Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1958)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 29, 1958 'DEfslNIS THE MENACE" 11 . Sen. Richard L. Neuberger has asked Secretary of the Interior Seaton to explain why Wocus Bay has been eliminated from the area of the Klamath Marsh which is to be made a waterfowl refuse under the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and to reverse this deci sion in the best interests of conservation. Oregon's junior senator, sponsor of the law which authorizes 90 million dollars for federal acquisi- 'SURE PARENTS ARE A WlM SCWETWES. BUT HPU GOTTA HAVE 'sTVI UNLESS YOU GOT YOUR OWN HOUSE. Bergman At Crossroads After Shocking World By Leaving First Hubby Editor's Note: Eight years aflcr she shocked the world by leaving her husband, daughter, home and Hollywood career for Roberto Ros sellini, with whom she hud an il legitimate child, Ingrid Bergman afain is at a crossroads of her turbulent life. Her marriage with Italian film director RossiMlini is at an end and she waits only for legal clearance to wed a new love, millionaire Swedish theatrical pro ducer Lars Schmidt. It was while she was in Wales with Schmidt and her three children by Ifosspllini that British newsman Ralph Coop er visited Miss Bergman and in duced her to break her long silence and speak frankly of her life from her superstrict childhood to the present. This is the first of five dispatches in which Miss Berg man tells her own story. By RALPH COOPER Written For HPI It was on a Welsh hillside that GATES OPEN 6:00 P.M. ENDS TONIGHT ! GREGORY PECK FEATURE AT 7:10 & 9:45 flUNF VAfKI SUZY PARKLR r El'rW 7LM Ten North Frederick i- m Ike Aide Asked To Tell Why Wocus Bay Deleted From Klamath Marsh ed to wealthy hunters, it might make possible a slaughter of mi gratory birds right at the borders of the refuge which would serious ly impair or even nullify the pro tective purposes for which the marsh was meant to be acquired." Neuberger said he hoped that the administration would not, by this action on Wocus Bay, impair the otherwise good record which he said both Undersecretary of the Interior Hatfield Chilson and Secretary of Agriculture Ezra 1'aft Hon of major resources of theioc u,j ,j : ,u: ,ui his request of the administration n speaking at a dinner meeting of the Izaak Walton League at the .Multnomah Hotel September 26. Secretary Seaton himself wrote to our Senate Interior Committee that: The marsh on the Klamath Reservation is the most important marsh to waterfowl that is left unprotected in the nation. This nesting area has been one of the mainstays in keeping up the sup ply of redheads, canvasbacks, and ruddy ducks in the Pacific Flyway. 'I know that the Senate Com mittee understood that the entire marsh was to be protected as a wildfowl refuge under the act, and no witness ever drew our atten tion to any other plan," Neuberger said. "I am disturbed by this new proposal to exclude 1,000 of the 15,- 730 acres of marsh from the des ignation. If the acreage of Wocus Ray were, for example, to be rent- hearted cooperation in seeking for a fair and constructive solution to the ruinous threat which the ori ginal Klamath termination plan had posed to the forests, watershed and marshes of the reservation. "At the hearings in Klamath Falls a year ago, our committee was told by the management spe cialists that the value of the un developed marsh might range from $25 to perhaps $50 or $60 an acre. These values are now sub ject to review, but even assuming the highest value for the 1,000 acres of Wocus Bay, the total sum seems a small fraction of the total 90 million dollars authorization to assure the complete protection of what Secretary Seaton has called the 'most important marsh to wa terfowl that is left unprotected in the nation,' " the senator stated. Neuberger congratulated the Izaak Walton League on "its suc cess as the chief organization spon- Star Sees Beard Growing As Enhancing Male Status DOORS PEN 6:3D P. I All the sultry drama of Tennessee William."' Play is now on the screen! Ml -J ii onaHot Tin Roof Paul Newman BwuIves to Carson -JuDnntoKoii Feature 1:o -J in MlTKflCOlO 1 Adult. 90c v.nuarn jjc PRICES nOOKl CPCN 6:30 P. M LAST 2 DAYS! C( eye W ItII AWAKED r. x v I met Ingrid Bergman and for two weeks stayed with her and talked with her of life, and love . . and man's inhumanity to woman After all she has been through, and all she has had to suffer I found Ingrid could almost shrug away the last eight years oy say ing: 'I m a very lucky person. I have had so much given to me in my life so much that is good that I cannot complain. 