Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 19, 1963, Page 1, Image 1

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    .., ji". ovr 1 ir,:i
In The-
Weather
Klamath Falli, Tultlakt and Laktviaw:
Mostly fair and cool tonight with lowi
40-41. Thursday Partly cloudy and warm
wtth afternoon and evening thowart or
thunder showers. Might Thursday 75-10.
Winds westerly S-1S m.p.h.
High yesterday 17
Low this morning 44
High year ago 13
Low year ago 47
Precip. past 24 hours .14
Since Jan. I s.3l
Same period last year 1.11
G't.N.:til'.AN,) iocuy.yf.
Day's lews
Weather
AGRICULTURAL FORECAST
Sivanty per cint umshlM with M
per cinl chanc of lowra Thursday.
Coolar tonight with heavy daw. Soli tem
perature 43 degree. Haying and spraying
outlook fair to good with only scattered
showers Indicated next faw days,
Jj &!;, 01 i'
Price Ten Cents .20 Pages
KLAMATH FALLS, ORKGOX, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1963
Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 7172
mil.. u
A
ra
By FRANK JENKINS
The news today?
Here's a briefing:
Liz and Burton lo wed as soon
as both can get free from existing
ball-and-chains maybe about Oc
tober. It will be Liz's fifth and
Burton's second.
In San Francisco, the nation's
first Longevity Foundation is
corporated. Among its projects
will be research on long-term
storage and TRANSPLANTATION
(1 such vital organs as the
heart, kidney, liver and bone
marrow. The idea? When some
thing essential begins to wear
out, you U go to the shop and
nave a new part installed.
In London, Former War Minis-
ter Profumo, whose affair with a
red headed call girl nearly
Drought down the British govern
ment, returns to London his wife
on his arm and "profound remorse
in his heart. (Why the remorse?
He got caught.)
In San Francisco, after paying
an expert $55,000 to make a study.
they get the sickening news that,
the Candlestick Park wind that
makes life miserable for the fans
can't be done away with. The
best - that can be done is to
CHANGE IT and make it blow
from another direction.
And-
In Washington, it is revealed
that approximately 10,000 one-
dollar urns containing mis
matched serial numbers have
been printed and sent into cir-1
dilation. The error is apparently
one of the worst in the "almost
impeccable" history of the Bu
reau of Engraving and Printing.
The heck of it is that they
can't be sold at high prices to
collectors as were the stamps
that got bungled a while back.
Shucks! Let's talk about outer
space.
As this is written, Russian Cos
monaut Bykovsky is in his fifth
day out there, He has traveled
somewhat more than 1.8O0.O00
miles. His dimpled space com
rade has traveled about half that
far.
The moon's average distance
from the earth is 238.000 miles.
(At its perigee, or nearst point, it
is 221.000 miles off. At Its apogee,'
or farthest point, it is 253,000
miles away.)
At its average distance,
round trip to the moon would
be about 476,000 miles, ho By
sky has traveled the rough .equiva
lent of four round trips to the
moon. Which is to say, he is
the world's lop traveler from the
standpoint of distance.
There was a time when a round-the-world
traveler was SOME
BODY. Those days are gone
where the woodbine twineth.
What's a mere 25,000 miles in
this age?
Question:
How did the moon get started?
G. H. Darwin, son of Charles
Robert Darwin, founder of the
theory of evolution, theorized that
the moon was once a part of the
earth. According to him, the
earth at that time was in a semi-
liquid or plastic condition. As it
spun around, it passed first
the shape of a pear, then intoj
the shape of an hourglass and:
fir,allv intn ihe (orm of a dumb-
bell, with unequal weights at the'
end.
.it.. ,iu..hv, on-,. .hJica. meeting without union prosi
two weights of the durnbbclUep-
.
J kA .m.iu. , k
u
came the moon.
One of the most interesting su
perstitions about the moon con
cerns its supposed effect on in
sanity. Our word LUNACY comes
from the Latin word LUNA,
meaning moon. Lunatics once
were supposed to have become
insane Irom gazing at the moon.
