Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1963)
11 V" 1 co:. V.W. wcwekm civ, (5) 0) athl Klamath Falls, Tulrim and Laktviaw Gentrally lair with 1 few brief thaw tea potiiblt through Tuesday. Spolty light frost tonight with lows JM7. Highs Tuesday 70-71. westfrly winds 5-13 m.p.h. High yesterday 5 Low this morning u H.gh year ago Low yr ago 4f Precfp. past 34 hours trace Since Jan. I 4,12 Came ptrtod lastyaar Lit In The By FRANK JENKINS The big news today? I reckon it's still the commu nist pow-wow in Moscow. What goes on there? There are two angles to the news. One is that Premier Khrush chev is meeting today with rner NATO Secretary Paul Henri Spaak, who is a Belgian. The meeting is said to be in the Ukraine. The Ukraine is one of the Soviet Socialist Republics. The official story is that he .remaining lar from Moscow as a calculated SNUB to Old Mao and his Chinese communists, who 'have come 'to Moscow for a con ference with tlieir Russian com .munist partners. Is that a snub? Well, how would you fee! about it If you had arranged a big comerence on the good of the or der with a person you were sup posed to regard as an associate tmd he ran out on you deliberate ly? You would be miffed. But- As Hamlet remarked to his un- tic: ' One may smile and smile, and be a. villain. At least, I'm sure it may be so in Denmark." It may also be so in the com munist hierarchy. Old Kroosh and Old Mao may be putting on a stow for us in the hope that we will let down our -guard so they '.an hit us when we aren't look- ;!!- !:' What do our diplomats (our wofcssionals in this sometimes complicated business of diplomat ic intercourse! think of it? Well, they have their fingers crossed. Uicy point out this morning that these curent Moscow IDE OLOGICAL talks (the diplomats also use big words 1 are ton earned with the MEANS rather than the HMDs of communist doctrines. Moscow and Peking, these West ern diplomats say tins morning, igree that communism . should wipe cut Western capitalism and so their dispute is over whether this should be accom jjlished through Moscow's policy uf PEACEFUL COMPETITION or Peking's policy of armed revolu tioa which means KILL OFF the capitalists and take over their v;rld. So They add Khrushchev might pursue his talks with Western leaders key issues of tension," but he wouldn't lose sight of the Marx ist Leninist goal of COMMUNIST CONTROL OF THE WORLD. Vie must always remember that i I.enin's Ten Commandments of .Evolution. Commandment No. 2 vtads: "There are no morals in ool'tics." Commandment No. 6 rc?ds: ' Truth does not count unless it serves an end." Commandment No. 9 is "Promises are like pie crusts: M.idc to be Broken." And here is Commsiidment No. 10: "Scheme . . . zigzag . . . retreat , . . anything to hasten the corn ins of communism." We nutstn't permit ourselves Day's lews lorpel tnat Mirusncnev is a com-25 per cent response to a Pe: on . mi-iiist. i ista blank balht campfign in 1-160. Nifcita Meets Spa&k; Snubs Chinese Reds MOSCOW iVPl - Premier Ni kita Khrushchev, remaining far from Moscow in a seemingly ral-idlak-d snub to the Chinese Com munists, met in the Ukraine to day with former NATO Secretary , Geiier.il Paul-Henri Spaak. Wy- ottuial Soviet lass news f.iy oiy sairHhat Khrushchev cor ,y ..'ii.-JSpaak. Belgium's for- tJ&vimom the Ukrainian -, t .ind Spaak,.. were ,, , .'."'-f '' JV','' proh't'iri in .meet sman Price Ten Centi 16 WASHINGTON I UP II - I resi - dent Kennedy and Itsixr S icre- L-iry W. Willard Wirti .-onf- rred with nine Demowatii' o o gressional leaders May on fosi ble government mo es lo- hea ' off; a nationwide i ail sti ike. With the walkout I hrea ene. . 'or 12:01 a.m. EDT Tlwrsdiv, he Chief Executive aid Wir'z list with key members of tin St :.tte and House Labor a::d Oraitsw Committees. Also present w 're House Democratic Lcadei Car A.I bert, Okla., and Assistau St '.ate Democratic Ltader Hv'jcrt H. Humphrey, Jlinn. The Commerce and La' or im- mittees would hav lu.usc.i' ion over any legislation ;).-oj os-s, by the White House to i. iwcr. the walkout. Kennedy first discussed the crisis with Wirlz. Assistant I, ins PR, ARTURO ILL A Argentine ir Give Lead To Dr. Illfe BUENOS AIRES (VP!! - 'jr.; Arturo Illia, heaclk.g the -icki of the Moderate Peoples Ru(.'T9l party, maintained "iifia&le ular vote lead today in Ar;rx tina's presidential (Minns. !