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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1959)
PAGE 2 A HKRALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore., Fridav. .Tulv 10. 1959 annua Mm mmjMm wwmtia'Vmmifl'fltMV i 4 ,tA. W J j J fl fr ; 1 This Movie Has Everything Except The Straight Facts. By ANTHONY AISTIN PARIS (ITU It's (he movie that has everything and almost none of it true. It's definitely anti American, but Americans who flock to it don't know whether to howl with rage or giggle at absurdities. scene o( the new French movie, "I'll Spit On Your Graves." The scenes shift. In a cabin deep in Mississippi (after a lynch ing, of course 1 a poor white takes a pull on a bottle imported Bal- its lantine's scotch what else? Meanwhile, back on Main Street The motorcycle mob of blank-i tempers rise. The drugstore own faced yimng hoodlums rips inlo(er pulls his pistol from under the the American town. Black leather counter. Candles in empty coke jackets zero in on the hapless bottles splutter in the night, bookstore owner. j Tne ner0 a Usht-skinned Negro Slap! His eyeglasses fly from passing for white, makes for the bis hands. Crash: Cowboy boots, Canadian border with the white ELDOR HENSCHKE, left, was recently honored with a 30-year-pin, presented to him by the International Paper Com pany, Long-Bell Division, by its representatives, Clifford Clayton, manager of the IPC, KUmath Falls, and Melvin Baker, district manager, Eugene. Hensehke began work in 1929 as a yardman in the local retail yard, wljieh at that ime was called the Big Basin Lumber Company; He. now resides at 501 Dairfont Street with his wife Mary., grind his groping fingers into the lloor. "Brutality in America!" is the girl who loves him because he scowls. Alas! Floodlights bare the flee House Judiciary Group Starts Civil Rights Bill WASHINGTON AP) - The House Judiciary Committee started work Thursday on a civil rights bill, the fate of which will play a large part in determining how long Congress slays in session this year. Action on civil rights is one of the key items in the Democratic leadership's legislative program, which critics say has been drag ging despite the party's heavy majorities in Congress. Chairman Emanuel Ccller iD NY predicted the committee would approve a bill not later than next week. If he succeeds In that goal despite strong South ern opposition within the commit tee, it would open the way tn lengthy battles In both the House and the Senate. Senate Democratic 1-cadcr Lyn don B. Johnson of Texas report edly appealed directly . to teller to get a civil rights bill passed by the" House) ,as soon as possible. This pointed to a strategy like the one Used in l!l."7 to enact the first new civil rights law in more than 80 years. The House passed a measure then and Senate lead ers used it tn bypass the Senate committee where Southerners had blocked action. In the Senate legislation to strengthen civil rights laws re mains tied up in a judiciary sub committee which has succeeded in holding only one meeting out of four tries since concluding hear ings May 2B. Another effort . is scheduled Friday. ' - Johnson and other Democratic leaders in Congress have been under heavy fire from a party wing led by National Chairman ROCK 'N ROLL DANCE featuring . "DREAM LOVER" BOBBY DARIN and his ORCHESTRA AUDITORIUM MON., JULY 13 screaming message of the opening ing pair and machine guns cut them down. Uncle Sam has the border watched. Boris Vian, a Parisian jacques-of-all-trades who wrote the script, was not limited in his descrip tions of America, since he has never been there. He died two weeks ago of a heart attack while watching this movie version of his original novel, "J'irai Cracher Sur Vos Tombes." The movie is the talk of the sidewalk cafes and American tourists flock to it for three rea sonsto get mad, to giggle or to gulp at the sex scenes which would never be shown in an American movie. American small town girls wear their parisian dresses only to shed them at the drop of a stare. In an underwater kissing scene the girl lacks the top of her bikini. Paul M. Butler. Butler said