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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1963)
MGE-M HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Friday, September 27, 1963 1 Security Officer Under Fire After Dealings With Senate WASHINGTON (UPD - Tile (late Department is attempting jo (ire one of its security officers, eportedly for giving confidential information to a Senate commit ee without authorization from his mperiors. State Department spokesmen laid a "letter of charges" was liven Monday to Otto F. Otcpka, J, chief of the evaluations divi jon of the department's security Uice. The division deals with wrsonnel security. Robert Morris, former chief OPENS TONITI 4:4S ' CONTINUOUS SHOWS " :SAT. t SUN. FROM 12:41 , y ft. -a LOUIS JOUROAN ELSAMART1NEUJ MARBARET RUTHERFORD MABBIE SMITH ROD TAYLOR AND ORSON WELLES. AtWOUUIUVIIIOIVI MKMISIOr and METRO COLOR counsel for the Senate internal se curity subcommittee, said in Dal las, Tex., Thursday that Otepka was accused of giving documents marked "confidential" and "lor official use only" to J. G. Sour wine, the subcommittee's present chief counsel. Replying to Morris's statement. Slate Department spokesmen said Otcpka had been given JO days to answer the charges or face dismissal. Tlicy would not say whether the charges had anything to do with the subcommittee. "The department docs not make public charges against employes," said press officer Richard I. Phil lips. The subcommittee has been in vestigating various sections of the State Department, including its security, passport and visa opera' tions. Otepka has appeared as a witness numerous times in re sponse to committee requests and with approval of the State De partment. The executive branch of gov ernment has from time to time invoked the doctrine of "execu tive privilege" to withhold infor mation from Congress. There is still on the books an executive order signed by President Harry S. Truman March 13, 1948, bar ring disclosure to Congress of in dividual government loyally in. vestigations. Under the order "all reports, records and files relative to the loyalty of employes or prospec live employes . . . shall be main tained in confidence and shall not be transmitted or disclosed except as required in the efficient con duct of business. Negotiations Recessed DOORS OHM 1:00 P.M. : SHOW STARTS 1:10 P.M. OUT AT J:3S P.M. Gen. Admission $1,00 Kid (Under 12) 25c Kids (12 thru 14) SOc S STORY Vf'y EX-CON mmm W fills: AND THE JOHN LUPTON MIKE McGRCCVEY now mm TOKYO (UPD - Japan re quested and Canada and the Uni ted States agreed today to recess their negotiations here over fish. ing rights for salmon and halibut in the rich Northeastern Pacific fishing grounds. The foreign office said today's meeting was called off at Japan's request in order that it might have more time to study U.S.. proposed modifications to the draft of a new fisheries convention. The talks, which have been held behind closed doors, will re sume Monday. Sources close to Uic Japanese delegation said Japan has de cided to postpone a decision on the proposed modification until the return home of Prime Minis ter Hayato Ikeda and Agriculture- Forestry Minister Munenori Atlas''- This means the talks are likely to continue at least until Oct. 6. The United States has agreed to drop the controversial absten tion principle under which Japan voluntarily has refrained from fishing for salmon and halibut off Alaska, Canada and the Northern U.S. Pacific coast. In place of the abstention prin ciple the United Stales has pro posed that until the North Pacific Fisheries Commission determines that salmon and halibut resources are not being utilized fully, fish ing will still he restricted to methods and practices now on forced." Japan contends that this would prevent its fishermen from shar ing in more of the calch. A.l.C. DOUGLAS STONE Top Airman Selected For August A.l.C. Douglas H. Stone, com munications specialist, has been selected as Kingslcy