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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1963)
L I . .... .V . cj..'iLLis, c.issc:.1 Fair Missis DD $blli4ka Child In The- Day's iYews By FRANK JENKINS As this is written, two breeds of communists are holding a big pow-wow in Moscow. One faction is led by Russia's Mr. Khrush chev. The other is captained by lted China's Mao Tze-tung. One of the correspondents with a pen chant for big words puts the sit uation this way: "Khrushchev's policy holds that while East cannot meet West po litically, because of the clashing of ideologies, they can live side by side through peaceful coexis tence. "But the Chinese line of Mao Tze-tung is the converse. East, he says, not only cannot meet West but East must DESTROY West with nuclear war, if neces sary." Sounds complicated, doesn't it? In an effort to simplify the sit uation, let s put it like this Kroosh holds that if you can't agree with the way your neigh bor runs his establishment the two of you can still live in the same block. These commies are all fond of big words, so Kroosh calls it COEXISTING. He thinks you might even go so far as to nod to your neighbor over the fence. Old Mao disagrees sharply with that kind of living. He says you must SHOOT the s of a b. People like that, he contends, mustn't be allowed to live. That's about the long and the short of this communist quarrel that is filling the papers and clog ging Uie air waves. How to settle it? Well, back in the dim vistas of uie past, an unknown author of fered a solution that is worth considering. He cited a quarrel between the Shah and the Czar. It W9G an irroo nn, ilahlf fnnfitt but, instead of going to war, they decided to fettle it by personal combat. So each chose a retainer to represent him. The unknown! author describes them as follows. beginning niiii the Shah's gladi ator, whom he pictured thus: "The sons of the prophet arc brave men and bold, "And quite unaccustomed to fear, "But the bravest by far in the ranks of the Shah - "Was Abdul the Bulbul Amir." Weather Klemath Falll, Tuleleke and Lakeview Partly cloudy with not much chanqe in temperature through Monday. Chanca ol soma thowen tonioht and Monday. Hiqh today 77-4. Low tonight 41-41. Wait crly windl S-IS m.p.h. High yeiterdey 71 Low lait night 3 Hiqh year ago It Low yaar ago 30 Pret'o. patl 24 hours .00 Since Jan. 1 4.11 Samt pariod last year 1.1 1 Weather ASRICULTUIML FORECAST Siity par cant sunshine today and Monday with ao per cent chance of showers tonight and Monday. No Irott. Keying outlook (air today and Monday and flood Tuesday to Friday. Price Fifteen Cents 48 Pages KLAMATH FALLS. PRECOX. SUNDAY. JULY 7. Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 7187 Inrfj:"Jf,y.?"-'r.-,' 'vmn nana" V v,e ' - ?Tr-, 4 I - yit1 li j: H A I i COUNTY PARK SIGN The first of a series of signs designating county parks it shown here t Hagelstein Park, north of the city, which will b dedicated Saturday, July 13, at 2 p.m. Tha sign was designed by Mrs. Charles Walls who donated bar services. Left to right, front row, Andy Silani, Parle Commission chairman; Glenn Bowen, park commissioner. Back row, same order. County Commistionar Ken Allison, County Judge Robert Waller, Commissioner Frank Ganong, all members of the county court; Lloyd Hankins, park commissioner, nd Earl Keuler, park technician. He then went on to tell about the hero who would uphold the Czar's cause. Of him, the Un known Author said. "Now the heroes were plenty and weii known to fame "In the troops that were led by the Czar, "And the bravest of these was a man by the name "Of Ivan Petruski Rkavar." There isn't space here to tell In minute detail of Uie conflict. It was lone and it was harrow ingas will be recalled by all Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, w ith whom these verses used to be ver-' popular indeed. They helped r ' ile away the tedium of long 1 ;es and dull the pangs ot trail hunger. Bi!'