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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1963)
PAGE iA HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon Friday, October IS, 19SJ CENSORED? - Not In America Editor' Note: The follow . lag dispatch li critical of the y nl ted Slates and Hi govern . mrnt. In Russia, such an Item would never appear in print. America, however, boasts a free press free to print Hems both favorable and ; critical of the government and : its administrators, and regu : lated only by good taste, lu ' tegrity and a sense of respon- slbUity and duty. This is Na- tional Newspaper Week, a - good time to reflect on Amer I lea's freedom of the press and ." to remember that a free press ; Is democracy's best guaran ; tee. I ' :' SAIGON, South Viet Nam, : (UPI) - Ngo Dhrh Nhu, broth er and political adviser of Pres ident Ngo Dinh Diem, said Thursday that the Vietnamese people "have lost confidence in the United States." Ngo, like his wife Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu, a frequent critic of U.S. policy here, repeated charges that U.S. intelligence officials tried to tlafic a coup against the Ngo family. He spoke to a group of for eign newsmen in an interview at the presidential palace amid new Communist claims of vic tories in the guerrilla war against Diem's government. Broadcasts from Hanoi, North Vict Nam, claimed that the Communist Vict Cong guerril las have killed or captured 75, 731 enemy troops including 600 Americans in the first nine months of this year. They claimed 350 aircraft shot down or hit and (lie de struction of 4.752 "strategic hamlets," a scries of fortified villages developed by Nhu. Ngo told the visiting news men lie could not understand why the United States has "ini tiated a process of disintegra tion at a time when we are winning" the war against the Communist. "People here are wondering what the United States is doing." he said. "Thete is an atmosphere of distrust. People have lost confidence in the United States." He said Buddhist leaders ar rested after the government's crackdown last August claimed "half a dozen" employes of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and other U.S. civilian agencies in Viet Nam had urged them to (stage a coup against the Ngo family and had incited Buddhists to commit suicide. Says Trust Gone Ngo said the trust that once existed between the U.S. and Vietnamese governments "has ceased to exist now." He said the (same was true of "relations between the Unit ed States and the whole of the underdeveloped world." He did not elaborate. Ngo criticized the U.S. cur tailment of commercial aid to Viet Nam, part of the $1.5 mil lion tlie United States was spending daily here. He said if the suspension of commercial aid continues, "it will certainly affect the war ef fort" and would force his gov ernment to dig into its foreign exchange reserves. Senator Labels Threat Of Inflation Prime Obstacle To Any Big Tax Cut WASHINGTON KUPP Sen. William Proxmire, R-Wis., said today that recent increases in some wholesale prices raise the threat of inflation, a prime ob stacle to any major tax cut this year. Proxmire, a member ot the Senate Finance Committee, is sued a statement opposing the administration's $U billion tax reduction measure shortly be fore the committee began its fourth day of public hear ings on the bill. Budget Director Kcrmit Cor don and Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon were scheduled to testify for the House-passed bill. For Dillon it was his fourth appearance before the commit tee, which is not expected to act on the measure this year. Other congressional news: Mental Health: .Final con gressional approval is expected Monday on President Ken nedy's "bold, new approach" to . GATES OPEN :30 SHOW AT 7:00 TOtllTE and SATURDAY! STEWART; It IMHCH HO'" ?2Maijsspmi - - AND IN HIS WAKE1 , AND iWlsl''' -rrnyuimina ROD TAYLOR AUN YOUNG .WETTE MIMIEUX P&NMIS10M TICHNICOIBR the treatment of mental illness and retardation. House and Senate conferees reached agree ment Thursday on an appropri ation of $329 million for estab lishing community mental health treatment centers over a four-year period, but eliminat ed a provision for federal aid In communities tn help staff the centers in the early stages. Space: Chairman J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Commit tee, decrying "technological stunts," wants a substantially reduced space budget to free funds for education and em ployment programs. Fulbright told the Senate Thursday there was "a dangerous imbalance between our efforts; in arma ments and space on the one hand and employment and education on the other." Chiefs: Retired Chief of Na val Operations Adm. Arleigb Burke was scheduled to testify today on a bill tn give four-year terms to members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. De fense Secretary Robert S. Mc Namara opposes the bill, which was supported Thursday by three former members of the joint chiefs. Aid: The Senate Foreign Re lations Committee, in a slap aimed at Latin American mili tary juntas, voted Thursday to ban foreign aid tn any nation where an elected government has been overthrown unless the President . decides otherwise. Tlie proposal was obviously aimed at Honduras and tlie Do minican Republic although nei ther country was named. OPENS TONITt :4S Ends SATURDAY! KIRK DOUGLAS iAMIHOKf QUINN . HALWALUS' LANCASTER -DOUGLAS .HALWALUS',. TIIIUL'll'Il'li UK. CORRAL ' GUN HILL UftrMIWI V?SaMWrY .ovumtn An Starting SUNDAY! Bette Davis and Joan Crawford 3 W Seven Am Presents An Assoc 1VKAT