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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1958)
PAGE 2 A Sonja Heme Preparing For turopean TV Spectacular HERALD ANT) NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON FRIDAY. JUNE 8, 195S HOLLYWOOD (AP) You'd think that Sonja Henie would want io nang up her skates forever. Yet she'f ATI thp ina aoain T fact, she has been up at 6 In the morning to skim over the rink at the Pan Pacific Auditorium for three hours. "It was the only time I could get tne ice, she explained. The auditorium was on a 24-h our achedule, with one Ice show ap pearing there and two others re hearsing. Why all this activity on Sonja's part? She's leaving for Europe to film a 90-minute TV spectacular that might be 'the start of a series. "We planned to make the first one in Paris," she said. "But the political situation is so upset that we changed it to London. I think it's better location anyway. Bob Hope just made a picture about Paris and there have been many others." Sonja's plan Is to go to Brus sels. where slip has nn Inn .km,, anDpannff at thp Wnr H't r She'll rehearse the musical num bers there, then transport the company to London to film them. AfterwariiK thp ctnrv nar nf tha spec win oe snot around London If the show is a success, we'll do others in various other big cities of the world, she said "Th films Uill ha mena in nnln.- so there is the possibility of show ing mem in theaters too. " When r marvplpH at her oarlu. I morning practice sessions, she re- piiea that tney re not unusual with ner. I nlwavs lal-p at load turn months to get into shape for an appearance, sne said. "I would not appear if I wasn't in top con dition. The public expects to see you at your best, and I won t dis appoint tnem. Negro Professor Ends Try To tnter All White School Press staffer Douglas Starr and two staff members of the Jack son tMiss) Daily News were the only newsmen to contact Negro Prof. Clennon King after he was Jailed for trying to enter the all white University of Mississippi. They managed to enter the build ing undetected and taped an in terview. Khni-llv aftarmarn1.. at..!,. police barred anyone from seeing Aing. wno tried to become the first Negro to enter a white school in Mississippi. By DOUGLAS STARR JACKSON, Miss (AP) Negro Prof. Clennon Kins' parnpri on ien. lated jail cell today for his cfforls io cross the state s rigid racial lines. He said his attempt to en ter the University of Mississippi i eiiuea. The 37-year-old former faculty memoer oi tne all-Negro Alcorn A&M (Miss.) College was whisked way oy state nignway patrolmen yesterday when he tried to enter the summer session at the uni versity. : His whereabouts were top secret GOOD! jp5i? Until latp last, nioht Tho Seen.! ated Press learned he was being held in a tinv roll nn lha inn rina.. oi me state nighway patrol head quarters nere ana held an exclu sive tape-recorded interview. I np inlprvipur nama nnl .. hour before the highway patrol tnrew a cordon oi troopers around the building and refused anyone access IO tne tan nwtra n.hnrn King. "I just want to get out of here," Kin0 xairf in thp intapi.iatu I-... recorded hv Nnrman Rarncnaa af lira jaexson uauy News. "I don't knnw what lhi' Ha ine to do." Kins tnlH hi Inla.. I viewers. "I would like to get out. I wouldn't bother it any more. I would leave it alone." But state anlhnritips ' mau nat leave King alone. They' indicated he would he evami narl hu nhu. sicians. Chancery Clerk J.B. How ell of Oxford, who filed a lunacy warrant against King, said, "If thCV conclude his minrl is a lillln off, they will send him to Whit field (state hosDital) for nsvnhi. alric examination." Kins Wan takpn frnm a lina af Students Waiting in rpnielar far summer school at the University at Oxford and was told "that if I came back on the campus I would be arrested." KinC said linivprsitv rnaiclrnv Robert Ellis told him the situa- tinn nn rnniclarinn , " ia'nais naa jual about hopeless." He said he asked that his application forms be re turned, hilt Wflft