. ii.e conflict was eventually : ttleo. As 1 rec?ll it, it ended in a draw. Anyway, it saved a lot of lives. And it saved the sub jects of the Shah and the Czar a lot of tax money. Wars, you know, don't come for free. So- Knr what it is worth This solution o'. their problem Is offered to Old Kroosh and Old Mao. Personally. 1 think it would be a very good idea indeed. Think of the gate money they could rake in. It would fill their treas uries to the bursting point. Ev erybody in the world would want to see it. And the outcome, whatever it might be. would probably be just as salistactory to all concerned as if thev went In war. JFK Trip Called Mil -Timed' MacColl He answered his own question " . . . The calamitous fall in his popularity, as shown by both pri vate and public polls, among the electorate" showed "an eye-catch-ina diversionary operation of glamour and color was urgently necessary. Thus Europe." The Germans "screamed their appreciation in the hysterically rhythmic chantings" for U.S. aid and dreamed of the day "when LONDON iL'Pl'-The Daily Ex-jaround him at home? press, in an acid attack on Pres- asked. ident Kennedy, said Saturday hi trip to Europe only flattered the Germans, further infuriated France and left a dubious im pression in Britain. Chief correspondent Rene Mac- Coll said Kennedy's "remarkable European invasion" was ill advised and ill-timed and that it was prompted only by the "ca lamitous fall in his popularity at home." The Daily Express, which olten voices an anti-American attitude in its special reports, is owned by Canadian-i.orn Lord Beaver brook. Coincidentally or nol he is reported to have lunched Friday with Prime Minister Harold Mac-millan. Why should Kennedy have "in sisted on deserting the White Housr. against a quantity of good advice, at a time when pressures and problems were piling up Ps! Strike Possibility Increases thev too will possess nuciear weapons," he wrote. Kennedy's German speeches "had harsh anti-De Gaulle over tones .. . which revealed how sharply he resents De Gaulle's in transigence towards American policies and the Frenchman's massive threat to the American master plan for Europe's future." "Repeatedly by inference Ken nedy stressed and undoubtedly deepened the existing U.S.-French split," he wrote. Hero llegro Student Charges On iace With Causing Intolerance" " " " : I .atM MB i.-1 - ! Sees Threat :f.H7 : 'erA j Movement t '., -; - V f ill Q ?li'7.i k i I , ,i 1 i ' , Young Girl Lost In Wilderness LAKEVIEW A 7ear-o:d girl was missing late Saturday night in tl? Blue l-ike wilderness area and was the Mibject of an in- tensie hunt by more than Ion perMins and to planes. The oun: girl is Kathleen shot well, dauhler of Mr. and Mrs Robert Sliotwell, in Lakeview. He it a lileview school teaclier. iivu oeiense memoers irom Lakevtew. forest sen ice employes and other lolunteers joined in the x'arch lor Uie girl who was lal awn bcloie noon Saturday She had gone In the lake with her lather on a lishing ti:p and appatent! wamlered off. II I ue l.ke is on top of Gcar- lunt Mounlam There arc no roads into the aiea from a campsite two mile below. The fatlwr, a.ler nol locating the vyri. imri (D lukP b;u-k tlie luo miles. ti(.n li-thc liau v ret-h i;i t:..-Hion to Itti '' an received bv Her bert Hao ry. fire eontrol officer at Bly hanger Station. search parties wore Immediate ly organiied and a kitchen was set up in the area. At press time a call was oui fr nder who could help search ine wilderness area. Study Shows Timber Lack Troops Used In Argentina Terrorist Surrenders WASHINGTON il'PIi Union oflicials will turn thumbs down on Secretary of Labor W. Wil lard Wirt.' last-ditch compromise elliirt to avert a nationwide rail wav strike, sources said Satur day. i- c-. i it r r.,itwri 111 i'ins, ii. wM. ,..., I ,.. , , ipresidcnt of the Brotherhood of numary govern- iLocomote Firemen and Engine- " ".v .aiuraay l,,n niihhrlv declared he would ot ,hcir lWmh !' seven-day I ".I,.