Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 21, 1958, Image 1

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RIBUNE
A featurs story on coat
launching sites along the Route
river appears on pace 12 of
today's Mall Tribune.
United Press full uinI Wire
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58 PAGES
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1958
No. 155
11 f
IFremni
Little Rock, Ark.-UPD-An
exodus of high school students
to schools in other parts of
Arkansas and even in other
states was reported yester
day. The movement of students
out of Little Rock indicated
that many parents were tired
Highway Crash
Kills Woman,
Injures 4 Girls
Mrs. Bessie Marjorie Smith,
37, of Klamath Falls, was
killed and lour 17-year-old
girls were injured when the
car in which they were riding
went off Highway 66 about
1V4 miles east of Tub Springs
State park and struck a tree
about 2:45 a.m. Saturday, ac
cording to state police.
In Ashland General hospi
tal are Helen Kathryn Smith,
Josephine Ann Krook, Judith
Marie Frasier and Ethel
Florez, all of Klamath Falls.
The girls were reported in
serious condition Saturday
afternoon by hospital officials.
Police said Miss Smith
suffered arm injuries and a
'possible skull fracture; Miss
Krook, possible internal in
juries; Miss Frasier, leg and
facial injuries; and Miss
Florez, a fractured jaw.
The car, operated by Mrs.
Smith, was traveling east on
Highway 66, police said, when
apparently Miss Smith at
tempted to turn on the car
radio. She struck the head-
; light switch, and the car's
lights went off.
- By the time the headlights
. were turned on again, police j
said, it was too late to avoid
striking the tree.
Mrs. Smith and the girjs
were returning to Klamath
Falls from Medford where
they attended the football
game between St. Mary's of
Medford and Sacred Heart of
Klamath Falls.
The fatality was the 10th
In Jackson county so far this
year. Last year at this time,
21 persons had been killed
in traffic accidents in the
county.
Football Scores
Northwest
Willamette 41. Whitworth 6
Linfield 32, Oregon Col
lege of Education 6
Lewis and Clark 12, Port- -land
State 7
West
Oregon 27, Idaho 0
Washington State 40, Stan
ford 6
Pittsburgh 27. UCLA 8
College of Pacific 24, Cali
fornia 20
Washington 14, San Jose 0
X7SC 21. Oregon State 0
East
West Virginia 6, Rich
mond 22.
Boston College 48, Scran
ton 0
Connecticut 41. Spring
iield 14
Villanova 28. West Chester
Teachers 14
Midwest
- Texas Christian 42. Kans
as 7
Nebraska 14. Penn State 7
Oklahoma State 13. Den
ver 0
Vanderbilt 12, Missouri 8
Kansas States 17, Wyom
ing 14
Iowa Slate 33. Drake 0
Marquette 18, South Da
kota State 7 .
Bowling Green 20, Wichita
14
Morningside 28, Omaha 9
Montana State 15, North
Dakota 8
South
mond 22
West Virginia 66. Rich
mond 22
North Carolina State 21,
North Carolina 14
Florida 34, Tulane 14
VMI 26, Moorehead State
20
Wake Forest 34, Maryland
0
Clemson 20, Virginia 15
Kentucky 13. Georgia
Tech 10
Newberry 16, Citadel 0
South Carolina 8, Duke 0
Florida State 42, Furman 6
Virginia Tech 28. West
Texas State 12
Southwest '
Bishop 42. Butler (Tex.) 88
Louisiana Slate 26. Rice 6
Texas 13, Georgia 8
Baylor 12, Arkansas 0
Texas Tech 15, Texas A&M
14
of waiting for the schools to
reopen either as integrated
or all-white institutions.
Dissatisfaction with the
closing of schools in Virginia
also was indicated. Parents
were trying to set up a plan
which would enable their
children to attend classes in
private homes, lodge halls or
churches.
These parents did not claim
the new makeshift system
would end the integration
controversy that has closed
three schools in Charlottes
ville and Front Royal. But
they believed it would give
some schooling to the 1,700
students who are now idle.
T-V Classrooms
Here in Little Rock, tele
vision was being used as a
stopgap school until classes
are resumed in the city's four
high schools.
In Arkansas's o flier major
integration controversy, 12
Negro students who quit Van
Buren High school two weeks
ago because of a white stu
dents' anti-integration strike
will start back again Monday.
