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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1963)
Book Links Goldwater With Hoods; Senator Calls It 'Trash' And Libelous PITTSBURGH UPl - Son. Barry Goldwater described as "trash" Saturday a book which said he was a riend of two big time hoodlums who have been murdered. The Las Vegas (Nev.) Review Journal, in a front-page story Friday, identified the book as "The Green Kelt Jungle." by Ed Reid and Ovid Demaris. to Barry Sidesteps Chance To Return Rocky's Fire PITTSBURGH (UPI) - U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater, It-Ariz., apparently is not ready to en gage in a political shooting match with New York Gov. Nel son Rockefeller, a declared seeker of the GOP presidential nomination. Goldwater was given ample opportunity during a press con ference here Friday night to re turn the fire leveled against him by (Rockefeller in a public statement Thursday. But Goldwater, here to ad dress the Harvard Business School of Pittsburgh, chose to stay on the defensive by merely saying that the governor simply fails to understand Goldwater's approach. Goldwater said that 90 per cent of Rockefeller's charges were erroneous. , Declaring that he does not know "what Rockefeller had in mind," whon the governor said Goldwater has no program, the senator said: "I don't know what Rockefeller's platform Is, but mine's been tossed around from pillar to post." Continuous fftm 12:43 u DeBBie 1 --LL-r R2noLDs BARRY NELSON DIANE McBAIN JCHMlE-iMliKOW Mai m M km , jtu 4 !wn h aowa l Ml dm m to fc it w t ii m warn, u a TECHNICOLOR riMlWAKNt". IHOS. TODAY! A scandalous romance between a thrill-hunting Heiress and I notorious man of mystery I CARY 1Z4 GRACE GRANT KEILY ,n ALFRED TO CATCH jtsjt win iivk jm witiius W people locked nlghtmir wor JAMES Twolerrifl.d- V ft aiEimiiriJUUfm j in ALFRED HITCHCOCK S UERliGO wwa BEL GEDDES rnCHWWWB! MlWMlKKK-MWJOHfS k uiftD kichcixh- wc ami-yuMi im Ml to M "( MH m M" h Ink M Omm ml h i Kmum Hum be published by Trident Press of New York Dec. 13. Iteid worked on a scries of Brooklyn Eagle, N.Y., stories that ox posed a $20 million gambling empire in New York and won for the newspaper a Pulitzer Prize in 1951. "The Green Fell Jungle" is about gambling in Las Vegas. The book charges tllat gam- In his speech to 700 members of the Harvard businessmen's group, Goldwater described the present federal tax system as a "ball and chain on our feet." He said President Kennedy's tax program would do little to improve it. Goldwalor accused the ad ministration of depending on depression year solutions and failing to admit "that a new day needs new enterprise" so Uie economy can grow fast enough to meet the demands of jobs. Goldwater, mentioning the ad ministration's intervention in the sleel industry's price hike last year, said "no area of gov ernment has the right to force its policies upon unwilling per sons, businesses, or industries except and this is crucially im portant wlien Congress passes legislation to that ef fect." He said collective bar gaining has given way to a kind of "de facto compulsory arbi trationagain, without a law, without consent, without consen sus.',' i Rockefeller Claims Barry 'Out Of Tune' ST. LOUIS, Mo. UPI -New York Gov, Nelson A. Rockefel ler, campaigning for the Repub lican "presidential nomination, said today that Sen. Barry Gold water, R-Ariz., will not be the 19B4 GOP standard bearer un less he "modifies his positions." Rockefeller said Goldwater was "not in tune with the mnin stream of Republican thinking." The New York governor said, "unless Goldwater makes some radical change he won't hold Hie support ho has now." However, Rockefeller pledged, "I will support whoever wins the nomination." ' Rockefeller the only an nounced candidate for the Re publican president nomination, challenged the Arizona senator to modify his stands on foreign and domestic affairs. Rockefeller said in the past Hit And Run Ernest Blair, 2M7 Turnagc. reported to city police that someone ran into his 1957 atuo mobile Friday night or, early Saturday morning while it was parked in front of his home. CONTINUOUS FROM 12:45 HITCHCOCK'S A THIEF (inKDWlCHCCCh JOHN Uw3 umo mtchccch john ikmuwms KIM bling in Las Vegas is controlled by organized crime