FRIDAY. NOVKMRKR 21. lOfiR
HERALD A VP NEWS KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
Governor Of Virginia
Opposes Retaliation
RICHMOND. Va. IAPI-Gnv. J.
Lindsay Almond Jr. says hp is
opposed lo any retaliatory policy
of closing Negro schools in areas
where white schools are locked
tinder the state anti-integration
laws.
He told his news conference
Thursday Virginia will continue
its fight to preserve segregated
public schools, but the state must
ctand on a policy of equal treat
ment for all. regardless of race.
"I want to see as many children
as possible, both white and col
ored, receive the best we can
offer in educational facilities." Al
mond said. "Many outside of Vir
ginia would feel that it (closing
Negro schools i would be a vicious
and retaliatory blow against the
Negro race. I would not want to
be charged with harboring such
s spirit."
The governor did concede that
the federal courts might force
some school integration. He said
the state "might have to choose
new plateaus" in continuing the
fight. But he ruled out any thought
of naming a legislative commis
sion now to draft new laws.
To appoint a commission now
"would manifest a lack of confi
dence in the laws we now have.
I have confidence in the integrity
of these laws."
Almond has said he will name
a commission to work up a new
legislative program if and when
the present massive resistance
stiucture is tumbled by the courts.
A special three-judge federal court
heard testimony on the constitu
tionality of the school closing law
Wednesday, and the Virginia Su
preme Court of Appeals will open
a hearing on the constitutionality
of the massive resistance pro
gram Mondav.
State Sen. E. K. Willey of Rich
mond, in a speech Wednesday
night, nut forth both the com
mission-now and clnse-the-Negro-
scnonis proposals, tie also recom
mended that tax relief be granted
lo those who contribute funds to
private education foundations.
Almond declined comment on
the last proposal other than to
say he had thought about what he
would recommend to a legislative
commission, but I am not pre
pared to say what my specific
plans are. I have some specific
ideas, but I would prefer not to
discuss them until they become
relevant.
Nine white public schools are
closed under the anti-integration
laws six in Norfolk, two in Char
lottesville and one in Front Royal.
Almond sa'd he docs not have any
plans for reopening.
PAGE 5-i.A
Central High Teachers
Await Students Return
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPD
This morning, as on every week
day, the teachers park their cars
and walk into the fine building
that was Central High School.
They hold a brief staff meeting
and then go to their separate
classrooms. The desks are pol
ished, the rooms spotless. The
chemistry and physics labs and
the biology room are ready for
experiments. On the row after
row of lockers are the familiar
combination locks put there early
this fall in anticipation of school
opening.
There is everything except pu
pils. The teachers sit at their desks
!n the empty rooms. They try to
make the day useful by devising
improvements in their courses.
Heavy Traffic
Protest Made
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Thirty
three parents formed two columns
that hailed all traftic on busy
Powell Boulevard Thursday to
protest heavy traffic that endan
gered crossing school children.
Children leaving the Creston
grade school marched in a corri
dor formed by parents two fa
thers and 31 mothers standing
tide-by-side on the street that car
ries U.S. Highway 26 traffic.
Mrs. Frances Dirks, chairman
of the Parent-Teacher Assn.
safety committee, said the
practice would continue until the
city provides a permanent red
and green light, moves the cross
ing to an intersection, and adds
warning signals.
Several children have been in
jured at the crossing which has
button lights operated by patrol
boys. Mrs. Dirks said the city ig
nored a letter asking the changes.
Span Washout
Derails Cars
SEATTLE (API - A washed
out bridge caused derailment of
two units of the Diesel engine of
a 33-car Great Northern freight
train on the Stevens Pass route
through the Cascade Mountains
Thursday night.
Officials said the engineer and
fireman, both unidentified, es
caped injury.
The fast freight, westbound from
Minneapolis, was traveling slowly
down the pass when the first two
unjts of the five-unit engine
plunged into Austin Creek. 65
miles east of Seattle. The 28-foot
bridge had been washed out by a
mud and rock slide. The span was
jonly seven feet high.
Railroad officials hoped" to re
store mainline traffic in 36 or 46
hours. Great Northern traffic,
meanwhile, was being routed over
the tracks of other lines.
