Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 30, 1954, Page 2, Image 2

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    HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH fAlAS naw-nM
TUESDAY, MARCH 30. losi
PAGE TWO
(Radio
KFLW 1450 KePST
, Tuesday Evening, Much 30
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Tuesday Evening, March 31
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Lakeview Holds
Band Concert
LAKE VIEW over 400 persons
attended the OiCRon State College
band concert which was held at
the Arthur D. Hay School auditor
ium on Tuesday evening, March
23.
The band members, direr led hv
Ted Mcsousr and student director
Keith Sime. are on a tour of South
ern Oregon during their spring va
cation. Their trip to Lakeview was
sponsored by the American Asso
ciation of University Women and
the music department of the Lake
view High school.
DEATH
TUNHRIDGE WE1.1A ITno-lanrt
The Marquess of Abergavenny,
whn could trace his ancestors
oack to tne nth century, died
at his home. ridcrf Catl. Ke
was 10.
Ae.Ht1.0t) Wit
KIMn JJ f V
L ."7 L3
"
THE FULL FORCE of his hypnotic powers is being turned by
the great Ben Allah on i hapless victim, Esther Seus, in a
scene taken from the three act comedy to be presented by the
Newell PTA in the high school auditorium at Tulelalce, Satur
day, April 3. The Great Allah is Lester Cushman, who usually
uses his prowess to grow potatoes.
Movie Dance Scenes Cause
Of Battle With Censors
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD UP! How do they
get a sexy dsnce past the movie
industry censors?
That has become a biz issue In
Hollywood because of recent
events. There was the famous or
notorious? dance Jane Russell
performed In "French Line."
which set off a nationwide battle
between Howard Hughes on one
side snd the producers association
ana various churches on the othnr.
Miss Russell, you may recall, said
Fall Injures
Mrs. Ganong Sr.
Mrs ' William nnnnM C I. -
patient in the Desert Hot Springs
Hospital at Palm Springs following
a recent fall that resulted in a
broken riant hln Ah will ll in
cast for 13 weeks, according to Mr.
Ganong, now back in Klamath
Palls.
Mrs. Ganong was at the winter
home of the family at Desert Hot
Springs when the accident hap
pened. She had stepped out of her
mi ur upvn a reawocu gale 10
drive through when wind whipped
the gate aglnst'her, knocking her
down and breaking the leg. The in
jury occurred March 10.
ILL HEALTH
HONG KONG Wl A recent
photograph of Mao T!e-Tung pub
lished here Tuesday shows the
Chinese Red Leader rumored to
have been seriously ill in clothes
which hang loosely as though he
were unusually thin. His face,
however, still appears round and
jowly. Mao disappeared from of
ficial life In Pelping last Decem
ber and did not show up again
until late this month. He lias been
rumored variously as suffering
from tuberculosis, heart disease
and stomach ailments.
WEEK S SEWING Bl'Y
You'll make it in a Jiffy, give
thanks the year 'round for the way
it doubles your wardrobe! iNo fit
ting problems. It wraps. No ironlnc
problems, It opens flat. Why no!
make two one in dentm; the other
in a dressy fabric! '
Pattern 8148 Waist Sites: small
t-3S: medium X-2t; large 30-33
Inches. Mealum alts requires '
yards 35-Inch fabric.
This easy-to-use pattern give,
perfect fit. Complete, illustrated
Sew Chart allows you every step.
Send Thlrty.five cents in coins for
this pattern add S cento for each
pattern for lst-class mailing, send
to Marian Martin, care of Herald
and News, Pattern Dept., P O Box
6V10. Chlcaio 80, 111, Print your
name address, sone; site, style
number.
a, as a,.-etHs .:t. -f-:.y
M-?6'-2l TlT
i.-30"-32' ''U
she was caught in the middle.
Then a dance of Dcbra Paget
in "Princess of the Nile" got the
frown from the Breen office, the
industry's self-censorship group. In
this case, . the producer, Leonard
Goldstein, bowed to the decision
and clipped the offending pas
sages. I w&tched Gloria Graham do a
song and dunce number in "Naked
Alibi" that should sizzle the cellu
loid. Gowned in a skin-tight satin
number with a slit skirt, the
blonde slithered around a bar
room, tossing a wriggle here and
a waggle there. It was highly In
cendiary. Yet dance director Kenny Wil
liams assured that it would pass
the censors.
"I've been directing dances in
pictures for 20 years," he re
marked confidently, "and I've' nev
er had a number snipped yet.
"It's all a matter of finding out
what they will okay and what they
won't. Largely it's the intent. If
you start out to create a diei.y
dance, they'll censor you. But if
there's a reason for the dance,
you can get byas long aa you
stay within certain bounds."
Those bounds are pretty well de
fined, he added. A girl can do a
bump (rapid movement of the
hips), but not a forward one. It
has to be to the side. The rules do
not permit grind (a clock-like
movement Of the hips). But a cer
tain amount of shimmying is al
lowed, as long as it doesn't go too
far. Get the picture?
