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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1963)
PAGE-2 HERALD AND News From The Services First U. Larry B. Bean of Klamath Falls hag received a regular United States Air Force commission. Bean, serving at Kindley Air Force Base, Ber muda, previously held a reserve commission, but received h i s regular commission after com- - 4 if' "i LARRY BEAN peting with other reserve offi cers on the basis of perform ance of duty, educational back ground and other factors. Bean is a pilot assigned to the 53rd Weather Reconnais sance Squadron. Ho is the son Of Mrs. Harry Mathis of 2140. Gettle Street, Klamath Falls. Bean wag graduated from Klamath Union High School and earned his degree at Oregon State University. He received his commission while in col- A.l.C. Roy D. Edwards of Lakeview has been graduated from the Noncommissioned Of ficer Preparatory School at Ba rney Air Force Base, Puerto Ri co. Edwards, con of Mr. and Mrs. Bergin Edwards, 648 G Street, Lakeview, attended Lakeview High School. He is a butcher assigned to Headquar ters Squadron, 72nd Combat Support Group, at Ramey. '.'Another Noncommissioned Of ficer Preparatory School gradu ate is A.l.C. Wilbur E. Bryant, a refrigeration specialist in the 823rd Air Division at McCoy Air Force Base, Fla. Bryant's wife Is the former Betty L. Shepard, 421 North First Street, Klamath Falls. Bryant is from ScoUsviUc, Va. A.3.C". Jerry N. Jones, whose wife is the former Barbara . WILLIAM PARKS Welch of Klamath Falls, is be ing reassigned to Robins A I r Force Base, Ga., following his graduation from the United States Air Force technical train ing course for data processing machine operators at Sheppard Air Force Base, Tex. Jones is from Asheville, N.C. Throe Klamath County youths have enlisted in the Navy in Klamath Falls and are undergo- nM. Hun A:M LAST 2 DAYS! TECHNICOLORTW I . ClNIMAftCO" WRK DOUOAS-MMtS lUSOK rMUuinratMi "PAUL mm inii'vr iiwifiewMannl r- J 'AV7 - ' . ."Mr ' N f v I :' "wniToisStxS . t. I WW 041 i4S NEWS, Klamath Fall), Oregon lng recruit training in San Di ego, Calif. Recruiter T. E. Shockley list ed the enlistees as William Thomas Parks, 17, a former stu dent at Gilchrist High School and son of Mr. and Mrs. Den ver Wade Parks; Raymond Robert Bartlett, 18, former Klamath Union High student and son of Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert H. Bartlett, Klamath Falls; and Leroy Alvin Harper, 20, a 1061 graduate of Klamath Un ion and son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur L. Harper, Klamath Falls. Marine Lance Cpl. Chester C. Harris, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Royal of Weed, Calif., is serving a 13 - month tour of duty with the First Ma rine Aircraft Wing stationed at Iwakuni, Japan. Gerald L. Switzler, aviation boatswain's mate and son of Mr. and Mrs. Van L. Switzler, 3411 Madison Avenue, Klamath Falls, is serving aboard the anti-sab-marine warfare support aircraft RAYMOND BARTLETT carrier USS Hornet, which re cently completed training exer cises off the coast of California. The Hornet is stationed at Long Beach, Calif. Army 2nd U. David F. Riley, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. James Riley, 522 North Fifth Street, Klamath Falls, completed a 20 week officer helicopter aviator course at Fort Woltcrs. Tex., Mme. Nhu Gets Quick Answer NEW YORK (UPD - When Mme. Ngo Dinh NiiU asked NBC newsman John Sharkey why he was wearing a bandage on his head and right hand she got a straiglit answer"! was beaten up by your secret po lice." Sharkey was one ' of three American correspondents re cently beaten by secret police as they recorded the burning suicide of a Buddhist monk in Saigon. The reporter and the petite First Lady of South Viet Nam met Sunday in an fJBC studio. "I'm very sorry," Mme. Nhu told Sharkey. "I hope you'll re cover soon." Morrocan King Sees First Lady MARRAKECII, Morocco (UP!) Mrs. Jacqueline Ken nedy was disclosed today to have had a meeting with King Hassan 11 of Morocco shortly after her arrival hero from Alliens Sunday