Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 12, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HERALD ANT) NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
TUESDAY. AUGUST 12. 1959
Grocer Saves
Falling Lad
NEW YORK (API Two-year-old
Stephen May toddled to a window
of a third-floor Brooklyn apart
ment yesterday, climbed to the
ledge and hung by one arm over
the sidewalk.
Across the street, Benjamin
Kroczak, 54, was outside his gro
cery, picking up crates of milk
that had just been delivered.
The child screamed and Kroczak
saw the boy suspended.
Kroczak, wounded in a leg dur
ing World War If, quickly limped
across the street, removing his
spectacles.
Just as the grocer stationed him
self below the window, Stephen let
go.
The boy crashed into his arras
The impact caused the grocer's
knees to buckle, but he held on.
Neither man nor child was hurt
The mother, Mrs. Jean May,
26, said she had dozen off in bed
with the child playing beside her.
British Reds
Decrease Noted
LONDON (API Britain's Com
munist party lost a quarter of Its
membership after the Hungarian
revolt and is down to a postwar
low of 26,000, an anti-Communist
organization claimed today.
But in a booklet "The British
Road to Stalinism," the Industrial
Research and Information Serv
ices warned that Communist in
filtration in unions remains
danger.
OPEN DAILY 7:00 P. M
Two amazing men
hunt each other
across 1000
miles of
exploding
seas!
A
ROBERT '
MITCHUM
CURT
JURGEliS
Enemy
BELQW
Suiu QNmmScoPE
Footur Tinin:
7i40 - 10:00
Thursday and
Friday
"HELL IN KOREA"
PLUS-
Sizzling Racial Contest
Taking Shape In Harlem
NEW YORK 'API A sizzlinc
contest on racial issues with na
tional overtones came to a climax
in today's primary election in
Harlem, where two Negroes
sought a Democratic congression
al nomination.
The contest in the 16th Dist. has
drawn nationwide attention as a
potential gauge of Negro feelings
on civil rights issues.
The showdown was between
Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr., an
impassioned advocate of immedi
ate racial integration, and City
Councilman Karl Brown, who
takes a calmer approach while
working for civu rights.
Powell and Brown have waged
their fight in the predominantly
.Negro and Democratic district al
most entirely on racial issues.
Their contest has drawn the
most interest in the statewide
Democratic and Republican pri
maries to choose candidates for
Congress and the State Legisla
ture.
Powell, 49, has served seven two
year terms in Congress. He also
is pastor of the Abyssinian Bap
tist Church in Harlem.
Brown, 55, is an editor of Life
magazine.
Tammany Hall, the Manhattan
Democratic organization, refused
to support Powell for another term
this year. The reason given was
that he backed President Eisen
hower in the 1956 campaign. Pow
ell said he did so because he liked
the Eisenhower stand on civil
rights better than the Democratic
party's. The congressman is un
der indictment on charges of in
come tax evasion.
Tammany Hall leaders in the
16th Dist. picked Brown to run
against Powell, who has a huge
and vocal following in Harlem.
Powell has called Brown a
"hand-picked Uncle Tom selected
by the Tammany plantation
bosses to work against his own
people.
Brown has accused Powell of
rabble-rousing racism and "trea
son to the Democratic party."
tven u Brown should be able
to beat Powell for the Democratic
nomination, both men will be on
the ballot at the Nov. 4 election.
Powell has the backing of the
Republican organization in his
district given after Tammany
aumpea mm. Brown has the sup
port of the Liberal party, which
exists only in New York state.
The Republican nomination of
Powell may have a substantial
effect on the voting for governor
and U. S. senator in November.
And the size of the Powell vote
in the Democratic primary will
have a marked effect on Tarn
many s prestige.
Both parties will pick nominees
for governor and U. S. senator at
party conventions Aug. 25-26.
In addition to today's Powell
Brown contest, there are 51 pri-
mary contests in the state, the
only one that has drawn much at
tention is the one in the 17th Con
gressional Dist. of Manhattan.
Robeson And Belafonie Vie
In London Musical Roles
LONDON (AP)-Two of the
world's most famous Negro sing
ers 60-year-old Paul Robeson and
31-year-old Harry Belafonte com
peted in the show business co
incidence of the year in London
last night.
Robeson sang folk ballads, spir
ituals and show hits at the 8,000
scat Royal Albert Hall in his first
English concert in nine years.
