Popovich, whose Vostoks III and
IV came within about four miles
of each other.
A direct link-up of two ships in
space would be the first step to
ward the creation of a staging
platform for longer voyages to
the moon and the planets.
Both Valentina and Bykovsky
said they were a "close distance"
from each other. But they gave
no indication whether they were
within sight or as close as the
four miles that at one point sep
arated Nikolayev and Popovich.
Miss Tereshkova's spacecraft
was flying at 17.400 miles an hour,
taking her round the earth once'
every 85 minutes.
Moscow Radio said Miss Teresh
kova's orbit carried her 144.8
miles from the earth at its high
est point and 113.7 miles at its
lowest at an angle of about 65
degrees to the Equator.
Farther Into Space
This made her voyage about
two-thirds of a mile farther -int'i
space and two-thirds of a mile
closer to the earth than Bykov
sky's. Lack of information could mean
the launchings, highly complex
procedures, did not have the ac
curacy of those in which Nikola
yev and Popovich were placed in
to twin orbits, observers said.
The official government news
paper Izvestia ana tne ouiciai
Communist party newspaper Prav-
da both were filled today witn ex
tensive accounts of the launching
of Vostok VI with the cosmonette
aboard.
Bykovsky may be headed to
ward a possible eight-flay flight.
He already has taken dead-aim
on Nikolaycv's (H-orbit stint last
August.
But the big news was me cos
monette, whose name goes down
in history with those of other
fabulous women pioneers.
Publisher
Appointed
William Sweetland. Klamath
Falls, publisher of the Herald and
News, has been named to t n e
board of directors of Portland
Metropolitan Future Unlimited.
President of FMKU is I'aul .
McKee, chairman of the board of
Pacific Power and Light Compa
ny. The organization was created
to develop and lostcr a l.iio
acre major recreational complex
at Portland's North Gate
PMFU has retained the engin -
coring firm fcBAhCU services to
make a study of the various Port
land areas that could provide
pace and accessibility for the pro
ject.
The firm's oricinal recommen
dation to PMFU is for develop
ment of the Delta Park Vanpoil
area with estimated capital cosls
of J48.J9t.000. Major items in the
plan call for construction of a
multi-purpose stadium with a seat
ing capacity of 60.000: 18-hole golf
course: botanical gardens; chil
dren's park; natatorium: build -
ings and exposition space for fair -
grounds and Pacific International
Livestock Exposition, and other
facilities.
PMFU has been asked by the;" "J-1
newly formed Delta Park Rec
reation Commission to undertake a
$150,000 promotional program
Needed is a program that will
'provide public services, advertis
ling and promotional material.
jhrochurcs and social art work
opinion surveys, film clips and a
speaker's bureau to inform the
public of Delta Park proposals,
and possible bonding requirements
for facilities.
LINNEA SUNDQUIST
First Senior
In Contest
For Queen
By RCTH KING
The poet Longfellow compared
the Swedish language, "soft and
musical," to t h e "ripple of wa
ter over hidden stones." Ances
try originating in that country,
once called Sverige, has handed
down to a pretty senior rodeo
queen candidate that feminine
quality, a lovely voice.
Lmnea Stindquist, just 16, the
first candidate for senior compe
tition, has inherited the musical
speech of her forebears.
Top o' the list of her "loves,"
just under Dad and Mom and
lamily, are journalism and her
6-year-old bay, blaze-face quarter!'
horse, Topper. Topper is a one-
woman horse, trained by his rider
lor cow work. He lives away from
home in lush pasture but his
young mistress sees him just
about every day.
Lennea is no newcomer to com
petition this year. She tried out
in 1962. She has been riding at
least for 10 years, swims in the
cool, cool water of Lake of the
Woods, makes just about all her
own clothes aiid admirs to really
liking English.
She was born on May 28. 1947.
in Klamath Valley Hospital to
proud parents. Mr. and Mrs. John
Sunduuist, and is an only child
Linnea, with dark brown hair
and eyes, is willowy and graceful.
She is not complaining one whit
because she will be on the "early
shift come fall at Klamath Un-
ion High School. Seven o'clock
comes early but she will be in
class by that time because she
likes foreign languages, English,
geometry, typing and home eco
nomics.
And that is the story aboutl
Linnea.