nifilil lor a three-day privalo visit. U.S. Secret Servicemen said the king, who sent a special jetliner to Athens for the U.S. First Lady, paid a 30-minute call on Mrs. Kennedy in the Bahia Palace where she is staying with her sister, Iin cess le RacUiwill. $craliiaTii$rttT;$ KUmtJh 'iik ortM PubtUhMl daily (axcrM ltt.1 luntfiy Itrviitf iwnntrn urewn and Nftrfhfrn CitlferU by KUmilh publliMnv Company Mi'n at Siplannrtt Phana TUnttt 4-aiil W. k. iwtalland, Publithtr hsimj iMMdiiii miliar at tha nnkl Affir al klamilh Falli, Oratjon, mm Autiual 4. ItM. umftr act 4 C4V OMBt wartn i ia". aacwvtia pon- at M" mamain rn, utrtw and at additional mailtni aliuati Carrtar I ManHi I Mantha 1 Vaar Mad In Advanct 1 Manth I Mantha .-. 1 Yaar Carrtar anal Daaiara Waafcday Caay ... tundav. Caay . . 1 1 tit w . UI.N I 1.M lit H III.M ... 1M lk UNITIO PHfSI INTIRNATIONAL AUDIT tUBlAU OP CIRCULATION SubtcriBr naf rtcatvlnt daiivarv al tftair HaraM a ad Nawt plaaM phandj luiaoa a-aui varar r a.n. LAST 2 DAYS! IMEW KINO OF LOVE KMCMV ....,1. it, i , r- , sy" .imui in hup ii -i tfi:ty xv Monday, October 14, 1963 Sept. 20. Riley entered the Ar my a year ago after graduation from Oregon State University. The 24-year-old officer is a 1937 graduate of Klamath Union High School. Army Pfc. John H. Taylor, LEROY HARPER son of George A. Taylor of Yre ka. participated in Exercise Falling Leaves, a six-day com mand post exercise in Korea, last month. Larry Wolter, son of M r s. Perley Wolter, 2263 Garden Street, and Lawrence B. Wol ter, 230 South Eleventh, enlisted in the Army Aug. 30 and is re ceiving basic training at Fort Ord, Calif. Ho is a 1963 gradu ate of Klamath Union High School., . Army Capt. Floyd D. Hoefler, 30, son of Mr. and Mrs. Domin ic Hoefler, 311 Division Street, Klamath Fails, has been as signed to the First Infantry Di vision at Fort Riley, Kan. lie is adjutant of the 701st Ordnance Battalion and served in Viet Nam before his assignment. Captain Hoefler entered the Ar my in 1953. He is a 1951 gradu ate of Klamath Union High School and altcnded Oregon State University. Marine Pfc. Earl B. Brinson, son of Jesse D. Brinson, 4630 Clinton Avenue. Klamath Falls, was graduated Sept. 6 from the four-week Aviation Mechanical Training Center, Memphis, Tenn. LARRY WOLTER Bus Crash Claims Two KEARXY, N.J. IUPI) - Two women were killed and at least 23 others wore injured early to day when a Greyhound bus plowed inlo the rear of a tractor - trailer on the fog shrouded I)jcw Jersey Turnpike near here. .The women, w ho had been sit ting near the front of the bus, were not identified immediately. Truckers reported the fog was mi thick Utcy could not see be yond their bumpers. Shortly before the Kearny ac cident, there was a huge pileup on Route 3 in F.a.st Rutherford. Involving another Greyhound bus, two trucks and five cars. At least three persons were hurt. One of the trucks was carry ing long pipes. When the rig jaeknlled across the road, its load spilled onto the highway. It was three hours before the wreckage was unsnarled. Cal Poly, OSU Top Judging PORTLAND (UPli - Calif ornia Polytechnic College and Oregon Stale University had high scores in intercollegiate liieatock judging contests at the Pacific International Livestock Exposition. t'al Toly team members took first place with Oregon State second. Fresno SUto, Washing ton State and Idaho finished in that order behind them. Michael Giles, a' Cal Poly junior from Walnut Park, was the top individual scorer. High score in cattle Judging was by Jerry Beach. Oregon Stale senior from Salem. Top hog Judge was Dennis Kiess of W ashington Stale. ,VY- 1 v V rj Mir 4iyyrffl Mjiminiwiinii 1 1 in Court Refuses To Hear Cigarette-Cancer Case WASHINGTON UPI - The Supreme Court refused today to consider an appeal by a Louisiana widow who unsuc fully sued two cigarette firms on the ground they were re sponsible ' for her husband's death of lung cancer. The action was taken at the court's first working session of the new term featured by an nouncement by the justices of various appeals they were either accepting for