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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1958)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AVD SEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY. JULY 3. 195 Public Address System Soufht By Senator Yiley 'DENNIS THE MENACE" By FRANK EI.EAZEK I'ntli'd l'nM International WASHINGTON (UI'Ii The lighter side ol Conjjress: The Hippest shock most people Set when they visit the Capitol is that the giant voices of the Senate frequently turn out to be (peaking in whispers. Let's face it. You can't hear most of what goes on in the Senate, and sometimes the sen ators can't either. That's why Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis is proposing to install a public ad dress system in the chamber. Covering the Senate tends to be like watching TV when the pic ture is clear but the audio's dead. In these circumstances one lip reader could be more useful in the press gallery than a pla toon of Pulitzer Prize winners. Senate debate often consists of two members talking to each other at a distance of three feet. Nobody gets it but the official reporter and even he better get into the huddle if he wants to make sure. When Sen. II. Alexander Smith (R-N.J.) has something to sny he might as well forget it unless he has copies in hand for the press. Sen. Thomas E. Martin (R-lowa) can't be heard in the galleries even answering aye or no to a roll call. Democratic leader Lyndon B. Johnson D-Tex.) is properly re nowned for his back-stage man agement of the Senate's affairs. However, he is inclined to legis late into his vest, and among Wiley's complaints is that al though he sits only two rows be hind Johnson he frequently can't eaten a word. Wiley is a member who wouldn't need a microphone ad dressing a mob on a beach a whole gale. So everybody got tne message when he stood up in the chamber the other day and said it was high time some changes were made. However, this doesn't mean his advice will be heeded. The Senate is a place where they still keep the snulf boxes filled, and on each member's desk is a vestigal sand pot that reportedly was useful for blotting purposes 100 or so years ago. Change comes hard in the Senate. The silence with which Wiley's proposal has been received is matched only by the deathly still that continues to settle over the chamber doily as senators. porters, and spectators (you can hardly call 'em an audience) cup their ears to hear a muffled pro nouncement by Johnson on the program ahead, or a muted re velation on skulduggery in high places by Sen. John J. Williams Ut-Del.), the Senates one - man investigating committee. It isn't all the fault of the whispering senators. When the Senate chamber was rebuilt eight years ago its sound barrier was supposed to have been broken. It wasn't. House members, across the Capitol, have been making good use of an amplifying system for years, and Wiley points out that the government hasn t collapstj as a result. Mere Parlor Game Can Be Moor Television Headache an 11-week period. It had become obvious that Mrs. Rhode . Mon torsi, the big winner, had not on ly learned huge chunks of the dic tionary but was playing Ghost with skill and a definite system. The use of Q, X and Z had been banned as starting letters, and upon Mrs. Montorsi's departure from the show, so were M. N. J and H. The producers found that if the first player knew both the contents of Webster's New World Dictionary and the system, It was possible to "control" the word so it would end with the opponent's letter in a two-man game. For ex ample, a skilled Ghost player might start with the letter J. The opponent might add the letter A. The first person would then call for an K. Thus, with J.E, the first player has eliminated all but one word found in the show s official dictionary: jaeger, a gull -like bird. This rule change has not solved Top Dollar's gnmo problem. Mrs. Alice Young who defeated Mrs. Montorsi and later walked out in the middle of the Juno 21 show in protest of the change in rules, in sists that eliminating M, N, J and II ns starling letters merely has passed control over to the person in second position. 'Of the 19 letters with which you can start the game." she told me, "only the letter S is not con trollable from the second position when two are playing the game. The person who goes first cannot control any word now: the person who goes second can control any word except one which begins with S. NEW YORK (AP)-Tako a sim ple, pleasant parlor game, like Ghost, put it on television with hundreds of dollars at stake, and the result is a major headache for the show s producers. Contest ants start playing for keeps, not sport. That is the situation currently confronting producers of the show 'lop Dollar. I lie game around which the show is built is old, familiar Ghost: the first player choses a letter with which to start a word and Die other players add one letter at a time until a com plete word of five or more letters Is spelled out. The object of the game is to have the word end with a letter supplied by an oppo nent. In mid-June one Top Dollar con testant was finally defeated after winning more than $15,01)0 over Gahor's Mom Termed Busy