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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1959)
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Tuesday. July 7, lOSS PAGE THREE CITY BRIEFS letting 0f the Klamath Cam era Club will be held Tuesday. July 7. at 8 p.m., upstairs in the county library. Members and visi tors bring one roll of processed lilm for showing. ..Meeting The Trustees ot the peace Memorial Presbyterian Church will meet Thursday, July , at 7:30 p.m. Initiation Women of the Moose Klamath Falls Chapter 467, will hold an initiation meeting Tues day, July 7, at 8 p.m. in the Jloose Hall. The chapter night pro gram and initiation will be under the College' of Regents Chairman Mrs. Hazel Pulley and the College of Regents. AH members are invited. Eagles Auxiliary will have a potluck at noon Wednesday, July t. at the home of Mary Wells, 6315 Alva Street. Co-hostess for the event is Etta Wiseman. ' Officers' Meeting There will be a meetiqg of the officers of the Eagles Ladies Auxiliary in the Eagles Hall at 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 7. Beta Phi Chapter of Beta Sig Fia Phi will have a rummage sale July 11 at the Pelican Theater Building. Anyone having, rum- Jiage to donate, please call TU J-4336 or TU 4-5831. vl "! iwWTi't trii i ri.aim Red Official Touring U.S. Closest To Khrushchev JAMES K. HALL received a $168 partial-tuition scholar ship from the state system of higher education recent ly. He plans to attend Ore gon State College. Hall was graduated last month from Klamath Union High School. Men who've met him say he tile mill. itics. In Uin he was party secre- install Kozlov as parly leader for has a quick, intelligent mind. Nev-i He quickly saw the road lo suc-itary in his steel plant, then head the whole of Leningrad Province, WASHINGTON NEA The. For graying, curly haired Koi- State Department is making cer- lov is more than No. 3 man in the tain that Russian tourist Firstjsoviet Union. From what US ex- Deputy Premier. Frol Romanovichpcrts can tell, he's clostv to Kozlov goes wherever he wants , Khrushchev's ear than any other j0j j iu gu anu sees wiuuevcr uuu living man. whomever he wants to see in the He is apparently ,ne of the U.S. ' shrewdest Soviet political ana- And that Includes President Ei-:l.vsts. He's a man with a tine erlheless, he's very careful around cess, joined the Young Commu Khiushchev, show, him great def- j Lists, was a lull party member irence, listens Intently to his opin- at 18. ions and is much more respect-1 Tne parly soni him to school. lul than the oldtimers around- He graduated from a workers col lege and then Leningrad Polytech "the boss." Kozlbv has come up quickly. Born in l'K)3 of poor parents in a small village southwest of Mos cow, he went to work at the age 5 .as an apprentice in a tcx- nical Institute. He came out an engineer, was sent to the Urals .is foreman of a sled mill, rose lo be a superintendent. But again. Kozlov shifted lo poi nt the city party committee. There he attracted the attention of high Communist brass, who slutted him to Moscow lo the stalf of the Cen tral Committee. He was in Lenin grad during the crucial early strug gles between Khrushchev and Mal enkov. When Khrushchev became the Communist Parly First Secretary in 11)53, he went to Leningrad to ousting a Malenkov man from the post. As Khrushchev's power grew, so lid Kozlov's. In June, 1957, when Khrushchev bested Malenkov and Mulutuv in the crucial struggle for power, Kozlov was made a - full member of the ruling Presidium. He and Russia's No. 2 man, Anastas Mikojan, don't like each other. senhower. Vice President Nixon, Secretary of State Herter. This is lo prevent Russia's No. I man Nikita Khrushchev from making a mistake in Berlin or in the Middle East. Scientist Bsck On Job LOS ANGELES (API Seven years ago today .scientist Albert Clark Reed left for his job at the California Institute of Technology and dropped out of sight He was located last year work- in;, as a groom at Hollywood r'aik Race Track. He had found peace, Reed said Lnrl t.ML-hnrl in .mntinila at a cl n. :m,Ml Hum iuuur leveiiuc-! dim.. , KunH Last October Reed took a job with an engineering laboratory, where he is working, now as au Liquor Tax Receipts Up I The stale treasury received $25,- prop- the Road Clear for Divorce ' HOLLYWOOD (AP) A erty settlement has cleared way for a California divorce of Setress Deborah Kerr and Biitish television producer Tony Bartley. ' She filed an amended complaint Monday in Santa Monica Superior fourt stating that the couple has no community property. The divorce complaint, charg ing cruelty, will