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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1944)
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PACE TWELVE Hon of whothor or not there should bo traffic squad in KUHS this year as thoro was sev eral years ago, was brought up. Action was taken to reorganize tho traffic sqmid, althouh no definite plans have brnu worked out. Details will be worked out with the advisor, who Is o yot unnnmcd. The sound will be appointed by the advisor and will probably consist of only senior boys. Each of tho four clonics held class mooting Tuesday f lornoon for purposes of nnnilniitlng class officers. Voting will tuko plncr. In homo rooms Wednesday, mid I ho result will bo announced in the nciir futuro. Army transport plnnos hnvo proved thiil tho North Aliunde In flyuhlo tho yrur round, both cnstuouiui and wckUiouikI. U. S. TO ACT CADRit, swtAT;;s, '"'-I. ( FOULGER't WOMEN iIn MUSIC CLASS llli... SERVICE MS GRADESCHQDL UNIVEHSA NEW5FREED0M Bv JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON. Sept. 13 tit) American action toward propos ing international guarantees of news freedom appeared probable today. The next move is up to Presi dent Roosevelt. There is a grow' ing sentiment among legislators to put congress on record as sup porting such a guarantee, but there is no prospect of house or senate votes to that end very soon because congress may recess next week. Meanwhile Mr. Roosevelt may act on a foreign policy statement of news freedom which was com pleted by the state department last week and approved by Sec retary Hull. Since it was not immediately made public it evi dently went to the White House for final action. Senator Taft (R-Ohio) yester day took the latest step toward congressional approval of the news freedom objective. He in troduced a resolution by which congress would request the pres ident to seek treaty guarantees with other nations for equal access to information and the right to transmit it without censorship at fair communica - tions rates. That would contri bute to the preservation of future peace, Taft said. One way to accomplish the guarantee, he suggested, would be to write it into the charter of whatever world security or ganization eventually is created. This linked the objective with the security organization talks going forward among American, British and Russian representa tives at Dumbarton Oaks. There has been no evidence that the subject has even been raised in those talks. It could be formally presented later, however, at the fulldress United Nations confer ence on world security expected to be held in this country late this year, if all goes smoothly with preliminary negotiations. Taft's proposed resolution in the senate was the second on news freedom dropped into con gressional hoppers in the space of. a few days. Thursday Rep. Fulbright (D-Ark.) proposed in a resolution in the house that con gress go on record as favoring in ternational news freedom in the interest of safeguarding future peace.. GROUP INSPECTS fiHM HI JORDAN VALLEY, Sept. 13 W3) State highway commission ers left here for Baker today after inspecting the Idaho-Oregon-California . highway. Meeting in Burns yesterday, they voted to purchase 80 acres of additional " land for Silver Creek Falls park in Marion coun ty .at a cost of $5000. . ; They also authorized the com mission highway engineer to ob tain petitions for rights-of-way for curbs on the Oregon coast highway at Taft, Oceanlake, Nelscott and Delake. The engineer was instructed to determine the cost of straight ening the southern section of the coast highway to accommodate 60-foot trucks. . Enrollment In County Schools Reaches 8628 Record of enrollment In coun ty schools at the school office here was boosted to 8628 stu dents when reports came in from three additional schools Tuesday. Shevlin reported 40 students. Gilchrist 175, and Weyerhaeuser tamp o, zu. Boeing Official Suffers Hemorrhag WICHITA. Kas.. SeDt. 13 (JPt Philip G. Johnson, 50, president of the Boeing Airplane company at aeattie, sutterea a cerebral hemmorhage here last night and is coniinea to St. irancis hotel where his condition was de scribed as critical. Johnson was in Wichita on a routine visit with local Boeing omciais. ills wife arrived by plane this morning. -One of the most prominent men in me aircratt industry, he nas Deen in cnarge of the vast Flying Fortress and Superfort ress construction programs. Swoon Study Slated In Vancouver VANCOUVER, B. C, Sept. 13 The effect demoralizing or oth erwise of Frank Sinatra's sing ing on Vancouver school children will be reported at the October meeting of the school board. . "I don't believe our children have gone so far as to prefer binatra to symphony," said Trus tee James Blackwood in asking tne report. But if so, ne added, the board will "try to educate them along different lines." BULKY A- BOXY SWEATERS For (he Campus. SJ.95 8.05 FOULGER'Sm M.in WOUNDED IN ACTION Of ficial word that First Lt. Lynn McDanicls had . been seriously injured in France, August 21, was received here recently by his - wife, Mar g a r e t McDan iels, 737 North Ninth. Mrs. McDan icls has receiv ed two- letters from her hus band since he was sent to a hospital in Lon don, where he is now. recover ing from a leg injury. Lt. McDanicls