Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 21, 1958, Page 1, Image 1

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EUQENE.OflEG.
6-1-53
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la The 1
Day's fews
By FRANK JENKINS
Screwball side of life note:
Author Aldous Huxley ha at
tacked the lubliminal advertising
technique in a television interview.
(This "subliminal" technique con
sists of lashing advertising mes
sages on TV and movie screens so
fast you oen't see 'em, and they're
supposed to influence your buying
decisions without letting you know
you're being influenced.)
He forecasts an ALARMING new
world in which politicians will
make nonsense of democratic pro
cedures by election campaigns
aimed at the subconscious mind.
Hrr-mmmmm,
D'ya reckon the politicians can
mess things up any worse with
the aid of the subliminal technique
than they ve been able to do with
out It?
At this point a question:
What is a politician?
The dictionary defines a politi-
elan as "one addicted to, or active
ly engaged in, politics as managed
by parties: often, one primarily
interested in political offices or
the PROFITS from them as a
source of private gain."
The dictionary adds:
"POLITICIAN now commonly im
plies activity in party politics, es
pecially with a suggestion or arti
fice or intrigue.
"STATESMAN now usually sug
gests broad-minded and far-seeing
sagacity in affairs of state.
That takes us back into history.
The Greek philosopher Plato, in
his great work Republic, speaks of
democracy as "a charming form
of government, full of variety and
disorder, and dispensing a sort of
equality to equals and unequals
alike.
At this point, another
Hmmmmmm. ' '
They must have had politicians
back in Plato s day.
That suggests another question:
When was Plato's day?
It was a long time ago.
It isn't known when he was born,
but he died in 347 B.C., more than
two thousand years ago. He was a
disciple of Socrates and the teach
er of Aristotle. Aristotle is general
ly credited with being the father
of science.
Plato was the student and com
panion of Socrates until the lat
ter s trial and death in 399 B.C
Socrates was condemned to death
"for the corruption of youth" by
Introducing new gods (meaning
new ideas and new ways of think
ing.)
He was required, upon his con
viction, to drink a cup of hemlock
poison, the theory being that if he
were guilty the hemlock would kill
him but if he were innocent it
would do him no harm.
They had some queer ideas then,
too.
Back now to Aldous Huxley.
Who's he?
Well, he's an English novelist
journalist and essayist. He's also
a scientist and the grandson of a
scientist. II i s grandfather was
Thomas Henry Huxley, widely
known for his defense of the theory
of evolution held by Darwin. He
was often called "Darwin's Bull
dog," and engaged in a famous
controversy with England's noted
prime minister William E. Glad
stone.
Gladstone was a politician (in
that he used the arts of politics
to keep himself in office) and he
didn't think the Darwinian theory
that man is descended from the
monkey would be popular with his
constituents.
Politics, you see, has ALWAYS
been politics.
T V , 1 l lilt
H vtra r.
' w) m -i
Price Five Cents to Pages
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1958 Telephone TU 4-8111
No. 607J
NEW SIGNS TO ATTRACT visitors to city parks arc being painted by Oregon' Tch
students happily at work above. The signs, sponsored and financed by Klamath Ex
change Club, are a project of the OTI sign painting class under instructor Earl Bairey.
Left to right, the brushmen are Bill Edinger, Jerry Jordan, Don Thurman and Jo Lunalc.
The class will also paint some 50 other signs, much smaller than that above, which will
be used to mark city park boundaries and to furnish directions to park users. Recrea
tion Director Bob Bonney will coordinate the job with the students.
Senators Vote To Restore
Most Of Slashed Aid Funds
WASHINGTON UPi The Senate I
Foreign Relations Committee
voted Wednesday to restore 220
million dollars of the 339 million
cut by the House President Ei
senhower's 13,942,092,500 foreign
aid program.
The committee.- by voice vole.
approved Eisenhower's request for
$1,800,000,000 in military hardware
funds. The House had voted $1,-640.000.000.
Similarly, the Senate group
voted to grant the administration
$835,000,000 in defense economic
Man In Space
Plan Studied
Mostly Fair
Over Nation
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Showery weather persisted in
sections of the Southeast and
Western areas but generally fair
weather prevailed in the major
part of the country today.
Cool air spread across Northern
regions from the Great Lakes to
the North Atlantic states, but mild
weather was the rule in most
other sections.
