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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1963)
Opening Talks Strengthen Hope Of New Cooperation Through UN ftlNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (VPV ! President Kennedy's suggestion lof a joint U.S.-Russian moonsliot land Moscow's proposal for an 18 ;nation summit conference on dis armament gave U.N. delegates ;food for thought today in the first weekend of the new General As sembly session. ; Hope that the 18th session 1uld prove to be an assembly ;of accord were strengthened by ;th,e first major East and West .speeches, by Kennedy Friday and Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko Thursday. Both applauded the Moscow ;Cest ban treaty which goes before the U.S. Senate for ratification Ocxt Tuesday and saw in It the possibility of "next steps" to ease 'eold war tension. ' Both agreed that there should "ie a U.S. - Soviet agreement to iioop nuclear weapons out of out ;ir space and urged that the qucs ;Cion be sent back to the confer ence table quickly. Soviet Press hands Talk py President Moscow (UPI) The Soviet press praised President Ken nedy's United Nations speech Sat today, but entirely ignored his sug gestion of a joint U.S. - Soviet moonsnot. i. Diplomatic observers 6aid I he emission indicated the Kremlin Sither opposes Die idea or wants to study it carefully before tak ing a stand. The Moscow papers quoted gen- rously from Kennedy's address before the U.N. General Assem bly. They mentioned his call for cooperation jn space, but said nothing about his specific sugges tion of a joint moon expedition, is an example of such looperation. Soviet press reaction appeared favorable to Kennedy's stale Jiients urging an -end to the cold war and peaceful competition be tween East and West. The government organ Uvostia Headlined its report "favorable winds are blowing." " "President Kennedy supported those hopes on which the 18th Jcneral assembly opened. His po sition is a position of cautious op timism, lzvestia said. By quoting at length from the fpocch the newspapers seemed to echo Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko's reaction al the V.N. Jt was a "veiy good" and "con tilintory" speech. I liussian silence on the moon iuggestion. according to some Western observers, might stem l orn the impression that Kennedy 3as holding it out more as a dis tant hope that as a concrete here- aud-now proposal. Sleeping on a is like sleeping on a cloud! SEALY MATTRESSES Starting at Low as 39.95 S&H Green Stamps Opn Fridays Till 9:00 12th & Main TU 4-8858 PI WALL'S ItliSTAIJHAXT Avalon at So. 6th NOW BREAKFASTS Special Hunter's Breakfast 5 A.M. Saturday's & Sundays Hunter's Lunches To Go. BUFFET LUNCHE0Nn,3,,.2P.M.s,,25 fc BUFFET DINNER ALA CARTE SERVICE 2 PM to 5 PM Banquet Room Special" affoirs Call 2-2765 P. Ik "There is room for new coop-1 oration, for further joint efforts in the regulation and exploration of space," Kennedy said. "I in clude among these possibilities a joint expedition to the moon." Gromyko reserved comment on this until he had studied tlie pro posal in more formal form. There have been suggestions of a U.S.-Sovict moonshot, with both countries sharing the extravagant costs and pooling tlieir scientific know-how, but Kennedy's was the first top official offer. Gromyko proposed a Moscow Proposal May Budget Of Space Agency. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi dent Kennedy s proposal lor a joint U. S. -liussian moon expedi lion may have damaged his civil ian space agency s chances of getting the money it wants for its Apollo moon program. Director James E. Webb of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) was quick to deny Friday that the proposal meant there would be a slowdown in project plants to put two Amer icans on the moon by 11)70. Webb told agency colleagues the United Stales would continue the Apollo nian-on-thc-moon pro gram pending any substantive ne gotiations with Moscow lor a joint probe. Dr. Robert C. Seamans, asso ciate NASA administrator, agreed, and added Jhat Kennedy's proposal proved that this coun try's space effort was strong and right on schedule. At a news conference at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, Tex., Seamans said, "The reason we have an oppor tunity to make this offer is be cause of our forward-looking pro gram. This demonstrates we have Dull Market Still Hits Mew Record NEW YORK (UP1 - The stock market lacked enthusiasm last week but nevertheless managed to squeak IhriHigh to u new record hidh. There :was n lot of milling around tlu'oughout the week. Most sessions were characterized by an early morning advance which was