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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1958)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NfiWS. ftLftMATH PaLLSREGO TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 1953 .r. Star Back From Yugoslavia Discovers Slavs Friendly By BOB THOMAS AP Motion Piclure Wrller HOLLYWOOD (API How arc things in Yugoslavia1 The way the movie business is these days, it's not outlandish to ask that question. From V an Hcf lin you get an answer: "Very friendly." Van has just returned from Eu rope, where he toured 13 coun tries with his wife, three children, nurse and dog. But the most stim ulating part of his half-year stay abroad was working on a movie in Yugoslavia. The movie was "Tempest," a huge epic made jointly by ugo slavian, Italian film companies. The interiors CentenniaSsst Seeking Aid PORTLAND (AP) Anthony Brandcnthaler, chairman of the Oregon Centennial Commission, said Monday the commission will ask more money from the state Legislature. He told Unlimited Progress, a Portland group, he could not say yet what the requested amount will be. But he said it would he for projects not planned when $.",30,000 was voted last year. He lidded that groups seeking extra money include the Fine Ails Com mission, higher education and possibly some others. Brandent baler was questioned about handling of Centennial af fairs. Then, the group voled co operalion and support of the cen tennial. ACCIDENT VICTIM PORTLAND (API Kelly G Morgan, 37, was killed here Mon day while working on a car at his home Monday. The automobile slipped from Jacks and crushed Morgan, a jail er at the Rocky Bulie jail. MAKING STATE VISIT MOSCOW (UPP Soviet Presi dent Klimenti Voroshilov leaves by air today for a state visit to Af ghanistan. DOORS CPEN 6:30 P.M. TOHiTE SIERRAS fct'i Baron , ClNfMAfcQPg r i ! i ii '. m 0 m .m i m:i I I T 4. Most terrifying of all crime. Mfof -wmmittoyte (11 Wfmtt !!( WIU tgatH WltWM UII UtitllMl UJOUII WUtl ' KKlill Wt1 mMitimwtx'' GARY COOPER t. DIANE VARSI SUZY PARKER Ten INorth Ll 18 ' mm mwtw i the war &V'-t waover! IliP Kin si. kIh x mail w Thur. M. were shot in Rome and the crowd and battle scenes were filmed on the plains near Belgrade. "It was the first time," Van said, "that a major tilm was made by Western producers be hind the Iron Curtain. Yes. I know that 'War and Peace' was sup posed to have been shot in Yugo slavia. But the producer, Dino Dilaurentis. also produced our picture and he told me that it wasn t How did the Slavs react to the invasion? "They were very friendly," the actor said. "And I don t think it was merely because of political and Americanicxpedieney. The people greeted us warmly and were extremely hos pitable. They were much more friendly to us. than to the Italian members ot our company. 1 sup pose that is because of the Ions antagonisms between the Italians and Yugoslavs over Trieste and other matters. The Yugoslav government went all-out to cooittrate, he reported even to supplying 2."00 cavalry troops for a battle of the Cath erine the Great era. "The cost of that battle scene would have been prohibitive in Hollywood. Van said. ' ou just couldn't find that many trained riders and horses. Nor could you pay them enough for the stunts they look. Ihe 2 alio put on charge right through exploding charges with horsemen falling in Hie front ranks so the others had to leap over them "In one day alone, 37 men were sent to the hospital. The horsemen were army regu l,-ii s and he didn't know what they were being paid. But Ihe extras who played soils earned just un der a dollar a day, not a bad wage in Jugoslavia, Van said. His other observations: accom modal ions w ere excellent at the Metrnpolcy a Hilton-like hotel in Belgrade. Food was excellent with the accent on steaks, pork and lamb. The cost of whisky was pro hihitive. and Vodka is unknown "But the Ihing to remember is that Yugoslavia is still commu nist. with all that implies," Van added. Tar's Union Sinns Pact SAM FRANCISCO AP) An iinprpcrdrnted contract covering 18.0(H) unlicensed West Loa;,c sea men was siuned Monday by ship pers and Ihe Seafarers interna- innal Union. Pacific District. The three- year agreement freezes waives for two years but provides improvements in vaca tion, holiday, seniority and other lrinae heneiits. The new contract effective Tuesday supplants three separate iireenienls winch had been nego tiated hv Ihe Sailors I'nion of the Pacific, the .Marine Firemen, Oil- rs and Watertenders and the Ma rine Cooks and Stewards I'nion. Officers of the unions previously merged pension tunds. The new contract a step toward mercer of ihe unions into one unit effects the merger of formerly separate vacation funds. All West I'nnt shipowners, e ept Pacific Far Fast Lines, are overed by the contract. Although