Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 29, 1960, Page 3, Image 3

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    HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
Fridav, January 20. lflfiO
PACK 3 A
President Of Broadcasters
Testifies Before FCC'ers
WASHINGTON lAPt-Tho
tion would be turning its back on
democracy if the government
should start decreeing what is
good for the people to sec on tele-
Full-Scale
Landing Test
To Be Tried
WESTMORELAND Calif. (IIP!)
Nearly complete "landing" tests
of a full-scale, one-ton project
Mercury space capsule were to
be highlighted today with a drop
from high altitude into the Saltori
Sea.
The National Aeronautics anrf
Space Administration (NASA) de
clined to say how many of the
high and low altitude drons nf ih
vehicle capable of carrying a
man into orbit had been made
but revealed some 35 tests were
on the schedule.
Today's drop was scheduled
sometime after 1:30 p.m.
All of the drops have been suc
cessful it was learned, with re
covery of the Mercury capsule
made each time on the 60-mile
long sea that lies below sea level
about U5 miles southeast of Los
Angeles.
Objectives of the Mercury pro
gram are to put a manned space
craft into orbit flight around the
earth, to recover the capsule and
. its occupant and to investigate
the capabilities of man in a new
environment beyond the atmosphere.-
A powerful rocket booster is
planned to hurl the manned satel
lite or capsule into orbit for
about 24 hours.
vision, CBS President Frank Stan
ton said today.
Testifying before (lie Fed
eral Communications Commission,
Stanlon said (hat if imperfections
have shown up in TV, "the prob
lem is not peculiar to broadcast
ing."
"It inheres in (he whole of our
system of democratic government
and way of life," he said. "We
are constantly exasperated by the
seeming fumbling and stumbling
the frustrating imperfections
which seem to mark so much of
our society.
"The process is slow, indecisive,
and untidy. We have labor strife.
Products are sometimes shoddy
and cost too much. Newspapers
sometimes are sensational and
superficial. Basic issues even of
survival take too long to resolve.
Trains don't run on time.
"But are not, after all, these
problems the hallmark of our
democracy? Totalitarian govern
ments are not faced with them
But that is simply because those
governments do not have to con
suit with the people."
Stanton pictured the industry as
constantly striving to put a bet
ler product before (he public. But
he emphasized his belief that (his
is a matter which must be han
died through contact between
broadcasters and the public not
by government diclation.
Stanton appeared at FCC's
hearings on possible tighter con
trols over broadcasting after NBC
Board Chairman Robert W. Sar-
noff had told the commission that
abuses in broadcasting, such as
ringed quiz shows and payola,
have been eradicated by industry
action.
Like Stanton, Sarnoff urged that
the induslry be given continued
opportunity to regulate itself.
Arbitration, Fact Board
Only Way To Halt Strike
CHICAGO (UPI) Arbitration
or appointment of a presidential
fact-finding board appeared the
only alternatives today to head
off a possible nationwide strike of
two large railroad unions.
Wage negotiations between ma
jor railroads and the unions, rep
resenting 97 000 workers, virtually
all the nation's engineers and
firemen, became deadlocked
Thursday and no new sessions
were scheduled.
Bad Weather
Slows Work
DALLAS, Tex. (AP Nike mis
sile bases being built at four sites
around the Dallas-Fort Worth area
are being slowed because of in
clement weather, the commander
of the defense ring said Thursday.
Lt. Col. Tom B. Strother told
newsmen at a briefing that since
construction began on the sites
at Denton, Alvarado, Terrell and
Mineral Wells in 1958 bad weath
er has delayed the completion
date.
Strother, who- said security re
strictions prevent his saying when
the bases will be finished, hinted
they might be ready soon.
The bases will operate on a 24
hour basis to keep Ajax and Her
cules missiles ready in case of
enemy attack.
SON BORN
HOLLYWOOD (AP) London
iborn actress Dana Wynter and her
atlorney husband, Gregson Baut
zer, are parents of a son, born
Thursday at a Hollywood Hospital.