By CLAIHE COX United Press International You'd think a beautiful woman with three beautiful dnughlers wouldn't have much to worry about. Not so Jolic Gahor glamorous mama to Zsa Zsa, L'.va, and Mag da (inhor. She's husy these days exercising a motherly prerogative standing up fur her children. Mrs. Gahor, who Ihes in r small hut lavish Manhattan apart ment, says Zsa Zsa is her biggest worry now. She feels people have the wrong idea About her actress daughter. Zsa Zsa is such a hard work ing girl, explains Mrs. Gahor, that she has less timo for romance than a hotiscwit?. She is disgusted with all the stories about Zsa Zsa and Domin Iran General Rafael Truiillo Jr. He gave her a Chinchilla wrap and an expensive sports car, "He's a friend of the family, " savs Mrs. Gahor. Zsa Zsa intro duced him to the Hollywood crowd, gave him a big party and then he gave ner uie coat. The four Hungarian-born Gabors have been married n total ol II times Magda four times, Zsa Zsa three times, Eva and Mama each twice. Mrs. Gahor, who runs a Madison Avenue jewelry shop and is mar' ried to a former Hungarian freed om fighler, is very proud of her brood. "They are hard wording sills she says. "They are not like oth er actresses. They are not liohem lan. they are good businesswo men " Mama also says her girls have much less romance than a pnv ate woman. A private woman lives only for romance." she says. "My daughters, they do not hae tune." Mie detenus the It marriages t'ns way- My daughters are all career girls. "It is not so c; for a career girl to have a mar riage that lasts. A caicer girl is not the little woman who is siiv ported and can compromise "When a woman makes money and is smart and intelligent." she says, "She v. ill not compromise. My girls all marry only for hap piness " Ami. even aller all this motherly loyalty. Mrs (labor isn't through yet. sometimes uie girls give me worry, she concludes, "but ihev are good girls. "There aie more beautiful and young women in America." she savs with a sweep ol diamond bedecked hands. " Hut my girls all have something roi l icToii s hi m DETROIT U l'l' - American flags with 4B Mais woie adwr tised today as a "collector's item" h.V a department store. The store sniir it has just 218 TOKYO (AP) A Japanese prosecutor charged today that for mer Yale football star Joseph P Crowley inflicted such a severe, fatal beating upon Connecticut businessman T. A. D. Jones Jr. that blood was splattered six feet up the walls of their hotel suite. Prosecutor Kenjiro Furukawa made the accusations as three black-robed Japanese judges be gan the trial of Crowley, 48, on manslaughter charges. Jones, 45, Crowley's brother-in- law and son of the late Yale foot ball great T. A. D. Jones, was found dead May 8 following a night-long drinking spree with Crowley. the two men, who were busi ness associates in New Haven, Conn., had come to Japan to buy an oil tanker. Frederick M. Kis singer of Brandywine, Md., who accompanied Uicm, was cleared of suspicion and returned to the United States. . Crowley, bespectacled and out wardly calm, listened intently as the indictment was read. Then in a firm, loud voice he entered a plea of innocent, saying, "I deny 1 bad anything to do with it. After the prosecution statement the court adjourned until July 8. Furukawa said Crowley s paja mas were smeared with blood and Texans Ready To Save Americans GLADEWATER, Tex. (AP) -A hand of sharp-shooting Texans is ready to show Cuban rebel Fidel Castro that flaunting Uncle Sam can be prelly risky. All they need Is the green light from President Eisenhower to un limber their six-guns and deer lilies and dash lo the rescue of the Americans the Cubans are holding. Martin Mr-Ada, HI, oilman and rancher, wired the White House lor permission to lead the band of 4. He said Ihey include fornvr Texas Hungers and "other men fed up with Ihis foolishness." "We are ready and if Ike will give the word we'll leave for Cuba at a moment's notice." McAda said. priORa CPEN 6!3D P. M. EtsW SATURDAY T r 7 MOST jFLsfU HATED ITK V J MAN T! l j WEST Z-JT?- HEEPMAN u&mtua mart auumssT I nam biowh CMlSrWMltllOCX0 'you NfiVER HEARD OF A SPABKlgff'? MV GOSH, K 0, WHERE YOU ffffA ? ' Prosecutor Charges Grid Hero With Fatal Beating Typhoon Heading Toward Luzon MANILA (UPD - A Pacific typhoon with maximum 80 miles per hour center winds churned to day in a general direction be tween the Philippines and For mosa. Weathermen located typhoon less early today at approxi mately 500 miles northwest , of Guam or 1,000 miles east of the southern lip of Luzon Island. It was moving northwest at 14 miles per hour. OPEN DAILY 7:00 P. M. SATURDAY ONLY! While Hot 5TJsJ Jungle HffV ricHNicoiei Ttevot Howaid lane Gieer FEATURE AT 8 0S ft 11:33 - -FOS GunSight I .1? & f H Shown At 10:03 Only SUNDAY! T loel McCREA Hark STEVENS loin WELOON II RUM SILENT. RUM DEEP that he tried to hide a bruised left hand when police questioned him about Jones' death. He charged tnai crowley inllicted.31 separate injuries on Jones and said that the latter died from severe blows by a blunt object to the left side of his head. He also claimed that Crowlcv gave a Japanese physician who attended Jones before he died a "reward" of 360.000 ven (St nnn) This point was not explained further. The prosecution statement aM only Kissinger and Crowley wore with Jones during the early morn ing hours May 8 when he was beaten. "There were no inriiraiinnc of intrusions from the outside . . . no indication Jones left the room and sustained injury." Crowley is free on hull with him in the courtroom was his old er brother, Robert P. Crowley 51 of Milwaukee, Wis. The trial is ex pected to last into September. the charge aeainst rvmuin,,- inflicting hndilv in in rifle nit death is equivalent to a man slaughter charge in the United Mates. Conviction carries a pos- o. imaun icrm ot irom 2 to 15 years. Singer Deplores Lack Of Opportunity For Youths By HAZEL K. JOIINSO.V tailed Press International HOLLYWOOD (UPIi Twelve years ago Lauritz Melchior would have subsidized classical musicians through a si-a-set stamp tax on radios. Gl Planning To Publish TOKYO (AP) William S. Gi rard. the ex-GI whose firing-range killing of a Japanese woman de veloped into an international inci dent, has written his Japanese lawyer that he's writing a book. Itsuro Hayashi, the veteran Jap anese attorney who defended the Ottawa. III., soldier, said he has received the first letter from his client since Girard got a suspend ed three-year sentence last No vember. "He asked to borrow official trial records," Hayashi said. "He explained he needed them in writ ing a book." After the trial, Girard was dis charged from the Army. He re turned to the United States with his Japanese wife, Ham (Candy) Sueyama. Today he'd cut the price in singer and musician. I would have half and assess each television set owner as well. "They could sell them in thel post offices," the tall, silver-haired veteran of opera and screen said as he deplored the "lack of op portunity for today's young art ists." Melchoir's "art tax" is a subject close to his heart, a long-time pro ject wh.ch typifies the sustained interest the operatic star has had in spreading the appreciation of "better" music. (Earlier this month. Melchoir's first long-playing album was re leased. An RCA Camden record ing entitled "The Lighter Side of Lauritz Melchior." "This is a back door way of getting the people to listen to Wagner." Melchior ad mitted. "The record people will put some of my operas out again if they find there's interest in this first recording.") Anytime the towering' heroic tenor is given half the chance he'll speak of his plan to set up a min ister (or secretary) of art and cul ture in the U.S. "If you study opera in the U.S., it's a dead end road," he said. "A disaster. "That's why we need an office to see about helping the young the government sell 50-cent stamp for art's sake. . .a stamp for each radio and TV set. "Nobody could not afford it." Whenever the government needs entertainers for any purpose at all it doesn't hesitate to call on the singer or the musician, Melchior said. "But it does nothing for music. It's ridiculous. We do everything for baseball or football, but for music we don't lift a linger." Melchoir visits a country which has such a "socialized music" set up through its art minister this week his native Denmark. On July 4 he'll sing "What Is Amer ica to me," in Copenhagen where as president he will preside over the annual reunion of the Kings' Regiment of the Royal Danish Guard. After a six-week European tour (with a tentative singing engage ment at the Brussels Fair), Mel choir and his wife will return to their Beverly Hills home and a singing schedule limited to about 50 performances a year. "I'm still taking it a little eas ier now," he said although he ad mitted he's still a pushover for any cause which purports to help the beginning operatic singer. And he's not given up on his radio-TV tax. "It may come along as soon as someone decides it would be a good plank in his political platform." Start SUNDAY! Mariorie '' Morningster - tw WARNdtCOLOR FME IELLYnATA Wood TREVOR WYNN SLOAN E -.BT. C0.'H KS MILNER- JONES i".'m"mii FILMED IN OUR OWN STATE OF OREGON! OPEN DAILY 7:00 P.M. I STATE OF OREGON! fi M w JOHN ERICSON LOLA ALBRIGHT TWO BIG ACTION HITS! THURSDAY AND FRIDAY FIRST RUN CO-HIT! -THE TRUE STORY- IT Could Happen In YOUR TOWN- SHAME, The SIN, The SHOCK! AThe ., EDWARD BINNS-CAR01YN CRAIG. JEANNE CARMEN FEATURE SHOWN AT 8:05 & 11:10 FEATURE SHOWN AT 9:50 ONLY PARAMOUNT PRESENTS TODAY'S MOST EXCITING SINGING STAR! STIRRING DRAMATIC PERFORMANCE! e nsw in .) J lUk M t vi- hYf v7 fl. ; I f f f Out o the French i f:;t 7T It pulaea wuh the I If 7 ' O0nf J jj I l 1 F Quarter's "Club ' V?t heartbeat of the fj Ward tt fe In. " H -LI ' i King Creole-fighU f. S vi- young ("-""""on jfr 1 Kinen eadedv by I II Y7! LA young New Or- 11 it'" V b'd on the Tf: J tten.e'e-7 .Oniao i 1 4 f. i ? leans entertainer... l' J''110""1 tp!l .' 'ea"s-V. erDoll I ? S"v V 1 struggling to the K H l"AJ!0n?J0t Ih'UiS -MIW t I top against gangs S1 VIC -t cls: ' 1;rl 8twl? MICHAfl .UADT. MW ':..VMnDDn .. ....V 1 W ra.UL. ? Z N 'WMtl- - " w v CAROLYN JNE-ii . - f. i' 1 -V - i t"ri.-.4f WAITER DOLORES DEAN -. r . is. FEATURE TIMES r(rtur Tonight . 7:14 t 9:31 FRIDAY MATINEE 1:00 FridoT N,,hl . 7:14 ft 9:33 CONTINUOUS SHOWS SAT. and SUN. tram U 45 Of the "trcasu:t the Indue k(,t.