Two 'Chute
From Plane
The crash of a Kingslcy Field
F-101 at 9:50 a m. Monday, June
17, was reported hy the base in
formation office. The incident oc
curred 20 miles northeast of Klam
ath Falls in a northeasterly direc
tion. According to (lie
Kingsleyj
sources, the pilot and radar oper
ator of the jet radioed they were
parachuting. Neither was identi
fied. Set Bruce Lattin of tlie Oregon
Slate Police reported at press-
lime that tlie radar operator of
the two-man crew of the downed
plane had been located. The sec
ond occupant of the aircraft, the
pilot, had not been found at that
! ,
Tlie radar operator, apparently
injured, was flown by Klamath
Aircraft Inc. air ambulance to the
Kingsley Field Disjiensary where
his injuries were reported not seri
ous. Slate police said the plane
crashed and burned four miles
northeast of Sprague River.
A police officer was at the scene
of the crash to help control sight
seers drawn to the wreckage.
1
l (
V7rGnCim ASKS
! IC1 Prnwor
NUERNBERG, Germany (UPI i
American evangelist Billy Gra
ham closed his Nuernberg crusade
Sunday by urging the German peo
ple to pray for President Kennedy.
"The President bears the heav-
lest responsibility of any man in
the world," Graham said. Gra-
ham planned to begin another
religious crusade in Stuttgart
ITucsday.
Supreme Court Declares
Schools Should Not Us
Lord's Prayer, Holy
WASHINGTON (UPD T h
Supreme Court ruled today thai
use of the Lord s Prayer and Bi-
ble reading as devotional opening
exercises in public schools is un
constitutional.
The court's opinion was de
livered by Justice Tom C. Clark.
The vole was 8 to 1 with Justice
Potter Stewart dissenting.
Clark declared: lhe place of
religion in our society is an ex
alted one, achieved through a
long tradition of reliance on the
home, the church and the in
violable citadel of the individual
heart and mind.
We have come to recognize
through bitter experience that it
is not within the power of gov
ernment to invade that citadel,
whether its purpose or effect be
to aid or oppose, to advance or
retard."
In the relationship between
man and religion, the state is
committed to a position of neu-
Petition
Filed On
Tax Boost
SALEM i UPI i A petition to re
fer the 196.1 legislature's $60 mil
lion revenue increase measure to
the voters was filed today with
the Secretary of State.
The petition was filed hy J.
Francyl Howard, who listed him
self as president of the Citizens
C o m m i 1 1 e e for Economy and
Equitable Taxation.
Elections Supervisor Jack
Thompson of the Secretary of
State's Office said the petition
was in proper order.
The tax increase measure has
not yet been signed by Gov. Mark
Hatfield.
Thompson said he would hold
the petition in his office until the
tax increase became law, either
with the governor's signature, or
on June 26.
Howard said he felt "the peo-!
pie should have a chance to vole
on this."
If he secures 23,186 signatures
on the referral petition, the lax
increase will be voted upon at a
special election to be held Oct. 15.
The legislature set aside $300,000
and the October dale lor a i-eler-ral
election in case voters ob
jected to the tax hike.
Howard said he had an alter
nate revenue proposal, but would
not outline it today.
Howard also declined to say
who else was involved in the Cit
izens Committee for Economy
and Equitable Taxation.
Howard, editor of the weekly
Albany Greater Oregon newspa
Der. told UPI Saturday thai a
group was preparing to refer the
legislature's revenue measure.
At that time he said his news
papers were not spearheading the
referral move.
4 ;
Xc'vJ 'Wfe,
I 'z - LI
- at .
aBaakaaaadawaaaHMmianww,
PARADE FLOAT TROPHY This Impraislvs first plaes revolving trophy for ths best
float in the Fourth of July Parade sponsored by tho Klamath Jaycaas will b passed on
to this year's new winner by Gary Woodrinq, left, director of the Parks and Recrea
tion Department. The department's float won the trophy last year. Virgil Biqby, right,
Jaycee parade chairman, urges Klamath organizations to sign up now to enter their
floats in this year's parade. New Jaycee president, Bob Crittenden, center, will pre.
sent the trophy to the new winner.
eUrality," the long-awaited opinion
concluded.
Clark said tlus neutrality is
"clearly and concisely stated in
the words of the First Amend
ment."
