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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1958)
TAGE 2 A HERALD AND NF.WS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TUESDAY. JIT.Y 1. 195R Rock Thrower Summons Aid ELLIJAY. Ga. (t'PIl -An un Identified motorist stopped at a Highway Patrol station near hen lo complain that someone had thrown rocks at his car. Oflirers went to the scene of rock-throwing and found that a car had crashed down an em bankment, killing one of its oc cupams and seriously injuring two others. Donald Lee Kincaid, 19, who suffered a broken leg. had crawled back totthc edge of the highway and had thrown the rocks In an effort to summon help. Patrolmen said the body of Dal las Monroe Mc'Gill, ID, was found In the car. Charlie Henry. 24, was pinned beneath the vehicle and received a broken leg and inter nal injuries. I 1.1 u 1 1 1 ; urn a sa OPEN DAILY -7:00 P. M. 'CARY SOPHIA GRANT LOREN frank SINATRA in the story of the monster gun and the three who lived and loved in its shadow... EriBE and TkB PASSroN ' TECHNICOLOl VWTAVISION .Feature At 8:05 & 10:40 STARTS THURSDAY- Bob Crosby Manages To Escape Daytime TV Stigma By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD lAPl Bob Cros hy has managed to escape th( daytime-TV stigma by slipping into Perry Como s easy shoes But it wasn't easy. Baritone Bob thrived for 4' years on a CBS alternoon show. and he considers it the grealesi experience in the world. But il also put a frost on his career "I can't understand the net work thinking," he sighed. "They believe because a guy has been on davtime television that he can't do anything else. "I think that's ridiculous, just as I think the networks have underestimated the daytime view ers. I have found that people who watch TV during the day are just as sharp and demanding as those who watch at night. Yet the stand ard of daytime programming gets progressively worse. Boh said he had done nothing on TV since going off his daytime show last October, and he blamed the attitude of the TV moguls for his inactivity. The break enme when NBC was searching for a singer to sub for lazy I'erry dur iug the summer months. And who can be more relaxed than a Crosby? I m very happy with the way the show has worked out," Bob ODORS CPEN 6.-3Q P. M. NOW SHOWING! r ANTHONY "1 I QUINN f as Attila the Hun! f SOPHIA I . LOREN who brought the Hun to his knees! i A Qt Miunaermi . tfoutands in TWCHNIOOI.O it- 1VU.1 wn y DOORS OPEN 1:30 Shnw Starts 2:00 Out At 4:00 MATINEE FOR KIDS KIDS 25c - ADULTS 75e MHZ mMM 5& US uoro VIIA unit SHMIDAN Ends Tonite - "FROM HERE TO ETERNITY" OPENS 6:30 Starts WEDNESDAY Jason ' the Sheepman VTS--rSgf ... he knew his best ffi&lu defense '7?W was In W4Vf WfflN. ? . - TLX't ft l IIS remarked. "It's an easy show to lo, especially since I've had the xperience of doing the daytime irogram. I learned to take every hing in stride then. "The only trouble is that I have 'o do the show in New York. I'm -ml rich enough to commote lhat's the other Crosby and here's nothing to do in New York luring the summer. To go out for a round of golf is a major pro duction. But after a trip here to play the home show, he'll hole up in Vew York and stay there. He figures it's worth it to get out of the daytime-IV stigmai The reviews on Bob have been good, and he gets a similar, Ihough qualified, reaction in his family. His mother wired him that he liked the show, but couldn t he have more violins in the or chestra because she doesn't like jazz? The summer budget on the Como show is cut in half," Bob explained," and we don't have any violins. "DENNIS THE MENACE" mmm USUI NIELSEN MICKEY SHAUG EDGAR BUCHANAN in OuiuiScon Ag)METR0COlOR Trujillo Eyes French Star HOLLYWOOD (API The r ing eye of Gen. Raphael Trujillo Jr. nas lighted on Brigitte Bardot. This reporter recently chatted with the French actress on a trench movie set. A photogra pher, upon whose lap she was sit ting at the time, disclosed that Trujillo had just phoned from America asking him to take all the pictures he could of her. Today a spokesman for the Dominican general confirmed that Trujillo had made such an order. But at the moment." he said, "the general is only interested in Miss Bardot artistically. What other interests can one have from 5,000 miles away?" The spokesman declined com ment on whether the handsome son of the Dominican Republic strongman may shift interest from actress Kim Novak to Brigitte. Trujillo. on a local television how. publiclv expressed his love for Miss Novak.