U. S. District Judge John
E. Miller refused to grant the
Negroes an injunction against
the school board Friday, but
he suggested that the school
board see they are protected.
Television lessons, which
began yesterday, are on film
and are a pilot program for
six hours' a day of lessons
that begin on Monday over
three Little Rock commercial
stations.
The lessons yesterday in
cluded: "Introduction to Bio
logy;" "The Pilgrims;" "Bet
ter Reading," and "A Trip to
the Moon."
They were scheduled for
showing from 1 to 2 p.m.
c.s.t., over a single station,
KATV. Regular television in
struction . will be both livev
Lawyers1 Statement
Urges Integration
Little" Rock, Ark. - (UPD -
Sixty-one lawyers signed
statement yesterday saying
that Gov. Orval E. Faubus'
plan to reopen Little Rock's
closed high school was not
constitutional. They urged the
people to vote for integrated
schools in a special election
next Saturday.
The lawyers' statement was
made public as Little Rock's
High schools opened a classes-
by-TV project and the segre
gationist Central High Moth
er's league circulated a peti
tion for an election to recall
four members of the school
board.
The lawyers, including some
of the most prominent in
Little Rock, made these points
in their statement:
1. "It is our opinion that
existing public school facil
ities of the district cannot be
legally operated with any
public funds as segregated
private schools and, conse
quently, that the real issue be
fore the voters of this district
on September 27 will be
whether we shall open our
schools under the (Supreme)
Court approved plan of lim
ited integration or close them
altogether.
2. "A 1 i m i t e d integrated
school system pursuant to
court orders is distasteful to
many in our group, but the
alternative of no public school
system is even more distaste
ful." 3. "We do not believe that
the existing circumstances
justify destroying one of the
finest public school systems
in the nation.
4. "We regret that the al
ternatives are harsh, but,
Non-Union Mills
Granting Raise Here
A number of the larger
lumber firms contacted in the
Jackson county area have de
cided to grant the 1XA cent
hourly wage increase pro
posed by the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers union.
Spokesmen for a number
of the mills which were not
union organized said they felt
they had to go along with the
wage raise since the mills
under unions were.
The raise is effective as of
Sept. 1. The contract runs to
June 1, 1959. The raise affects
employees in central and
southern Oregon.
Medford School
Calendar Set
The proposed 1958 - 59
calendar for school district
549C, Medford, has been
announced by school of
ficials. The last of the
schools, Medford High and
Hoover Elementary schools,
will open tomorrow.
Tentative date for the
. Jaekson County Teachers
conference is Nov. 10, and
the following day. Tuesday,
Nov. 11, is a legal holiday.
The Thanksgiving holidays
are scheduled Nov. 27 and
28, and the Christmas holi
days between Dec. 24 and
Jan A. inclusive.
Jan. 23 is the end of the
first semester, and spring
vacation is scheduled March
19 and 20. High school com
mencement is scheduled
June 4, and school will
close June 5.
(See story on page 14)
with regular high school
teachers, and film. '
School Superintendent Vir
gil T. Blossom reported that
210 of Little Rocks 3,480 high
school students have trans
ferred to other schools.
Of those who have trans
ferred, 130 were from Hall
High in the city's best resi
dential section. Hall has a
total of 717 students, mean
ing that 17.7 per cent of its
student body has gone.
Central High, the center of
the controversy, has lost 80
of 2,071 students in transfers.
Little Rock Tech and Horace
Mann,' the Negro school, have
lost no students by transfers.
nevertheless, as attorneys and
citizens, we feel compelled to
take our stand for public edu
cation," they said.
: 5. "We urge our fellow citi
zens in the Little Rock school
district to face frankly the
hard alternatives and to join
with us in an effort to pre
serve free public education in
our city."
It was. denied that the
Pulaski County (Little Rock)
Bar association is behind the
statement, which is being cir
culated for more signatures.
"It started in one . of the
law offices and was passed
around over town," a lawyer
said. '
One of the lawyers said it
is a statement of opinion, not
a petition, and will not be
sent to Faubus.
AEC Postpones
Atom Safety Test
Las Vega's, Nev.-flJPD-T h e
Atomic Energy Commission
postponed a scheduled nuclear
safety test yesterday without
explanation.
The test, an attempt to dis
cover the best way to guard
against accidental nuclear ex
plosion, was to have been the
15th of its kind.