Temperatures were mostly in
the 30s and 40s in the Great Lakes
region and dipped to below freez
ing in parts of Northern Michi
gan. The cool air which moved
into the north Atlantic states
dropped readings into the 50s.
They were in the-60s in the mid-
Atlantic Coast while 70-degree
marks were general in the Gulf
Coast area and along the south
Atlantic Coast.
WASHINGTON UP) The Penta
gon is studying a dozen proposals
to place man in space, including
one to rocket a human out of this
world and bring him back in a
matter of minutes.
But the chief officials of the De
fense Department's Advanced Re
search Projects Agency assured
Congress that no American will
he hurled beyond the atmosphere
until an animal has made tthe
trip and been brought back to
earth. They said a chimpanzee
knay be put in orbit in 12 to 15
months If present studies succeed,
United States plans lor space
conquest and money to be spent
on them were disclosed by Roy
Johnson, ARPA director, and Dr.
Herbert York, Us chief scientist
in testimony released today by the
House Appropriations Committee
Johnson testified last month tnai
a 72-miUion-douar appropriation
request for the fiscal year start
ing July 1 included money for
man-in-space research.
But man's safety in space can't
he Euaranteed within the next 12
months, he said, "regardless of
the amount of money that we
spend."
ARPA s chief scientists dis
closed that the Air Force is now
planning a reconnaissance satel
lite with a gross weight ot trom
1 to I'i tons. They said it will
take television pictures and pick
up radio signals while over poten
tially unfriendly territory and re-
broadcast this intelligence while
orbiting over American stations.
York said the Army and Air
Force have about a 75 per cent
chance of success in getting satel
lites in orbit around the moon this
year. The Army has been author
ized to make one or two tries at
the moon, and the Air Force three
attempts.
support funds for countries with
which the United States has de
fense pacts. The House had cut
this item to $775,000,000.
The committee decided to meet
again in another closed session
Thursday to consider other items.
There may be other Increases.
In still another voice vote ac
tion, the committee wrote into the
foreign aid bill a declaration that
is in the interest of the United
States to join other nations in pro
viding India with "support of the
type, magnitude, and duration
adequate to assist India in com
pleting her "current program for
economic development.
From three senators Mike
Mansfield (D-Mont), H. Alexander
Smith (R-NJ) and George D. Aik
en IR-Vt) came appraisals that
n t i-American demonstrations
against Vice President Nixon
would help rather than hurt the
administrations foreign aid program.
Tuesday the committee direct
ed a subcommittee headed by Sen.
Wayne Morse (D-Orei to make a
full-fledged inquiry into the back
ground of the Latin-American in
cidents.
The House, accepting r e c o m-
mendations ot its Foreign Affairs
Committee, cut 339 million dollars
from the amount Eisenhower
asked but rejected heavier cuts
n the military and economic aid
authorizations.'
Mansfield, who advocates deep
er cuts than those made by the
House, said he thought the net
result of the anti-American dem
onstrations in Latin America
Lebanon. Algeria and elsewhere
would strengthen Eisenhower's
hand.
In a separate interview. Smith
said he would "move heaven and
earth to restore the authorizations
to the full amount asked by the
President.
I think our case will be made
stronger by the increased evi
dence of Communist infiltration
and economic penetration in South
America. Africa and the Middle
East." Smith said.
Agreeing. Aiken said one elfect
of the demonstrations has been to
make all Americans conscious of
the international situation.
Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper
R-Iowa) said there was no dis
position on the part of the Senate
o retaliate against souin Amer-
for the Communist-inspired
demonstrations.
Chief Still Hard
Man To Rattle
NEW YORK President Ei
senhower demonstrated to the sat
infection of newsmen last night
that he still is a hard man to
rattle.
The President was about to
board his plane at LaGuardia
Field to fly back to Washington
when a flashbulb exploded as
press photographers recorded his
departure.
Secret Servicemen and the city's
ton police officials were startled
and wheeled around tensely at the
sound of the gun-like pop.
Japanese Hold Former Yale
Football Star For Murder
TOKYO I Joseph P. Crowley,
star Yale football back in the
early 1930s, whs held by Japanese
police today on suspicion of fatal
ly beating his brother-in-law T. A.
D. Jones Jr.
Jones, a New Haven, Conn.,
businessman and son of a Yale
gridiron great, died here May 8.
Funeral services will be held to
morrow at Trinity Episcopal
Church in New Haven.
