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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1957)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS," OREGON FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 22. 1957 Rodin-JO ftV MOTl! Tfc rali tut Ncwa 1 ) IfeU tmr Uat mimic- ckangti la U rati I TV ch.dnln. Tbty VW-CM ABC. 14N EC Friday, Nov. 22 W SpOrU Hifhlirhti .OS Muale for Dining 7:00 Ntwi CBS 7:0 Lowell Thomai CBS T: Sports Time CBS 7:23 Pcopla in the Ncwi ABC 7:30 Affloi 'N' Andy CBS 7:M Spcaklnf of Sports CBS B OO .Vw. CBS :05 Maiuri of Melody CBS 11:30 Hobt. Q. LwJ. CBS 8:00 News CBS 9:03 The Bob Inch Show 9:30 Niwi CBS 6:35 Tht Bob Inch Show :SS New ABC 10:00 Bob Inch Show 13:00 51m Off Saturday. Not. 23 6:00 erly Morning Nmvn 9:15 America'! Favortta Mule 7:00 Ntwg Breakfait Edition 7:15 Wcathcrcast 7:1 Breakfast Broadcast 7:30 Frank Goii CBS 7:45 County Agent 7:55 News ABC :00 Johnny Pearson Show ABC 30 Haven of Rest 00 News CBS 05 Freddy Martin CBS 30 Gunsmoke CBS 9:55 Jack Leonard Show CBS 10:00 Weekend News ABC 10:05 Robert Q. Lewis CBS 11:00 Weekend News ABC 11:05 Amos N' Andy Music Hall CBS j j : .m t-iiy nospuai vbs 11:33 Top Tune CBS 12:00 Noon Edition News 13:13 Hound and Round Society CBS 13:30 Garden Gate CBS 13:45 Man Around the House CBS 1:00 News CBS 1:05 Speaking of Sports ABC 1:10 Music 1:15 Oregon vs. OSC Football 4:00 Music 4:15 Young Republicans Group Inter view 4:30 Basin Briefs 4:43 Football Scoreboard CBS 5:00 Musical Variety Show CBS 5:05 Speaking of Sports ABC J: 10 Music ilS Weather Roundup J:i Behind the Headlines 5:30 Tom Harmon CBS 5:45 Frank Goss CBS A:SS Hometown News 6:00 Sports Highlight 6:05 Music for Dining 7:00 Musical Variety Show CBS 7:03 Johnny Dollar CBS 7:30 Words of Life 7:45 Football Scoreboard CBS n 00 Weekend News ABC fl:Q9 FBI In Peace and War CBS 8:30 Cocoanut Grove Orch. ABC 9:00 CBS News 9:00 Bob Inch Show Remember . . . A HALLMARK CARD from SHAW STATIONERY "Whtn You Car Enough To Send The Very BestJ" PERSONALIZED CARDS GIFT WRAP end RIBBONS PERSONALIZED STATIONERY BOOKS end BIBLES Shaw Stationery Company 729 Main Street See what MAGNIFICENT m VIEWING Yes you can pay a lot more for your TV but never enjoy the kind of val ue offered in the New Yorker 21 Just look at these features . . see what the Maqnavox New Yorker at $259 50 in Mahogany offers you: Ultr-modtrn comol. tyl.ng Conc.alcd lop-tuning Full Iromtormer "Mo,!!. jew.r halm Two Mogno.oi 8" ..tended range ,peoke,i 265 . inch titwinf . Chremolon. optical fill.. Hond rubbed lyntu mahogony tiniih Swiv.l baia aTailabla at J.3 axtra. v Dewy 1)1 M 7k W In Lakeview 10:00 Weekend News ABC 10 05 Bob Inch Show 12.00 Sign Off KFJ1 MBS DLBS. UM KC Friday. Nov. 22 M rdw P Morgan News DLBS :1ft World of SporU 30 First Federal News 6:43 Kraft News DLBS 50 Bill Brundlge SporU DLBS 7;00 The Queen's Men DLBS 7:23 Gabriel H tatter DLBS 7:30 Counterspy MRS 7:33 Headline Edition DLBS 8:00 Mostly Music 8.30 News DLBS ft M Mostly Musi" 10:00 10:00 PM Headlfnee 10:10 Bill Stern Sports DLBS 10:13 Mostly Musir 11:00 News Summary 11:05 Mostly Music 12:00 Sign Off Saturday, Nov. 23 6:30 News Summary 8:33 The Cow Hour 6 00 Nt'ws Summary 6:05 The Cow Hour 50 Sports Roundup ' 00 News DLBS T 13 Melody Weather Time DLBS 7:M Todays Best Buys 7:41 Local Morning Newt B:00 Percolator Patrol B:50 Social Security 8:55' 4-H Club 9:00 Kraft News DLBS 8.03 News & Views on Aviation 9:15 Storyteller 9:30 Firefighters 9. .15 jra Morning Show 10 00 News DLBS 10:10 Frankie Frisch DLBS 10 15 JI's Morn in it Show 10:45 Nntrn Dame vs. Iowa Football V'M N.