Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 01, 1961, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    RERALD AND
Beautiful Gal
Can't Buy IFriend
By ANN LANDEM
Dear Ann Landers: Don't tell
me to go to my clergyman with
thi I'm too ashamed to let any-
; one mbi"
'l on my mind,
! ii IS and very
i beautUul. I'm
) ih saying this
i because I'm
,v ner mnm.
. 11
C Everyone re-
marks about ner looks. We are
people of means so sne nas raveiy
.lnth and a gorgeous home. She
has her own bedroom and sitting
room, private phone, and the fin
est stereo equipment money can
buy- .
The trouble Is she has no
friends. Mv husband Is in a busl
ness that provides us with free
tickets to almost every sport
event and musical event in town.
When our daughter Invites guests
thev always accept, but Uiey nev
er seek her out What's wrong?
QUIET MOTHER
Dear Mother: Hew does year
daunter trees tweple? Thia is
what eoante. Leaks, cMhe and
a lardy heme aeat snake Mesas,
Yea aad year hatband eeoM
Mb Ii DOtttaa aa ead the
free tickets. Beawtlnses kMs feel
the eaa buy Mesas with eater-
talameat aad that s leaf a they
prartde faaey sarrauadlags they
eaa be asealaeerlag, snokkUh aad
i erea abasrre. Remove the areas
aad let year beautiful daaghter
paddle her ewa caaee.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm young
woman who moved bite this com
munity a year ago. Wa bought a
new home and spent a Jot of time
and energy (not to mention moo-
ay) making our place attractive
I decided I wasn't going to en
tertain until the home was com
plete. Last week I had the first
group in eight ladies for a bridge
luncheon. They were all very
complimentary a doth im lanu-
. scaping and the exterlpr of the
bouse. They commented on the
living room and sun porch, but
no one asked to sea the rest of
the house. I was deeply hurt'and
cried after they left Why are peo
ple so mean? Surely they must
have known that I was eager to
how them the place. Pleas tell
me. HURT HOSTESS .
Dear Hestesst It's aoeelMo that
the weeaea were watting far yea
te offer to skew (he net of the
heaee. Biaco yea said aeUaaa they
may have aasamid It was est rsa
ay te be shewn.
I aeee yeevaevef have anything
mere serleos lhaa this te cry
; abeot, Toots. It seems pretty aa-i
Important whea yea ceasMer what
mest people have te pat ap with.
Dear Ann Landers: Have you.
ever heard of anyone, keeping
their New Year's resolutions? I
am 11 years eld and I have a long
list of resolutions for the new
jkmi, siiauc uicui up aw t wcu.
along and I know I wouia be a
better person if I could keep some
of them even half way.
My older brother says I am a
tarty-eyed Idealist and that no
body keeps New Yean retotu-
tlons. He claims they are Just
, something to talk about and that
nobody ever sticks to them. Is he
right? SELF-IMPROVER
Dear napreveri Year brother
tstfcs
ii':mf-i:io
TOU-UFE l.:0DEL
, The comfort and atyuaf of the
aaw Aeoottieon "iwat-ui"
turn to be experienced to be
- appreciated. Without charge,
well aend yon a Tro-Lif e model
of the Hfhtweirht (11 ee.)
eentoirod, new Aeenstteen
bearing1 aM for aa ear-level
wear-teat at your leisure. A
etorleaa tube and, tip convey
Fill ia aad snail coupon-today.
Oat roar free Tra-l
ure
f the Aeeaeticoa 'rtnAHtM'
.Xp.
4f
I"" - Z1"? '
I 'snHeoaf 9 !
! M mmjmhm mm
w- sm n alaMSj ae
Ma.
r-i
Falls. Or.
Is wroag. If yea aim for the
kbelee apple oa the lop lime your
es for hitting K are better
lhaa aet aiming at all.
Striving far excellence aad try-
lag te be better than you are Is
not starry-eyed and Idealistic. The
oaly way people Improve them
selves Is through constant effort,
Good luck te yea aad a Happy
New Year!
Are you going steady? Making
marriage plans? If so, send for
Ann Landers' booklet, "Before
You Marry Is It Love Or Sex?"
enclosing with your request 20
cents in coin and a long, self-
addressed, stamped envelope.
(Ann Landers will be glad to
help you with your problems.