Police Inspector Tsunetoshi Shi
rakawa said Crowley was arrest
ed this morning "on the suspicion
of having inflicted the injuries
which caused Jones' death."
"We have conducted a thorough
and careful investigation. . .and
from medical reports and testi
monies of all persons involved.
suspicion had become strongest
against Crowley," the inspector
said. He had indicated ell along
he thought the case might involve
manslaughter or assault rather
than murder.
Shirakawa said an investigation
was continuing on Frederick M
Kissinger, a Maryland accountant
who accompanied Jones and Crow
ley to Tokyo May 5 to buy an oil
tanker.
From the first Crowley has de
nied having anything to do with
Jones death. At the police sta
tion he refused to answer report
ers' questions and said, "Tho
whole thing is fantastic."
Kissinger said, I think tne po
lice have made a very gross mis
take. They do not know what hap
pened.
Shirakawa said he will refer the
case to the office of the Tokyo
prosecutor for consideration of
formal charges. Japanese proce
dure gives police until Friday
morning to do this. The prosecutor
then can hold Crowley for
20 days without charge while com
pleting an investigation.
Economic
Upturn Seen
By President
NEW YORK on-President Ei
senhower told the nation last night
that an economic upturn is In the
making. . :
He foresaw a future bursting
with vitality and promise.
"No single person and no sin
gle group, however wise, can
name the day or the week when
the upturn will begin," the Presi
dent said.
The slump is not over by any
means, he said. He added, how
ever, that reports from the nation
strongly indicate that the reces
sion is slowing down.
Once again he promised that de
cisions on tax cut proposals will
be made soon.
He put so much (tress on the
dangers in inflation and mounting
deficits that he appeared to rule
out the likelihood of White House
support for a general cut in fed
eral income taxes.
James C. Hagcrty, his press
secretary, told newsmen In re
sponse to questions that the Pres
ident's remarks' about an early
decision on taxes should not be
interpreted as meaning necessar
ily that the administratfin wi'L.ad-
vocate a cut. '
The President addressed 2,600
business leaders at an economic
mobilization conference called by
the American Management Assn.
He was introduced at the con
ference dinner by Vice President
Nixon.
The vice president told the busi
ness executives at an afternoon
session that political pressure for
an emergency tax cut directed
solely at benefiting consumers
should be resisted. .
Mail Rate Hike
Seen Likely
By July First
WASHINGTON lu-The cost of
mailing a letter appeared likely
today to rise to 4 cents July 1.
Quick passage was predicted as
the Senate prepared to take up a
compromise bill to raise postal
rates and pay. House passage.
possibly tomorrow, would send the
measure on to the White House.
Higher rates for first-class mail
4 cents for letters. 7 cents for
air mail and 3 cents for postcards
would become effective July 1
it f resident Lisenhower signs the
bill before the end of May. Grad
uated increases in rates tor other
types of mail also are provided.
The bill also would boost the
pay of 500,000 postal workers as
of last Jan. 1 one of several
features which had led to some
predictions Eisenhower might
veto the bill. Raises would range
(rom 7'i to 10 per cent.
A Republican senator reported
today that Postmaster General
Summerfield strongly endorsed
the measure at a White House
conference of GOP leaders Mon
day. The senator, asking that his
name not be used, saw this as a
strong indication Eisenhower
would sign .the bill.
Senate staff experts said the
added revenue from rate in
creases in the bill now is figured
at 575 million dollars "annually at
full effect instead of the 530
million announced when the con
ferees completed their work last
Wednesday.
They said also the pay raises
for the 500,000 postal employes
would total about 265 million do
lars a year instead of the 257
million figured last week.
However, the pay boost
retroactive to Jan. 1 so that the
total cost in the first full year of
operation is estimated at about
390 million.
fell
Ll 1 in Safe E
Mrs. Davis'
Toes Removed
KEITH O'HAIR
LLOYD DiLAP
Write-In Vote Successful
For Two, Canvass Reveals
An official canvas of the bal
lots cast in last week's primary
election revealed Tuesday that
both Lloyd DeLap and Keith
O'Hair had emerged as success
ful write-in candidates.
DeLap was a belated write-in
candidate for the post of coun
ty treasurer on the Democratic
slate while O'Hair was not an
Soviet Bloc
Holds Meet
MOSCOW ifi-The leaders of the
Soviet bloc are gathering in Mos
cow for their first summit confer
ence in seven months.
