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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1956)
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1956 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE SEVEN 1. Aiv' - if i ;ffr , . I (J - "fcw-m IfUlM 111! II III lltlllM Ml I III foe, said today he personally will lead the community's campaign to rid the Clay School of its only two negro students. I'll not rest until James andiclay ?nd s.tur8's not ?c "H Teresa Gordon return to a srhnn movea unill me snuuiiuu a re- A TON OF MEAT, beef, pork and lamb was shipped from Klamath Falls recently to the Crippled Children's home in Portland by the Klamath Falls Shrine Club. The meat was bought by club members at the Rotary-sponsored 4-H and Future Farmer of America Junior Livestock Sale held in late August and donated to the hospital. The shipment was taken to Portland by the Bend-Portland Truck Service free of charge. The TP Packing Company donated the processing and six lambs to be included in the shipment. In the cooler at the TP plant before removal of the meat are, left to right, Charles Bane, mana ger, Bend-Portland Truck Service, and Shrine Club president, Jim Winde, Keith O'Hair end Charles Heaton, who bought and donated the meat. UN Truce Chief Urges End To Border Clashes JERUSALEM W Maj. Gen.ikilled by a Jordan patrol Monday, Edson Burns, U.N. truce chief, has called on both Jordan and Is rael to put an end to the series of border incidents that has ex ploded in the middle of the worsening Suez crisis. : Jordan military sources charged yesterday that 1,000 Israelis in a fleet of trucks and armored cars blew: up a fortified police post and killed 20 Jordanians during a two-hour battle. This attack, . one. of the most serious along the Jordan-Israeli border in months, was only three Mayor Leads Fight To Rid School Of Colored Pupils ClAY, Ky. (A Mayor Hcrmanlaway, where seven Negroes were for the fourth consecutive day, day. Approximately 200 guards men are assigned to the school. Gen. Williams said the troops at The raid was followed by an Israeli report last night that two Israeli guardsmen were killed by infiltrators from Jordan on the road between the Dead Sea and Red Sea. Another guardsman was missing. Gen. Burns appealed to both sides to end the "tragic series of events." In a communique he de clared that the raid appeared to be "an act of retaliation such as has . been repeatedly condemned by the Security Council The Tel Aviv newspaper Maariv miles from where the Israelis said the raid "should teach the claimed six of their soldiers were Arabs that Israel's security forces was killed, are on guard and will severely punish every murder and act of sabotage. A spokesman at U.N. headquar lers said the police post, a four room stone building with two towers at Rahwa, about a mile inside Jordan and 20 miles south west of Jerusalem, was wrecked. An explosives expert said at least half a ton of explosives had been used to blow it up. Jordan military sources gave this account of the attack: Supported by heavy mortar fire and military engineers, about a battalion of Israelis in 34 trucks and jeeps and three armored cars attacked that 16 Jordan police and national guardsmen manning the post. The post was blown up by an explosive charged slipped into the building and everyone 'inside where they belong," Clark said in an interview. We will follow a policy of pas sive resistance by keeping our children out of school until the Gordons leave." The government started Yester day when all white children in the school (enrollment 590) walked out after the Gordon children entered classes under protection of 500 Na tional Guardsmen and GO state troopers. The escort slipped into the community before dawn under the command of Ad). Gen. J. J. B. Williams. One teacher. Minvil Clark, said he would not return even though l was threatened with the loss of my teaching certificate by the State Board of Education." Clark, a Baptist minister here, said he and the school's It other teachers were told the board could revoke their certificates if they leu scnooi Deiore , uieir working day ended. The minister repeated his nrnm. ise later in the day to 200 Clay residents who met at Pixon, the county seat, to urge the Webster loumy Hoard of Education toTion or a petition suggesting all teach- ers siay out ot classes until the negroes left. School Supt. Wilbur Collins told the gathering the board would have to follow the law and permit we negroes 10 remain, solved no matter- how long or short it mav be." About 200 people crowded around and on the road leading to the Clay school yesterday morning after the Gordons were safely in side, but only a handful watched them leave in the afternoon. Lakeview Sets School Election LAKEVIEW A school'bond elec tion will be held here on Tuesday, October 16. according to H. B. Fer rins. school superintendent. A bond issue of $360,000 will be asked for school district No. 7 to provide funds to construct and equip a new high school gymnasi um, auditorium and two class- rpoms. A health room will be in cluded in the project. Morrison and Howard, Klamath Falls architects, have drawn pre liminary plans for the structure. John Howard consulted with mem bers of the school board at its meeting last week. GIRL BORN HOLLYWOOD Wl-Actress Ma rie McDonald, recently divorced from wealthy shoe manufacturer Harry Karl, gave birth to a 4 pound, 5-ounce baby girl by CflPKiirPAn section vesterdnv nt nu was quiei at Murgis, 11 miles Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. mtX LUCKY STUDENTS, Linda Bowman, 2804 Biibee Street, left, and Ray Bramhall, 536 Pine Street, right, won a portable typewriter and a leather zipper binder respec tively from the Shaw Stationery Co., 729 Main Street as a part of the store's back to school program. All students entering the store registered and were eligible for the prizes. Twelve pen and pencil sets were alio awarded to other students. J. H. Brodie, center, represented the store at the presentation. CONGRESSMAN DIES CHICAGO I Carl R. Chind- Worn, 84, former Republican con gressman from the old 10th Dist. in Chicago from 1919 to 1933, died yesterday. Lee Available For Hew Job SALT LAKE CITY. l-Gov. J. Bracken Lee says, "If you know anybody who wants a man of mjr age for a job, why I'm open." now that his bid for a third term hai been rejected. But Lee, 57, says he "would not encourage a move to re-elect him via a write-in campaign. "I just don't think a thing like that would be successful." he said in an interview last night after his defeat in Utah's Republican primary Tuesday by political new comer George D. Clyde. "After all, this isn't the end of the world for any of us. It's just an election. Certainly I feel bad about it. I'm certain my friends feel just as bad if not worse." Lee, considered a political mav erick by party regulars in Utah for his criticism of foreign aid, the United Nations and the Eisen- n o w e r administration, lost to Clyde by more than 8,000 votes in a Republican gubernatorial pri mary that totaled more than 117,000. i ,. . -, , ! i - Some post primary talk ' has mentioned the possibility that Lee might make the race for governor anyway, on a write-in basis. But he says of such a move: "My feel ing is that I don't want to partici pate in it. The people have spok en and I'm willing to abide." Will he support Clyde? "I see no reason why I shouldn't siinnort him. Of course. I'm not going to campaign as hard as I would for myseit oecause man hard work. But if they want me, if they need me, if they feel I won't hurt them sure I would." 'ZJW WW! NEWEST AUTOMATIC FEATURES AT THIS SENSATIONAL PRICE Electric clock ope rotes continuously has luminous hands Convenient opphonce outlet, shuts off. 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