- But that was some months ago. She. in New York, is a long way off too. Miss Bardot said this of the 29-ycar-old father of six "He looks very pretty." And would she accept a gilt of. say. a big diamond? Mais oui," she answered. "If it is a true one."' (Wf Ml WWt ' 'GOT MORE BREAD CRUMBS? TV Afraid To Experiment Says Newsman Ed Murrow By SAUL PETT AP Writer NEW YORK (AP-If Ed Mur row were just now starting in tele vision he'd be unlikely to find a network willing to take on a show called "See It Now." Who says this? Ed Murrow. "The industry today has a great fear of experiment, of controversy and, of course, great expense," he says. "The cost of failure is oreater than ever and today tele vision is much more conservative than it was in its youth. Today a new idea, a bold idea. would have to be fought through five echelons of a big corporation. The industry suffers from a rigid pattern. You get a new idea on the air, you get sponsored, you be come moderately successful, you get initiated and God help any one who wants to change anything." Murrow s opinion was elicited hy the question, "What's wrong with television today?" Chain smoking, as usual, in his Impres sively small office at CBS, Mur row thought a moment, wreathed his face in a characteristic pattern of frowns, and said: In my own field news and Record California Budget Goes Into Effect Today SACRAMENTO (API A record slnlo budget that will use all of California's reserves went into Mfect today along with an order o stale agencies to cut expenses to a bare minimum. The Stale finance Department, looking, ahead to 1959-60 issued an paily call to state departments for their spending requests for next year with this order: Hold expenses at a rock bottom level. The record budget of $1,999,572.- !)R3 passed by the Legislature in April went into effect today with the opening of the 195K-59 fiscal year. The budget calls for no new taxes, but provides for using the slate's 73 million dollar "Rainy Day Fund" accumulated during World War II and other reserves. However, officials alreadv have predicted it will take about 20 mil lion dollars Irom the Rainy Day Fund'to pay the bills of the fiscal year which ended yesterday. r inancc Di r e c t o r John M Peirce said preliminary estimates indicate spending will top income by at least 200 million dollars by next June 30 and the state will face an urgent financial problem 'Effect every possible economy in designing the program to meet esential needs and budget for only absolutely necessary sup plies, travel, equipment and other costs, Peirce ordered the de partments in a letter. Budget chief Rohert L. Hark ness, explaining the need for the belt - tightening, said production and income in the state are expected to he down during the year that started today. Harkness listed as general rea sons for the decline a drop in the motor vehicle market, substantial liquidation of inventories and bigger than expected drop business expenditures for plants and equipment. "Looking forward to the next 24 months, it is difficult to foresee any development which could pro duce a sharp resurgence in the national economy or that of Cal fornia," Harkness sain. ducumentaries there is an unwill ingness to experiment, to try new techniques, new devices. Just examine the program listings for the prime evening viewing hours and you have to conclude that TV is insulating people from the reali ties, from the crises of the world. "Except for Sunday afternoons. television offers almost nothing bt escapism. But this, I m afraid. reflects a national characteristic of ours, an unwillingness to accept me unpleasant. But Murrow being Murrow man whose documentaries run off with most of the awards year aft er year he will be coming up with a new show in the fall, "Small World." It will involve a three-way con versation between three divergent personalities at widely separated points around the globe. Murrow will be the man in the middle who starts the conversation and helps keep it rolling. The three personalities actually will converse by radio, be record ed and filmed simultaneously and then edited for the half-hour show. If the idea has any virtue at all," Murrow says, "that lies in its unpredictability. For example in our pilot film, we have Lauren Bacall talking from Hollywood, Malcolm Muggeridge, retired edi tor of 'Punch' from Australia, and Eric Johnston, head of the Motion Picture Assn. of America, from Washington,- "Their conversation ranged all the way from politics to books to fashions to the responsibility of the press in covering movie morals. They were wonderfully spontaneous and the cameras got many fantastic reaction shots. Sea Lion's Appetite Said Lagging TOLEDO. Ohio 'API It mightl perk up the lagging appetite of Cyril, the year-old sea lion, if someone told him today the head lines he's earned in his vagabond ing of the last week have