Hmmmmmmmmm.
It sounds reasonable.
Mabe that's how tliese lunatics
who are proposing to spend $40
BILLION to put mn Bn lhe
moon got that way. ,
Cardinals
vTtr.tv rrrv it'Pli The'lhetr time eettine settled in theirline the conclave ere Joisef Car-1
Roman Catholic College of Cardi-I
na t held a unai .naj'S ana cun-
ii lotions todav. pr
epiiratory to
mtlerine a secret conclave for thelitis morninc in St. Peter's Ba-
most important papal election oliMlica, hokt the last of a series ofjria Cardinal I)e La Torre, 66, o(
modern times. daily moclines that hesan nn'Quilo. Ecuador, who is ill.
The SO princes of the churchljiine 4. tiie day alter Pope John! More cardinals from more na
present for the election of Popej.XXIII died, and then proceed in lions were participating in this
John's successor were scheduled 'procession into the Sistinc Chap-lcomlave than any previous pa-
to enter Ibe sealed-of! conclavejcl. cutting off contact with the,
area of the Vatican's apostoiic
palace at 6 p. m 'lpm. EDT1.
They will not come out until they
rhoo-e a new leader of the
world's half billion Catholics.
Actual balloting docs not beam
until Thursday morning. After en
tering the conciave area this eve
ning, the cardinals will spend
mi f lacfal
Wield
To Tax Referral Measure
SALEM lUPIl Opposition to a
referral of the 1963 legislature's
tax increase measure, and strong
support for a planned initiative
movement for a new state con
stitution was voiced today by
Gov. Mark Hatfield.
He said he hoped the p u b 1 i c
L7l'W y
"fill lib '1.
w EM. J;k V;:' .''rt:
ammiu 'H Mi-r-,, y ,MsasM.
SPACEWOMAN? Aviatrix Jerrie Cobb, America's
leading potential lady astronaut, says she is proud a
female has made the trip into space but is disappointed
the first one was a Russian. Miss Cobb has passed the
same physical tests as the men astronauts.
UPI Wirephoto
West's lumbermen Ask
Foreign Freighter Use
WASHINGTON UPH - Pacific
Northwest lumbermen renewed
demands Tuesday to be allowed
to use foreign ships to carry lum
ber to U.S. East Coast ports.
A group headed by Joseph Mc
Cracken. executive vice president
of the Western Forest Industries
Association, Portland, Ore.,
opened a campaign to get con
gressional support for amendment
of the Jones Act.
The lumbermen said the act.
Sfee! Union
0c4 RritQT
J'lCCl Dl Iwl
PnTSBt HGH H'PI'-Tho In-
tcrnational Executive Board ol
lont David J' McDonald held a ifor Canada to take over 500 mil
Fiun.minnla ociin tnrlu then on.li:. i r n. 11 t-
nvc-minuie sessKin uxiay viiett au
;journed to await a meeting of the
f,. .. B
Wage Po icy Committee.
McDonald bypassed the Execu-
live Board conclave, described by
one member as the shortest ever.
to continue crash negotiations
with management representatives
of the Human Relations Commit
tee i unci.
McDonald was to meet later to
day with the 170-member Wage
Policy Committee, the union's fi
nal bargaining agent.
Those negotiations were under-
taken amid growing concern that
formal talks will be necessary to
(reach contract agreement.
Meet To
"cells."
me av s scmtiuip inuti im
the cardinals to celohrate Mass
outside world
Chun h circles m Home said the
election is tiie most important in
modern times. The choice of Ihe
next Pof will determine whether
John's bold church reforms and,Monlini, 6-V the "liberal' arch
drive toward Christian unity willlbishnp of Milan. He was a close
be continued. tiend of Pope John and was a
The two cardinals not attend-, top contender to succeed Pius XII.
Takes Exception
would not support the tax increase
referral.
"1 do not think it is wise be
cause in all probability it would
necessitate a special session of
the legislature, he said.
