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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1963)
Morse Rips Into Aid Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., delivered a scathing attack on the $4.2 billion foreign aid bill Monday and said the Senate should take' three weeks if necessary to re write it. Morse ripped into the bill aft er Chairman J. William Ful bright, D-Ark.. of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee opened debate on the measure with a plea for approval despite admitted shortcomings of the aid program. Fulbright said the senate should approve the measure be cause "any large 6Clo depar ture" from the present program "would pose unacceptable risk" in foreign policy. Senate leaders had hoped to finish action on the long-delayed, controversial aid bill this week. But Morse made it clear that he planned an extended fight. He said . the Senate has a "clear duty to rewrite this bill on the floor of the Senate in the next three weeks." Otherwise, he said, the bill will do more harm than good in Latin America and be welcomed by Communists everywhere be cause It "strengthens Uie anti freedom forces" with aid to strong-arm governments. Morse, formerly an aid sup porter, cast the only recorded vota against the bill when the foreign relations committee ap proved it by voice vote. The male swan is called a cob. the femalo a pen, and the young cygnets. LAST TIME TCI DAY! . bat nnnMC'JS JNt MtllOCOLOd rrrnrr .PAlHtC0tOIIPMVISI0tf "VINCENT PRICE DEBRA PAGET LONCHANEY i HOW MUCH stm TUCT UUREN-DRtXEl-OlSIN ? ..Hl w I ; AMERICAN INURNATtONAt. ". EDGAR ALLAN POE'S ' PALACE 5H0CK CAN THE HUMAN 4 A BRAIN ENDURErfeM BEFORE IT if Mi HflO 1 IV -'f Liberals Win Close Vote On Virgin Mary Beliefs VATICAN CITY UPI - In an extremely close vote, the Ecumenical Council fathers to day decided to include a dis cussion of Catholic beliefs about the Virgin Mary in a pend- Home Sets U.S. Trip LONDON UPI Prime Min ister Sir Alec Douglas-Home will fly to Washington within 6ix weeks for talks with Presi dent Kennedy, the London Daily Sketch said today. The Sketch said Douglas Home's trip to Washington his first as prime minister will come in December at Kennedy's invitation. He will not go until he wins a seat in the House of Commons and leads the government in de bates on Lord Denning's report on t'h e Profumo affair, the newspaper said. The talks with Kennedy, it said, "are likely to lead to aq intense initiative following up the improved relations with Russia (and) will be the first swift move by Sir Alec to stamp the policy and character of the new government on world affairs." Christine Keeler Ordered To Stand Trial for Lies LONDON (UPD Christine Keeler. whose favors cost War Minister John Profumo his job and nearly brought down the' British government, was or dered today to stand trial in Old Bailey on charges that her lies sent a discarded Jover to jail. . The 21-year-old redhaircd call girl and three co-defendants all pleaded innocent to conspiracy and perjury counts after a live day pre-trial hearing and wore admitted to bail pending their criminal court trial. No trial dale was set,' Its ear liest start could be Nov. 12 when the next session at Uie Old Bailey begins. Bail for Miss Keeler whose lawyer 'said the entire story told against her was "false" w as set at $8,4110, and lesser amounts were asked for the others. Her roommate P a.u 1 a Hamilton-Marshall, 2,1, wis freed under $4,200; her house keeper Mrs. Olive .Brooker, 56, $2,10(1, and the same amount was set for Rudolph Kenton. 39. West Indian chauffeur and friend of Miss Keeler. The perjury charges could bring a prison sentence of up lo seven years. Penalties for con Ends TONITE! STARTS WEDNESDAY! JANET LEi SHELLEY Wl GH "You haven't been I "You used u , , 1 close enough to i todo I J I me to throw J better I A true dish .'' I i thjt ... I jf- I You'can't J I tell the arm A WOW .UAIIIP apart without 'I WALLIO a scorecard I ! PRODUCTION I mmmmmmmmmmmmmrmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 0 first winner of Photoplay's Front-Cover d(3 SUZANNE ftRHflTf, , Y ing document on (lie church. The decision, by a scant margin of 40 votes out of more than 2,000 caht, was a crucial victory for council liberals who favored this approach. Many conservative bishops had campaigned actively for a long, separate theological docu ment on Mary. The liberals feared this would only widen the considerable gulf which al ready exists between Catholics and Protestants on this subject and make Christian unity hard er than ever to achieve. In another major develop ment, the theological commis sion distributed to the fathers the texts of five questions which will be put to a vote -Wednesday to determine the council's feelings