Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 01, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    TUESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1052
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALIS. OREGON
PAGE SIX
STARTS TOMORROW! DREWS JANUARY ST0REWIDE
Fairless Nixes
Union Address
PITTSBUROM 11 The Presi
dent of the United States Steel
Corn,,' has turned down an Invita
tion to address .. the CIO United
Bteelworkers convention when II
meets Thursday to decide tuturc
policy In the current wage dispute.
The Invitation to spen had been
extended to Benjamin F. Fairless
by Philip Murray, president of the
CIO and the steelworkers. Replying
Monday, Fairless said he believes
the opinions of the delegates al
ready are fixed.
"Your organization has yet to
explain satisfactorily how this court
' try can have round after round of
largo wage Increases and resulting
price increases without more and
inore Jpilatlon which is certain to
injure everyone," he 'said.
The union is demanding an 18
cent hourly pay boost and other
contract gains which steel officials
say would amount to a total hourly
edvance of nearly BO cents an hour.
Workers now average about 1.9b
an hour.
President' Truman has referred
the dispute to the Wage Stabilisa
tion Board and the .union, which
previously announced It would not
work unless it obtained a new con
tract to replace the one wh.ch ex
pired Monday midnight, agreed to
postpone any strtko action .pending
a decision by the special conven
tlon which meets at Atlantic City.
A strike appears to be Inevitable
If the convention refuses to let the
VVSB make a recommended settle
ment. Registration
At SOCE Set
Registration for winter quarter
at Southern Oregon college will be
gin Wednesday, Jan. 2 announces
Mrs. Mabel W. Winston, registrar
and dean of women. Classes will
reconvene the following day and
registration for new courses will
continue through Jan 16.
Faculty members will attend reg
istration meetings to give counsel
ing sarvice to students, assuring
thut proper course work Is planned.
The curriculum offered will be the
came as that of fall term with the
addition of a class in comparative
governments to be taught by Dr.
Arthur S. Taylor, professor of so
cial science.
Forty-two Klamath county stu
dents were enrolled in the Ashland
institution during the recently com
pleted quarter, Mrs Winston re
ports. Thirty-two of that number
are residents of Klamath Falls.
Extra-curricular activities will
begin with a registration dance on
Jan. 2 followed by a weekend bas
ketball series with Oregon College
of Education;- Special events
planned during the winter term in
, elude the third annual high school
speecn conierence.- a jesuvai 01
arts and the annual B school bas
ketball tourney.
Physical expansion of the cam
pus plant will continue as construc
tion is started on an annex to the
women's dormitory. A scenic mall
will also be landscaped in front of
the new library-classroom building.
Blaze Suit
Said Settled
EUGENE, Wl A suit arising out
of the 3-month-long Little Fall
Creek forest fire of 1950 has been
settled out of court.
The Lane County Circuit Court
last week dismissed the case of
the State of Oregon vs. Portland
Manufacturing Co., M. and M.
Woodworking Co., Rasor Logging
Co., and the C. W; Guerrier Lum
ber Co.
The suit asked $80,000 of the four
companies as repayment of funds
spent in suppressing the fire. Dis
missal of the case followed receipt
of a statement by Eliot Jenkins,
president of the Eastern Lane For
est Protective Association, that the
suit "has been compromised and
settled."
Another suit, brought by Booth
Kelly Lumber Co., Is still pending.
It asks damages of more than
S300.000 from the same four com
panies. Portland Manufacturing and the
M. and M. Companies were the
owners of the land where the fire
started, later spreading over Booth
Kcllv lands. Guerrier was purchas
ing the timber from the two firms,
rnd Rasor was under contract to
Guerrier to cut the timber.
A desert bonanza In California
lias made the United States sudden
ly rich in the scarce Industrial min
erals called the 'Irare earth?."
. . . the lettert Mart. Then
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