Then they write letters, practice
typing, read, look out the window.
For the 3.700 students of Cen
tral and Little Rnrk'c thr-nn nthn..
high schools have scattered from
coast to coast, enrolled in make
shift private schools, taking cor
resnondonce courses nr iitct
given up their education tempo
rarily,
A few hlnrk-c auav Ic -in AM
building which bears the only re
semblance to a high school in Lit
tle Rock today. It is a former
orphanage, later used by the Uni
versity of Arkansas Graduate Di
vision.
It is the site nf Hi T.illlo T?.b
Private high school, run nn Hnna.
tions and staffed by 34 teachers
who came out of retirement or
are lust beginning teachers. Thorp
are 217 seniors and 288 juniors
here plus 312 sophomores in a
new Sunday school building of the
Highland Methodist Church
nearby.
Thursday -the Stlldnnlc hnlrl an
election for president of the stu
dent Dody and other offices. The
campaign posters are stuck
on the walls with endorsements
like peppy," "reliable," "real
guy."
But nowhere is there any men
tion that thaco fhiMtan'e arli, nn-
tiOn has been crippled because
their state and nalinn hai.An'l
been able to find a reasonable
solution to putting Negro and
white children through school.
W. C. RreshMrc a fnrmnr. el
ementary school principal and a
superintendent of schools in Tex
as, is the superintendent of the
private schools. Hp ic ItKtifinhlv
proud of having made available
education in Little Kock, and he
points out what a tremendous job
it has been.
"It not ae if T itlln Dnr.L-
suffered a major disaster," he
said, "and that not only the
buildings and laboratories and li
braries all had been destroyed,
but the entire teaching staff
wiped out."
For the 175 regular teachers
are under federal injunction not
lo teach in a nrivat crhrml Tim
desks, the chairs, the test tubes
and bunsen burners, even the
books cannot be made available
to the children. ,
C..?.' hi "
IT'S OYSTER STEW tonight, piping hot and well seasoned for the members of Sacred
Heart Church and all others who like oysters and the fun of a bazaar. Saturday night
there will be roast beef on the menu. Both meals are to be served by the men. The
annual bazaar is being held in Sacred Heart Gym for the benefit of the building fund,
the new addition to Sacred Heart Academy. Making plans were these members of
the building committee, Art (Jim) Rickbeil, Gino Carnini, Bob Harrahill and Chuck
Bailey. Serving will begin promptly at 5 p.m. There will be all kinds of booths with
Christmas gift ideas, cooked 'foods, toys and games for the entertainment of young
and old. The new addition to the academy is to be built at a cost of $200,000.
Shopping Jour With Buyer Tires Editor
By GAY PAULEY
UPt Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UPD One dav
spent with a fashion buyer from
Birmingham and I was bushed.
But Miss Leah Kay was still
going strong, on a shopping spree
in which she will spend a fortune
for coats, suits, dresses, rain
coats, furs and cocktail clothes.
"When I get so tired I can't
take any more. I just go back
to the hotel and get in bed with
a murder mystery, said the dur
able Miss Kay, a buyer for 15
Experiment
Not Success
PAMPA, Tex. (AP)-This west
Texas city's first experiment with
the downtown mall streets from
which autos are barred was not
a complete success.
A teen-aged driver, whom police
did not identify, crashed through
a barrier Thursday, struck a dis
played 1959 car, and rammed it
into four other automobiles on
display.
A spectator, Clyde Jonas, suf
fered a broken leg when he was
pinned between two of the scram
bled autos.
Police, who said damage was
between $1,000 and $2,000, quoted
the 17-year-old driver as saying
his brakes locked.
years for Porlcr's, a junior de
partment store in Birmingham.
.Miss hay. a tall, attractive bru
nette in her 40 s, is just one of
the thousand or more buyers
crowding the Seventh Avenue
garment district showrooms, plac
ing orders now for clothes which
you women will buy and wear
next spring.
On this two-week trip, she will
spend S197.OO0 (retail value), and
some $70,000 of that on suits
alone.
This, she explained, is one of
four or five buying trips she
makes each year. Her other big
spending season is in June, when
she buys for fall. In-bclween trips
usually January and August, are
for "fill-ins." And, she also orders
by letter and telephone, working
through the store's resident rep
resentative, the Atlas Buying
Corp.