was a student at KUHS when he joined the national guard in 1940. He has been with the tank . destroyers since July, 1942 and left for overseas duty last February. In active duty in France since D-Day, Lt. McDanicls recently sent his wife some flowers which a French peasant had thrown to him as he marched through a liberated village. He received a shrapnel wound in July. Lt. McDaniels' mother, Mrs. T. R. McDaniels, lives in Van couver, Wash. He and his wife, the former Margaret Mahoney, have a small daughter, Marilyn, who is one year old. From a hospital in Italy, Pfc. Harvey Brannan has written his mother that he is having the Ked cross mail the Purple Heart to her, s which he re ceived for nr n ii n e in. curred at the v battle of Leg JXJ-S" horn on July 18. He is under Gen. Clark. Be fore one detach ment could move forward to take Lee- horn, his company was detailed to clean out five machine gun nests and 20 Germans. It was at this time while Harvcv was acting as raaio man lor his cap tain that he was shot through the hip and his leg fractured. He writes cheerful letters nome and is auite enthusiastic about the wonderful work the doctors are doing, saying that me coiuidence they instill in the wounded is half the battle for recovery. He is also appre ciative oi ine service rendered the men by the Red Cross. tie expects to be transferred in September to another hospi tal and as soon as wcu enough to travel may be sent to a hos pital in the U. S. Harvey seems to regret being in combat such a short time after all the long months of training, his mother reported. He did not see Leg- norn or even Home nut did get a thrill out of seeing Gen. Clark ride up in a jeep and ask the whereabouts of the com manding officer. Mrs. Brannan has another son in service, Glenn Brannan, S 1c, at present -in the Ha waiian Islands. ' AN EIGHTH AAF BOMBER STATION. England Award of the Air Medal for "exception ally meritorious achievement while participating in sustained bomber combat operations over enemy occupied continental Eu rope" to Sgt. Robert Burns, 19, The Dalles, was announced recently. A waist gunner on a B-17 flying fortress. 5Et. Burns, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Burns of the same address, has taken part in more than 10 bombing auacKs against targets in uer many and the occupied coun tries. Prior to entering the serv ice, he attended Klamath Falls Union high school. Together witn tne Air Medal, he received a promotion to staff sergeant. - WITH THE FIFTH ARMY, Italy Private Adrian L. Stra der, - son of Mrs. Maude E. Boggs, who lives at 4615 Shas ta way, Klamath Falls, has been promoted to private first class. He is a clerk with the 88th in fantry division of the fifth armv in Italy. Twenty of the giant Mars fly. ing boats are being built for the U. S. navy, to rush mail, men and material to the far-flung Pa cific bases. SLOPPY JOE SWEATERS For the Campus. $3.90 ' $8.09 - FOULGER'S sjsM.i. VHFWFOOD Next time your dinner doesn't set well, and you feel licit and miser able, let toothing PEPTO-B1SMOL ' help you. Relieves heartburn, sour, upset stomach-helps retard gas for. ' mation and sirrtDle diarrhea. Auk : your druggist for PSPTO-BISMOL wnen your stomach it upset. A NORWICH PRODVCT TO GIZ E - The beeinnlns instrumental classes of the grade schools of tho city school system are Dcmg orsanized this week. A much larger enrollment in these begin ning classes is expected over tasi year, when 138 students took up the study of instruments in purj lie school classes. These classes are to be taught by competent music teachers and will be under tne direct supcrvi' sion of Andrew Loney, director of music education, assisted by John Best, a specialist in string instruments. These classes will be offered during regular school time and will be graded in such a way that instruction will be continued through grade school. Junior high, and high school. In struction will be offered on the following instruments: violin, viola, cello, string bass, clarinet, flute, piccolo, oboe, bassoon, saxophone, French horn, cornet, trumpet, trombone, baritone, bass, and percussion instruments. Except in the case of large, bulky instruments, which are furnished by the school district, students purchase or rent their own instruments. In addition to the 138 students who entered the beginning classes last year, the grade schools of Klamath Falls had an enrollment of 144 in grade bands and orchestras. If it's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one By JUANITA SHINN Along with the many hew stu dents in KUHS. many new facul ty members have put In an ap pearance. Some of these new teachers come from the staff of substitute teachers, some from the various grado schools in Klamath Falls, some from other parts of Ore gon, and oven soma from other states. Far from unfamiliar is Paul Ansstcad, former principal of Fremont junior high, who is the new assistant principal o( KUrla. Coaching Pelican football and basketball, and heading the boys physical education department this year is L. Marble (Jook. com ing from Lincoln high school in Portland. . From Evanston, Wyo., to as sume the position of assistant su pervisor for the music depart ment is John Best. The English department boasts three new teachers. 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