Field's Air man of the Month for August, the Information Office of the air field has announced. Airman Stone has served in the U.S. Air Force for three and a half year;, including two at Randolph AFB. Tex.; one in Vietnam; and four months in his present assignment. During his leisure time, he is scoutmaster for Troop 101 of Falcon Heights. A $25 check and a three-day pass were presented to the air man as part of the award. ,w ..... K011 wear item w Roundup - Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PUT to. day. Astoria Baker Brookings Medford Newport N. Bend Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem The Dalles Chicago Los Angeles New York Phoenix San Fran. , Washington Northern California: Mostly fair except partly cloudy northwest part through Saturday Western Oregon: Mostly fair with night and morning fog south coast: highs Saturday 75 north to 90 south, 65 on coast; low 48-58. Eastern Oregon: Fair and warm; highs 85-95; low 42-58. Five Day Weather . Western Oregon: Some cooling Saturday or Sunday; highs 74-84 low 46-56; little or no rain. Eastern Oregon: Highs 80-90 and lows 40 - 55: some cooling about Monday; little or no rain. GATES OPEN) 7:00 ENDS TONITE! Reynolds lUMtlMl'S MIGHTIEST (MILS I Big Hit Big Hit Where L uo-m nctutt timwstiP! irf mmmi 1 DOLORES HART GEORGE HAMILTON YVETTE MIMIEUX PAULA PRENTISS M MtlttfKIftf tB. TCOIOR IDIRUEARll KNNf JOHN JlfK HELM MOORE KRUSCHEN i GUNS OF THE BLACK W1TCH"3 ACADEMY AWARD WINNING TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD PLUS COMPANION FEATURE SEVEN SEAS TO CALAIS Fire Report (From 12 noon Thursday until 10 a.m. Friday) Klamath Falls Fire Department 3:37 p.m. Seventh and Main, car leaking gas, street washed down. Found Innocent PORTLAND (UP! '-Mrs. Irene Brown, 55. was found innocent of second degree murder Thursday in the fatal shooting last June 11 of her policeman husband, Henry Brown. i3 lLlA-k . tiEz&B Hosts High Low 81 51. 90 43 104 59 76 .. 69 57 ' 87 57 79 59 95 46 12 57 90 53 711 62 1119 81 76 56 100 71 88 57 76 54 Departure Times Shift Two West Coast Airlines flights linking Klamath Falls and Sac ramcnto each have been set back 15 minutes, the airlines reported Friday. The flights leaving this city for the California capital now depart daily at 10:45 a.m. and 9:50 p.m. The new schedule went into ef feet Sept. 20 with tlie inaugura tion of a new non-stop flight be tween Portland and Medford, forming the only direct air con nection between the two cities It is that flight which proceeds to Klamath Fals and then Sac- ramcnto, the company disclosed. Salem Parents Wanted To Care For Two Boys i OPINS TONITI 6:45 CONTINUOUS SAT. t SUN. FROM 12:45 w v'tcnj KiRK DOUGLAS MiTZI GAYNOR GIG YOUNG v i . f y He was hired to Mate them ...but not to Date themlll 1 SALEM CUPH The parents ol Danny and Ronald Piesnell, two Snlem bovs they sent to Boys Town, Neb., told Marion County Circuit Judge George R. Duncan Thursday they wauled to make a homo for the hoys here. Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Hack- worth, the mother and stepfather of the two boys, said they had not intended to abandon them. They said they were driven by financial and emotional worries to send tne youngsters by bus to Omaha in hopes they could be better cared (or there. Judge Duncan ordered the boys placed under temporary jurisdic tion of the Marion Lounly Juve nilc Department. Juvenile direc tor Richard McDevitt said he would seek the boys' return to Snlem. The parents said they wanted the juvenile department to take On The Record DIVORCE ACTIONS FILED DOUGLAS Sandra Darlens v. Charlts RIHv. REDFIELD Don C. vs. E'rial LfluK B RUMBLE Dorothy EHto vi. Herbert Benmin, SEPARATION ACTION FILtD SANDERS Betty vs. Orcdia DiObon. MARRIAOE LICENSES Hnrviy S, Lirnt. 71. and Anna Louli Tuektr, U, both Klamath hall. Manning M. Boout. 1- Srfnta Maria. Call., and I rant M. Ltovd, 41, Klamath Falls. Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Sesl. 71. Mil Wiitiam T. Bennatt. drunk, $IS or flva or TO davs- Hanry Martin Johrii, drunK, i5 or nvr or 10 dflv Gana C. Ganlry. arvn aia nirana run. continuad Harry BurntMt. drunk. 13 S or 1va or 10 days Lron Gaia Pramon. ttsauit ard ca?- tery. trnjlrrfri to county Lylt Can Williams. aMau" aid oai- larv. transferrad to county. Wltliim m McLaughlin, drunk, n ana v or tO dayt. fcrnrsf Littltwolf. drunk, IW or 10 or 10 d4vi Gfprqt DavU, disordfriy COnauCi. IX 'Ortf t)i?d. Kllm.in nut, Orton PublliKK llly Imnl l I "H Jui"lT Jtrvlnq soutntrn Drtgnn and Northtrn CAlllftrnl by Klimtlh PublliMnf Combiny Phont TUimio 41111 W. B. SwMIUnd. PublnHtr nttrad at Mcpnd-Uii mklltr at In poll p'llca al Ktwmath Falia. Praoon. an Autuil 31. 104. vMr acl f can- ora. rth 3. ia saconctan f-"t. ata paid al Klamath Mill. Orttan, and al addihanil maillnf aiiican Carftrr I Mftnlb .... 4 Mantnt I Yaar Mall In Advanca I Manfn 4 MMina . 1 Yaar Carmr and Daalart watkdav. cr, tundav. C00V UNITKO PRRU I NTIR NATIONAL AUDIT AUKIAU Of CIRCULATION SueKHMrt nt raca.vlnf daiivarr at thatr MaraM and Nawt. AMaM nndnt TUvadd 44111 dtfdra I a.Tt. charge of the boys, aged 12 and 10, and said they hoped they could work to regroup the family. The Hackworths, w.io went to Charleston, near Coos Bay, after (he youths were sent to Omaha last week, returned to Salem Thursday. Hackworth said he was still trying to find a job. Judge Duncan said it was up to Omaha juvenile authorities wheth er the boys will be returned here. A healing is scheduled in juvenile court in Omaha Oct. 9. If the boys arc returned to Marion County, McDcvilt said his department might ask a private or public welfare agency to help the family (o get back on its feet and build a home for the boys. ''fTci ti ASTORIA (UPD - Astorians awaited a brief afternoon visit from President Kennedy today, hopeful of hearing some favorable word about the future of the old Tongue Point Naval Station. All members of Oregon's Demo cratic congressional delegation and Republican Gov. Mark Hat field were scheduled to greet Ken nedy at 1:20 p.m. when his heli copter arrived from Tacoma. The visit was to be brief only 15 minutes. Kennedy was to view tlie installation, meet with local officials but planned no speech. He then was to icoptcr back to Seattle-Tacoma airport and fly to Redding, Calif. passing over the Oregon Dunes and tlie Rogue Basin Project in Southern Oregon en route. The Democratic con gressional delegation was to ac company him, then return to Port land by plane this evening. . Kennedy Briefly This Afternoon Barricades to control a crowd of 3,000 to 5,000 persons have been constructed at Tongue Point, lo cated just east of here. Many Clatsop County schools planned to dismiss classes to let children see the President. Tongue Point was completed in 1939 as a Navy air station, con verted into a reserve fleet base in 1948 and closed in 1960 as sur plus. Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., has been after the administration to find a new use for the facility. Kennedy had been scheduled earlier to speak in Portland but this was called off in the face of threatened picketing of a new pub lic housing project by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Rep. Edith Green, D-Ore., said the President may return in the next few months and stay longer. She said she was "sorry about the combination of events and statements that caused this can cellation." Kennedy's afternoon flight south was to take him over the scenic dunes area between Florence and North Bend. Bills have been in troduced to convert it into a na tional seashore. Before landing at Redding he also was to pass over the Rogue Basin project and view sites for three proposed dams Lewis Creek, Elk Creek and Cooper. No actual w ork has been done on the dams since money is available only for planning. Earlier, Kennedy said in a speech prepared lor delivery at Cheney Stadium at Tacoma the figlit over conservation has been waged since the beginning