Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 02, 1964, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE (A
HERALD AND
Two Young Men Plan Private Launch
Of Satellite To Study Northern Lights
SAN FRANCISCO UPI -Two
young men with their eyes
on space announced plans today
to launch a satellite to inves
tigate the northern lights.
They also announced plans to
raise enough money at least
$30,000 to $40.000 to get their
satellite into orbit.
For those who wonder at the
audacity of the plan, the two
young men offered an impres
sive background of accomplish
ment and backing from prom
inent Bay Area citizens as well
as encouragement from the U.S.
government itself.
' The rocketeers are Kelly Mac
donaJd, 20, a premedical student
at Contra Costa College, and
Castro Marks
MIAMI (UPIt Premier
-Fidel Castro starts his sixth
.year in pewer today with a
'speech and a "gigantic" pi
radc, probably featuring his re
gime's made-in-Moscow military
mi'jht.
The 37-year-old premier
marks each anniversary cf his
seizure cf power in January,
1939, with a Soviet-style parade
through Havana's "Revolution
Square."
Castro, apparently confident
he cannot be overthrown as long
r
Weather
Temperatures
hours ending at
during the 24
4 a.m. PST to
day.
High Low I'cp.
Astoria 57 42 1.34
Baker .17 22 T
Brookings 54 4:1 1.2(1
Mcdford 47 38 .21
North Bend 55 V, 1.10
Pendleton ' 42 .05
Portland 53 38 ,.73
Redmond .60 32 .0t
Salem 50 39 .49
The Dalles 55 43 T
Chicago 30 28
Los Angeles 00 50
New York 38
ITHi
PINS TtfWTl :4S
HOW MOST WORLD BECOMES
I NEW WORLD OF ADVENTURE!
ULBRUnnER,
George chakiris
SHIRlEUAIinE FIELD
"mnrep
yr
OF THE
CUM kf HDU PMMISIOI'
Ciiriiuoioijliijjiiiiiijiiiiiiiiitt
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A whirlpool of infrigue...
odvnfur...ond fhe onexpecfedl
Cat-y, Audrey
Grant Hepburn
1 i
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NKVVS. Klamath Falls. Oregon
David Cuidici, 21, an engineer
ing student at Oakland City
College. Both live in the East
San Francisco Bay suburb of
El Cerrito.
Successful Launch
In November they launched a
test rocket that roared 90 miles
high from a balloon over the
Nevada desert 45 miles west of
Fallon.
Now they are working on
plans to launch a four stage
rocket from a huge balloon
100,000 feet above the Pacific
near Midway Island next sum
mer. The rocket, they hope,
will push a four-pound satellite
named "Searcher 1" into polar
orbit to investigate the makeup
Sixth Year
us he has solid Russian support,
faces a possible new diplomatic
challenge later this month.
A five - nation investigating
committee is expected to make
pjblic the results of its probe
of charges that the Castroites
smugglid 3 tons cf arms into
Venezuela for use by Commu
nist terrorists.
Latin American diplomatic
quarters say substantiation of
the rliargjs could lead to unit
ed hemisphere sanctions against
Castro.
Roundup
Phoenix IS9 33
San Francisco 54
Seattle 51 38 .93
Washington 37 30 .59
Northern California: Mostly
fair through Friday.
Portland Vancouver: Mostly
cloudy tonight and Friday with
some light rain: highs 48-52: low
toniglrf near 40.
Western Oregon: Occasional
rain through Friday; highs 45
55: low 35-45.
Eastern Oregon: Few showers
rain or snow tonight; partly
cloudy Friday; highs 38-48; low
25-35.
Tatoosh to Blanco: Small
craft warnings up for west wind
15-30 knots becoming south,
then west again tonight and Fri
day: showery.
i The Dalles and Hood River:
Partly cloudy with a few show
ers; lliglls 45-50; low 37-42.
Bend: Partly cloudy with tew
light showers, mostly moun
lain sections; highs 38-44; low
20-34.
Baker and La Grande: Partly
cloudy; highs 38-44; low 20-33.
SATES OPIN 6:30
FRIDAY
SATURDAY!
VINCENT PRICE
COLOR
WARD
iAMSEY
L-,3f,xfil
:::::
IRISTINA I
HANSON)
mi ,
CUSHING
I
MELISSA I
STRIBUNG
i
Charade
. STANLEY DON IN
nmNJCOiiOR'"
ames Cobum
Wr PETER STONE
Thursday, Jaouary 2, 1964
of the Aurora Borealis, or
northern lights.
