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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1958)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALI,S. OREGON MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 19.i() Portland Man Crash Victim By THE ASSOCIATED TRESS ' Only one man was killed this weekend on Oregon highways. He was William Edward Bauer. 24. of 5504 Northeast 30th Ave., Port land. State Police said Bauer was killed yesterday when the car in which he was riding went out of control, skidded off Pacilic High way 10 .miles north of Salem and rolled end-over-end into a ditch. Police said the driver, Jack My ers of Milwaukee, suffered broken ribs. Another Oregon man, Jesse Wil liam Hackey, 48, was killed while walking along U.S. Highway near Merced. Calif. Merced County Coroner Ken ncth Riggs said Hackney, a trans lent farm worker, listed his ad dress as Box 155, Bt. 2. Hood River. He had been working in Merced County. "DENNIS THE MENACE" Solon Ureses Science Fissid LOUISVILLE, Ky. AP - Sen.i A. S. Mnnroney D-Oklo) Sunday: night urged Americans to pursue "science for life instead of science! for death." Monroney advocated taking a tenth of the nation's budget for developing weapons for scientific research aimed at aiding human ity. Ho addressed the opening meet ing of the weeklong Church and rteeriom Celebration sponsored by the Louisville area Council of Churches. 'Mom, woulo you mm turnin" the tv oh v Health Check-Up Patients Brushed Off, Doctor Says OPEN DAILY 6:00 P.M. ENDS TONIGHT Feature at 6:30 & 10:20 SHOWN AT 8:35 ONLY Robert Mitchum blaiH tti Kttml Mill By FRANK CAREY Associated Press Science Writer ST. LOUIS (AP Too many doctors brush-off patients seeking periodic health check-ups, a pub lic health official says. He says it's because too much emphasis has been placed on medical edu cation for treating disease as dis tinguished from maintaining health. Dr. Lester Breslow, chronic dis eases chief of the California State Health Department, said it's true there aren't anywhere near enough doctors to give everyone in the country an annual check-up apparently the "ideal approach to preventive medicine." Most people don't seek one any way, he said, partly because of the cost involved He said in a talk Sunday to the Assn. of Teachers of Preventive Medicine on the eve of the 86th annual meeting of the American Public Health Assn: "In addition to the present im possibility of periodic health ex aminations ifor everyone) from the standpoint of physician time, there is also the fact that physi cians in the United States are still not oriented toward or interested in health maintenance work. "Those in public health practice are all too familiar with the la ment of the public health nurses who encourage people to go to physicians for a periodic check' up, only to have the physicians give patients the brush-ott. He said another thing that prob ably has held down the develop ment of the periodic health ex amination "is the poor quality of it when it has been offered. "Experience with the cursory school health examination or us ual life insurance examination NOW SHOWING! POORS CPEN 6:30 P. M. K ' Over 4 uears on the stage' jr Overwhelming r. on the, - screen , TEbI-C LOLA I Fl P01T ttJErJ r ?S5wBfi'Sa GWEN l-""2&"" 1 "TECHNICOLOR iwliwIiijliEllsa tou oom nun "Tti'u Colli Hiii Hud" ul ikil iim ciliNiM "tin tnlm" null DOORS CPEN G:3d P. M. Knrft TONITE UANE. Juitl Goddtw TIME LOCK Starts TUESDAY! THOUSAND THRILLS rnTrnuNirninDil in III VIIIIIVVLUII, I I i I I TheBlaK ot utory I Romance o America I m Thrilling Py' J M Pmw tMhwIm kU ,i Mil Win I IMtllt IUCll kMCJU'l UU-V. it mem ANNE BAXTER WILLIAM HOLDEN SONNY TUFTS WILLIAM BENDIX STERLING HAYDEN w H.ward 0 SfefJoMMy fart. MWM'tti would not seem to provide much encouragement for regular check ups, he said. Dr. Breslow said while the ideal of annual comprehensive check ups for everyone remains a goal for the future, a partial approach to the ideal lies in a health ex amination called "multiple screen ing." He defined this as the combina tion into a battery of several dis case-detection, or screening, tests performed by technicians under medical direction and applied to large groups of apparently-well persons. Man Jailed In Blast Try PORTLAND (API - A Tigard man was in jail today in connec tion with an attempt to dynamite a car that police said could easily have taken the life of a Portland woman. Police said Roger II. Mobley was held in lieu of $10,000 bail on charges of unlawful use of ex plosives with intent to injure per sons ' and property. Detectives Roy Benson and Ray Duerst arrested Mobley, whose car matched a description given by Mrs. Scott Partridge. Mrs. Partridge told officers this story: She said she- was visiting neighbor when she heard a hotrod racing in the neighborhood and she spotted someone near her car. She called and the person fled but returned later. She rushed out and found four bullet holes in the smoking car. Frightened, she called her hus band and police, who found two sticks of dynamite that had failed to explode because a copper fuse failed to detonate. Police said the faulty fuse saved the woman from being blown up. Another blast damaged a brick wall and 20 windows at the All state Insurance Co. at 1035 E. Burnside St. Writer Tops General, Gets Flight In F106 Missile Editor's Note The Air Force took a general off the wait ing list to permit Associated Press Aviation Writer Vern Haugland to become the first newsman to fly in the new F106, a plane termed a missile with a man aboard. By VERN HAUGLAND TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. 