"I think the recent 1-il-day ses
sion was enough. The legislature
which limits intercoastal trade to
U.S. vessels, has put them at a
serious disadvantage in competing
with Canadian lumber producers.
By using foreign ships, they
said, Canadians can ship lumber
cheaper from British Columbia to
U.S. ports.
McCracken, who termed the act
a "reverse tariff." said it. in ef
fect, gave the Canadian lumber
industry a "guaranteed subsidy."
The Jones Act was passed orig
inally to guarantee maintenance
of a U.S. merchant fleet for de
fense purposes, he said.
McCracken said the immediate
objective of the group was exten
sion of a one-year exemption the
lumber industry got last year to
allow use of foreign vessels to
ship lumber to Puerto Rico.
"The Puerto Rican exemption
only scratches the surface," Mc
Cracken said, adding that the
Jones Act had made it possible
lion board feet of tlic U.S. mar
ket on the East Coast since 10.
"There used to be as many as
140 ships in the intcrcoastal lum
ber trade," he said. "Now there
are 16."
"There used to be some 30 lum
ber mills in Portland. Ore., alone.
Now tliere are three."
Stanley Bisliopric of the Dant
and Itu.-seil Lumber Co., Port
land, told newsmen that if the
cost of shipping lumber from U.S
West Coast ports could be reduced,
to the Canadian figure of 122 per
thousand board feet H would re-
i suit in lower lumber prices on the
iEasI Coast.
1
rIi n"iNaiisf
Select New Pope
jehnal Mindszcnty. who has been
in uie v;.o. h-mii"" -m
since tlx? Hungarian rcvou was
crushed in l!'.Vi, and Carlos Ma-
pal election, in tne vjjH conclave
j w nich elected jonn to succeed ine
I Idle Pius XII. 51 cardinals took
; part.
The top favorite as next pontill
'was Ciovanni Baitista Cardinal
Sidle
has already demonstrated that
this is the best bill that they
could come up with.
Hatfield added: "If they
couldn't draft an acceptable pack
age in 141 days, you can't expect
more of the legislature in a spec
ial session.
A preliminary Detition to refer
the lax measure was filed with
tiie secretary of state Monday by
J. Francyl Howard, editor and
publisher of weekly newspapers at
Albany and Corvallis.
On the question oj a new con
stitution, Hatfield termed the
planned initiative movement "an
excellent idea."
'"I regret that the people are
forced to take this action because
of the Senate's failure to refer
the new constitution to the people
for a vote," he said.
During the recent legislative
session, the proposed new state
constitution won approval in the
House, but failed by three votes
of receiving the two-thirds ma
jority it needed in the Senate.
Macmillan's
Position
Still Shaky
LONDON I UPI I Prime Min
ister Harold Macmillan sought to
work out an agreement vith the
opposition Labor party today on
further investigation Into the Pro
fumo affair that threatens to
force his resignation.
Even as Macmillan prepared
for today's meeting with Labor
party leader Harold Wilson, out
spoken Conservatives were dis
cussing possible successors to the
09-year-old prime minister.
Wilson was expected to press
rr an invficl ioal inO mmmilM
with broad powers to requisition
any document or subpoena any
witness in a searching prolic of
the scandal centered on resigned
War Minister John Profumo.
Conservatives feared such a
committee might subject their
party to (urther embarrassment.
Macmillan had first offered the
more discreet investigation of a
privy councillor's inquiry, to be
followed by a tribunal if neces
sary.
Inlormed observers said it was
only a matter of time before the
Conservatives force Macmillan tojpossibly to certify the space rcc
make way for a younger man. lords were on hand to meet the
The government crisis erupted
when Profumo, 48, admitted he
lied in Uie House of Commons
about his relationship with Chris
tine Keeler, a 21-year-old party
girl. Profumo said there was no-
thing improper about the relation-
ship, but it later tunned out he
was having an illicit love affair
with her.