Later this month Macdonald
and Guidici plan to start a
vigorous campaign to raise
with the public's help enough
money to make their hope a
reality.
"When you think about it."
Macdonald said, "it's actually
pretty cheap compared with
government shots. They might
spend $3 or $4 million."
Macdunald said he and Guidi
ci have the support of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, the U. S. Navy
and the University of Califor
niaall of which, he said, have
offered technical assistance and
advice. Additionally, many pri
vate companies have agreed to
donate much of the material
needed.
"But we'll still need money
for the balloon, the helium, for
trucks and for shipping all the
stuff over there," Macdonald
said. "Also there's the little
stuff. It's pretty easy to get the
big parts for the rocket donat
ed, but the little things arc
hard those you have to pay
for."
Trust Fund
To handle the money, plans
are underway for a trust fund
at the Golden Gate National
Bank in San Francisco, where
the young scientists already
have an account under the title
"Project Searcher."
The mayor of their home
(own, James Doherty, said he
and Claude Samples, principal
of El Cerrito High School, have
agreed to act as executive
trustees of the fund.
"They have our solid back
ing," Doherty said. "The city
is very much behind them.
They are fine boys."
Macdonald said the honorary
trustees probably will include
U. S. Sen. Clair Engle, who has
helped them obtain government
cooperation; San Francisco at
torney Jake Ehrlich, and for
mer St. Mary's College football
coach Edward P. (Slip) Madi-
gan.
Macdonald. tne son nl an
attorney, and Guidici, whose
father owns a television repair
shop, got together about four
years ago and began sending
up balloons with cameras and
other equipment to investigate
the atmosphere.
"We decided," Macdonald
said, "that since we wanted to
do these things, it would lie
easier to do them together."
I ft 111 Iifo THi f L n I ! h ?
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS!!
HURRY-WHILE THEY LAST!!
Women's -Children's
DRESS SHOES, FLATS,
CASUALS & SLIPPERS
Values to 3.99
ON SALE NOW I
Men's & Big
DRESS & SPORT SHOES
Values to 8.99
SALE!
C?77 r77
CREW SOX for Men
SPECIAL VALUE 2 9R.
Br CLAY
M Your Doily Adivtir Ovid t
According to tht Stan.
To develop message for Friday,
read words corresponding to numbers
fTl 5-15 26371
sf FAURUS
AM 21
I MAY 21
or your ioaioc Dirm
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31 Your
2 Don"!
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4 Look
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12 btykcff
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16 "i
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19 Inter eit ing
?0 Reveol
21 M3v
22 Doy
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24 Fun
26 Of
27 St.dv-nj
29 U -pectH
29 Or
32 Receive
33 For
.14 Mcrchonts
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'i60ue.i'ii
37 Cheer
j9 Letter
40 Beccmt
41 Moy
42Cham
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5566874
76- 77-84-351
GEMINI
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MAY 22
JUNE 22
O) 6-21-32-43!
CANCH
i JUNt 2i
5 And
JULY 23
47Moei
48 Before
1M4-25-36J
48-59-70
49 Or
bO Involved
bl Greeting
52 Enter
53 Nei
54 Banking
55 T.me
56 Many
57 Loyer
58 LMuiual
9 You
60Cardi
6's juLr2'
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10-22-33-44
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VIIDO
AUG 2t,
SEPT 22
30 i'top'w
A 7-19-30 41
( ) Quol Advcri
Johnson Girls Attend Game,
Secret Service Kept Busy
DALLAS lUPI'-The younger
half of (lie country's first fam
ily blended in with 75,000 foot
ball fans Wednesday, and gave
the Secret Servicemen guarding
them a hectic afternoon.
Lucy Baines and Lynda Bird
Johnson watched Texas defeat
Navy 28-6. The men who guard
the daughters of the President
didn't get much of a chance to
see the game.
The l'J-yeur-old Lynda Bird
had mixed emotions about the
game. Her fiance. Lt. J. G.)
Bernard Rosenbach is an An
napolis graduate, but she is a
sophomore at Texas.
However, she -joined her
schoolmates in cheering for the
Lonnhorns. .She oficn junwed
up from her scat on the 35-yard-line
aid displayed the
"hook 'em horns" hand sign,
much to the discomfort of the
A. V. Lafferty
Suffers Stroke
PORTLAND i U-Pl ' - A. W.
