Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 16, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE 2 A
HERALD AD NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON'
WEDNESDAY. JULY 16. 1953
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ADAMS' SUCCESSOR7
Widely circulated rumort
lay that Secretary of the
Interior Fred A. Seaton will
luceeed Sherman Adami as
presidential assistant should
Adams be forced to resign.
Adams has been the object
of attacks demanding he be
relieved of his post for hav
ing accepted gifts from
Boston millionaire Bernard
Goldfine.
School Sets
Clothes Code
. BELLFLOWER, Calif. (AP)-A
girl in slacks or a bearded boy
won't stand a chance at Bell
flower's high schools next semes
ter. Beards and slacks just don't
pass the Code.
The Code is a policy adopted by
the school board in this Los An
geles suburb to tell the town's
teen-agers how they're supposed
to act at school.
Each student will get a copy of
the Code. It classifies misbehav
lor in three degrees: unaccept
able, serious and extreme.
Beards and slacks are unaccept
able. So arc beach wear, "hot rod
jackets." and trousers too low at
the hips, for the boys; and open
back or low-front dresses, sheer
blouses and flamboyant hair tints
ior the girls.
Serious offenses include (man
cy. fighting, gambling, defying
authority, profanity and destroy
ing school property. Extreme of
, fenses are obscene language,
striking a teacher, setting fires,
bringing lethal weapons to classes,
use of narcotics or alcoholic bev
erages.
Unacceptable misbehaviors may
earn only citations. Other penal
ties are suspension from school for
the balance of the semester and
expulsion.
Dr. Norman Wampler, superin
tendent of schools, explaining the
code to a reporter, emphasized
that "we feel that our kids are
no worse than any others." He
added: "We feel that high school
youngsters need lo know exactly
what is expected of them with re
spect to behavior, dress and appli
cation to studies, and the punish
ments they may expect if they fail
to comply."
Grisly Thought Added To
Darwin Evolution Theory
Admiral Named
Lebanon Chief
WASHINGTON (API - Navy
Adm. James L. Holloway Jr. has
arrived in Lebanon to take com
mand of American forces there,
the Defense Department an
nounced early today.
A Pentagon official reported
that the commander in chief of
II. S, naval operations in the east
ern Atlantic and Mediterranean
had arrived on the I'SS Taconie
off Beirut.
PROFESSIONAL !
;l RODEO :
; July 25-26-27 jl'
WASHINGTON. LPI) It is a
srisly thought that Dr. Geoffrey
F. Fisher, the srehbishop of Can
lerbury, may hae addi-d to a fi
nal and awful footnote to Charles
Darwin's theory of evolution.
Likely nothing was further from
the archbishop's mind than the
Darwinian theory when, over the
weekend, the primate of England
was revealed to have said that
it may be God's will that man
kind be destroyed by nuclear
weapons.
For all I know, the arch
bishop had written in a sympo
sium on nuclear policy, "it is
within the providence of God that
the human race should destroy it
self in this manner."
The archbishop's widely printed
speculation must have remind
ed some readers of the July 1
dispatch written for United Press
International by Sir Charles Dar
win, grandson of the famous nat
ural scientist. Darwin's theorv
of evolution became public 100
years ago. His great book "The
Origin of the Species" was pub
lished ihe tollowing year.
Ihe central point of Darwin s
theory the mechanism by which
it lunctioned was natural selec
lion which, loosely, means the
survial of the fittest. Sir Charles'
dispatch explained natural selec
tion this way:
The intense competition of all
living things in the struggle for
life which was continually wiping
out the less efficient members of
any species and leaving the stage
lor those better equipped to sur
vive.
In this same dispatch. Sir
Charles wrote that there is ques
tion now of the extent to which
Darwin's theory actually and di
rectly affects the human race. He
wrote that some areas have at
tained so high a degree of pros
perity as to ease the struggle to
survive or, practically, to abolish
it. permitting the less fit to mul
iply. "Natural selection." he wrote,
"has been eliminated for the time
being."
This is leading, according to Sir
Charles and some others learned
in the subject, to a condition of
world overpopulation which would
he catastrophic in volume and in
effect.
"Can our statesmen realize,"
Sir Charles continued, "that this
is by far the most important po
litical problem of the near fu
ture? Nobody knows any satisfac
tory answer, but if one is not
found soon, our over-populated
world is almost certain to re
lapse into hard conditions of life
like those that used to prevail
only a few centuries ago, when
it was the ruthless processes of
natural selection that controlled
the number of mankind."