They have been married three
years. This is their first child.
The power that tin has to hard
en copper was attributed to the
devil by the ancients.
Leverelt Edwards of the Nation
al Mediation Board said bargain
ers for the industry and (he 37,-
000-member Brotherhood of Loco
motive Engineers (BLE) were
sent home late Thursday night
when talks collapsed.
Earlier, the 60,0O0-m ember
Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire
men and Enginemen (BLFE)
broke off negotiations with repre
sentatives of the 168-170 railroads
affected.
At this point, under provisions
of the National Railway Labor
Act,- the board may offer arbitra
tion to settle the dispute. If that
fails, it may ask the President to
appoint a fact-finding board to
head off a national emergency.
But no major strike is likely for
60 days at the very least, since
the fact-finding board would have
30 days to submit recommenda
tions, and a mandatory 30-day
cooling off period would follow
that.
Edwards said the talks, involv
ing two of the five operating un
ions negotiating for new con
tracts, could be considered "effec
tively and substantially termi
nated." The BLFE has demanded a 14
per cent wage increase, a
changed cost of living escalator
clause and adjustment of daily
earning guarantees. Firemen at
present average $18.54 daily for
passenger service and $18.34 for
certain freight service, according
to union eslima(es.
'COPTER CRASH KILLS TWO
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (UPI)
An Army reconnaissance helicop
ter crashed in woods on a farm
near here Thursday night and
two men aboard were killed. The
victims were CWO Harry J. Lim
erick, 32, East Riverdale, Md.,
and Pfc. Edward E. Cutler, 25
Cass City, Mich.
GET YOUR TRUSS
HERE AT HOME!
CITY BRIEFS
Parents and Patrons of KL'HS
will meet February 1 at 8 p.m. in
(he school cafeteria. Richard B.
Farnsworth. U.S. Department of
Health, Education and Welfare,
will speak.
Donald A. Piper will be guest
speaker at the Monday noon meet
ing of Klamath Basin Life Under
writers Association. The local at
torney will discuss the subject of
wills.
Mrs. L. E. Spencc will chairman
a Klamath Woman's Library Club
fashion sewing program Monday
February 8. at 2 p.m. in the city
library auditorium. Basic fashion
principles, related to figure prob
lems, is the topic to be followed
by a question period. All women
interested in sewing or buying
clothes are invited.
Mrs. Charles Woodhousc will
have the City Faculty Wives at her
home, 530 Hillside, or a meeting
Monday, February 1, at 8 p.m
Mrs. Fred Ehlers will present a
"cook book" review. Committee
for the evening will be Mrs. Lowell
Kaup, chairman; Mrs. Forrest
Hawley, Mrs. Willard McKinny
and Mrs. Merland Phelps.
Henley Grange will sponsor a
March of Dimes card party Sat
urday, February 6, at 8 p.m. in
the Henley Grange Hall. The par
ty is for the public.
Geoffrey M. Lee, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph F. Lee, Route 2, is re
ceiving basic infantry training at
Fort -Ord. He was graduated from
Henley High School in 1956, and
attended Southern Oregon College.
Mrs. Clara Fink seeks inquiries
from any person interested in a
general sewing class to be held
Tuesday evenings at KUHS. In
quiries may be made by calling
TU 4-7470 after 5 p.m. A Monday
evening class now meets at Room
115 from 7 to 9 o'clock, i
Mrs. Nellie Pantcr, 4514 Sum
mers Lane, was admitted to Klam
ath Valley Hospital January 24 for
treatment of back and hip inju
ries she incurred in a fall on ice
at her home.
Alice Hoover, home ec chairman.
Midland GranEe. times all mem
bers to be at the home of Eleanor
Sukraw for a club meeting Tues
day, February 2, at 1:30 p.m.