1 would like to have my nri vale life to myself, but there does not seem to be much I can do about that . . . so," another shrug . 1 don t complain. 'I am not bitter about all the stone-throwing and mud-slinging In some respects it was to be ex pected because so many who knew me only on the screen Ihought I was perfect and infalli ble and then were angry and dis appointed when I wasn't." People were of course shocked when you had a haby by Roberto Kosseiimi nelore you were mar ried, I said. "Let's not be hypocritical about this ..." said Ingrid. "It's not the first lime this particular mis take has been made, and I don't expect it will be the last. "I believe people should be judged by the way they act after they've made the mistake . . . that's what's important. Perhaps time and tears change everything. "My children mean everything to me. But sometimes a woman can he laced with a terrible decision. 1 was, when 1 had to decide wheth er to give up Robeiio, with whorrf I was in love, or give up the love t wanted and needed for my daughter's sake. "I know the decision I made to leave my husband, Dr. Peter Lindstrom was a selfish one. I was sick at heart havinc to hurt nw daughter Pia to lind happiness for myself. No decision I have ever made in my life ever gave me so mucn neariache. "What you turn out to be in life depends a lot on your environ ment, how you were brought uu There has to be a certain amount of luck about that . . . but, per haps not . . , perhaps you are what you make yourself. That is some thing you can sit up all night arguing anout. "Rut if you are lucky, as I have been and in spile of everything i miii ininK 1 nave open lucky you can learn Iran lile as you go along. I learned early that you can't take trom life all the time with out giving. . . . 'Some people, even when they h.ive suffered, do not learn. In stead the vengeance takes them and lh.it to me is terrible i Iriglitcning thing. "They take one liltle thing from i no past and never let it go, 'Just wait till l get a chance I'll pav ilion! out' , . . the firm, the com pany ... the colleagues. nny live witn all that rage j bottled up inside you for so Ions" What is the point of it? What good docs it do anybody? That is -something I do not understand. And what happens in the end . . when that chance comes at last to 'pay off the firm, the company or the colleagues? Their triemis have been bored to death with the tale for years and the people they're supposed to he scoring off they very often i-oiiMn t care less any more. Where's the satisfaction? "There are very few things in this lite. 1 have come to the con clusion, that are worth getting steamed up or angry about. "1 don't like to get angry . . . and 1 can t get mad and' throw thinjs . . , because 1 think people ! ipok. so tunny when they are an gry. It all seems so childish and i not the way grown-ups should be-:! have. "So when things upset me and J there are times when they do I j jum noin myseit pack, and say i nothing and mule ... and wait till I I get to my room ... and then i the bed and By BOB THOMAS AP Motion Picture Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) Suppos ing the husbands of America would sit down stubble-chinned to the breakfast table and say to their wives: "I don't care what you say, I'm going to grow a beard!" The wives might scream, along with the razor and electric shaver makers. But actress Vera Miles declares it would be a great thing for the country. Her reasoning: It would help make the male the dominant sex again. "Women have taken everything from the male province short hair, long pants, all kinds of things," she said. "Here at last is something that can be entirely the men's." Vera, a bright doll who has blasted the theory that beauty contestants can t become movie stars (she was a Miss America runnerupl, said: "If a man is slightly henpecked and my husband isn't; who could henpeck that monster? his defiant growing of a beard might be just the thing to restore his power in the house. eramen were clambering round the balconies of the nursing home try ing to get pictures of her in bed within hours of her son being born. This visitor from Hollywood told her that she could come back to Hollywood if she wanted to . . . but only on certain conditions. And he was there to present the terms: Give up this passing infatua tion," demanded the movie mo gul, "never see Rossellini again; send your son to a home