Three milos away, Belafonte
made his London debut by open
ing a week s engagement at the
4,000-seat Movie House.
Both sang to full houses, but it
was Belafonte who got the critics'
plaudits. The Albert Hall audience
gave Robeson a great welcome
back but the critics panned him.
rrom the moment he stole on
stage with panther grace to the
soft strumming or silhouetted gun
tars, Harry Belafonte's - London
debut as a singer and comedian
was a completely professional tri
umph, said the Daily Mail.
man triumph." "Rare and Splen-
man triumph : Hare and Splen
did" talent; "The finest pop this
country nas seen since rrank si
nalra came here eight years ago."
I he critics objected to Robe
ODORS OPEN 6:30 P. M.
SONG 'LAUGHS 'TECHNICOLOR
Trouble Shooter
Ends Mission
PARIS (AP) Robert Murphy
flew home today from a Middle
East trouble-shooting mission for
President Eisenhower that began
shortly after the Marines landed
in Lebanon four weeks ago.
The U.S. deputy undersecretary
of state conferred with officials in
Beirut. Amman. Tel Aviv, Bagh
dad, Cairo, Addis Ababa, Athens,
London and Paris. He talked with
French Foreign Minister Maurice
touve do Murville and other dip
lomats here.
AfcLUiij LAST 2 DAYS!
DOORS CPEN 6:30 P. M.
Tht mort
cholUngina
Invm ifarv
ttr&tjofirih
.LeoraOana
WEDNESDAY!
Doors Open 1:30 Show Starts at 2:00
Out At 4:10 Kids 25c Adults 75c
MATINEE FOR KIDS!
6 CARTOONS
ond
r ? BOB
The MUTfTTXr
Storyi
Starting THURSDAY!
SfFT TWO OPMADDOC KiLURf
1 J$&-
.taking on
a posse
led by his
own father
tilrf
KAIMK CRANI-JAMTS MOM
m VAN HEFLIN -TAB HUNTER
WALK
son's use of a microphone to bol
ster his remnant of a voice and
his injection of politics into his
program.
Said the News Chronicle: "Even
in the encore by which he is best
known in this country '01' Man
River' he changed the lovable
lines 'Git a little drunk and you
land in jail' to 'Show a little grit
and you lands in jail.' "
Daily Express: "The bass
plowed stolidly through spirituals.
Hebrew songs, Russian songs and
popular ballads, 1 making every
one sound alike.
"He even used a microphone,
usually unknown for concert sing
ers, an kept signalling to the
control engineer to turn it up
louder.
"It made little difference for his
singing scarcely ranged outside
the same five or six notes, when
it did, his tone ran aground at
the bottom and disappeared at the
top.
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
'SoiUS AlyVAyS TALKIH'ABOOT THE'fiOOO OC D4V5' WHEN
1 WASN'T HERg. W6U. JOY YOUseeiVES''
Afier Long Absence, Film
Winner Back In Hollywood
Beainiks Leave Haunts For
Downtown Tour Of City
By BOB THOMAS .
AP Motion Picture Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) "I waited
and waited, wondering if they
would ever call me back to Holly
wood again. Why wouldn't they?
Did I not win an Academy Award
there? I did. And still they did not
call."
This - was the frank, energetic
talk of Katina Paxinou, who has
finally been called back to Holly
wood after a 10-year absence. The
winner of the supporting award
for her dynamic Pilar in "For
Whom the Bell Tolls." she has
long been cited as a victim of the
so-called "Oscar jinx."
"Perhaps I did have the Oscar
Printed Pattern
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In 1lTi1irtiM
Hot Weather
Over Nation
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seasonably hot weather clung tr
a major part of the country to
day although a little relief ap
peared on the way for some
Northern areas.
High humidity added to the dis
comfort in broad areas from east
of the Continental Divide as warm
and moist air from the Gulf of
Mexico covered the region.
Although showers and thunder
storms broke out across many
sections during the night, no ma
jor storms were reported in the
early morning. Thunderstorms ex
tended from northeastern Mis
souri eastward to the lower Ohio
Valley and a few also were re
ported in Georgia and eastern Ma
nama.
More Neqros At'
White School
GREENSBORO. N.C. (AP)
Seven Negro pupils, two more
than last year, will attend a pre
viously all - white elementary
school here this fall.