rpfllcprl ann aaifl he wanted to return to' the wait-i ing line. "When I sought to leave the room thev forced me nut nnnth-r entrance," King continued. He said he was carried to a waltinc car. DENNIS THE MENACE" (Record Can't Be Hit If It Does Not Have Potential Operator ? Listen. I want ya to say 'muo' to a iittie kip who's Neve teen on the tele phone before I' Hurok Seeks More Cultura Exchanges With Russians By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (APlKnl Hnrnfc who qualifies as the John Foster uuues ot snow biz, came to town nllimmnff fnr mnra miltiiral av change with the Soviet Union. The more we exchange artists with the Communists, the better Odah'A BEAUTY SALON TOWN & COUNTRY Call TU 2-3(71 or drop I. E. ningt by appeintmint ... Al ways the bast. ' I New 1958 GENERAL ELECTRIC SWIVEL-TOP CUUM CLEANER I I "177 i.-.m., ,kw I ,,,.U'"-ACT,N 1 1 winkw, J CltANINO UNIT . . H Om teal an rati .nrf rWi j "W ' " I 49" - ij- - (j 0INe1- "LICTIMC J.W Floor Polisher 49" APPLIANCE CO. 1001 Main Phone TU 4-818 j Jail Picketed By Shipmate HONOLULU (AP) A lw YnrKPr whnce hinmatas era in jail because they tried to sail into the mid-Panifip nilPlpar tad vnna picketed the federal courthouse yesterday. .lamp. Pprlf 4! haoan hi nialr eting after three crewmen of the ketch finlripn Rule warn iailnaf nn 60-day terms for trying to sail to Eniwetok Wednesday in defiance nf A fpdpral pmtrt nriiar Pnaai Guardsmen stopped the ketch, as iney aia May l on tne crews first attempt to reacn tniwetok. Peck carried nlararHe in oanh 'hand, reading "Let the Golden Rule sail" and "Stop the bomb test U. S.. Rritain nnri ftnecia " Attempts to sail the ketch into the lAtomic Energy Commission's test area are a protest against nuclear weapons. Peck was joined in picketing by pen norris, a Quaker and presid ing ouicer ot tne f riends organ ization in Honolulu. The Golden Rule's substitute SKIDDPr Ann livn Pravman nlaarl. cd guilty to charges of criminal CnntPmnt nt (pHpral aniirl lp,,iaa to sail Wednesday despite a court uruer to tne contrary, feck also pleaded guilty but his jail sen tence WAS KiKnPnHnH and ha woe placed on a year's probation. The others are William Hunt ington, 51, St. James, N.Y., the substitute skinner- Ciri nn Khni. wood, 28. Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and George Willoughby, 43, Black wood Terrace, N.J. The (.Olden Rlllp' fire cL-innar- Athprt Smith Rianlniu K-J r-n Cob, Conn., was jailed Wednesday ) oeiore tney tried to sail lor voic inB intent tn rie(V the rniirl nritnr He had been given a suspended sentence alter taking the Golden Rule to sea May 1. Bibelnw. Hnnlinntnn anrl Wil loughby are Quakers. Sherwood is a metnomst wno teaches at Quaker school in PnitchLraancia Fed ral Judge Jon Wiig said he was suspending Peck's sentence because it was the defendant first appearance in his court Pprlf- whn rlacprihac himcolr a nonrelicious narifkt IninaH i crew last week. He lives in New lork city. our chances for nearp " caM tha bullet-shaped impresario. "The success of the cultural exchange proves that John Smith and Ivan 30eanOVlcn . arm intpraclarl friendship." Hurok is the No. 1 man in the new program. At present, he SOOnSOrine the IT. S tnnr nt tha sensational Moiseyev dance troupe. He has sent or is sending nis own artists to tne soviet Un ion for tours such names as Mar ian Anderson, Jan Peerce. Leon ard Warren. Isaac Slarn Rnharta v eters and Nathan Milstein. "The reCPntinn nf nnr narrnam ers there is just as sensational as tne reaction to the Moiseyev danc ers." Hurok declared. "It is i great thine for both rnuntrlp- " There can be no doubt of the success of th,e Moiseyev -com pany. It will play to a half-mil-lion customers in an-ll-week tour ana mere is no evidence of an empty seat at any performance. Hurok has more Russian de- liehtS UD his vnlliminnnc claatra On Nov. 5. hp hrinrc lha RnrinnL-a company of 65 women dancers to .ew lorits uroaflway Theater. He is also importing a noted pian ist, violinist and lieder singer and next spring will see the invasion of the