he need never know who his father is." And, added the man: "Return to America, apologize to your hus band and to the people of Ameri ca over the radio for your be havior." Ingrid's answer was brief and to the point. She told the man: "Get out!" "It is fortunate I was horn with a sense of humor " says Ingrid. "I have been very grateful (or it many times. If you can find some thing to laugh about when things are looking at their blackest . . . then you can usually find it in your heart to forgive." The "monster" she spoke of visited her on "The FBI Story" set and demonstrated why Vera started her hirsute hullaballo. He is Gordon Scott, onetime smooth shaVen Tarzan of the Apes. Now he sports a luxuriant beard and mustache. He explained: "When I quit the Tarzan series, I wanted to get as far away from it as possible. The only way I could get producers to look at me differently was to change my appearance. And it has worked. I ve had some pretty good offers for westerns. "I was against it at first," Vera admitted. "But now I think it looks terrific. How is it for kissing? "After the first few days of stubble, you hardly notice it at all," she replied. "The beard be-: comes nice and silky." . i The beard revival seems to be going beyond actors who wish to i switch from the jungle to the prairie. A look around a campus like UCLA reveals an increasing! number of chin whiskers on the1 students. And of course beards j are profuse in the coffee houses of Ihe Sunset Strip and other haunts of the beat generation. "Wouldn't it be wonderful," Vera asked pointedly, "to get up in the morning and not have to shave?" soring and backing the creation of the National Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission, a new federal commission of which he is one of four Senate mem bers. He particularly praised the presidential appointment to the commission of Joseph W. Penfold, national conservation director of the league, as "an excellent and most appropriate choice, and also the appointment of Laurance Rock efeller, who has been instrumen tal in the development of Jackson Hole in the Grand Tetons and of the Virgin Islands National Park. Among questions of outdoor rec reation taken up by our commis sion there should be included the promotion of roadside beauty along the scenic routes leading to our national parks, forests and beach es," declared the Oregon senator, who sponsored the first national billboard-regulation law in the last session of Congress. "Most Amer icans must reach these beautiful and majestic natural playgrounds by long drives from our increas ingly urban habitats, where our eyes and ears are incessantly sub jected to the cajolery of sales manship. The long road to and from these areas ought ftself to be recognized as potentially an important part of the outdoor rec reation, insofar as this can be assured by promoting the scenic and pleasant aspects of our high ways, Neuberger said. The junior U.S. senator from Oregon promised to renew his ef forts in the coming session of Con gress to give the Fish and Wild life Service authority over fish protection aspects of dam-building licenses by the Federal Power Commission. He said he had been assured by "a most competent authority that if my proposal had been the law earlier, for example, we might not have had the current episode of the failure of fish fac ilities of the Brownlee and Oxbow dams. "In the absence of such outside authority, the protests of biolo gists and fisheries experts were cavalierly disregarded by the Fed eral Power Commission in licens ing projects at Pelton, on the Cow litz, and at Beaver Marsh. Yet these would be trivial by com parison with any FPC license for the construction of Nez Perce Dam, which could shut off from spawning over 60 per cent of the entire spring Chinook Salmon run in the Columbia River Basin." The Oregon senator declared that the FPC had already committed itself to favoring Nez Perce Dam and this in spite of effective tes timony given against such a proj ect by the Commercial Fisheries Division of the Fish and Wildlife Service." Assurance of full consideration for non-power purposes and values will also be a major objective in preparing legislation for a Colum-; bia River Development Corpora-! lion, said the senator, who intro-l duced the first draft of such a bill in the last session of Congress, i senate stall members are now working on a new draft of this1 proposal, which would reorganize the Bonneville Power Administra tion into a government corpora tion with broader