HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
FRIDAY, JUNE IS, 1953
PACE 2 A
On The Record
KLAMATH FALI.i
BIRTHS
(.IRLl
HOSMAN Born to Mr. and Mrt
Lloyd Hoiman June II In KUmith
Valley Hotpiul a firl weighing 8 lhi
' eu
MrCILVRAY Bom t Mr. end Mrt
tverett McGllvray Junt 12 In Klam-
tth Valley Hospital fir! weighing
lb., ft ou.
BOY!
BILLINGS Born to Mr. and Mn.
William Billings June 12 In Klamath
Valley HoapiuT boy weighing 7 Iba..
14 om.
HEATON Born 1o Mr. and Mn.
ponnte Heainn June 12 In Klamath
Valley HotpiUl boy weighing 7 lb.,
14 's oca.
ISM ROI NDI P
GlrU 211 Boyi 228
KLAMATH FAI,I.
MARBIAf.C LULVSfc
Jlmmie M Thompon, 25. and Wan-j
4a Sue Edwards, lfl. I
Richard Paul Sumner, 3C, and Mir-j
U Rae Cochrane. IT I
Thomas Richard Ferrell, 19, and I
Barbara Marie Pyle. 17. I
Robert George Valentine, 27, and
Janice La Croix. 17.
Harvey Franklin Collins, 25, and
Lois Ruth Rogers. 27.
George R. Burrell, 23, and Averil
Love Garrlolt. 20. I
Reed Hamilton Cutter, 20, and Ma-!
titda Ann Pedersen. 21.
KLAMATH TOL'NTV . ,
DIVORCER
Opal O, Robinton va. Lou it L. Rob
Inson. seeks divorce.
Ethel Palfrey vt. Jajntt Virgil Pal
frey, teeks divorce.
Marie Evelyn Trapp vs. Won Trapp.
eeka divorce.
Teachers See
Political In
PORTLAND (API The Oregon
Education Assn. planned to file
Kriday with the secretary of state
initiative petitions providing for a
vote on allowing teachers to serve
as slate legislators.
The association, an organization
of school administrators and
teachers, said Thursday the peti
tions have some tiO.OOO voters'
signatures more than enough to
put the proposed constitutional
amendment on the November
election ballot, if the signatures
are valid.
The OKA started the campaign
alter the state Supreme Court
held that Thomas Monagahan, a
Milwaukie Democratic House
member, could not be both a
teacher and a legislator.
The court ruling was that a
teacher was Ineligible for the Leg
islature because he is under su
pervision of the state executive
branch.
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5IRCC0RIC NINA ' MARTHA JUDITH VINCENT
HARDWOE-rOCH -5COTT ANDERSON PRICE
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CantlNMM SWi Saturday
M laatfay from 1:00
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Aifll3j SATURDAY!
TThQPROR OF theTHIHSthatAx
COULDN'T
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Pt!l MIUSSA
CUSHING STRIBUNG
j WtlLMM ft IV NOLO ANDKA MARTIN
cS&EA&5 SUNDAY!
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shattering truths IlLCS I
E X P O S E D I 1
HIGH
SCHOOL
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RUSS TAMBLYN JAN STERLING
JOHN DREW BARRYMORE
MAMIE VAN DOREN JERRY LEE LEWIS RAY ANTHONY
UACKIE COOGAN CHARLES CHAPLIN. JR. DIANE JERGENS 15W
The Musical Treat
With That foot
STOMPIN' beati
. NIUOtNl l(SI DWFTING Johnny Mlo. Uotu ImiTta NtJ
rnWairtr-fT,... . HIT
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
'I'll MUR HAVE CHILDREN! tfcXMJME? tfEYfR!
DKTB01T (AP An army of
20,01)0 minor union officials has
become a vital factor in the Unit
ed Auto Workers' fight to win
new contract demands from the
automotive Big Three.