Kate Hoguc will have the Rebek-
ah Past Noble Grand Club at her
home, 626 North Ninth, for a pot-
luck luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Tues
day, February 2. Rolls and coffee
will be furnished. All members
are urged to' attend.
Merry Mixers square dance
group will have a rummage sale
one day only, Saturday, January
30, in the Pelican Theater Build
ing. Doors will open at 8 a.m. Any
one wishing to donate rummage,
please call TU 4-4482.
Race Relations Sunday will be
sponsored by the NAACP Febru
ary 7 in the lecture room of the
county library. Foreign students
attending OTI will speak at 3 p.m.
Isabcllc Brixncr and Mrs. Dick
Owens will be on the program at
the annual meeting of Eulalona
Chapter, DAR, Monday, February
1, at 8 p.m. in the community
lounge.
Mrs. George Proctor will be
speaker at the luncheon for Klam
ath Chapter, Daughters of Ameri
can Colonists, in the Pelican Par
ty Room at noon Saturday, Janu
ary 30. .
International Footprintcrs will
have their first dinner meeting
of the year at Sari's at 6:30 p.m.
Friday. January 29. There will be
committee reports.
Hi'thcl No. 6, Job's Daughters,
will meet for choir practice Sat
urday, January 30. at 2 p.m. All
choir members please attend.
Maury Clark, president of the
Klamath Chapter, Oregon Pilots
Association, has called a board
meeting at the Winema Hotel at
noon Monday, February 1.
Ralph Sukraw will be host to
members of the Midland Grange
Youth 8 p.m. Friday, January 2:1
All interested young people of
granges are urged to attend.
Gals, Don't Be Depressed
If Hubby Can't Understand
The Annual meeting of the Ore
gon Conservative Baptist Associa
tion will be held in La Grande Feb
ruary 17-19.
Henley Bethel, No. 51, Interna
tional Order of Job's Daughters
will meet at the Henley Grange
Hall, 7:30 p.m. Monday, February
1. There will be initiation of new
members.
James L. Griggs, son of Mr.
and Mrs. T. C. Griggs, 4305 La
verne Avenue, senior at the Uni
versity of Oregon, made the fall
college honor roll. He recently re
ceived confirmation of his admit
tance to the University Medical
School, Portland.
Robert Buck, 222 Jefferson, will
be host to the Executive Commit
tee of Presbyterian Men at 7:30
p.m. Saturday, January 30. Plans
for the coming year will be dis
cussed. All committee members
are urged to attend.
Youth Sunday will be observed
in Peace Memorial Presbyterian
Church at both worship services.
9:30 a.m. and 11 o'clock, with Neil
Alexander to speak on "Doubt."
David Ragland's topic will be
Faith and Jim Sibbet will speak
on "Knowledge."
Airs. Elsie Matthewson has re
turned from a national conference
of primary church workers held
by the Board of Christian Educa
tion in Philadelphia. She was
among 25 women throughout the
United States chosen to attend.
She is teaching here In the pri
mary department of Peace Memo
rial Presbyterian Church.
SEARCH FOR ftOMBS
COLUMBUS, Ga. (UPI) Two
airliners were searched for ex
plosives Thursday after an anony
mous caller warned the Southern
Airways ticket office here he had
'set a bomb to go off." No
bomb was found.
CONSTRUCTION DOWN
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
Commerce Department Thursday
reported this month s new con
struction valued at $3,700,000,000
was 8 per cent less than last
month.
Nickel is alloyed with aluminum
to produce automotive and air
craft parts requiring strength in
addition to light weight at elevat
ed temperatures.
PHILADELPHIA (AP - Lady,
don't be depressed because your
husband doesn't understand you
He can't, according to Dr. Wen
dell Johnson, prominent senianli
cist at the University of lon.
And you can't understand him,
"The war between the sexes is
intensified, moreover, by the com
plaints of men who feel that wo
men should understand them bet
ter than they do, and vice versa,"
Johnson declared Thursday night.