Communist party chiefs of all
the Warsaw Pact nations and their
Asian Communist allies began a
meeting of the Council of Mutual
Economic Assistance yesterday.
. Chiefs of government, foreign
ministers and defense ministers
meet Saturday as the Political
Consultative Committee of the
Warsaw Pact, the Kremlin's
counterpart of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization.
A brief announcement in Izves-
tia, the Soviet government organ,
did not give the purpose of the
meetings. But it was assumed the
whole range of political, military
and economic relations within the
Communist bloc and between the
bloc and the West is on the
agenda.
Solidarity among the Communist
nations and relations with Yugo
slavia are expected to be a major
item in view of the recent Krem
lin-led denunciation of President
Tito's regime for continuing its
independent course.
Warsaw Pact members are the
Soviet Union, Poland, East Ger
many, Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
Romania, Bulgaria and Albania.
The Economic Council meetings
are being attended also by Com
mumst leaders of Red China.
North Korea. North Viet Nam and
Mongolia. The Asian delegates
also may a'.iend tho Political torn
mittee's meeting, although this
was not specified. -
Tito reportedly sent Moscow a
letter last weekend saying Yugo
slavia will not join the Soviet
bloc and warning that further at
tacks on Belgrade can damage
Soviet prestige.
Lebanon To
Receive Tanks
WASHINGTON Wl The United
States is assembling a shipment
of light tanks for delivery to Leb
anon this week.
Officials said the tanks are be
ing collected from stocks in Ger
many and will be sent to Lebanon
by ship.
The tanks are destined lor tne
pro-Western regime of President
Camille Chamoun in his govern
ment's efforts to put down rebel
lious attackers.
They were requested by Leban
on along with police-type equip
ment like gas masks and tear gas
grar.
Officials said Chamoun's gov
ernment appears to be making
progress in its efforts to maintain
order in Lebanon. Secretary of
State Dulles said Chamoun s com
ulaint of interference by the
United Arab Republic appeared to
be based on solid evidence.
The United States sent 18 huge
C124 transport airplanes to Frank
furt. Germany, last baturaay.
The officials said these big
Globemasters, capable of carrying
200 persons or 35 tons, were not
for use in airlifting tanks to
Lebanon, but could be used to
evacuate Americans from either
Lebanon or Algeria if the need
should arise.
Washington is closely watching
the virtual insurrection in Algeria
by French military leaders who
took over control and called for a
French government ncaded by
Gen. Charles de Gaulle.
JOHN DAY, Ore. (Jfi Mrs.
Bruce Davis underwent surgery
Wednesday ' for removal of the
toes of her right foot, frozen
Wnonth ago as the lay in mountain
snows ior tnree oays oesiae a
wrecked plane.
A week ago her left foot was
amputated.
Mrs. Davis. 35, is the wife of
a Fresno, Calif., orchestra leader
When their plane, which he was
flying, crashed in clouds .April 21
he set out for help. After a three
day and night ordeal he reached
a ranch house and hours later an
Air Force helicopter found the
plane wreckage and picked up his
wife.
Her pelvis was fractured and
her feet were frozen.
Dr. Martha van der Vlugt,
whose husband,Dr. Jerry van der
Vlugt, handled the surgery, said
that Mrs. Davis was, as she had
been right along, "in real good
spirits."
Davis, who suffered rib frac
tures in the crash and frostbitten
feet on his hike, continues at the
hospital principally to be near his
wife.
He has been planning a hospital
benefit program to be held when
both he and his wife have returned
to good health. He said it was to
repay the people of John Day for
their friendliness and help.
Grange Makes
Price Study
WASHINGTON OB The Na
tional Grange said Wednesday
farmers have gotten comparative
ly little in the increase in retail
food prices.
It said a study of price reports
show that the great bulk of the
increase in food prices during the
past 10 years has been in costs of
labor employed in the transporta
tion, processing and distribution of
farm and food products. It said
that federal income taxes have
gone up more than farm prices.
The grange said that during
1957, the farm value of a desig
nated quantity of food referred to1
by the Agricultural department as
the market basket increased $15,
but that the cost to the consumer
had increased $31. . .
It said that In the case of bakery
and cereal - products) the farm
value moved up 40 cents last year
but that the consumer cost ad
vanced $5.85. In the case of milk,
it said, producer prices have gone
down but consumer prices have
risen.
