..... ,
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
CHere's always a lot of
Bergman Back
To See Awards
HOLLYWOOD APi Ingrid
Bergman. 43. is back in Hollywood
after i 10-year absence.
A double Oscar winner, she will
present the Academy Award stat
time Monday night to the pro-;
ducer of the best motion picture of
im,
oiic aui.tu a. ,. .it... . .... j, i. j i Mi.iiu i vi uiL Dfliy UUIUUWI
.... r-.u.., uk h thi.,1 hi.c.lanri Adolnh rirran narlu .ri..
band, Lara scnmiat
lnealer
Impresario.
Hammer Killer
Dies In Chair
MOUNDSVILLE. W.Va. 'API
Elmer David Bruncr. 43. Hunting-
ton, died in the electric chair
Friday night for the hammer slay-
Ing of a housewife almost two
years ago.
Bruner was cairn and composed
as he walked his last few feet from
a cell with Lt. Morris Eads. prison
chaplain, who read from the Scrip -
tiics He was pronounced dead
eight minutes later
Ruby H. Miller. 58. a contrac- M(,w norm today towarn tneir sum
tor's wife who was prominent tol" nesting grounds in Northwest)
church work, was found dead on Territory. Canada,
a bed of her home May 27. iri:7. An aerial check Friday showed
Her head had been beaten and the 1' " 32 rare whoopers which
atate said she had been raped,
WALLET
1
stststsi
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those in MY block'
Brando Seen
With Ex-Date
HOLLYWOOD (API Marlon
Brando made an infrequent pub
lic appearance and an unfriendly
RE , T'a. 7
.......... M,. , UHBlll I IIUBJ
He turned up with an old sirl
friend. Rita Moreno, at a charitv
f rb.u.
mo . :;.ii ; " "Um
IB
Miss Moreno was reputed to be
inranaos prime romantic interest'
beiore he married Anna Kashfi,
; the Indian-born girl who sued him
for divorce last month.
When photographers tried to cot
(pictures of the couple. Brando !
held a finger of his right hand
, ront 0f njs face. He kept the
finger there as photographers
fjrej avvay.
lAhnaBina Crflll0
WwnWWpilUJ Nl UIIC
Cac Mni4k Aflfiiii
rMf IWI in MUin
COHPl'S CHR1STI. Tex. 'APi-
At least II giant whooping cranes I
iwmieren a, Aransas a a 1 1 o n a. i
vvnoilie ivcuiRe norm oi nrre nan
departed.
The big birds, the lust flock in
existence, normally start north
bout April 4, refuge manager
Claude Lard said
He sain the 21 buds still at the
r U i . j ,
anytime from now until mid-May
US
i..iTi,.',ini
Sin
FULL or TWIN SIZE
50
K SHIMO TJ0
Phone 4 3134
Racing Body
Names New
Chief Steward
PORTLAND AP-Harold Mor
rison of Monrovia. Calif , Friday
was named Oregon's chief stew
ard and supervisor of racing.
Morrison's appointment was by
a unanimous vote of the five
member Oregon Racing Commis
sion. Morrison, recently a steward at
Santa Anita, laler told the com
mission he will report for work
April 15
As chief steward, Morrison will
he the top policeman of grey
hound and horse racing in Ore
gon. The steward's job is to
watch for violations of racing
rules, and recommend penalties.
in past years, the steward's
pay has averaged about $10,000
a year.
Morrison was aDDOinted to re
place Cecil Kdwards. the state's
chief steward since 1951.
Kdwards. though, has filed a
suit in circuit court in an attempt
to regain tne post.
in tne suit. Kdwards said he
was discharged without just cause
and was given neither a written
notice of discharge, nor a formal
hearing.
Ted Bruno, chairman of the
Racing Commission, has said Kd
wards is a "superlative" official.
but has been "controversial."
Poets Push
Penny Papers
KW HAWTN r.inn APi
. vunn. in
rweraa "in
'N Monday. If you buy one. you'droned
I fan rit :n.nrnfi nf
can he
having
limited edition.
Three Yale
.tudents are pro
moting the poetry ale this way:
Fellow students all over the
country unpublished poets all-
have been sending their efforts to
William Byler, Alan Shavzin and
Lewis Lipsitz. The Yale trio has
'been duplicating each poem 200
i times.
i Come next week, the 200 copies
of each poem will be exhibited,
lace down, in a local bookstore.
