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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1963)
Moscow Bloc Readies Red China Expulsion LONDON (UPI) - The Mos cow - led Communist nations have drafted a point-by-point In dictment of Communist China : for next month's meeting which may lead to Peking's expulsion from their ranks, it was learned today- . - Communist sources said in Moscow over the weekend that the major Communist parties in Uie Soviet camp would gather there during the celebrations of the 46th anniversary of the Rus sian revolution. China and its Asian, Commu nist allies were not expected to attend the meeting, which was seen as a possible prelude to the expulsion of the Chinese from the Moscow-dominated blcxf. The official organ of that Oregon Claims Biggest Spruce EUGENE (UPI) - A forester of tlie Willamette National For est says Oregon can claim the nation's largest Englemann spruce, an honor which has long belonged to Idaho. Marsten Kuchne said the tree was found in the Bruno .Meadows in the Detroit Ranger ; District. It stands 140 feet high, '.has a circumference of 20 feet, 7 inches; and a crown diameter ;of 34 feet, a measurement of the limb spread. Kuehne said the tree is larger than Idaho's giant spmce in the Cache National Forest. Council Authorizes Use Of Modern Languages VATICAN CITY (UPD-Ecu-t menical Council fathers voted, ; 2,103-19, today to authorize the use of modern languages fn- ctnaH iif T.olm in Hnmnn mill s' o!lc wcddfnss. funerals, ban- ? .. . ., - ugms ana omer sacraments. - In another significant action, ' tlioy voted, 2,143-35, to change - extreme unction commonly called "the last riles" to "the sacrament of the anointing of the sick" in order to make clear that it is not intended merely for those who are dying. At one of the busiest sessions ; they have held this all. the . ...... !. ........ -J U.. an overwhelming standine vole . to ciose aenaie toaay on a ooc i ument dealing with (ho clergy iHlf-tlie church. Wednesday they will begin debate on a docu ment concerned with the role of. tlio Catholic laity. On Thursday, the fathers will take four crucial test voles on FA NEW KIND Starts WEDNESDAY! IK . .... A uirKHtillUL'1 1 fxrri.'au I M i nit bUKNkL WILUI: UtAN WALLAU I BKIAN AHtKNt tm, n rnmmo rra nooumun b uhytimi news ( bloc, the World Marxist Re view, iset out key points of the indictment prepared against Pe king in its current issue. The Moscow group's overall charge is that Peking, with its hard line foreign policy and bit ter attacks on Russia, is out of' line with the world Communist movement "on many issues of policy, strategy, and tactics." The indictment leaves no room for compromise and im plies that if a settlement is to be achieved, Peking must make all the concessions. ' The indictment charges that -the Chinese leaders: "Deny the pressing need for a jointly elaborated policy of peaceful co-existence," a ref erence to the Peking line' that war Is inevitable in advancing the cause of communism. "Violate the standards of behavior between fraternal par tics," which refers to the re peated propaganda attacks on Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev and his policies, some of them launched by Chi nese In the Soviet Union itself. "Out Of Joint" "Arc out of joint" on the nuclear test ban treaty, which Moscow , concluded with the West and which Communist parties outside the Peking orbit support unanimously. "Support splitters and rene gades" who have been expelled from Communist parties. This refers to, Chinese attempts to line up Communist dissidents throughout the world to oppose Khrushchev. tlie general principles of the document on the clergy, which has been under discussion sinco (Ills session of the coun cil convened Sept. 2D. These votes will determine how the fathers feel about two controversial issues involved in tlie clergy document. ' One is a proposal to restore the ancient order of deacons and permit them to marry. The other would recognize that bish ops comprise a sacred college sharing with the Pope respon sibility for the teaching and government of the entire church. The document on the clergy is Chapter Two of a "dogmatic Constitution" on the nature of the church. The document on the laity which comes up for debate Wednesday Is Chapter Three of the- same overall project. Ten to !12 pounds of feed