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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1963)
HERALD AND Khrushchev MOSCOW UPI Premier NU kita Khrushchev threw the full weight of his oralory (oday into a final pica for a seven-year economic flan tliat is likely to curtail Soviet defense and space budgets. " The 69-yoar-uld government and .party leader started his windup speech before tlie plen- ary session of the Communist t party's ruling Central Commit- tee today. '. 'Khrushchev was expected to : speak for two hours, with ofli I cial reports on the speech ex ; peeled later tonight. :' ; About 5,000 party experts and PAGE IA Legion Plans 'Bunny Bop' Despite Strong Protests ? . HARMONY. N.C. (UPD It's j getting traditional for local i American legionnaires every $ year about this time to go i ab ; bit hunting with sticks. ; ; Despite vigorous opposition . from the Humane Society, Sat urday apparently will be no ex ception. The event is scheduled on the farm of W. B. Norris Olin. The rules of the hunt, much , to the horror of tlie Humane Society, are quite simple. ; Hounds flush the rabbits from jthe brush and Legionnaires armed with sticks and some 5 times stones beat the bunnies i to death. No guns arc allowed. J The rabbits are skinned, dressed and frozen, for use lat ' er in the Legion's annual char ' ity barbecue. Proceeds umuiIIv '.go to children who cannot af ford school lunches. Officials of North Iredell Counly Post No. 113 contend OPINS TONITt I SAT.-MJ Ends SATURDAY V Starts Sunday'. THE GIRL HUNTERS COIOtAMA flAIUtU UltAII IrUtllllilj i Tjlj JflUAHC I 'S nsa hammix I 1m LAST TIMES TON1TEI i .llTABl!dra SATURDAY ONLY! .V LXJL- sTcvrRtms Starts SUNDAY! cr. , rfl as.o-7 NEWS, Klamalh Falls, Oregon Pleas For 7 technicians attending the plen um heard Khrushchev expound on tlie urgent need of a 42 bil lion rubles HW.2 billion i invest ment in the clicmical industry during the next seven years. The plan tu rcvitalue tlie chemical industry, with partic ular emphasis on chemical fer tilizers lo boost the nation's chronically failing agricultural program, was tlie sule item on the agenda. Khrushchev himself presided over tlie special committee which dratted a decree approv ing the seven-year project. The plenum was held in tlie the "bunny bnp" Is fair because the rabbits have a chance to escape the stick-wielding hunt ers. And they point out the hunt is all in the interest of charity. Tlie Humane Society thinks differently in no uncertain terms. "Barbaric and cruel" are some of the milder criti cisms of the event. The society has waged a bit ter battle in recent years lo have the hunt outlawed. They fought the event all the way up lo the stale Supreme Court without success. They did win out in 1061. however, though public opinion. Publicity given their fight brought such a national slorm of protest that Legionnaires can celled the event that year. But the hunters were back with their sticks the following year, although the hunt was staged on the sly because of public Indignation. National Le gion Commander Dan K. Foley of Indianapolis also condemned the hunt last year but to no avail. Local Legionnaires arc speak ing softly, but they're still car rying big sticks. :19 FRIDAY SATURDAY! JERRY LEWIS Dpirt GlveUo The Ship BnSS Qtmr IOMV SCHNHOIB Ml ROFHb 'SOHofSAMSOH' roots orrn i:rr.M. SHOW flTARTH 1:111 P.M. .OUT ATliH T.M.. MATINEE FOR KIDS! SATURDAY Dec. 14 "1001 ARABIAN NIGHTS" Plus Color Cartoons and Llrrlt Ratcals Comedy Mi J5c in. S0 Adulti $1 OPtNi TONITB S Cnllnm . Irtm il ls IT ?TheMan MTtoSAot Libertu V&lance wnwcoion.ammscoft of The Christ... lniplretioa of jmkra Work. Friday, December 13, 196 - Year Plan Kremlin's Talace of Congres ses. The plenum was running an extra day, through Saturday morning, to allow the 17S vot ing members to give lormal approval to the project fur a chemical revolution that is bound to affect other parts of the Soviet budget. Saturday's meeting, attended only by the 175 full members and 135 alternates, will allow them a private discussion on or ganizational and other mailers. N. K. Buivakov, chairman of the State Committee on Chemi cal and Oil Industries, claimed that with the advances project ed in the new plan, the Soviet Union would surpass the United Stales in oil output by ID70. He said the 1970 Soviet oil production would be between 350 and 390 'million tons of oil as compared lo an annual pro duction now of 2110 million tons. Contralto To Retire NEW YORK UPI - Negro contralto Marian Anderson an nounced her retirement Thurs day and said she would dedi cate herself chiefly to aiding (he civil rights movement. -Miss Anderson, the first Nc-fli-o to sing at t ho .Metropolitan Opera, told a news conference she planned a farewell worldwide concert tour next year and would end her 30-year career with an Easter Sunday Carnegie Hall concert in 1963. She said her tour, arranged In consultation