They are the union shop stew
ards and plant committeemen
now working under unusual con
ations to handle the problems ol
nearly half a million General Mo
tors, Chrysler and Ford UAW
workers during their current no-
contract period. '
The stewards and committee
men figured prominently in the
UAW strategy when the union s
contracts with the Big Three ran
out about two weeks ago. Since
then, for the first time in over
17 years, the auto plants have
been operating without a contract.
GM, Chrysler, f ord ana tne
union all said when the contracts
expired that they would do their
best to keep the plants operating
normally while negotiators tried
to aeree on a new pact.
It s nearly impossible to tind
anyone who sees chance of agree
Radio Stations Starting
To Editorialize Scripts
By JOHN DALY
NEW YORK (API-Increasing
ly, V. S. radio and television
broadcasters are being urged to
editorialize.
The right of stations to present
editorial stands was affirmed 10
years ago, but only recently has
the issue come to the lore.
A series of statements by in
dustry leaders, culminating in an
address hy the chairman of the
Kederal Communications Commis
sion to the National Assn. of
Broadcasters last April, has urged
license holders to make increased
use of the right to editorialize.
Chairman Docrfer pointedly re
marked that, having fought and
won the battle for the right to
editorialize, the broadcasters have
failed to follow up this conquest
at least to the extent expected
by the commission.
Sentence Due
In Shooting
MARTINEZ, (UPI) Paul K.
Mercer, (il, Antinch sheet metal
worker, faced a possible death
sentence alter pleading guilty to
the first degree murder nt his
foreman in Pittsburg March 6.
The victim was William F. Jack
son, 53, Orinda. Both men worked
at the Columbia-Geneva mill of
the U.S. Steel Co., Pittsburg. He
was shot with a .22 caliber auto
matic on the plant parking lot.
Mercer was arrested in a tavern
shortly alter the shooting with the
gun still in his possession.
Although Mercer confessed to
the shooting when arrested, he
pleaded innocent on April 17 and
a trial date was set for June 17.
But he appeared with his attorney.
Robert Collins, before Superior
Judge Norman A. Gregg Thurs
day and chanced his plea.
When he was arrested in a tav
ern, he told police he had shot
Jackson because he was disgrunt
led that others had been promot
ed over him.
The - only solid precedent we
have here is that of the press.
One thing the better American
newspapers have shown us is that
it takes an editorial staff to write
editorials. This staff may be a
young editor behind the rolltop
desk of a north Texas weekly, or
it may be a dozen elder states
men of journalism meeting around
a gleaming conference table on
the 30th floor of a New York sky
scraper. In any event, the editori
al staff worth its salt is marked
by four qualities: experience, in
telligence, courage and detach
menl.
One of the radio-TV newsmen's
prime responsibilities one which
by and large, we fulfill is lo
know what we are talking about.
A certified public accountant, a
mechanic, a real estate broker, a
Union Square haranguer for the
corporate state of vegetarianism.
is not qualified to express his omn-
ion on world events over the air
waves of the United States. A
Quincy Howe, an Edward R. Mor
row, a Hans Kalterborn is ouali-
fied, through years of experience
and study, to express such an
opinion. By extension, only expe
rienced observers of current
events are qualified to form an
institutional opinion for a news
paper, or for a radio-TV station.
An editorial, in whatever medi
um, must be a distillation of facts
leading to a conclusion: this is
the logical process in its most vi
tal form, requiring of its practi
tioners that rare gift, intelligence.
Brains, if you like. And since the
conclusion drawn hy this intelli
gence frequently flies in the face
of popular opinion in the words of
one writer, 50 million Frenchmen
can be dead wrong-rit requires as
well the equally rare gift of cour
age. Colloquially, guts.
Experience, brains, guts. These
are the qualities which our edi
torial staff must embody. They
are the qualities of the specialist,
the detached specialist with no
other responsibilities.
The station that decides to ex
ercise its right to editorialize will.
I believe, soon discover the need
for a new man. perhaps a new
department an editorial staff.