arc required to produce one pound of lean beef. DOORS OPEN TONITE AT t;43 OF LOVEH Tul (IaMUL'U Oh' TUK MflS'l VaIJANT VVAKKIOR OK THEM ALL: PACE-2 HERALD AND ,0 o tS ft 1-3H 'FAMILY HONORED The now famous Fischer family, minus their month-old quintu plets who still are in the, hospital, were guests of honor at a parade and celebration Monday in Aberdeen, S.D. The other five Fischer youngsters are, left to right, Julie, Denise, Charlotte, Daniel and Evelyn, The celebration marked the one-month birthday of the quints. UPI Telephoto 'Air-Taxis1 Grounded After 6 Die NEW YORK (UPI) - New York Airways grounded all its "air-taxi" service today as Civil Aeronautics Board inves tigators sought to determine if metal fatigue in a rotor blade caused a fiery helicopter crash that killed six persons Monday. All six persons aboard the 25 scal, twin-blade craft died when the helicopter fell from the sky, crashed and burned on takeoff at ldlewild Airport. Three of the victims were crewmembers, Including a 21-ycar-old stewardess, Maria R. Fourquet, of Northport, N.Y. A preliminary investigation by federal investigators indi cated tlie crash was caused by a fracture in one of the two rotor-blades, usually the result ,of metal fatigue. Oscar Bakke, regional direc tor of the Federal Aviation Agency, said the snapping of a blade would make a tremen dous noise, much like an explo sion. Several eyewitnesses said the helicopter, a $750,000 Boeing Vertol 107B, seemed to explode seconds alter lifting off. The New York Airways' three remaining , helicopters were grounded pending the oulcome of the investigation, s Also killed in the crash was the pilot, Frank' I-o Turcn, 42, of Thormvood, N.J., a veteran Marine Corps fighter pilot who joined New .York Airways in 1055, and the co-pilot, .Joseph C. Giambntisln, 37, of New York. Giambntista recently wed the former Fern Roberts, who had been New York Airways' chief stewardess. The three passengers killed were Mrs. Marie Wild, 51., of aio:t Springdale, Parma, Ohio: George A. l.angcnberg. 51, of .11105 Techney Road, Norllihrnok, 111., and R. .1. Stnnknvish. 25, an employe of British Overseas Airways Corp., who lived In New York. ' TOMITl Starts Hi iiiH I'lUIH'IHT " i ft r. NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon Home Town Celebrates Quints1 'Birthday Party' ABERDEEN, S.D. (UPI) -Mrs. Andrew Fischer put aside the cheers of thousands of well wishers today and yearned for "the quiet days" when her tiny quintuplets will 'be' at home with her. Mrs. Fischer, 30, and her husband smiled and waved as they rode down Main Street Monday during a big parade. Later they went to a mam moth "birthday party" at the Civic Arena in honor of their famous children. But clearly their hearts were across (own where the Fjschor quintuplets lay kicking and coo ing in St. Luke's Hospital and perhaps back to the "quiet days" they once knew in their big rambling farmhouse just outside Aberdeen. "It's wonderful," Mrs. Fisch er said of the 25,000 persons Disaster Workers Begin Gigantic Rebuilding Task BELLUNO, Italy (UPI)-Puh-liu officials and survivors of the Vajont Dam disaster worked to day to overcome a set of appal ling problems and rebuild the ruined selMemonts of (lie Piave River Valley. An uneasy sense of danger still hung over the area where an estimated 2,500 persons died last Wednesday when a land slide smashed into the Vajont Reservoir, sending millions of tons of water down on the town of Longarone and a half dozen omuller villages in (lie valley. Soldiers still dug in the mud today for bodies buried in the deluge. No official figure was available on the number of bod ies recovered so for. The government earmarked funds at a cabinet meeting 'Monday night for the repair and reconstruction of houses. WEDNESDAY! HURT KIRK LANCASTER-DOUGLAS , HALWALUS'- GUNFIGHT AT THE aiLCORRAL T1CHNICOLOR FLEMING - VAN FLEET-IRELAND iwinainiisi KIRK DOUGLAS ANINONT QUINN .HALWALLIS'.., LAST TRAIN FROM GUN HILL T1CHNKOUM CAROLYN JONES EARL BOWMAN Tuesday, October 15, 1063 1 who braved a rainstorm and lined the flag-bedecked streets. "But I'm anxious to get the babies home." She said she longed for quiet, and her husband said: "I'm looking forward to quiet days, loo." The quints were born ear ly Sept. 14, one month prema ture. The Aberdeen Chamber of Commerce planned the "birthday party" for the day