Send them to . her In care of this
newspaper enclosing a stamped,
self-addressed envelope.
Huffmans
Winners
In Contest
BONANZA The first annual
outdoor Christmas lighting contest
for the Bonanza Langell Valley
districts was a success this year
with 13 entries. The contest was
sponsored by the Bonanza Garden
Club.
Cash prizes went to first, sec
ond and third place winners list
ed in that order as follows: Mr.
and' Mrs. Glenn Huffman, Bo
nanza: Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ste
venson, Langell Valley, Mr. and
Mrs. LeRoy Fernlund, Bonanza.
honorable mention went to Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Carl, Dairy.'
Judges ' were Charles Steber,
Mrs. Ivan Bold and Mrs. Don
Horsley.
Rev. Guderian
Talks At Event
i
The Rev. Lawrence Guderian,
former resident and graduate of
Klamath Union High School, wa
the speaker at a potluck supper
held at the Methodist Church on
the evening of Dec. tt in honor
of college student home for the
holidays. The occasion was spon
sored by the Christian Vocations
Committee, Mrs. Glenn Johnck,
chairman.
Following
upper,. Wilbur
Womer, chi
school auperuv
tender
C H. Barnsta-
We; 4
ted a copy of a
Met colli
The Student at
lyer"
h-of 12 students
at various Oi
son and Washing-
ton colleges,
one local business
and to two young
college studei
men from.
igsiey Field who are
active to the Older Youth Fellow-
ship. J , -
Cora Eaman, student at Whit
man College, played a piano se
lection from Beethoven, and one
from Debussy,
The. Rev. Guderian addressed
the students en the theme of
Christian vocation In both special
Christian professions and in any
chosen field of useful service. The
speaker is at present superintend
ent of the Forest Grove Dis
trict of the Oregon Conference of
the Methodist Church.
Named To Post
For A Ftw Days
DOVER, Del. (API-David P,
Buckson was Inaugurated Friday
for what wuTbe the shortest term
a Delaware governor has ever
served II days. . -
Buckson, 40, outgoing lieutenant
governor, was appointed to serve
as governor until the Jan. 17 in
auguration of ; Democratic Gov.
elect Elbert N. Carvel. Buckson
succeeds Gov. J. Caleb Bonis.
who resigned so as to be sworn
m aa a U.S. Senator Jan. 1.
Boris, a Republican, was In
eligible for reelection.
DANCE
featuring In Person
"BIG JAY"
McllEELEY
nd hli Orchestra
LARRY
WILLIAMS
LITTLI SONNY
WARNER
JACKIE VALDAY
WAfAAAAA
JehMiy (OjNlret) Wettea
Klamath Falls
AUDITORIUM
MM JAN 2
DANCING .1
$125 Par fanan
StUM,
aWay, Jaaaary L UM
Gospel Find
Is Claimed ;
Dy Scholar
NEW YORK (AP) - A Colum
bia University historian says he
has found a copy of an ancient
letter that ascribes a secret Gos
pel to St. Mark and narrates s
miracle absent in the present,
Gospel of Mark.
Dr. Morton Smith, an authority
In the field of ancient religion,
presented the letter at a meeting
Thursday night of the Society of
Biblical Literature and bxegesis
at Union Theological Seminary.
He found the letter two years ago
while studying ancient manu
scripts at the monastery of Mar
Saba, near Jerusalem.
He said evidence indicates that
the original letter was written in
Greek by Clement of Alexandria,
one of the founders of Christian
theology. Clement wrote between
180 and 202 A.D.
The letter Incorporates the story
of Jesus' raising Lazarus from
the dead into the Gospel accord
ing to Mark. Clement says that
the Lazarus story is part of a
"secret Gospel" of Mark that was
not set down by him, but does not
say what the other contents of
the secret Gospel might be.
The Gospel according to John
is the only one of the four Gos
pels that now includes the story
of Lazarus.
The Clement letter introduces a
new witness to the Lazarus mira
cle, Salome. She Is mentioned in
the presently-known Mark Gospel
of the New Testament as having
watched the crucifixion of Jesus
from afar.
