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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1958)
FRIDAY. JUNE 27, 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE 3 A Quick Rundown Given Of Newsmen Crash Victims BOSTOX, on Daniel J. Coughlin Jr., 31, killed early to day in the jet tanker crash at Westover Air Force Base, had been an Associated Press news . man for six years. A native of Boston, he was graduated from Boston Collcce High School and enlisted in the Army at the age of 16. He landed in Normandy with the first wave on D-Day. After his discharge, he gradu ated from Boston College. He joined The AP in Charlotte, N.C., in March 1052 and was trans ferred to Boston in January 1957. Couphlin, a rugged 195 pounds, was a standout football guard in high scoool. He also played semi . pro football in eastern Massachu . setts, but passed up the sport in : college to concentrate on his : studies. ; He leaves his widow Phyllis, . fwo sons, aged 6 and 4'j, a daugh- ter born last December, and his parents. Five other newsmen died in the crash. Robert B. Sibley, 57, was one of the nation's top aviation writ . ers. He had been aviation editor of the Boston Traveler since 1939. He conducted many campaigns for COOL FLATTERY Printed Pattern Be cool or covered-up there ore two neckline versions in this Printed Pattern. Sun style has wide straps to conceal bra, slip. Proportioned for half-sizers no alteration worries. Printed Pattern 9027: half Sizes M'i, 16'.i, 18'a, 20(4. 224, 24'4. Size requires 4!i yards 35-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pat tern part. Easier, accurate. Send fifty cents (coins) for this pattern add 5 cents for each pat tern for lst-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Herald and News. Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. V. Print plain ly name, address with zone, size and style number. New Sector Head Assigned To GOC MONTAGUE Members of the Montague-Yreka and Stuart Ranch Ground Observer Corps learned that a new sector sergeant had been assigned the Siskiyou County areas. M. Sgt. Al Glaze of Redding has been appointed to present the train lng sessions in place of Sgt. Vieko Asiala the sector sergeant of Klam ath Falls who was recenily ap pointed to take charge ol the Mod ford area and other points in Ore gon. Set. Howard Darby of Chico was also present at the meeting to ex plain the necessity of the change. Darby is the field supervisor of the GOC in Northern California. REMODELING! INSULATION I POQFINGr OVERHEAD jOAPAGE COOOSl ALL TYPES 1 V VX (' 1 s picture founoationI ' rv'v i IwincowsI' . v A Divew4ys -.V No Doyn Payment - S Yri. To Pay On FHA PHONE TU 4-8866 Roger't RofMf & tntsqfe Isti'mates GUd SOff . 1 air safety including ground con trol installations and radar aboard airlines. Sibley won many local and na tional honors for his work in the aviation field. Before joining the Traveler, he was a reporter on the Worces ter Telegram and the Post. He leaves his widow Leona: a son, Robert Jr., of Natick: and a daughter, Mrs. Joan Kronenberg, :ailt'K. Robert A. Ginsburgh was an associate editor of U.S. News and World Report and a former aide to four secretaries of defense. He was 63. Ginsburgh joined the news mag agazine in 1953 after retiring from the Air Force as a brigadier gen eral. He specialized in military affairs for the magazine. Ginsburgh, a native of Poland, joined the staff of former Secre tary of Defense Louis Johnson in 1949 after serving briefly as dep uty director of Air Force public relations. He remained on the secretary's personal staff during the terms of three other defense chiefs George C. Marshall. Robert Lov ett and Charles E. Wilson. Ginsburgh was born in Warsaw May 30. 