they would be one month old. The tiny tots got another weighing just before the festivi ties began Monday. First-born Mary Ann, tlie tiniest, weighed 3 pounds 12 ounces. The lone boy, James Andrew, weighed 6 pounds 1 ounce. Mary Magdalene weighed 4 pounds 10 ounces, Mary Cath arine 4 pounds 13 ounces and Mary Margaret 5 pounds 1 stores, factories and public works. It also approved special aid for orphans and elderly sur vivors. The road to recovery was far from easy. Only a handful of the 240 former buildings re main in Longarone, where an estimated 1,260 persons died. Most of tlie farmland in the valley lies ruined beneath a 25-mile plain of mud and water. Art Event Scheduled Klamath Falls artists arc re minded that they are invited to submit their work for the Rental- Sales Gallery of the Boguo Valley Art Association. Works of art may be in any media. Paintings should ' be framed or matted and delivered to the basement meeting room of tlie public library of Mcdford and Jackson 'County, Wednes day, Oct. 16, between 1 and 4 p.m. A limit of four works for each artist has been set. The work will lie judged on Thursday, Oct. 17. Artists will be notified immediately follow ing judging whether their work has been accepted or rejected Rejected work may be claimed during regular visiting hours at tlie Rogue Vnlley Art Association Gallery at 220 West Main Street, Mcdford. Accepted work. will be on ex hibition for the general pub lic for two weeks following tlie Nov. 4 opening and reception for the association members. Following Nov. 15 the work will be available for viewing by tlie membership and the public in tlie back room of the gallery which Will continue to be used as a Rental-Sales room. Rentals will be available only to the association members. Sales will be open to the puhlic Gallery hours are from 2 to 4 p.m., Monday through Sturday. feralii anil Jeto; Klimath Pttlt, Orttt Pukllthtrt Ottlv (.vet.! Sat.) .n SundtT S.nrlftf Sftuirtfrn Orflfn eml Ntfthtrn Cstthtrile Ktsmsth Pvbitintnt c.mooey OMn. Ttl. .aid W. . sxtll.ix. Pitiiiher Inftrve as SKone.cl.ii matter at !e pt off lea al Klamath Fail). Oreoon. ! Avouit la, ltaa, Mi e- rati, Marcn J. nit sectHvKiais t . aaa eatd at Klamath . OnaM. ane at adeittwtel maillna aMtceat Cam., I went. . . I MantkB I Year . . Matt In nevence I Month I Mentha 1 Year , in w . U1.M . t I II . (1IW II.N weekeav. Ce, tee Suneav. Ceav 1st j.tnim.i m. recaivine eetlverf ruaoee Mill eerere I urn. Racial Crisis Looms Again in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM,. Ala. UPH Negro leader Martin Luther King Jr., bitterly denouncing the city's rejection of his deseg regation demands, threatened Monday night to lead demon strations of ."more numbers that any man can .count." "We will demonstrate until they integrate," he told a rally of more than 1,000 Negroes. But he did not say when such segre gation protests, which brought around 2,500 arrests last spring, would begin. King spoke several hours aft er Mayor Albert Boutwell said that solution of the city's racial problems "will never be done in response to threats or dead lines from anyone." Boutwell referred to a demand by King that the city hire 25 Negro po licemen within a two-week pe riod ending next Monday or face new racial demonstrations. Bout'well's executive assist ant, W. C. Hamilton, said civil service regulations requiring a six-week clearance check for new employes would make it "impossible" to meet King's deadline without an act of the legislature. Boutwell said an "intensive and completely impartial sur vey" was being made to deter mine the best kind of police force for Birmingham and he would not permit "other inter- Jailer Quits Burns Post BURNS (UPI) - Harold Weatherhead has given .up his job as night jailer at the city county jad here. Weatherhead was freed from 36 hours in a cell Monday after being locked in by escaping prisoners for the second time in two weeks. He promptly an nounced he was through. The jailer, 58, was locked in Saturday night by John King, 27, of Prineville, and Leonard Bogue, 18, of Salem. They pulled a knife on him and took the only key to the cell when they fled. Bogue was appre hended in Salem Monday. King still is at large. . Werner Arntz, a Burns ma chinist and Harney County com missioner, drilled the lock off the door alter he was unable to open it any other