syndicates. It has quotes saying that Goldwater was a friend for many years of Gus Grecnbaum, manager of the Riviera Casino, and Willie Biolf, a convicted ex tortionist. Both maintained homes at Phoenix. Ariz., Gold water's home town. Goldwater told a news confer ence here the book's allegations "wouldn't have any effect on a presidential campaign" if lie decides to seek the Republican nomination. "It's trash and the American people won't want to have anything to do with it. In (act, it might even be libelous. We're looking into that." Goldwtcr said he had never been a "personal friend" of Bioff. but that he had known him under the name of "Al Nel son" and that "Nelson" had contributed to his campaign fund years ago. He said that much later Bioff introduced himself to Goldwater under his real name. Goldwater said he had known Greenbaum when Grecnbaum ran a grocery in Phoenix be fore moving to Las Vegas. Tlie Las Vegas Review Journal quoted the book as say ing: "In 1955 Biolf found an even more unlikely friend: The jun ior senator from Arizona, Barry Goldwater. The two men were often seen together and Gold water . . . personally ehauf feured Biff in his private plane all over the southwest to attend various parties. "When questioned by report ers, Goldwater became indig nant, protesting that he had no idea that his friend, one Wil liam Nelson, was the notorious Willie Bioff. Goldwater has urged "with drawing from the United Na tions, sale of the Tennessee Val ley Authority tTVA)" and indi cated both ideas arc contrary to the mainstream of American thought. Rockefeller said, "Goldwater has been in opposition to Presi dent Eisenhower and the major ity of the GOP .senators on ci vil rights legislation." The governor said, "Goldwa ter in ltXi.1 volcd against cloture to limit filibuster" against the civil rights bill. In answer In a question of whether he would name a Ne gro to his cabinet if elected President, Rockefeller said he would be "receptive" to the. ap pointment of "qualified citizens" to any post. Rockefeller arrived by plane this morning for a weekend of campaigning for Missouri sup port for his presidential bid. The Governor was w hisked by molurcadc to the St. Louis Press Club for a news conference. His schedule included an ad dress tonight at a news media banquet. His .St. Louis visit will lie rounded Sunday wilh an ap pearance on CBS TV's "face the nation." Peace Corps WASHINGTON LTI - The Peace Corps is approaching Hie sanctity of the FBI and motlter hood at least in the cses of a majority of the House of Itcp re.sentalivcs. The House voted last week to autliorize every penny of the $l(t! million President Kennedy wants to expand the volunteer organization's activities in Latin America and Africa. The authorization was almost twice as much as the Peace Corps spent last year. The lawmakers beat back three separate attempts to cut the authorization. In a session of Congress where the economy bloc is flexing its muscles w ith now vigor that's quite an ac complishment. The only other government agency which has won every cent it wanted authorized is the KBI. headed by J. Kdfar Kianim run. PvtlllhM MIIV ' til l ? Strvlnt Svuthtm OrtaM n Null caiuami Y Klamath PtifeluMnt Camnanv Ma n al FiManartt HM TUiaaa Mill . Saatlaii4, PrtlllHar Intarfrf ai atcana'laia mattar at ttia att oHica at Kiamat Flu. Orw, AWfvu la, int. anaar act vf araii, March 3. II" sacoM-ciaaa a"- aaa pars at mamam ram. urvgw ana al aMinanal mallini aftWHi Carrtar 1 MaoHl t.n 4 Maama 1 vaar Bi n Mall M Mvaact I Maam I 1 ri Manas kin I Vaar IH.aa Carrtar an Oaalar Waaaaar. Capy II twMay, Ca .... . 1t I unitio ppisi mTiNTioNi UDIT lUMnU OP CIRCULATION Ivtwrraara' pal raaaivia oalivarv at raarr MaraM an Nawa. plaaaa pMa Iruaaa Mill aim I .v. PAGE JA HKRALD AND LOOKING FOR LEADS pi fvSilV:'-:(P JK LEADS Telephone men C. W. Sweeny id Art Franclt install four new trunk lines at ation in Albany, Calif., to handle the in- Df traffic caused by the disappearance of mson (photo at right). Policeman Sigrid ul. . .tll I , . I - f ,1 I standing I and the police stat crease flow Judith Williams Oakley sits at the switchboard taking in one of the many phone calls received daily with information or questions concerning the whereabout of the University of California coed