"This dance of Gloria's wouldn't
be permitted in 'French Line," "
Williams remarked. "But In our
picture there's a reason for it. She
plays a floozy in a border town
bar. She has worked there for five
years and Is pretty bored with it
all. The customers have seen her
do the number many times and
they pay little attention to her.
"If the men In the bar were to
yell and whistle then we would
be censored. It's all a 'matter of
how It is presented."
QaKe it from we
(yj itAST l-jv QUARTS
fgf s of MILK
. ps- aw pay. . .
Heor Bing Crosby and Frank
Lovejoy in the dramatic produc
tion of Edward Everett Hale's
immortal story
"Man Without a Country"
on "Two Tickets to Broadway"
KFLW -8:00 -TONIGHT
Ike A$ks Broader Power To Cut Present
By DOUGLAS B. COBNELL
WASHINGTON UP) Prsaldeot
EUenlvower asked Confreu today
(or broader powar to cut tarilts
aa the heart of a "bold" program
be said would bolster the security
and economic growth of America
no- ner allies.
In a special messes deallnc
with the comically exnloaave lasua
of Import duties and lsylns; down
the foreign economic palicy of bis
administration. Elsenhower also:
1. Called for cuttina. dawn aid to
other oountrlej. and in end to out
right, grants of economic ald as
m as possible. .
Dulles Urges Action To
Halt Red Threat Iri Asia
NEW YORK CD Secretary of
Stat Dulles speaking with the ad
vane approval of President Ei.
senhower last night urged
united action" by the free nations
to prevent communist domination
of Indochina and all Southeast
Asia.
Communist domination in that
area of the world "would be
grave threat to' the whole free
community," Dulles said in a ma.
jor foreign policy declaration.
"The - United States feels that
that possibility should not be pas
sively accepted, but should be met
by united action," he said.
"This might have aerious risks.
But these risks are far less than
would face us a few years from
now, if we dart not be resolute
today.
"Sometimes It Is necessary to
take risks to win peace, as in war
it Is necessary to take risks to win
viptory. The chances for peace re
usually bettered by letting a po
tential aggressor know in advance
where his aggression could lead
him."
Dulles' declaration of the Com
munist threat In the Far East was
delivered In an address before the
Overseas Press Club at the Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel.
It was learned In Washington
thBt his call for "united action"
had been specifically cleared with
Eisenhower at a weecena wnne
House conference.
Dulles made clear that he meant
action by the United states and
its -allies, in contrast to previous
speeches in which he spoke of pos-
iSiis Pipeline
Hearing Ends
WASHINGTON ( A Federsl
Power Commission hearing on the
application of two companies to
pipe natural gas to the Pacific
Northwest ended Monday after
setting recorda for duration and
volume ot testimony.
. The hearing started June- 18
1063.
In the following 31 months, a
commission examiner heard from
more than 80 -witnesses whose
testimony covered 38,000. typewrit
ten pages,- with about S .million
words. Forty-iour lawyers took
part in the case presenting 860
exhibits and attachments. The cost
of nreoarine and presenting the
case was estimated at more than
3 million dollars.
The question to be settled was
whether natural gas should be
piped to the Northwest from the
Peace River fields of Canada, or
the San Juan Basin of Colorado
and New Mexico.
The Westcosst Transmission Co.
proposes the Canadian supply. The
Pacific Northwest Pipeline Corp.
applied for the line from the San
Juan Basin,
1. Gave i ' assurances ' that in
ereaswl trad In peaceful goods
between the West and Iron Cur
tain countries "should not causa
us undue eoneern." .
Important sections of the pro
gram may be heading into legisla
tive quicksand.
LONG MESSAGE
For to f, 000-word message goes
pretty much down the line of rec
ommendations of a specisl com
mission on foreign economic policy
a commission whose report was
so loaded with dissents as to raise
ran doubts as to bow far its
proposals would get in Congress.
stble United States retaliation,
He did not spell out specific
"united action" measures. A State
Department aide said any moves
would be discussed In detail with
U. S. allies..
The secretary was - interrupted
13 times by applause as he spoke to
1,000 persons at the dinner.
The speech was broadcast nation
ally by radio and television, and
by the Vole of America abroad.
Dulles, said that at the forth
coming Geneva conference on Far
Eastern problems the United
Biates will not be "disposed to
give Communist China what it
wants from us, merely in exchange
for -its promises of future good
behavior." He said the United
States would not absndon the Chi
nes Nationalist government on
Formosa "and encourage Its
bloody liquidation by the Chinese
Communists."
In preview of the U. S. position
at the peace conference on Korea
ana jnaoenina opening April 28 at
Geneva, he declared:
W hope that any Indochina
discussion will serve to bring the
Chines Communists to see the
danger of their apparent design for
the conquest of Southeast Asia, so
that they will cease and desist."