on two oilier disputed issues. One is whether bishops com prise a "college" sharing re sponsibility with the Pope for the teaching and governing of the whole church. The other is whether tlie church should re vive the Kew Testament order of deacons as a permanent rank of ordained clergy and permit them to marry. . Both issues are raised by the second chapter of the document on the church, which the bish ops debated earlier this month. spiracy conviction vary from two years upward. Miss Keelcr's lawyer, William Howard reserved defense at the conclusion of the hearing but made a statement charging that the entire case against Miss Keeler and the others was a fraud. The caso against the throe women and Fenton is that be tween April 17 and July 31 this year they conspired ,to put the blame for an attack on Miss Keeler on Oloysius iLuckyi Gordon, 31-year-old West Indian jaiz singer who once had been Christine's lover. In fact, po. lice charged, it was someone else who beat up the call girl, and the defendants told per jured stories. During the pre trial hearing John Hamilton Marshall, brother of Paula, tcs lilied it was ho who had a "punch-up" with Miss Keeler. As a result or the stories lold Kilirc, Gordon was tried and convicted of the assault and sentenced to three years in prison." The case against him subsequently was quashed and Miss Keeler and Ihc three other defendants were arrested on Sept. 5. 0O6RS OPEN TONtTE AT MS P.M. . VAN JOHNSON TERS -MARTHA HYER Award for showcasing new talent! HARDIN DOROTHY PROVIHF UN Ouster Attempt Dying Out UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. iLTIi African nations hoped today to decide their strategy against South Africa's race pol icies, but a drive to expel South Africa from the United Nations appeared to be dying quietly. Tlie feeling against South Af rica's white government among the 32 - nation African group here was heightened by today's trial of 11 men African, Indian and white in Pretoria, South Africa, on sabotage charges. The African nations tried to stop the trial through a U.N. appeal to the South African government to free the men. But South Africa considers the trial an internal affair outside the scope of the United Nations. Criticism df South Africa's apartheid segregation program reached a climax this year with concerted demands to oust the nation from the world or ganization. There have been re current reports that South Af rica might decide to walk out before such a move could be made. But the United States, Brit ain, and other Western powers were counseling the Africans against precipitate action. Washington and London have let it be known they oppose fur ther economic sanctions or a diplomatic boycott, against South Africa. The Western powers also sup port moderate African nations who oppose any move to expel South Africa. It appeared likely that the African group would decide" to ask for a Security Council ses sion to discuss sanctions lale this week. Blast Hurts Three Men ' VANCOUVER, Wash. iUPI) Three men were injured in an explosion at the Food Machin ery and Chemicals Corp. plant here Monday. Taken lo the Vancouver Me morial Hospital - were Palmer Jorgenson, 52. Camas. Wash., and Horace Kibbler. 58, Van couver, both chemical operators and Milton Sanders, 27, Van couver, a process engineer. The explosion twisted steel beams and shattered reinforced concrete walls. A fire then broke out. Itobert Pnlansky, resident manager of the plant, said he did not know the cause of the explosion and was unable to es timate tlie damage. However, it was thought that a solution in a two-sloi-y stoneware container exploded. The plant, which manufac tures hjdrogen peroxide, was not closed by the blast. New Date Set For Execution NEWPORT. Ore. (UI'Ii-Thc execution of Larry West Shipley. 22. o( McMinnvillo was reset for Jan. 23 by Lincoln County Cir cuit Court Judge Stuart Weiss Monday. .Shipley was convicted of sav ing Linda Jean Stevens. IS. of Willanuna near Otis in Weiss set the new date alter the I S Supreme Court denied Ship le's appeal tor a hearing. Woman's Body Identified I'OliTl.ANll (UPI '-The body of a woman found Sunday in a brushy area near Gresham was identified Monday nisht as that of Nona Christine Jackson. JR. a divorced mother of three chil dren. Sheriff Donald Clark said she apparently had been slam, but cause of d e a t h w as still un known 11 was estimated she had been dead at least three months. Identification was made by hor former husband, Raymond 11. Jackson, of Oregon City Me j identified a lint: lound on the body as one he had given her nlmul 10 years ago. They were divorced IS months ago and Jackson received custody of j Kiamatti rsin, OrM PukliihiHl duly Met 1st l M luteal i Itrvioi Suit t hum Orsevn ! snJ Nertfi' Cillfarms I j Klimatft Puktitfttna Csmeanv Vs m f ?'rrt ft TUtee 44111 ttfsrsd si erecli matter at taa pbt 9 pVBTa" fii't 0'fl. a auiuit It. - act ef Ce- '. MSflh 3 $tKf1l Wt j tea at Klamata Peilt. Orta1 an at aMitienai maHt eftKett ! Cirrtlf j 1 Want Menmt t Yasr Malt m advance ; I Mentft I l MenlM . . 