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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1963)
21 Storm 24 Uncle Tom' friend 27 MUl dam 28 Kifisui city 32 Reposition 34 Flowered dress material 35 Constellation 36 Nautical term 37 Boy's nickname 33 Authenticate 40 Color 4! Slatted 44 Feline animal HERALD AND SEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon President Has Kite Troubles HYANNIS PORT, Mass. liPH President Kennedy tried to fly a kite from the stern of his yacht Saturday, He failed. The Chief Executive and mem bers of his family put to sea for an outing climaxed by Kennedy's attempt at kite-flying. The kite, bird-shaped and bright yellow, red and black, was soar ing about 50 feet above the ves sel on a fishing line with which it had been lofted by Kennedy's friend, K. Lemoyae Billings. When Billings handed the fishing pole to Kennedy, the kite nose dived into the water. The Kennedy and Billings ap parently were flying the kite for the entertainment of the Presi dent's five-year-old daughter, Car oline. She was sitting in the stern of the White House yacht Honey FjU beside her father. Also present were Mrs. Jacque line Kennedy, the president's brother, Sen. Edward M. Kenne dy, and the First Lady's pet Ger man shepherd, Clipper. All, including Clipper, watched attentively. Kennedy had more success lat er when the Honey Filz docked and he gave Caroline another dis play of the sea going capability of her two-year-old brother's new toy sailboat. The President had commandeered the three-foot ves sel, a gift from .Italian President Antonio Segm, from his son -Friday to watch it from the beach outside his family's "compound" of homes. White House newsmen and cameraman covering the presi dential cruise in chartered boats of their own were unable to watch the latter event. Coast Guards men had been ordered to keep the press vessels a half mile from the Kennedy pier, while dozens of other small boats and a sightseeing vessel were allowed in close, and other spectators stood on the beach. For most of his two-and-a-quar-ter hour cruise, Kennedy sat aboard the Honey Fitz while it lay at anchor off Great Island in Lewis Bay. The bay, an inlet of Nantucket Sound, is about three miles from Kennedy's sum mer home here on Squaw Island. Monday, July S, 1963 PAGE 7 A Fabrics Answf te Prf6u Punt ACltOSS 47 Ltgendry 1 Twil',d worsted Norse king 6 B:bbed soot 48 Heir styl dress goods 62 Funeral vehicle 12 Biblical prophet 54 Basement 14 Kye part 56 Excite to action 15 Woolly 5? Passerine bird 16 Pedsl arch 58 Creator of 17 Chinese pottery Hyman Kaplan type 59 Proportions 18 Native of tatvia ROWS 20 Time period ,,,,, ,,htic INlOIEL ILI MM R;igilSlfl Al6ig!e'5M l IM PiAltJg s'e'g si FT e'Ait-j Ip'eiw h? 19 Above prefii) 39 Buildup . 1? , 22 Boy's name extension 3 uemis of frogs 23 How 45 Sptmt ilrmOT) 4 Monstrous ii-i God oflove. 43 Lesser being 25 Green iher.) veneration 5 Consume 28 Comineirt 44 Scortn Staler '29 Correct tcsll.j 45 Go by aircraft 7 Leases 30 Place 46 New Meucs 8 Belonging to it 31 Feminine name city S Quote 33 Eternities 49 Diagram ?fl Hmvv hlnw 34 Wan 50 Vaiiev 1 1 Hawaiian cloth 38 Cotton cloth SI itinera! rock! 13 Protective headpiece 33 Satin-tike. cotton S3 Wheei track 55 Make a mislait iEiMTOB'S NOTE! The ma jor civil rights organizations agree on their iiUimate goal but they vary on the degree of mil itancy of their campaigns to reach it. This iaieBsificatisn ea efforts, and the cerepftiUea among the various groups far prestige and funds, is discussed lit the fsilowing dispatch by a I'E'i correspondent whs has covered every phase of the in tegration straggle for the past 10 years, i By AL KUETTSER ATLANTA (UPli An all-out influence struggle among Negro; T "2 3 14 15 I 16 17 8 13 10 U 1 14 ' - - fl Hji8 19 fj 20 I2F22 " " 23 I 24 25"2tT 27 pj28 29 WW" 32 33 ' 'p 35 p 37 jjTss J4Q E 43 I JtT ri48 49 SfTIT" BsTf 1 53 0 55 56 ' 57 58 59 I I I 1 I 1 I I J I 18 Step Toward Protestant Church Merger Underway Gas Market In Turmoil j WASHINGTON (UPf) - The ding - dong battle among pipe I line giants for the Southern Cal ifornia natural gas market is get iing more bitter. ' Firing (he latest barrage was Gulf Pacific Pipeline Co,, Hous ( ton, subsidiary of Tennessee Gas , Transmission. It fears Transwest i ern Pipeline Co., and El Paso I Natural Gas Co., which already 3 serve the market, are trying I through the Federal Power Com t mission to set up deals that would knock ils