Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 27, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
SUNDAY. JULY 27. 1958
Lebanese Said 'Sick And "pennis the menace-
Tired' Of Current Crisis
Bv RKI.MAN MORIS'
BEIRUT tAPi "We're nick and
tired of the whole thing. The peo
ple don't care what kind of a solu
tion develops so long as they get
this over with."
Camille Birlxiri. 36-year-old pur
chasing a cent for a Lebanese
firm, was talkifiz. His oftite is in
the center of Beirut on? of the' midnight
wife to the hospital at 7 p.m..
an hour before the streets were
cleared and belnre the nightly
shootings and bombings began.
The hahy arrived that night.
"We were very fortunate," he
said. "It's hard to say what
might have happened if we had to
go suddenly through the streets at
hottest spots in the 7.1-day-old re
bellion against l,ebanon s pro
Western government.
Frequently, Birbari has tele
phoned his pretty wife Aida, moth
er of one child and with another
on the way, that he had to work
late.
Actually his office building was
under heavy rebel fire. One em
ploye was killed and another
wounded. Birbari moved his desk
sway from the window and felt
reasonably safe. But he couldn't
tell his wrfe the real reason for
his working late "She was al
ready nervous and I wouldn't
give her any more bad news."
Aida's time drew near. Because
of rebel sandbag barriers in sec
tions of the cily and the govern
ment's 8 p.m. curfew, the husband
Birbari's work frequently takes
him around Iebanon, into rebel
held territory. He has been shot
at several times on the roads and
three times narrowly escaped ex
ploding bombs.
Although he travels widely in
the country, he said nobody could
estimate what percentage of the
people are actually fighting or
militanlly supporting any of the
various factions.
"Most people wouldn't give two
hoots about politics so long as the
shops kept open," he said. "It's
mainly only the political leaders
and their personal rivalries.
"You must remember that in
the villages the clan system pre
vails. If the head of the clan tells
the village to fight with one side
or the other, they fight. But they
became apprehensive about the) don't know what for and they
trip to the hospital. don t care.
We had curfew passes, of
course, not knowing when Aida
might have In go to the hospital.
Then they canceled the old passes
end told everybody in .the city
they would have to get new ones.
There was nothing we could do
but hope for the best. My wile was
nervous but very brave."
Ten days ago Birbari took his
Birbari said the arrival of the
U.S. Marines caused celebrations
among the government, supporters
and badly scared the opposition.
But the great majority of the peo
ple now just want peace, he de
clared, adding: "We are sick and
tired of it. We're against anything
that disturbs the stability of the
country."
Harry Of Warner Broihers
Closes Illustrious Career
Lebanon Supply Armada Surpasses Berlin Lift
PARIS (AP) The American
landings in Lebanon took the
wraps off an air transport punch
that dwarfs the lamed com war
airlift into Berlin.
The decision to land troops in
Lebanon was immediately backed
by an airlift that could deliver
over a distance 20 times as great
more supplies than ever were
flown from West Germany to Ber
lin during a 24-hour period.
The airlift has been going on at
'KM CALM WNH.fflS.Woe, AND SAV THAT A3AIN. MRSARST
wants id join tis'Nuoisr axw?jjAiuoisr corny 2 .
Crippled Airliner Makes
Safe Dramatic Turnabout
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
Harry Warner, 7fi a Polish im
migrant hoy who became one of
the giants or the motion picture
Industry, died Friday night at his
home.
Warner, who with his brothers
pioneered the use of sound in
movies and revolutionized the in
dustry with the production of AI
Jolson's "The Jazz Singer" in
1!)27, had been ill for several
months. Death was attributed to
a cerebral occlusion.
Harry stepped down two years
ago after 30 years as president of
Warner Bros, studio, but was a
member of the hoard at the lime
of his death. His brother Jack is
now president and another broth
er, Albert, is in charge of film
distribution.
Harry, .lack, Albert and a fourth
brother, Sam, were the sons of a
Polish Immigrant lamily that
came to the United Slates in 1H87,
living first In Baltimore and then
in Youngstown, Ohio. Sam died in
11127.
They began their storied motion
picture careers in a tiny thealer
set up in a remodeled store in
New Castle, Pa., in lfin.1. Harry
handled the business. Jack sang
songs in Ihe pit, Albert ran the
projector and Shiii sold tickets.
Harry, the oldest, handled the
business all the way through the
brothers' steadily expanding
movie activities, which included
exhibition, distribution, and, in
1917, production.
"I hardly ever saw a movie
made," he said a few years ago.