who has been missing for several weeks. Police have turned up several promising clues, but as yet have been unable to locate any trace of the young lady. Foul play is suspected. UPI Telephoto Police Retracing Coed's Last Known Movements ALBANY. Calif. (UPI) Po lice Saturday began the arduous task of retracing the events in coed Judy Williamson's life during the days before she dis appeared. The 18-ycar-old University of California prc-medical student was reported last seen while walking to a bus stop on San Pablo Ave. several blocks from her home on Oct. 29. Witnesses in that area have told police they saw a car, described as either a white or black-and-white convertible, fol lowing the attractive coed near the bus stop. Investigators had a composite drawing made of the car's occupant and began a door-to-door check in the neigh borhood with the picture. In addition. Police Chie'f House-Senate Committee Holds Key To Foreign Aid WASHINGTON (UPI I - A IlnUsc-Scnale conference com mittee held the key today to ad ministration hopes for loosening some of the foreign policy sha ckles clamped on its foreign aid authorization bill. The Senate finally approved its $3.7 billion version of the bill 63 to 17 Friday after almost three weeks of the sharpest at tacks in the program's IB-year history. The wrangling left the pleasure festooned with policy restrictions unrclcatcd to the money totals involved. Voting for the bill were 43 Dcmocrals and 20 Republicans. Opposed wore 10 Democrats and 7 Republicans. All , opposition Democrats were from the South except Sens. Alan Bible, D-Ncv., and Wayne Morse, D-Ore. The Republican opponents included Budget Escapes Knife Hoover., The Peace Corps will have to go some lo beat the FBI's over all record, however, because Hoover always gets appropriat ed the full amount that has been authorized. Last year Congress author ized $ttf.7 million for the Peace Corps, but its appropriation was reduced to S."9 million. Santa's Zip NKW YORK UI'i - With the coming of the Christmas sea son, the fight for the zip code has been carried to Hie kiddies. Young-.tcrs may write to San ta Clans, but it will be for nought, according to t h e New York Post Office, unless the ad dress includes the North Pole's zip number 99701. And if they expect a reply, a sign that tlieir wishes have been noted, tlie tots will have to hunt up their own zip codes to NOTICE! All grocery and variety ipecioli in last Thursday's Big-Y Ad goad through this coming Wednesday! BIG-Y Super Market 4710 South 6th KtfVTS. Klamath Tails, Oregon Telephone men C. W. Sweeny Ralph Jensen and his staff were questioning several ,of Judy's friends, including her former boy friends, in an attempt to learn more about her life before she vanished. Jensen said he may employ lie detector tests in the ques tionings but emphasized that everyone concerned was cooper ating. He also planned to talk with several men with past sex offenses. The FBI in Washington was still analyzing Judy's books and umbrella, which she was carry ing the morning of her dis appearance. The books, which were found on the Berkeley campus, were apparently blood stained. The umbrella was found by younsters near a local shop ping center. GOP presidential possibility Barry M. Goldwater, Ariz. The $3.5 billion House version of the same bill carried its own set of policy provisions, many of which overlapped those imposed by the Senate during the meas ure's rocky voyage. After disposing of the author ization bill, Congress must then tackle the appropriations meas ure putting up the money. This w ill provide another forum (or attack by critics, acknowledged by President Kennedy at his Thursday news conference lo be stronger now than at any time' since the program began in 1947. The Senate Friday named its conferees to work out a com promise version w ith the House, which is expected to follow suit Mondav. The Peace Corps, though, has a strange effect on even the most implacable opponents of foreign aid. Rep. Robert V. Hemphill, D-S.C. told the House he never has voted for foreign aid but he is a staunch supporter of the Peace Corps. Hemphill said it put Ameri cans and people in other lands "heart to heart." Code Told go with the return address. It's all part of the Post Office educational campaign to get people used to and using the zip code when they mail. The clever officials w h o thought up the strategem have made this Christmas promise: every boy and girl who gets a letter in by Dee. 15 with all tlie numbers right will receive a reply "appropriately decorat ed with a drawing of Santa Clans and 'Jlr. Zip.' his new helper." Sunday, November 17, 19K3 EL - mmmm , . , 7 ?'