'API The new Convair F106 interceptor the nation's nearest approach to a pushbutton war plane plunges into its takeolf run like a startled race horse in a headlong runaway. It f ings itself along the runway to a speed of well above 100 miles an hour within seconds, then leaps into the air. A two-million-d o 1 1 a r 30,000. pound monster of metal, fuel, elec' tronic brains and possibly atomic weapons, it raises its tapered nose and climbs skyward at an angle of almost 45 degrees. The all weather interceptor readily exceeds twice the speed of sound and operates effectively at a t tudes over 50,000 feet The controlled fury of its Pratt and Whitney J75 jet engine puts it among the world's fastest and deadliest aircraft. In giving the public its first look at the F106B in flight, the Air rorce made public some hitherto closely guarded facts. Rex Warden, a former ADC jet pilot now serving as chief of the F106 program for Convair division of Geneiai Dynamics Corp., said so far as he knew no other civil ians except test pilots had flown in the F106. It is still in its test program and is not to become operational with the air defense command until next spring. The single-place F106A.and the two-place F106B are being pro duced under a one-billion-dollar program that also . includes the semi-automatic armament control system. Lt. CS1. William Price, Air force project officer, said the De fense Department first ordered the. coordinated electronic equip ment and weapons system and then bought the airplane to wrap arouna it. "This is the first plane to carry a aigitai computer. Price said "Actually it is a missile with a man aboard for specialized func tions. Price explained that in opera tion, the pilot merely takes the piane ott tne ground, then in ef fect folds his arms and lets the electronic equipment v. a . . j through the mission. The system coirui" - . rt- ..,An.nii3llv nrp- path oi uigni, auiuiiianv..., r--l pares the missiles for launching and at tne precise ' -i. :n iK.MP tun miccilps to track iui: ICiaca n- down and destroy the target. EASY STREET NEWARK, Ohio AP No one lives on Easy Street here. Factor ies, not houses, line its curbs. Plant Forces Rout Rebels HAVANA IUPI) Loyal sol diers and sailors joined forces over the weekend to drive rebels off the properly of the U.S. gov ernment's Nicaro nickel plant, from which 59 Americans were withdrawn Friday, the army an nounced today. One sailor and "many" rebels were wounded in the clash at Nicaro, the army communique said. . The Cuban forces attacked de spite a U.S. request for a truce. It had previously been reported that all loyal forces had been withdrawn from the Nicaro area. Gen. Francisco Tabernilla, chief of the Cuban joint staff, said the U.S. request for a truce was rejected because the rebels took advantage of a similar cease-fire last summer to ."occu py strategic positions and supply themselves at their own conven ience." Meanwhile, rebel leader Fidel Castro announced that his men have been ordered to "shoot on sight" at any automobile on the road between Oct. 30 and Nov. 6 in a move intended to disrupt the Nov. 3 election. Goes On Trial LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) Caril Ann Fugate, 15-year-old compan ion of convicted killer Charles R. Starkweather on a three day bloody rampage last January, goes on trial today fur her life. Caril is being tried on the same charges on which her bow-legged ex-sweetheart was convicted and sentenced to die Dec. 17 in the electric chair. Starkweather ad mitted involvement in 11 deaths. 10 while with Caril. The state needs only to convince the jury that Caril aided and abetted Starkweather in the slay ing of Robert Jensen, 17, Bonnet. Neb., to quality lor her first de gree murder conviction and one of two penalties life imprison ment or death. Selection ot a jury is expected to take three days at least. The couple's three-day flight was marked by the finding of bodies of six slaying victims in Lincoln, including Caril's parents and half-sister, three at nearby Bennet, and one in Wyoming where they were captured. Stark weather also admitted killing a Lincoln filling station attendant in a robbery attempt. Caril has denied any part in the killings. County Builds Plush School OWENSBORO, Ky. (AP) - The little red schoolhouse was never like this. The new two-million-dollar Da viess County High School, formal ly dedicated Sunday, includes: Air-conditioning in all 90 rooms, a 1.000-seat auditorium with up holstered seats, a hat check room, a patio, big mirrors in the hallways, skyglass. a complete laundering service in the athletic department, parking lot for 750 cars, acoustical ceilings and walls, a svm with electrical partitions so boys and girls on use it at the same time and 57 acres of campus, including practice fields tor football and baseball. Classes began in September. READ The Big Squeeze of the Big Three Dec. Confidential Page 18, Worth Your While "De" Leigh Motors Studebaker - Packard Mercedes-Benz Sales & Service 239 Main TU 25544 (P Keep 'Em Warm And Healthy , . . in one of our new 1 or 2-pc snow- suits just made to keep 'em cozy and dry. All sizes from Infant's to 6x. Many with braid, knit or fur-like trim. All colors and styles, too. 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