The First Amendment says,
"Congress shall make no law re
specting an establishment of re
ligion or prohibiting the free ex
ercise thereof." The same prohi
bition is applied to the states by
Lawmakers
Rap Ruling
On Religion
WASHINGTON (UPD - Con
gress reacted sharply today to the
Supreme Court ruling outlawing
Bitiie reading and use of the
lxnd's Prayer in public schools.
There was some talk of a pos
sible constitutional amendment to
preserve tlie practice.
Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt.,
said that "if it illegal to quote
the Bible or read the Lord's Pray
er in public schools it's illegal in
Congress, too. Aiken said tlie de
cision can be changed only by a
constitutional amendment.
Senale Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield, Mont, said only "the
Supreme Court has its function
we have ours." Asked if tlie
Senate would drop its opening
prayer, he replied quickly: "No,
sir!"
Son. Frank Carlson. R-Kan., who
heads the International Christian
Leadership movement, aaid:
"Prayer and religious service is
fundamental in the nation's his-
lory and I regret to see a decision
that in any way lessens the need
for sound principles that are so
basic.
Strike Still
Unsettled
PORTLAND i UPD - Federal
mediators reported no progress
toward ending the Northwest lum
ber strike today, although there
were no indications it would
spread beyond the 19,000 workers
now idled.
Mediator George Walker said he
had made no progress toward
bringing tho International Wood
workers of America (IWA) or tlie
Lumber and Saw mill Workers Un
ion lUSWl together with repre
sentatives of tlie "Big Six" of the
Northwest wood products indus
try-
r he unions are on strike against
St. Regis Paper Co. and U. S.
Plywood Corp., and are locked out
at Weyerhaeuser, International
Paper, itayonicr and Crown Zcl
lerbach. Both unions have filed
charges of unfair labor practices.
the 14th Amendment under pre
vious Supreme Court decision
The court cited both amend
ments last year In ruling out use
New York schools of a 22-
word non - denominational slate
written prayer.
That opinion also was 8 to 1 with
Stewart dissenting.
The Lord s Prayer case was
brought by a Baltimore mother,
Mrs. Madalyn E. Murray, and her
son, William J. Murray HI, both
atheists. They challenged a 1905
rule of the board of school com
missioners requiring reading the
Bible and - or recitation of tho
Lord's Prayer without comment
every morning.
The Maryland Court o: Appeals
upheld the practice on April 6,
1962, by a 4 to 3 vote.
The Pennsylvania case was ini
tiated by a Unitarian couple, Mr.
and Mrs. Edward L. Schempp,
who have two children in Abing
ton High School. A 1913 state law
requires that 10 verses of tlie
Bible be read without comment
at the opening of each school day
a practice dating back to colon
ial times.
The program is carried on by
means of a loudspeaker by the
students in tne school s television
workshop. The court was told that
the school buys the King James
verion of the Bible but that the
pupils normally read their own
tlie revised version, Douay and
others.
According to custom, the Lord's
Prayer follows, although tlie law
docs not mention it.
A special three-judge federal
court in Philadelphia ruled the ex
ercises unconstitutional on Feb. 1,
1962, as a violation of the First
Amendment. . . .
Stewart, in a blislorins dissent.
accused his colleagues of tramp
ling on the First Amendment's
uua,rantM -' "tf freedom
" " " T" ,
m.!a a on an
"We err. . .if we do not recog
nize, as a matter of history and
as a matter of the imperatives of
our free society, that religion and
government must necessarily in
teract in countless ways," Stew
art said.
Stewart charged that today's
ruling actually interferes with the
religious freedom of parents
"who want their children exposed
to religious influences" in school.
For a compulsory state educa
tional system so structures a
child's life that if religious exer
cises arc held to be an impermis
sable activity in schools, religion
is placed at an artificial and
state-created disadvantage," ho
said.
Stewart continued: "Viewed in
this light, permission of such ex
ercises for those who want them
necessary if the schools are
truly to be neutral in the matter
of religion. And a refusal to per
mit religious exercises thus is
seen, not as the realization of state
neutrality, but rather as the es
tablishment of a religion of secu
larism, or at tho least, as gov
ernment support of the beliefs of
those who think that religious ex
ercises should be conducted only
In private."