way. The same thing happened two weeks ago when Bogue and an other man escaped. They were recaptured the next day. . las Aninrnnifrn dlUUtUHUEIi 6-cylinder engine establishes 8 new records at Bonneville...shows how advanced engineering pays off for you! Advanced enpneering puts plenty cf power into every Studebaker en gine, including the record-breaking Skybolt 8-cylinder you get in the low priced Challenger. Wc tested all the '64 Studebakert on the Salt Flats not for speed (lone, but to prove their overall performance. We built the '64 Studebakert purposely different. So you can enjoy that extra margin of safety when you have to pass another car in a hurry, or swing onto a turnpike and move quickly up to traffic speed. You get greater economy, too. From the Skybolt 6 to the Jet Thrust V'8't, every Studebaker engine is diet conscious when it comes to gasoline. You see, at Studebaker, "different ... by design" means more than style. It means high performance. See your Studebaker dealer for a look . . . for a r'de . . . and today's best buyl DISCOVER THE BIO DIFFERENCE IN STUDEBAKER 120 EAST MAIN csts to intervene or defeat" that study. .Other racial developments: Clinton, La.: A Louisiana court Monday issued a warrant for the arrest of James Farm er, national director of the Con gress of Racial Equality (CORE) for leading racial dem onstrations. Farmer failed to show up (or a hearing Monday against Negroes charged with violating a restraining order against picketing white mer; chants. Resignation Adds New Fuel To Nuclear Ships Dispute WASHINGTON (UPD-Navy Secretary Fred Korth's resig nation was expected today to fire up a controversy in the Pentagon and Congress over tlie future of the nuclear power for naval ships. - Intentionally or otherwise, the Texan's retirement decision served to emphasize a dispute that has smoldered for many months between the Navy and the Defense Department over the speed with which the fleet should shift to atomic propul sion. . A congressional inquiry al ready had been planned on the basis of Defense Secretary Rob ert S. McNamara's opposition to a second nuclear - powered aircraft carrier. It conceivably could be hastened and almost certainly will pit Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rickover, tlie atom ic power expert, against Mc Namara in a dramatic congres sional controversy. More than St decade ago, Rickover and a . few congres sional supporters practically forced nuclear propulsion of submarines on a hesitant Navy. But today tlie outspoken admir al has the support of the Navy from Korth on down, and of the Atomic Energy Commission (AECI in pressing for a speed ier switch to atomic surface ships. Chairman John O. Pastore, D-H.I., of the joint Congres sional Atomic Energy Commit tee notified McNamara in a letter dated Oct. 9 that he would hold hearings on the new Your usable discards will help us to help others. Don't throw 'cm away. CALL: The SALVATION ARMY THRIFT STORE 4th A KUmalh TU 4-Alinl fUlflfpfU KLAMATH MOTORS Gaslonia, N.C.: Several hun dred Negroes picketed two seg regated movie houses Monday night without Incident. It was the second consecutive evening of picketing. Tallahassee, Fla.: A group of white Florida State University .students carrying "Ban the Ban" placards picketed an off campus hangout Monday to pro test its tefusal to serve Ne groes. Jacksonville, Fla.: A hearing was scheduled in U.S. District I aircraft carrier, which McNa I mara wants to be conventional i 'ly powered. v Coincidental, that was the same day the Navy got the word from McNamara that he was against Korth's proposal of last Jan. 23 that the flattop be built with nuclear propulsion. The Navy saw in that deci sion a threat to its broader pro posal trat all future ships of more than 8,000 tons displace ment, chiefly frigates but also carriers, have atomic power. un uct. iu, tne avy request ed McNamara to give it one more hearing, which he agreed to do. On Oct. 11, Korth ar Brand New n Complete! Ready To Move Into. Priced From Just ON YOUR LOT, PAID FOR OR NOT See the new Echo (Homei now under construction on Delta and Pleasant Ave. NO MONEY DOWN No Closing Costs 100 Financing Pjrmts Like Rnt Or our salesman can tefl you how to hove your new "dream home" now with only 3 dawn if you don't already own your lot. 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