Dr. Smith said that If the docu
ment receives scholarly accept
ance as an authentic letter toy
Clement, opinions about the origin
and character of the Gospels, the
nature of the early Christian
church, and the teachings of Jesus
probably would have to be recon
sidered. The copv of the Clement letter,
believed by scientific experts to
have been written in the 17th or
18th century, is hand written on
the back of the leaves of a Dutch
book printed in 1848. Dr. Smith
said it probably was the work of
a scholarly monk. . '
Promoter Slates
Rock V. Roll
Monday Night
Baldv Evansi local entertain
ment promoterAvill cap trie holi
day season wh a rock 'h' roll
show and dance at the Klamath
Auditorium Monday night, Jan. 2
Heading the contingent of musi
cians and ' entertainers will be
"Rio .lav" ifcNeelev and his or
chestra.-" Evans calls McNeeley
of the country's most out
standing tenor saxophone men in
rock ' 'n' roll and rhythm and
blues. : .
Also appearing will be Larry
Williams, whose best-selling hit
recordings were of "Bony Moro
ni" and "Short Fat Fanny," and
Little Sonny Warner, Jackie Val-
day and Johnny "Guitar" Watson.
Dancing will be from p.m
until 1 a.m.
Bjr CLAY H
yyi MAR. 22
AMI
M Yaw Doily Atlmly Cu M
Attorning fa Ihm Stats, , f
To 'develop message for Sunday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodioc birth sign. -
. IUm 31 You'll l Aclicn
2 Yai'S 32 Day 62 Right
3 You 33 Any 3 Mind
4 Conditions 34DKMna 4 Rcctix
SSwm 35Pnpl tiOt
A 36Ntw 6WtS
7 Gommofl 37 Tlwm'ia 67 Your
STo 38 You'll MovM
9 Bo . .. 3 Moy 69 Spending
10 Sent 40 And 70 Emotions
IIClKmgina 41 Proioctv 71 ProcIKO
12 Aipki 42 Not 72 UmupKlod
13 Your 43 In 73 About
USomolMna 44 Soma ' 74 Aetna
ISOmIc 4)Hkk 75 You
16 Bo 4Unl,MnoV 76 Vim
!7PrUml 47Am. 77Vior -IS
You ra ' M Ro 7S You
19 looks 49 8. 79Fotlma
20 Don't SOPraeobly SOMony
2IL.1. SlRulw SI Hod
22Sun S2Lto 82Thmo
23Molo MCooponlliva BIThntt
24Concoma 54 Moy S4 And
75 Bogm 55 End B5 Monoy
26lroducth 56 Odor SoHopod
27Tho STTwxh S7 Punlod
2SYour M Got BSTorioy
29 About 59Chocklul 9Entonxlw
30RMult 60A . 90lconomnt
Gool Ad (Ncutrsl
TN 2- WMJl
i6:
T4MU1
APR. II
MAY 31
MAY 22
JUNE 22
I 59-451
76-7744-W
CANCM
ft
JUNC23
1ULYU
Kp(V3MJ-4v
uo
JULY 24
AUQ. 21
I 4- 34 371
44ff.
SWT. til
L
1AM7S4JI
jt-er-70
ANNOUNCING
STEVE MAKINSON
Formerly With Iroodwoy Berber Shop .
Now With
South Suburban Barber Shop
Town & Country Shopping Ctr.
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
To All Our
Friends and Customers
Hal Clin
Dn Srofltdill
W Beard F&ees
The new year probably will
bring initial phases of a major
change in the structure of Klam
ath Unon High. School District.
Manners ot uie uoara oi educa
tion already are 'faced with a dif
ficult decision. .
They must decide what to do
with an anticipated bumper crop
of freshmen next fall. And there's
practically no room for expansion
at KUHS.
RAY HUNSAKER
Already, space there Is more
tightly utilized than in any high
school in the stale. Broken aown
Into a "utilization factor." the
figure becomes about 97 per cent,
That means that the 84 "teach
ing stations," or places tnai
teachers can possibly hold class
es, are in use 97 per cent of the
time. Stated another way, it
means that eight room-hours of a
possible 384 are not in use.
Such complete utilization re
quires fantastically efficient sched
uling. It also means that about
20 teachers of the 80-teacher staff
are "floating" or moving - from
room to room as periods pro
gress. A teacher can do a better
County To Get
Defense Fund .
SALEM (AP)-The state, eight
counties and the city of Portland
will get S7S.O0O in federal funds
for civil defense during the first
half of next year, Arthur M.