"The facts are that ever-increasing
costs of moving food from the
farm through the supermarket or
corner grocery have pushed gro
cery bills to new highs," the
grange said, adding in a state
ment: i
"Even so, the average return
for an hour of work bought more
food during 1957 than ever before.
The amount of working time re
quired to buy a pound of meat in
1957 was 19 minutes, compared to
30 minutes 10' years earlier."
Food prices were said to be 15
per cent higher than the 1947-49
average, compared with 20 per
cent for all consumer goods combined.
avowed candidate but drew enough
write-in votes for county coroner
to put him on the November ballot
DeLap was opposed most closely
by Eva Cook for the Democratic
nominee as treasurer. Mrs. Cook
polled 4,234 votes to secure the Re
publican nomination, and had she
polled more write-in votes than
DeLap on the Democratic ticket,
she would have been the only can
didate for the, office in November.
However, DeLap had 419 write-
in votes as against only 310 for
Mrs. Cook on the Democratic bal
lot, and the two candidates will
vie for the county post In No
vember.
Dr. J. Martin Adams swept the
Democratic nomination for coun
ty coroner, the post he now holds
by appointment, and camo with
in nine votes of gaining the nom
nation on the Republican ballot
by write-in.
However, although he was not
an expressed candidate for the
post, Keith O'Hair polled 181
write-in votes to gain the Repub
lican nod for county coroner, and
will oppose Dr. Adams in the
fall.
With the exception of changing
the vote totals slightly, the offi
cial canvas of the votes failed to
change any of -the election re
sults, according to County Clerk
Charlie DeLap.
NY Cracks Down
On Litterbugs
NEW YORK iiP-The City Sani
lation Department is cracking
down hard on litterbugs.
After a five-week educational
campaign, 1,300 sanitation patrol
men took to Uie streets yesterday
and handed out 892 summonses
within 5'i hours.
The biggest batch 220 went to
janitors and property owners ac
cu.ed of having improper or in
sufficient receptacles for reluse.
Among the 892 tagged was post
al clerk Erwin Ferber. As he
watched a store owner argue with
a patrolman over a summons.
I'erber chewixi idly on a bit of a
matchbook cover.
He shook his head sadly at the
storekeeper s fate and the bit of
paper fell to the sidewalk. Before
the bit hit, Ferber was given a
summons.
Bird Snarls
City Traffic
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UP) -
Whatever it was. it tied up traf
fic on a busy, four-lane boulevard
and it bit a policeman.
"I was coming up Wilkinson and
this bird was in the middle of the
road flopping aroun.1," said Coun
ty Policeman Stan Noel. "I turned
around and stopped because peo
ple were having to drive around
it and I was afraid there would
be a wreck."
Noel said he tried to push the
bird out of the road with his foot
and was bitten on the leg for his
pains. He finally got it off the
road and covered it with a blank
i:t.
"When I first saw it, I thought
it was a duck." said Noel. "When
I turned around it looked like a
goose. It was about the size of
pelican but it's got a long, pointed
bill and webbed feet. It sounded
like a crane and had real beady
eyes."
The county dog truck, alerted to
pick up "a vicious, pelican," look
the bird to the children's nature
museum where an attendant iden
tified it as a loon.
YeHnq Writer Way Id
Like To Be Banker
COLUMBUS. Ohio iP In
composition titled, "What I Would
Like to Be Right Now," read by
School Supt. Harold H. Eibling at
a Columbus school board meeting
a 9-year-old wrote:
"I would like to be a father of
two children and be president of
bank. Because I like kids and
banks. To be a president of
bank you have to have i good
record, and no time in the pen
i'ou would have to go to a banker
:ollege (sic) and to be a lather
il l natural and easy.!'
NEW CAR SALES
"You Auto Buy Now" car
ales Tuesday exceeded the
comparable day a month ago
but did not come up to the rec
ord of last year. The three day's
ales of new cars to date re
ported by members of the
Klamath Automobile Dealers As.
soclatlon show cumulative In
creases of 117 over April and
18 per cent over May 1957, for
the same days.
Safety Probe
Set By Solons
WASHINGTON W - Congress,
reacting swiftly to the latest aerial
collision of a military plane and
a civilian airliner, plans to open
two investigations Thursday into
air safety.