Sun day Democratic presidential chances in ln were endangered by what he called the lack of a progressive record from the Dem ocratic-controlled Congress. Even with the best of luck for proponents of new civil rights legislation, the chances of enact ment this year seemed to hinge on Congress' willingness to have a long session, perhaps into Sep tember. . ; The bill the House committee considers today behind closed doors is an amalgam of proposals bylhe Eisenhower administration and hy Celler and other northern Democrats. Celler is pushing a provision which the- House included in its !!IS7 , bill, but which the Senate rejected. It would extend to all civil rights the present law's machinery for enforcement of voting rights by court injunction . The rest of the bill consists largely of administration propo sals surh' as federal prosecution in racial bombing incidents, a commission to push enforcement of anti-discrimination policies in ledcral employment, and help to school districts wanting to inte grate their schools. The least controversial feature is a two-year extension of the life of the Civil Rights Commission. now scheduled to end in November. CAR PRODUCTION UP WOLFSBlirtG, Germany (API A new peak in production of the German Volkswagen was reported today in the annual report of VolkswaRenwerk. In 1958, a total of Mil, 3ii!t automobiles were pro duced. This compared with 472.- 5!)4 in the previous year. , 4-H NEWS 4-H CAMP LAKEVIEW - The 1(159 Lake County 4-H Summer Camp will open Sunday afternoon, July 12, at Cottonwood Meadows, according to Al Haslebachcr, county exten sion agent. About 75 campers and staff will take part in this year's camp. Camp director is Mrs. Virginia Petty and assistant director is Mrs. Paul Doughty. Norma Bla lock will again be camp cook and Barbara Peterson, the camp nurse. Counselors for the camp are Joe Kaley, Maurice Odegaard, Phyliss Ashcraft, Jennie Cleland, Marilyn Cook, Madge Schofield, Sharon Smith, Sandra Smith, and Mary Lee Scoville. . Campers are asked to register at the office between 1:30-4:3(1 p.m., as soon as they arrive at camp. Alter registering they will he directed to their tents and acquainted with the camp rou tine. First camp meal is dinner at fi p.m. . Attending 4-H camp are Patti Metzen, Johnny Leemann, Kenny Kudrna, Nancy Ann Clair, Carolyn Goss, Doug Leehmann, Dcanna Johnston, .Lynn Abramson, Laura Bowers, Cecilia Bowers, Sandra Wolf, Wayne WolT, James Blair, Carol Elder, Robert Giese, Ken neth Thomas, Bonnie Jean Thom as, Merle Busic. Frank Nelson, Connie Nelson, Barbara Garrett, Kathy Butler, Linda O'Ncil, Butch Moss, Sandra Moss and Vergie Padgel. Nancy Fae Rogers, Carrie Ann Morris, Ann Weir, Lucille Clel and, Denise Haven, Gayle Carroll, Linda Moran. Judi Serfcrt, John Sipp, Ray Hopkins, Carolyn and K a I h r y n Laux, Nancy Lantr., Cheryl Petty, Nancy Maxwell, Lar ry Maxwell, Carol Biggs, Clifford Williams, C i n d a Weir, Marvin Wells, Jane Doughty, Veronica Manhinney, Anita Lukl, Richard McDonald and Jimmy McDonald, all of Lakeview. , 'DENNIS THE MENACE 1 1 I LEFT 'EM OVER AT TOWWS vVAOlM'KOL! I DIDN'T 5RNS 'EM "CAUSE JM SOIM" R16HT0ACK'' - Steel Strike Appears On; Firms Take Adamant Stand Klamath Full. Oregon Serving Ttnuthern Oregon and Northern California Publldhrd daily rxcrpt Saturday by Southern Oregon Publishing Company Main at Esplanade Phone TUxedo 4-Rltl FRANK 1KNK1NS. Editor : fill, I, JENKINS, Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor Entered second rlau matter at th poll office at Klamath FalU. Oregon, on August 30, 1906. under art of Congress, March 3. 