1 Vaar II M ni.M 1 1 ii in m III.M Week say. Ceart let SvMav, Ceav IM ! UNITIO FVtll 1NTNaTlONaL AUDIT tURIAU O CIRCULATION we wr - ael racsiviaa eehverr e tfteir Here) 4 Newt. seee saews ruisee Mill eetert t a.. PACE J HERALD AND TEEN QUEENS Miss Teenage Denver, Lesa Ann Phillips, Miss Teenage Albuquer que, Betty Lou Purvis, and Miss Terenage Los Angeles, Muriel Dance ( left to right I, pose in their western hats during photo sossion at Miss Teenage Contest going on in Dallas this week. The Miss Teenage America title will be awarded to one of the 50 lovely young girls at a nationally televised pageant Friday night. UPI Telephoto Teenage Lovelies To 'Clash1 Today In Football Contest DALLAS (UPD The 50 can didates for "Miss Teenage America of 11164" clash today in a queenly game of touch football, in a stale where the gridiron is king. The first annual "Miss Teen age America Bowl" will be at the professional football train ing field of the Dallas Tcxans at 4:30 p.m. (ESTi. Texas has two professional football teams and is the home of the nation's top-ranked University of Texas. Stars of the Texans will coach the East-West .teams in the "grudge battle." Mentors said they would use the platoon system, of frequent substitution lo increase action in the 30- Warning Clarified WASHINGTON iLPli - The Food and Drug Administration i FDA i planned to issue a new statement today to tlcar up "misunderstanding" about its warning against smoked fish in fected with deadly botulism vi rus. An FDA spokesman said the agency agreed after a meeting Monday with fishing industry representatives lo issue I he new warning to eliminate "public misunderstanding" over a state ment last Friday. A spokesman said the FDA would reemphasize that its warning did not apply to fresh, canned, or fresh - frozen fish from the Great Lakes or other areas. The Friday statement said that all stocks of smoked lish from the Great Lakes area should be destroyed unless they had been cooked at a high tem perature during processing 'or had been frozen until eaten. Rep. Victor A. Knox. R-Mich. said Monday that the FDA had used "scare techniques" in the Friday warning. lie said the warning did not make clear whether frozen or fresh fish were included and. as a result, the Great Lakes fishing industry was nearly at a stand still. Pheasants are essentially seed caters. They rarely eat t h e buds of shrubs and trees as many upland game birds tin. their three girls ngod 5. fi and The young woman's hands iip parciUly had been tied with a plastic covered wire and -"he wa. nude except for a swim ming suit pulled over hor aims ahoe her head. - There were no obvious umis of fractures or wounds in pre-' Uminary studies, .kick son $aid he d.d not know lu former wile wa mt$inc un til he had failed to appear (oi lier court-author ued visits to the Cirls. When he read of tlie re ports of discovery of a hody he called the sheriff's oUice. Sheriff Donald Clark asked for public help in tracing the lat movements of the woman The room where she formerly lived here was searched for poih clues. Police said she had been em p oved last at a bow tins '' 1 a cocktail waitress She was re ported mifSitit; June II Ccait'tO'Gxut. NEWSPAPERS SEUTHEMOSTH ir n rl I a pCTM 1 I NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon. minute contest. Sponsors calculated the touch softened game would relieve the pressures of judging which the 50 hopefuls started Monday and will end Fiiday in a na tionally televised (CBSi pageant. The girls, ages 13-17. are com peting for a crown now worn by Darla Jean Banks, 17, of Fres no, Calif., the daughter of a lay minister-disc jockey. Miss Banks said she was sad dened by the imminent ending of her reign as America's ideal teenager, but it had been an eventful year. She said she had met her boyfriend, Steve Ritchie of Reedsville, N. C, an International Red Cross Reaches 100th Birthday GENEVA i UPI '-The Inter national Red Cross, which grew from a Swiss humanitarian's dream into Ihc world's biggest relief organization, marked its 100th anniversary today. On Oct. 29. 13M, Henri Du rant, 33, met with four other citizens of Geneva and the rep resentatives of 10 nations and signed an agreement embody ing the rules of an International Red Cross movement. Explosion Rips Demo's Office MIAMI iUPI' - A midnight explosion ripped apart the two slory headquarters of (he coun ty Democratic Executive Com mittee Monday night and bomb squad inspectors said I hey were working on tlie theory it was an inlentional act. No one was hurl in the blast, which crumbled two concrete walls and the roof c the struc ture. There was no lire. One fire in.