--'s showing doomed a Man '. b lot campaign by supporters of ex-; dictator Juan D. Peron. With more than 70 per cer . ' the vote counted. Dr. Illia. a country doctor, held a camnvid ing lead over Dr. Oscar Ale leader of an intransigent ra!-al faction. Failure of the Peron - ba, ,ed I JFK Mo 1 blank ballot campaign -vas M The" action, expected to be an biggest surprise of the slet' . -n. nounced later todayt involves vvim unemployment nign ar,o ne economy staged niter "evilts government crises, Peron;sts been expected lo attrait 1: numbers of discontented voti A massive blank balbt would have undermine! ' chances of any minorit p dential candidate to : inn strong government once elai d. With 32.711 ot Argentiia's , 1 precincts roijorted, i;iofl!:ial returns gave Illiii 1,836,34 i voes. Dr. Alende had 1U82.054 aid i,'-n. Pedro Aramburu former p.-jvi-sional president, 1,110.631 The total of blank ball its -vas 1.109.603. about 16 per cert ol the vote total, a sharp dro, f 'om the returned lo Moscow orlv i.ist Thursday from an East Uermanl visit was disclosed Saturday tol have gone to Kiev. Hit Wp ras; considered a rcbuif io tie Chi nese Communists meetii-g v-.th high Soviet party officials in Moscow. The secrecy-shrouded MosxDW talks continued ioday as iVcst rn diplomats predicted that tie S:no- .Sc.vK.'t struggle for Conmuiiist leadership would have h 'tie cf fe( in the Kremlin's bai ic i',ti tinte toward the West. The diplomats said the d.ir nt Vtswv idrnl,)f,'cp t !i arf con- cr-rin- -, v.vi'f, ratier the ends of Commui tt uk-, 5. hx&lu mm lW Paget KLAMATH yAsk Congress To 1 Secretary James Reynold and White House special counsel Theodore C. Sorensen. The four of them then met with the con gressional group. Included were Chairmen Lister Hill, Ala., of the Senate Labor Committee and Warren G. Mag r.uson, Wash., of the Senate Com merce Committee: Sens. Wayne Morse, Ore., and Pat McNamara, Mich., ranking Democrats on the labor committee; Chairman Oren Harris, Ark., of the House Commerce Committee, and Reps. Carl Perkins and Phil Landrum, ranking Democrats on the House Labor Committee. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, D N.Y., chairman of the House La bor Committee was invited but was unable to attend. White House press secretary Pierre Salinger said the Presi dent also planned to brief Senate and House Democratic leaders at breakfast Tuesday morning. Salinger said it was "quite pos sible that we may have some thing further to say" later today about the rail situation. But he said that until then there would be no White House comment any of the possible steps to be tken or on the timing of such moves. Salinger said Wirtz brought the group up to date on the conver sations he had with management and union representatives Friday ;nd Sunday in a last-ditch effort I io ward off a shutdown. Wirtz cut short an appearance Ibefore a congressional hearing on another matter to go to the White House. Rep. Elmer J. Holland, D-Pa., who was presiding at the hearing, wished him "good luck." i "I'll need it," Wirtz replied. The administration appeared to I be nearing a decision on whether uo ask Congress for legislation to prevent the strike. The five op erating rail unions Sunday re jected Wirtz' last-ditch proposal for averting the walkout threat ened for Thursday. Presumably, the administration now was nearing a decision on whether to ask Congres3 to step into the dispute by enacting a Cuba Money Ban Issued WASHINGTON UPI - The Kennedy administration has or dered a ban on currency transac tions with Cuba similar to those in offpnt fnr RpH China and North K.nrpa it .as iGarned todav. blockings" of several million ;,t!dollars in Communist Cuban as '.scts in American banks. Government notification to American banking firms were sent o1:'. this morning. Officials said the administra-, lion was putting into effect for Cuba the foreign assets control regulations, administered by the Treasury Department. Under! these rules, assets here of Red China and North Korea are blocked and unlicensed dealings involving property in which those countries have an interest are prohibited. The regulations also prevent use of American financial facili ties by countries to which they are applied. They also prohibit unlicensed importations of goods. However, the United States already bans imports from Cuba. This edict lias been in effect since Febru ary. 12, under other reg ulations. ?oy Survives Long Tumble MEDFORD I UPI i A seven-year-old Tacoma Park, Md., boy survived a tumb'e