- -., ,,rnnl nn l' f'ncm.'nl of the elections I1' - - marched through I grounds il would amount to com-1 Integration March Held Bv Lnitcd Tress lntrrnational Integrationist streets and courtrooms Irom pulsorv arhilr.itiun. There was no Georgia to Maryland Friday and; immediate comment fn'in Wirt?.., a southern governor said the time wu ti has asked both sides in I has come lo end "the injustice sith(, ,mK and (horny woik rules and indignations Ion siiHitivI hv j . . t.. a nm 'DT .. f OlSPlHC I" H Hi l I' "' '- tne Negro race c,i,v tn his nrooosal that Iwoi BLENOS AIRES il'f - The armed forces Saturday deployed 70.000 troops and thousands of federal police throughout Argen tina to try to avert violence in Sunday's presidential elections boycotted by the followers of ex- dictator .Juan U. Peron, Tough security orders were to "repress with all enerev" nnssi ! ole disturbances hv Peronists 1,1:: ml K l I m BLOODMOBILE SLATED TUESDAY Mrs. Winston D. Purvine, Blood Program chair man for the Klamath Basin Chapter of the Red Cross, inspects a blood-donor bottle in the presence of Linda Wood, left, and Vicki Trnka in preparation for the Red Cross Bloodmobile visit to the Klamath Falls area Tuesday and Wednesday, July 9 and 10. The bloodmobile will be at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall, 515 Klamath Avenue, 2.30-7:30 p.m., Tuesday, and at the Kingslev Field Service Club. 10 .m.-3 o.m.. the following day. - , VJSAF Photo Nikita MOSCOW (UPli Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, in a seem ing rebuff to Peking, was dis closed Saturday to have left Mos cow as negotiators from Commu nist China and Russia met in the first business session of their his toric showdown conference. Khrushchev, who had returned to Moscow only two days ago from a trip to East Germany, was in Kiev. The premier's ab sence from the city at the time of the vital talks was disclosed by Moscow Radio. Diplomatic circles said they considered Khrushchev's absence a snub because it is customary EUGENE i L'Pl '-Western Ore gon faces a timber shortage in the future, according to a study published bv the I'niversitv of Oregon Bureau of Business Re search. The study, by geography in structor Dr. Louis Hamill. indi cates that contrary to popular be lief, there is evidence that the fore-t resource of western Oregon is not capable of supporting much longer a high level of production and employment. The study, entitled. A Forecast of the Forest Resource and In dustry of Douglas and Lane coun ties." says there has been a tend ency to view a tti-ci easing em ployment situation in the industry as the result ol poor markets and competition. Hamill writes, however, that the assumption that when mar'tets improve there will be a general improvement in the wnod process ing industries is not supported by the evidence. Bookmaking Charge Laid PORTLAND lUPI'-A total of nine persons had been arrested! by late Friday in a crackdown in Multnomah and Clackamas coun ties on alleged bookmaking operations. Three persons were arrested in raids Thursday. Six secret indict ments were returned by the Mult nomah County grand jury Friday which resulted in more arrests. William Whitehead, 3ti, was ar rested Friday morning and An thony Marconi and Albert Batta- glini, 51, Friday afternoon. Three other men. Donald Arch er, 38; J. D. Archer, 57, and Gor don Alvin Charles surrendered at the courthouse on learning they were wanted. All were charged w ith gambling and released on S.5O0 bond each Court Action Still Faces Clergymen BALTIMORE, Md. iL'Pl' -Seventy out of 283 demonstrators including leading religious lead ers, today still lace court action in connection witn an Indepcnd ence Day attempt to integrate a suburban amusement park. i lie duik ol uie group was processed friday nignt during a four hour hearing before Balti more County police magistrate John Serio. All pleaded innocent to charges of trespassing and-or disorderly conduct and requested jury trials. Serio, holding the marathon