-wa DLBS 1:33 JI's Afternoon Show 2:30 Krift Nrwn DLBS 2:33 JI's Afternoon Show 3:30 Kraft N-ws DLBS 3:35 JI's Afternoon Show 3:30 Kraft News DLBS 3 33 JI's Afternoon Show 00 Evening World Roundup 6:13 Game Commission 6 30 SporU Flashes - DLBS 6 VI Local Evening News :45 Leatherneck Jamboree 7:00 Word of Life DLBS 7:30 News DI.BS 7:33 Music Beyond The Stars DLBS 8:00 Mostly Music 8:30 Ni'ws DI.BS 8:35 Mostly MukIc in. (Hi 10:00 PM Headlines 10:15 Mostly Music 11:00 News Summary 11:03 Mostly Music n:uu news nummary KOTI-TV Channel 2. Klamath Falls Friday, Nov. 22 2:00 Copro Home Show 2:30 Garry Moore 3:30 Strike It Rich 4:00 Feminine r'jincles 4:30 Uncle Bill VALUE you I " Ifl 1 GOGH LTD GQOXX FOR ONLY AND ONLY MAGNAVOX GIVES YOU THIS GOLD SEAL Full year's warranty on all parts and tubes 3 month's service guarantee Buy On Convenient Terms, Of Course b Music Co. Pk TU 4-5111 Shop Siebert Brothers Store oq 4:43 Search For Tomorrow 5.1X1 Wild Bill Hick ok 5 30 SporU Highlights 5:45 Muteum 6:00 Weather and News 6:13 Doug Edwards 6:30 Passport 7 00 Cavalcade of Sports 7-30 Sportsmen 1:00 Mr. Adams and T.v 8:30 Captain David Grief 9:00 Lineup 9:30 TBA 10 oo Stories of the Century 10 30 News 10:35 Dugan and Meat Theater' 12:00 Sign Off Saturday. Nov. 23 11:40 Cartoon 12 00 Hockev 1:15 Football Oregon vs. Oregon siaie 4 00 Big Picture 4:30 Goldbergs 5:00 Llberace S-30 Get Set Go 6 00 Flash Gordon 6 30 Tennessee Ernie 7:00 Casey Jones 7:30 Dick and the Duchess R 00 Gale Storm Show 8 30 Have Gun. Will Travel 9:00 Zane Grey 9 30 People Are Funny 10 00 News 10:05 Premier Theater KBES-fV Cbeuel ft. CBS, NBC, ABC Friday, Nor. 22 2 00 Copco Home Show 2:30 Garry Moore 3:30 Strike It Rich 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:30 Visit With City Police 4:45 Search For Tomorrow 5:00 Wild Bill Hickok S:30 Uncle Bill 6:00 Weather and News 6:15 Doug Edwards fi 30 Passport 7:00 Cavalcade of Sports 7 30 Do It Yourself 8 00 Mr. Adams and Eve :30 Captain David Grief 9:00 Lineup 9:30 TBA lo.oo stories of Century 10:30 News 10:35 aoth Centurv Fox 12:00 Sign Off Saturday, Nor. 23 12 00 Hockey 1:15 Football Oregon vs. Oregon State 4:00 Big Picture 4::tO Goldberm 5 00 Libcrace 5 30 Get Set Go 6.00 News 6:15 Gateway 6 30 Tennessee Ernie Ford 7:00 Casey Jones 7:30 Dick and the Duchess 8:00 Gale Storm 8:30 Have Gun Will Travel 9.0(1 Zane Grey 9 :10 People Are Funny 10:00 News 10:05 Caveman Theater RVIP-TV Channel 7, ReMteg California Friduy, Nov. 22 2:.'t0 Truth nr Consequences .1:00 American Bandstand 4 00 Inside Your Schools 4:1.1 Phllrn Plavhnuse 5 10 Komic Karnival 600 Billv Jack Wills a IK) Grnv I ; host 5 :tO Life of Riley 9 00 Bonis and Saddle 9 :10 Sheriff of Cochise 10.00 S.J rVnham News 10 1 n nob Albertson Show 12:00 News Saturday, Nov. 23 1:4.1 PCC Rrgional Football 4 1T Football Scoreboard 4:iO Sheriff Bill's Theater 6 00 Wrestling From Chicago 7 00 Vagabond color 7 :t0 People Are Funny B 00 Perry Como Show color 0 00 Suspicion 10 (K) What's It For Ki no Your Kit Parade 11:00 Late'Show 12:30 Uite News re missing! 5 259 50 GUARANTEE 'DENNIS THE MENACE" T7fbt I I a.7? '5AY,YX LCOK Labor, Management Leaders urge Better News Coverage NEW ORLEANS iffv-George M. Harrison, vice president of AFL CIO, today accused the nation's editors of unfairness to labor in their coverage of the McClellan committee. "I say that the newspapers have tailed to point out that the dishonesty and racketeering re vealed before the McClellan com mittee have involved just as many businessmen as labor leaders," Harrison said in a speech pre pared for delivery to the Associ ated Press Managing Editors Assn. . "For every labor man who took a 'bribe or a kickback' there was a businessman who gave it." Harrison, who also is president of the Brotherhood of Hailway Clerks, said that the committee of Sen. John McClellan iD-Arki was set up to investigate labor and management but "you'll lind most newspapers have put the em phasis on the misdeeds of labor." You can probably guess that I don't think we've had a fair shake." Harrison added, "and that, incidentally, is all we ever ask, a fair shake." Another request for fuller cov erage came from management, in a speech prepared for delivery by Lammol du Pont Copeland. vice president and chairman of the Finance Committee of E. I. rau Pont de Nemours & Co. "There is good reason to doubt that the public understands as TRADE GREEN LIGHT 1956 DODGE Sierra iJAOIl 1956 DESOTO Fire dome 4-door .. 