The AEC said 2V4 hours be
fore the. firing that the test
was postponed . and "a new
readiness date will be an
nounced -shortly."
It was indicated the reason
for the delay was simply that
the test was not ready at the
scheduled time.
GA1, Chrysler Propose
Same Terms As Ford
Detroit -0PD General Mo
tors and Chrysler, threatened
by the United Auto Workers
with strikes, yesterday pro
posed to settle their contract
differences on the same terms
that the UAW accepted from
Ford Motor company.
Sports Bulletin:
Moffei Naval Air Corps
base 40, Southern Oregon
college 25.
Score by quarters: First,
Moffett 1. SOC 12; Half
time, Moffeit 20, SOC 13;
third, Moffett, 27, SOC 13.
Jacksonville 19, Chile
quin 6, at Klamath Falls.
Roger Linhart, 14,
Killed by Friend
In Gun Accident
Jack Peebler Pointed
Brother's Gun At Him
Roger Donald Linhart, 14,
son of Mrs. Sarath Linhart,
1762 South Peach st., Med
ford, was accidentally shot
and killed by Jack Nelson
Peebler, 14, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert (Bud) Peebler,
1871 Marsh lane, Medford,
early Friday afternoon.
Chief Criminal Sheriffs
Deputy Joe Walsh said the
accident happened when the
boys, who had known each
other since the first grade,
were playing with a .22 cali
ber pistol at the Linhart
home. The boys, both 9th
graders at McLoughlin Jun
ior High school, stayed away
from school Friday, deputies
said.
The gun is owned by
Floyd Linhart, older brother
of Roger. It was in a holster
hanging on Floyd's bedroom
wall.
Boys In Bedroom
Walsh said the boys were
m the bedroom, and young
Peebler took the revolver
from the holster. He pointed
it at young Linhart, deputies
said, apparently not realiz
ing it was loaded. Young Lin
hart was struck in the fore
head, Walsh said.
Young Peebler called Med
ford police, who notified the
sheriff's deputies, who called
a physician. Walsh said the
boy had died before the phys
ician arrived.
Case To Grand Jury
Jackson County District At
torney Thomas Reeder said
that from the investigation
conducted by the sheriff's of
fice it appears to have been
an accidental death. However,
he said he would present the
case to a grand jury next
Thursday because of the ser
iousness of it.?-j;t.J;i".' '"
Young Peebler was releas
ed to his parents by sheriff's
deputies.
Survivors of the Linhart
boy include his mother, Mrs.
Sarah E. Linhart; five sisters,
Iris Carter, Medford, Mrs.
Mildred Harris, Pittman, Nev
ada, Mrs. Darlene McLeod,
Medford, and Sharon and Iva
Linhart, both of Medford; and
one brother, Floyd Linhart,
also of Medford. One sister,
Cora, preceded him in death
in 1935.
Hunting Accident
Injures Boy, 10
James Alan Gould, 10, of
Happy Camp, Calif., was re
ported in fair condition in
Sacred Heart hospital Satur
day suffering from a .22 cali
ber bullet wound in the stom
ach, v
The Gould boy, son of Clif
ford L. Gould, Happy Camp,
was flown into Medford by
Mercy Flights, Inc., plane.
The 10-year-old boy was
said to have been hunting
with Ronald David Blaycock,
9, also of Happy Camp, Calif.
when the accident occurred.
James Gould was walking be
hind Ronald Blaycock when
a bird suddenly flew up. The
gun went off too quickly and
the bullet went through the
Gould boy's stomach, it was
reported.
Warsaw Meeting
Postponed One Day
Warsaw - (UPD - The U. S.
embassy announced yesterday
that the scheduled meeting to
day of the American and Red
Chinese ambassadors on the
Formosa crisis has been post
poned until Monday.
The spokesman said the
session had been delayed "for
administrative reasons." In
diplomatic language, this
meant one side had requested
the postponement, probably
to await new instructions
from its government.
There was no indication
whether U. S. Ambassador
Jacob Beam or Chinese Am
bassador Wang Ping-nan had
asked for the delay.
Roger's Declaration
A Warning To South
. Washington -(UPD- Attorney
General William P. Rogers'
declaration that government
officials cannot "flout" the
supreme court's integration
decision without violating
their oath of office was view
ed as a pointed warning to
Southern extremist.