Lafferty, 83. Republican con
gressman from Oregon from
1!11 to 11113. was listed in
"pour" condition at St Vincent
Hospital today following a
slrcke.
Lafferty, who has been an ac
tive attorney in Portland, suf
fered the stroke 'Wednesday.
His condition was at first list
ed as not serious.
& zm
DRESS
and
Boy's
Boys Girls
-
tilt,,.. . c on W r
PRICED TO
(4)
s- 1 1
K KH.LAN-
OCT. 23
3.16-27-381
U7-61-7I
sign.
61 And
A? V.i-loe
63 With
64 Your
6b And
t. A Tr,
67 Or
68 Cwieen'rcte
69 Treoi
70 &egn
71 Actum
72Arfie
73 Circle
74 Soulo'"g
SCOMIO
OCT. 24 C'ty
1-13-24-35'
Us-58 69 i
SAGITTAKiUS
W 21 )
KC. 22 f3
2-tB-39.iO( V
03-82 89
CAPtKOIN
DtC 23 p
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8-12-23-34. C-
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46 Engagcfnenl 76 Turn
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86 People
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88 Today
89 Salenion
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157 67-79 86
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Secret Servicemen around her.
Each time she jumped up,
they stood up and searched the
crowd around her. When she
sat down, they sat down. A
group of Dallas policemen stood
on the sidelines and faced the
stands during the entire game,
missing all of the "dream"
contest.
Lucy Baines was net so no
ticeable. She sat on the opposite side
of the stadium from her sister,
and created little stir. But her
Secret Service guard was con
stantly scanning the noisy
crowd around her.
Dallas police oflicers said
they did not know where the 16-year-old
daughler of President
Johnson was silting, and Col.
Homer (iarrison. chief of t h e
Texas Department of Public
Safety, had to admit that he did
not know where she was either.
The two gills were not the
only worry of I h e Secret Serv
ice. Extra men were placed on
duly in case the President him
self decided at the last minute to
make a surprise call on the Cot
ton Bowl. Some reports indi
cated that 33 detectives spent
the night in the huge stadium
just in case.
But the President only
watched the game on television
at Johnson City and the Secret
Servicemen were probably
happy with that decision. They
were busy enough with two nor
mal teen-age girls.
k 8 J 2 3 -
Women's
SHOES, FLATS,
CASUALS
FIRST QUALITY
SHEER
SEAMLESS
NYLONS
REDUCED TO
29f,.
(i : ar l ) r.
wmit THir ittri
la
Day's km
(Continued from Page 1)
mouth. Sir Thomas Mallory
wrote in English the story of
the Grail Le Mort d'Arthur.
It is required reading in most
literary courses.
To Mohammedans, this strand
of hair from the head of
the Prophet (Mohammed is as
precious a relic as was the
Holy Grail to the Knights of
the Round Tabic some eight
centuries ago.
So
Let's make no wise cracks
about this theft of a holy hair
especially here in the United
States of America, where we
are reaching for the position
of Leader of the World.
If we are to become the lead
er of tile world, and remain on
that lofty eminence, we must
learn to be tolerant of other
people's beliefs.
True LEADERSHIP of the
world calls for more than the
mere possession of more guns
and more bombs than anybody
else. It calls for wisdom and
understanding and tolerance.
Fire Burns
Pope Home
NEW PINE CREEK The
Clyde Pope residence in New
Pine Creek was severely dam
aged by a fire Friday afternoon
which is thought to have started
from a clogged oil stove pipe
vent that crosses through the
attic into the main chimney.
The Pupes were away at the
time, and the fire was reported
by an employe who said there
was a loud explosion just before
it w as discovered. The local vol
unteer fire department an
swered the call and worked
more than an hour and a half
to control the blaze. Water was
also supplied by the Willow
Ranch fire truck.
Iowa Republican Lashes President
WASHLNGTON UPH - Rep.
H. R. Gross, R-Iowa, who has
been a thorn in Die side of
other presidents, is starting off
the new year with some unkind
words about President Johnson.
Gross said in a statement
Wednesday that the new Presi
Nursing Home Fire Takes
Lives Of 3 Elderly Men
COLUMBIA. Miss. UPI -Fire
destroyed a nursing home
for elderly men early today
and trapped and killed three of
the aged occupants in the old
one-story frame building.
Authorities said three bodies
were found in the charred re
mains of the building that
housed 17 or 18 men.
The occupants who escaped
were either rescued by firemen
or stumbled blindly out of the
building and into the freezing
weather.