Sheets, state civil defense direc
tor, said today.
The counties are Clackamas,
Deschutes, Douglas, Klamath,
Lincoln, Polk, Umatilla and
Washington.
The money w,ll be spent for
additional auarsonnel and adminia
traUv eajnses.'
Vote Change
PORTLAND (AP) - The City
Council voted Thursday to allow
a connecting door between bowl
ing alleys and, bars operated by
the bowling operators.
Previously, patrons had been re
quired to go outside if they want
ed to get from one place to the
other.
A 4-1 vote approved the request
of George Amato to have a door
between his alleys and his restaur
ant and bar.
FOLIA N
SAOITTAKIUS
NOV. 21 (
oic! 22 m ;
12 15-17-40 atl
L52-75-79-87aJ
CAMKORM
jan!
24-32 35-471
1S3-5S.74
AOUAMUt
IAD. 41
ria. it JJ
19-21-30-.
IM.7245'
PIKtS
MAR. 21
20.25-33.36rC!
4I-5641
Clam Braniff
Mai MeCortnty
fed
UNA
3- 5- 8-JjVi
27.o2.Ag
tcoario
NOV. 22
1- 7.10-431
69-71-8390'
job by teaching all his classes
in one room, says Ray Hunsaker,
superintendent of city schools.
The board has a choice of two
or three safety valves or com
binations of them to relieve the
pressure. Members already have
discussed possible temporary mea
sures, some of which probably
will be used when school opens
next fall. .
And they art expected to get
Klamath County's Schools Face
Sharp Growing Pains
By NORM CAROOZA
Klamath County's three school
districts are expected to face
some sharp growing pains during
1961.
Except in the case of Klamath
Union High School District, how
ever, little real trouble appears
in store.
The KUHS district, if forecasts
are correct, will have about 150
more students next fall than it
has room for at present, and no
firm plans have yet been devel
oped to erase the problem.
Members of the board are ex
pected to meet the problem head-
on during January and perhaps to
develop a sweeping expansion
plan sometime before summer.
Both the City Elementary
School District and the County
School District need to expand
school officials say.
In the city, elementary district
board members are wrestling with
pressure of numbers at some
schools and with some rooms con
sidered substandard at Pelican
School.
There, five classrooms are too
small, according- to state stan
dards, and four- are in the base
ment an undesirable place to
have classrooms, school officials
say.
Of the substandard rooms, two
have a problem with sound, since
they were converted into tempor
ary classrooms and were not
properly insulated against sound.
The board is considering build
ing a six-room addition there, but
has studied no firm plans yet.
Board members also are consul
ering adding a multipurpose room
to O'Neill School that Is under
construction. .
A multipurpose room is a larg
er-than-average space that can be
used for a number of things.
Some contain gymnasiums, stages
and cafeterias. Nearly all modern
schools have them. '
Plans for the Lucile O'Neill
School contamed a multipurpose
room, but the board, fearful that
serial levy revenues for the school
year would fall below the amount
needed for construction, post
poned construction of the room.
The serial levy is a special tax
voted by residents of the district,
to, be used only for school con
struction. The first 10 classrooms of the
Lucile O'Neill School are expected
to be completed sometime early
during 1901 and classes may be
conducted there before the year
is out. '
The school is designed ultimate
ly to contain 20 classrooms and,
when brought to size, will be one
of the city's largest elementary
units.
By next fall, the school will
act as a safety valve to take
pressure off crowded areas. Mills
School and Roosevelt are units
that are in particular need of re
lief.
The county district, blessed with
perhaps more predictable growth,
is able to plan its improvements
and expansion sometimes years
in advance.
During the last several years,
the county has been adding or
replacing about one complete
school each year.
Bly will have a new school that
will handle grades one through six
by next fall, and Chiloquin will
get a new high school ready for
occupancy by the fall of 196Z,
nrobably.
Bids probably will be let for the
six-room Bly school this winter,
so that work may begin as soon
as weather permits and the plant
will be ready for occupancy by
fall.
The school will contain a muKl
purpose room, cafeteria and i
two-bedroom apartment for the
principal or one of the teachers
and his family, ' who will guard
the grounds against trespass and
vandalism at night.