down a 150 foot embankment at Sliady Cove on Hie Rogue River, k was re ported Sunday. Authorities said Wayne Wuersl ling darted over the cliff while he was chasing a ball. He landed on rocks below and sulicred frac tures and bruists. The bov was taken to Rlk.jrrhsii ; highway curve 22 Valley Hospital here hei W ' - mm trariCpd and released. . FALS, OREGON, MONDAY, law to require compulsory arbi tration of the issues involved. Wirtz was asked by a reporter as he walked to his waiting lim ousine at the Capitol if he thought that Congress could move fast enough to enact legislation before the strike deadline. He also was asked to appraise the impact on the economy of a rail shutdown. "I cannot talk about it," Wirtz replied. "Any cabinet officer who would talk about such a matter when he is going to see the Presi dent shouldn't be a cabinet of ficer." The railroads plan to put new work rules, which would eliminate jobs of up to 37,000 firemen, into effect Thursday. The unions have announced they will go on strike if the new work ruies are ap plied. Bitter Over Rejection Wirtz said Sunday that he was "bitterly disappointed" by the unions' rejection of his suggestion for a settlement. Management representatives had accepted the government plan. The proposal called for 20 days of negotiation to work out a short-term solution on two key is sues in the dispute and a two- year lest of any agreement. Un der the plan, the government would decide issues that could not be worked out by the two sides in the 20 days, and neutral arbitrators would settle issues re maining after two years. The unions said in a statement that they rejected Wirtz' plan be cause it was "iiiniiy dis guised compulsory arbitration" and contains no incentive to make the carriers change their attitude and engage in true col lective bargaining at this time." Can Do Nothing After meeting separately with both sides Sunday, Wirtz told re porters that he cauld "do nothing further." He then reported by telephone to the President who spent the weekend at Cape Cod. J. E. Woi:, chairman of the railroad negotiating committee, that management planned to go ahead with its so-called and featherbedding" rules Thursday! "unless in the meantime legisla tion which makes that act unnec essary has been enacted." Wirtz indicated previously that a legislative request might be im minent. The speculation has been that this might consist of com pulsory bargaining, seizure of the railroads, or a combination of both. Bus Drop Kills Three ST. LOUIS, Mo. lUPI) - A crowded ous with passengers standing in the aisles hit a wet spot and plunged down a 30-foot embankment Sunday. Three per sons were killed and 52 were in jured. Officials feared the toll might be higher, but when the Sceni- cruiser was finally righted five hours after the pre-dawn acci dent, the death count was fixed at three "This accident i3 one of t h e worst we have ever had Greyhound official said. The dead were Jack Wesley. 23. Burdette, Ark.. Cleophas Johnson, 22, Ann Arbor, Mich., and Mrs. Jessie F. Matthews, 28, Rapton, Ala., who was traveling with her four children to meet her husband. Two of the children were hospitalized. Ambulances shuttled 28 injured persons to St. Joseph Hospital, Kirkwood, Mo., where 16 were admitted. Twenty-four were taken to St. Louis County Hospital and four were admitted. The driver. Elliott John Smith. 34. East St. Louis. 111., who sus tained only bruises and shock, said the rear of the bus skidded into a large highway sign and spun off the embankment. It slid backwards into a mud-filled ra vine and overturned on its side and top, smashing windows and crumpling the vehicle. Many of the injured were among the 15 passengers stand ing in the aisles. There were 43 passengers sealed. Mrs. Mc-tthews was thrown from the vehicle and crushed be neath it. The bus was bound Irom Mem phis, Tenn , to St. Louis when it li - iesjouti?.' o( St. Louis, where hcc.ir!eDl. e-.Kifftci. JULY 8. 