argument, or rejecting. Immediately after announce ment of the court orders, the justices began hearing argu ments on the first of five Negro sit-in cases that might have far-reaching impact on the right of private business to practice racial discrimination. The smoking case was brought to the Supreme Court by Mrs. Victoria St. Pierre Lartigue., She sued the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and the Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. after the death of her husband in 1955. In seeking damages, she charged that the sale of ciga rettes by the ' two makers im plied a "warranty of whole someness." A New Orleans federal jury ruled against her and the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the finding on April 19 .of this yea r. The Supreme Court's brief order today let the lower court findings stand. In a similar case, the Flori da Supreme Court has ruled that a cigarette company can be held liable for the death of a person. The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals has scheduled re arguments on the case for Nov. 1. In the Louisiana case, the circuit court observed that Mrs. Lartigue's husband smoked from the time he was 9 years old. She acknowledged he was a "cigarette fiend." The opinion made no direct reference to a federal govern ment study now being awaited on the possibility of a link be tween cigarette smoking and lung cancer. In other actions today, the Supreme Court: Agreed to rule whether a native-born citizen can be ex patriated and ordered deported because he served in Fidel Castro's Cuban army. The ap peal came from Herman F. Marks. 42, a native of Mil waukee, who has been accused by the Justice Department of handling a number of execu tions while serving Castro in 1959-60. Let stand a circuit court order that could open the DENNIS THE MENACE :5S euttt ' MATS MORE IMfbftrANT . . . WAUAWe OH 1VE 6W PHD 1 ttR PREW IN My WOl ItFE ? ' SELF-ADJUSTING MATERNITY SEPARATES STYLED BY way for a strike over job secu rity by the Order of Railway Conductors against, the Pull man Co. Agreed to examine two state required oaths challenged by 60 employes of the University of Washington at Seattle. A spe cial three-judge federal court had upheld the oath require ments. Refused to accept a case brought by the American Civil' Liberties Union challenging a California state rule governing leasing of a school auditorium. Accepted a case involving whether a witness can gain immunity from antitrust prose cution by testifying on the same subject before a congres sional committee. Solon Eyes Las Vegas Information 'WASHINGTON UPI Sen. Jacobs K. Javits, R-N.Y., wants to question underworld informer Joseph Valachi about crime and gangland connections in the Las Vegas, Nev., gambling center. Javits, a member of the Sen ate investigations subcommittee that heard Valachi last week, said Sunday he thought there was "a big story in Las Vegas" and Valachi knew far more than he had testified in public about the gambling oasis. The investigations subcommit tee, with Valachi temporarily excused as a witness, plans to take testimony starting Tuesday on crime in Tampa, Fla., Buf falo, N.Y., and Boston. Javits said he would try to get more information from Va lachi on Las Vegas when the subcommittee resumes question ing the Cosa Nostra alumnus in closed session. Valachi said in his public tes timony that he believed impris oned Cosa Nostra boss Vito Ge novese still had gambling inter ests in Las Vegas with racke teer Meyer Lansky. Javits said on a television program that Valachi's appear ances before the Senate group had been sensationalized some-' what but that, after all, some of his disclosures had been "pretty sensational." The New York senator pointed out that the hearings had two purposes to win public support for law enforcement officers and to consider the need for wire-tap and other legislation to crack down on crime. Only nationally-famous L o d y in Waiting knows how to make ma ternity fashions likt these. You got a full, leom-to-ieom front in sert of magic stretch Helenca R . . . PLUS a