1895, and came to the United States in 1901. He was graduated from Harvard in 1917. He joined the Army the same year and remained in the service until his retirement five years ago. He is survived by his widow El- io. one son and twin daughters. James L. McConaughy Jr. was chief of the Washington bureau of Time and Life magazines. McConaughy, 42, was son of the late governor of Connecticut and president of Wesleyan University, .uiddletown, Conn. A native of Brunswick. Maine. he was graduated from Deerfield i Mass.) Academy in 1932 and from Wesleyan University in 1936. He worked on the Hartford 'Conn.) Times and the Washing- Ion Post before joining Time, Inc., as a copy boy in 1938. He later became a writer for Time magazine. In 1944 to 194(5 he served as a captain in the Marine Corps in telligence in the southwest Pacif ic. After he left the Marines in 1946, he was sent to Time maga zine's Ottawa Bureau, where he remained until 1950. when he was assigned to the Washington bu reau and became a political and congressional correspondent. In August 1957, he was named chief of the Washington bureau of Time and Life magazines, their largest. He leaves his widow, two sons and two daughters. Glenn A. Williams, 41, had been a newsman for more than 21 years. He was an associate editor of U.S. News and- World Report. After radio and newspaper stints. Williams joined The Asso ciated Press at Jefferson City, Mo., in November 1941. Four months later he was transferred to The AP's Kansas City Bureau- He was moved to AP-St.Louis in May 1943, and returned to Jef ferson City in January, 1944. In late 1945. Williams entered the AP foreign service, being assigned to the London bureau. In 1951 he returned to New York to serve on the AP foreign desk. A year later he went with U.S. News and World Report. A native of McGill, Nev., Wil liams was educated in the public schools of Enid. Okla., and at the University of Oklahoma. Williams was married and the father of a son, Bruce, 14. Norman Montellier was a Unit ed Press International newsman Montellier, 37, a New York City resident, worked in the UPI New York office writing interpretive news stories for the UPI foreign service. He was born in Plainfield. N.J and reared in California. He started to work on the Napa 'Calif.) Daily Register at the age of 16, and later worked on the Napa Journal. In 1937 he joined the Vallejo (Calif.) Times Herald, and was city editor of the news paper from 1941 to 1943, when he joined the United Press (now the UPI) in San Francisco. He became night manager of the UP in San Francisco and later served as editor in charge of the LP's Pacific war desk there. After World War II. Montellier went abroad for the UP. He spent 6'j years in Europe, serving as bureau chief in Rome and later becoming general manager for Italy. He returned to New York in 1951. Montellier leaves his . widow Maureen and two children, Peter and Kitty. I sroBMoooRSI l ko wikdows M masqnrTI Vast, Complex Electronic Air Radar Network Opens By VERN HAUGLAND McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE. N.J. (AP)-SAGE the vast and complex electronic air warning network called Scmi-Automatic Ground Environment formally went into operation today. Gen. Curtis E. LeMay. Atr Force vice chief of staff, declared that for the United States to have designed, produced and installed such a mechanical marvel in four years was "a real technical and logistic triumph." Le.May described the inaugura tion of SAGE as "the largest sin gle step taken toward the im provement of air defense capa bilities in the past 10 years." several hundred military digni taries and representatives of many firms that helped build the huge system attended ceremonies dedicating this first operational SAGE center. The various centers to be built will be controlled from North American Air Defense Com mand headquarters at Colorado Springs, Colo. This first center of the series guards the most densely populat ed and highly industrialized sec tion. of the nation the New Y'ork- Philadelphia metropolitan areas. all of New Jersey, and parts of Connecticut, Rhode Island and Delaware. At the dedication ceremonv. the Air Force gave for the first time New Cosmetics Can Alter Women's Facial Color By GAY PAULEY , UPI Women's Editor NEW Y'ORK (UPI) Around Manhattan: Our language is sprinkled with cliches concerning people who turn green with envy or purple with rage. But I never thought I'd see the day when we women would turn either color with cos metics. Yel, a new group of makeun shades includes emerald, ame thyst, and amber. They're all the brainchild of Charles of the Ritz cosmeticians, who announce that we are in "for an age of adorn ment. Recommended only for eve ning, and "for the girl with the California Weather By United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair through Saturday and probably Sunday except for patches of morning tog; high today San Francisco 69, Oakland 75, San Mateo 76. San Rafael 80: low to night 52-59; westerly winds slight ly stronger than usual. Northern California: Fair through Saturday and probably Sunday; chance of a thunder storm or two in extreme north ern mountains; patches of high fog on coast; slightly cooler south em San Joaquin Valley today; slightly warmer northern Interior Saturday; coastal winds north west 12-25 m.p.h. today and 10-20 m.p.h. Saturday. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Most ly fair through Sunday but chance of a thunderstorm or two today; cooler tonight. Sacramento Valley: Fair through Saturday and probably Sunday; slightly warmer Saturday high today 84-94, Saturday 88-98; low tonight 54-64; variable winds 8-15 m.p.h. Northwestern California: Fair through Saturday and prob ably Sunday except night and morning fog near coast and chance of a thunderstorm or two in northern mountains today: slightly warmer inland Saturday: high today and low tonight Ukiah 85-53, Santa Rosa 85-53. Napa 85- a3; coastal winds northwest 12-25 m.p.h. today and 10-20 m.p.h. Saturday. TRANSFERS DUNSMU1R-A. W. Keith, Shas ta Division trainmaster, has been transferred to Sacramento by the Southern Pacific Company, effec tive July 1. Keith and his family have been residents of Dunsmuir since 1951. L. E. DuBose will replace Keith. DuBose, a native of Dunsmuir. has been trainmaster ol Western Pacific with headquarters in Eureka. He originally hired out on the Shasta Division as a fire man. His parents. .Mr. and Mrs. J. E. DuBose, make their home in Dunsmuir. GET INTHE ACTI IT'S Buy Genuine Men's, Boys', Ladies' DS5S ot DON'S And Get ?H" Green Stamps Men's 3.75 Boys' 3.35 & 3.55 Ladies' 3.75 We have Levi's Western Shirts, Im! DOM'S It AlbMi rH tthJ efeefi the details of the high powered radar system and associated Com puter equipment that helps screen North America from air attack. They include: 1. Heavy, long-range radar units, with radomes 50 feet in di ameter and weighing 2,300 pounds mounted on steel platforms more than 100 miles at sea and on stra tegically located ground sites, capable of detecting aircraft hun dreds of miles away. 2. Medium powered gap-filler radar to plug the holes between the coverage of the long-range units. These sets automatically transmit information by telephone lines to the prime stations, where a special television converter dis plays the combined data. 3. At the center itself, the larg est electronic computers in the world each occupying about two acres to receive the information from the radar installations and to monitor the positions of air planes and defense weapons. Le.May said SAGE cannot track ballistic weapons, capable of fly ing many times the speed of sound, or control attacks against them. "As yet there is no defense against such weapons," he said. But he said the greatest threat for the next few years comes from manned jet bombers and air breathing missiles and SAGE provides improved defense capa bility against such weapons. camellia complexion and dark hair," the green makeup includes green-toned face powder, made a little paler by blending with , buff if the wearer doesn't have the courage to look like a spring of mint: eyes shadowed with a shade called "fern;" lids outlined with green; a dash of black mas cara for what the manufacturer called "the heavy lidded look;" and finally, a dusting of the green powder applied in streaks throuoh the hair to match the rest of the makeup. Heady for the ourole combo? This is for the fair skin with red hair, and begins with a mauve face powder, continues on through a nne mist ot silvered eye sha dow," charcoal liner for the lids and blue mascara. Mauve powder is ausieo inrougn ine nair. For daytime, and especially re commended for the sun-tanned blonde is the amber look. This in cludes gold - colored powder, a streak of china blue eyeshadow, and blue to outline the lids. A United Press International story from Carshalton, England, this week prompted me to ask the National Shoe Institute, a trade organization, how long fash ion intended to keep us women wearing the needle heels. The d s- patch said that Carshalton's citv fathers were complaining that wo