In Harry's hands, business was
good. The brothers kept control of
Ihe huge studio in Burbank with
in the family until two' years ago
when a financial syndicate bought
in for 20 million dollars, leaving
Ihe Warners in charge of produc
tion. In 1930 aflcr Ihe phenomenal
success of "The Jazz Singer." Ihe
studio was reportedly worth 23(1
million dollars.
The broihers set several trends
in Ihe industry. In 1932, "42nd
Streel" launched Ihe big film
musicals. And such pictures as
"The Life of Emile Zola," "Louis
Pasteur." "Lit I ie Caesar," "I Am
a Fugitive From a Chain Gang."
and "Confessions of a Nazi Spy"
started the use of topical and bio
graphical mailer in the movies.
Recently Warner Bros, has gone
into television in a big way.
llesides his brothers Harrv
leaves the widow, Rea Levinson
Warner, whom he married in 10(17:
and three daughters, Mrs. Doris
Vidor. Mrs. Betty Sperling and
Mrs. Lita Hiall.
FREE
ADMISSION
UNFORGETTABLE...
as the prayer learned at
your mother's knee!
'BUtij
(hahatn
in
SOULS IN
.CONFLICT"
si?!
TONITE
7:30 P.M.
American
Baptist
Church
Altamont
Junior High
ARGEXTIA. Nfld. (UPD - A
crippled Pan American World Air
ways Clipper carrying 45 persons
made an emergency landing here
Saturday ending a dramatic four-
hour, 4H)-mile turnabout tngnl
Irom over the darkened Atlantic.
There was no panic, and all 36
passengers and 9 crewmembers
were unharmed.
The pilot of the DC-7 Capt. Rob
ert P, Postlewaite, 42, of Wilton
Conn., at one point planned to
ditch his craft In the Atlantic aft
er one engine went dead and the
plane developed a runaway pro
peller.
But. finding he could maintain
altitude after dropping from 17.000
SP Families Set
Safety Outing
All Southern Pacific employes
and their immediale families and
all Southern Pacific pensioners and
families have been invited to at
tend Ihe Southern Pacific Com
pany's annual salely picnic to he
Held next lucsday al Moore Park
from 1 to 7 p.m. C. K. Alward.
trainmaster, is committee chairman.
The picnic will feature barbe
cued heel and all the trimmings.
prepared under the supervision of
Charley Blown of Ihe MPJiC de
partment. Officers of Ihe Southern
Pacific will serve as hosts.
The picnic Ihis year fetes Shasta
Division Southern Pacific employes
for Iheir excellent safety record
lor Ihe year 1957 when they
achieved Ihe highest safety record
nf any division of the Southern
Pacilic system. Shasta Division is
again in first place for the first
six months of 1!)SB. This year
marks Ihe eighth consecutive year
Ihis division has achieved an out
standing safely record.
Between 71K) and R0(l persons are
expected to attend Ihe picnic.
THERE'S A CONNECTION
LINDEN. N..J. (ITU The Esso
Research and Engineering Co. re
ported today
habits shows rock n'roll tunes
plaved on car radios causes mo
torists to jiggle the accelerator
Flying Tiger
Is Improving
NEW ORLEANS (UPD Ailing
Lt. Gen. Claire Chennault has
shown "marked improvement"
and has been removed from the
critical list, a spokesman at Ochs
ner Foundation Hospital said
Friday.
The former head of Ihe Flying
Tigers in World War II is under
going treatment for bi-laternal
lung cancer.
A hospital spokesman said the
(W-year-old general s improvement
has been "dramatic almost
miraculous."
Chennault has been hospitalized
at Ochsner since July 6.
Two Drowned
At Newport
NEWPORT. Ore. (AP) A
woman who couldn't swim stood
horrified on a river hank Friday
and watched her husband and
niece drown.
The bodies of Vernon Graves,
31, and Lynn Thomas. 5. were re
covered about 40 minutes after
they vanished in the Silelz River.
Siale police labored an hour to
revive them, but were unsuccess
ful. Graves, his wile and their niece
had gone lo the river (or an after
r.oon picnic.
As Ihe girl waded in Ihe slug
gish slream, she apparently
slipped into a deep hole. Graves
plunged into Ihe water after her.
and also drowned.
Mrs. Graves stood helpless on
shore, and then ran to their near
by dairy larm and phoned police.
The bodies were recoered from
lo 6,000 feet, Postlewaite decided
to make a run for the U.S. Naval
Base airfield here. The New York-to-London-bound
Clipper set down
without incident at 12:36 a.m.
A Sabena Belgium Airlines
plane, bound from New York to
Shannon, Ireland, flew to the side
of the disabled Clipper on receiv
ing its distress call, lt was re
lieved a short while later by two
Coast Guard B-17's two Royal Ca
nadian Air Force Lancasters and
a U.S. Navy radar picket Constel
lation, which shepherded the DC-7
to its emergency landing.