of this century. "But only recently," he added, "has outdoor recreation be come a full partner in the con servation movement." Atomic Power Plant Started HANKORD (UPD - President Kennedy ushered in the age of atomic electricity Thursday with a wave of a uranium - tipped wand. More than 30.000 persons broil ed under a brutal sun for about three hours to be present for the historic occasion here. Kennedy used the atomic point er to start a BO-foot crane and scoop shovel, which actually turn ed the first earth for construction of a powerhouse to produce 860, 000 kilowatts of firm electricity. I assume this was actually on the level and that there was no body over there," Kennedy quip ped as he gestured to the crane. The ceremony took place in dusty area beside the Columbia River. The crowd began to ar rive before noon and long before the President arrived, the spec- tators Mere standing shoulder to shoulder across tlie hot, dry desert. It was not a demonstrative crowd. They cheered only infre quently. But the fact that they came at all, 37 miles from tne nearest town, attested to the sense of history. The audience was liberally sprinkled with children. The power plant scheduled for construction here will use steam to turn giant turbines. The steam is a by-product of the production of weapons-grade plutonium in an atomic reactor-. The entire reactor will cost $195 million, with about $25 mil. lion associated specifically with the electric generating facilities, which are scheduled to begin pro ducing power by October, 1065 Although Kennedys trip was billed as a nonpolitical one, it was the Democrats' day. Sharing the speakers stand with the Pres ident were Gov. Albert D. Rosel lini and the state's two U.S. sen ators. Warren G. Magnuson and Henry M. Jackson. All are Dem ocrats. No Republicans were on the stand, although Rep. Catherine May, R-Wash., was praised in ab sentia for her part in the con gressional fight to win authoriza tion for tlie Hanford electric proj ect. Throngs Greet President At Mormon Tabernacle 1MiLY HROTECTOR J Lynn Colby 1229 Main TU 2-3673 State Farm's Family Protector Insurance provides a lump sum payment as well as a monthly income while your children are growing up both at a low package rate. (Same good deal as State Farm car insurance.) See your friend for life. Statd Firm Life Inturanca Company, Horn Ollict: Bloomington, Illinois.. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah i UPD The mighty Mormon Tabernacle choir of 375 voices had the ancient structure throb bing with the soaring final bar; of "Battle Hymn of the Repub lic." A tall slender figure in a dark blue suit carefully flicked per spiration from his face as he lis tened intently; twisted in his hair on the Tabernacle rostrum for a view of the singers ar rayed behind him. It was Presi dent Kennedy Thursday night the biggest ovation of his current western tour. More than 8,000 persons jammed the vaull-roofcd Taber nacle and easily double that num ber swarmed futilcly around each of the many entrances to the huge hall, striving to squeeze at least within sight of the rostrum where Kennedy was flanked by Democratic leaders and Prcsi dent David O. McKay, 90-year-old spiritual leader of two million members of the Church of Jesus ml I Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mor mon). What made the evening take on successlul, it not unusual, propor tions for Kennedy was that he had delivered a rather stern in dictment of many policies and ideas dear to the hearts of the radical right, the John Birch Society and such Republican con7 servatives as Sen. Barry Goldwa tcr of Arizona. Such a speech runs counter to the conservatism that marks this city, seat of the Mormon church, and for that matter, much of the stale. No Honey Down When We Build An Echo Home ON YOUR LOT!! Or our talesmen can tell you how to have your "dream home" now with only 2 down if you don't own your lot. 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