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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1960)
-PAGE 8 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Friday, .January 1. I960 GLAMOR GIRLS Sterner Enforcement Set For Television Industry C 1M0. Kml fuwtu fj . V .,u tig lita iMml1 "Check your refrigerator! They're all coming back lor breakfast i" Chiefs Named By Ag Group YREKA Community committee men of the four Agricultural Sta bilization and Conservation Com munity Committees, as well as the County Committee for Siskiyou County were elected by mail dur ing the month of December. Each committeeman is selected for one year starting January 1, I960. The outcome of the elections is as follows: the County Committee will be headed by John N. Foster as chairman, with Burris Short as vice chairman; R. S. Simpson, reg ular member; John H. Parsons, first alternate; Paul Clement, sec ond alternate. M. H. Tozier will serve the Scott Oil Spokesman Calls It Quits WASHINGTON (AP) - Demand for oil products in 1960 should en able oil producers to clear some of the stocks they have been car rying on their shelves, so to speak. That's the way Russell ; B. Brown sized up the New. Year for the domestic oil industry as he wound up a 30-year career as Washington spokesman for a large segment of the industry. Brown retired Thursday as gener al counsel for the Independent Pe troleum Assn. of America. Brown predicted in an interview that In J 960 consumption of oil and oil products will show an increase Valley Community Committee as chairman with B. F. Davidson, vice chairman; Charles E. Ilovenden, rcsular member; Donald Dowling, lirst alternate and Earl N. Simp son, second alternate. Chairman for the Shasta Valley Cunimunity Committee is George E. Betts, with Louis V., Hessig as nee cnairman; Roy ,. Townlcy, SALEM (AP) - The Orecon regular member; Paul Clement, Supreme Court finished its year WASHINGTON (AP) - The new year prospect for the much-investigated broadcasting industry to day was a dose of federal law against such things as payola and quiz rigging. A sterner enforcement of pres; cnt laws and regulations appeared an even more immediate proband ay. A day after President Eisenhow er made public a special report he had asked from Atty, Gen. Wil liam P. Rogers, most discussion was not about whether laws against fakery are needed, but how sweeping they should be. In general, Rogers recommend' ed some additional law but prin cipally mo.e vigorous enforce ment by the Federal Communica tions and Federal Trade Commissions. Several congressmen who have played prominent parts in last year s investigations said, how ever, they are ready now to go well beyond Rogers' recommen dations for changes in the com- High Court Of Oregon Sets Record first alternate, and Donald Coon- rod, second alternate, John H. Parsons was chosen as chairman for the Butte Valley Com munity Committee, with Delos .Mills as vice chairman; Harry Short, regular member; Carroll Robison, first alternate, and Harold Porter field, second alternate. The Tulclake Community Commit ee will be headed by Lester L. Turnbaugh as chairman, with E. J. Duckett, vice chairman; Walter Motlike, regular member and John M. Staunton, first alternate. The function of the committees is to administer the various ASC programs in Siskiyou County which include Agriculture Conservation, the Wheat Acreage Allotment and Marketing Quota, the Price Support- the Wool Incentive and the Soil Bank Program. Meetings of these committees will be held through out the county during January. 4-H NEWS CLVB CONFERENCE The Oregon 4-H Club Confcr- approachine 5 ner cent. For lMfl ente wil1 be ,,,,d at Salem, Febru- the Increase Is estimated at 3 per 01 ' ' ana as announced by cent over 195B. Consumption n ""u" - siaie i-n ciuu this country now runs about eight million barrels a day, including Imports. He expects drilling for oil and gas to increase, although he said wells should not be drilled to pro duce much more oil than is need ed above reserves held to meet emergencies. Lebanon Frees Pennsylvania BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Leb-anese authorities freed Roger Mc Allister of Monongahela, Pa., on New Year's Eve after detaining him for crossing the Israeli fron tier in a motor boat. McAllister, an engineer in Bei rut, hired the boat at Sidon Tues day and drifted by mistake into Israeli territorial waters while fishing. The Israelis picked him up and sent him back to Leb anon. Since Lebanon is technically at war with Israel. Lebanese author ities became suspicious and held him until they could check his atory. leader. "Know Your Stale Govern ment" will be the theme for the delegate's, attending. Each county may send only one 4-H girl and boy as delegates to the Oregon conference. Interested and eligible 4-H club members from Klamath County must submit their permanent record with 1958 and 1959 stories to the 4-H club of fice by January 10 to be consid- e:ed. To be eligible, each delegate must have completed at least three years of 4-H club work and be currently enrolled in 4-H. The delegate also much have been 16 years old be fore January 1, I960, and prefer ably at least a junior in high school. I he delegate, if in high school, must be in the upper third of the class. If in college, the delegate must have a grade point equal to or above the student body aver age for the institution the delegate is attending. Further information about the Oregon 411 Club Conference Know Your State Government may be obtained from Francis A. Skin ner, county extension agent. ANOTHER MARINE