Subcommittees In both the Sen
ate and House scheduled hearings
Tuesday a short time after a
Maryland National Guard jet and
a Capital Airlines plane collided
over the Potomac ' River Valley
near Brunswick, Md., killing 12
persons.
Announcing hearing plans,
Chairman Mike Monroney (D-
Okla), of a Senate Aviation sub
committee, said the Brunswick
crash "points up again with tragic
clarity the urgency of a single con
Irol of our space."
Declaring both military and
civilian planes should come under
one direction, Monroney said:
"We can no longer await Ihe
snail-pace consolidation of the
various air traffic control pat
terns. The present dangerous situ
ation requires immediate correc
tive legislation."
Monroney said his group also
will investigate the April 21 colli
sion near Las Vegas, Nev of a
military jet and a United Airliner
that killed 49 persons.
French Open
Drive To Win
Back Algeria
PARIS uT) Premier Pierr
Pflimlin today held a new leas
on political life to try to solve
the dangerous crisis brought on
by military-rightist power seizure
in Algeria.
He promised to take all stepi
to restore the Paris regime's au
thority over the insurgent French
in North Africa.
Gen. Charles de Gaulle stiU
stood in the wings awaiting lha
call which the National Assembly
didn't givo him yesterday. Th
Assembly's smashing 475-100 vote
continuing the government'
emergency powers in revolt-torn
Algeria appeared to be a deliber-
ale rebulf to the world war 11
hero's bid for power.
Had the Assembly wanted to
return the wartime resistance
leader to office, it could have
paved the way by voting against
Pflimlin.
Instead the Premier got support
from virtually all elements in tht
Assembly except the extreme
right. It was one of the biggest
majorities ever won by a postwar
French premier, apparently dm
to the deputies' fear; of Da
Gaulle's olfnr to head a strong
man government.
Priimlin told the Assembly ha
would leave day-to-day control of
Algerian affairs in the hands o(
Gen. Raoul Salan, amy com
mandcr in the North African ter
ritory. The government put Salan
in full charge after an Algiers
mob of French settlers and sol
diers a week ago defied the Paris
appointed civil officials- and de
manded' De Gaulle take over the
government.
Pflimlin said Salan had at times
acted with government approval
and at times under the pressure
of events. He said the military
chiefs in Algeria had "fulfilled the
need to safeguard national unity,
public order and republican legal
ity."
The Premier added that his gov
ernment would "take all steps in
the coming days to assure the
complete return to legality" a
return to Paris control in Algeria.
He did not indicate how he
might achieve this.
Salan himself continued to pact
fy the Algiers mob with pro-De
Gaulle sentiments. Addressing a
rally of French settlers and mili
tary tnen in Algiers now a daily
occurrence he hailed-the general
as an inspiring leader whose
words "have raised in your hearts
an immense hope of grandeur and
national unity."
Red Radio Tells
Orb's Progress
LONDON W Moscow radio to
day said the carrier rocket of
Sputnik III is now leading the ar
tificial satellite by two tenths of an
orbit as they whirl around the
earth.
This means that the rocket.
which had less initial velocity than
the Sputnik, is spiraling in toward
the earth and will be destroyed
by friction with the atmosphere
while the satellite is still aloft.
The broadcast said both objects
completed their 77th circuits of
the earth this morning.
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity: Variable high clouds and
a few Isolated afternoon and eve
ning thundershowers through
Thursday. High 75-82; low Wednes
day night 44-50.
High yesterday ...7
Low last night ...47
Prcclp. last 24 hours
Since Oct. 1 .I4.8e
Same period last year H..14.8t
Normal for period 11.14
i tsfl ! t-'''y"';-!tI!IttIt"VXv"A , .
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TWO OUTSTANDING girl graduates of the 1958 senior class of Klamath Union High
School were preiented with $ 1 00 scholarships by the Roosevelt PTA at a meeting in
the school Tuesday. Both girls, who have made excellent scholastic records during their
high school years and in addition have taken part in numerous extra currlcular ac
tivities, will major In elementary education, Virginia Walkley, left, at the University
of Oregon, and JoAnn Geiis, right, at Oregon College of Education, Monmouth, Cen
ter it Mrs. Paul Dollar, teacher member of the Roosevelt PTA Scholarship Committee.
Other member, of the committee include Mrs. Neil Black, parent member, end Gerald
Clement, school principal. y