proposed Texas California pipeline project into a cocked hat. For this reason. Gulf Pacific has asked the Commission to consolidate pending Transwestern and El Paso applications with its own so the issues at stake can be aired publicly and swiftly. The Commission has made no decision yet. In the meantime, it is writing the epitaph of a $151 million joint plan by El Paso and ' Colorado Interstate Gas Co. to pipe 475 million cubic feet a day into California. This decision, made last May 1 hut still being put in final draft form, seemed to give Gulf Pacif ic a new competitive lease on life. But Gulf Pacific now sees fresh dangers from El Paso and Transwestern. To keep the picture in focus, it must be remembered that Gull Pacific has signed a contract with Southern California Edison Co. and the Los Angeles Depart ment of Water and Power to de liver them 865 million cubic feet of gas a day before July I. 1965. This is contingent upon FPC ap proval of Gulf Pacific's pipeline pt oject. Edison and the city are now wived by cither El Paso or Transwestern through Pacific Lighting Gas Supply Co. ami its subsidiaries. Hcfice if Gulf Paci,' ic can get a foothold, il stancs to tfkc over a rttulti-millioit doll.r business. DENVER lUPii The fourth 1 general synod of the United Church of Christ took an ecumen ical step Saturday toward possi-j ble merger of six major Protes tant denominations. j The action was taken in tliC form a resolution passed by the; general synod authorizing the; United Church of Christ delega-; tion to the consultation of church union "to enter into the develop ment of a plan of union, . ." The consultation began with a meeting in Washington in April, 1MS2. A second meeting was new at Oberlin, Ohio, last March. Oth er denominations involved are the Methodist, Protestant Episcopal and Evangelical United Brethren Churches, the United Preshyteri- an Church in the Lnited States and the International Convention of Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ). Before Saturday's resolution was passed, tlie Rev. Dr. David G. Cohvell of Washington, chair man of the consultation of church union, said, "We will know within the next four lo five years wheth er or not a union of the denomi nations now engaged in the con sultation is possible. A sikesman said the action was the first such resolution passed by any of the denomina tions. The consultation meetings to date were described as ploratory." The general synod also author ized continuation of "separate conversations toward union" with the International Convention of Christian Churches and the Na tional Baptist Convention, and "steps toward bringing churches of the Council of Community Churches into the United Church of Christ." Civil Rights Groups Don't Agree Bogus Sills Printed At School HAYWARD, Calif. (UPil-One of the biggest counterfeiting cases in U.S. history spread to Alameda State College Friday when a suspect told authorities he printed aboult $4 million m bogus bills on a school printing oress. Police said ine suspect, uonam J. Carothers, 2i, a press opera-! tor, made Use admission shortly after being arrested. He was the fourth suspect to be picked up: bv Secret Service agents and lo cal police. Five more men were sought ffi connection with the operation which Secret Service area chief Tom Hanson called the largest in the history of the service. Agents already have recovered some $2.4 million dollars in coun terfeit money printed at the school. Hanson said another $309,- 090 in bogus money is somewhere; i the San Francisco area. Carothers told police lie had key to the campus press to work at night on overtime jobs," Dr. Fred Harcleroad, the col lege president, expressed shock when told the bills were printed on the campus. "No one at the college had any knowledge or indication that any one or any facility on the cam mis was being used for other itsan normal use," he said. movements has temporarily takenlrhose the sometimes tedtous: much of the spotlight away fraffijmcihods of tlm courts and face-to-: the overall desegregation effort, jface conferences with white had-; The iaiest division amoisg the: Negro high command brake into tlie open at the Nations Associa tion fur the Advancement of Col ored People tNAACPi convention in Chicago where a nominally orderly group booed several: speakers into silence or off the! platform. One was Chicago May or Richard Dalev. James H. Meredith, a Negro: who was enrolled at tile Univer sity of