1 11 spend two or three times
as much on letters and telephone
orders as I will this trip." she
said, as we worked our way from
crowded showroom to crowded
showroom. In two weeks, she
planned to cover at least 15 suit
manufacturers, 10 raincoat, and
50 to 60 dress bouses.
It was suit day, the dav T spent
with her and we visited six man
ufacturers, although she had
larted with 11 on her itinerary.
We were accompanied on the
better-suit buying portion of the
day by Mildred Newman, and on
the less costly portion, by Betty
Davidian. bolh with Atlas.
Resident firms, who charge the
ctores a fee, have such experts
as the Misses Newman and Dav
idian in the market every day.
keeping tab on what's new, and
advising out-of-town buyers on
bargains.
Miss Kay said she never orders
on first visit: she makes a second
and sometimes a third call on a
showroom before final orders arc
placed.
She also discusses every order
with the resident buyer "we
nooge it over." she said of these
worry conferences.
If I have a bad suit year, I
blame Miss Newman," the buyer
laughed. "If a good one, I take
all the credit."
Striking Pilots Discover
How The Other Half Lives
WASHINGTON U'PII What
do highly-skilled airline pilots do
when their company is shut down
a long strike
They find out how the other
half lives.
About 850 captains and co pilots
have been furloughed since a
mechanics' strike closed down
Capital Airlines 35 days ago.
A ll'l survey showed todav
that many pilots swallowed their
professional pride when their
pocketbooks were grounded.
Three pilots went from the
complicated cockpits of turbo
prop viscounts to driving taxi-
cabs in suburban Montgomery
County.
One veteran captain is digging
clams along Chesapeake Bay
and happily reported he is earn
ing $20 a day.
"I d rather be flying." he said.
' hut I gotta make a living."
Other temporary jobs revealed
in the survey:
One captain is refurbishing an
tiques a hobby he turned into
an avocation overnight.
Two are working a plant nur
sery owned by an Allegheny Air
lines captain.
Another is painting houses.
Several are selling real estate.
Five are giving private flying les
sons. One is instructing in sea
plane flying. Two are working in
hardware stores as clerks. At
least two are selling insurance
and one is a part-time school
teacher.
All Capital pilots receive $10 a
day "subsistence" benefits from
their Union, the Airline Pilots As.
socalion ALPA.
But these benefits fell far short
of meeting all their commitments.
"You must remember that
some of our men were earning as
much as $14,000 a year," one pi
lot exolained. "Thev have finan.
cial obligations in accordance
with their normal living stand
ards mortgages, car payments,
ftp ttO a Hnv tn a man rrtsbinrf
I between $8,000 and $14,000 a year
is an awtul letdown.
SQUEEZED OUT
CHICAGO (UPD Frank Djj
Patterson told FBI agents he
really hadn't intended to escape
from a Biloxi, Miss., jail cell.;.
Patterson said he decided
against making a break after
crawling halfway through- the
bars of a jail window but be
came stuck and couldn't squeeze
hack in. So he squeezed out. - '
DRIVER TRAINING
Dual Control Car
Phone TU 4-7690
DUGAN & MEST
USED CARS
HAVE MOVED
to
6th and Plum
New York Policeman
Has Secret Admirer
LOCKPORT, N.Y. (AP)-Some-one
on the Lockport police force
has a secret admirer.
A potted plant arrived at head
quarters with a card, unsigned,
that reads: "for the policeman
who admires flowers from the
lady who admires a kind police
man." Each officer claims the flowers
were meant for him.
12 Hours Only!
Sunday Store-Wide Sale!
Do Your Christmas Shopping Early and Savt 50 to
bootl This Year buy Something for the Home!
9:00 A.M. TILL 9:00 P.M.
Bush Furniture Co,
When Quality ll Not Expensive Next to Willard Hotel
ATTENDANCE CONTEST
LANGELL VALLEY A month's
attendance contest between the
"reds" and the "blues" of the
Lorella Full Gosepel Church end
ed with a party and potluck sup
per at the Lorella Community
Hall Friday evening. The reds
were the losers and hosted the
blues starting with the 6:30 sup
per for 45 persons. Games and
contests were enjoyed by all fol
lowing the supper. The Rev. Rich
ard Stewart is the minister of the
church.