?Jk Z -Jl, t .- '& W IJm'm"wr' .: J-l Committee To Study Africa War ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (UPI) African foreign minis ters called a special meeting Saturday to select a committee that will recommend settlement terms for the explosive border dispute between Algeria and Morocco. The "arbitration committee" planned to study behind closed doors tlie dispute over the ill defined Sahara border that flared into open fighting be tween the two countries Oct. 8. The conference was called within the framework of the Or ganization of African Unity (OAUh Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia opened it Friday with a- warning that Africa's ability to solve its own problems was at stake. African officials worked to prevent the conflict from be coming a pretext for a larger struggle between President Ah med Ben Bella of Algeria and King Hassan II of Morocco. Friday Algeria's Foreign Minister, Abdcl Aziz Bouteflika. said his country was determined to discuss the problem within the "African family." He voiced optimism. '&' 'Wi VERSATILE 100" PICTURE WALL SCREENS , 4 Sections ... for That Extra Long Wall! 11 "24" PANELS IN CHOICE SUBJECTS ONLY LI mAM I raC3CTl r-r, tT Dramatic, new decorating idea! Four 43x25" ponels, 100" over all), in a continuous picture to uie on an extra long wall or at any corner. Any number of arrangements possible as each panel is complete In ittelf. Choice of 3 designs printed en simulated fabric, framed in 1" gold-finiih molding. Washable and fade-proof, Showm "Ming Trie" in soft hues of gold, tan, olive and rust. A DEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR PANELS ON LAYAWAY TILL XMAS LET YOUR BUDGET SET THE TERMS AT ADAIR'S Jury Learns Of Difficulty In 'Shopping' For Murderer MINNEAPOLIS dPI' - The moral might be: do your shop ping early. Here was a man sent "out shopping for a killer" in the Twin Cities area, accord ing to the state's charge. He must have dawdled. Or maybe his price was not right. Or the supply short. Because he still was shopping in Minneapolis just a few days before the job w as scheduled to be done. And he didn't pick up one of the murder weapons un til the day before the schedule called for murder. That was the testimony in Hennepin County District Court by a dark and articulate 34-year-old former convict named Sheldon Stanley Morris, a fig ure long awaited as a top state witness in the "murder for hire" trial of T. Eugene Thomp son. Morris w ill be tried separate ly as an accessory in the mur der of Carol Thompson, the St. Paul housewife whose husband had loaded her with $1,055,000 in life insurance in 1 1 months. The state charges Thompson, 35, a criminal lawyer and church elder, with mastermind ing a plot to kill his wife. The shopper, the state al leges, was Norman J. Mastrian, a police character and former boxer, 'who had been a client of Thompson's. Relaxed and almost suave on the witness stand, Morris told a tale of devious seeking by Mastrian, with himself as chauffeur. A former tavern keeper, he had been living with the Mastrians, he said, and he had seen Thompson in Mas trian's company several times. Carol Thompson was mur dered on March 6. The state claims it had been planned lot March 5, but didn't come off could it be the man was still shopping? Morris testified late Friday and will return to the stand Monday. The last week in Feb ruary, he said, he and Mastri an picked up one Richard L. Sharp, 38, a longtime police character, in Morris' car. They were driving along and sudden ly: "Mr. Mastrian asked Mr. Sharp if he was willing to com mit a murder for $2,000. Mr. Sharp did not reply. He was just as stunned as I was. Then he said he was not interested." "What did he then say?" Prosecutor William B. Randall asked. "He told Mr. Mastrian he possibly knew someone who might be interested. Mr. Mas Irian said, who? Mr. Sharp said. 