Shop Stewards Play Vital
Role In Tense Car Industry
Weather Table
By United Press International
Temperatures and rainfall for
24 hours ending at 4 a.m.
High Low Rain
Albuquerque 93 65
Atlanta 95 73
Bakersfield SO 55
Boise 60 51 .25
Boston 77 59
Brownsvillt 92 77
Chicago 64 57 .23
Denver 86 . 55
Detroit 72 62 .01
El Centre o3 69
Fairbanks 6R 51 .01
Fort Worth 97 75
Fresno 77 53
Helena 53 46
Los Angeles 76 59
Miami 85 74 .23
Minneapolis 73 56 .04
New Orleam 93 74 '
New York 82 66
Oakland 74 61
Oklahoma City 94 78
Phoenix 95 66
Pittsburgh 78 66 .05
Red Bluff 76 56
Reno 52 46 .17
Sacramento 72 54
Salt Lake City 73 45
San Francisco 67 54
Seattle 67 53
Spokane 66 46 .01
Stockton 73 52 T.
Thermal 94 66
Tucson 97 69
Washington 86 73
Meteor Piece
Found On Road ,
SWEET HOME (AP)-Pieces of
what appeared to be a recently
fallen meteor were found Thurs
day east of the town of Foster.
John McWade, an assistant fire
warden for the Linn County Fire
Patrol, came upon the rocks on
an old logging road. The largest,
2'i by 2 feet 'on top, was of white
color and appeared to have been
scorched. It was in a two-foot
crater.
McWade said the fragments
were not there when he traveled
over the read two weeks ago.
ment before August. The UAW
yesterday set in motion the ma
chinery to take strike votes among
GM, Ford and Chrysler workers
but emphasized there was no plan
for an immediate strike.
The auto companies, no-contract
operations brought up new prob
lems daily for workers and man
agemnt alike.
Typical of the union stewards
is Laymon Good of UAW local 7
which represents 4,000 UAW work
ers at Chrysler s Kercheval-Jef-
Person plant.
Under the recently expired con
tract. Good devoted practically
all his work time to handing
complaints and grievances.
Chrysler, like the other auto
companies, pays the stewards and
committeemen the rates they
would get if working on their reg
ular jobs in the auto plants.
In the no-contract period, Chry
sler and the other companies have
tightened up. At Chrysler, a union
steward now has to report to his!
regular job for the first hour of
his work day. He also has to work
it the first hour after lunch and
the last hour n the day.
Norman Matthews, director of
the UAW's Chrysler department,
charged the new company policy
was an attempt to intimidate oth
er unionists. Chrysler, denied the
charge saying that without a con
tract, it was not bound to have
union representatives in the plants
hut would do so under tightened
rules.
UAW officials said if the com
panies succeeded in cracking
down pn the stewards, the aver
age plant worker, might become
intimidated and accept possible
unreasonable work standards
Good expressed disappointment
at Chrysler's attitude. "If they
only realized it. the chief stew
ards and committeemen are very
valuable to Chrysler and the oth
er companies," he said.
He explained that on a typical
day he might handle a variety of
complaints from workers, -ranging
from protests that it was too hot
in the plant to charges that the
company had stepped up the speed
of its production lines.
The chief stewards have to be
everything from a chaplain to a
lawyer, from a nurse to a coun
selor for the several hundred
workers they represent," he said.
Good and thousands of other
chief stewards and committeemen
are back at work at regular jobs
in the plants now for the first
time in years.
"It was rough on us the first
couple of days, but we are get
ting back into the swing of things
now," he explained. Many of the
stewards had not worked a full
day in the plant for over 10 years.
SCHEDULES
Reminder
Radio and TV program
loqs for the entire week
were cqrried in Sunday's
magazine section of the
Herald and Newi. Readers
are urqed to retain this
section for reference
throughout the week.
These oroqram logs will
be carried hereafter in
the Sunday magazine
section.
(MM
BEAUTY SALON
TOWN & COUNTRY
Coll TU 2-5671 or drop in. fvo
nings by oppointmant Al
ways tho best.