wages are frozen, the contract pro- ides for a wage review Sept. 30. CIIAMI K ADDITIONS HOLLYWOOD 'AP' Newest additions to Hie local cradle rule: lauue Lome .M.n'lliMm.ill. burn to actress Nanette Katuay and writer Handy Mai-Doug.ill. SIkiuii Haul CasMdy, horn to ac tress-singer Shirley Jones and mger .l.uk Ca'-suly. PDDR9 rPEN 6130 P. M All the sultrv drama of Tennessee William.' Play is now on the screen! EU2A2F7H TAYiJ. Paul Mem to Carson Jot tasoji 41 PfTt'COl Adult, 90c Children 35c PRICES: i. r. t ' . V-'v!J 'DENNIS THE MENACE" 'AM' WJ SIT 'TIL I -cause im tilGGERf YOU. Connors Makes Big Shift, Baseball To Western TV By CIIARI.K.S MKRCKR NKW VOUK lAI'i If the count of the notches on our Run is ac c-iirale, we've shot it out in inter views with 2:1 Western heroes in the last couple of years. Hut never have we met a hero who loved and knew more about his Run and his horse than Kevin .loseph Connors, better known as Chuck, a lowering, muscular, blond fellow who proudly hails from Brooklyn and made his way to Ihe Western ranges by the un iikely roule of big league base ball. Tonight he launches his TV ca reer as "The Rifleman" on ABC- TV, a weekly saga about a widow er with a young son who seeks land in the West. As a first baseman for the Chi cago Cubs and in the Dodgers farm system, Connors discovered with surprise and pleasure a lew years back that half the casting directors in Hollywood are base ball fans. Because they knew and liked him they began giving him profitable bit parts in the winter season. One break led lo another and Chuck Connors, first baseman, gradually became Chuck Connors, actor. Then everybody began tell ing him that he was a natural for westerns. "There were two things wrong with me," Connors said the other Final 'Studio One' Show Not So Good, Says Scribe By WILLIAM F.WAI.D Vnited Press International NKW YORK 'ITI - Monday night "Studio One" left for good and "Arthur .Murrav Party" ar rived for not so good. I caught only the last half of CPS-TV"s "Studio One'' drama. image of Fear," because it over lapped Ihe riehut of the NBC-TV Murray show. From what I saw o( the play is seemed a rather slug- isb execution of a promising dea. However, despite Monday night's outing and the prodigious number ot clinkers that "Studio One" has turned out in recent seasons, I shall miss it. It provided live drama and on Monday nights it was the only wheel in town. As for "Arthur Murray Tarty. " what cm 1 say? Mothers love it. babies cry lor il and chickens clink for it. 1 must say it strikes as a dubious contribution to teleUMnn enlei lainment, a kind 01 amateur night with a good paint job. Monday nuht, Kathryn Murray, who is Arthurs wile, starred in a tedious pantomime that had some thing or other to do w til, acrobats I and hula hoops and beach chairs I on a New Aork root Well, maybe: oiir root, K.ilhnn. but not mine Most Now York itols are so small you cm barelv get rain on them, i Also on the Murray show, there :w.i the pieie de resistance whuh. in this case, means a piece ol enteitaiamcnt to resist which !uno!od a dancing bee between j Kranctiot Tone Dan Dailey and iliic.udo Mont.iihan. Mr. Montal j ban. incidentally, has a charming name, but when Mrs. Murray pro nounces it :n her neree New ,ler sev accent, it comes nut sounding like "lie i Olunk " Mis. Murray announced. 1 be lieve, that the guests were con ;i ilni'ing their $: imo ices to vari ous chanties I guess they all felt . they were steahni: ttie money. I And you know, they were right IMeie was another debut Mon ,day nigh! It was called "The levin" and was en CHS TV. It starred liorv Calhoun, two corpses, a i nch ir.oh and sc era! horses I siivpcct the dialogue was iWoman Skate To California (,noV. CITY. Pa 'AP'-A so-ve.ir-ivd u:vjrp'.o erf asomnSx jinn wo:kiT o:i hrr way lo Los M,!.s Svnif K:o!ii;n-k left tiny i r;ri ti IY:n, , low n Mon i i'iA . hppi!' m -K.v-' Ht nv.ies ju;iy :n i:v o -Vi n;: t;:p. She J n rrf n'-.iy v,::x r.:'.05 in the li Uke'V'.v ' r .i:d "IV i-vp ,v r.'.t'ie' iv'e'.j a'.onj I '!-. u.i ts I t. tr.-fd " " N2 S4y y3fj CAN GET UP1. 5tti day on a trip Kast. "I had a crew out and I'd never been on a horse. 