hearing in the Wooitlawn police station, granted their request and released them in the custody of their lawyers. No date was set for the cases to be heard in the Baltimore County Circuit Court. for the Soviet leader to receive personally ail high-ranking for eign Communist parly delegations. Peng Hsiao-ping, head of the Chi nese delegation, is the No. 2 man in the Chinese Communist party aner mao izc-tung. It was possible (hat he would meet later with the Chinese There was no explanation of Miruslicnev s seemingly pointed ansonce Irom the Soviet canital during the talks, but there was little doubt about the obvious in direct rebuke lo (he Communist Chinese delivered by publication Saturday of a new peace appeal from President Kennedy. The Soviet news agency Tass revealed Kennedy's Friday appeal as the Soviet and Chinese Com munist ideological experts met in the headquarters of the Commu nist party Central Committee. The message from Kennedy to Khrushchev thanked the Soviet premier for his July 4 offering ol good wishes and urged a joint effort to solve "kev problems winch divide us. Reliable informants said the two negotiating delegations con fined their secret session Satur day to a presentation of "position papers." The Soviets were led by Mik hail Suslov, a presidium mem ber, and the Chinese Communists by Peng Hsiao-ping, secretary gen eral ol the party. CHICAGO (UPI) - James H. Meredith, the Negro who inte grated the University of Missis sippi and became a hero to his race, charged Saturday that "intol erance and bigotry" among his own people endanger the civil rights movement. Meredith who was roughly treated by his audience alter a speech Friday night at a session of tlie annual convention of the National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People (NAACP), bitterly attacked his detractors. In an interview with a United Press International reporter, Mer edith said. "I shed my first toirs early this morning since 1 was a child. Throughout all of the other ordeals that I have encountered, I was able to maintain my com posure. However, the . discourtesy shown me last night by the group Deiore wnicn i had been hivited to speak, overwhelmed me.- My makeup cannot endure this kind of intolerance and stand to be so dishonored by my own people," Mereoitn said. Meredith's remarks to an NAACP youth group resulted in a sharp hassle. Meredith was re buked by a youth leader as being too moderate. Association officials interpreted his speech as being offensive and scolding. His main point was that certain Negro youth leaders have not acted responsibly. Immediately after the UPf re porter left Meredith's hotel room, the newsman encountered Rov Wilkins, executive secretary of the NAACP. The reporter told Wilkins of Meredith's complaint. 'Did he say that he was re sponsible for the treatment he re ceived'."' Wilkins snapped. "Did he say that he was criticized be cause he called the audience 'burr-heads' or did he otherwise tell why lie was treated as he was? file NAACP is not going lo issue an apology to Mr. Men. tilth," Wilkins said. "If anyt-1-" is going to do any apologizinji should be him for making su . statements." 1 1 Meredith said he became a life member of the NAACP Friday night. "Those cost $500, don't they?" the reporter asked. "Yes, that's what it cost me," Meredith said, "and I intend lo keep active in the association." Fandango Days Set Mark NEWARK. N .I ' I PI Linden. N.J . truck driver who fa tally shot his wile and sister-in-law, wounded three other persons and terrorized a family of eight surrendered meekly to polite early Saturday. An 18-year-old girl abducted by the fugithe and released alter I r..,v 't,,... ..( v...i,;. 