-fVclor called it "the worst 'explosion' I'veewT seen around here." BIG ROOM BIG NEWS: NEW '64 RAMBLER 6 orV-8 11 r .W- v.,. p'iC'iMii7;0C'CeuiM'v6 0'10S0Y.8 V m Tuesday, October 29, 19M Air Force Academy cadet, through the publicity. "Miss Teenage America of 1964" will be announocd on the televised show, with Bud Coll yer as master of ceremonies. She receives a four-jear college scholarship, a new convertible and other prizes. Miss Banks rejected a motion picture act ing offer that followed her se lection, saying she favored a homemaking career. Contestants are graded on personality, poise, intelligence, talent and good grooming. There is no bathing suit com petition and sponsors said "foot ball' skills don't count' in the judging." Since then the Red Cross has circled the world. In war or during natural disasters, it goes immediately to the aid of vic tims with hospitals, lood and housing. The agreement signed in 18(13 contained 10 resolutions and 3 recommendations aimed at one objective above all: Guarantee ing the inviolability of wounded combatants and those caring for them. The International Red Cross has always steered clear of pol itics, but since World War II has been called in as an im partial mediator in political troubles. Recently it asked Cu ba to accept relief from the United States under Red Cross auspices. Suggestions have been made to have the Red Cross partici pate in any world disar mament plan, but officials eel this would be too political a role for the organization. Today the League ot Red Cross Societies is made up o( KG national Red Cross organi zations with 170 million mem bers. This year the Red Cross and the League iointlv were j awarded a Xobel Peace Prize the organization's third. BIG AS Atl OUTDOORS IfJSIDf, trim outside. All 19M Ramblers hae full headroom, hip room, legroom, shoulder room for 6 adults. I ,a ' I ECCLES MOTOR 1 Watch the lannv Ka e on CBS-TV. Chinese Change Tune, Talk Of Coexistence MOSCOW i UPI i A Chinese Communist, in a marked de parture from the usual Peking line, told 6,000 applauding Rus sians and others today the Chi nese favor peaceful coexistence and continued friendship with the Soviet Union. Chao Kuo-chiang, secretary of the All ' China Federation of Trade Unions, spoke of mutual solidarity in a speech to the 13th Suvict trade union con gress. His. brief address, in moder ate tones, followed a weekend appeal by Soiiet Premier Niki la S. Khrushchev for an end to the bitter propaganda ex changes that have poisoned party and governmental rela tions between Peking and Mos cow during the past year. Chao, leader of the Chinese observers among 80 foreign groups attending the convention, was all sweetness today except in his reference to "aggressive American imperialism" as the alleged cause of all, the world's troubles. He seemed, however, lo stress people-to-people friend ship between China and Russia rather than party and govern mental relations. He gave clear ' approval lo peaceful coexistence, the main bone of contention between Pek ing and Moscow. "We are firmly fighting the policy of aggression and war conducted by the imperialists for the implementation of peaceful coexistence between countries with different social systems," Chao said. With Premier Nikita S. Khru shchev in the hall, trade union chief Viktor Grishin Monday at tacked Peking's policies and urged unionists throughout the world lo rally to Moscow. Grishin, one of the Soviet ne gotiators at last summer's un successful ideological talks with Chinese leaders here, told the union members of "serious dif ferences" between the two Communist nations. He said they went beyond Communist party relations and created an IS NEW & DEPENDABLE 3 It's Coming to KLAMATH FALLS Oj METER MAID EXAMINATION APPLY KLAMATH FALLS POLICE DEPT. 5th and Wo I nut Straett Examination November 2, 1963, at 9:00 a.m., Klamath Falls Police Station IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT For Successful Applicant, apply now! tXTR A.VAtUE FEATURES: Rocf-Top 1 ravel Rack on most wagons, Deep Dip rustproo'fing, Double-Safety Brakes, Curved-glass side windows. Advanced Unit Construction, many others standard on all '64 Ramblers. SI A0JUST-O-TIIT STf EDINO WMIH adjusts to 7posmons, optional, "0. 1 IN C0MNCT CM SHK-MMIIER IU0J CO., 606 South 6th Wrtnla fvemnfa fl P M , Channel "abnormal" situation between the two governments. Un Peking Monday. Chines Foreign Minister Chen Yi told visiting Japanese journalist) that China will not be able to develop its own atomic bomb for several years. 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