gradually whittled away m the afternoon, Analysts' confidence didn't wa ver, however, and they continued to hold that another breakthrough was near at hand. Tlie Slock Exchange reported Wednesday that short interest had risen to 5.87!t,688 shares, the lar gest total since Dec. 14. l!Ki2. when llm vhm-l nntitinn Inhilrvl R 4W; 915 I shares. Most brokers felt that Thursday would he a dull session because of tlie Jewish hmh holiday, which usually cuts Wall Street attend ance. But the large short interest position combined with the Prcsi dent's public plea for the proposed $11 billion lax cut was too mtich In resist and prices shot higher, pushing the Dow-Jones industrial average up 5.36 to a new record high of 7-13 .22. smashing the pre vious record set tlie week before. The closing session was more vigorous and showed greater en- lliusiasm and prices closed a liny bit above Thursday's levels for another record high. Dow Jones industrial average was up 3.47 to a new record high of 743.W). Rails tacked oil 0.32 but utilities cased 0.75. Standard & Poor's 500 slock In dex rose 0.13 to T3.30, also a new 'all-lime high. Ph. 2-2765 SERVING: - Daily, from 6 AM available for those Gourmet Menu! for Information conference by next June 30, lo be attended by the chiefs of govern mcnt of the 18 countries invited to the Geneva arms talks an invitation declined by France to "discuss both the question o( general and complete disarma ment, and separate measures to achieve the further alleviation of international tensions." Kennedy did not reply lo this proposal. But although n ashing ton's first unofficial reaction was lukewarm, it was well received by other delegations here. Endanger been able to accelerate our pro gram to initiate this type of of fer." nut otner naoa sources pre dicted Hie President's proposal would weaken the agency's case before congressional appropria tions committee, some of whose members already have indicated they would like to cut the $5.35 bil lion sought to finance Ihc program this year. The sources discounted any no tion that the President, by pro posing a joint program, was hedging in any way on the Apollo protect, which will cost an esti mated $20 billion for the red of the decade. These sources said the admin istration still wants Congress to appropriate the money to finance the program authorized for Ihc current fiscal year. But one official admitted Hie program had been sold to Con gress on the basis of competition with Russia and it would be dif ficult to recall it now on the bas is of coocrution with the Soviets. Kennedy did not clear his speech Willi Ihc secretariat of the National Aeronautics and Space Council, winch was created specif ically lo advise him on U. S. space programs. But Webb said he and his dep uty, Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, were consulted. Webb said McGcorge Bundy, Kennedy's special assis tant or national security affairs, called him in St. Louis Thursday and "read Ihc language lof the i speech l to me." Asked if the President's pro posal signaled a radical depart ure , in U. b. policy, Webb plied with a flat "no." lie snjd H had always been U, S. policy lo seek international coojicrulion in space exploration. U.S. Chief Says War Being Won SAIGON lUPli - Gen. Paul D. Harkins, U. S. military com mander in South Viet Nam, to day reaffirmed his belief in even tual victory over the Communists. Harkins flatly denied reports Ihat South Viet Nam's govern ment is losing ground in the vital .Mekong Deltu region surround ing tlie capital. "I can categorically say 'that we arc winning the war in the Delta," Harkins told UPI in an interview. Harkins stuck to his usual re fusal to predict a date lor Jinol victory. In the past year, other American miliUrv men have esti mated it would take three years but Hiirkins has never pinned it down that closely. He said American military lead ers in Vict Nam never did fix a date- for winning the war "at least I know I never did." The four-slur general was asked about reports that the program of gathering (he peasants into forti fied "strategic hamlets" for self- defense was under-planned and over-extended. "TIkto Is some over-extension of the hamlet program in tlie del la," lie said, "but not too much." Washington State Slates Civil Defense Exercise OLVMPIA H IM' - More than I 200 persons, including key state officials and leaders of private industry, "ill set up camp near Klimith Plllt. 