planning and fi nancing powers, on the basis of information gathered at hearings held by the Senate Public Works Committee on the proposal last May and June, Neuberger said. "While the proposed Columbia River Development Corporation would itself be primarily respon sible for electric power, it is im portant that its activities be fully coordinated with t h e continued functions and responsibilities of other agencies in the fields of navi gation and flood control, irrigation, watershed management and pro tection of fish and wildlife," Neu berger said. "These values must receive equal consideration in the process of planning true multipurpose, comprehensive use of the Columbia Basin's water resources." The Ore gon senator, who is a member of the Public Works Committee re sponsible for Bonneville matters, said that migratory fish runs, in particular, constitute an irreplace able resource which must be as sured protection in any plan for river basin development. Fuller Products Phone 2-3666 Arnold Migliaccio Gassy ? 3 Timet Faster Relief urtlMl laboratory tests prove BELL-INS taunts neutralue 3 limit at much itomich acidity In ana minute ai many leidini 'igcitlve tablati. Cat BELL-ANS tam. lor the fastest known ralial. 3S at drusiliu. Sand poilal to BELL-AHS, Orantehurf, U. t. for liberal Iraa sample. FOUND A SURE-FIRE WAY TO ELECT MORE DEMOCRATS SEND TOUR DOLLAR FOR DEMOCRATS, P.O. BOX 307, KLAMATH FALLS. Pd. Adv. Democrat. o Central Comm. NOTICE Registration Of Voter For General Election Will Close October 4, 1958 At 8:00 P.M. A Six Months Residence In The State Of Oregon Is Required To Register. YOU MUST REGISTER IF: YOU FAILED TO VOT ONCE DURING THE "YOU HAVE CHANGED YOUR PLACE OF IV YOUNHAVE CHANGED YOUR NAME BY IFAYOUAHAVE OR WILL HAVE ATTAINED THE AGE OF 21 YEARS PRIOR TO NOVEMBER 4th, 1958. Register At The Following Places: County Clerks Office from 8:30 A.M. until 5:00 P M everyday, but Saturday and until 8:00 P.M., October 4th, 1958. Amidon's Business Machines in Town and Country from 12.00 noon until 6:00 d u .vorvrlnv and on Saturday, September 27th from 10:00 A.M. until 6:00 P.M. Balsiger Motor Company show room trom iz:uu noon unni o:uu B kA vrvrlnv and on Saturday, September 27th from 10:00 A.M. until 4:00 P.M. Culinary Al liance. 220 Main from 9:00 A.M. until 5:00 P.M. everyday, but Saturday. CHAS F. DELAP County Clerk Klamath County, Oreqon PHOTO FINISHING SALE FIREPLACE GRATES j ra. Adv. Democrntio Central Comm. j 1) - MATERNITY FASHIONS tJjl A j DRESSES LINGERIE j ! TOPS PEDAL PUSHERS WMF ' 8 Jumb. ; CAPRI PANTS SKIRTS ' Prints 4jm FOUR WAYS TO BUY: Cash, lay-away, ff rhr, On'v 30-day charge, revolving charge with up X TS OtiUL 4T Western Thrift t 6 month, to Poy. (III1U VA V ' i 1 lki i1!! $25.50 to $49.95 I HEAVY WROUGHT Ii St ; ? XC r OlI-WOOl COOtS only $189 1 ':r Til -V. A tl i. , . tern-, :r b . I sis M.i.7, I r.".' Vi-v. A 7 T If Tcnncwvf Mm uu I j A I 'xV-. Al- ..."..r.v.ry Iu- Si . tts lis X5" 'sV!., ' Announcing Th corrextien o( FiM Fusvr ProUpM) frclnnion and other Rxtl Ditordort Without HoeptlaJ oporatiotk R. REYKrOlDS, N.D, O.C I1M Caw . H L throw niysflf t scrcnn anil cry. .1 Which is ho sh (olt thp day J sranilf. faced MP from Holly-;i woo.1 rnt to see hfr in Homo1! shortly ulifr hfr son Roberto h.di been boi n before her divorce i! from D. Prfer l.inrUlrntn h.H hen ud wliile Italian fun- J........,V" CUP OUT, Thu is ywir dcnnit a few ol lha ?0.(VO or more Arty dishea, poll and pan the washes every year! This Chnsttnaa, her fitttlom rem drujfrry, ?tt da-t of the year . . . (pve her a new G-E MOBILE-MAID AUTOMATIC DISHW ASHER. We'll deliver rt Christmas eve with ne efcarn pnmrnl, nc mtmihty ery inenlf till am March! If she isn't completely delighted with her new MOBILE-MAID within ten davs, return it to us tikmt tatt ir ohltfatton! And, if you're too husv to come in and see the MOBIl-E MAID, M r u. a rill. Vi e can handle all arranRr ments hv 'phone. Why not find out more about rt right - Thete priest tpeolc for themsejrvet...nejejej we toy more? The lovingj are fontastie, tn liylti terrific. v pilgrim collars, chemise s3- houtts, wonderful clossies, Thesej aB-wool fabrics ore outstanding too... plushes, fleeces, wool-emd-cashmore blends bt ffr most gorgeous colors imaginable. Better get yours while our stocks ore complete.. .dofll let these bargains get away I h aeavteae Ct. tea "."J T: l. " eei e. 91. Shop Friday Til 9 P.M. HOME APPLIANCE Corner 10th & Main Ph. TU 4-8183 ClVt IDMJRiV 0 jtiurt many ft&t 133 So. Eighth Phone TU 2-4481