FIRST??? MUSKEGON, Mich. (UPD Randy, a 7-year-old schoolboy, jumped to his feet in protest when his teacher, Cecllle Carter, told a Christmas story of how "no one went ahead to prepare the stable for the birth of Jesus." "You're wrong," Randy insisted. "The Marines must have been there. They always get there first." Thursday by establishing a mod em record for handing down de epens in a single year. Jack Sereombe, court clerk said the court rendered 242 opin ions, involving 264 cases, during 1959. That is the largest number in many years, he said. The 1958 total was 178 opinions. The court, trying to catch up with its backlog, was given an assist by the 1959 Legislature. It allowed the court to name two temporary justices to serve along with the seven regular justices. Sereombe said the increase over the 1958 figure is about the same as the number of opinions vrilten by the temporary justices. The court handed down five opinions Thursday. It reversed a $60,000 false ar rest judgment that Anton Kraft had ien awarded in Multnomah County against Montgomery Ward & Co. Kraft was arrested on a charge of burglarizing a Ward store, but the charge later was dropped. He was convicted in municipal court of criminal trespass, but was ac- quiited on appeal to the circuit court. The Multnomah County Circuit Court granted Kraft the $60,000 in a jury trial. But the Supreme Court reversed it be cause of errors made in that trir.1. The decision, by Justice pro tern Dal M. King, reversed Cir cuit Judge James W. Crawford. George H. Rowe vs. Wilbur G. Rowe and others, appellants. Ap peal from Lane County. Suit to determine beneliciaries under a will. Opinion by Justice Kenneth O'Connell. Judge William S. Fort, reversed and dismissed. Coos Bay Oyster Cooperative. appellant, vs. Oregon Highway Commission. Appeal Lorn Coos County. Appeal from decree dis missing a suit for damages to oyster beds. Opinion by Justice pro tern Charles W. Redding. Judge Robert C. Belloni, re versed and case ordered to trial. POOR YEAR FOR PIGEONS IPSWICH, England (UPD-The new year may be great for every one else, but it's going to be a switch. Police ruled Thursday that crumbs and peanuts tossed to pigeons In the local square are litter," and anyone who tosses them is subject to prosecution un der the anti-litter law. Cadets at the UiS. Air Force Academy are called "Falcons." The known oil reserves in the Sahara Desert are estimated at four trillion harrels. munications and criminal laws, Ihe iron Is hot now," said Rep. wiinam l. Springer (R-Ill). "i hope we get promptly into such things as better programming and control of objectionable advertis ing. Rogers advocated two immedi ate changes In existing law: 1. To make it a federal crime for an employe of a broadcasting company to plug a product for payment on the side payola Present law applies only against tne station. 2. To give the Federal Commu mcations Commission a wider choice of penalties to assess against errant members of the broadcasting business. He said the present law expressly provides only one punishment, banishment from the air. This is so drastic, he said, it is rarely invoked. He sue gested as lesser alternatives the temporary suspension of licenses' or the granting of conditional li. censes. Then, without advocating them (lie attorney general suggested two other possible changes thai might be considered later: Putting networks themselves un der federal regulation, as indivi dual stations now are. Broadening the power of the Federal Trade Commission to move against false advertising or deceptive trade practices in. any area of the economy. Its authority to seek injunctions is limited now to food, drugs, therapeutic devices end cosmetics. Nevertheless, Rogers told the President, on the whole the two commissions concerned with broadcasting "appear to have au thority adequate under existing law to eradicate most, if not all of the deceptive and corrupt prac tices in broadcasting which have been disclosed. However, Rogers noted, (he gov ernment's enforcement weapons do not appear to have been used as effectively as they can be." Both the FTC and the FCC have taken a new look at their respon sibilities since the irregularities were brought to public attention last year by the House subcom mittee on Legislative Oversight. There was no immediate com ment from the broadcasting indus try on Rogers' recommendations. Members of the Communica tions Commission declined com ment until they could study Rog ers report. Chairman Earl W. Kintner ot the Trade Commission said he Has pleased with the report "since it seems to reflect what the commission has been doing' in recent months. Kintner said he didn't consider the report critical of his agency. In a brief letter acknowledging the report, Eisenhower appeared to back Rogers' broad hint to the FTC and FCC to step up their eflnrts. Eisenhower wrote that it appears "the governmental bod ies concerned have not completed all of the action which they may ua considering. I would therefore appreciate it if you continued to follow the matter for me. Please advise me of developments." Springer said he cannot agree that it is perfectly clear the agen cies have most of the authority they need under present law. The gmeral counsels of both FCC and FTC, he told a reporter, testified otherwise. "We ought to get it perfectly clear," he went on. 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Reg. 150.00 Diamond Solitaire With Wedding Band 99 Many Other One Of A Kind Bargains -Get Our Deal! 69 COSTUME JEWELRY lUckut Tax inc. 2 rUCC JEWEL E R Reg. 1.10 PAGE 9 A, 1 A 50