Purchasers may plunk down a
penny and take home a poem.
They may not read before buying.
There's no profit motive, say
the Yale students Thev just want
to help fellow poets become pub
shed and read
Singer Says
'No Weddi.ig'
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
"After
.. .... A J,. . I,.,. ...1 A
tfZ-t. aik-u..; .-i i j
.Mtiiio WWWMIWHIi I lltfvt Ut-
cided that marriage at this time
would he premature. For that rea
son I have on my own decided
against the wedding."
The 22-year-old singer issued
that statement Friday, just nine
days before she was to have mar
ried composer arranger Buddy
Rrroman ?s she miM nni ei-hj
orate on the statement, and Breg-iTh''
man added nothing. i
This is not the lirst time their
romance has hit a snag short of
the altar. Miss Alhcrghetti called
off the engagement last Novem
ber, but later called it hack on
Her mother. Vittoria Alherghetti.
said at first she opposed the nir
riage because Biegman had been
divorced, hut later gave approval.
Anna Maria is a Catholic, Breg
mnn Jewish.
SATURDAY, APRIL 11
Big Show and Dance
8-12 p.m.
KLAMATH AUDITORIUM
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
BILL MONROE
and his
BLUEGRASS BOYS
ADVANCE TICKETS
NOW AVAILABLE
Derby's Music Store
Adults Adtonto 1 23
Adulti Door Mm $ I so
CUHp) Anrtimo ... S SO
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH
LIFE BEGAN AT 40 (or Nikita Khrushchev, who was on his
way up tha Communist ladder when ha sported this Lenin
Lapel decoration as general party secretary in the Ukraine
in 1939. Twenty years later, older and far more powerful,
Khrushchev was the fur-capped and unchallenged boss of
the Soviet Communists when he played host to Britain's
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan last month, Khrushchev
will be 65 next month.
Life Story Of Nikita
Shows Him As Prisoner
Of Unyielding Doctrine
Editor's Note Nikita Khrush
chev stands for rhe thing that So
viet communism has stood for all
along world domination. Is
there any hope of change? In this
last of five articles on Khrushchev.
William L. Ryan points out the
stark facts.
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
AP Foreign News Analyst
A Communist party hack named
Z. T. Serdyuk from
on and on, saying just
what was expected of him
Nikita Khrushchev, tireless talk
er and dogged listener, hung on
every word.
"In view of the ultimate tri
umph of our party's general line."
intoned Serdyuk. "we have all the
mule r.iurui-i" vi inc uuimv.ii , ,. . . ,
fe-fiS? eSK. As esVtwoSeS
of Malenkov. Kaganovich
Molo-
tnv. Bulganin and Shepilov
Frowning. Khrushchev
rupted. "Shepilov who
them." he corrected.
inter
joined It happened last December at a
partv session when Khrushchev .clucked over by his stout, mother
was establishing himself finally as lv "lfe. admired by his grand
boss. The Moldavian momentarilv children. If Khrushchev has a soft
had stravert from 'he formula. slde- ' ' his devotion to his
When Khrushchev "took the
hiack sheep by the tail," as he
put it. and threw them out in mid-
1957. a new cliche was born. The
big hovs who opposed Khrushchev-
were to be regarded as guilty as
sin. Former Foreign Minister
Shepilov was not quite so guilty
This was the Khrushchev mindjslaves has come a long way since
work, as dogmatic as Stalin s,
conditioned by a lifetime of ex
pressing himself in pre-fabricated
phrases. Such incidents throw
light on the personality of the
man who would face Western
statesmen in any summit confer
ence.
Khrushchev's life story shows
him clearly to he the prisoner of
a rigid, uncompromising doctrine.
Khrushchev learned from Icnin,
for example, there are two kinds
of war-thc just and the unjust
Just war defends or advances
wmnninini.
i nere are two ways in fxpanu
influence in the world. Whatever
the West does, even throuch eco
nomic aid programs, is colonial
ism. Whatever the l.S S R. doesi
is in support of liberation.
When Soviet troops crushed a
revolution in Hungary, and when
Red Chinese troops smash resist-
ance in Tibet, that is "coming to
the defense of the people.
To Khrushchev as to all devout
disciples of I.enin and Stalin, the
terms "Communist party" and
the people" are synonymous.
