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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1963)
Scientists Hope Molecules Hold Key To Prolonging Youth, Curbing Cancer : WASHINGTON (UPD-Scien--' lists working with molecules : which boss the work of living ," ' cells may some day learn how to prolong youth and curb can '.' cer. ' This hope was held out today :' by Dr. T. M. Sonneborn of In- ; diana University in an address to scientists celebrating the cen ' tennial of the National Acad I.; emy of Sciences. 'i Already researchers have managed to make one kind of '.' cell stop the sort of work it has been doing and turn to other projects. They have set tumor , celU, for example, to manufac turing produots normally pro duced only by liver cells. They have intervened so HOUSE CALLS Only $430 In l.c.l T Ara Billy Golden TV H'fC Cmn Stamps, Too! TU J-1259 HUNTERS! We're Open for Breakfast at 6 A.M. Hunter's Special $1 Hunter's Lunches Packed to Go. Free Coffee Thermos Fill BUFFET LUNCHEON-i 1:30 to 2 P.M. $1.25 BUFFET DINNER , P.M. eP.M. S1.75 Have a special Family Night out! Bring the kids ... Let them choose what they wont from our array of Hon de'Oevres, Salads, Entrees. Special Child's Plate (under 10) ALA CARTE SERVICE 2 PM to 5 PM For those Special Holiday Parties . . . Plan ahead Call us Now! Ph. 2-2765 RESTAURANT Avalon at So. 6th iudget Furniture Does Hit Again. Sensational sovings on excellent quality rockers 12 only! Some swivel, some just rock. Outstanding selection of covers in beiqo, turquoise, tangerine, coral, charbrown, bronze gold and rose beige. All srcol spring construction on wooden frames. Swivel Rockers Swivels, rocks! Excellent quality rockers with moulded foam back and seat. Outstanding selection of all-nylon covers. Makes a wonderful gift for now ... or lay away for Christmas. Reg. 89.95 NOW PARK FREE OPEN WEEKDAY JluJ I 1SBS1-HI1 J SB I ai ru in deeply in the makeup of para mecia, microscopic one-celled animals, as to create monstrosi ties wjth two mouths and three vents for waste. . Long-Time Puzzler Science has long been puzzled by what makes one cell func tion differently from another possessing generally the same equipment. The human being begins as an invisible fertilized egg which proceeds by cell di vision to produce more than a million billion other cells, tho building blocks of the body. The first cells. Sonneborn said, seem to be identical. Then differences appear. Finally, the body is possessed of scores of differently functioning cells which manufacture everything from toenails to teeth. This is known as cell differ entiation, and (or a long time scientists held no hope of ever understanding it. In the past decade there has been a "rev- Ph. 2-2763 J ROCKERS Reg. 44.95 and 49.95 NOW Similar with (0)951! ON OUR OWN BIG PARKING LOT! EVENINGS TILL 9:00 Saturday till 6 00 I A 2410 I "3 II "JUL) in: ai V 1 N. Mon.v Don olution" in Uiis field of study and a growing conviction that "it will be the area of one of the next great triumphs of biol ogy in the decade or two ahead." The "boss molecules" of cells are nicknamed DNA and RNA. DNA is the chief genetic ma terial, ultimately responsible for heredity and function. RNA is the genetic material charged with carrying out DNA's orders. How does it come about that two cells with roughly the same content of DNA and RNA grow up to perform such dif ferent chores, the one making skin tissue, say, and the other manufacturing car lobes? Scientists now believe that New York Police Claim Tito Protection Adequate NEW YORK (UPD-Cily au thorities planned no extra pro tection today for President Tito despite Yugoslav complaints that police had allegedly failed to "undertake adequate securi ty measures." The Yugoslav claim was is sued in connection with the cancellation by President Tito of a reception originally sched uled for Thursday for 1.100 guests et the Waldorf Astoria. The complaint was rejected angrily by Police Commission er Michael J. Murphy who branded it "sheer, unadulterat ed nonsense." Murphy said tiiat no action was being taken to augment the detail assigned to Tito. Ac cording to the commissioner. Tito's party has received addi tional protection in New York City because of its "controver sial" nature. The Yugoslav entourage has been met by demonstrations, fisticuffs and picketing ever since Its arrival here Sunday for a five-day visit to Now York. Two nights ago, two Yugo slav refugees managed to get Clockwatchers Delight MEMPHIS. Tenn. UPI Everyone agreed the new fed eral building was a clockwatch er's paradise. Inadvertently so. Employes of 50 federal agen cies, moving into the $13.5 mil- o)88 o to illustration, except T-Cuthion. South 6th T.M Dm. this ctll differentiation comes from regulation the turning on and off of activity by the genes in which the boss mole cules are situated. They are be ginning to surmise how nature does this. By injecting genetic material from one kind of cell into an other, experimenters have forced the treated