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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1956)
PAGE lVlNE THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 16. 1958 HERALD AND NEWS.KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON L'rench Okay Mollet Plans t ARIS (PI The French Cabinet endorsed Premier Ouy Mollet's policies for Algeria today and au thorised him to bring his proposals before the National Assembly this afternoon. The Socialist Premier's plan was expected to hinge on his contro versial proposal . 10 sei up a one kni Algerian legislature of both Moslems and French colonists as toon as possible. Mollet hopes this fill produce Algerian leadership with which France can negotiate for an end to the 16 months of fighting between Moslem national- tat ana f'rencn troops. To quiet Algeria's French col' osJsta who opposed such a pro posal last week with riots and dem onstrations, MOliei was repanea planning to offer guarantees as yet unspeciiiea against weir De- jiujr swamped. Algerian Moslems outnumber the French 8 to 1: at present each has its own legis lative house with the French cham ber dominant. Presentation of Mollet's propos als wis expected to furnish a res pite from the miDustcring ana brawling In the Assembly by fol lowers of antitax leader Pierre Poujade. They have brought the chamber to a virtual standstill for the oast two weeks battling at tempts to unseat U Poujadlst dep uties whose elections nave oeen challenged. Court Records DISTRICT COL'BT lUymond Clarence PauUen. parking n the highway, S7.30 bail forfeited. Edion Perry Owen, tandem axle over load. $43 bail forfeited. Joseph Stolz, no reninlratlon card, 15 paid. Francis Edwin Decker, no warning device, 17.50 ball forfeited. Dale Alden Coolldge. violation baiic rule. $7.50 paid. Charlie H1U, violation basic rule. $11.50 oa id. Clarence Neal Bice, violation bailc rule. S7.50 paid. Mike Bradley, no vehicle licenac, W yald. Emmett Kldr?n Dorring, void foreign 4 llrn S3 nairt. Otmer Gabriel Stenhenson. failing to atop at stop "inn, 5 paid. Coye D. Roberson. petty larceny. 30 avi voumy jau. Qulnrv Bahr. driving suspended pe riod. SIM or 47'4 days In Hen of fine. Km"'- r "elf Manley, violation ba ie rule. $7.50 paid. Robert Rose, violation basic rule, IT U naid ' letter EldHdse Miller, failing to stop T nop sign. 3 paia, Etmer Ira Noah, improper signal de- Vice. $10 ball forfeited. Earl Gene Moler. no operator's li cense. $10 ball forfeited. Dudlev Earl Lon. tandem axle, over load. S39 bail forfeited. Donald B. Gillls. combination over load. S74 ball forfeited. Robert Edwin Logan, violation basic rule, $43 paid. Myrtle Lucie Hescock, no operator license, wi.hq pita. William H Rurke. fuffitive from 1u. . tflVa violation aeotlnn 270 of the penal ' code of the state of California, asked ' far additional time to decide on hear-iiia Henry John Lauba, violation basfc rule. $7.30 paid. Morty Meekle I WAKTTDcrlVElrJO I V EMPLOYEES WITH OTHER RRM5 A EAI6E, MEEkLE, BUTIFT HEAR ABOUT IT. ANPTMCV ITWILLCieTABOUNP, ANP ) PEMANP EAI66.' LABOfc I'LL HAVE TO 6U y TROUBLES RUN ROT J THEY ALL 6ETRAI6...CO6T0e I I 6T1LL NOT SORE UVINcr cjOES UK INFLATION 6ETS H0W,BUTIJ(J6T IN,THN BANC THE BALLOON TUeNEPOOWN A RAI6E BUR5T5..IW -ALLOVERAeAIN.' 'ANP SAVED THE WHOLE v NO WORK fiSti BREAPLINE6.' . y-r, COUNTRY FBOM . tt -iMn .i Trr5 economic YcTr g iar7t if' t w Westinghouse Strike Enters 123rd Day; Ending Remote PITTSBURGH tfi The Westing house Electric Corp. strike entered its 123rd day today and an early settlement seemed remote after the firm's rejection of a public inquiry into the walkout. Gov. George M. Leader of Penn sylvania. - in cooperation with four olher governors, had set up a two man fact-finding board to studv the strike which has Idled 44,000 workers at 30 Westinghouse plants since Oct. 17. Gwllym A. Price. Westinghouse board chairman and president, sent telegrams to the governors rejecting the plan. "Westinghouse cannot delegate to outsiders ... the right to de termine the fundamental terms