The affair took on security
implications when Miss Keeler
reveaieo sne was ,e .
me .oviev assisiam uava, at
tache at the time she was see
ing Profumo.
Top choices to succeed Mac-
millan appeared to be Deputy
Premier ft. A. iRabi Butler. 60.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Beg-
lnald Maudling. 46. and .Science
lini!ilpr v'L'''0"nt Hailsham. S.'i.
Other leadms candidates in -
eluded Gregory Peter Cardinal'' :,u,''ce William Mi'M-'AI'
a.i.mi, m, iir v.i uicnnm
who heads the church's mission-
aru seruiri..- fWrnrm Cardinal
Le'riaro. 71, the archbishop of
Bologna : Ernesto Cardinal Huf -
lini. 75. an hhishnn of Palermo:
(iiovanna Cardinal Urbani, M. Pa -
tnarch of Venire, and Carlo Car-
dinal Confaloniere, m, curia
member.
More often than not. however.
the College of Cardinals has notiJolieV refusal to discWe the
named a favorite. Pope John, then! names of his former colleagues
Angelo Oiuscoue Cardinal Ron-i lor fear that it would harm them
calli. was relatively unknown
w hen he was elected in 19.'jR. j
Election requires a two-thirds'
majority of the cardinals present. !
,iru.iw:i
'"H.
h '
THE RAINS CAME Motorists quickly recalled the deluge of two years ago that
brought mud and boulders sliding down off the hills and flooded the underpasses all
over town, as the rain poured down in a roof pounding blast Tuesday. The airport
weather station reported three-fourths of an inch of rain fell in a 40-minute period. The
Main Street underpass at the East Main Street intersection was passable in passenger
cars, but Oh ! I ! those scooter riders.
Russian Space Team Returns
MOSCOW lUPli-The world's,
first man and woman space team
returned to earth safely today.
rirst to land was Valcntina
Tercshkova, lirst woman to soar
through space. She was followed
more than two hours later by
cosmonaut Valery K. Bykovsky,
who set new space and distacce
records with a flight of nearly
five days around the earth.
The official Soviet news agency
Tass announced the lundim?.
Miss Tereslikova. a 2ti-yea-old
bachelor girl, spent about three
days orbiting the earth in a flight
that was longer than that of al
four American astronauts w h ol
have been rocketed into orbit.
Bykovsky broke the distance and
endurance records set by his fel
low cosmonaut Audi ian Nikolayev
last August.
Land Hours Apart
Bykovsky. married and the
father of an infant bov, landed
"' P m- Moscow time (7:00
a.m. EDT), Tass said, tie would
have completed five days in
space at 3 p.m. local time, but he
already had covered around i
million miles in space.
Valentina landed at 11:20 a.m.
14:20 a m., EDT', Tass said. This
was just short of three full days
In orbit which she would have at
tained at 12 30 p.m.
Tass said both Bykovsky and
Valentina landed northeast of:
Karaganda, Kazukhslan.
Friends, relatives, other cosmo
nauts and sports commissioner
Court Okays
" l)AJ
pCfjTlpr Kpfl
l IIIWI IIWU
SALEM (UPI '-The Oregon Su
preme Court, by a 5-2 decision,
ruled today that a former mem
ber of the Communist party could
Emitted to the Oregon Bar,
The high court approved the ap
plication of Bernard Jolles of
Portland for admission to the bar
The State Board of Bar Exam
iners had recommended Uiat his
application l denied on the
ground that he had failed to es
tablish that he was a person of
good moral character because of
having been a member of the
Communist party from 1049
lo 1957.
Justice Kenneth J. O'Connell
wrote the majority opinion
Justice William C. Petty wrote
la dissenting opinion in which
.
r" h'S" conclunea inai
! Jolles IS now Iree from Commun
1st influences which distorted his
i morel hidRiwnt and llial he is a
I person of good moral charade!
1 The majority of the State Bar
Board of Examiners found the
evidence of his rehabilitation un
i convincing.