made! him famous. And being famous is synony mous with being valuable in the show business whether it's in the Toledo Zoo, where he's now housed in a bear cage and where the admission charge is 50 cents, or back in Springbank Park at London, Ont., where he escaped the night of June 19 and where the customers pay a quarter. If Cyril knew how officials of each zoo pressed claim of owner ship to him yesterday, arguing to a stand-off, he might not even feel so miserable about the welts on his hide. These blemishes are ap parently alter-effecls of tranquil izer drugs Toledo Zoo men fired into him with a dart gun yester day to make his capture easy. The London Public Utilities Commission, which operates the zoo there, sent two of its members here for a conference late yester day with Director Phil Skeldon of Ihe Toledo Zoo. Asst. Chairman Earl Nichols, accompanied by his 10-year-old daughter, Mary hue, and Commissioner Stewart Kill- ingsworth returned home last night with their mission unaccom plished. "Personally. I feel he now be longs to the Toledo Zoo." said Skeldon, who has spent most of this week playing hide-and-seek with Cyril at the western end oi Lake Erie. ' Bevond that. I understand there's an old English law which states that once a wild animal escapes, it becomes the property of anyone who captures it. We captured Cyril in our jurisdiction, so I feel he belongs to us." Nichols denied he ever said his zoo, which serves a metropolitan ooDiilation about a third the size of greater Toledo's 400,000, had lost interest in getting Cyril back That was the word here when London sent no seal-hunters south ward and announced another sea lion would be ordered. "Nothing could be further from the truth," Nichols protested. "1 might add, that if you will let us have this sea lion back, I will see that the Toledo Zoo gets an-! other one." Cvril arrived in London June 17 from California where sea lions a large type of seal with ears are so plentiful in the facitic (hey cause no excitement at all. They're not famous, either, and can be bought, as Cyril was, for $150, plus about $60 for shipping. The day after he got to London, Cyril slid under a fence, dove into the Thames River and began a marathon swim of hundreds of miles to Lake St. Clair, to the Detroit River, to Lake Erie, to Maumee River, to Sandusky Bay, and to fame. Drowsy from the tranquillizer shots, Cyril was captured in a boat house on Sandusky Bay yes- Director Seeks Money For Film LOS ANGELES (API Director William Wyler is asking more money for his work on "The Best Years of Our Lives a movie now U years old. Wvler filed suit yesterday seek ing $4011,356 from producer Sam Goldwyn and asking for an ac counting of the profits of the pic ture, of which he is supposed to get 20 per cent. Goldwyn, apprised of the action said Wyler already had received $1,400,000. . . .. Elvis Named In Damage Suit MIAMI UPI) Singer Elvis Presley and his former chauffeur have been named in a $5,000 damage suit filed hy a secretary from Washington, D. C. The plaintiff, Mary Frances Tucll, 24, alleged in h(;r Federal Court action that she was in jured in August, 19i6, when a car driven by chaulleur Arthur llooten struck the one in which she was riding. llooten was driving one of Presley's automobiles, the com plaint said. Race Issues Said Old Hat ST. LOUIS (APt-Scnsitivc ra cial senrcpntion issues nro not new to the 8'h U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which once ngatn has ho I to Rock case before it. The V, S. Supreme Court re minded Attorneys (or the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People of that yesterday. It refused to bypass the circuit court and act directly on an or der nVlaymc intecration at Little Itock Central High School for 2lj years. The appellate curt has dealt uilh the case three times before and the Supreme Court said it was sure it was aware speed was needed to permit arrangements: lor the fall term. What is the makeup of this court which will decide for the present.! at least, whether seven Negro stu-! dents can return to the Little Hock hieh school Biter a year of tionp-enforced integration? The chief justice, who will name I three nf the seven members lo hear Ihe appeal, is Archibald K. Gardner, who at W is the nation's oldest active federal judge. liardner. quiet by nature, has declined to say whom he wdl n.une r when or where they will J t bear the plea t trtT Hie dur W V. ft Pist. Judxv Hi ry rj sou ji 8 ru o litifc uort. Kun9.il Ihgio S.ia ?JF made oft Kh tt tiionze tah of a man 9$"' m armor nomine a lamp in ni t hand Police said they thoushi hry wo;i!d recocnize the stole ohject if they found it. 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