0rfffl Pubhllwl tftllv (tt Sal. I and twnilat Sarvlna favllttrn Orn ml NtrOtam CallHvnia by KUmallt PaklitMnt CnMV Ma n al Ftnianada PUMt TUvtrta 44111 W. a. Iwatllantf. PuMKStr nlirt aa itcfttt-clatl matlar at lift wnl okt al Ktamaih all. OraoBn. Avtutt ll, im. ww aci tan- orait, uarch J. la satemt-ciatt no" it mna ai Kiamain ram. and at aMIllanal maltlni altlcaii cawar I mmm I MWIIAI 1 Vaar Mall In AdVancf 1 Mantn a Monlha I Vaar Carnar and taalra Wtakaar, Caay, . t in ! Ili.it lie lunaay. easy Ik UNIT1D PMI1 INTIRNATIONAl AUDIT IUKIAO 0 CIRCULATION suaurlMrt nat rtcaivlnn nalivarv Iftair HtraM anal Nam. ihiH BAaiM) PAGE 2A HERALD AND r ,' ' ' . , . .. . , , ; I . - ''' r r . :. . : v- r -;An "a i .1 -t A. i . ' W t v , . 1 f t It) ti ;5r.'H --M-Y: CI. HtA...A !v . ' ' - NEED A HOME Danny Presnell, 12, and Don, 10, hi-s brother, arrived in Omaha Thurs day with 90 cents and a note asking to be taken to Boys Town, Father Flanagan's famed home for boys near Omaha. The boys, whose case is being studied by Juvenile Court authorities, said their mother, Mrs. Betty Hackworth, is sick and their stepfather out of work at Salem, Ore. UPI Telephoto Police Seek Oregon Of Lads Sent To Boys Town SALEM I UPD A search fori the parents of two boys who were put on a bus here Tuesday and told lo go to Father Flanagan's Boys Town in Nebraska shifted to the Coos Bay area today. The boys, Daniel Ray Presnell, 12, and his brother Donald, 10, arrived in Omaha Thursday night with !I0 cents. They told authori ties their nwtlier gave them $4 for food and put them aboard a bus with instructions to go to the famed boys' home. Authorities identified the mother! De Gaulle And Stage Final Conference PARIS ( UPI I French Presi-1 dent Charles de Gaulle met Kon rad Adenauer as West Germuny's cliHiiccllor for the last time Satur day in a private conference pre ceded by a precedent - breaking official welcome. Informed sources said the two leaders discussed the Franco-Ger man alliance in the light of the casing of tcold war tensions be tween tlie United States and the Soviet Union. Diplomatic observers predict that tlie basic French German friendship will continue when Adc naucr gives way as chancellor in lluee weeks lo Ludwig Erliurd but that the foreign policies of tlie two nations will gradually drift apart. Saturday's Adenaiier-De Gaulle conference in the marble room of the Rambouillct castle 30 miles from Paris where De Gaulle has his country home, was t he 15lh between the two chiefs of slale. It lasted several hours. Pilot Killed In Jet Crash VANCOUVER. Wash. iUI'H - An Air Force F1U2 jet fighter crashed into a sparsely - settled resident ial neighborhood cast ol here Saturday, killing the pilot. Ideiitilication ol the victim was withheld, pending notification ol next of kin. The Air Force said the jet had a llameout while returning lo Portland Air Force Base from a routine target flight. Tile pilot elected to try to bring the cralt in salcly. rather than bailing out. The plane nosed to the ground in tlie yard ol Mr. and Mrs. Wil bur Garrison, skidded into a giuve of trees and burst into (lames. The pilot's body was re moved before fire charred the wreckage. I'oit Angeles next weekend lo re hearse what l hey would do in the exent atomic bombs tell un Wash ington. Stage Civil Defense Director K. M. Llewellvn said todav Ihe ex ercise was intended lo determine how fast Ihc slate could snap back from a nuclear attack. He said six observers from Ca nadian civil defense agencies would witness the drill. Headquarters for Hie exercise will be Ft. Hayden, an old ciiaMul defense outpost 17 miles west ol Poll Angeles. A similar drill was held in Julv at Ft. Columbia near the mouth of the Columbia Itiver. Manv par ticipants in that test brought their families with them. Llewellyn said the exercise next week would net be a family pic nic. "We are not refusing permis sion lo bring wives, but we bic not encouraging it," he Mid. NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. as Mrs. Betty Hackworth, and hcr husband as Dudley Hackworth. They apparently moved to Salem from Idaho in January. The Duckworths were staying at the Rose Haven Trailer Court here, but tlie court manager said they lclt Thursday. He said they were going to Coos Bay and would return Monday. Salem city police said they had been asked to investigate, but no charges had been filed against the parents. Adenauer Adenauer's trip to France was not an official stale visit. But all rules of protocol governed his arrival at Villacoublay Airfield, and De Gaulle and his w ife trav eled from the castle to meet him. A battalion of the French air force accorded Adenauer full military honors. STARTS "IT COULD BE THE MOST TERRIFYING MOTION PICTURE I HAVE EVER MADE!' A UNIVERSAL RCUASl JESSICA TANDY-SUZANNE RODWLOR- f I 7 I UllUULLIII... TRFMFNfinilSI rr ARLON TREVOR HOWARD at ( tpit.t ).. RICHARD HARRIS I lultn M.llt TECHNICOLOR' Optnt BRAN