1879. Second-clasn postage paid at Klamath FalU, Oregon, and at additional mailing offices, I SUBSCRIPTION RATES Catrlrr 1 Month , $ 1 V) Months 9 OO 1 Year -...1B00 Mad In Advanca I Month 1 sn Months $ B!W I 1 Year , 413 00 Carrier and Dealers f Week days, copy VJ I Sundays, copy We UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL I ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIR'LATION Subscribers not receiving delivery o! their Herald and News, pleas phona Tl'do 4-8111 before 7 P.M. After 7 P.M.. uhona Maurice Miller. Cir- ictilatlon Manager at Tl'xedo 4-47M. j OPEN DAIJ.Y 7:OQ P. M ENDS TONIGHT! JULIUS LA ROSA TOP ROCK STARS! CmIum: :0S t ll.JS Life begins at7 Shewn 10:10 Only Plus! Flfht Pici Suicide Pact; Three Die HOBBS, N.M. (AP)-An appa rent murder-suicide pact Wednes- day resulted in the death of a mother and daughter and a man who lived a few blocks away.' Dead as the result of .22 cali ber bullet wounds in the head were Elmer Pirhlope, 3B, an oil field worker: Annie Jo Brixie, 32 and her daughter, Beverly Carol Brixie, 7. Police said the shooting happen ed in the home of Mrs. Brixie's husband, Albert, who with the Brixie's 15-year-old son, Melton, was on a visit to Monticello, Ark. Undersheriff Bruce McCallum said a note was found addressed "to whom concerned" and signed "Elmer '.and Annie." McCalluml said (he note announced suicide plans. NEW YORK (API The Steel-I workers union waited expectantly today for an industry labor con tract settlement offer. But there was no sign that steel firms in tended to budge. With an industrywide walkout threatened at midnight Tuesday, substantial progress must be made before Sunday if costly prepara tions for banking furnaces and tapering off steel production are lc be avoided. Executives of the industry's top dozen steel companies huddled to decide whether to make a last- ditch wage offer to avert a walk out. Apparently there was divided opinion. There was no announced decision. New York newspapers said the industry chieftains re portedly decided to stick to their advocacy of a one-year wage The Steelworkers union, headed by President David J. McDonald, indicated this meant a sure strike. The union, which granted a two week strike truce from July 1 to next Tuesday midnight, rejected a bid Wednesday by President Eisenhower to put off a strike in definitely. The union was reliably reonrted lo bs banking on. a suddea indus try offer, or a departure on the part of one or more major steel Big 4 Unit Shew (S Ad Tnif P.) SUNDAY! 3 DAYS ONLY! i i -Ml yi WINNER OF 7 ACADEMY AWARDS! Big Discount MOHAWK CARPET" Th corpat factory a vtr-produced on special oraer tor famous hotel chain, and wt have a limit ed supply of this beautiful green, daep-ptle, pluth, all wool carpet. If offered on the reqular market it would tell for 1 5.95 a yard or mora. It't voun for onlv . . . $ 1 Open Till 8 P.M. BUSH FURNITURE COMPANY Your Eiclutive Mehowk Corpct Dealer Next to Wiltord Hotel . 221 Main Phone TU 4-5987 ifii (1 fj THE IBRIDCE ON THE RIVER 1 KWST TECHNICOLOR DOORS OPEN TONITE AT 6:45 Continuous Showt Sal. & Sun. From 12:45 NOW PLAYING! Feature Tonite At 7:16 9:40 i Feature Time Saturday and Sunday 12:55 - 3:09 - 5:23'-7:37 - 9:50 The Wealth and Power of the evil Rambeaus... their Hates... their Lusts! ROCK HUDSON JEAN SIMMONS DOROTHY McGUIRE CLAUDE RAINS 4 I The story pf . j- woman't ! Ci V secret THE CRY THAT ROCKED THE VALLEY Of THE SUN... Mine freeze. companies from the solid industry front, to break the negotiating stalemale. The companies have persisted in maintaining that any new steel labor cost increase would touch off a new wage-price spiral. The union claims the industry can af ford higher wages and other con cessions, workers presently aver age $3.10 per hour earnings. Formal negotiations lasted only an hour Thursday, recessing to to day to let both sides huddle sep arately to review their positions. The union was reported to have shaved down its demands to a rockbottom basis. . From both union and industry sources came informal estimates that a 10-cent-an-hour raise in wages and benefits, on a probable two-year basis, could settle ' the dispute. ; Two subsidiaries of companies involved in the negotiations here were reported to have reached tentative agreements with other unions in California. It is illegal to keep migratory birds in capitivity. State Secretary Appling To Speak To GOP Picnic u-.-ii inniins .Ir . Oregon sec-1 nonpartisan luncheon at the Kirisiu relary of state, will be guest speak-j ley Airport Cafe. Mayor Pro Tem er at the annual Klamath County (Walter Fleet will extend greeting, Republican Picnic Sunday, juij .. . ... 1 .... i.