2195 195S BUICK Roadmastcr 'ir": s2i95 1935 LINCOLN . $01 OC Capri 4-door .... 1 3 1955 PLYMOUTH Hard Top Coupe Belvedere $1695 1953 HILLMAN MINX $ 595 4-door 1953 FORD Cuitom Club Coupe $795 1953 STUDEBAKER Cruiier 4-door Land J595 1952 PLYMOUTH 2-door $395 Herd $705 1952 MERCURY . Top Coupe 1951 STUDEBAKER Command ar Rega 2-door s445 $495 1951 BUICK . Special 4-door 19S0 PACKARD . Two door J350 Land J395 1950 STUDEBAKER Cruiser, 4-door . See these and many more at JUCKELAND EDSEL SALES, Inc. 1 1th to 12th on Klamath Ph. 2-2581 fffiil at the W site tp of the t I HOUGH J0&UE A CAKE I ' much as it should about the oper ation of the economic principles that underlie our social, cultural, educational, scientific, and even religious structures," Copeland told the APME. Harrison said that management should follow the lead of labor and pass ethical codes to clean up corruption. "There was some 500 million dollars embezzled by businessmen last year," he said. "Certainly there must be many a juicy story there.' The labor leader cited these ex amples of management corruption that he said were not adequately covered by the newspapers: 1. "There's the hearing of Svd- nty Albert, president of the Bel- lanca Corp.. before the Securities and Exchange Commission. He admitted lending . . . stock with out security to his friends and he paid them dividends on it while they had it. "All in all, his financial trans actions made Beck and Hoffa look like pikers. But how many people on the street outside this building today have ever read the name of Sydney Albert in their newspapers?" Dave Beck, former president of the Teamsters Union, and James Hoffa, elected to succeed him both appeared before the McClel lan committee. Harrison said some General Electric salesmen in New York were accused of providing call girls tor big buyers or appliances. "This could have been devel oped into a real story, but some how it slipped by most papers, and the ones which did run it put a 'boys will be boys' sort of label on it," he added. "I contrast this with the treat- meent given the Teamsters on the Portland and Seattle stories." HarrUon said labor would do a thorough job of house cleaning. "When we are through, I can guarantee you that there will no longer be any corruption or rack eteering in any of our labor or ganizations." Harrison said. "Will businessmen stop profit eering and eliminate corruption? I hope they will act in the public interest." In outlining management's plea for better news coverage. Cope land said the public needs to be educated so it can make the right decisions and "avoid the collapse that has inexorably overtaken all earlier democracies all, without exception." Copeland listed three spheres of business that he said the public needs to know more about: big ness, the progressive income tax on corporations and the role of capital. "The truth is that we must have large companies if we are to survive," Copeland said. "Even if large companies were as self ish and as evil as their critics say they are, we should still have to have them, for we cannot sur vive as a nation without them.' "I'm not sure they realize that the size of a company is dictated; basically by the magnitude of thei job to be done. We have got toj have the teams of various sizes! trained and ready for any job that comes along. In this troubled era.! there isn't time to create them afier the emergency has arisen." j Copeland called the progressive; tax. which would tax bigger com-1 panics at a higher percentage j than smaller ones, "a lormula for destruction." j "It will work while we sleep, t quietly pull our whole system to! pieces, and make a present of the' free world to the Communists."! he said. Also on today's session of the i annual convention, which ends to-; morrow, was a diicussion of the; llunsarian revolution by Endre Marlon, the AP s Budapest corre spondent at the time. I TO .SIGHTED CHEROKEE. Ala. 