great Bolshoi Ballet. Russian-born Hurok, who ar rived at Ellis Island in 1906 with a 11 SO slake hae innrnavaH In hie native land four times in thp nacl year to book talent. With his fine eye for potential attractions can spot stars that have underestimated. he the Soviets Editor's Note The author of this column is star nf th "ninV Clark Show" and hosts "Ameri can Bandstand on the ABC tel evision network. By DICK CLARK NEW YORK (APlTaka liaa round, shiny, black records. Ten weeks from now one will ha iha biggest hit in America; the other win ne just a saa memory for the artist who made it. HOW dO VOU tell Which whir-h? A musical Shnw kaanmaa Lnnuia lor tne quality of music it plays; if you can spot hit material far enough in advanra wtaallv ha. fore release and then "give' it a ride, your audience comes to ex pect good records of you. and ies' grows. Girls Tour East Reich SAC CITY. Inwa (4Plnaa1 Schultz, lumber firm manager, and hi Wifp U-ill ha alaa1 .ha their daughter Mary, 21, comes oacK to Iowa Irom her sojourn in Europe. ADDarentlv Mk Sahiili?- hae been giving her parents iitters With letters ahnilt hilnhhiliinn through Communist - dominated countries. The Climay Pamo vaeiarrtav wnen tne Darents learned frnm an Associated Press dispatch that MarV And twn nlhap imariaaa college girls had thumbed their way through Eastern Germany to Berlin. "It RCarac tha luila nut nf rnn ' said Schultz but he was happy to learn that they were well treated and enjoyed their venture. Mk Sfhnll7 - anH nna nt tha girls, Joan Whitehead, 20, of Chi cago, are exchange students the University of Vienna Rllt VAii pan't malra a hit niillT laarn what records to Watch of a tune that doesn't have the! I'm hmlrv annuod tn nnprate Out potential; all you can do is bring of one of the "nippiest" areas of it before a bigger audience and the country. Among the most sen make more people dislike it. AndUjtive barometers for new records cnnllina inami.l l.l...... I. . .... m: rt I..-.! full-time job. Detroit. Pi'ttsbureh and Boston: Aside from vour own. fallible these and a few more cities will intuition, you have three main nick up a future hit faster than sources for tins on future hits anv other Dart of the United mail, personal contact and, most States. In each of them I have lmDortant of all. hnns if mavlnafs in thp music business, ai sppm unusual fnr a natu-nrlr nap. lira tallr almost riailv hv nhone. former tO DlaV lOCal record h0D.sl Tha third maiar cnnrra fnr fll in and around Philadpinhia. at .. ku. i a., mo;i Tha tarvav. scale or gratis. ors tell me we get a greater nut I ri Wltlinolv nav nut mv nuin money to go on running these af- lairs lor teen-agers, ana not as a matter nf rharitv pilhar fav I nPVPr PPt cn smile that T ctnn doing hops: that's where I find out wnai records are going io ao wnat. We usually arrano-a fnr tha Cftn tO l.lOfl tPPa-APPrc uhn will ha at. tenaing to submit requests in ad vance. A big chunk of these re quests will always be for the cur rent hlfs Rllt If T cnat a eivahla minority requesting a brand new icuuru, one tnai s only oeen Dlaved on the air nnpe nr turina T knnW I'm nn tn cnmalhina n,,r ing the dance, too, I get a chance to cnat wun tne youngsters, and volume of fan mail that is, no, contest mail than any other show on the air; we play to an enthu. siastic and highly vocal audience. Mail ic psneriallv vahtahla t cnnllinp- rpEfinnal hits. Srnialimu a small outfit will cut a disc for, say, just tne ooutneasi area. The kids there will tell me about it, and if enough of them are av! cited about the same record, I'll send for a copy ana may give it a try on the show. From then on, ia'e tin tn Ihp BiiHtpnpa Tn L: il a a w , music business, it's always up ti the audience. H I f 'fj W WILY FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! i','irni:iaiiii;u''iiHi:i;iiinr.,i-.i.ii- .i..