1963 Telephone r Vi Pi , " : H! DIG THROUGH RUINS Rescue workers dig through the still smoking remains of a brick bathhouse after it had been struck by a crashing jot fighter plane Sunday. Seven persons, four of them children, were killed as they sought shelter from a thunderstorm which had interrupted their picnic. The pilot of the plane, Marine Capt. John Butler, 30, ejected safely. UPI Telephoto EI3CE9 By United Press International Racial violence flared Sunday in New York City and Baltimore where angry Negroes and whites tangled in bareknuckle brawls. New integration moves were planned today across the nation. Police described the situation at a Bronx white teen-age diner hang-out Sunday night as "high ly explosive and set up barri cades to prevent a full-scale riot. The barricades were erected after two attempts by young whites to break up a picket line at the diner where about 60 white and Negroes paraded with signs protesting alleged discriminatory hiring practices. In Baltimore, more than !00 in- tegrationists who tried to force their way past park owners and police into the Gwynne Oak Amusement Park met with vio lence. At least 95 demonstrators, including 13 clergymen, and six while hecklers were arrested. One Negro woman was punched in the face. Plan Hotel Picketing Omaha Negroes planned a pro test demonfiration today in the downtown section around the en trances of the Sheraton-Fonten- clle Hotel. The demonstration ap parently was planned to coincide with the first meeting of a bi racial committee to discuss civil rights remedies in city govern ment, (he mayor's office, the school system, banks, insurance firms, railroads and other busi nesses which integration leaders said were almost entirely segre gated. A group of young Negroes was Task Force in I In Shark-Infested Area MIAMI (UPD A task force of Navy and Coast Guard planes combed the shark-infested Carib bean waters today for a rickety fishing vessel called Sno' Boy which vanished seven days ago with 40 persons aboard. The mysterious case of the 63- foot fishing craft was similar to that of the SS Marine Sulphur Queen, which disappeared last February ip the Gulf of Mexico with 39 persons aboard and a cargo of molten sulphur. A former owner oi the Sno' Boy said he was mysu.'ied by the fishing vessel. He said the shio did not have convenient space to transport 40 persons and that he was puzzled by reports the Sno' By. ti diesel-powered craft, was carrying gasoline drums. "Chancet oi finding survivort TU 4-8111 No. 71S8 Block Violence aifiiiiore, slew scheduled to meet with city offi cials of La Porte, Ind., today to discuss complaints of alleged ra cial discrimination in restaurants and taverns. The stage was set for the meeting after a weekend of "testing" facilities in eating and drinking establishments in tie city. More Unrest There was more racial unrest in other parts of the nation: Chicago: The National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored People (NAACPl concluded I its 'year of decision" national convention by announcing plans for militant action in its drive for increased civil rights. Charleston, S.C.: Rov Wilkins. Holiday New Road Death Record By United Press International A toll of 557 traffic deaths dur ing the Independence Day week end set a new record for highway siaugmer during a summer holi day. Howard Pyle. president ot the National Safety Council, called the total a "tragic standard againsi wnicn lo measure any holiday. The final United Press Interna tional tabulation of holiday fatali ties from 6 p.m. Wednesday to Hunfs Craft are extremely remote after six days in shark-infested waters, Navy spokesman said Sunday. Thus far. searchers have found an unidentified bodv. a decx house i an oil soaked dinghy, a life ra.'t! and other debris in the area where the ship is missing south I of Jamaica. Most of the debris1 was trom uie Sno Eov. The vessel departed Kingston. Jamaica, last Monday on a "drift fishing" voyage to an island 80 miles to the south. She has not the last two days of the holi been heard of since. ay- The Sno' Boy was built in Mi- An analysis by the National ami in 1944 and has sleeping ac-!Safey Council of figures supplied commodations for only seven or eight persons. She was skippered! by Australian Lewis Tole and earned two unidentified Ameri cans among her passensers. The rest were Jamaicans. Tole it a long-time resident of Jamaica. Weal her AGRICULTURAL FORECAST Mostly latr through Saturday, axcept lor a lew kriof showery periods. Slowly rising daytime temperatures. Lows near freezing at times. Haying outlook is most ly fair to good except tor threat of showers until mid-week. Flares NAACP executive secretary, said Sunday that white Americans "should get down on their knees and thank God that Negroes have demonstrated as peacefully and orderly as they have." Wilkins vowed that desegregation demon strations would continue in Char leston and throughout the South. Albany, Ga.: Police Sunday ar rested nine white and Negro inle grationists who attempted to use an all-white swimming pool. Over the weekend Georgia's Ku Klux Klan leader, Calvin Craig, called for a massive demonstration by Klansmen at Savannah July 20 to be concluded by a march "two abreast and a march downtown." Weekend Sets midnight Sunday night showed this breakdown: Irallic 557 Drownings 19: Koating 4 Planes 17 Fireworks Miscellaneous 101 Total 872 California led the death count with 48 traffic fatalities. There were 43 in both New York state and Pennsylvania. 