-i:. Dirlr in Pn nu'in.0 the lunchpnn 'nl at 1:30 p.m. al me -- - -- mi Malin The picnic is sponsored by Williams, commander of the base, ihe Klamath County Republican; has arranged a tour of the Air Cenlral Committee. . . ''' 't,lll'es- , , . Also expected for the picnic aroi ine ui-icuii? u. Maie win (our m" jnnlin" and too olficers of the Southern Pacific Railroad lata ihe Young Republican Federation in Ihe adernoon and will appear on of Oregon KOTI-TV at B: 15 p.m. The visiting Secretary of Stale j A buffet dinner has been planned and Mrs. Appling will arrive ,injfor Secretary and Mrs. Appling, Klamath Falls lale Friday eve-county Republican officials and Ihe ning Saturday. July 11, Secretary, Young Republican officials. A re Appling will make recordings al ceplion is set for 8 p.m. in tht boih radio stations, KFLW and Winema Hotel. The public is in. KF.I1. Saturday morning Appling vited. Ann Watters is chairman ol will meet with civic leaders for althe reception. hunaay morning me Young Re. publican Executive Board will holt) ils monthly executis'e meeting. Secrelary of State Appling will greet the officials. Master of cer emonies at the picnic will be Fred Heard. Ben Adair, Central Commitlee chairman, will be in charge of in. Iroductions and will read greet ings from Gov. Mark Hatfield, Slate Treasurer Sig Unander and GOP state chairman, Peter M. Gcinnar. Helen Epley Hoffman is enter lainment chairman. Mrs. Hoffman, neati oi ine loreign language de- Union Aide Scores U.S. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (API-Fed eral government "interference in labor union contracts could re sult in a shutdown of U.S. missile test stations this year, a union official says. Roy M. Brown, general vice president of the International Assn. of Machinists, told a Per sonnel Management Assn. meet-lparlmenl al Klamath Union Hi ir,g Wednesday nigni inai laom contracts often "cease to exist" when employes of private industry are "loaned" to the government at these bases. Brown said Ihe federal govern-' ment has created a "dictatorship worse than any behind the iron curtain in setting labor policies at missile test bases where non governmental industrial employes are concerned. Brown stressed that he had no argument with management of the companies concerned. "This is a joint fight by labor and manage ment against the government," he said. izh School, has arranged a program centered around the Centennial theme. Marie Obenchain will ha ac-ompanist. Ross Ragland will in troduce Secretary Appling. Tht closing prayer will be delivered by Mrs. Hollman. Mrs. Frank W Hurd will be in charge of regis, trations. Charles G. Woodhouse will super vise Ihe public address system. Malin Republicans are handling decorations and general arrange-mcnls. Klamath County Treasurer Eva M. Cook and Heard are co- chairmen for the weekend. LURE RED AGENTS : BONN, Germany (UPI) The West German government Tues day night offered lo waive prose cution of East German espionage agents who defect to the West. Interior Minister Gerhard Schroe-1 dcr, speaking on a national tele' vision -network, promised "we will do what we can to make use of Ihe possibility of not prosecuting in such cases." : MADRID PASSES 2-MILLION MADRID (UPI) Metropolitan Madrid officially has moved past the two million mark in popula tion, making it the sixth largest city in Europe. Officials Wednes day celebrated the event by heap ing awards and honors on five day-old Ana Isabel Sainz de Cueto y Torres, who, after a careful check of records, was named the capital city's two millionth citizen. THIS SATURDAY.' 4 UNIT SHOW the Left IIAHOZD JgWl PAUL NEWMANf ALL FOR LAUGHS JACK LEMMON ERNIE KOVACS KATHRYN GRANT MICKEY ROONEY REGULAR PRICES! Open Doily 7:00 P. M. Show Starts or 8:05 NAM iWCHHK y I trfsmsm Unew world champiowB I liffila Hnwm-winjAm holdeh JHTTTTTWiTTITTJTTTSf FEATURE TIMES "Floed Tldt" at 8:05 & 1:50 '0(rotion Mad Ball' 'at 10:05 "Uft Haaoad Gun" at 12:00 JWjjfcte' t 9:45 Only Jm kM&W Vb"Heflin l W v JeanAlTHUR nsrvAr . . 1 " . -T, tH. Uiilk AfV l I a a. . . o-.n-.T '" " rAuwtE EDGAR BUCHANAN -Vomponiori Feature 'ifiirl pf Ploatura I.Uurf