with the Sate Department, would take in Eu rope, Asia and North and South America. She said it would be gin next October. .Miss Anderson, 61, spoke of the civil rights struggle as "ac tivities which inlerest me deep ly. I plan to do what is within me to do not to follow others." She was first acclaimed as an artist after her 1035 debut in New York's Town Hull follow ing her return from Europe. She began her career in 1!125. Wind, Cold Belt Northern By lulled Press International Temperatures skidded toward zero across the Northern Plains today and 45 mile an hour winds whipped snow into drills in the Dakolus. Near-blizzard conditions were expected in parts of Minnesota and western Wisconsin but the wealher bureau said the mas sive storm which churned down from the Rockies hist weekend was beginning tu blow itself out. Blizzard warnings were with drawn for t lie North and Cen tral Plains and upper Midwest. The slorm still sent heavy rains across the Southland. Tal- Klamath Pant Ortn Publfihtd daily (tNcapt la).) antf Sunday Sarvln Saulharn oraion and Northirn Ctllternl y Klamath PuMiihtfi Cam pany Ma n l Einlanatf Phana TUvad 41111 utarad at aacend-elaia matter at poil offica al KUmath Pain, Ortgon, n Auiutt 31. 14. wndar act f Carv trait. Warth 3, 117. Sacwd-claii poat- pail ai Kiamam pimi, uragon and at additianal mailint olticait Carrnr 1 Manth I 1.71 4 Mantnt ., Hi-fi I Yaar Ul.N Mall in Advanct I Mtn t 1.71 Manlht tll.M I Yaar HI H Cartiar and Daalari Waky, Capy, It Sunday, Cay 11c UNIHO PRI1S INTIRNAT10NAL AUOir IUMAU OP CIRCULATION Suatcrlktn nat ratatvlnf dallvary at thtir Haratd and hawt, plaaat phaa ruxada 4-1111 kaftra :m. ANJOU EAU DE PARFUM PURSE SPRAY m noil iuvi nwu mum rov m ANJOU COMQUftl I'. ci taku to unu too m tom kimi M Miewut vun ua M MUCH HUMlMt Mt WW t Will HICI Devastating Apropos Hide (ilance pi Celestial I 25 50 1 w BRODEIIICK'S PHARMACY Weather Five Day Heather Western Oregon: Temperature below normal with highs in 40 s and lows in 20 $ and low 30 s; less than normal precipitation. Eastern Oregon: Highs 2j-3J and lows mostly zero to 13 above; chance ol few snow flur ries. Northern California: Mostly fair through Saturday. Portland - Vancouver: Partly cloudy through Saturday; highs about 42; low tonight near 32. Western Oregon: Mostly cloudy tonight, partly cloudy Saturday; highs 36-43; low to night 22-34 Eastern Oregon: Cloudy with chance snow flurries Satur day; highs 23-34; low 12-22. ex cept near zero some high val leys. Tatonjh to Blanco: Variable winds 5-15. mostly north; most ly cloudy. The Dalles and" Hood River: Cloudy tonight and Saturday; highs 30-40: low 23-32; gorge winds cast 12-18. Bend: Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday, chance few snow flurries; highs 35-40; low 10-15. Baker and La Grande: Partly cloudy through Saturday, chance few snow flurries; highs 23-28; low 10-15. Temperatures during t h e 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST to day. High Low Astoria , 40 29 Baker 2a 13 Brookings 53 33 Mcdford 44 22 Lakeview Girl Wins Slalom V.L D'lSKERE. France. I CPU Jean Saubert of Lake view, Ore., won the ladies giant slalom at the "nint critoi ium of the lirst snow," traditionally the first big inlernational alpine ski meet of the season. The 21-year-old Oregon State University student streaked over tlie course in 2 minutes. 1.4 sec onds to beat Teresa Obrccht of Switzerland by almost a full second. The Swiss skier was timed in 2:02.2 with Marielle Goitschcl of France third in 2:03.&1. lahassee. Fla.. reported 1.2B inches during the night. Up to one inch fell in sections of Lou isiana, Mississippi and Ala bama. Aboul an inch or two nf fresh snow ell Thursday night in Kansas but the rest of the snowbclt showed only a trace of precipitation. The U.S. Army Kngineers said today that Lake Michigan and Lake Huron had equalled all-time low levels lor Decem ber set in 1933. The weatlier bu reau blamed the severe drought this fall for causing many riv ers in Missouri and Illinois to approach record low levels. The wintry storm dumped up to six inches of snow on New England Thursday before head ing out to sea. The Massachu setts Department of Public Works had 1,000 men and 500 trucks trying to keep highways cleared. At least 60 weather-connected deaths were counted by United IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IN STOCK! OLDSMOBILE Roundup Newport N. Bend Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem The Dalles Chicago Los Angeles New York Phoenix San Fran. Seattle Washington 50 4 31 25 24 4l' 23 35 13 3fi 23 32 21 30 .13 2 46 30 27 (il 38 ,31 41 40 28 39 22 Mourning Will Last One Year WASHINGTON UPI '-Foregoing public appearances, and wearing the traditional black ol the widow, Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy will observe a one year mourning period for her dead husband. Mrs. Kennedy's decision was announced Thursday by her press secretary, Pamela Turn ure. Asked if there was a possi bility that Mrs. Kennedy would campaign for President John son next year. Miss Turnure said Mrs. Kennedy would re main in mourning and would not accept any public engage ments. The former first lady and her two children, Caroline. 