The court Mid it concluded that
was sincere and that X should1
not be used as a basis (or denying ,
him the privilege of practicing!
law. j
n
mm
two Soviet space travelers when
they landed, Tass said.
The official statement did not
soy whether the cosmonauts rode
their space ships to earth. Alter
a similar twin flight by cosmo
nauts Nikolayev and Pavel Pop-
ovich lost August, both were an
nounced as having landed by par-
u. ,1
VALERY F. BYKOVSKY
Herbert Hoover
Showing Gain
NEW YORK I UPI I - Former
President Herbert Hoover, suf
fering from anemia and an in
testinal ailment, spent "a com
fortable night" and continues to
show improvement, a spokesman
said today
While still in serious condition,
the 88-ycar-old Hoover is re
liorted lo be "impatient lo get
well" and has shown steady im
provement since his illness was
made public in a brief medical
hulletin last Friday.
3
' ' ' '
il,a iint.V tVi: aWl esiaetil . II a aim n Minn n i n nia m iia'M'ntjiiii il l hi l tmmmt-t
PLANE FARE: PENNY A POUND Four pilots of the Kinqsley Field Aero Club
check out s Piper Tri-Pacer which will be uied to provide airplane ridel to base per.
sonnel and their dependents for the unique fee of e ponny a pound. The flights,
sponsored by the Aero Club, are IS minutes in length and will provide the passenger
with a panoramic view of the area. A ISO-pound individual would be billed $ 1.50, one
penny tor each pound of that person's weight. Club president Dale P, Livingston,
center, points to the altimeter of the plene observed by, left to right, Ernest L.
Morris, Searcy C. Yerbrough end James W. Benson. USAF Photo
Dm
I- I 1.5
. i A 'J
achutc close to their craft in a
region south of Karaganda.
Bykovsky and Tercshkova
have returned to earth," the
news agency said in announcing
the end of the boviet space spec
tacular. At the same time Mos
m lolovivmn nhl iwlrail.
of the two space (tiers on thej
. ... . r ...Imonths in such cities as Bir
screens.
The official announcement said
Valentina and Bykovsky, 28, had
la,lrl ..tll "in 1hr.
Al.n.!awl',.." f Ih.
fipfianaif Areas'
of the Soviet
I Union.
-c
Tile official announi-ement sa
both cosmonauts "feel well.
Orbit Sinks Lower
It had been generally believed
at one time that Bykovsky would
try for an eight-day record and
that Valcntina would stay up with
him, but Bykovsky's sinking orbit
had caused spallation for sonic
days that he might have to give
up any such attempt
Soviet announcements on the
progress of the space lights
never gave any hints of trouble.
Tass said Vostok VI, which car
ried Valentina into orbit last Sun-
day, landed "as planned" on the
4!lth orbit. Jt said the spaceship
came down 385 miles northeast
of Karaganda.
Bykovsky's Vostok V came
down on its 82nd orbit. MS miles
northwest of the same city, Tass
said.
By the time Valentina landed,
she had more than doubled the
best American effort, the 22.9 or-1
j bit, hy Maj Gor(,' Coopcr jr
last May 16.
The Soviet space team is ex
pected to spend several days un
dergoing medical examinations
before being flown lo Moscow for
an all-out welcome comparable to
those accorded their four Soviet
predecessors in space.
Congress Given Strong
Package On
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Congress an "imperative" package of strong civil rights
legislation today and appealed for a halt in racial dem
onstrations while the program is under consideration.
He submitted a series of proposals designed to
end discrimination in jobs, voting, schools and access
to restaurants, hotels and other accommodations.
And he urged Congress i'
to stay in session as long as
necessary to enact the pro
gram, warning that the al
ternative "will be con-
tinued, if not increased, ra
cial strife."
'Enactment ... at this session
of the Congress however long It
may take and however trouble
some it may be is imperative,"
he declared in a 5,500-word spe
cial message to the House and
Senate.
Common Sense Approach
The President said his legisla
tive proposals were based on
For an analysis of t h e
Presidents proposals see
Page 4-A.