The Greensboro school board.
continuing the pattern set in 1957
when the city's segregated school
policy was broken, yesterday ap
proved the last of the seven ap
plications to enter Gillesnio Part
School.
The board reiected annliratmnc
from 11 other Negro students to
enter all-white schools. i
The board meeting contrasted
sharply with last year's noisy ses
sion over pupil assignments. Sev
eral Negroes and Ku KIux Klans
men sat quietly through the ses
sion. 1
jinx," sighed the handsome Greek
actress. '-'All I know is they could
find no pictures for me. Except
when they, wanted someone to
play an old bag. So here I am
back again, playing another old
bag."
Once again she is playing a
Gypsy rebel leader, this time in
"The Miracle." She is happy with
the meaty rdle and to be "home
again (she lived here 10 years
during the war and postwar
years). But she is puzzled at how
Hollywood has typed her.
"Look at these are they pic
tures of an old bag?" she asked.
She displayed photos from her
stage roles in London, New York
and her native Athens. They were
indeed quite glamorous.
"I was only 37 when I played
Pilar," she remarked, "and 1 was
considered by many to be a
beauty. But try to get the studios
to see me that way!"
Miss Paxinou left here a decade
ngo after "Mourning Becomes
Electra," which she admitted was
a disaster.
What does she think of Holly
wood now?
"It's dead, dead, dead," she ex
claimed. "It is very sad to come
back here and see it this way. I
have gone to Romanoff s and La
rue and I see no one I recognize.
They are all at home, I guess
Even the studios are not the
same. You used to see the bustle
and activity. Now they are dead."
I asked her what she has been
doing in the intervening years.
She explained that she and her
husband, actor Alexander Minotis,
have a theater in Athens which is
partly subsidized by the govern
ment. They have put on many of
the classic dramas there, as well
as in London and Paris.
But she was obviously pleased
to be back in Hollywood.
'I was very homesick, she
commented. "But I would not
come back unless they asked
me.
By RODNEY GUILFOIL
United Press International
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) One
hundred neighborly Beatniks left
their haunts in Beat Alley Mon
day night for a tour of downtown
San Francisco with flutes, bongo
drums and bagels.
Object of the tour was to let
members of ' San Francisco's
famed "Beat Generation" see how
the other half lives. The other
half was doing its Monday night
shopping.
The Beatniks set out from the
Co-Existence Bagel Shop in two
chartered sightseeing buses. Huge
banners hung from the windows
reading: "The Squaresville Tour."
The first stop was the St. Fran
cis Hotel. Entering by the fash
ionable Post Street side, the Beat
niks filed into the lobby behind
a flutist and a bongo drummer.
They carried signs saying:
"The Beats are touring the
bourgeois wasteland," and "Hi,
squares, the citizens of North
Beach are on tour."
After making the scene at the
St, Francis, the Beatniks trooped
down the street into the elegant
salons of I. Magnin & Co., and
staged a Beat fashion show.
The Beatniks paraded up and
down the aisles, the women show
ing the last word in black shorts
black sack sweaters, long black
stockings and sandals, and the
men wearing smudged slacks,
frayed corduroy coats, dirty shirts
and beards.
Occasionally the Beatniks
paused to swig from bottles en
closed in paper' bags. A lady
Beatnik carrying a long stemmed
rose said it was sherry.
From Magnin s the Beatniks ad
journed to Union bquare lor a
spot of poetry reading. One line
of verse went:
We stood in the middle of the
road and talked to ourselves."
The audience soon included the
occupants of three squad cars
and a paddy wagon, iney came
up to. talk to the Beatniks. The
world got around:
"Don't bug the fuzz." This
meant, "Don't bother the cops."
Then followed a visit to the
lobby of the Sheraton-Palace Ho
tel, where Beatnik leader trie
Nord was arrested on charges of
helping two teen-age girls run
away from their homes.
After stops at one or two other
points of interest, the Beatniks re
turned to the Bagel Shop to talk
. . .and talk. . .and talk. . . far into
the night.
FBI Stays
To Observe
OLIVE HILL, Ky. (AP)-FBI
agents said today they'll remain
as "observers" while police and
volunteer searchers try to solve
the disappearance of Debbie Ann
Greenhill.
Searchers have been combing
rugged, hilly terrain here since
last Saturday, when the 2-year-old
blonde toddler disappeared while
her family settled in a new moun
tain cabin.