of the union agreement under which Westinghouse must live for some years," he said. In Washington, the AFUCIO In ternational Union of Electrical Workers said Westinghouse should THIRTY-ONE DIE RIO De JANEIRO, Brazil uei Thirty-one persons died during Rio de Janeiro hectic tour-day pre' lenten carnival and 3,684 were in jured, police reported Wednesday. The death toll did not Include 11 killed In auto accidents outside the city. "abandon Us futile attempts to ad' just this dispute by million-dollar propaganda campaigns and try to achieve settlement by present ing its case to the fact-finding board. The IUE, which already has ac cepted the governors proposal, charged Westinghouse manage ment with a "campaign of lies, duplicity and misrepresentation". Gov. Leader, who previously said the probe would go on even without Westinghouse, had no im mediate comment on Price's rejection. Meanwnile, more violence at the firm's Sharon plant was reported. One auto was overturned and other cars were stoned yesterday. Some windows in the plant were broken. No arrests were made and no in juries were reported. .- The union originally asked a 16 cent hourly Increase under a two year contract which expires this October. Westinghouse offered five-year contract which it said would boost wages a minimum of 23 cents an hour during that period. The IUE says it has since scaled down its demand to a 7-cent hourly boost for the first year of a pro posed three-year contract. Under the old contract workers averaged $2.10 an hour. Segregation Rule Defied NEW ORLEANS (ft Defiant se gregation leaders declared today that "the people of Louisiana will not integrate" to comply with a federal court's ruling ordering de segregation in public schools. State Sen. W. M. Ralnach, seg regation leader in the Legislature. criticized the three - man court which gave the ruling yesterday and the Orleans Parish (county) School Board said the next step would be to appeal the decision. Ralnach said the three Judges took an oath of office to uphold the constitution of the United States, not an oath to uphold the palpably unconstitutional decision of the (U.S. supreme court) justices." The court tossed out as uncon stitutional the segregation laws enacted by Louislanan to sidestep the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling against separate white and Negro public schools. In the wake of Wednesday's de cision, U.S. District Judge J. Skelly Wright ordered New Or leans to end racial segregation in its public schools 'with all delib erate speed." He was ouick to point out, how ever, that this did not mean the mixing of classes would come overnight op even in a year or more." Wright directed the school board to Integrate classes "after such time as may be necessary to make arrangements for admission of children to such schools on a radi cally non-discriminatory basis." Rainach aimed his criticism at Wright and his two fellow Jurists. all natives ot Louisiana, juoge Wavne G. Borah of the 5th Circuit and U.S. Dist. Judge Herbert Chrlstenberry shared in the nil- ins. Wright cautioned that "Uie prob lem of changing a people's mores, oarticularlv those with an emo tional overlay, is not to be taken lightly." After the U.S. Supreme Court de cision In 1954 abolishing segrega tion In public schools, the Legis lature passed a series of laws plac ing segregated schools under the state's inherent police powers. The District ourt ruled that Uie laws were unconstitutional. FIRE EXCHANGED TAIPEI, Formosa Ul The De fense Ministry said Chinese Na tionalist units on Little Quemoy Island exchanged artillery tire with Communist forces at-Amoy before dawn Wednesday. The an nouncement said the Reds fired 38 rounds. It added that Little Quemoy had been the target of Communist artillery dally since Sunday. ) I ... .i . I'l,.;.........., ,., .. , ,.,.,., ,.,. i4 m- ., ' - ' " pit ''1 j F'J. , Z i a, hi i ' l" STAR CHIEF 4-DOOR CATALINA The ear lay 0 and the price won't ttop youl Easy Does ll-This One's Loaded! ' t t f 1 Try the mighty 227-H.P. Strato Streak V-8 teamed with "y Strato-Flight Hydra-Matic! Here' all the go you'll ever want for norma driving . . . ui'fA lots more where that came from whenever you need it! Take it easy ... in seconds you'll be sailing serenely along at the legal limit or leaving the steepest grade behind unnoticed . . . and always with that big "something extra" for safety! You're piloting America' most modern V-8! It's the mightiest." highest-compression, hiVhpjt. torque power plant in Pontiac history . ; . avail able in 3 versions, 205 h.p., 227 h.p. and a blazing 285 h.p.! 