men s shoe spikes are piercing road . surfaces, making it easier for the sun to melt the tar layer unoerneatn. The institute says that despite some domestic griping about nar row heels tangling with escalators and sidewalk grills, the slim heel will be a favorile for fall. "Skinny as ever for evening." said a spokesman. "But if it's any comfort to you, some of the new daytime shoes do have the broader, stacked heel. "These are several layers of leather and are not the old fashioned bulky heel; they're still built with the louis curve." Seen on several New York mod els displaying the new fall clothes in the showrooms: Beauty patches or what in the 18th century were called court plasters. Robert Wimbush of the New York office of Rooles Motors re ceived a card the other day from a Los Angeles dealer for the British-made Hillman car. The dealer's pitch to potential custom ers advised in bold type: '"Buy your gal that new im ported car before Trujillo does." JUNE IS BONUS MONTH at OLDSMOBILE! 30 CARS to Be Sold during June & July Large Selection - Larger DEALS! DICK B. MILLER CO. RODEO DRESS-UP TIME! in Sere revel Phone TU 4-SM Young Iraqi Alters Ideas Of What's Been Going On By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Foreign News Analyst BEIRUT (AP) A year ago young American-educated Ali was the most passionate of Baghdad's Arab nationalists supporting Ga- mal Abdel Nasser. Today, the young Iraqi is a re laxed man. He has been taking a calmer view of what lias been going on about him, and he has begun to wonder. Ali is a symptom of what is going on in some Arab areas. The union of Egypt and Syria under Nasser's dictatorship, along with the crisis in Lebanon, cost the Egyptian leader much of the sort of unquestioning support he had received from the small but im portant group of young Arab in tellectuals. Many members of the same class in Syria are beginning to be Engle Levels Knight Blast SACRAMENTO (AP). - Rep. Clair Engle, striking back at what he terms lies by Gov. Goodwin J. Knight, says the Republican governor is "ducking, dodging and staying out of gun range" on major issues. Knight. Engle s opponent in the campaign for the U.S. Sen ate, yesterday challenged Engle's claim that he was a co-author of the GI bill of rights for veterans of World War II. The Democratic congressman told newsmen "The import of his statements is deliberately false." and that Knight only showed his ignorance of the legislative pro cess. A reporter asked if he meant that Knight had lied. i That s a short country word for it," Engle replied. The governor couldn t hit the side of a barn if he was inside and had all the doors and windows closed," Engle said. The fact was. Engle said, that he was a member of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs when it wrote the World War II bill and that same committee when it rote a similar bill for Kor ean vets. "I've had 15 years of legislative experience. He has had none. There it (Knights statement) demonstrates a lack of knowledge of how legislation operates in the House of Representatives," Engle said. To Knight's charge that Engle had falsely claimed to be a vet eran because of a 30-day tour of duty as a lieutenant colonel with the Air Force in Korea, Engle answered . that he has never ,claimed yeteran s status. OLD COINS STOLEN DETROIT (AP) Bandits have broken into a model of Delroit's first financial institution housed in the basement of the Detroit His lorical Museum and made off with $60 in rare coins. Museum authori ties said the face value of the coins was $60, but that their mar ket value would be more because of their age. NO DOGS ALLOWED FRAMINGHAM. Mass. (AP) - Actress Joan Blondell has been evicted from a motel because ot Bridcy Murphy, her tiny English pug dog. Miss Blondell, here to star in a summer play, said the management asked her to leave because dogs were not allowed. She and the dog 'found quarters at a private estate. The Klamath Basin Celebration Council Invites You To Their queen: BAIL Klamath Falls ARMORY Saturday June 28th Sponsored by Klamath Saddle Club and Jay-C-Ettcs Dancing 9 till 1 Music By Baldy's Band Crowning Ceremony-11:30 1.25 (Tax a little unhappy with Nasser's icaoersnip. in Lebanon. Nasser likely has lost much of the un divided loyalty he