-iih Apeman Epics On Wide View HOLLYWOOD (API "Ma zan, you Jane." Almost M vpare actn thnca naJ. launcnea one ot Hollywood class ic love affairs. AnH if vnn Han't I think treetop living is here to stay, check Mr. Ape Man's next epic: its going to be in Cinema. scope. It Will hp Mn 39 nnminn- in fha atUOth annivPrSarV vaar nf tha aa. framl-i.. J 11 r: . r ni I j a n . i ' "u "IB "r51 cnance ior rar- n. i- j c .au iu awing urancn to Drancn The third is Susan Sloman, 19, of around a wide screen ban Francisco. Since 1918 thp pvnaris a tha film versions of Edgar Rice Bur roughs' famous characters have grossed more than half a billion dollars. Bootlegged Hollywood Tarzan filrPa- ara favnritae urith tha C I viets. And just as Westerns are popular in tne American West, Hollywood's jungle films rate high with African movie-goers. In all thprp hava hppn 11 Tap. zans, 19 Janes and numerous Boys Itheir son). Like Little Omhan Annie, the characters never age. Record - holders as a Tarzan team were Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen O'Sullivan six films from 1932 to 1942. Wei ssmnl. I . i ler did half a dozen more epi sodes with three other Janes Nancy Kelly. Frances Gifford and crenaa Joyce. The nrespnt anp man tc flnr. aon acott. tve Brent is Mrs. Tar zan in Sol Lesser Productions' next film, thp wiHp.snrnan inh The title suggests it'll be a close ining us jarzans ngnt tor Life." But chances are he'll make it. Ihoae. "ROCKPRCTty BABY" """" If IDS alVbankwifr. Just The Facts: Dragnetter To Wed HOLLYWOOD (AP) .lack Webb plans to - make actress Jackie Loughery a June bride. .The movie and television actor producer said that he and the for mer beauty queen will be mar ried later this month. Webb was formerly wpd tn singer-actress Julie London and actress Dorothy Towne. Miss Lnuehprv. ATlss IT S A in the 1953 Miss Universe contest, recently divorced sincpr finv Mitchell. ELECTED - TnnrwjTn (APiTha p.v rip .lnhn MaUah nf Tnpnntn hae haan uv.... "a- utui unanimously elected moderator of the Presbyterian church in Can ada at Ihp phitrrh'e Jtdth aanapal assembly. The 71-year-old clergy man succeeds the Rt. Rev. A. D. MacKinnon, of Narrows, N. S. ind MOUT BEE wrtti FAY WRAY M.im mm,. fite.r ftw At: MJJ tAlo 6061 GMMT 0mWy C-tUrhi WILUM. BETMOLDS : ANDRX MARTIN JEFFREY STONE JSkmra Af v:sv way'- .- TWO NEW HITSf yn n q CHECKPOINT 1AtW . , OOn.1 VIRSOtS STANLSV SAKOI IN EASTMAN COLOR ANTHONY STEEL DONALD SDiDEN ANNA MARIA SANDRI Black TfefJT - utt Nomi t. TltKhTCBLOf VtSTAVlSMM POORS OPEN :30 p aa Continuous Shows Saturday & Sunday From 12:45 P.M. Railroad Cuts Pullman Fares KANSAS CITY (APlThn Kan. sas City Southprn RattrnaH is put. tins fares aeain this (imp fnp thn uenciu ot ruuniRn passengers. Mnst nthpr railrnarlc haia oil- en up on passenger business. They have discontinued and combined trains or abandoned service on most branches and even on main lines. Ruses and airplanes have taken much of the business. "Our Dassencer operations are important to us." said W. N. Der amus. the peppery 70-year-old who has been hpad nf thp Kansas City Southern since 1940. He once saia ne nopea to get coach fares down to a cent a mile. The new fare deal will permit passengers to use Pullmans on regular coach tickets. Kstimated saving: 29 per cent. On the .Snl-milp run fpnm Kan. sas City to Shreveport. La., the present tirst-ciass round-trip tic kel for Pullman travel is U8.95 I ne round - triD rnarh fara is H7.85. Pullman passengers still must pay the Pullman Co. space charg- C.H. Taylor, the railroad's H. vertisins manaepr saiH ha ha. lieves the Kansas City Southern is the first to olfer the saving to Pullman passengers over its en tire system. The Kansas City Southern was the first railmaH In inlrnn,.aa Ik. .. wuaia family fare plan now used by P-v rl r I M I 1 ISafurdav A$iinrl.u TA ! T lT I 1 I SUNDAY! ' JflJ. , -from - $mr T0 mmSA TEXAS" . I Shvuunq II I 'yx - DionVr! It I X Don Murroy fj I A"' , m NEVER HAS THE SCREEN THRUST SO OEEPU INTO THE CUTS WARI Ends Saturday! I iniy x-sSaa ESI jyf -jigy fa.TPK tTdos ntSEb oca -. tMIOtlllSR En .77 W Sicud& Sunday RawAndRouah ASToaay' Dollar Whiskey. war! - ENDS SATURDAY - "MACABRE" and HELLS FIVE HOURS" s- few Billion- lonsfigs fmrntJ) - .ctm mcouis most railroads.