When Khrushchev applies the
douhle standard, one for the
IVS.S R. and one for the West, it
is useless to look for logic as West
erners know it. There is onlv one
logic for Khrushchev: the inevit-ivvar.
able triumph of communism. Does Khrushchev's drive to impose
the Kremlin act in good faith'' communism elsewhere
There is only one faith: eommu- With Khrushchev as top man.
nism There is only one morality. .there may be little relaxation of
It excuses anything that advancesthe tensions communism uses to
the cause of Soviet communism I advance its doctrine. Time can
Like I.enin and Stalin before change that, and when the West
him. Khrushchev has made him-.negotiatcs. it buys time,
self sole arbiter of what is good Some day Soviet people may
for the cause of communism at have an abundance oi food, cloth
home and abroad. Those who dis-;ing. housing and security. Some
agreed with him became antipaitylday the Soviet population may be
wreckers, guilty of half a doren mature enough to force its iead
"isms" from the Communist h?x-ers to abandon the goal of world
icon of sin domination. If that time comes.
By these standards, Stalin was the world can hope for lasting
right when he resisted Trotsky's peace
impatient demand to regimenf! But it's unlikely Nikita Khrush
farmers. And he was richt when chev will live to see the day.
he himself brutally accomplished
the same thing. Khrushchev was j
right when he denounced Stalin COslTGrCGS rVlT6
.itiu riii him ..Ken vaiiMims iei..a
lions. He was just as right when
he re-estahlished Stalin as a hero
and cracked down on the same Jlpm:R ISLAND, Fla. AP'
0,h" '"'Atlantic Council conferees ,n
costly experiments Washington have sent special
hr.M .' , hr. r0laTS;r-'ngs to Secretarv of State
brought about a situation ,n Hun- JJJ r , convalf5nn(!
gary which he found hot as pap- f
rika. Ttiey brought restiveness
among Sov let you'h. riots in Po
land, even trouble in China They
required him to fix the blame
elsewhere, and thus the renewal
of the Kremlin feud with Tito ofl
Yugoslavia.
a Stalinist Still feeling he needs'
to m..k promises to the public. t....
I he warns that abundance must not vYQlCfl 1 nrlQyOli
lv eviwted too soon. I. ike Stalin. CI.
Khrushchev wants world power MCT0 HQ COlTlCS
lirst
; He leaves no doubt how he wants : TA1PKI. Formosa AP' The
I to use that power tow n council at Taoyuan thinks
"Whether they like it or not. ".Mayor Hsu Hsin-chih should get
he once blurted out. the capital-1 married
ists must die Well contribute' It feels so strongly about this;
wh.it we can " that it has named a U-man com
This is a clear challenge for the mittee to find wife for him
West to ponder in advance of a The five women members of the'
I summit meeting. tow n council also v olunteered to
I Does all this mean many yearsiheip find the right girl.
FALLS. OREGON
of ceaseless cold war? That may
depend upon how long Khrushchev
lasts at his dizzy height.
Communists know the job of be
ing a Red nation's party boss is
gigantic. The premier's job is al
most equally taxing. Khrushchev
himself once decreed it was im
possible for one man to do both
raR, and separated the posts in
the satellite countries. He does
seem to have enormous enersv.
Moldavialbut he may lack the bounce of
two years ago. when he snorted
to correspondents trying to keep
up with one of his rocket-like
tours:
"Life is short. Live it. Tired"
Of course not. I'm a strong man."'
Khrushchev will be 6.5 in twoi
weeks. Doctors have warned him!
drinker is pretty much on the
wagon, and suddenly is intent in
making the whole population lay
olf the stuff.
He lives in luxury in Moscow,
daughter, wife of a Moscow edi
tor, and his son Sergei, an electri
cal engineer. Another son died in
World War II.
When the pace gets rough.
Khrushchev rests at a 30-room
villa, showplace of a Black Sea
resort. The grandson of peasant
he joined the Bolsheviks 40 years
.ico.
So Khrushchev may live for
years. But his generation of mili
tant Bolshevik veterans is dying
out. Khrushchev has neither the
power nor the personality to he a
Stalin. Opposition, both from die
hard Bolsheviks and the rising
generation, is easily detectable.
Still. Khrushchev seems intent up
on producing a robot population.
He is revising marxism and creat
ing new dogma to prepare the
country for his version of com
munism. He may be miscalculating.