Speaking before Temple Univer
sity's 17th annual Reading Insti
tute banquet, Johnson said "Peace
and even love comes when it
docs with the realization by both
of them that neither is going to
be understood by the other except
on different levels of abstraction,
and so only in a limited sense."
"To put it in simple terms,"
Johnson explained later in an in
terview, "a man can't understand
his wife completely because he
can't have her feelings."
Further, Johnson added, a lim
itation of understanding due to
built-in errors in our language
causes prejudices.
Johnson, author of (he book
"People in Quandaries." said, "If
you tell me a teenager is delin
quent and then a lawyer asks me
what the boy does I wouldn't
know. That is because you only
told me how you classify him and
not what It was you classified.
The point is instead of talking
about him you talked about your
self. This happens all the time.
"Rather than tell the how, what,
when and where of the incident,
people talk more about themselves
and their judgment.
"Most people have an accus
tomed level of vagueness and find
it hard and even painful to be
descriptive."
.Johnson said we should train
ourselves to be aware of what we
say. He added this can be accom
plished by asking ourselves three
questions what do you mean, how
do you know (evidence) and the
eventual effects of what we say.
Insurgents, France Differ
On How To Pacify Algeria
PARIS (AP)-rBoth the insur
gents holding the barricades in
Algiers , and the government in
Paris want the same thing a
pacified Algeria firmly French.
They differ on how to bring it
about.
That accounts for the strange
quirks and contradictions that
seem to give a split personality
to some of the actors on both
sides of the uprising.
The insurgents feel the govern
ment's policy of self-determination
will fail and ultimately re
sult in independence for the pre
dominantly Moslem land.
The government feels Presi
dent Charles dc Gaulle's moderate
policy represents the only hope
for ending the five-year-old Mos
lem rebellion and the best hope
of preserving the French position
in Algeria.
This was the gist of Delegatc-
Icneral Paul Delouvrier's plea to
the insurgents you can t settle
the Algerian question without the
help of the Moslems, and the
Moslems trust De Gaulle.
This common bond the passion
ate desire for a French Algeria
which unites insurgents and gov
crnment loyalists has resulted in
such odd tilings as these: ,
Government officials refer to
the insurgents as patriots.
Paratroopers watch idly as the
insurgents reinforce the strong
hold the troops may be asked to
storm.
RUY SIXTH HOTEL
NEW YORK (UPI) William
Zeckendorf, New York real es
tate operator whose firm owns
five New York hotels, reportedly
has purchased a sixth for $14,-
500,000 the fashionable St.
Regis Hotel on Fifth Ave.
Both sides fly the Tricolor.
Troops and insurgents chat ami
ably while pointing guns al each
other.
Paratroopers snap to attention
and salute when the insurgents
break into the French national
anthem. They even salute the insurgents.
Complete
AUTOMOTIVE
SERVICE
Lubrication
Tune-Up
Hydramotic
Electrical
Wheel Alignment
Brake Service
ALL Makes & Models
DICK B. MILLER CO.
7th & Klamath Ph. 4-4154
We Have Moved
EVERETT DENNIS
REAL ESTATE
NOW AT
1407 ESPLANADE
Opposite Corner's Food Store
FORMERLY LOCATED AT
133 S. 9th St.
TU 4-8491
. . . from someone youTcnow, someone who's here
every day of the year to service what you've
bought, to make sure it still controls. After all,
we're truss experts, too, and WE'RE not itinerant
our appliance department, just like our
prescription department, is a full time, always
available service. Our trusses, too OTC
PROFESSIONAL TRUSSES are made by
experts . . . experts who've been manufacturing
body appliances for more than sixty years Wear
OTC, expertly fitted, with full confidence.
: l ha Complete PROFESSIONAL Fting Service.--
J Lee Hendricks Drug
f 2212 So. 6th Ph. TU 4-4321
I
i
1
t Hey MS'')
..THEY'RE RUGGED
..THEY'RE TOUGH
..THEY'RE TOPS
r m. i1--' . , ,. j .tj
Tt, T nm rv - in
t VII CWH.,.
