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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1959)
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 7. 1959 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OBEfiON PAGE SEVES Balinese Film Set Tonight ' What are described as actual scenes of demon possession on the Island of Bali will highlight a new missionary film. "A Cry In the night, to be shown Wednesday, January 7, in the Klamath Temple. starting at 7:30 p.m. There will be one showing only. The hour long, full-color film was produced By World Vision. Inc. Balinese maidens" succumb to: the powers of demon possession, rise to dance the intricate steps of a ritual they have never been taught. Feathers fly in a tomole courtyard, as two savage game cocks battle. A nurse in the film binds up wounds of the leprous. The film recently won first place in the documentary division of the Winona Lake Film Festival, an international competition , for religious films. It is being 'pre miered in churches in this coun try. Churches using the film, rath er than pay a rental fee or take an offering for the World Vision organization, take an offering for their own foreign missionary pro gram. Startling sounds accompany the cenes from the Orient, seldom seen in tnis country. i World Vision is a service orcani iation headed by Dr. Bob Pierce ijvho states that over 40 denomina tional and interdenominational missionary organizations receive emergency aid from World Vision and over 12,000 children in 147 orphanages throughout the Orient are being cared for. Billy Graham is a member of the advisory board. The Fev. Harry M. Strachan, pastor of Klamath Temple, invites the public to see this film. ' ; .i 'ji American Cor Association Gives City 'Fair' Rating While pointing out that the eity's;grsup also noted that the city bad First West Coast Satellite On Pad At Vandenberg AFB College Drops Three Pupils CORVALL1S (AP) Oregon State College Tuesday suspended three students for vandalism at a University of Oregon sorority house Nov. 22 uses homecom ing day. Officials identified the three as Dean Lampros and Gary Baker of Portland and Earl Harbin of Honolulu. Three others, not identified, were placed on orobation for painting the university student union' building. A former student, William Strange of Des Plains, 111., pre viously suspended for taking the cap of a Corvallis policeman, al so was implicated, college offi cials said. They said the students agreed to pay $300, the estimated damage at the Delta Gamma sorority house. r..vri Scene From "A Cry In The Night" LOS ANGELES AP A 1.300- pound satellite the iirst ever to be launched on the West Coast is on its pad at Vandenberg Air Force Base. Some time within the next few days. Project Discoverer will be under way, headed for a Pole-to- Pole orbit. A dozen or more Discoverer sat ellites will be launched from thej California coast this year, each of them carrying hundreds of pounds of instruments to tell man what he will face when he ventures into space. Some also will carry mice and, later, monkeys. The Discoverer satellites will be pointed southward to orbit around the earth from Fole to Pole, ine first few are expected to stay aloft for only a matter of hours before! they plummet back to burn up m the earths atmosphere. Before they do, however, they will eject a capsule containing in struments and any animal pas sengers which can be recov ered by Air Force and Navy search crews. The first satellite will be pow ered by a Thor missile topped by smaller Bell-Hustler rocket. Some of the following shots will be similarly powered but before long the Thor-plus booster is ex pected to be replaced with mighty Atias missiles. Vandenberg Air Force Base, 170 miles north of Los Angeles, fired a Thor as a training shot last Dec. 1 to test launching ana tracking facilities. The next shot and oth ers in the Discoverer series will be directed by the Advanced Re search Projects Agency of the De fense Department as part of the nation's space research program. Number of pedestrian accidents, low caliber of school safety pro- rams, and a wcac public imoH mation program caused the city of Klamath Fails to be given a rating of only fair m a survev of the city for 1957 made by the American Automobile Association. and recently released to city of ficials. The survey was part of the organization's pedestrian appraisal program and coniamed a numher of pertinent suggestions by which the city might improve its stand ing. The city was evaluated at 55 per cent of a possible 500. This compared with an established standard of 67 per cent, and against the 94 per cent record compiled by Monroe, North Car olina. The city had one pedestrian fatality in 1957 as compared with none tn 1955 and three m 1956. There were 12 pedestrians injured in accidents in 1957, nine m 193; and six in 1S56. The city's overall ratings were as follows: Casualty record, fairly weak: accident records, fairly strong; legislation and enforce ment, fair; engineering, fairlv weak; organization, fair; school safety, weak, and public mforma tion, weak. Two weakest points appeared lo be school safety ana public infor mation. lo pointing out improvements in the school safety phase, the as sociation recommended t need for school safety patrols where tTLA. -(unproved its standing consider- they said, more than 650,000 school safety pairs! members afforded protective guidance to an estima! rd 13 million elementary school children crossing streets on their way to ana from school; 2 eie mentary schools devote at least one hour per week to teaching traffic safety and (3 suggested loser cooperation between traffic nfficers and other safety official and schools, having them appear more frequently before assemblies and traffic safety classes. In puhlic information, thev rec- emmended 1 more use of safety iims t2i more use of radio facili ties to promote pedestrian safety,; nd 3i mare use of pedestrian! messages on posters, calendars,! arris, bus cards and the like. Other recommendations includ ed (IS study to determine need for additional police officers nr adult crossing guards for duty at school crossings; 2 prohibiting parking on school side of street adjacent to school during and minutes before and after school hours, and 3 suggested mini mum distance from crosswalks at which parking permitted be 10 feet rasas QMS Many Stations Retain Prices PORTLAND AP1 Gas war prices were retained Tuesday by most Portland area stations de spite a nickel a gallon boost in price by three major oil com panies. An Oregon Gasoline Dealers Assn. spokesman said the boost was effective at stations of Stand ard Oil Co, of California, Shell Oil Co. and Associated Oil Co. He said most other stations re tained the "wartime price" of 23.9 cents a gallon ior regular gasoline and 28.9 for premium. pared with a standard of 87. the jhly from only m per cert in 1356.: PASTY HAIU ATLASTA m A wsrnan re ported to poises Monday that 2S pairs of panties have bees ststen from her ciotheslise ia the last five weeks. Other clothes tsiva. been left anteached, she said. POOL HALL PROPOSAL BALDWIN PARK, Calif. UPI Police Chief ovlH Ben Torres has endorsed a proposal to lower from 18 to 16 years the minimum age at which a boy can enter a poo! hall. It might take a tew kids off the street and give them some form of activity, he told the City Council. themittmbRfOUimffi Drive-in Cleaners Open Soon 2041 Radcliffe At So. 6th & Eoit Main Jack N. Martin, M.D. Announces the Removal of his Offices from 2903 South 6th Street to 4036 South 6th Street in Doctor's Medical Center H Fit V 1 SAVE BY JAN. 10th EARN FROM JAN. 1st! 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