ALL !
STOCK WALL PAPER '
; Vi - Vi off ;
!; A & B PAINT j
1229 I. MAIN
-VFW-
FALL CRABFEED
Saturday, Nov. 22
6:30 P.M.
Contrary to Pre-vioul Announcement, Thil
ft for Member! and Their Adult Gueitit
Dancing To Follow
"Emerson MX
"888"
Q TDAMQIQTOD A
Pocket Portable RADIO -
lf J Sir. only 4" wide, high, V,'
yryj j PAY ONLY 1.00 WEEK
Pried lowtr than mart J-troniirtor radios,
with hifh fidelity tana, powerful reception
nd handy carrying hendle. Guaranteed
Navarbriak" cat in red, black ar (reen.
deep.
Complete
W5
with Botteriet
ll
LUCKY BULL
TAMPA. Fla (I 'Pit The rilir
Council approved a circus plan to
stage a bullfight here Jan. 8
when the circus promised the bull
would not be harmed.
DANCE SaSr
tied earn
Dorrit, California
Music By
PEE WEE
STIDHAM
and the
Butte Valley Ranqert
Ne liierMie hi
edmiielon pricee
Dancing 9 till 1
90c Person
j""T limn mil ' f iwaii i mi i" " inn nun nn muni r;
Penney's
thrifty Santas get MORE
for a dollar DURING
PENNEY'S CHRISTMAS
OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9 D.m.
YOUR CHOICE
BAMBOO
ROCKERS
V BAMBOO
SHELL CHAIRS
i" BAMBOO
TUB CHAIRS
CHILDREN'S OCCASIONAL CHAIRS
To Please Any Boy or Girl for Christmas r
ANOTHER FIRST FOR PENNEY'S! THE MOST TERRIFIC CHIL
DREN'S ITEM WE'VE EVER HAD! MADE JUST LIKE THE BIG
CHAIRS, BUT JUST FOR THE LITTLE TOTS. CHOOSE ROCKERS,
SHELL CHAIRS, OR TUB CHAIRS. STURDY, COMFORTABLE, PER
FECT FOR THEIR ROOMS, PLAYROOMS OR WATCHING TELE
VISION. THEY STACK FOR EASY STORAGE. WONDERFUL GIFT
AT A BUDGET PRICE.
TOYLAND-THIRD FLOOR
88
REDUCED!
WOMEN'S DRESSES
Big Selection! New Fall Stylet?
Basic and high fashion
stylci In tha finest fall fab
rics. Wc'ra cleaning houst
... wools, cottons, jer
seys and oil at big savings.
Shop torly. Broken sixes.
SECOND FLOOR
6
00
SPECIAL!
45 RPM RECORDS
YOUR CHOICE OF HUNDREDS!
This is. a real special! Top
recording artists, top tunes ffiP
of the nation. Enjoy good
music at big, big savings.
Also available ... 33 RPM
records 88c.
MAIN FLOOR
1
00
REDUCED!
WOMENS BLOUSES
Bio, Selection! Many Styles
Wow! What a terrific buy
on plaids, plains, prints.
Fine basic blouses In long,
short, roll-up sleeves. Over
blouses too in cottons or
jersey. You'll went several,
Sites 32-40.
SECOND FLOOR
1
33
REDUCED!
GIRLS COATS
All Fall Winter Styles!
Every coot in stock reduced
to clear. Thirty of the girls
cutest stylos. Tweeds, plush,
fleece. All the best colon.
Basic styles as well as "the
new look". Broken sites
7-14.
SECOND FLOOR
14
00
REDUCED!
WOMENS SHORT SLACKS
A big cleanup of the finest in womens short slacks. Topsail
corduroy, tullcona in the best colors. Wonderful for leisure
woor. A few proportioned slocks. Western gabardine pants.
Broken iiies 10-18. Shop early!
SECOND FLOOR
2
PAIR
5
701 Main St., Klamath Falls
SHOP PENNEY'S TOYLAND
THIRD
FLOOR