1 did something about it. I let my hair grow and I shopped around tor a horse. "With the help of an old wrangler friend I found a pinto mare that couldn't run because she had a bad leg and I picked her up for $liu. I rode her every day to get the feel of a horse and after a couple of months I traded her in on a 2-year-old sorrel geld ing that could barely run.. "After six months I bought a quarter horse, a buckskin and a beauty, .lust shift your weight in the saddle and he d run in circles I became a pretty good rider, but then I got to thinking what do I know about a horse? "Well, I fenced in a half acre, doing all the work myself, . and built a little stable for him and I learned to do everything for him clean him. worm him. saddle him, pare him everything but sboc bun. When tapped to be star of "The Kitleman. he took home a Win chester 92 and practiced handling it as diligently as he had prac ticed horsemanship. He gave us a demonstration in handling and twirling this beautiful and service able rifle in his hotel suite, and take our word for it that he's pro ficient. wrilten bv Johnnv W'eissmuller. Oh yes, it'll be a hit. The Channel Swim: Dean Mar tin is angling for Bing Crosby and Sammy Davis for his opening NBC-TV show Nov. 22 Martin is trying to coax Frank Sinatra inlo his second show. NBC-TV is axing "Youth Wants lo Know," after a seven-year run. Charles Van Doren will host "Kaleidoscope." a new NBC-TV hour show that will alternate with "Omnibus" on Sunday allernoons. "Kaleidoscope." which kicks off on Oct. 19. will explore such sub jects as ballet, psychoanalysis, acting, the American Indian and news events. The 21-year-old Aga Khan will make his live TV debut Ibis Sun day on CBS-TVs "Face The Na tion." Arthur Godfrey will take a breather trom Ins CBS-TV morn ing show next week Ruslv Dra per will fill in. ABC-TV's Sunday show, "Maverick," out-Trendexed by a comlortable mat Ein all of its opposition NBC-TV's "North west Passage" and "Steve Allen Show" and CRS-TVs "Bachelor father and "Kd Sullivan Show Oil & iV' i- r IXlVSf un & water fc r . Colors Pastel -Water -Oil Sets Paint By Number Sets Canvas and Canvas Boards All Types Art Papers Brushes Easels Mediums Foster Art Books Come In and Browse Around SHAW STATIONERY 729 M It. Film Star Tells Of Reaction To MlmM ly Public Editor's Note: This is the second of five dispatches in which Ingrid Bergman reveals her thoughts and discusses her life in an interview with a British newsman who was her guest for two weeks in Wales. Today, Miss Bergman tells of her reaction to public attacks on her, and talks about love and the children she bore to Roberto Ros sellini. By RALPH COOPER Written For UPI Ingrid Bergman's friends often say to her, "I wouldn't blame you if you never spoke to another newspaperman in your life." They know she has been deeply hurt by some of the things that have been reported about her, her daughter Pia and Roberto Rossel lini. But Ingrid herself is apt to shrug her shoulders and say quietly, "it is their job if they don't get what they come for they only get into trouble. . .and I don t like trouble for anyone." Explaining this, she told me: "I can still remember the time I had my first cry over what other people said about me. I was still at the stage where I got ex cited about interviews and pasted every little clipping in. my cut tings book. "It was about the time of 'In termezzo.' There was something I can't remember what it was probably something very silly which I thought was very un fair. . .and the Swedish actor who Fishina Chief Plans To Quit WASHINGTON (AP) Ross L. Leffler, assistant secretary of the interior for fish and wildlife, said Tuesday he may resign as a mem ber of the North Pacific Fisheries Commission. "The matter is in my mind but I want to discuss 1t over here (the department) before taking any ac tion," he told a newsman. The commission is charted with supervision of the North Pacific Fishing Treaty, entered into after World War II by the United States Canada and Japan. One of its principal problems has been the controversy over contentions by the U. S. fishing industry that Japan has enroached on Alaska spawned salmon stocks in the North Pacific. Medico's Son Crash Victim CORVALLIS (AP)-The young victim of a highway crash was wheeled into the emergency room of Good Samaritan Hospital here Monday while Dr. Louis Freeark was on duty. Dr. Freeark walked toward the mangled body, then suddenly threw back his head, covered his face and staggered backwards. It was the doctor's own son, Tommy. The youngster was killed and his mother was hurt when her car went out of control and over turned as she drove south of here on Highway flii-W. Mrs. Freeark's condition was described as satisfactory. The death was the 3."ih in Ore gon tralic this month and the aM8lh this year in the Associated Press tabulation. CRANE OPERATOR DIES HOOD RIVER (API A crane overturned Monday, fatally injur ing its operator, George Crowe. 17. He lived in Dee Flat, a smalt logging community south of here. AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday Service 11 a.m. Mono Ranm Altiminl Jr. HtfB I90 loath 0th Water id took th Leslie Howard part found me in tears. . .and gave me some very good advice. 'He was a very fine actor. . . and this is what he said, 'If you are going ti cry abtut a little thing lik that. . .what will y it when you are a big artist? Al ways remember,' ha said, 'that the higher you . m the rr.re talent you have. . .the harder it will be. It's wmdy un there. top. . .and it's a rough wind that gets rougher the higher you go.' 1 ve certainly found out since that he knew what he was talk ing about. 