Roseburg Blast Case
To Get Court Hearing
: SALEM (AP) The state Su
preme Court said Tuesday a hear
ing will be held Jan. 18 on wheth-
i California
; Briefs
GlWNVltW
JOHNNY COURTS returned
from Siskiyou County Gener
al Hospital, Yreka, Dec. 17, fol
lowing treatment for a stomach
ailment.
MR. AND MRS. VICTOR HUD'
' DLE left for San Francisco Dec-
' 17. Edith Dyer will stay with Mrs,
Buddie's mother while they are
gone.
- JIM DYER, Klamath Falls, will
visit his mother, Mrs. Edith Dyer,
here Dec. 24, and take her and
Verna Maplesden to Medford for
Christmas Day to be spent at the
borne of Mrs. Maplesden s daugh
ter. Crystal.
MR. AND MRS. DAVE MAL
LOW and their family have
bought Matt George's home here
and will move soon.
Happy Camp
THE ANNUAL CHRISTMAS BA-
EAAR at the home of Mrs. Nel
son Baker grossed $165, said Mrs.
Bernice Sutcliffe, chairman of
Happy Camp Grange Home Eco
nomics Club. Needlework and
baked goods were donated by
women ot tne club.
' THE CHRISTMAS MUSIC CON
CERT, an annual event, was pre
sented to the public here by
James Tristan, director of mu
sic for local schools, the evening
ot Dec. 13. About 100 youngsters
from elementary and-high schools
participated. Art work was done
by students 'from the music de
partment. ' MRS. EDWARD WEBER was
given a surprise baby shower Dec.
1 at the home of Mrs. Myrl Reed.
Co-hostesses wen Mrs. John Hin
ton and Mrs. Bill. Reed. Games
were played. Refreshments were
aervea. ouwrs attending were
Mrs, Homer Weber, Linda Mun
oii. Gall Carries. Tom Hesler
and Charles Carries.
' TWELVE CHRISTMAS TREES
ware lurntsnea by tne forest terv
lea Iw Happy Camp Elementary
School. Herbert Sonneborn. nrin-
cipal, said each classroom .had a
tree lo decorate for class parties
uec. 16. Santa Claus, whose visit
was sponsored by the Dons Club,
presented each youngster with a
bag of candy.
er Pacific Powder Co. of Tenlno,
Wash., can be prosecuted for
manslaughter in the disastrous
explosion that ripped Roseburg in
1959.
Fourteen persons were killed
when a truck loaded with 6li tons
of explosives blew up.
The case has been appealed
from a Douglas County circuit
court ruling that corporations
cannot be prosecuted for man
slaughter.
The court also set hearings for
Jan. 11 which will test the county
toning law, and clarify what state
records should be open to the pub
lic.
The zoning appeal is from Lane
County, where the county com
missioners sought to prevent
Heintz Construction Co. from re
moving topsoil from property own
ed by Thomas and Leola E. Winn.
The commissioners sued the com
pany and the Winns. .
This case already has been ar
gued before a department of the
high court, but has been set for
reargument before the entire
court. The Lane County circuit
court had dismissed the case.
In the public records case, the
suit was filed by Dr. Alan M. Mac
Ewan to force the state Board of
Health let him see its records
concerning radioactivity in the
air, rainwater and other places.
The Multnomah County circuit
court dismissed it, with the board
saying it . released, radioactivity
reports to. the press four or five
times a year.- MacEwan .claims
these records must be open to the
public. : . -
II
DENNIS THE MENACE"
jf a
' 60, IS AlAROARET MAD! SANTA 04US TOCO
Aids In Capsule Recovery
State Agencies
Are Released '
PORTLAND (AP) - The Oregon
Highway Commission and the
Oregon- National Guard will not
be involved in a suit brought by
British Overseas Insurance Co.,
Ltd., to consolidate damage ac
tions in the Aug T, 1959, Rose
burg explosion.
Circuit Judce John F. Kilkenny
today dismissed those two state
agencies as defendants in the suit
brought by the insurance eom-
pany. ' :-
The action by the Insurance firm
is aimed at getting all damage
suits consolidated and to deter
mine the extent of the company's
liability.
Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton s
motions (or the state said that
Oregon cannot be sued without
legislative authority, and Uie at
torney general cannot waive this
provision lo permit it to be linked
with other, in connection with
damage claims from the Rose
burg blast.