Among those aboard were Sey
mour J. Berkson, publisher of the
New York Journal-American, and
his wife. They were hound for a
vacation in Europe. Mrs. Berkson
is a fashion expert.
On Ihe emergency turnabout
flight, Postlewaite maintained an
air speed of 115 miles per hour
while flying at 6.0110 feet. The
Clipper had been flying between
275 and 300 miles per hour at 17,
(Hio feet before the left inboard en
gine failed at 8:27 p.m., e.d.t.
When the propeller began to
windmill, dragging the plane
down, Postlewaite prepared to
ditch in the Atlantic at Ocean
Point Delta, where a Coast Guard
vessel is stationed, about 3fi0
miles from Newfoundland and
about 100 miles from where the
troublo developed.
But when Postlewaite found he
could maintain altitude at 6.000
feet, he decided to try for a land
ing at Argenlia.
At one point, Ihe plane's speed
was less than 100 miles per hour.
It normally has a maximum cruis
ing speed of 354 miles an hour at
23.500 feet.
Postlewaite. 42. a graduate of
the University of Illinois, has been
Hying with Pan American since
1940. In 1955, a Pan American
liner he was flying clipped three
minutes off the New York-London
ight record, which, until then,
had been 8 hours. 55 minutes.
Soy Beans Get
Bicycle Trial
LOS ANGELES l'PI Carl
Urhan, 40, was all set to start
his cross - country bicycle trip
Friday nourished completely by
soy beans.
Urban, an Applelon. Wis., man
ufacturer wilh a passion for soy
beans and a tendency towards
eccentricity, is out to prove that
25 cents worth of soy beans a day
provide enough energy to pedal
his hike 100 miles a day for the
3.0O0-mile trip.
He said his wife. Marion, and
their wo children. Holly, 12. and;
Carl Jr.. 15. would nare him in I
a car and cat anything they
want. They hope to arrive in
U.S. Readies
Missile Shot
At The Moon
By BILL WILKS
United Press International
LOS ANGELES (UPI'-The Air
Force is preparing to launch its
first shot at the moon in about
three weeks when the moon
passes within about 220.000 miles
of the earth, it was reliably re
ported Saturday. '
The lunar probe is planned for
the period when the moon makes
its closest monthly approach. That
period, according to astronomers,
is Aug. 15-19, with the moon being
closest Aug. 17.
The small package of instru
ments, which will be fired in a
three-stace rocket from Cape Ca
naveral, will take about two days
for its journey. If fired on Aug
17, it would arrive Aug. 19 at a
lime when Ihe moon is in its quar
ter phase and visible up to mid
night at locations throughout the
world.
What type of probe is planned
for the first shot was not revealed
by confidential- sources. So far of
ficials have stated only that scien
tists would attempt to send the
first probes in "the vicinity of the
moon and that the primary on
iective is not to hit the moon, al
though that possibility exists. It
also has been stated the moon
rockets are designed to provide a
close look at the moon with in
strumcnts which include television-like
"ground scanning" de
vices.
This has led to speculation the
first launching will be a simple
"boomerang" shot around Ihe
moon and back toward earth rath
er than an attempt to hit .the
moon. Scientists who conducted
Air F'orce studies on Ihe project
say the round-trip shot appears
basically easier.
However, unofficial spokesmen
believe the first shot could be
aimed to impact on the moon.
A scientific source close to the
project declared scientists would
be happy "even if the first shot
came only within 50.000 miles of
the moon because we could learn
a lot from that and it would not
be a failure."
The first two stages of (he moon
rocket will consist of the Thor
Able missile which lias been un
dergoing recent testing at Cape
Canaveral. The third stage vehicle
was developed especially for Ihe
lunar probe project.
this rate for almost two weeks and
Air Force officers confidently pre
dict it can continue as long as
needed while routine flying chores
are handled also.
In addition, the U.S. 6th Fleet
is giving massive seaborne sup
port to the Marines who landed
at Beirui.
The airlift is run from a small
control room at Evreux, France,
50 miles west of Paris, where the
U.S. 322nd Air Division is based.
A single telephone call from there
can reroute planes from Oslo to
Istanbul.
DEAD RIGHT
NEW BERLIN, Wis. (AV-Parish-
oners reluctant to sit in the front
pews at Holy Apostles Catholic
Church recently received a not-too-
uhtle hint to do so in the parish
Sunday bulletin. "Some people rc-
iuse to come up the front of the
church unless escorted by pall
bearers," the bulletin said.
At its height, the Berlin airlift
of 1948-49 never quite reached car
rying a million pounds daily. The
longer airlift to the Middle East
has several times beaten that by
some 200,000 pounds.