FOR Fi?mme,a'
VII Maqazines
ond SOUVENIRS
BUD & CHARLOTTE'S
1004 Main
A BABY!
Pink (girl) . . . Blue (boy) . .
whatever the color, SPENCER'S
has gifts to please the most de
manding infant . . . the proud
est parent. From Baby's first
breath to his first day in school,
choose his gifts at Klamath's
only exclusive children's shop.
That's SPENCER'S, 619 Main,
TU 4-5497 . . . where Your gift
is S & H Green Stamps!
FATHER'S DAY At The
"CHAR-HOUSE"
Waitress Service At All Hours
Prime Rib of Beef, Au Jus - 2.25
Extra Large Cut 2.75
16-oz. Top Sirloin 3.65
8-oz. Top Sirloin 2,65
16-oz. New York 3.65
8-oz. New. York 2.65
16-oz. Fillet Mignon 3.85
8-oz. Fillet Mignon 2.85
Baked Virginia Ham and Fruit Sauce 1.75
Pan Fried Chicken - 1.80
Soup, Salad, Baked Potatoes
With Sour Cream and Chives or Butter
Dessert and Coffee
Th- CHAR-HOUSED DRIFTWOOD
126 So. 7th Phone TU 4-5267
HOOK IK
RKDWOOI) CITY. Calif AP
A 32-year-old mother was convict
ed of horse race bookmaking
while her fi-ycar-old daughter was
attending school.
Superior Judye Frank R. Blum
found Mrs. Kvclyn Carroll guilty
and set June 2.i for sentencing.
Police les'itied Mrs. Carroll did
a $2f0 a day bookie business over
the telephone in her apartment.
OPEN DAILY T.aaP. M
SATURDAY
r-feytonJ
fiacc
9
mm
S
Cinemascope
'tatur Tiikm: 8 05 & 11:10
Stcvdi
u wra ERNEST HEMINGOM'S
toa KUisoa Jtwnui jm "now h xt
inimsw6 ffM
rZ
Annual jtyfc Special Event!
MC
New! Just in time to highlight your summer beauty,
East Side Pharmacy holds its once-a-year '2 price
sale on famous Harriet Hubbard Ayer cosmetics!
fit)
Ayer Dry Cream
DEODORANT
and anti-perspiront
Ayer Dry Cream Deodorant contoin
Exrrolon, gives 24-hour protection
ogoinst unpleosont odor and per
ipiration. Reqular 1.00
NOW
50c
AYER LIPSTICK
All Colors - Reqular 1.00
NOW 50c
AYER SMOOTHAWAY " 250 1.25
For domry ttet. Eliminates rough, dry skin on feet, hands and
e'bows.
AYER NIGHT CREAM R" 250 1.25
Lanolin rich for dry or super sensitive skin.
AYER COOL MIST " 250 1.25
For foot comfort. Cools, refreshes, deodorijes, soothes.
AYER LIQUID LUXURIA 250 1.25
Tnple action, deep pore cleanser.
Ayer Dry
Roll-On
Deodorant
Newest, easiest-to-oppty
deodoront. Just "roll-on"
for effective 24-hour protection.
NOW
75c
Ayer Pink Clover
Bubbling Bath Oil
Regular 2.00 Six
NOW LOO
Ayer Pink Clover
COLOGNE
Real old-time odor. Regular 2.00
size.
CL Aver Colortone
SHAMPOO
Not o dye . . , but 0 rich-lother-ino,
deep-cleansing shampoo that
woshes sparkling color high
lights into your hair as it cleans.
Brown, brunette, blonde, silver,
grey, red.
Regular 2.50 Six
NOW 1.25
NOW
1.00
iff - !
b rim SMI
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AYER.NET
No-Lacquer
Hair Spray
Spray sets pin-curls fast
and firm, holds even cas
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Regular 2. SO
NOW 1.25
jRAi Sic (pkahmxmj.
808 East Main
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