He also said the United states
government has no intention of
granting diplomatic recognition to
Communist China or of voting to
seat it in the United Nations.
It is bow the policy 'of the
United States," he declared, "not
to exchange United States perfor
mance for Communist promises."
in discussing the Red threat in
the Far ' East, he warned as
be did her last Sept. 3 that open
entry u a cninese communist
army into Indochina "would re
sult in grave consequences which
might not be .confined to Indo.
china."
He furthee warned as he did
her last Jsn. 13 that potential
aggression anywhere "might lead
to action in places and by means
of the free world's choosing, so
thst aggression- would surely cost
more than 11 could gain."
Tlni- Penney m
with Hank Henry
KFLW - CBS
3:30 P.M. Monday thru Friday
Those same doubts still spply
now that Elsenhower nas accepted
the suggestions in general, .bund
led them together Into a message
and asked Congress to do some
thing about them. Many, members
of the President's own party in
the Senate and House adhere to
the historic GOP position that tar-
ills should be kept relatively high
to nr o t e c t domestic industry
agalrBt cheap imports.
The commission, headed by Clar
ence Randal of Chicago, president
of Inland Steel Co., turned in its
rport Jsn. 23.
The core of the report and the
Eisenhower message is a recom
mendation for a three-year exten
sion of the Reciprocal Trade
Agreements Act, which expires
June 12, and for expanded author
ity for? the president to negotiate
tariff adjustments with other coun
tries on a give-and-take basis.
OBJECTIONS
Significant objections came from
members of Congress who will
have a vital role in deciding the
iate of tariff legislation:
Charman Daniel A. Reed (P--NY
of the House Ways and
Means Committee, Rep. Richard
M. Simpson (R-Pa), a high-ranking
member of the committee, and
Chairman Eugene D. Milllkln (R
Colo) of the Senate Finance Com
mittee. .
Elsenhower said his is a "mini
mum program" of four major, in
terlocked parts:
Foreign aid "which we wish to
curtail."
Investments abroad "which we
wish to encourage."
Free exchange of one currency
for another" which we wish to
facilitate."
Foreign trade "which we wish
to expand."
The President said he considers
it essential to achieve each of
these objectives, declaring:
"Unless we are prepared to
adopt the policies I have recom
mended to expand export and im
port, trade and increase the flow
of our capital into foreign invest
ment, our friends abroad may be
discouraged in their effort to re
establish a free market for their
currencies. If we fall in our trade
policy, we may fail In all. Our
domestic employment, our stand
ard of living, our security, and the
solidarity of the free world all
are involved.
WORLD MARKETS
"For our own economic growth
we must have continuously ex
panding world markets: for our
security we require that our allies
become economically strong. Ex
panding trade is the only adequate
solution for those two pressing
FIBERGLASS WIZARD BOATS
LARSON ALUMINUM BOATS
TAILORCRAFT ALUMINUM BOATS
TUE II IM CTr.DE
714 Main
human inisMAi aWoM
aboui psiopk in
(hnsJuaxb popuIaA jrui&ic
Tariffs
problems confronting our coi-m,.
Failure to attain a lughw tSi
level, the President ,aU "SS
Uireaten the domestic eXJt1
dooming efforts to find wbm K
which others, through thelrXto
"Beyond our economio intereai
he said, "the solidarity of ft.
free world and tho capacity "of S!
free world to deal with thwe wto
would destroy it are threatened
by continued unbalanced trade in!
latlonships-lnabillty of na'ion, to
sell as much as they desire to Uv
INCREASED EXPORTS
"By moving boldly to correct the
present lnbalance, we shall ,!
port and increase the level of our
exports of both manufactured aid
agricultural products. We shall ,t
the same time, increase the eco.
nomlc strength of our allies"
While Eisenhower asked for a
three-year extension ot the trad,
agreements law, there are signs
to Congress he may have to settle
lor a two or even one-year contiu,
uat on,. perhaps without the added
authority to cut duties he and the
Randall Commission asked.
The changes would empower the
with other countries, to make these
tariff reductions during the three,
year extension period:
1. A cut of 5 per cent a year on
specially selected commodities If
presidential authority to negotiate
tariff reductions up to 60 per cent
under present law has has been
used tip, the proposal would limit
reductions to a total of 15 per '
cent. - , , r
, 2 A cut to so per cent of the
value of the goods of all tariffs
now exceeding that figure.
3. A cut of as much as 50 per
cent in the rates in effect on Jan
I. 1945, on products not being im
ported at all or only In "negli.
gible volume." This could be done
by the United States alone, as well
as by negotiation.
Klamath Falls, Orate
AMERICAN CHINESE
Feeds f their Bart! ,
Ben B. Lea, Mgr.
Hi. 496 Far Orders T Take Oaf
lib. Warn saeTBwaBB phone 3883