The archbishop's idea would fit
in about there the idea that it
may be God's .will that nuclear
weapons shall accomplish what
mere war, pestilence and famine
formerly were sufficient t o
achieve in preventing a popula
tion explosion in the world.
Sir Charles left out of account
what effect, if any, the welfare
state concept may have on the
survival of the less efficient and
the coming over-population of the
world.
Neither did he dispose of the
fact that the population bulge is
not especially among the high
standard of living welfare-state
nations hut among others such as
India, China and Japan.
However that may be, the con
cept that a Higher Power may
have directed men's minds to the
nuclear break-through to blast the
world against suicidal over-popu
lation is, perhaps, the grimmest
peek at the future in this year
ot grim forebodings.
'DENNIS THE MENACE"
Radio Expert Tells Of Air
Communication Problems
By RENNIE TAYLOR
Associated Press Science Writer
LOS ANGELES (API Some
planes now can go fast enough to
push radio signals out of their al
lotted frequency channels, says an
electronics expert.
This can mean danger for men
in supersonic aircraft because it
reduces or in some cases can pre
vent effective communication dur
ing fleeting moments when warn
ings or other information are
vital, he said.
The best way out of the prob
lem, the specialist said, is to es
tablish artificial radio relay sta
tions in satellites thousands of
miles above the earth.
Two planes closing in on each
other and each traveling at 2 1 i
times the speed of sound get a
speedup in their commonly used
voice communication band, Par
kinson said. After they pass each
other the frequency is slowed
down by the same amount.
The effect is basically the same
as the rising and falling notes of
a train whistle or an automobile
horn when a car on a highway
passes a train going in the oppo
site direction. Scientifically it is
called the Dopplcr effect.
This variation may crowd the
signal clear out of the band to
which it is allotted, Parkinson de
clared. Unless the receiving plane
retimes its set to compensate for
this, it may get only part of the
message or may miss it entirely.
One answer to this and other
shortcomings of present radio
communication. the specialist
added, is the establishment of two
or three satellites 22.000 miles
above the earth with instruments
for relaying short-wave signals.
These satellites would have the
same speed as the rotation of the
earth, so they would seem to be
stationary in the sky. At the same
lime they would reflect signals not
just to one part of the earth but
over nearly half of its surface.
A satellite relav svslem could
carry thousands of channels simul
taneously and relieve the conges
tion of the present radio spec
trum, he reported. The system
also could make long-range or
even worldwide television possible,
he added.
Existing electronic equipment is
capable of producing such a sys
tem, he said. The main unsolved
problems, he added, are a booster
rocket that could get the mod
erate-sized satellite to the 22.000
miles level, and a means of fur
nishing it with power to operate
us reiay equipment.
Such problems will be solved in
5 to 10 years.
Crime Hikes
In California
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt
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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
Attorney General Edmund G.
Brown reports that major crime
in California rose 12.8 per cent
during 1957 about one third of
what the FBI says.
'A large part of the statistical
increase in crime is due to bet
ter reporting, better procedures
for obtaining data and better law
enforcement methods," Brown
said Tuesday.
But beyond these factors, there
is still an underlying increase in
unlawful conduct in our communities.
'That increase is one of the
disturbing symptoms of our times
both in California and across the
nation."
Brown charged that the FBI's
Uniform Crime Reports on Califor
nia presented California crime in
an "unjustified, u n f a v o r able
light." The FBI placed Califor
nia's crime increase at 35 per
cent.
Brown charged the FBI based
its statistical rate on California's
population under the 1950 census.
Brown said he based his statis-
itics on the 1957 population, which
was one-third greater than in
1950.
The attorney general's compila
tion showed total felonies for 1957
were 194.038, compared to 1S5.250
in 1956.
Noting that arrests for adult
felonies were up 10.fi per cent, fel
ony complaints increased ll.fi per
rent and the number of defend
ants prosecuted rose to 13 7 per
cent. Brown said:
"This means that serious crime
has increased in California be
tween 10 and 13 per cent faster
than the rise in population."
San Francisco had a "relatively
low" increase of 5.9 per cent.
VotfRE okax Harold, tmt wasn't you. the kid here just
BROKE A WNEK KOASTNG STICK!'
Can't Fake Charm, Says
Fabled Song-And-Dancer
By JAMES L. KILGALLEN
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Maurice Chevalier says "You
can't fake charm."
The fabled song-and-dance man,
whose charm has made him inter
nationally famous over a stretch
of 59 years in show business, said
in an interview that to be charm
ing "you've got to have charm
inside of you, in your heart and
in your blood.
He said the three most charm
ing men he ever met in his world
travels were actor George M.