Lt. Perry Williams, formally of
Klamath Falls, participated in
the third successful aerial recov
ery of a capsule from the fringes
of outer space.
He was a member of the large
Air Force team working on Dis
coverer 18. Among other
things, this particular space cap
sule carried a precious cargo of
human tissue in a test to deter
mine the effects of the outer at
mosphere on humans.
His professional skills were
pooled with those of approximate
ly 84 other officers and airmen
of the 552nd Airborne Early
Warning and Control Wing's (Air
Defense Command) Discoverer
task force of four RC-121DV de
ployed to Hickam AFB, Hawaii,
from McClellan AFB, near Sac
ramento.
RC-U1D Super Constellatibn
aerospace ' sentinels" " of the
552nd serve as aerial- command
posts during the airborne recov
ery attempt. . It is from these
'command posts in the sky" mat
the direction1-, for the actual re
covery by the C-119 come. .
More than 5'i tons of electronic!
gear packed away in these giant
Air Defense aircraft are used to
spot the plummeting Discoverer
capsule and to control the many
aircraft and ships in the impact
area for' a successful recovery.
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MEDICAL INSIGNIA
Insignia of the medical profes
sion has a serpent entwined
around the staff, called -a cadu
ceus. In ancient days, the ser
pent was a symbol of health be
cause it could shed its skin and
appear young again.
OCCKKMMK
T
scout nsvs
PACK 77 :
New pack leaders were intro
duced during a meeting of Cub
Scout Pack 77, sponsored by Con
gregational Church, Dec. 14, at 7
p.m.
They were Bill Ackerman, cub-
master; Douglas Knudson, com
mittee chairman; Charles Ever
ett Bohannon, treasurer; Clifford
Kenyon, institutional representa
tive; Mrs. Rose Putnam and Mrs.
John Aschenbach, den mothers,
and Ted Coker, webelos leader.
Awards were presented as fol
lows:
Steven Eccles, wolf gold ar
row; Wayne Bohannon, won sil
ver arrow and 50th anniversary
award; Charles Bath and George
Knudson, bear award and gold
arrow; Howard Lord and Estin
Hansen, one-year pin; Ronald
Young and Wayne Bohannon, den
ner stripe; Charles Bath and John
Britto, assistant, denner stripe,
and Jon Aschenbach, John Brit
ton, Steven Eccles, Howard Lord,
Billy Putnam and Wayne Bohan
non, roundup neckerchief slides.
"Guiding Stars" is the theme
for December. Those attending
the meeting were entertained by
cubs of Den 1. They made pin
hole viewscopes of various con
stellations and demonstrated
each.
Boys of Den 1 displayed a
model of the solar system, includ
ing the sun and the nine planets,
and they delivered readings con
cerning each planet.
Den 1- and Den 2 members
made ornaments to put on . the
Christmas tree in the church
hall. Candy canes were given to
cubs and other youngsters present.
Those attending sang carols at
the close of the meeting. They
were accompanied by Mrs. Louis
Bath.
Next meeting will be Jan. 27.
Theme will be "South America."
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Wednesday. Dec. 21. 1(60 PAGE S-B
Research Papers On Sale This Week
The third In a series of re
search papers issued by Klamath
County Museum went on sale this
week. .
It is called "A Bibliography of'
Klamath Basin Anthropology with
Excerpts and Annotations" by
B. K. Swartz Jr., museum cura
tor. The book contains 117 pages.
It sells for $1.75. .
Price is reduced to subscribers.
Subscriptions cost nothing, since
the papers are published occa
sionally, not regularly. Payment
is required each time an issue
is published. Prices for each
vary, too.
Four types of subscriptions are
available. They are general, nat
ural history, anthropology and
history classifications. The gen
eral subscription includes all is
sues.
The new publication is designed
to provide a comprehensive list
of references as an aid for those
studying Kl?math Basin anthropology.
Annotations or excerpts are giv
en for each entry and in some
cases, both.
Duplicate subject references are
provided for material that cov
ers more than one major an
thropological field, such as eth
nography, archaeology, linguistics
and physical anthropology.
The book contains a preface
with a complete explanation of I
the bibliography.
"HORROR RMTRT TE"
The horror story of "Blue
beard," who murdered a series of
wives and hid their bodies in a
locked room, first was published
in a collection of tales for chil
dren that also Included "Cinder
ella," according to the Encyclo
pedia Britannica.
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