Woman Stabs
Rev. Martin King
In Harlem Store
New York .-(UPD- The Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr.,
Southern Negro integration
leader, was stabbed in the
chest yesterday by a Negro
woman who attacked him
with a letter opener while
he autographed copies of his
new book in a Harlem depart
ment store. It took surgeons
nearly three hours to remove
the weapon from King's chest.
The knife thrust by 42-year
old Izola Ware Curry nearly
pierced the heart of King who
led the Montgomery, Ala., bus
boycott in 1956.
King spent more than four
hours in the operating room
at Harlem hospital where at
team of four surgeans per-'
formed a "miraculous job" in
the intricate removal of the
letter opener. .
'Quite Satisfactory'
His condition was describ
ed as "quite satisfactory" as
he was wheeled from- the
Student's Knife
Brings Expulsion
New OrleansHWI1--An uni
dentified Negro student was
expelled yesterday from the
integrated New Orleans
branch of Louisiana State uni
versity for carrying a six-inch
knife on the campus.
Dean Homer L. Hitt at the
same time warned bluntly
that any- other students, Negro
or white, found carrying
weapons of any kind on the
campus also would be ex
pelled. He thus lent weight to his
statement earlier in the week
that school officials would
tolerate no violence, boister
ousness, congregating j and
name-calling. Students dem
onstrated on the campus,
where 69 Negroes began class
es this week, for two straight
days before Hitt issued his
crackdown order.
A white student noted the
knife protruding from the
Negro's pocket, Dean Hitt
said, and reported it to a
campus security guard. The
guard in turn notified school
officials.
Dr. Hitt said the Negro
student told him he "was go
ing to get the knife sharpen
ed later in the day."
Rail Disaster Toll
Increases To 46
Bayonne, N. J, -(UPD- The
death toll in Monday's Jersey
Central Railroad disaster rose
to 46 yesterday with the re
covery of a mall's body from
Newark Bay.
The body was tentatively
identified as that of James C.
Adams, 45, Rumson, N. J., a
trade publication publisher,
whose wife died of. cancer the
day after the commuter train
plunged off an open draw
bridge. Two men were still listed
as missing. They were be
lieved to be Thomas Judge,
48, Elizabeth, N. J., and Rich
ard McGovern, 45, New York
City.
County Voters'
Registration Slow
Registration of voters con
tinues to be slow in Jackson
county, according to County
Clerk Bereth P. Hopkins.
As of Friday, Sept. 19, the
Republicans had 17,295 voters
registered and Democrats 16,
136 registered. Those in the
miscelalneous category of
party affiliations totaled 737
voters. Total registered is 34,
168. Mrs. Hopkins said this is a
gain of 122 voters for the Re
publicans, 201 for the Demo
crats and eight miscellaneous
since July 15.
room. v Doctors said it took
two and one-half hours to re
move the seven-inch blade.
It was the third attempt on
the life of the minister.
"You made enough people
suffer in the last six years,"
shouted the Southern - bprn
Mrs. Curry as she drew the
letter opener from the front
of her dress and plunged it
into him. "I have to do it, I
have to do it."
Blade Pierced Breast Plate
Dr. Bernard Nadell, ' senior
medical superintendent at the
hospital, said the blade pierc
ed the upper part of the
breast plate.'
"A large section of the
large vessel, the aorta, which
comes from the heart, was
severed, but not enough to
cut it completely."
The main fear of the sur
geans was that removal of
the blade would trigger fatal
bleeding from the nearly-cut
blood vessel.
Gov. Averell Harriman of
New York was at the hospit
al while the surgeons worked
then later left when doctors
assured him King would pull
through.
King was received at New
York's city hall earlier this
week, where Mayor Robert
F. Wagner told him:
'Democracy at Work
"I'm sure you , will see
Democracy at work here.'
King was sitting at a desk
in the shoe section of Blum
stein's department store au
tographing copies of his book
on the integration battle in
Montgomery. The story was
jammed with shoppers and
about 20 persons were stand
ing in line waiting for him to
write his name in copies of
the book which they had pur
chased. King's assailant burst
through the lin'e and address
ed him.
"Are you Dr. King?" she
asked.
"Yes, I am," he replied,
looking up.
She then stabbed King. He
tried to grab her but she slip
ped away. A store security
guard and a representative of
a Negro newspaper grabbed
her and she began to scream
incoherently.
