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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1958)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NF.V9, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, JUNE 19. 19SS Ship Owner To Testify In 'Deals' WASHINGTON (AP) -Aristotle Socrates Onatsis, wealthy Greek fhip operator, goes before a House subcommittee today for question ing on ship contracts and who controls two firms in which he has interests. Onassis told a reporter he was going to answer all questions "if I don't lose my voice." For two days the ship magnate has been an attentive front row spectator at a special House Mer chant Marine subcommittee hear ing on a contract involving his interests. The Justice Department filed suit in New York last week chars- ing Onassis companies broke an agreement with the U.S. govern ment to build three tankers worth some so million dollars for Ameri can flag operations. The suit named the Alexander S. Onassis Corp., Victory Carriers inc., and the Grace National Bank of New York, trustee of Onassis Interests in the two corporations The shipbuilding agreement was part of the terms of settlement of an earlier dispute over the rinht of Onassis interests to buy sur plus vessels alter World War II These were restricted to firms Controlled by U.S. citizens. The subcommittee has asked de tailed questions of previous wit nesses as to who controls the two companies which were set up as controlled by U.S. citizens. Onassis Is not an American citizen. Capt. Granville Conway, presi dent of Victory Carriers, testified yesterday that a recent letter re- garriod as default on construction of the three ships was not in tended as such. Instead, Conway said, the letter to the government was intended to bring about a congressional hearing in hopes of modifying tho contract to provide for construe tion of two tankers instead of three. "DENNIS THE MENACE" SENTENCE lie z'-t-x- New Studies Show Drinks, Even Two Of 'Em, Can Throw Driver Off Aim By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor NEW YORK (UPI) Two scien tists put liquor into people ex perimentally and found that two stiff drinks within an hour were enough to make it unsafe for a man to drive a car. That's a drastic reduction in number of drinks usually . permit ted under driving laws in many states. In effect, these laws say it takes about six stiff drinks within an hour to justify the ac cusation that someone has been driving while drunk. Legally the question of whether I JUST WANTED TO SHOW YOU HOW DIRTY OTHER PEOPLE LET THEIR KIDS GET I Double Life Led By Man In Both TV, Real Estate ny Hon tiiomas HOLLYWOOD (AP) Here's a fellow who leads a double life. Some days he's ftichard Travis, film actor. The rest of the time he's Wil liam Justice, real estate execu tive. Travis and Justice are the same man, a tall, handsome gent who appears well adjusted despite his occupational schizophrenia. I talked to Travis on the set of his latest picture, a sci-fi caper called Missile to the Moon. He filled me in on Justice, which is his real name. The whole thing started about five years ago when Dick's moth er sold a house. The real estate VIENNA (AP) A communist court in Sofia has sentenced five Bulgarians to prison terms of one to 15 years for alleged espionage for American and Turkish intel ligence services. Sofia Radio said the defendants were "criminal and depraved element s." It charged twd were trained as spies in Istanbul. OPEN DAILY T.OO P. M ENDS TONIGHT ! Feotury At: 8:10 I1:0J .. i;.:-; hevoltut FOOT I Ik Shan At 9:30 Only WAIT DISNEV5 :"kr.atiir".-or'i i f 2nd F.AMILY HITti 0 ' 0 Oil Painting Vins Award YREKA The popularity award at the first art exhibit presented by the Siskiyou Artists Association was captured by May 0. Stevens, Yreka, with her oil portrait ot an Irish colleen. An oil painting of Oro Fino Store by Calla Lukes, Etna, was Si;cond most popular, and oil portrait of a Balinese Mar ket Woman by Olga S. Owsley, Giizclle, third. These awards wero determined by the 400 people who attended the exhibit lust weekend when over 2U0 Siskiyou County artists entered approximately 650 works of art m all phases. first prize winners in all divi sions follow: Oils, portraits, May Stevens. Yreka; landscapes, Mar garet Chandlee, Yreka. Watcrcolors, Hetty Ilaig. Yreka; other media, Kenneth Traelove, Grenada. Crafts, copper, Olga Owsley, Gazelle; wood. Jerry Jenkins. Grenada; special craft, R. E. Mc- Manus, Yreka; ceramics, Edna Favcro, Yreka. Junior artists from Siskiyou County entered 24 exhibits and first prizes winners were: oils, Sal ly Some, MontaRue; other media Sallv Smile. Clifford A. Platz, artist from Medfnrd, was .iudgo for the point ing divisions of the exhibit. agents, a pair of brothers who had been successful in Beverly Hills, propositioned Dick to join their firm. "I had been doing fairly well in pictures making $15,000 to $18,000 a year," he said. "But the caliber of pictures 1 was offered was pretty crummy. So I decided to try real estate and I took the state examination. "I found I liked it. When you get to the point of closing a deal, there's a real excitement, the same as you got in acting. And I found that people generally rec ognized me from pictures or tele vision, so that was a help." Eventually, Dick founded the William Justice Co. The firm now grosses more than two million dol lars in the competitive Beverly Hills market and sales of $250,000 houses are not- unusual. Dick now vice president of the Beverly Hills Realty Board and is destined to he president next term. However, he indicated that Travis may dominate Justice in the future. "I'vci always had an agreement with my co-workers that when roles came up, I would take time off, he said. I think I may take 10 pounds off and devote even more time to acting. It's really my first love." While he was in the Air Force during the war. Dick had a chance to sign with Universal at $750 a week for the postwar pe riod. Hut he was advised against it. Thus he returned from the war to battle for roles with all the other discharged actors. rzi edcdgjco cued ctj cd ed 0 CecilBDeMille's n JACK LCMMON CRNIE KOVACS KATHRYN GRANT MICKEY NOONEV HLST0N BRY NNtR -RVXTER R051H50H fj wow mm, jo r Ot CARLO PAGtl DE RtS U fl HAOWiC"t-f.QCH-5C01I ASDtRSON PRiCt 0 0 0 T Crtun4ndmmt flhowa 0r Onl tl MS Adult! (Intl. I4 Ta II ft rrin lmn unmet irr imm Teacher On Extended Trip .Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hoag loft by United Air Linos Tuesday for an extended trip. Ho;ir. instructor in the Commercial Department at Oregon Technical Institute, is co owner of the Whitehend-Hoac man- ufacturinR firm in Newark, New Jersey, where he will speak at a banquet. From there they will ro by helt i copter 65 miles distant to visit Hongs brother and sister-in-law. Later they go by air to the World's Fair at Brussels, will visit Ma jorca off the coast of Spain, then to London where they will take delivery of a foreign make car to bring back to the united States. They will make a second visit to Brussels betore returning here by way of the polar air route. Hoag is a graduate of OTl, hav- ing received his diploma at the time his daughter, Mrs. Lynn Williams, now of Eugene, also graduated, lie served as dean of men at OTl during the time John Hobson took an 1ft month leave of absence to attend the University of Oregon. Compromise Foreign Aid Bill Ready WASHINGTON (AP) A com promise $3,675,400,000 foreign aid program is ready for final con gressional action. Chairman Thomas E. Morgan ID-Pa) of the House Foreign Af fairs Committee said today he will call up the authorization bill for a vote early next week. Passage there, and by the Senate later, would clear the way for action on a separate money bill to finance the spending for which the author ization bill sets terms and ceilings. The program recommended yes terday by Senate and House con ferees is 2B6'i million dollars be low President Eisenhower's re quest for military and economic help to friendly nations in the fis cal year starting bill still in House committee. Before finishing work on the au thorization measure, the conferees dropped a Senate amendment aimed at halting use of nonmili- tary aid funds for purchase ahroad of Japanese textiles and other commodities in competition with American business. The conferees also eliminated a Senate provision which would have required publication of itemized expense accounts of every senator or representative spending U.S. owned foreign currencies on offi cial travels abroad. They left in language requiring each committee member or em ploye who uses foreign currencies obtained in the sale of surplus agricultural commodities abroad to make an itemized report to his committee chairman. This report would show the dollar equivalents of foreign currency spent. The chairman would be required to publish consolidated reports show ing the total itemized expen ditures of the committee as a whole. The bill provides $1,605,000,000 for military assistance (planes and other hardware) to allies, for which -Eisenhower sought $1,800,-000.000. It also carries B10 million dol lars of the 8.15 millions the Presi dent asked for defense supports. This is economic aid for allied countries to enable them to sup port adequate military lorces. you re under the influence de pends upon how much alcohol is in the blood. If it comes up to 0.15 per cent, you're too drunk to drive. But Drs. T. A. Loomis and T. C. ington, in Seattle, say they have shown experimentally that one third that amount (0.05 per cent) I is enougn to lessen a man s abil ity to keep his car on the road and to respond promptly to chang ing traffic lights. Therefore, two drinks fiave made him drunk for driving pur poses and present laws are "too lenient," they concluded. They argued that It takes eight to 10 ounces of 100-proof liquor consumed within an hour to pro duce a blood level of 0.J5 per cent, it you tigure that one and a half ounces of 100-proof liquor makes a stiff drink, then six such drinks add up to nine ounces. If that is so, only two stiff drinks will produce a blood alcohol level of 0.05 per cent, they say. Their experiments showed also that the first few drinks do not bestow a "quick tolerance" which make the next few less effective in kicking up the blood alcohol level. Their people were tested over five-hour periods and the drinks of the fifth hour were just as intoxicating as those of the first. They experimented with 10 men and a set of standard car con trols (steering wheel and accel erator and brake pedals) which controlled a miniature automobile suspended over a moving belt which represented the road. The man at the wheel could move the car to left or right or "speed" it or "stop" it by controlling the belt with accelerator or brake. First, the men were trained into expertness in operating this apparatus. Then they were put to operating it with increasing amounts of alcohol in their blood i put there by martinis, manhat tans, and bourbons.) The require ments were to keep the car even ly on the "road" and to respond promptly to the green, red or amber of a miniature traffic light. "All the subjects showed some impairment of function at blood alcohol concentration of 0.05 per cent," they reported to the Yale University Center of Alcohol Stud ies. " . MISSING TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) The Nationalist Chinese air force to day admitted an F84 Thunderiet missing on a leaflet-dropping mission over the Communist Chi nese mainland. Peiping radio reported yester day that the plane was shot down Monday by Red fighters while fly ing over Fukien province with an other Nationalist jet. The broad cast said the plane crashed into a mountain and the crew was killed. "YOU CAN'T AFFORD ' TO GAMBLE -WITH A .CHEAPO mm THE ROOF IS THE MOST IMPORTANT PART OF A HOUSE BE SURE TO SELECT THE BEST) INSIST ON SNCIBU fMNCIB ASPHALT SHINGLES WITH BONDED PERFORMANCE! LOWEST COST PEK SOUAM PER YEAR Of SERV1CI JUD WEBER ROOFING SIDING INSULATION Phone TU 4-6860 Wsnrf It i LLSf til ZI;;?wf. r)-RYlr Starts Doort Opm MO TODAY! 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