6, and John Jr., 3, plan to spend Christmas holidays in Florida. After the holidays. Mrs. Ken nedy will move into a new home in the Georgetown sec tion of Washington. Firm Locates At Grants Pass GRANTS PASS HiPI - An Oakland, Calif., container firm has announced plans to estab lish a branch plant here. The Crate-Rite Corp. manu factures containers and packag ing materials. The firm will employ 15 per sons. It is being constructed on a 10 acre site just east of the citv. Plains States Press International in the series of wintry onslaughts that reached from the northern Rockies lo Texas and eastward to Iho Atlantic. FOR A USED TV IT'S ACE TY TV lnlr W have (Ivrn on a rry good tflfrtlitn nf l'rd TV. All f nr aria carry an uninnditlonal 30 day taaranU. 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Load space is 75o greater than you get in the largest pas senger car-type wagon. in m h h m ra r Second Education Aid WASHINGTON 'ITU - For the second time this week, Con gress was expected to approve a large federal aid to education bill. The Senate was to vote on legislation providing (1.5 billion to expand federal aid to voca tional schools, increase govern ment loans to college students and continue assistance to schools crowded by children of federal workers and service men. The House earlier this week approved compromise vocation al aid bill, and finished work on a group of education and train ing measures that included ap proval of a S327 million bill to Saturn-1 Flight Postponed, Titan-2 Fires Perfectly CAPE KENNEDY (UPD -The first orbital test of the Saturn-1. a huge missile the late President Kennedy said would give America rocket power su periority, has slipped into Jan uary. But U.S. hopes for an early unmanned test of the two-man Gemini capsule t received a boost Thursday with the near perfect 5.700-mile flight of a powerful Titan-2 rocket. The versatile missile, capa ble of delivering a warhead equal to 18 million tons of TNT over a 6,300-mile range, is be ing readied for an attempt in late February to place an un manned 7.000-pound capsule into an earth orbit. Manned flights may begin late next year. The Saturn-1 will be used lo send three-man teams of astro nauts in orbit around the earth prior to a moon flight. The Saturn-I had been set to fly with a live second stage lor the lirst time next Tuesday, but engineers Thursday discov ered cracks in pneumatic lines in the first stage. The troubles will take al least three weeks to correct and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the test was put off until late January. The Saturn-1 first stage has had four straight successes, each time with a dummy upper stage. The next test will be ah attempt to orbit a 16-ton satel lite using the live second stage a cluster of six hydrogen en gines. TU 4-3581 expand and extend the life of the 1962 manpower training program. The House retraining bill would have to be meshed with differing Senate legislation on the same subject. The Senate vocational meas ure carried authority to in crease federal aid for job train ing schools from the present yearly level of 158 million to nearly $300 million in (our years. It would provide $304 million in new money to continue oper ation nf the 1938 National De fense Education Act for an ex tra year through June 30. 1965. The third provision would ex tend, until June 30. 1965, at a cost of $327 million, expiring President Kennedy, in (lie last address before his assassina tion, predicted the Saturn-1 would put the United States ahead' in rocket power for space. Kennedy visited the Sa turn launching complex' six days before his death. The Titan-2 test followed an Air Force announcement that two more squadrons of the rocket, at Wichita. Kan., were combat ready. Two squadrons with nine missiles apiece were already war ready at Tucson, Ariz., and two more are expect ed lo become operational at Little Rock, Ark., later this monlh. LP I,- 5S"f-'Bl5WPBeAcLOTHES DRYING .1 I MSl 1 igljji g' ' " ' mo COMFORT ! I l-JAlllilllMimm JlWWm:il.aniiii.li ,., . ifW Now with the new low priced LP-Cas DOXOL you, too. can have modern home convenience. Call us today for dependable gas service and save the difference. Soid Onlv by 1D Bill Expected To Pass portions of the so-called "im pacted areas" elementary and secondary school aid program for areas with big federal in stallations. Other congressional news: Aid: The battered foreign aid authorization bill was expected AT SHAW'S THI ALL NIW PARKER 45 with America's 14K GOLD POINT Slim-swppt styling, Expensive looking. Giant, size ink cartridge. 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