firm, 10ft, all-around waistband of one-inch elastic , . , PLUS more fullness shirred into the expertly-fitted back far extra grow, ing room. Nothing to odjust or fasten your Lady in Waiting garment expands automatically as you need it, fits perfectly at all times. Come in for try-on. Korth Quits As Navy Secretary WASHINGTON UPI - The White House announced today the resignation of Navy Secre tary Fred Korth. Korth wrote President Kennedy that he made the decision to resign be cause of "pressing private af fairs." Kennedy said Paul Nitze, now assistant defense secretary for international security af fairs, would be nominated to to succeed Korth, a former Fort Worth, Tex., banker. Korth, in his letter of resigna tion to the President, said he .was leaving the post with "the utmost regret." Korth asked that bis resigna tion take effect Nov. 1. He said he wanted to "re turn to private business and at tend to my pressing private af fairs." , Korth was among Defense Department officials who fig ured in tlie explosive Senate in vestigation of the TFX war plane contract award. The President, in a "Dear Fred" letter, praised Korth for his "real contribution to the ad vancement of United States na tional security interests." He asserted: "The nation is in your debt for your many years of public service, including this last pe riod of almost two years when you have worked so devotedly to strengthen the United States Navy." The White House announce ment said that Nitze would be replaced in his sensitive secu rity post by William P. Bundy, currently his deputy assistant. Korth was questioned for days on end by Senate investi gators in their TFX inquiry, and there were suggestions both within and outside the subcom mittee of a possibility of con flict of interest on his part. Surprise Vote Returns Document For Rewriting VATICAN CITY (LTD Ecu menical Council fathers in a surprise vote today sent back for rewriting a document au thorjzing the use of modern languages and other reforms in the Mass. The document in question is Chapter Two of the liturgical reform project which the, pre lates debated for three weeks at their first session last au tumn. In a series of votes last week they gave overwhelming approval to 19 specific amend ments to the chapter, indud-. ing four which spelled out in detail authorization for the use of the vernacular the ordinary language of the people instead of Latin in large portions of the Mass. Today's vote was on approval of tile chapter as a whole. In voting on the amendments last week the fathers had only two choices: They could vote yes or no. Today, however, they had a third choice. They could vote "Yes, Willi reservations." Since 2.242 ballots were cast, 1.495 yes votes were required to make up the necessary two thirds majority for final ap proval of the whole chapter. But the chapter received only SRm Jtem 1.91 St 2 Main Strt M.lttBrfT f.ihieni Stcone1 Flo.r Uit tt. IL.itOf: Negro Leaders Plan Showdown With Birmingham City Officials BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (UPD Integration leaders Martin Luther King Jr. and Fred Shut tlesworth return here today for a showdown with city officials on their demands for more de segregation. The two Negro leaders who led the massive racial demon strations here that exploded into violence and led to more than 2,500 arrests, issued an ul timatum last week that 25 Ne gro policemen must be hired by next Tuesday. They vowed to lead the Ne gro community in more and bigger demonstrations if their demands are not met. Both King and Shuttlesworth have emphasized, however, that employment of the' Negro po licemen Is only the first step. They also demanded "face-to-face" negotiations between Ne gro leaders and the city coun cil to arrange better job oppor tunities for Negroes in other areas of government. Gov. George Wallace was to appear on local television late today and was expected to dis cuss the racial situation and hold a news conference. The Community Affairs Com mittee on Human Relations, composed of 14 whites and nine Negroes, adopted a resolution Friday urging Mayor Albert Boutwell to change the city's policy of hiring only white po licemen. Many of the city's Fire Report (to a.m. Friday to 10 a.m. Monday Klamath, Falls Fire Department 2:40 p.m. Saturday Moore Park, grass fire started by campfire, no damage. 