The new Sov iet generation is not
the frightened mass Stalin domi-
"""' '' .icx-iui.im-iu, a rn:
of P1"'1 ,n industrial and scientific
achievement, a hint of apology for
' "acuwaru siaie oi me ennsum
er economy, all are pressures on
Khrushchev. Thousands of techno
crats, engineers, scientists, profes
sional people and even many par
ty members will likely resist be
ing transformed into robots.
Party leaders worry about signs
of doubt among Soviet youth.
More than anything else, edu
cated Soviets, feeling themselves
on the verse of an era of unlimit
ed promise, fear the specter of
This, too. must affect
Dulles Greeting
Council Secretary-General Paul
Henri Spaak telearaphed Dulles
'hat "Our heartfelt thoughts go out
to you and we send you our sin
cerest good wishes for a peaceful
conv alescence and full recovery to
A U-..I.L. "
WaU Street
In Market Week Closing
NEW YORK IL'PI -The bears
chased stock prices downhill in
the first two sessions of the past
weeK hut the bu Is chased them
right back up again in the final
two sessions.
The bulls of Wall Street finallv
managed to throw off the caution
and frustration that had held
them in check for mo:e than two
weeks. The turninc Doint came on
Wednesday but the bulls really
bellowed on Thursday and Friday.
When all was said and Annp th
bull market had resumed its ad
vance and more than three billion
dollars had been restored to stock
valuations. The rallies on Thurs
day and Friday marked only the
second and third times in the past
11 sessions that cams outnum
bered losses.
The market was helned this
week by a long list of favorable
business and economic develop
ments, including record steel pro
duction, record electricity output.
sharp rise in auto nroduction
and sales, gains in railroad and
truck freight loadings over a year
ago and predictions of sharply
higher first quarter earnings.
Individual corporate develop
ments influencing the market in
cluded a big Navy contract to
Grumman Aircraft, American
Motors' study of the feasibility of
producing an electric car, Chrys
ler s decision to enter the glass
business. Lockheed s acquisition
of a shipbuilding firm which may
give the aircraft company a foot
in the atomic submarine business,
and a cautiously optimistic pro
gress report on the development
of anti-cancer drugs, and a 3-for-2
split by IBM.
During the week the New Y'ork
Stock Exchange cautioned its
member firms to reappraise their
policies "in the light of present
market conditions" in order to
conduct their activities "on a
sound and conservative basis."
The warning was said to reflect
some official concern in the finan
cial community about the false
tips and rumors that have been
circulating and feeding the specu
lative fires.
That's why experts were happy
New Pilot
Aid Offered
NEW YORK (APi-Researchers
have come up with a device de
signed to enable pilot to read
their instrument panels without
taking their eyes off the plane's
windshield.
The apparatus, announced Fri
day by North American Aviation,
Inc., is called a "display projec
tor." By use of special w'indshield
glass and illuminated images, the
instrument panel data is superim
posed on the windshield from a
projector above and behind the pi
lot. Paul Mooney. North American
research specialist, said the device
will be particularly helpful during
heavy air traffic or a need for an
instrument landing. For a large
plane, he said, the apparatus will
cost about $75,000.
HL'TTON ton
SANTA MONICA. Calif. (APt
Actress Betty Hutton is suing for
divorce again.
She charges her third husband.
XBC executive Alan Livingston,
caused her grievous mental suffer
ing. They have been married four
years. Both are 38.
SOME
CAME
RUNMN6..
mm
ACADEMY AWARDS
Hanwooo
To KVIP-TV-
Bulls Bellow
on Thursday and Friday when the
market's upswing was led by such
prime investment issues as Amer -
lean Telephone. Du Pont. U. S.
Steel and General Motors.
Another important development
was the strength displayed in
those two sessions by the rail
group, which had been the worst
laccards. The hulls are never
really happy until the rails join
the parade.
Open 12:45 p.m.
AMERICA'S FbfiHlEST Guys ARE Gl's
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Feature Times: 3:05 - 6:30 & 9:5S
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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, nso
'Frugally Proves
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DETROIT (AP)-Polici
DCTROIT lAP.'-Police s!nnnH
"0Dert J: Panel truck when
lk.ense late5 nad dl(ferent num.
bers
i Tk ,,.a ' k. -'
ion aA lou nlatU "this .-.
yellow and green colors and
mounted them on the truck.
Lewis said he didn't have the
money to buy new plates. He was
lined s.iO alter nleadine euiltv in
I a charge of improperly using
motor vehicle plates.
TODAY!
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1:35 5:00 & 8:25
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ADULTS
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