"common sense and common jus
tice," and added:
Rancor, violence, disunity and
national shame can only hamper
our national standing and secu
rity.
Kennedy deplored the rash of
street demonstrations and pa
rades that have been led by Ne-
"B' ''"
mingham, Philadelphia, Jackson,
Miss., Boston, and Cambridge,
Md.
r. "" .- UUPPOiasu . .i.u
"hrS "i ' Wrf
land no other remedy was in
. . sight." tiie Chief Executive com
'mented. "But as feelings have
recent days, these dem
onslrations have increasingly en
dangered lives and properties, in
flamed emotions and unnecessar
ily divided communities."
Kennedy made no direct refer
ence to Negro threats to stage e
sit-in at the Capitol if his legisla
tive proposals become bogged
down by a southern filibuster.
But he pointedly said: "This
problem is now before the Con
gress, unruly tactics or pres
sures will not help and may hm
dcr the effective consideration of
these measures.
While the Congress is com
pleting its work. I urgo all com
munity leaders, Negro and white,
to do their utmost to lessen ten
sions and exercise self-restraint.
The Congress should have an op
portunity to freely work its wuT.
Asks Responsible Leaders
Kennedy said his program
would enable reasonable and re
sponsible spokesmen on both
sides to wrest leadership from
the purveyors of hale and vio
lence" and provide "solutions
which should be acceptable to all
air-minded men."
His specific recommendations
tronllntird on Page 4-A)
Civil Rights
President Kennedy sent
DIANNE FRANCK
Contestant
Always Takes
Bright View
By RUTH KING
If all folks were optimists, what
a bright world thin would he.
Dianne Franck, IS, pretty candi
date for queen of the Klamath
Basin Roundup this year, Is en
- i;P,m,lst- Web!,'cr "
- '',ookinf on. ,he br'B,t. of
things." And an optimist keeps
trying for a goal.
Dianne is a true horsewoman.
She has shown her horses at nu
merous fairs and 4-H playday
events, has won several red rib
bons and a halter, no blue rib
bons, but she'll "keep trying."
This year she goes into compe
tition for Roundup queen and from
the twinkle in her eyes, she plans
to be in there pitching to win tin
til tiie Judges mako their deci
sion.
She is 18, a lover of good horse
flesh, and presently owner of
Lady, the second horse she has
owned. Lady will put her "best
feet forward" for the judges at
Ihe queen tryouts at Ihe fair
grounds Sunday, June ).
Dianne, in a quickie review, be
longs to the Pinenecdles Knitting
Club (no knitting on horseback'.
and the Vaquero Horse Club, en
joys putting ingredients together
for a meal, and also sews. She is
a 1961 graduate of Klamath Un
ion High School; plans to go to the
city, San Francisco or Portland,
m the fall to pursue a future in
business school; lists all summer
sports Including swimming and
roller skating, topped by horse
back riding on her preferred list
and only once has ever tried for
crown, as queen of a roller
skating contest.
She was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Franck in Berkeley, Calif.,
and arrived in Klamath Falls when
about one-year-old. The family
home Is at 4637 Douglas Avenue
where also in the family circle
are an older brother. Bob Franck,
two foster sisters, Ailccn and Ilia,
one dog, Eben, and two cats,
Dixie and Pixie. Lady is stabled
a mile away.
Dianne Is tallest of this year's
senior contestants, a slender five
feet eight, with soft brown hair
worn long, and deep blue eyes.
Fire Kills Man
At Grants Pass
GRANTS PASS (UPI)-A mart
died early today when fire burned
through twoiedroom annex to
a nursing home here.
The victim wan James T. Han
negan, M. Another occupant of
the annex, George Ilodowal, 84,
escaped.
Eleven persons were evacuated
from the main building of the
Ade Ren nursing home, which
was not damaged by tiie blaze.
Firemen said the blaze appar
ently started from a cigarette. It
broke out about 2:90 a.m.
i