However, like the Berlin airlift,
this one is no lark. The crews
have been worked so hard that a
flight surgeon now stands on the
flight line to insure that no over
enthusiastic pilot gets into the air
too tired to handle the huge planes
safely.
The commander of the 322nd,
Col. Clyde Box. a former bomber
pilot . from Nevada, Tex., has
flown 50 hours on the airlift him
self. With a telephone call, he can
put into Ihe air 110 big transports
C130 turbojet Hercules. C124
Globemastcrs and the old CI 19
twin-boomed Flying Boxcars.
At the start these planes were
beefed up by another 80 planes
Irom Ardmore, Okla., and Stewart
Air Force Base, Tenn.
This global force had never re
ally strained iis muscles until
President Eisenhower's decision
July 14.to send troops to Lebanon.
CONTINUOUS FROM 12:45 P. M. yV
TODAY!
Feature Today
1:34 . 4.11 . 6:41 . 25
CARTOON LATI NIWS
' ''''' ' s
The great love story of World Warn
by the author of "All Quiet on the Western Front'
ERICH MARIA REMARQUE'S
CINEMASCOPE? m. :vtmau COLOR
A Univenal -International Picture starring
M JOHN GAVIN LILO PULVER
JOCK MAHONEY DON DeFORE KEENAN WYNN
and ERICH MARIA REMARQUE, liimseK, as Tlie Professor
in IVV (11 WrlltT, .!!. MlilM'S W d pw Vp,-!, Sent 4
SI liny 01 Oriving imNMidiii-u iirir iui ?mmv.
ine misnap occurred z nines
east of Newport. near Silelz.
The girl, a Newport resident
pedal. siRnificantly decreasing gas. had none to her uncle's farm for
mileage. 'a hi let summer visit.
Billy Graham Warns South
Christianity Only Solution
I iv, i nero are no umoi oisi mc-
Graham has at me cross.
t.raham spoke of current ten
sion in the Middle Kast and in
toned "science has placed in our
hands the weapons to destroy civ
ilization. "We all talk of summit meet
'lies." the ennse!t said, "but t:
nuht. (iraham said "Cod does my"""vlv "lM Z t " .
Ill lll'n MIHI'H l Mrulll, UIVII Hit
SA. ANTONIO, Tex. (V'PP itv. There
Evangelist Billy
caulioned the Smith that its racial
problems will remain unsolved un
til Negroes and whites recognnc
land accept Christianity.
! Sneakinc to an unsmrelated San
nionio audience of 4.V0O0 Ne-
I lilies. Mcvic.ms and whiles t-rinay
look upnn Ihe color of a man s
m. but at the attitude of a man's
heart." !
lie said "we will never solve our
racial prohlems in the South until
boih races come completely lo
rerognie and accept Christian!-
For More
Living
Per Gallon
See the New
MORRIS
'1000'
or
Robin & Myers
1200 I. Mim TU 25S11
summit's decision could civc
new hope lo the world. Otherwise,
there will likely he failure as in
most pat discussion "
(iraham. who was introduced as
"the greatest man of our day" h
Texas llov . Tru e Daniel, said
Americans are "interested in co
me on acations. poms to nsht,
cluhs seekinc our own entertain
mentincluding sex and not oc
cupying our thoughts and our time
in the spiritual things that Hod !
wants us to. I
"America should he on her j
knees and the churches should he
filled ami the nation should be
praying," he said, commenting I
that 'we are now m our darkest!
hour in history."
Avit 3,000 persons stepped for-1
ward to make a decision for;
f'hrst the conclusion of the!
meeting. I
CONTINUOUS FROM 1Z:45 P. M. w
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iMpfrPS &-k rSS':-when one f f& $Stwl- iKPfi i
opENrJ,.v7:oaP.M Cf meant death , j , f&k MikKrl
: lolhousands! 3 A A E
Iroa the producer tf "Piytin Place"! V 'M , Of tlTjth fTfWjSffJ' FT;. P
william faulkner s , 5v v when she had jSlrj ' 1&'&V ttyiM '
Th ' W V to surrender bZ
Trl6 m the man she Itf j
iOHQ lovedto "JW'
gig? t x the Names! CZT
mmw t --- , m. 1 i 4 ro ri W
PAUL NEWMAN JOANNE WOODWARO
ANTHONY FRWCIOSA ORSON WELLES
LEE cVICK-ANGELA LANSBURY .J",
Future At :55 & 1ft 25
ARRP I AMP PRAMPIQ I mfiPPP
Amgnuuu inni i uniiuiu llULILI
"MARACA.I60" at 3:03 6:34 10:00
"COUNT S and DIE" of 1:14 4:46 8:17
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