KUmam rails, one
Serving Southern Oroto"
ana Norttttrn California
gkllshaa sally apt Sat.) and Sunday
ft
SautttarR Oragon Poslithlna Cempany
Main at F.splanad
Phona ruwado 4-4111
W. t. SWIETLAND. aubllsnar
fntorod as sacond class mattar at tha
past attic at Kiamatn Palls. Onseon.
an August K. I tr . unoar ad at Con
trass. March 1 lit. Sacond-dass post.
ita pate ai mamam pans, eraaon.
ind at aaaitianal mamn attic.
SUBSCRIPTION RATIS ,
carrtar
I Month
1 Months
vaar
Mail in aavance
I Mnlh ,
Month
t vr
ClrrMr on 0Htra
Wkdv a Sunday, copy
. it
, tit.
. Sfl.tS
. t It
. tie at
. tim
its
UNITeO PRfSS INTePNATteNAL
associated pt ss
iiSUaJ." "1 ?uSf, J' ,Vi ,2 wr ambassadors, Zellcrbach com-
urir nai racwvtna nvnt w, .,., , ,. ,
wr Hriefvj Km. awn ahonairnentcd: 1 11 believe it when Con
VZmlmJiTiT '""Igresa appropriate, the money."
Year &
down more to specifics when they
meet in a joint session the eve
ning of Jan. with the city ele
mentary district board.
The high school board is ex
pected to negotiate with the ele
mentary board for use of some
elementary district facilities to ac
commodate a huge freshman class
that forecasts indicate will enter
KUHS next year. Estimates indi-
cate 1,938 students will enter
It was designed by Architect
Howard Perrin for expansion to
a total of 10 rooms when they
are needed. The site is about two
blocks away from the old struc
ture which will be used for in
structing grades six through 12.
Thus ope of the last remaining
"one-through-12" schools in the
county district will have been
split in two. . ,
Morrison and Howard, Archi
tects, and Starbuck, Engineer, are
in process of drawing preliminary
plans for Chiloquin High School.
The school board and adminis
tration have tentatively selected
one of several floor plans drawn.
The school will nestle In pines
on a pretty bank of Sprague Riv-
2 Drivers
Get Tickets
Two Klamath Falls drivers
were cited Thursday for careless
driving, one for failure to yield
right of way and the other for
following too closely. ,
Clarence Eldred, 24, 2318 Want
land Street, was ticketed for fol
lowing too closely after he pulled
out of a - service station and
struck a car driven by Phillip
M. Hogan, 47, 1537 Ivory Street,
The accident occurred Thursday
evening at the comer of East
Main and South Sixth streets.
A $30 fine or six-day sentence
was assessed against Beverly Fay
David,, 21, 3863 Clinton Street, in
municipal court Friday morning
as a result of a Tuesday collision.
She was cited for failure to yield
right of way to a car driven by
Herbert W. Boettcher, 30, 2026
Eberlein Street, at the corner of
South Sixth Street and Washburn
Way. .
John R. Gritman, 14. 521
Adams Street, said he would
sign a complaint Friday against
Clade L. ,Burr., 33714 East Main
Street, as a result of a Thursday
night collision at the corner of
South Sixth and Ogden streets.
Gritman said he was stopped
waiting for a car when Burr
smashed into him from the rear,
Burr said his brakes failed.
Atomic Ship
Restricted
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Atomic Energy Commission said
Friday safety aspects of the Sa
vannah, the world' first mir-leor.
powered merchant ship, .would be
considered at a public hearing be
fore any okay is given to start its
nuclear power plant. j
The AEC also released a report
which concluded that, in eeneral.
the Savannah's reactor could, bejthe district reorganization problem
nu l.J ...:, t , . . Si J :J 1
upcicui-u wjuioui unaue nazara W
me neaun ana saiety ot Hie Mb-
lie provided certain restricUoniloverlap those of the elementary
are imposed. i .
One of the restriction.; listed
was that the reactor be operated
at no more than 10 per cent of
full power in the planned start-uo
at Camden, VN.J., where the ship
is aocKea at tne yards of iU
builder, the New York Shipbuild
ing corp.
The committee suggested this
as a means of avoiding "a risk,
however small," from accidental
release of radioactivity in the
highly populated Camden area
Envoy Cost
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-J. D,
Zcllerbach. just returned to his
home in San Francisco, says it
cost him $200,000 to serve as am
bassador to Italy for four years
zcllerbach, chairman of the
board of Crown-Zellerbach Corp..
said he could afford it but "many
of our most able career people
simply can t afford the job."
