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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1949)
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON WEDNESDAY, JULY 13. PACE TEN Reuther To 1 8 Rule Uni Till 1951 MILWAUKEE. July 11 (41 Htrong er than iwt and starting his newly-won third presidential term, Walter Ketilher aouiht today to make absolute hie control at lh CIO United Aula Workers. This goal waa regarded by ab aerer at the anion convention as possibility but na cinch. All fanr top officers won hands dona reelection lata yesterday erer weak. left-wing opposition that waa only ghost of another faction that eaca etanlnaled the snilllan-member I'AW. Reuther overpowered W. O. Grant, ex-president of the bis Ford local 600, by a 13 to 1 margin. The (tnal but unofficial vote count was tow to 873. Reuther will hold his post until the next convention In April, 1951 some 30 nwnUu hence. His three top aides won their sec ond terms about as easily. Secretary treasurer Emil Mazer I beat out James Undahl of Detroit Packard Loral 190. Richard T. Oosser and John W. i Livingston held onto their vice presidencies with mounding defeats 1 of William H. Johnson of Detroit I and John de Vito ol Cleveland. All four eandldatea whe ran against Heather slate were nomin ated bv ft stoud of left-wingers aotne of them admitted eommonrtta know as the pioTcaive anlty ,J &d. US Convoy Will Test Red Guard BERLIN. July 13 Amer ican army convoy of 60 trurki, load ed with supplies tor the U. 8. mil itary post 111 Berlin, rolled toward the Soviet-sone frontier today In a lest of Russian policy. Unarmed, but with American mil itary police escorta, the convoy is scheduled to appear at the Russian s Hetmstedt checkpoint on the mam Berlin Autobahn tomorrow mormufi British military police at Hrliu stedt reported today that se er.il hundred Berlin - bound Oermau trucks were stalled there In ft con tinuation of the tieup which the Russians beitan Sunday. The military police S4id thai Soviet guards had allowed as many as six trucks an hour to pass in the early morning but were now cuttuia back to as few as three. The American army, if its convoy gets through the Soviet aone without difficulty tomorrow, plans to estab lish a weekly trucking service to its Berlin post to relieve some of the burden on the V. S -British airlitt. ading hi It's our ...ont then some Our Celebration ol Hudson's 40th Anniversary Year With the foar top offices tlthl In their (rip. all that was left for the Heather forrea to win waa anar wtos and anwaveHnr supn"t of the lTAW exeeotlre board. This ha been aside an of the foar top ef flera and IS reeioaal direetara. fltnee the last convention so railed snti-Re' 'thelites have had four seats on the board. NEW LOTION NOTION This comely vacationer was first in line to buy a clime's worth protection ogainst a bad sunburn. She gets a spray job from the new sun-tan lotion mochine set up in a Virginia Beach surf club. Latest bid in the billion-dollar-a-year slot machine business, it sprays 30 seconds for o dime. Experienced Actors Gather At Ashland For Shakespeare Festival To Open August 2 Prisoner May Serve Term KING6VILLE. Tex. July 11 iP Ascension Oarxa, freed from Jail for the funeral of two of his three month -old triplet daughters, faces tha prospect today of finishing s j two-year sentence growing from a I traffic accident. I The first triplet, Delma, died Monday of Infant diarrhea. Then Thelma died of the same illness. Trie third triplet was reported In I poor condition. j Oarxa was tailed when he didnt carry out sr provision of a sua-1 pended sentence and 2O0 fine given ! him April 11 by County Judge Tom ' Brookshlre. I At that time, six days before the : triplets were bom, Garza was sen- I tenced on charges of aggravated as- aault for striking a woman with an ' automobile. Then sentence was sus- I pended on condition that he pay the woman's hospital bill. When she recovered, she returned i to Mexico. i Garza lost his Job and tailed to : make the payment. I It Pays to Use the Want Ads! ASHLAND. Ore. -We'll pre sent the most polished perform ance ever staged during our sn n u a 1 summer drama program. Angus L. Bowmer, producing di rector of the Oregon Shakespear ean festival, commented today with the August 3 openuu; less than three weeks away. "Not only will a well-balanced selection of plays be seen, but the cast is the finest ever to participate during the nine years of the festival's history." With two-thuds again aa many players awarded rolea as took part in the record 1946 performance, Bowmer notes that the majority of the 60 actors have had consider able proffcuonsi. college, or civic theater experience. Take Dick Graham, for exam p 1 e." Bowmer points out. "He played for several seasons with Kaiherme Cornell o n Broadway and has appeared In a number of motion pictures. Or Fred Nelson of Michigan. Fred has worked wltn drama croups at Harvard. Welles and Northwestern university and has appeared with civic theatre or ganizations at Grand Rapids and Detroit," Mentioning others. Bowmer re minds of Jim Sandoe of the Uni versity of Colorado who has di rected civic theatre groups at Boulder and Palo Alto. Calif. Jane McArthur of Pensacola, Fla now a n undergraduate t Stanford, participated In the National High School Drama institute at North western and tne Prisrilla Beach theatre at Plymouth, Mass while 1 classmate Carol Eller of San Fran ! Cisco was stage manager for the i American dance festival in C o n : necticut last summer. Edna Lor lng of Ashland was graduated from the school of drama at the Uni versity of Wisconsin and taught dramatics at San Francisco for 3i years. , -With such excellent talent a s this available, we are able to as sure our primary objective pro : duction of Shakespeare's works aa , a modern means o f entertaln ' many folks remember studying the j Bard's works in stuffy classroom i sessions. Although our program is closely associated with the Shakes peare summer school .at Southern Oregon college, presentation of the plays In true Elizabethan style on I our outdoor stage proves that they ! can be Just as enjoyable as a mo- tion picture." Experienced student actors who I have been cast in roles Include 13 I from Stanford university, nine from Southern Oregon, four from tha I University o f Washington, and three from the University of Ore gon. Among others are students at Washington State, Lewis and Clark. J Montana Bute, and the Pasadena' i Playhouse. j Other civic theatre groups rep resented include those at Portland and Medford In Oregon. Reno. Death Report Delay Found CLEVELAND. July 13 ,4-A 71-year-old woman lay dead on a dav enport for more tha.i two ri.v whil her 64-year-old brother and a sister, IS. went about their duties as usual. Coroner Samuel R. Orrber reported yesterday. Oerber was notified of the death .after Julius Pomerene. the brother, telephoned an undertaker Monday night. The elderly victim ras Laura Pomerene. She had lived In a dusty, ornate It-room house In East Cleve land with her brother and a lxtr Susan. Pomerene said yesterday he knew , his sister had died Saturday, but he didn't feel like calling an under 1 taker. "We are unprepared and weren't feeling very well ourselves," he said The Pomerenes are rouvins of the late Atlee Pomerene. U S senator from Ohio from 1911 to 1933. Their father was Julius Pomerene. long active In Ohio politics and former state senator. INJI BFD CALOARY. Alberta. Julv iCP) Sonny Tu reman of John Day. Ore. one of the top-right United States cowboys competing In the Calgary 8tampede. suffered broken leg yesterday when he was trampled after being thrown In a bareback nronc nding event Not. and San Mateo. Calif. Many of the actors have had practical radio experience, and the majority are planning to continue with stage careers. I Want Ada phoned to Bill before ! 11:30 a. m. appear the same dayl o lVvt) longtst trodt $ bst tals h t history-to win ttill wort tww fritnds for Hudson I Tint Niw HtiDrtON t riditvf a ritng Udt of popuUnty! 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