Mississippi with strong! NAACP support, was rebuked by an NAACP youth leader as being: too moderate. His reception was! cool. Meredith said the "bigotry and intolerance" among his own peo-i pie brought him to it-ars for tlie; first time since childhood. Meredith's reaction recalled the! shocked surprise that hit Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. recently when his car was pelted with: raw eggs by militant Negroes In New York. NAACP Among First vmn a sew years ago, mac-: teaiiy ail the efforts oi Negroes m their move up the civil rights ladder were centered in activi ties of tlie NAACP. That agency, among the isrsl organizations: formed in the United States to! advance the cause of SegroesJ A similar approach was taken: hy the Urban League, as agency that has long been is the fore-: froni of improving housing, sans jet involved in s single campaign: too professes io iiieo in ma- violence. Tlie CORE organization! collected clergymen, students, white ass Segra integratasisists; and university teachers. Soaieiimts ai of these "direct isctioa" groups, Bias the I.AACP James A. Garfield was the only man m U.S. history simultane ously president . elect, senator-: elect and congressman from Ohio. tary and recreation facilities for Negroes in tlie big cities. nie change in the tempo of tlie; N'egro struggle started with three; events tlie Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott, tlie sit-in demonstra tions which originated with four; young Negroes at Greensboro,; N. C and the "freedom rides, ': The Montgomery campaign was: run by King, then a young Baptist: preacher in the Alabama capital; atv. His movement became the; ;Soutlicrn Christian Leadership Conference iSCLC', dedicated to; i-on-violence, Sit-ins Catch On Tlie sit-ins caught fire like dry prairie grass and Became me; chief tactie of tise Congress of; Racial Equality )CG3?Ei and Use; Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee SNCCi, a group that; also argued for peaceful methods; hut was much more militant than tlie SCLC, "Snick," as it has come to be known, Is made op maisiy by high school and col lege siuaenis. Mng s younger: brother, ihe Hev. A. D. King whose home was bombed recent ly m Birmingham was an early leader m that organizaiion. Irecaom rides were or ganized by COSE, which remains one of the roost militant of the desegregation groups aithough it hut each has sis own sphere of influence and its own war chest Each has lis own jealousies. These lare coming rapidly to tlie surface: now in a massive bid for fluence over the integration ef fort. Struggle Js Apparent The internal struggle is bound: to have a pronounced effect such demonstrations as the civil rights protest march planned for; Washington m August Complicating Ihe struggle for; leadership is the occasional ani mosity among local Negro groups; running then own private cwii; rights campaign when ihe larger; organizations, such as those run bv King, nwve in "and take over,' A number sf Negroes have; spoken out against the march. Some have openly questioned the massive street demonstrations; in tise South and 'orth. There nas Seen talk oi a suns-; mit" meeting between the giajer; .organizations, us even a possible: alliance. One such conference was hrfd in New York recently. While tiiei; participants agreed their ultimate) goal was Hie same ihe ahsiitissj: of discrimination there was no ; rinsing sf ihe ranks or foi-iiusfioni of one overall group with a uni-i fied high command. There is noi 'DENNIS THE Ml 1 one leader at tlie forefront io pull off ihe giganiic task. j ft is not likely this wia happen anytime soon and His struggle for: leadership, the compeiiiion for funds ana tlie rivalry jor prestige will continue. fSOTICT YOUSt FARMING GOOD NEWS ON TRANSLATOR Fsr ttrt fetes itifsWisatisM M.SASI CALL; BILLY GOLDEN TU 2-1259 Back To Job SAN BRUNO, Calif. (UPD Raiph Flores, an electrician who survived the crash of his light i-pianc and a seven-week-long or deal m tlie rugged Yukon terri tory earlier this year, said Sat urday he was returning to his job on tlie DEW line in the Arctic Circle, Flores and his passenger, Helen Klaben, 21, New York, crashed near Whitehorse Feb. A. Both were injured but they managed to stay alive until trappers found them almost two months later, frostbitten and near starvation. CAPTAIN- KI11D Wiliiam Kidd was a Scottish pirate vho iV'eame famous a. Captain Kidd. 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