'I suppose it doesn't really mat ter what they write about vou as long as they say it. That actor told me whatever they say about you. . .don't cry. The time to cry is when they don t talk about you." And I suppose that is so. . . even when they say 'you are a shameful person and should never show your face on the screen again. "The bitterness with which things like that were written about me astounded me. I was not prepared for it and I just could not understand it. I suggested, "I think it showed the depth of feeling and affection people had for you," and Ingrid said, yes, I think it did. They thought so much of me that when I fell in their estimation there was so much farther to fall." She sighed, and went on: "Whoever said that 'love makes the world go round' spoke the truth. Being loved, and having the capacity to love others is the most important thing in the world with honesty. "I value honesty. . .in myself and others. Whatever I have done, I have tried to be honest. The hypocrite's way the hidden way. may sometimes be the easier line to take. . .but that s not for me. To be honest one has to be cou rageous. . .and without courage. . . what is there? Without courage you are even afraid to live. "It is because I know how im portant love is for happiness that I try to keep my children as near to me as possible. . .to give them all the love they need, so that when they are older they can also give and receive it." Ingrid's children Robertino, now 8, and twin daughters, Isa bella and Ingrid, S, are never very far away from her. In the breaks between work there was always a little dress to lengthen... or socks to mend. "I'm always lengthening their dresses and shortening mine!" she laughed. . .and showed me. with exasperation, the hem she Family Size - 8 Cu. Ft. With 1 0-Year Trade - Model D11-S 11 Cu. Ft. With 10-yr. Trade s149 Model D11-11 cu. ft,-With 10-Yr. Trade 179 With your present 10-year-old operating refrigerator of pop ular make in good condition! NO DOWN PAYMENT - EASY BUDGET TERMS Vern Owens' Cascade Home Furnishings 114 hUrth 4th was trying to lengthen. "They are clever m Italy, she said, "you see how it has been cut. . .there is always one part of the han which is just not there. . .yam can not let it down. . .so you hv t buy another dress! "You wait till they get U the teenage stage. I said, you 11 heve your work cut out tt keep pice with it then. And for a moment Ingrid lookeil sad. "That is something I do not know. You see, my eldest daugh ter, (Pia Lindstrom) was only tf when I left her. . .and when she came back to me she was ei;h- teen. And now. . .now she s a woman already, . ." What does Ingrid Bergman want for these children of hers? "First and foremost that they should grow up to be good human beings. I want them to be able to look after themselves and get along with people. If there's one thing which makes me really mad it is an intolerant person or a snob. I shouldn't want my chil dren to be either of those." She became thoughtful, obvious ly remembering her own child hood, then continued: "Y'ou know how it is when you are a child. You ask questions about life. . .you want to know everything. But when I was small it was not thought necessary to answer these questions. . .1 had to find out for myself. "I believe that is wrong. A child's questions should always be answered, because if they are . ot he feels he has done something wrong in asking them. "When I am asked for my auto graph, my Robertino wants to know why. . .because he knows other boys' mothers don't get asked. "So I tell him that the person has seen one of my films and that part of the money she pays for her seat in the cinema comes to me, so if she asks me for my autograph I feel it is something I can do in return. Attention Hunters! Open 9 till 9 Wed., Thurs. and Friday SPORT HAL'S im 532 "Again photographers follow my children around which doesn't happen to their friends at schoel. So I tell thefti the photog rapher makes his living by tak ing pictures and selling them. . . ;it perhaps he can sell a picture of mj children. If I didn't tell them tst they would probably t&row itoaes at the photographer! "Chiiirs have se much today. I look at my children with their tej cuwboerds full and listen to them saying, 'what shall we do, mama?' . . .and I can't help re membering my own childhood. I made do without all these things. I lived in a world of my own." We Know How to Coox i Maximum warmth from Your Heating System. One Call Brings Automatic, "Keep Full" Service Plus Fuel Saving Tipl that Really Pnv Off! ( STANDARD I HEATING OILS Main Phona TU 4-8365 & Co. 1 835 Market TU 4-51491