He told a reporter Thursday
that when he and his wife went
to Rome in 1957 to succeed Clare
Booth Luce, they found their offi
cial residence in near-crumbling
condition.
He said he spent a sizable chunk
of his own money to refurbish the
villa and added that the steady
procession of official parties he
was required to host cost him
some $50,000 a year over his sal
ary and entertainment allowances.
In regard to President-elect
John F. Kennedy's intentions to
increase emeriainmcnt allowances
Basision n Spme Crisis
school next fall, compared to
about 1,800 last September.
Specifically, talk so far ha:
been of ush of Ponderosa School,
one of the elementary district s
newer schools.
The school was designed to be
used ultimately for a junior high
school. But It has been used to
alleviate pressure at Mills School
by accommodating some firs!
I grades and special education class-
Daring 61
er. At first, boys will use the
old high school gym, and stu
dents will dine in the elementary
school cafeteria. ,It will be built
to handle 250 students, with pro
visions for ultimate expansion to
handle 750 students.
The newest member of the
County School District fold is Fal
con Heights School near the Air
Force housing area. Air Force
youngsters and those of families
in the Midland area attend school
there. I
Twelve classrooms were opened
in December. The school is de
signed to contain a total of 16
to be completed as they are need
ed.
And four more classrooms are
in construction at Stearns Elemen
tary School in the South Subur
ban area. Two 'will be filled by
classes currently using classrooms
in quonset-type structures at Al
tamont Elementary School. ' One
room will take care of an extra
first grade class that probably
will have to be formed at Stearns
next fall and the fourth will ac
commodate a first grade currently
sharing a room with another first
grade class.
One problem the county will
have to cope with during the year
is extraordinary growth of popu
lation in the South Suburban area.
The district has been hard pressed
to keep expansion on a keel with
growth, especially since Kingsley
Field was activated,
Student pressure in Klamath
County is most severe at Klam
ath Union High School. The
school is bulging with students
this year, and nearly 150 more
yet are expected with a huge
class of freshmen next year:
Expansion at the KUHS campus
has been carried-about as far as
it can go, and the school cannot
cope with the expected increase
next year without acute over
crowding.
The district has ream to build a
nee; high school at hat is called)
the South Site in tha South Sub-i
urban area, but to mM a plant
of the size iieeded.
drain too many .ttudents from
KUHS and wouhf thus leave' Tool
many ciassroms empty there, -
Ray Hunsaiier. euperuitendriet
of city schools, suggests convert
ing an limited staee in the new
wing at KlJHS into a study Ball
and corutrting a little bit of
space Wsewhere in the building
into classroom space,
The board of education has also
held talks preliminary to negotia
tion V with the city' elementary
school district board for use next
fajfot some of its classrooms.
But that will not solve the prob
lem .ultimately, officials believe,
the district must build, they say.
But the type, size and location
ei aty new building will be a
tough decision for the board until
district to encompass the South
Suburban area, but a law passed
by the last Legislature command
ed all districts in the state to
torm common boundaries, so that
a common administration may be
provided for grades one through
12 in each district.
The law has not proved effec
tive here and elsewhere and some
officials expect further legislative
action to force the issue one way
or another,
Hunsaker suggests construction
of one or more buildings to han
dle freshmen exclusively. The sys
tem would be flexible enough -to
fit into any reorganization pattern
practical in the county, he says.
A total of 2,583 students were
attending city elementary schools
Sept. 30, and a total of 2,698
were attending county district ele
mentary schools.
Estimates, based on growth fig
ures averaged over several years,
indicate the figures in both dis
tricts are going to go up.
Mileage Death
Rate Is Lowest
CHICAGO (AP) Traffic acci
dents killed 34,540 persons during
the first 11 months of this year
but, statistically, there were some
good features to the awesome
figure.
The National Safety Council ob
served today, that while the toll
is a 1 per cent increase from the
34,150 persons killed in the cor
responding 11 months of U39. a 2
per cent increase in travel made
the mileage death rate tha low
est on record.
On a mileage basis -November
was the safest November since
1934 w hen the council began record-keeping.