Special Agent Charles Weeks
said in Louisville FBI agents
have no evidence that Debbie was
kidnaped. But he said four agents
would offer FBI facilities to help
in the search.
Oil workers dragged a 54-acre
lake yesterday without success.
Police Chief Milt Barker said
he's investigating the possibility
of foul play, but added nothing
worth a penny" has been found.
Steel Plant
Work Stopped
HAMILTON, Ont. (AP) Can
ada's largest steel plant stopped
production today in a wage dis
pute between tl)e Steel Co. of Can
ada and 7,500 workers at Stelco's
Hamilton plant.
A strike voted last Wednesday
by the local members of the
United Steelworkers went into full
effect during the night after an
inconclusive six-hour meeting of
company and union representa
tives. Another meeting was sched
uled today. Union officials said
Liicjr iiujjcu lb nuuiu pi uuuvc a set
tlement. The strikers' are seeking a set
tlement similar to a 1956 package
deal which gave them a 33-cent-an-hour
increase. They contend the
raise is justified by increased pro
duction, higher company prices
and profits and a need for more
consumer spending power to stem
the recession.
The company, which usually
sets the line for Canada's other
steel producers, said increases
would be inflationary and the
steelworkers were the best paid
in Canadian industry. Under the
contract which expired March 31
the basic hourly pay rate was
$1,734 and the average was $2.56.
Stelco offered a two-year exten
sion of the existing contract with
some improvements in a group in
surance plan.
Tranquilizer Pill
Forgotten; Dog .
Bites Cyclist
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) -Billy
Young had no way of know
ing the situation when a barking
dog came out to meet him as ha
pedaled his bicycle past a horn
here.
The dog bit the boy's ankle.
Mrs. Howard Harper explained
to police that the dog usually,
gets a tranquilizer pill each day;
to steady its nerves, but the pilt
had been forgotten.
NAMED CHAIRMAN
A Klamath Falls public accoun
tant. Frederick Lawson. has been
named chairman of the commit
tee on professional assistance of
the Oregon Association of Public
Accountants. As such, Lawson
automatically becomes a member
of the organization's board of gov
ernors. Previously elected to the
board is another city accountant,
Walter Fleet.
Dependable Coverage
MAYFLOWER
AUTO INSURANCE
Reasonable Rates
VERN W. EMLEY
Offtct Fhons t-3?3 20(11 So. Stfa
HALF-SIZE tiEM
cess silhouette so-o-o flattering to
the shorter, fuller, fisure; Easy to
sew as a cool sundress, smart
jumper with blouse lor next sea
son.
Printed Pattern 9187: Half Sues
H'j. 16. 18'. -2't. 22'j. 24'..
Sue 16'i requires " t yards 39-inch
labric.
Printed directions on each pat
tern part. Easier, accurate
cnd thirty-five cents looms) for
this pattern add S cents for each
pattern for l.tt-class mailing. Send
to Marian M.irtin, care of Herald
and News. Pattern Dept.. 232 West
18th St., New York 11. X. Y. Print
plainly name, address with lone,
sue and style number.
STARTS TODAY
KLAMATH FALLS
FAIRGROUNDS
2:15 P.M. and 8:15 P.M.
LAST TWO TIMES WEDNESDAY
2:15 P.M. and 8:15 P.M.
' (GATES OPEN ONE HOUR EARLIER)
10th Annual Klamath Falls Shrine Club
Wls PRODUCED BY
Mighfy Amalgamated New I95S Edition
31)00 I'.en. Adm. Seats Adults, $1.M; Children (I'nder 12), 73c
RESERVED SEATS Adults and fhlldrrn SJ.OO and $!.S0
SEATS NOW ON SALE. Shrine Circus Office. Old Klamath
Armory, Cor. Main 'and Spring Sis. and at the
Fairgrounds Before Each Performance
Open Dally 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
rjUJ.VlUl.-I-TU 1.1.11 NiiUM.H!l"Knra
ROTC COMPLETED ,
Dennis F. Todd, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry R. Todd, 730 Mount
Whitney Street, Klamath Falls.
has completed six weeks of Re
serve Officer Training Corps duty
at Ft. Gordon, Georgia. Todd, a
Signal Corps trainee, is enrolled in
the ROTC at Oregon State. He
was graduated from Klamath Falls
Union High School in 1955.
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