be heard Thurs day. Miss Kerr filed for divorce East year. The couple's daughters, Mel inic, 12, and Francesca, 8, are with their father in England. " Miss Kerr and Barlley, a for mer Royal Air Force hero, were rtiarried in 1945. When they sepa sated in March 1958, Bartley ac cused writer Peter Vierlcl of stealing his wife's affection. Vicr fel said the charge was "absurd 4nd ridiculous." : -, : Chairman Doubts Geneva Success i LOS ANGELES (AP) , Tile Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission doubts that the Ge neva talks will produce a U.S. Soviet agreement to halt nuclear Weapons tests. i John A. McCone said at a news Conference Monday he hopes for an agreement "that can guaran tee strict compliance." But he , said he is "quite dubious" such In agreement could be reached. I One issue, he said, involves who Should staff control points that would be set up around the world under a test - suspension agree ment. Another issue, he said, is So viet insistence on veto power over parts of a suspension treaty. privilege lax collections during the 1958-59' biennium which ended June 30. This exceeded by $1,229,- 135 the total amount requested by the 1957 Legislature for the two year fiscal period. During the same time, $5,679,731 was distrib uted lo the various cities and coun ties. Distributions of liquor revenue and privilege tax funds for the quarter year ended June 30 sent $1,618,750 to the general fund of the state, $197,750 to the county treasuries and $172,500 to Ihe in corporated cities. The state census- a J.I. fund received $1,000. iiTOm MOOnSMne aerodynamicisl. Why? "It seemed to me that , maybe I could contribute something to our national security," Reed, 52, said in an interview. He is now alone in life. His wile died in 1955. His son, Tim my, 13, was adopted by his wile's cousin in Larchmont, N.Y, Girl, 8, Dies COMPLETES COURSE Pfc. Robert K. Goeckner, 21, son of Mrs. Helen D. Goeckner. 535 North Tenth Street, recently completed a wheeled vehicle main tenance course at the Army's Engineer-Ordnance School in Murnau, Germany. Goeckner attended klamath Union High School and was employed by Lewis Manufac turing Company before entering the Army. His father, Ed B. Goeck ner, lives at 3057 Franklin Street, San Francisco. , ' rtiViTrtMrfrf Win 1 ATLANTA t AP) An 8-year-old girl died after drinking moon shine provided her by a 24-ycar- old woman, police said. Manslaughter charges were iilcd Monday against Margaret Moore. The girl, Cathy Ann Dix on, died ol a-.ute alcoholism Sat urday at Grady Hospital. Detectives said two other chil dren, one 11 and one 15, shared a glass of the liquor with Cathy Ann at the Moore home, became intoxicated but escaped serious injury. All are Negroes. nose for which way the wind is blowing. So the State Department and the White House want Frol Kozlov correctly to sense U.S. strength and U.S. determination, and ac curately repoYt them' to Khrush chev. The top White House stra tegy men think this could prevent miscalculations by Khrushchev hat could lead to war. What then is the source of Koz lov's strength? First! ability. Back through the years, Kozlov nas Deen a nigniy- regarded worker by whomever was . in power. He s noted as- a top llight administrator. Second: shrewdness. He's been able to see, early in the game, which way the tide was turning. Kozlov jumped into Khrushchev's camp early in the struggle for Third: his ability at party or- 1 ganizing and his skill at operat ing party machinery. He probably saved Khrushchev's neck in the show-down fight two years ago (with Georgi Malenkov and V. M. Mololov. He's credited with being the key man in the rounding up I of more than 130 Central Commit- tee members for the quickie meet ing thai kept Khrushchev in power as he was about to go down to defeat in the smaller Presidium of the party. Kozlov is known as somewhat ol sophisticate, a man who likes the finer things of lite. He's- fond of Western music and dancing: he dresses well. - I kv-y- V ' -V V ' V v v v v v - v V YJj s ! V '. SAVE THIS COUPON IS WORTH $9.00 ON A FIRESTONE SAVE i , 'I ft $ CAR SERVICE SPECIAL! $g "fj j (ujt (LIMITED TIME ONLY) v) O H l X" Comt in today or phone for on appointment . X ' Vm I S i Ittfcl HERE'S WHAT WE DO: , YM 5 I : X 111- BRAKE JOB 2 WHEEL ALIGNMENT 3 FRONT WHEEL I A ! I o: u 1 1 raiw.Jn'.':.:: taw,rt .. err.,, balance ir IU. V I "" rrp.c iron! 1. l.rr.cl r.mbrr II ' Y i I LO 1 UlK"l n-td.d. Ilr.we.rl. 5. Prrrl.l.n .Ulic b.l.nc. -1 I Ian ! V - I I ' hrnkt ihiir. I. ircar. lull lPrl. Ii.nien. . dj u I I I. Inatall neceuarr I V Z " ! 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