... ,. rt
es until the Lucile O'Neill school!
could be built.
The first ten classrooms at
O'Neill . School are expected to be
ready for occupancy by next fall.
The school board at first asked
for a bid on six classrooms and
an . alternate bid on four, more,
One alternate bid received was sq
attractive that a unit of ten was
contracted, making possible a sort
of short-term "space surplus," say
Hoard members.
Hunsaker has proposed that only
freshmen use Ponderosa. An eche
lon of - students in the morning
and another in the afternoon
would receive instruction in Eng
lish, social studies and general
science there.
Hunsaker has also proposed
that the big stage buUt into the
new wing at KUHS be converted
to a study hall.-The stage was
constructed for incorporation into
a projected auditorium, but is not
in use at all times.
He' also suggests converting two
study halls in the upstairs por
tion of the main building into
classrooms.
Those measures will alleviate
the pressure for a while. But
they are no ultimate solution. Only
one sure solution is in sight, savs
Hunsaker, that is to build. -KUHS
cannot be effectively expanded.
The type, size and location of
an additional structure or struc
tures are questions that when re
solved probably will constitute the
board s biggest decision in years.
Though the district owns a bis
lot ideal for building a high school
in the South Suburban area, the
decision to build is not so sim
ple. If the board decides to
build a complete high school there,
too many classrooms at KUHS.
will be vacated.
.Yet a school built there would
be located in a district contain
ing more students than live with
in the city limits. It almost neces
sarily would have to be built large
enough to handle them all. Other
wise, the district would have to
THE WOTUfD HEKO Of
TrOIMliaitSYOlJ
HBTORf S MOST COLI
tVIHCJM MsTNTUafll
3
d,4 Mr
iVLa-J
.THE MAGtllHCENT
aCSAII'll -las I t.mmo
mm Ull-lta anmi-ftiu
I
THEf ERFECT HOLIDAY ENTERTAINMENT
A TICKETS HOW ON SALE!
1 1 AteADEM Y AWARDS .
JIEMHXILDWmM
prtsantti
piivutbfwmu4ia
OIRECTEO BY
WWANm5&
8TAKNO
(MnDNM-JAffiMWMS
IM HARAREET STEPHEN BOYD
HUGH fJRIFFITH MARTHA SCOTT with CATHY ODONNEU,- SAM JATTt
CBrtNPLAV iY MOBUCtO Y
mwrnwrnm
TECHNicoLore, cameSaM '
2 PERFORMANCES TODAY and MONDAY
. 1:30 anal 7:30 Dears Open 12:30 ana 4:30 '
Multa 1.49 Unci. Ta) - Children Unaer 11) TSf
arrange to transport some stu
dents to KUHS a relatively un
fair arrangement lor parents and
students affected.
Furthermore, a law passed re
cently by the state legislature
commands counties, whose high
school and elementary districts'
boundaries overlap, to make an
effort to merge the boundaries.
thus bringing grades one through
12 in each school district under
a common administration.
The law so far has proved of
little influence in causing boun
daries to.change at least in Klam
ath County.
Educators expect the forthcom
ing session of the legislature te
result in further pressure to re
organize school district bounda
ries. But they do not expect the
session, to settle the matter final-
ly. That will come further in
the future.
Klamath Union .High School'!
boundaries include the South Sub
urban area. The city elementary
district's boundaries do not, and
youngsters in that area attend
elementary schools provided by
the Klamath County School Dis
trict. A firm decision will be diffi
cult for the KUHS board until
the matter is settled conclusively.
In the meantime, Hunsaker of
fers as one suggestion construc
tion of separate facilities to han
dle freshmen exclusively. His sug
gestion appears to be unique
in Oregon.
Perhaps the alarm over popula
tion pressure is unwarranted. Tha
forecast is purely n estimate.
But it is a scientific estimate
based, in general, 8n growth fig
ures over a number of years past.
During' the 1962-63 school year,
the estimate indicates the dis
trict will serve 2,100 high school
students; in 196344, 2,184, and in
196445. 2,237.
The board should know fairly
definitely by April 1 how much
room it will need next year, say
Hunsaker.
Continuous
SUNDAY 4. MONDAY
mTMeuea PMoucro. ootctfooJ
s.na-ilaWU-aaiijuvWBs
WINNER OF X
y
JTV (Ja
i r