Sunday, September 22, 196 Hf,MiyHIJli i in lM Parents They were believed to be driv- ing a 1951 model station wagon with a 10-fool blue and white house trailer. People who knew the mother and step-father expressed surprise that they would give up the chil dren. Tha boys carried a note from their mother to officials at Boys Town asking them lo "Care and guide my children ... I am in poor health and unable. They are good boys, alert and able In learn the belter things of life . . ." Judge Buys New Roots In Omaha. Juvenile Judge Sew ard Hart dug into his own pocket for money lo buy tlie boys new pairs of cowboy bools to replace those they were wearing. It will be up to Judge Hart to decide where the boys will live. Msgr. Nicholas H. Wcgner, direc tor of Boys Town, said he was sure they would be welcome there. That was all right with the boys. "I'd like to go to-Bovs Town," said Daniel, "but I'd like to sec my mother, too." Gafes Open 7:00 TONIGHT! ALFRED 1I1TCHCOCKS TheBirds' TECHNICOLOR PLESHETTE -'TIPPI' HEOREK TRUE... f TIIDDIIICMT ms T: B. t. I. , . . Tyranny aboard a hell shipl Ecstasy In tht south seas I Todoy 1:30 Can. Aim. 125 CSilrfrtn Una;r 12 50c ;r. HITCH uMFIIH -i-M. kil.rlMI HIT IN wf4' itcitstw "Aft! Organizations Reject FBI Reports WASHINGTON (UPI) - Previously-secret congressional testi mony showed Saturday that in ternational organizations have re fused to ire eight Americans de spite warnings the FBI found "reasonable" cause to worry about their loyalty to the United States. Tlie U.S. government, which helps to finance the organiza tions, had recommended against their continued employment but the advice was rejected, a House appropriations subcommittee was told. The testimony came from John W. Macy Jr.. chairman of the U.S. Civil Service Commission, who also complained that lack of funds was holding up investiga tions to determine the suitability of Americans for employment with the United Nations and other international organizations. Macy said there was a "gener al understanding" between the U.S. government and internation al organizations that American nationals employed must have tlie okay of the State Depart ment. But he later submitted a statement which showed there had been eight exceptions to the rule. , capricious, women at their most primitive and their most sophisticated, women as they are in of You Have Never JOSEPH E. LEVINE p.. mm OF TEE W0MLD TECHNICOLOR'sv,fdb, PETER USTINOV Dwb, GUALTIERO JACOPETTI Md (m alpti-ibcltcjl order by PAOLO CAVARA FRANCO PROSPERI rhotftRupriy by ANTONIO CUMAU ind BtNllO fRAHARI Pioduced by Cn(hj An Embiy Pidu'ti Rflfiit '4A A O I iov. than lady loved" ANNA MAGNANI The persons or international agencies involved wore not iden- tilied in the testimony released overall percentage ot Americans Saturday. vorking for international organi- At present. U.S. citizens arelz.tinns is 17 per cent. Look Alike Faces Cause Innocent Man To Suffer OMAHA, Neb. UPI Locu-, motive fireman John Swick of Bcllcvuc, Neb., is almost afraid to look in a mirror these days. He's not happy about the way he looks. ' It all started when the Omaha office of Hie Federal Bureau of Investigation issued a sketch of a man sought in the robbery of Ihc South Omaha Bank on Sept. 6. The bandit escaped with over $10,000. Swick closely resembles the artist's sketch. Swick said that no sooner had he spotted the sketch in a paper Los Angeles County, Calif., is the largest U.S. county with 6,038,711 inhabitants. , -women in blind love and blistering hate, , women carnal and every part the world I Seen Anything Vk to be robbed! i V PtttO CLARK IOI VISttL a tlt.Nol rtlM -liwfi T SIKIO ClIHriUlll . IH lH ICtUtlS ilKASr '" n.lfnWRnJWansj U Ul If 1 employed in 27 per cent of the total number of U.N. Jobs. The than his telephone began ringing. He said he has received some 50 calls so far. . .most of the callers asking where he "hid the mon ey" and asking him to split the loot. Swick. 45. is a fireman for the Union Pacific Railroad. He once was a police oflicer in Sioux City. "I've never been arrested in my life," he said. "Up till now I've always been able lo be my- self and was proud of it. Now I've got a problem and it wor ries me." buicK said ne s not laugnmg ai it all because his wife is critical ly ill in an Omaha hospital. He said he has been afraid to go to the hospital for fear he might be arrested and his wife might take a turn for the worse. Said Swick, "this is no joke." Starts TODAY! J 84 'W' 1 ' it?,! tAtMilllt- In The World Like EVERY INCREDIBLE SCENE IS REAL! Ah Joseph E. Levine presents MARIO MONICELU'S , hilarious successor to BIO DEAL ON MADONNA . STREET" Mr 1 J -I Vy J i I : A DEN QAZZARA TOTO'