11:45 p.m. Sunday Trash fire near tracks behind Home Lum ber Company, 2404 South Sixth, no damage. 1,417 unqualified yes votes 78 short of the requisite number. There were only 36 flat no votes but there were 781 fath ers who voted "yes, with res ervations." The Rev. Frederick McMan us, of the National Liturgical Conference of the United Slates, a prominent advocate of liturgical reform, said there was no reason for anyone to be distressed about today's vote and that "the use of vernacu lar and other reforms would unquestionably be approved." Wave Threat CANNON BEACH, Ore. (LTD Many residents in the Cannon Beach and Tolovana Park areas moved to higher ground temp porarily Sunday following a re port that a tidal wave might strike. No tidal wave came. Fire Chief D. R. McCoy of Cannon Beach said about 500 persons from this area left the town during the aler t, which he received at 6 a.m. from t h e Clatsop County sheriff's office. o Effect On Local School Districts of A Reduction of 11 and 14 of the 1963-64 Appropriation for the Basic School Support Fund Diiltiet Eitimtrtd Apportionment Ettimot'ed District Rtduction it , Numbor Undtr Full Appropriation j ThtTolol Appropriation Ii Rtduc.d br " "I'M, U. ' 1 13) 1 l4"'"ZI Cor Unit $ g31,OS4.1J $ 85,344.22 $107,02 41 ll,m' N' ' 277.146.0 31,169.30 . 40,204.60 J1 419.6.6.42 65,326.91 13,964.62 T0TAL $1,528,719.20 $182,940.63 $232,098.63 , 1 VOTE A to Tliii ad paid tat at t community tanica kr: Klamath Cawnty. Oroa.n. Iducatian At.aci.ti.n $,dntr Stt.lolt, I.,,,!.,,.. Chmn., 3910 Dta. most influential business and rivio loafWs DreViOUsly had made the same recommenda tion. Earlier the mayor said he would not answer the King and Shuttlesworth demand but Sat urday a spokesman announced Boutwell was considering the committee recommendation. Clinton, La.: At least 43 pick ets were arrested during the weekend while protesting segre gation customs in stores. Most of the arrests came Saturday, but four members of the Con gress of Racial Equality I CORE i were arrested Sunday. Chicago: Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy told an audience in Chicago Sunday that the ad ministration's civil rights legis lation "has become an article of faith, testing whether white Americans can put aside sec tional and political differences to meet racial problems. . . . He said the "whole nation Now ... at Vern Owens' MARK 9 at a Special The "WAKEFIELD Mark 9 Serits 14-G-795 Beautiful Contemporary , Styling Glort Proof Hi-Fidelity Color Tube Tins? Dependable "Space Age" Super Powerful "New Sealed Circuitry Vista" Tuner Vern Owens' Cascade Home Furnishings 412 Main QUESTIONS to our fellow citizens of ' Do you know that under Measure I our county will receive $1,528,789.20 Basic School Support funds from the state during the current bien nium to offset local property taxes? Do you know that if Meosure 1 is defeated on Oct. 15, any cuts in Basic School Support will have ta be made up by lowering our educational standards (making our children the victims) or by raising property taxes? YES on Measure 1 YES vote means 'No' higher property will be the loser" if Congress rejects the measure. Greensboro. N.C: About 200 Negroes paraded before a seg regated theater Sunday night. The demonstration was orderly and there were no arrests. Charlotte. N.C.t Author-hu-orist Harry Golden urged Ne groes attending a convention of the North Carolina NAACP Sun day to use their ballots to oust Southern office holders w ho block their quest for better treatment. Jackson, Miss.: Negroes at tempted to attend two all-white Methodist and Episcopal churches here Sunday but were refused entry and left quietly. TOYS! TOYS! Complete lint of oil tho ' Mottll toys tien on TV J. W. KERNS 734 So. 6th TU 4-4197 C010BT1I Low Price! m tumrt rer trad Ph. 4-8365 Klamath County taxes! 4