EVEr? HAPPENED To Mir &1 n . DOORS OPEN Us4J LAST TIMES'. . "SATURDAY! H 1 CS- Technicolor ur"! Power Saw Issue Leads To Walkout COOS BAY, Ore. (UPI) -The International Woodworkers of America struck Weyerhaeuser operations here Thursday night in a dispute that started over the use of power saws by boom crews. Pickets were sent out at 9 p.m. after talks between offic ials of Coos Bay Local 3261 and the company broke down. About 970 men were thrown out of work at the company's sawmill, particle board plant and plywood plant at North Bend and its woods operations at Allegany. The union had demanded that workers on boom crews be paid more money for using power saws. The company then sus pended employes who laid olf work to attend union strategy meetings Monday and Wednes day. Only about 20 per cent of tlie day shift was on the job Thursday. The union also has demanded lliat tlie workers be paid for the lime they are suspended. Solon Seeks Fund Change SALEM i UPI i A constitu tional change to allow all high way revenues to be placed in (he general fund was proposed Thursday by Rep. Bculah Hand, D-Milwaukic. The proposal will be submit ted to the special legislative session Nov. II. Klamath Ftlli, Oregon Publlshfrf daily (axcapt Sat.) and Sunday Jtrvtno 5uifitrn prifon and Norlhtrn California by Klamath Publtihlnq Company MiTn at Esplanade Phon TUxteio 4-1111 W ft. SwMtland, Publilhtr ntarad at atcond-clati mattar at tfti post o'tic at Kiamain r-aiis. or tot fl an August 7, Ito. unatr act i ttn rti. March 3. U'. Sicond-cUw tt- aia pats mtrntin rain, urtfvni and at additional mainnf mem Carntr 1 Month I 1.7S A Monthi II.S 1 Ytar 111.00 Mall In Advanco 1 Month I l.H 1 Moniht in to 1 Yaar I1I.M Carnar and Dtalan Watkday, Copy. 10e Sunday Copy tie UNITfcO PRESS INTIR NATIONAL AUOIT BURIAU OF CIRCULATION Subtcrlbtn not rtctivint daiivery ot thtir HtrtW and Ntwi. pltato phono tuimi -itii otiaro i o.ti. This, in its own terrifying way. isa i love story! jacK lemmon ano LC6 neniiCK "oavs of nine ano noses" The Screen Takes its most fascinating journey of all... and rips bare the souls of an amazing family I s CI Joseph L Levine i usooation with Ely Land3u a-vi Jxk J. Dreyfus. Jr . presents Katharine Hepburn I Ralph Richardson Jason RobardsjuIDeanStockwell i m Euaon O'Nelll'e One Of The Inwenivc Ten Best i.wnBuaig Of The Year" . JOURNEY si-h: into Night ,-,-. tvk. Pi Vl ILnillrv CiMirvl iiiirr am cmiMiy ftctwroa "rim Rate Study Scheduled- OLYMP1A (UPH-A special committee will be named next week to select a consultant who will make a study of freight rates affecting shippers in Se attle, Portland and Eastern Washington. Francis Pearson, chairman of the State Utilities and Transpor tation Commission, said the se lection committee would repre sent the commission, the De partment of Commerce and Economic Development, and the transportation industry. In some cases, Pearson said, it is cheaper to ship goods to Eastern Washington or Puget Sound areas from Portland than from Seattle. "It is a complicated and com plex situation," he said, "but apparently the lower rate is in rail tariffs for some goods. If it had been used much we would have known about it be fore." Pearson said a special con sultant was necessary because commission officials "just don't have the time to make a study of the magnitude that this one will have to take." Pearson said tlie decision to make the study was made at a commission meeting several weeks ago. He announced it Thursday. The study w as prompted by a series of mergers between out of state companies and firms in the "short line" busi ness as well as the growth of industrial parks outside of met ropolitan areas. "They have made a complete ly new transportation picture." he said, "there are certain rales in Eastern Washington we have to look at too, but the Pu get Sound area is more import ant at tlie moment." Language Document To Be Further Liberalized - VATICAN CITY (UPK-The Ecumenical Council today eent back for "further liberalization" a document authorizing the use of modern languages at Cath olic weddings, baptisms other sacraments, and funerals. As presented to the council today, the document placed only one restriction on the use of modern languages in the Catholic sacraments. It provid ed that Latin must continue to be used for the "essential Ver bal formula" of the rite. Many prelates of the council's "liberal" bloc had let it be known they would like to elim inate even this vestige of Latin and allow all sacraments to be entirely in the language of the people. The vote on the document was 1,130 yes, 10,054 yes-with-reservations, and 300 no. Under council rules, prelates who vote yes with reservations are required to submit a writ ten description of the change they wish made in the docu ment before giving it final ap proval. Council experts said that un questionably a very large per centage of the reservations were voiced by bishops who want to eliminate Latin entirely from the administration of Cath olic sacraments. They said the campaign for a iarge number of reservation votes had been quietly conduct ed by liberal bishops from West era Europe in preparation for today's vote. The document and the reser vations now go back to the council's litureical commission Hard of Hearing! Zenith Hearing Aid 50 For Only Full Powtrid 4 TriMiitMS iir. y hernt dimontlri- ?I J.Tlll?f'T.WT tan tail? 1 "' Dr. J. L. Lawson, O.D. OPTOMETRIST AND HEARING AID CONSULTANT ONLY LOCAL FULL-TIME HEARING AID CONSULTANT 715 Moin St. Klomoth Foils TU 4-8322 HOURS: 9 A.M. - 5 P.M. 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