1 I., ' u-j ' ALTl RAS mile-lonff street' Instrumental - -U'doc Inion Ranch first- Modoc Auction parade oincd three-day festivi-j Hifih School Band ,Yard, second; Les Killingbeck. t.rs for Modoc County's Fandan-1 Industrial Pacilic Pouer and third. g Pa on the Fourth of July. , Light, first: Surprise Valley Elec-' Best Parade Morse Jean Dix- I More than loo units made this trie, second. oni Klamath Falls, first: Bill Die- l wisdom and mirage and tn uii-'i. i " i ,u. i... m,m would ' .Wi-de the biggest and Open-Strutting HonKeri Senior, ikroegcr, second; Art Monson. ' j , .i ... . i., .... . .- f:,. Qii-ntlini HonKOrs iTm.- ! ,1.:... iKN smnn uial everv chi d ot God i, . l. l v 1 vl 111 imas. .-eeii- him. ?- "inn ,. nuio Gov. Terrv San ford of North Carolina urged an historic st.ite wide "summit" meeting of about W0 rmnors. city managers and men representatives to display kev issues be submitted to bind ing negotiation and that a two-. ear truce he tailed. i All indications were that the; wiiiik accept oui iii.il on earth desires a chance tor life and human dignitv But Sanford s.nd A breakdown of negotiations leen t.rst-nlace iionhie e r e second; Girl Scouts No. 12, third. Humorous ixii-nr- Lje.es, several hours reported to police, of any questions." I o s.nd that Richard t Teddy I' olenit'in. j A folk -on 2 "hivtm.iniH .. .t - ..1 j- ..m iiwduini 11 i i 1 na vm p n the sUite ::'' ,;:;:..' , rules ne-s rlus ,,-cc.al ribbons and first: Striblmgs. lnwa. would not be intimidated In mobm0 0(lro, , ' Thursdav. a- , ham's. Jh 'd. action. isohedu'l and I the unions 'could i Uadmg the parade on her float I Best Mounted G:oup, Sen.or "I don't intend to daiH-e l0 ihc,,.. 'i was I he Fandango queen. Let-;. Modoc Brushpoppei'. nrst: Modoc tune of extremists on either sid. n,.,.i. u.r,- v, made it 1:0 Geniirc. Altura. with 6-vear- County Record, -en no. Sneriff 32, a Negro, sexually assaulted her. Doctors at EliMboth. N .1 . General Hospital said examina tions confirmed the possibility of raiv The girl. Maiy Kamin.-ki. who is white, was the second eldest daughter of a family which Cole man had held at gunpoint for four hours alter Uie shootings. Best Mount Single, .Junior Pamela Monson. first: Dick Mack ey. second; Linda Wilson, third. Best Western Pair. Junior Kelly and Kim Tutuer. Likely, first; Jane and Barbara Stephens, second: Terrv and Cindy Griffith. clear that a nat.inw:o lie-up " " 'rtiey wno won tlie, rossc. u...u. ,Wird. would for... him i.. c-. lo l'on-;l' ' ' Mis Sparkler. The I Best Western 1 an. Ser.wLa.i Best Horseman Croup. Junior singers a- ,r mir..v ,,, '..n, ,n to 1 1 o i"val nii-es reigned over.Vonne ho-ter ano idrvm toop- -Davis Creek Wanderers, first. held Saturday at Browning. Miss.. Ideal with tiw vuuat on ' all spectator events or. lirsl: Bob and nuo smuh. sec- Shetland Group of the Brush- to aid a voter registration cam-1 Union sources contended that fat ado re-ui; wci: ond; Bill and lnird. poppers, second; Louisignont (am- pa.gu in u,e .Mississippi Delta tl,f ,m mmw which would' tommeiciai - western Stores.: Hesi com.. . -nuen .xo- i,v. thud Yttr .'A". ft A, f. r m M MB luring wellkiviwn tea- siHikc-man tor (lie student Non-Violent Uixiid.nating Commu te said the ir'.egrated "rexlom !oik song festival" I e a t it r e d Pete Sooner. Theodore Bikol and Joan Baez. alio Lahor Secretary : nrst. Konne' t.lcctnc. second; .lames G. Revnolds lo tlucct sei-j Ingraham's Hardware, third, tlcment, smacks much of I M"st OutsUinding Entry Dis compulsory arbitratni. tam-c traveled, work and thought. "It's something ( just can't'ntimbcr of neopie participaUng lue with," one otticial said. 'Lakevie Eagles. Ian. tirsi. u second; Bob Smith, tnird Best Cow girl-I'1"!'' 'hy Diru.. second; er. first. Jame howins, Theima Archer, uuru. Best Horsedran Lajy j y Organizational. Senior Aitui as j Garden Club, first: Altura Elks.! second; Lakeview Elks, thud Organizational. Junior Cub Scouts, first; rmuihow- Guis. sec ond; Girl Scouts, third. V-s?J f&rf!... . f-S0i imQ38M"t' LEAD PARADE Lettle Genuna. in back, was Goddess of Liberty of tha Modcv' Fandango Days, end 6-year-old Rhonda Hartley, front, won the title of Little I Sparkle'. The two era shown on their float which led tha Fourth of July parade. mm