'I know a fellow by' the name of Bill Ingram. . .' " Willard (Bill) Ingram, a known burglar, has admitted that he and Henry lHanki But ler pulled a burglary that net ted tliem a 7.65 millimeter Ger man Luger, which he said they passed to Mastrian and Sharp. So later in the day: "Mr. Sharp went in and got Mr. In gram and they both got in my auto. Mr. Mastrian asked Mr. Ingram jf he was interested in S1Q95 2200 committing a murder-1 believe the expression used was "a hit' for $2. Mr. Ingram asked who and where. Mr. Mastrian said, 'it's out of the city (they were in Minneapolis! and it's a woman.' "Mr. Ingram said, 'it's not enough money, and it isn't my line of work, and I'm not inter ested.' " Comes March 4, the day be fore the original "hit" sched ule: "Mr. Mastrian and I were in my car; Mr. Butler and Mr. Sharp got in. Mr. Mastrian asked Mr. Sharp if he'd brought him something. Mr. Navy Station Of $125,000; SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) -Two young sailors were sought today by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation for questioning in the $125,000 hold up of a crowded bank at the U. S. Naval station here. Agents identified the men as Victor Lawrence Taylor, 22, and Explosion Rips Hole In Street TUSCALOOSA. Ala. (L'Pl'-A pre-dawn explosion heard throughout the city Saturday ripped a hole in the pavement of a street 100 yards from Negro Vivian Malone's dormitory at the University of Alabama. No one was injured. Police said they did not know what type of explosive caused the blast or if it was connected with the integration of the uni versity earlier this year. A hole about four indies deep, one foot long and six inches wide was torn in the pavement in front of Mary Burke Dormi tory East. Miss Malonc, one of two Negroes admitted to the university last June, resides in Mary Burke Dorm West. The two dorms are connected by a narrow walkway. Several National Guardsmen joined local and county police in tlie investigation. Police said the blast occurred al about 3:15 a.m. CST (4:15 a.m. EST) but because' there were not witnesses and little damage was caused, they did not find the location until after 4 a.m. Although it was heard over a wide area, the explosion did little damage and no windows were broken in nearby buildings. This Year Send PHOTOGRAPH Christmos Cards UNDERWOOD'S CAMERA SHOP Ph. TU 4-7063 mm- i i 'j vt.'' i i i ft FURNITURE APPLIANCES SO. 6TH Sharp replied he had. Mr. But ler took a gun out of his waist band and handed it to Mr. Sharp and Mr. Sharp handed it to Mr. Mastrian a German lu ger with white grips, end Mr. Mastrian attempted to break the gun, clear it and the gun fell apart, and Mr. Mastrian said, 'What the hell's going on here.' "So Mr. Sharp cleared it and said, 'It's okay now, and Mr. Mastrian wrapped it in a towel and put it in his waistband and asked Mr. Butler to drive him someplace and they drove off. . ." Bank Robbed Pair Sought Jeremiah R. Terrence, in his early 20s, both of the nearby North Island Naval Air Station. Taylor and Terrence fit the description of the two gunmen who took the money from the bank on pay day Friday, then fled out tlie naval station's main gate, guarded by three marines. The bandits were dressed in Navy shore patrol uniforms and wore greasepaint, authorities said. The robbery was one of the largest in Pacific Coast his- lory. An estimated 45 persons in the Bank of America branch were startled when tlie white helmeted bandits fired two pis tol shots into the ceiling as a warning. About 40 of the cus tomers were forced to lie face down and five women tellers were herded into a small stiilf room, the FBI said. The bandits', one short and the other over six-feet tall, pulled off the robbery in a mat ter of minutes despite the large crowd. Many of the sailors on this base had just been paid in checks they frequently cashed at the bank, the Navy said. Teller Marian Asman, 32, San Diego, said "The smaller man was nervous during the holdup. But the big man was as calm' as they come. When he (the tall man) left he said, 'Good-by folks'." DENTAL PLATES Repaired, etc. Our canvflni-tnt, h e n d y, practical, and economical lervicet NOW availcbl. No appoinrmant naidad. N drlsr - ti wkltini Eiit Credit Evtnlnfi by nqant OPEN 9:00 - 5:00 1033 Main St. TU 4.3284 TU 4-7510