cell to take on a new occupation. The change is permanent, the in jected cell passing its new pat tern of activity on through sub sequent generations. Sonneborn has experimented with non-genetic ways of chang ing cell function and found that they, too, work. All this sug gests "future possible practical applications," he said. by security forces and made their way close to Tito's hotel suite before being intercepted by State Department guards. President Kennedy apparent ly was upset by these develop ments and asked U.N. Ambas sador Adlai Stevenson to check and report back to him and whether Tito was receiving adequate protection. That same night anti-Tito demonstrators tangled with three Tito aides, including his personal bodyguard, Major General Milan Zeelj, outside the hotel. According to police Zeelj pulled a knife but author ities intervened before anyone was injured. The latest melee occurred Tuesday night when three anti THoists attacked hotel employes who at sunset were folding the Yugoslav flag which had been flying over the hotel. They tried to grab the ban ner and when police stepped in they spat on it. The men were held for questioning. However, the flag incident oc curred several hours after the Yugoslav mission to the United Nations announced its decision to call o(f the reception. lion structure Monday, found nothing hut clocks on several of the building's 11 floors. ' Some of the 365 clocks were slcwn aboitt various rooms. Others were stacked wall to wall, defying admission to of fices. "This is a little extravagant," admitted a spokesman for (he General Services Administra tion (GS.M, which manages the building. GSA building manager Mor vyn Anderson-Smith said the clock-log resulted from a slip up in tins contract for the build ing, lie said the contract pro vided for installation of the clocks over office doors, but it failed to specify the locations. The contractor decided to let the government put up the clocks and placed them indis criminately on the floors of of fices throughout the . building. This created a problem for fur- nilure movers who had to shove clocks aside to make way for desks. Anderson-Smith said the "ex cess" clocks were being stored until it can be learned where they go. Bond Approved At Beaverton BEAVKRTON (LTI Resi dents of the Hcaverton School District Tuesday approved a $.18 million bond election. At the same lime. Columbia School District voters agreed to build their own high school. The Rcnvcrton vote was 4.718 to 3.2W. The money w ill b e used for school addition's and new construction. Columbia District residents voted 174 to H4 to empower the board to hold bond elections for the money to build a new school on a 24-wre site north of Portland. Columbia presently sends 110 high school students to Parkrose and Portland high schools. KUrntMl PUN OrtfjM j PuMiihMi flatly (ivttDt Sit l an lurwJiv "Urvlrtf StvtMnt Orttn i mi Nwtiwm Cillrtwm by t Kiimath Pwbiiihiflf CtmMftV tuimio a-am W. ft. SwMHantf. PlttKr nttrtti at ttcentf-ciata mailer at IMI tftl ftM'CB Hr MAmatft FftHl. Or tOn. I ft Atttjutt It. 1H4. wrxftr let tt Ctft rtl, Mirth . Iirt $tcoiMlll wt- i it at Klamath Pam. Ortto j nd it atftMianal ma Hint, iffrctti Cirrttf i Mtm t in MtfftM lit M 1 Yiar tll.M Mill In AtfvtftCO Mtwttt ... . . t W I MMitit .... iiaat t Vttr Ctrrttr iM Dttlirt wathtar. Car. ... tit Kfttfiy, Cttv H UNITiO MISS I NTIR NATIONAL AUDIT tURIAU O" CIRCULATION tvhKritwn Ml mttvtftff Cftivtrr ttiair HaraM atf Niwt. stoat pfttf lUxttft Mill twftrt f IJ. Full-Scale Inquiry Requested WASHINGTON lUPl) - Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa.. said today he would fight to head off any delay in the inquiry into finan cial interests of former Senate Democratic Secretary Robert G. (Bobby) Baker. Scott said he would oppose any move in the Senate Rules Committee to have the investi gation handled by a subcommit tee because "the honor of the Senate is at stake and delays might result." The rules committee, headed by Sen. B. Everett Jordan, D N.C., meets today in closed ses sion to agree on ground rules for the investigation of possible conflict of interest in Baker's outside activities. Baker resigned his 19.600 post on Oct. 7 after disclosure of his interest in a food vend ing firm serving defense plants. Scott, one of three Republi cans on the committee, said he would urge that the closed hearings be held by the full committee. He indicated he ex pected a majority move to con sign the inquiry to a subcom mittee. Jordan said in advance of to day's meeting that the subcom mittee question would be a first matter to be settled. He indi cated no preference on proce dure. Scott also told a reporter he thought the rules committee should inquire about "all trans actions by the former majority secretary which have a bearing on his interests in order to de termine whether a conflict of interest existed." That would mean, he said, in formation on such transactions as Baker's various real estate deals as well as his