commanded from the impatient nationalists. Ihe impression one gets alter a tour through Baghdad, Damas cus, Beirut and other Arab capi tals is that Nasser's personal popularity, while still high, has passed its peak. The transformation of All, for example, in a country like Iraq, is nothing less than astonishing. He explained: At the time of the Suez crisis and for some time after,' I was sure Nasser and only Nasser could be right. What was right for Egypt was right for the Arabs. Today I am not at all sure. "We a lot of young people like myself who have had some good education didn't quite like the way the union of Egypt and Syria came about. We wanted Arab uni ty. But we didn't want one coun try to swallow up another. We didn't want a dictator from one country to impose himself total ly upon another. That wasn't the sort of unity we were thinking about. The number of such young men is small. But they have been a major source of Nasser's strength outside his own country. These men still believe in Arab unity, still believe in liberation slogans. They still think they have been the victims of foreign dom ination. They still resent the cre ation of Israel. But they have had Western ed ucation. They have ties to the West and like Western ways. When they speak of liberation, they do not mean complete di vorce from everything Western. In Iraq, they realize the nations riches would remain underground without Western know-how. They still complain about the United States, still say the United States ought to revise its policy toward the Arabs. But today they sound as if they say these things mostly because it is expected of them. The passion of a year ago is gone. Cake Eating To End Contest LOCKWOOD. Mo. (AP) In Lockwood, too, the queen's de cree will be: "Let them eat cake." This town of 900 will choose its Queen of Wheat Saturday night and cake probably will be the de ciding point. Seventeen organizations have nominated queens. Anyone who brings a cake lo town Saturday night can cast 100 votes. What happens to the cakes? They will be disposed in a cake- walk. Anyone who buys a ticket for the cakewalk, prr 10 cents, can cast 10 votes. OH, NO ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) City workmen painted new traffic lines on a St. Joseph street the other dty. Next day. another city crew covered them with a new coating of asphalt. CLdahl BEAUTY SALON TOWN & COUNTRY Coll TU 2-S671 or drop In. Eve nings by appointment ... Al wayi the beit. Person Incl.) IT'S A WONDERFUL STORl Saturday Check List OF GOOD summer dresses dollar-day- priced at only $8.88 . . . instead of $12.98. famous name sun dresses, elastic back in beautiful pr ints, also 2-pc. pique dresses, several styles, drip dry, black and white. costume coats dollar-day-priced at only $8.00 and $9.00 ... in silk and cotton blends, and in tweeds, all completely taffeta lined, lots of back interest, pastels, black and white . iiiiiicriiily tops ' dollar-day-priced at' only $3.79 . . . regularly $5.98. large new group, many different styles in care free fabrics. maternity 2-pc. dresses dollar-day-priced at only $7.88 . . . in stead of $12.98. in linens and cottons, dressy and casual styles. duster housecoats dollar-day-priced at only $3.88 . . . in stead of $5.98. short sleeve, drip-dry, several prints and styles to choose from. baby doll pajamas dollar-day-priced at only $2.88 . . . reg ularly $4.98. wash and wear, no-iron, striped modified sailor collar and striped flounce, white and blue, white and pink. nylon (Hoot dollar-day-priced at only $2.99 ... in stead of $5.98. lavishly trimmed with pleats and lace, white, size 38 and 40 only. miracle blend pajamas dollar-day-priced at only $3.49 ... in stead of $1.98 to $5.98. several baby doll styles, in nylon tricot, and dacron and nylon. copri pants dollar-day-priccd at only $1.79 . . . reg ularly $7.98. in the cotton tarpoon cloth, hard-finished, machine wash able and machine dryable. no-iron, st ripes and plaids. IAAA"' col foil IiIoiim's dollar-day-priccd at only $2.00 . . . reg ularly up to $7.98. in stripes, prints and solids. skirts dollar-day-priced at only $ 1.79 . . , reg ularly $6.98 and $7.98. rayon linen slim shirt3. walking pleats, black, beigo,aqua,mint, and navy. VALUES .slips -i-i--rririru-iinnruvr