32 in Michigan. 29 in Ohio, 23 in Texas, 23 in both Indiana and Missouri, 22 in Illi nois and 21 in Virginia. Only five slates could boast no traffic deaths over the 102-hour weekend. They were Alaska, Del aware, New Hampshire. North Dakota and Rhode Island. The toll broke tlie record for traffic deaths over a summertime holiday set just last May, when 525 persons died over tlie Memor ial Day weekend. The previous July 4 holiday record of 509, set was ''-"O surpassed The Sa(ety Council had made a Pi e-bohday estimate of 550 to 650 ,ralfic d?allls owr U holiday, DurinS ,he weekend's early hours iw ei mum was so low sale ty ollicials hoped they could scrap their estimate, but the death pace increased sharply dur- by United Press International showed that 27 per cent of the fatal accidents were caused by excessive speed, 16 per cent by crossing (he center line and 18 per cent by failure to yield the right-of-way. Pilot Ejects Safely As Flames Hit Plane WILLOW GROVE, Pa. (UPD A naval team todiy was expect ed to question the pilot of a flam ing jet fighter which crashed into a bathhouse being used as a shel ter during a thunderstorm Sunday and killed seven persons, four of them children. The FIE jet was on a landing approach to nearby Willow Grove Naval Air Station when it burst into flames in the air and crashed into the frame and cin der block structure jammed w ith people. Minutes before, they had been playing baseball and swim ming during a carefree outing. They had sought the slielter of the double garage serving as a bathhouse when the sudden storm struck. The pilot, Marine Capt. John W. Butler, 30, Boiling Springs, Pa., ejected safely before tlie crash. He had been about to land fol lowing a routine training mis sion. Butler, a Marine reservist, was detained overnight at the base dispensary and was expected to be questioned today by a naval team investigating the tragedy. Die In Crash The crash on tlie grounds of tlie Green Hill Day Camp killed Mrs. Jennie Klein, 36. of Phila delphia; her daughter, Sandra, 10, and a S':n, Harvey, 4; Emmanuel Fine, 43, Jean Arnold, about 40. Judy Arnold, 10, and Carolyn Hershfield, 10, all of Philadelphia. About 16 persons were treated at Abington Memorial Hospital, and 10 of them were detained. One of the injured, Samuel Oberdin, 51, of Philadelphia, was listed jn critical condition. The day camp area had been rented for tlie day by a family and neighborhood group from northeast Philadelphia. All the1 victims were from that area or suburban communities. Describe! Mishap Alan Fincman, 33, of Philadel- phia, was on tlie outing with liis I wife, Ruth, and their three chil dren when tlie plane crashed "like the biggest firecracker in tlie world. Fineman said a "huge orange ball of flames raised up, followed by billowing clouds of black smoke." Ho rushed to the pool where his sons, Barry, 9, and Evan, II, were swimming. Fine man said the plane struck the ground about 30 feet from where he was standing and skidded into. tlie crowded bathhouse. (Sec Plane Approach Robert Maier and James Mc- Ghee, lifeguaids from the New haminy Swim Club, located one mile from the crash, said they saw tho plane as it approached the naval station. Maicr 6aid he saw the plane 'explode in the air" and the pilot bail out. He said "We went over and the whole place tllie bathhouse) was leveled." He said people stand ing around were "hysterical" and the baseball field on the grounds was "scorched." A 14-month-old baby napping in a house on the grounds and his mother, Grace Lederer, who was in tlie next room, received minor outs and bruises when the wheels of the jet came crashing into their dwelling. Lands In Crib One wheel came through a window and landed in tbc crib where the child, Duncan, was sleeping. The other crashed into the framework of a doorway. Boy Needs Blood Drive A special