role in the Sorv-U food vending firm. The 35-year-old former Sen ate page boy, besides living in a $125,000 house in Washing ton's swank Spring Valley, was said by the Advance News Service to be owner of a $30,000 contemporary town house in Southwest Washington. The news service said the town house had been occupied by several young women, in cluding Baker's former Senate secretary, Nancy Carole Tyler. Miss Tyler resigned Oct. 8 from her $8,000 a year job. Burglar Bungles Job Twice LUGO, Spain (UPD Enrique Castedo Gomez crept quietly into a home here last Wednes day and set about burglarizing it. But while he was upstairs Manuel Trigo Pol and his fam ily came home. For the next six days, police said today, the hapless Gomez, 5fi, hid In the attic of the house, waiting for the Trigo Pol fam ily to go away so he could get out. At night, the police said, Go mez went down to the kitchen to steal food. By day he sat hunched up in the tiny attic and thought dark thoughts ahnut the wages of sin. Tuesday the house finally fell quiet and Gomez, thinking the family had left, climbed down from his attic. But as he passed the main bedroom the temptation became too great and he delayed a moment to rob it. While he was scooping up the loot, Trigo Pol, 38, relumed, heard a noise upstairs, went to investigate and found Gomez hiding under the bed. He quick ly locked the bedroom door and ran to tell police, who picked up the bungling burglar. Since 1!),".'. 10 million families have acquired major medical insurance to lielp cover costs of seriously crippling injuries and catastrophic illness, the Health Insurance Institute reports. ROBERT MITCHUM ' EISA MARTINELLI The screen's mightiest f excitements go on tSS tha ramnanal HV Ml gei j w , , m i irM- mm PAGE SA Goldvater WASHINGTON (UPll-High-ly placed Republicans now class Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona as the favorite to win crucial presidential primary contests in New Hampshire and California. In both states, Goldwater is expected to collide with Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. The New Hampshire pri mary March 10 is the nation's NRA Postpones Action On Proposal To Seek Solution To Power Dispute ' SUN VALLEY, Idaho (UPII Dircctors of the National Rec lamation Association put before 17 state caucuses today pro posed creation of an NRA com mittee to resolve the public vs. private power dispute. They voted Tuesday to defer the proposal until the more than 850 delegates attending the 32nd annual convention here can dis- Aid Cutback 'Frightens' Vietnamese CHICAGO (UPI) lime. Ngo Dinh Nhu said Tuesday night the U. S. cutback of aid to South Vict Nam "frightened" her government and would raise "great suspicion" in many coun tries. The fiery First Lady of South Viet Nam told the Headline Club that the United States had taken the action without con sulting her government. "What is the purpose of this cut in aid?" she asked. "How can we know unless you are willing to talk with us?" "These things can be settled if they are spoken clearly be tween the two countries," she said. "In Saigon, we asked Mr. Lodge (Henry Cabot Lodge, the American ambassador! why, and he said, 'It is all from the State Department.' " The U. S. earlier this week cut off its S3 million annual al lowance for the Vietnamese "special forces" which have raided Buddhist pagodas. The United States said the cut would remain in effect until the Viet namese forces returned to com bat against the Communists. "This will raise great sus picion in many countries," she said. "Now actually the Vietna mese government is fright cned." She said again that the South Vietnamese were winning the war against the Communists, that the violence in her country was not a religious strife, and that Communists had infiltrated the ranks of the Buddhists Monks. Two Boys Flee Reds BEIILIN I UPD Two East German boys aged 13 and 14 fled to West Berlin by cutting their way through barbed wire on the East-West Berlin border. West Berlin police said today. The boys (led Sunday night and were sent to a youth home while West Berlin welfare of ficials decided what to do with them. In the past children who fled to West Berlin were sent home to their parents. Meanwhile, it was reported that Eastern border guards in their hunt for refugees are even owning coffins. The West German newspaper Bild Zoilung reported Eastern guards hired a plumber to open a zinc coftin being shipped from East Berlin to West Ger many lor burial. JT c., (U 'M TECHNICOLOR wnimtl INS. HERALD AND Believed Ahead In Two first. California will close out the presidential primary season June 2, six weeks before the GOP National Convention. New Hampshire is regarded as a critical test for Rockefel ler, w ho needs to make a good showing there to stay alive as a candidate for the presidential nomination. But while Goldwater is rated the favorite, uncommitted Re cuss it in their state meetings. Some delegates, however, said the association should stay out of the fight