Fire Chief Allen Dubson said
the fire broke out at about 5:45
a.m. He said he believed the
fire may have been caused by
a faulty furnace.
The temperature was in the
low 20's when the fire began.
A hard layer of frozen snow
about seven inches deep cov
ered the ground following a vio-
herald anil Jrttr
Klamath Fill, Oregon
Published daily txcent Sat.) and sundiy
Serving Southern Oreoort
anil Northern California
by
Klamath Puhliihinej Company
M n at Eplanari"
Phone TUxedo 4-11 M
entered as second-clan matter at the
OOSt office at Klamath Fallv Oreoon,
on August 21, Itot, under act at Con
oress. March 3. 1879 Secon-clas oot
aqe paid at Klamath Polls. Oregom
and at additional mailing offices!
Carrier
I Manth S 17
i Montns St 50
1 Year .. . tVM
Mall in-Advance
1 Montn . $ I ti
Months HI M
1 Year tll.M
Carrier and Dealers
Weekday, Cpy, tte
Sunday, Cp ISC
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION
Subscribers net receiving delivery at
their HeraM and News, pleeie phone
'i'wn 4.IM1 before
See for
yourself...
it pays
to look
ahead!
MORE THAN $1,000,000.00 IN DIVIDENDS
PAID TO FIRST FEDERAL SAVERS IN 1963
Advice to the gentleman
who paused outside our office
(and to thousands like him):
You wondered whether you should start a regular savings program for
the new year. You and your wife were talking about it the other daw
About those school expenses coming up. About that house you plan to
buy . . . someday. And a nicer vacation trip.
You were taking the important first step toward saving . . . looking
ahead to the future . . . making plans, Now for the second step . . . mak
ing those plans realities through profitable saving.
Our savers know how profitable saving tan be. Sale and conven
ient, loo. The earnings they received last car alone will help pav fnr
many things they once looked ahead to.
Our adice to ou, sir, is to come again won. Don t stop outside.
Come in and open an account of your own. Then add to it regulailv.
It's one of the best decisions you'll ever make!
dent already had shewn that he
talks "out of both skies of his
mouth" and is "well-scliooled in
the art of political expediency."
The Iowa Republican, noted
for his one-man stands against
proposals of the previous ad
ministration, reached the boil-
lent winter storm that moved
across southeast Mississippi
New Year's Eve.
Marlin Fortenberry, a wit
ness to the fire shortly after it
started, said he went to the
scene and found "old men
standing outside in the snow
without shoes and partially
clothed. None of them were
fully dressed Smoke was
everywhere," he said.
Clyde Bourne, owner of a lo
cal feed mill, said the building
housing the nursing home was
built in laiO. He said it had
been used as a nursing home
for the last five or six years.
The building was a total loss.
A Negro woman who lived
near the nursing home took in
several of the elderly patients
from the freezing cold.
II I llllll HI I IIIIIlM
4
CiMf lit Rule
mtfoM January Storewide
PlSjj FURNITURE SALE
,.,, Now In Progress! Save!
jF Wc Give H.'fC Green Stamps
i 12th & Main Ph TU 4-8858
mm
i s r
SAVINGS
ing point because of Johnson's
role in the foreign aid b;il
hassle. ,
He said that Johnson had dem
onstrated "tough and ruthless
arm-twisting seldom, if ever,
seen in Congress" to fight a re
striction on credit guarantees
for wheat sales to Russia.
Gross was among backers of
an amendment to prohibit use
of government credit guaran
tees for the commodity sales.
Johnson finally got Congress to
allow such guarantees if the
President considered them in
the national interest.
In his attack on Johnson.
Gross noted that the President
had promised in a speech to
Congress on Nov. 27 that he al
ways would respect the inde
pendence and integrity of tlie
legislative branch.
"Yet less tlian a month
later," Gross said, "Johnson
completely repudiated this
promise and cracked the lash
over the backs of members of
Congrcis, forcing them to do
his bidding."
INCOME TAXES
The Greatest Headache
Of The Year
YO"r tneom1 tux an bookkeeping
problems will disappear when you
call an . . .
CHAS. HATHAWAY
TU 15473 110 No. 10th
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Per Yc
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FIRST FEDERAL
rfarmp ait ft '$.
!j JnmwM WWI D8NEN- a urwtfui Mtt
u
820 MAIN ST.
onus
TONITS
:4$
,p in
540 MAIN STRUT
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