Cohan, Mayor Jimmy Walker of
New York and Dwight D. Eisenhower.
No slouch in the charm league
himself, Chevalier has brought
flutters to many feminine hearts
in strutting his stuff on-stage with
a straw hat tilted over his eye,
a pouting lower lip and a
Parisian spirit of eternal youth.
'The first proof of charm is
sincerity," he said as we chatted
in his suite at the Chateau Mar-
mont Hotel.
"Just making faces up there on
the stage isn't enough. That's a
bluff and insincere and it's dis
gusting. You've got to have charm
within you to put it across.
Chevalier doesn t kid himself.
He knows he's what many people
regard as an elderly man he will
be 70 years old on Sept. 12.
"I realize my ago," he smiled
I'm past the days when I want
to play romantic leads. I don't
want to he embarrassed. From
now on I'll play fathers, uncles
or even grandfathers. The thing
I most fear is ridicule.
Nobody, however, ridicules
Chevalier.
Currently, he is one of the stars
in MGM s new picture, Gigi,
which he plays an uncle in the
role of an old Parisian boule-
vardier.
He is now in Hollywood appear
ing nightly at Ihe Greek Theater
the beautiful Griffith Park
Amphitheater in a series of per
formances of his one-man show.
"I don't know how long I can
go in the profession, said Che
valier. "But show business is c
love affair with me. I've been at
it since I was 12 years old
Paris. It's my pride, my kick in
life."
Press Didn't Realize How Lost Child
Much They Missed Marilyn gns Rules
By BOB THOMAS
AP Motion Pictures Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Marilyn
Monroe is back, and we're glad.
The Hollywood press corps
didn't realize how much they
missed Double-M until she came;
back after a two-year absence.
They realized anew that this is the
real article.
Oh, there have been others who
have tried. Jayne Mansfield?
You've got to give her A for ef
fort, but she lacks subtlety. Sophia
I.oren? Not enough imagination.
Kim Novak? She comes close, but
still lacks a certain flair. Zsa Zsa
Gabor? Are you kidding?
Marilyn has everything it takes,
and I don't just mean the physical
aspects. She still has that wonder
ful wide-eyed response to inter
viewers' questions. And her re
sponses are not just accidental or
vague.
Such as when she was asked
whether she favored the sack
dress. No, she replied, it's not or
ganic.
Watching her operate at her
first press reception on her re
turn, 1 tried to analyze the Mon
roe magic. It is unique. She ex
udes the impression of being the
dumb blonde. But she knows all
the angles, including the camera
ones. She chided a photographer
for trying to get a shot that would
5how more than she wanted.
And she keeps the reporters
happy. She reminds each one of
when they met last, which builds
morale. And she always answers
oueries. Thouah her reply might
skirt the question, she is always CALISTOGA (UPI) A teen,
quotable. 'age girl who became lost over-
Welcome home. Marilyn, and 'night in rugged Napa County ter.
stay awhile.
Las Vegas, notes. . . . It's TV
time on the strip. Among the stars
playing at the top hotels are Ed
Sullivan, Jack Benny, Gisele Mc
Kenzie. George Gobel, Eddie Fish
er, .Milton Berle, Rosemary Cloo
ney, etc. Reason: TV stars want
to pick up that Las Vegas loot as
soon as they start their summer
vacations. ...
The Clooney gal is appearing
twice nightly at the Sands though
five months pregnant with her
lourth child. But with today's
crazy styles, it's scarcely notice
able. . . . Benny got off to a slow
start in his Flamingo debut, but
picked up when his Yermo, Ncv.,
fan club came onstage. They were
eight middle - aged ladies who
formed a rousing swing band.
Ships Warned
To Stay Away
HONOLULU (UPI) - Shipping
and aircraft traveling near John
ston Island, 700 miles southwest
of Honolulu, were warned away
from the area for a radius of 75
miles Tuesday night in prepara
tion for a nuclear test.
The warning said the area would
be dangerous to all traffic from
the surface to an unlimited alti
tude for an hour.
rain was safe today and pondering
a lesson in obedience.
The girl, Paulette Alcouffe, 15,
Dunsmuir. went riding Monday
against the wishes of her grand-
mother, whom she was visiting.
The horse returned to its stable
late Monday but without the girl
and her Collie named lulty.
A 50-man posse combed the
brushy, mountaindus countryside
all night without finding her. She
was finally found Tuesday by a
search helicopter from Hamilton
Air Force Base.
DOORS CPEN 630 P M
LAST 2 DAYS
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OPEN DAILY 7:00 P. I
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