Automatic in Brassiere
The woman was handcuffed
and searched. A .32 caliber
loaded automatic was found
tucked in her brassiere,, po-'
lice said.
. Some of the customers in
the department store were
thrown into a panic and ran
screaming for cover.
His' assailant -was taken . to
the hospital, where he identi
fied her, and then was taken
to a police station for ques
tioning by high police of
ficials. Chief Inspector Thomas
Neilson said Mrs. Curry gave
them several versions of why
she stabbed King. He said
she remarked at. one point
that "people were torturing
me." She complained, he said,
that she was suffering from
a persecution complex.
Did Not Know King
Neilson said the 151-pound
woman did not know King
and had never seen him be
fore the attack.
Mrs. Curry was booked for
felonious assaultand violation
of the Sullivan law, which
prohibits carrying concealed
weapons.
U.S. To Press Again
For Return of Airmen
Washington -(UPD A State
Department spokesman said
yesterday the United States
will press again for return of
all 17 American airmen
downed in Russia this month
-not just the six bodies Rus
sia has agreed to return.
There has been no indica
tion whether the other 11
men art dead or alive.
"Think We Should Wait Till They Catch Up?"
1 1 1 f 1
Foreign Interest
In Oregon Studied
A comprehensive studv of
foreign trade interest in the
state of Oregon and its impact
upon the economy of the state
is now being conducted by the
Library of Congress, Gover-
Mothers Plan
Schools At Home
Charlottesville, Va. (UPD
Determined mothers tidied
their basements and set up
borrowed black boards yester
day preparatory to opening
do-it-yourself grade schools
Monday as one answer to state
school closures.
Plans also were made for
high school seniors to start
their fall semester belatedly
in the local Elks club later
next week.
More than "300 pupils of
Venable Elementary school,
one of two closed here by
Gov. J. Lindsay Almond Jr.,
to block federally - ordered
racial integration, were to re
port Monday to 15 or 16 pri
vate homes where, their regu
lar teachers from the city
school system will hold
classes until the public schools
reopen.
No plans were made to ad
mit Negroes to the classes
held in private homes, clubs
or churches, even though tax
paid public teachers will be
used.
Lebanon Premier
Flown to Turkey
Beirut, Lebanon (DPD Out
going pro-Western Premier
Sami es Solh was flown out
of Lebanon to Turkey aboard
a U. S. Navy plane yesterday
in a cloak-and-dagger opera
tion which indicated possible
concern for his life.
His staunch defense of
President Camille Chamoun's
pro-Western policies had
made Solh the target of five
recent assossination attempts.
His departure plans were so
secret that his brother and
sister were not informed until
after his plane took off.
Solh arrived in Istanbul
last night and said he would
not return to Lebanon if the
nation lost its "independence"
He said in that even he would
"fight from other countries"
until Lebanon becomes an in
dependent state again.
BULLETIN
Medford firemen were
called at 9:52 p.m. Satur
day to put out a fire in a
shed behind a house at 215
South Front St., it was re
ported. A partition and part of
the roof of the shed were
burned. Damage was esti
mated as small. The house
is vacant, firemen said. An
itinerant is believed to have
dropped a cigarette in the
aaed, causing the fire.
an-
The study is being prepar
ed by the Legislative Report
ing service of the library with
the cooperation of the Oregon
State System of Higher Educa
tion, through the University
of Oregon and Oregon State
College. The Oregon Planning
and Development department
is assisting in the reseach
and field work .and is provid
ing necessary funds, along
with the System of Higher Ed
ucation and the Library of
Congress.
The study is being super
vised by Dr. Howard S. Piq
uet, Senior Specialist in In
ternational Trade of the Li
brary of Congress and for
merly Chief of the Economic
Division of the U. S. Tariff
Commission.
Dr. Wesley C. Bellaine, Di
rector of the Bureau of Busi
ness Research of the Univer
sity of Oregon, is acting as co
ordinator for the Oregon Ed
ucational institutions who are
cooperating.
Dr. Piquet is at present in
Oregon meeting with various
business groups to explain the
nature of the . study and to
formulate return of the ques
tionnaires which are being
sent to all manufacturing es
tablishments in the state em
ploying five or more persons.
The Agricultural portion of
the study is being prepared
by the Agricultural Economic
staff of Oregon State College.