to avoid being ac cused of taking one side or the other. "We need power development in order to pay out some of these reclamation projects," said a member of the resolu tions committee. "Without it, we might not have the irriga tion projects to develop the West." NRA President LaSelle E. Coles, Prinville, Ore., called for fully rounded water resources development of the West. While this no longer needs to be based primarily on irrigation, he said, the benefits of irrigation to the total economic picture should not be overlooked. He said the river systems can be made to provide a full range of services "aimed at serving municipalities and industries as full copartners in agriculture." "I do not think that surpluses or other problems in the South, East or Midwest have any bear ing on the need of the West for its own regional resource base," he said. "We need our recla mation program just as they need their flood control and pol lution abatement programs." Coles called in particular for a vigorous attack on the water problems of the Southwest which he said are "approaching a crisis." He also hit out at a national magazine article that put a "pork barrel" title, he said, on the basic resource development Swimmer Succumbs In Hospital SAN FRANCISCO (UPD James Small, 27, former Uni versity of California swimming star who lost both legs in a San Francisco Bay accident Sunday, died today at Letterman Army Hospital. The swimmer's condition had been listed as critical, although hospital officials said he had been showing signs of improve ment alter undergoing surgery Tuesday for the second time. "He came through surgery in good shape and was in very good spirits," Capt. John Rob erts. Letterman information of ficer, said. "He was conscious shortly before he died at 7: 16 a.m." Death was attributed to mul tiple hemorrhaging. Small re ceived 65 pints of blood alter the accident as hundreds of don ors responded to a pica for blood. Small was among 12 members of the Dolphin Club competing in a long distance swim across the bay when the 32-foot fishing boat Pacilic Dawn cut through the swimmers at an estimated siecd of 12 knots. Small was the only swimmer injured. The boat's propellers severed one leg and doctors were forced to amputate the other leg sev eral hours later. Officials of the Dolphin Club criticized the Coast Guard for not providing patrol boats to protect the swimmers as it as sortcdly had done in the past. Rut Coast Guard officials said the agency could not be respon sible under federal laws and Coast Guard regulations for pro viding such protection. ' JACK HAWKINS 1 a -4S I jmi urj ntMCnw NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon publicans believe that the small state is territory well adapted to the intensive campaign the New Yorker is expected to con duct. Although neither Goldwater nor Rockefeller is an announced candidate, both are viewed as active contenders for the nom ination. An early announcement is expected from Rockefeller. Goldwater presumably passed the point of no return w hen he program of the West. He said it reflected other trends and be liefs including dissatisfaction with farm subsidies, the farm surplus problem and "even the growing resentment of city peo ple over what they consider un due rural domination of legis latures." TONIGHT No. 2 in the series of 8 presented every other Wednesday in this theatre, ... from the world's greatest books come the greatest classics of the motion picture screen! NOW SEE CHARLES DICKEN'S DAVID COPPERFIELD W. C. Fields es Mr. Micewbsr Lienel Barrymore Freddie Bartholomew Edna Mee Oliver Frank Lawton Medae Evans Roland Yevnj Maureen O'Jullivon BOOM 0IN TONITt :4S ENDS TONtTEf ("WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANET 1 "DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES7! .Starts THURSDAY! i MA THE WEIRDEST! lk V I j ' THE WILDEST! . Uo fJ l HALF WOMAN! mpAyyff HAlF STONs M m f -HERCULES ll It-V -CAPTIVE iy Jn women I t ' fcVywSL x """" ClZfL ;" ' REG PARK tasi:iv ig!i?iM.n.i:aH qannnnzEF HE FOUGHT FOR RAVAGING ... PILLAGING A PATH Of CONQUtST! 7 fcM&?? mm Wednesday, October 33, 19SJ Key States set up a committee headed by former Sen. William F. Knowl and to advise him whether to enter the California primary. An adverse recommendation is deemed inconceivable. Other Republican wheels have enlisted in the Rockefeller campaign, but none has the stature of Knowland, former Republican leader of the U.S. Senate. GOP analyists now visualize a convention needing more than two ballots to nominate a presidential candidate. But they also concede that Goldwiater could win on the first ballot after a string of primary vic tories comparable to those won by President Kennedy in 10. Favorite son movements are developing for such Republican leaders as Govs. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania, George Romney of Michigan and James A. Rhodes of Oho. and Rep. John W. Byrnes of Wisconsin. ONLY! I DOORS OPEN TONiTI AT 4:45 WARand WOMEN! UBTt.