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The Basin residents flew to Hawaii on Monday, February 6 and spent seven days at the Edgewater Hotel on Waikiki Baach, Honolulu. Knovvland Filed In Primary ST. PAUL. Minn. ID Minneso ta Republicans may have the choice of two delegates slates in the presidential primary March 20 after filing of the name of Sen. Knowland (R-Callf) yesterday, last day for entering the race. John Alexander, Minneapolis at torney who submitted the list of 25 Knowland delegates, said it was aimed not against President Elsen hower, whose slate was filed re cently, but as an "Insurance" move to: Provide a Republican contest and to guard against "having to submit to an unwanted favorite son candidate" in the event El senhower withdraws. He did not elaborate on the "un wanted" in his statement. The Eisenhower delegate listing is topped by the name ot Sen. Thye (R-Mlnn). It was filed by the state GOP organization. Should the President fail to with draw by Feb. 25, the deadline, both the Eisenhower and Know land delegations would go onto the ballots. Sen. Knowland himself pre viously has Indicated he would withdraw from all primary activ ities It the President announces he will run again. There is also a Democratic con test In the primary, with Adlal Stevenson and Sen. Kcfauver (D- Tenn) competing, Stevenson with he backing of the state Democratic-Farmer-Labor party. The Knowland filing was made just 33 minutes before the entry deadline. Alexander said It was aimed to giving a chance for expression to those favoring the Brlcker amend ment, those against recognition by of Red China, those objecting to the spending of resources In for eign areas, and to those who "be lieve It Is high time for our coun try to end its leftist movement." AGREEMENT REACHED CANBERRA, Australia IM Aus tralia and the United States have reached agreement in principle on exchange of atomic Information, Supply Minister Hownrd Beale told the House of Representatives Wednesday. Nixon May Get GOP Nod WASHINGTON Wl A eroes section sampling of Senate Repub licans and Democrats showed to day most of them think that if President Elsenhower runs again Vlco President Nixon will be on the OOP ticket. Elsenhower has Indicated ha will give his second-term decision around March 1. If he says then he la available, there is little doubt the vice presidential a o m 1 n a named at the August convention will be the man ha wants. , Sen. H. Alexander Smith (R-NJ) said he believes Elsenhower win want Nixon to run with him de spite what smith termed "some op position" within the party. I think most of the Republican opposition to Nixon la directed at him as a possible presidential candidate. If the President doesn't run again, rather than as a vice presidential nominee," Smith aald. Sen. Mansfield (D-Mont) said he thinks there is little likelihood of any move by Eisenhower to shelve Nixon. Sen. Bush (R-Conn) said In view of Elsenhower's complimentary re marks about Nixon he thinks the ticket will be the same aa in 1962. Sen. Curtis (R-Neb) agreed. Sen. Snarkman (D-Ala). the libl Democratlo vice presidential nom inee, said he doesn't think Elsen hower Is going to run again. But it he does, the Alabama senator pre dicted Nixon will be his running mate. A novel suggestion for the ltM OOP ticket came from Sen. Long (D-La), who reiterated hla conten tion of a year ago that Elsenhower will not run again. 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