The portions relating to tim
ber, industry, ports and trans
portation will be prepared by
members of the staff of the
University of Oregon.
Julius R. Jensen, Director
of the Planning and Develop
ment department, stated that
employer lists may not be up
to date, and some industries
may not be represented. In
such cases, he sugges' ies
tionnaires may be o Jied
from either the Department of
Planning and Development,
State Office Building, Port
land; or from the Bureau of
Business Research, University
of Oregon, Eugene. ,
School Bus Crashes
Near Myrtle Point
Myrtle Point -(UPD- A
school bus filled with elemen
tary and junior high school
students crashed off Lee Val
ley road Friday about six
miles northeast of here in
juring seven children and the :
driver, none of tnem serious
ly. One child, Kenneth Starry,
9, Myrtle Point, was kept
overnight at Mast General
hospital here for observation
and the others were treated
and released. Driver of the
bus was George Royer, 59,
Myrtle Point.- He suffered
bruises. ' . I
The accident occurred on a
curve, the Coos county sher
iff a office said.
nor Robert D. Holmes
nounced Friday.
Ike Calls Charges
'Unacceptable
Note 'Abusive'
Believed First Time
Red Note Snubbed
Newport, R.I. (UPD- Presi
dent Eisenhower angrily re
jected Soviet Premier Nikita
S. Khruschev's latest message
on Formosa yesterday and
sent it back unanswered.
White House Press Secre
tary James C. Hagerty said
that, as far as State Depart
ment officials could recall,
this was the first time a So
viet communication ever had '
been rejected.
Eisenhower issued a special
statement at the vacation
White House denouncing- a
letter received at the Ameri-'
can embassy in Moscow Fri
day. He labelled the Soviet
Premier's latest charges aa
"unacceptable" and termed
the letter "abusive" and full
of "inadmissable threats."
The White House said Rich
ard M. Davis, U.S. Charge
D Affairs in Moscow, has been
instructed to return the Khru
schev message to the Soviet
government in Moscow this
morning.
In a second statement ac
companying his announce
ment of rejection of the Khru
schev letter, Eisenhower said
the United States consider!
the Russian viewpoint "gro
tesque and dangerous."
In Washington, officials
said Eisenhower's refusal to
accept Khruschev's "abusive"
letter had plunged Russian
American relations to a new
low.
Such a rejection of a dip
lomatic message is not a move
toward severing relations, of
ficials said, but is considered
a severe "slap in the face."
It was considered bound to
put a further chill on U.S.
relations with Moscow. 1
One ef the Sharpest
Khruschev's note to Eisen
hower was one of the sharpest
he has yet written to the
President. He said the Chi
nese Communists would drive
U.S. forces out of the Formosa
area unless they leave volun
tarily and promptly, and he
warned again that American
resistance to the Communists
would mean another world
war.
Khruschev also demanded
that the Nationalist-held off
shore islands be turned over
to Red China and said that
neither the Soviet Union nor
Red China would be "frigh
tened" by American "atomic
blackmail."
Eisenhower conferred by
telephone with Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles In
Washington this afternoon 'af
ter the President returned
from viewing the opening of
the America's Cup races. La
ter he played golf.
Then the White House is
sued two statements, one re
jecting the Khrushchev note
and the other commenting on
its contents.
In rejecting the Khrush
chev message, the White
House said:
"This communication is re
plete with false accusations;
it is couched in language that
is abusive and intemperate:
it indulges in personalities; it
contains inadmissible wrests.
"All of this renders the
communication unacceptable
under established internation
al practice. Accordingly, it has
been rejected, and the United
States charge d-affaires in
Moscow has been instructed
to return the communication
to the Soviet government."
WEATHER
FORECAST: VsrUble cloudiness
. this morning and increasing
cloudiness this afternoon sod
evening. Cloudy tonight and
Monday with possibly a few
light showers Monday. High
today 72; law tonight S;
high Monday C8.
TEMP.
Highest Yesterday 8
Lowest Yesterday J J
Our Skies Tonight
Sunset today .
6:12 p.m.
Sunrise tomorrow .
5:58 a.m.
Moonset tomorrow
12:56 a.m.
The constellation of Orion now
rises shortly after midnight and
It will be high in the south
east In the early morning twi
light. This group of bright stars
will be prominent In the even
ing sky Best winter.