effort will be made during the coming visit of the Red Cross bloodmobile to recruit blood for a local youth, Stephen Williams, 18, who will have own heart surgery in Portland in the near future. He will need 25 pints of blood. He is one of 'wo open heart cases that will netd blood donations in tlie next few weeks. Young Williams, son of Mr, and Mrs. Gene Williams, is a fresh man at the University of Ore gon. He attended Riverside School here and graduated from Klam ath Union High School. Retail stores are rallying to the call for donors with the larg est number of pledge cards sent in Irom Montgomery Ward. Oth er stores aiding in this visit to dale are Sears, Penncy's, Payless Drug, Miller's and La Pointe t. The two-day visit will be divid ed between two sponsors, the Vet erans of Foreign Wars July 9 from 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. and King- slcy Field on Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. There will bo baby sit ters for the VFW operation to be held at the VFW Hall, 515 Klam ath Avenue. Inside the bathhouse, Samuel Weiner, 38, fell upon his son and saved him from more serious in jury and, after carrying tlie boy to safety, returned to the build ing several times to aid other victims. Werner and his son, Jack, 10, were burned on the backs and arms and tlie boy had a possible concussion. Both were reported in fair condition today. Authorities said the plane struck the ground about 100 yards west of tlie building and skidded into it, demolishing the structure! The tail assembly and the plane's wings were torn loose and hurtled about tlie area. The main building of tlie day camp was not damaged. The day camp area, located in back of the air station, had been rented for the outing to the Weiner Family Circle. Members of a similar group, the Roseman Cousuis Club, had been invited. Lost Girl Found Safe By Dentist BLY An inlensivfl -wvirrh by more than 100 Dcrsoi and two planes ended at 7:13 a.m. Sun day and 9-year-old Ann Sliotwell was discovered sleeping by a log near the head of Hole Creek in tlie Blue Lake wilderness area on Gearhart Mountain. Dr. Ed Zarosinski a T.alr dentist, found the child about a mile and a half from where she was first reported missing. Her father, Robert Shotwell, brother I Jim, and Henry McCormack were preparing a picnic lunch when Ann wandered oft. Ann told her rescuers that she spent most of the night walking and slccpin?. She said she had heard tlie planes and knew that people were looking for her but was unable lo make her position known. She was dressed in outdoor clothing, including a yellow sweat shirt, blue coat, and tennis shoes. Blue Lake Is located on top of Gearhart Mountain. There are no roads into tho area from a camp site two miles below. When tlie father could not find the girl, he hiked the two miles and drove to the Dairy Creek Guard Station to summon help. The call was received by Her bert Hadlcy, fire control officer at tlie Bly Ranger Station, who 1 immediately organized a search party. Civil defenso members, forest service employes, a sheriff's pos se, and other volunteers joined the search, aided by two planes from Lakcvicw. The Fremont For est supervisor, Carl Simpson, and forest rancor, Bruce tgger. were also at the scene. Pilot Myron Buzzwell of the Buzzwcll Flying Service answered the call and kept his plane in the area of the search until 9:30 p.m. Saturday when darkness made him return to Lakcvicw. Mrs. Shotwell arrived on t h 0 scene Saturday evening and re mained with ner husband at the Nottin campgrounds throughout the night. She spoke with her daughter by radio shortly after she was found. Because of the rough terrain and lodge pole thickets, a call was sent out for horses and rid ers. By early Sunday morning, more than 43 horses and trailers had reported. Not Guilty Plea Entered JACKSON, Miss (UPI) - By ron De La uecKwun to day pleaded innocent to charges that ho murdered Negro integra tion leader Mcdgar hvers. "Not cuiltv. sir." the 42-year- old fertilizer salesman said loud ly when asked to enter his plea before Hinds County circuit Judge Leon Hendrick. Arraicnmcnt of the ex-Marino and staunch secreeationist from Greenwood, Miss., was then sus pended while Dist. Atty. William Waller conferred with defense at torneys. Beckwith stood before Judge Hendrick while Waller read the Indictment charging that he "dkl kill and murder Medgar Evers. a human being." mm mn ' '' H '''?, , -if