'IP' High school principal Homer Blanken ship and his wife reported seeing1 living saucer Thursday night. its lights "flashing on and off." I Hlankensbip aid the object, about too feel wide and tapered at the bottom, hovered over the high way moving up ami down. He aid. "it definitely was an object! w ith enough speed to scare my I wife and me bait to death." I High Winds LOS ANGELES Wi Devastating winds dashed out of the desert with hurricane speed yesterday, whistled through metropolitan Los Angeles on a wrecking spree, and fanned a monstrous forest fire that was still running wild today. The Forest Service said the fire. burning northeast of here in the Angeles National Forest, might cover as much as 25,000 acres. It. had burned about 18,000. Police and sheriff's switch boards around Los Angeles and in many other parts of Southern California were jammed with re ports of damage caused by the shrieking winds. Houses were wrecked, hundreds of trees were blown down, power lines were knocked out and a num ber of injuries were reported. There were no known deaths. The forest fire started yester day when a camp fire got away from a prison crew working on a highway west of Crystal Lake. about 25 miles north of Azusa. The fire had moved 22 miles ear ly today. At times it was whistling along at the rate of 200 feet a minute, fanned by winds that hit too miles an hour in gusts. Dave wane. Angeles Forest fire prevention officer, said the blaze I 1 MONTALBAM Li I sn was . flM(PZiir 'K.NV(1U,NnO I Siarts SUNDAY! LraApJ mh ' JOEL M.CDCA ill'-!" .-4 MARK J STEVENS 1 JT J0AN - WELDON - sja a mm mm nam BERNARD SHAW'S 97 r m 1 1),. ,fr" S.-v all tun tt aV . "" flL Ends SATURDAY Young And Dangerous plus on a four day leave. ..with four months' pay... with two of the most beautiful women in the world! and He's out to see the sights.. and what sights they show What a time! "hat a ball! him! What a wonderful thing to happen to a guy on leave in San Francisco! 3 Arzz u.& ti k urn Cinemascope -mm. Cause Damage was burning only a couple of miles north of the town of Mon rovia in the San Gabriel Moun tain foothills. County Fire Chief, heith hunger said other commu nities in danger included Azusa, Duarte. East Pasadena and Sier ra Madre. All are northwest of Los Angeles. Waite said the famous observ atory atop Mt. Wilson was in "serious danger," as were halt a dozen or so Los Angeles television transmitters on the mountaintop. The crews manning these facili ties were alerted for possible evacuation. Waite said about 100 summer homes in Big Santa Anita Canyon were threatened. Four or five families occupying homes in the area were told they might have to leave. A hundred children at Camp Hi-Hill, a Long Beach city school facility, were evacuated by bus. KIDS 1 RUNAWAY. CAR WAYCROSS, Ga. (UP) Five small children rode a run away car at speeds up to 45 miles an hour Thursday. The car, running in reverse, finally backed into a tree. The children escaped unhurt. Ends SATURDAY Loyewag theiw Tn.. tip? C COLD-BLOODED KILLER... OpVf deadlier than dynamite) J"I-S 1 couruc m w and ucriftn and tacrifict 'alT STORING RICH7RD WIDM7RK RICM7RD TbDD TOJlbN WALBK90K 7CKIO oJEKN SEBERG Starts SUNDAY! Sift In California The evacuation was ordered when the fire was three or four miles from .the mountain camp. Chief Klinger said the blaze was in the "worst possible area" and in "the most valuable watershed in the world." "There's 50,000 acres without a road in there," he said. About 900 fire fighters were on the lines. A hundred Indians were to be flown in from Albuquerque, N. M. DOORS OPEN 6:3Q P.M. ENDS TONIGHT ! UKt CRANll AN AFFAIR TO DEBORAH KERR REMEMBER CinemaScoPC: Al 8:40 Only A"4 SAIN! MUBMf j FUJUCIOU ' OncmaSoopC A 6:40 and 10:40 DARRVl f. ZANUCK'S (.0 OC LUXE v ClNCMA5cOPt AND SUSPENSE OM ROCKABILLY BABY CONTINUOUS FROM 12:45 P. M. "" ' TWO ACTIONHITS!! SLOW DRAWL...LIGHTNIN' DRAW 'Feature Times 2 25 - 5:10 7:55 & 10:45 - PLUS . JNZ "ROPE JUSTICE'! I VjGUyMADISOM uLS-t TCCHNICOLOU M FEUCIA FARR KATHRYN GRAMT At 1:10 . 3:55 . 6:40 li 9:30 miluhd-q1;n-paget ill