Shop BOGATAY'S
Semi-Annuol
CLEARANCE SALE
Now in Progress!
With wedge crepe soles
and Red W ing's original
"Sweat-Proof" Leather
Insoles Viscolized
Leather Counters.
Priced
From
10"
HEY MOM!
How Many Uses Can You
Find For The New
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PORTABLE TYPEWRITER
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2. Typing recipes
3. Typing shopping lists
4. Typing club reports
5. Typing personal correspond,
ence with the fype that
looks like handwriting.
Think of the time saving, the extra neatness, the
convenience that a new Olympia portable can bring
to your own "kitchen corner office." Choose the
colored typewriter that goes best with your decor.
Choose the typeface that reflects you best. When you
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today. No obligation!
Trade In Your Old Typewriter
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icsr. tt ncn y
123
FOR VALENTINE'S DAY
Greeting Cards . . . table and wall decorations
and special Valentine's day Gifts., See Jones'
collection. You'll find just what you're looking
for!
QjoiwA ' Office Supply
629 Main
Ph. TU 2-4408
'4-
IT'S A WONPtKFUI. STOtl
urday
Check
List
OF GOOD VALUES
car coal clearance!
only $8.79 and $10.95) . . . instead of
$12.98 and $14.98. all-weather poplin
coats, plain or corded, trimmed with
wool knit rib. quilted lining, light
all-year-round shades.
scramble fables
willi sportswear of all
kinds, blouses, sweaters,
skirls. elc.
checked jacket dresses
only $15.95 . . . instead of $17.95. darl
ing, checked jacket dresses, short
sleeved sheath style with sabrina
neckline and wide belt, topped with a
waist-length jacket, peter pan collar
and pocket trim, colorful contrasting
lining, miracle fabric, always fresh
and crisp, beige and white or black
and white.
maternity dress sale
only $7.00 . . . formerly $12.98 to
$25.00. cottons, rayons, tweeds, many
dresses one of a kind, come early for
best selection.
casuafmofcer jacket dresses
only $15.95 . . . nationally $17.95. you
are free of care with casualmaker
dress and jacket ensemble, master
tailored in dupont nylon jersey, ma
chine washable, drip dries, never
needs ironing, pellbn lined collar,
cuffs and facings for shape retention
exclusive prints, also: white polka
dots on navy or caramel.
sal in 'cotton casuals
only $14.98 . . . that's all it takes, da
mask print stripe with contrasting ac
cent, step-in style, wide cuffed
sleeves, lovely dyed-to-match buttons,
silk scarf at waist, slit pockets, detail
ed belt, gold or aqua backgrounds.
coat sale
now only $25.00 and $38.00 . . . were
up to twice as much, this is our clean
sweep fashion clearance, newest
styles, famous names and iabncs. all
sizes.
linen-look sheath dresses
only $9.98 . . . should be $11.98. several
styles, rayon fabrics that look just ,
like linen, no wrinkling ever, coach
man sheath ,or jewel neck sheath or
tri-tone sheath - all in blue, black,
navy or beige.
pell icon In
only $4.88 .'. . instead of $5.98. double
nylon marquisette skirt with rows of
nylon ribbon above the gathered
flounce, nylon tricot to hips for
smooth fitting.
new spring robes
only $3.49 ... an amazing low price,
drip-dry floral print, small puritan
colar trimmed with nylon lace, short
sleeve is gathered to an elastic cuff,
slash pockets, duster length.
nvloii slccpwenr
only $2.99 . . . regularly $3.98, $4.98 or
more, january special purchase of ny
lon tricot baby doll pj's, popover pj's
and waltz length gowns, embroidered
sheer nylon over nylon tricot, square
neckline with small cap sleeves, many
otner styles, neaveniy pasteis. s
V.awi-'W m-m' ' ft- -' i.-n i
617 Main