Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 16, 1961, Page 2, Image 2

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    V:. . .
Man.
KEP.ALD AND
Should Melp
This Moodier
By ANN IANDER8
' Dear Ann Landers: We have In
cur, office the world' champion
ciearette moocber.. Ho claim he
aoesm wani 10
buy cigarettes
' because he's
determined to
stop smoking
By actual
count on Fri'
day he had
bummed 11
ciearettes off seven of us.
Basically, he's a fairly decent
guy big hearted and all that.
Nolwdy wants to rough him up
with a d rcct insult, but we all
figure If he can afford to drive
a classy sports car ho ought to be
able to buy himself cigarettes.
Furthermore, we would like the
Drivilese of selecting our own
charities. Please suggest a Land
ers Plan of action. We are
DESPERATE
Dear Desperate: In unity find
strength. Band together. From
bow on when the Magnificent
Moocher asks for a cigarette the
stock answer (delivered with an
appropriate note of patenulistlc
Interest) should be "Absolutely
boL I'm tolas to HELP you to
stop smoking."
Dear Ann Landers; My problem
Is a niece. Whenever I invite my
husband's sister to our home her
daughter Irma thinks she's invit
ed too.
Irma is married but her hus.
band travels a lot so she has a
good bit of spare time on her
hands. Also she has more brass
than a eovernment mule. You'd
think a arown woman would have
some friends and interests of her
own, but she hasn't.
If we want to play bridge
there's always one too many. I've
had to cut a small steak in half,
stretch the soup and pretend like
I didn't want a piece of pie so
Irma could have mine. I hate to
hurt my sister-ln-law's feelings
but I'm sick of having her daugh
ter come over here uninvited
Please tell me what to do.
IMPOSED ON
Dear Impends When next you
tavlte vour sister-in-law aver, tell
her the mvttatton does sot tndude
the goveraawfll mule I meaa
her daughter.
Irma has beea taking advantage
af bath yon and her mother. The
only way to protect yearsall
against tasteless dads who em
ntoy brassy tactics la to speak
right up. Silence Is Interpreted as
approval.
.Dear .Ann Landers: No doubt
there ard many people: In this
same boat but at the moment we
(eel pretty much alone. Can you
help?
My husband has a good job and
makes nice salary but we both
went overboard on installment
buying last year and we bit off
-not
.urn
ROMANTIC
ADVENTURE
m bit all miUnt'
DEBORAH KERR
ROBERT MITCHUM
PETER USTINOV
t TECHNICOLOR
GlYNIS JOHNS
. DtNA MERRILL
1 1
NOW
iwuMv't
frwyWy'i
FRED CLARK
with EDDIE FOt,
res.'
V
1
NEWS, Klimilll Falli. Ore (
more than we could chew.
Our credit rating is not good
and we wen turned down recent
ly when we tried, to open another
charge account. This hurt our
pride and shook us up enough to
realize we must control our buy
ing. We promised ourselves not
to purchase anything more until
all bills are paid.
The question is this: Once you
are listed as "Slow Pay" can you
ever get back an A-l rating?
MINUS FOUR
Dear Minus Four: Yes. Write
to the head of the credit bureau
In your city and advise him of
your past foolishness and your (u
ture good intentions. If you live
tip to your present commitments
you can erase the blot and start
with a clean slate.
It aiconol is robbing you or
someone you love of health and
dignity, send for Ann Landers'
booklet, "Help For The Alcohol'
ic," 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.
Inaugural
Weather
Promising
WASHINGTON (AP) - There's
a better man even chance that
it won't rain or snow on Jan. 20,
Inauguration Day. And the chanc
es are even better that the tem
perature will be above freezing
That should be a bit comforting
if you are one of the thousands
who has dealt out from S3 to
$25 for a grandstand seat to watch
President John F. Kennedy s in
augural parade. .
There is one parade unit that
is rather hoping for a heavy
snow. That's from the state of
Maine, and it has 10 northwoods
huskies ready to pull sled down
Pennsylvania Avenue.
If there a no snow, they 11 have
to put wheels on the sled, and that
might spoil the effect.
The Weather Bureau says it a
still too early to forecast the
weather accurately for Jan. 20,
but 'the weathermen checked into
the past records and came up with
these statistics:
There's a chance of 3 out of 5
that there will be no rain or snow
and an S out of 10 chance for
above-freezing temperatures.
Inauguration Day was changed
from March 4 to Jan. 20 in 1937,
for Franklin D. Roosevelt's sec
ond inaugural. It rained heavily.
But since then there have been
five Jan. 20 inaugurations with no
precipitation. '
The early presidents had good
luck. George Washington's first in
New York was a fair day, and
so was his second in Philadelphia.
The first Washington inauguration
-Thomas Jefferson s on March
4, 1801, also was on a beautiful
day. -
But over the years March 4
turned out to be a pretty chancy
day weatherwise. In 1945 James
G. Polk took his oath under an
umbrella In a downpour. There
have been many other wet ones,
The echoing, drafty National
Guard Armory hero is being
transformed Into a ballroom fit
tor a-president. But the Inaugural
Ball is so big it will-be in three
sections and three locations. The
Kennedys and the Lyndon B.
Johnsons will visit all three.
The walls of the armory are be
ing covered with pale gray cloth
called Egyptian rep. Gold eagles
with 40-foot wingspreads will look
down from each end of the huge
auditorium. The balcony will be
faced with white satin and studded
with the SO state seals.
The presidential box will be
topped by a gold satin canopy. In
the middle of the floor will rise
40-foot circular bandstand
decked in satin, golden ropes and
goltr eagle.
Altogether 19,000 will attend the
Inaugural Ball, paying $23 per
ticket or $320 a box. The other
sections will be at the Mayflower
Hotel and at the Sheraton Park
Hotel.
tkikt At ttiitl
ttarV'j itt pniusl
MetroGoldwyn-Mayer potent!
An ARTHUR FREED Production
WW
t m -wmcoior
Jr. JEAN STAPIETON
t4S
Monday, January M, IMU
Face Traps
Ex-Nazi
In Germany
FRANKFURT. Germany AP)-
The face of (he sausage vendor
on Hie rail'oad platform looked
familiar to two Polish doctors
The Prague-Nuernberg train had
just reached Schirnding, its first
stop on West German territory,
A few hours later, sausage
vendor Erivl Bednarck, S3,
former trusty at Auschwitz ex
termination camp, was arrested
as a war crimes suspect identic
fied by the two doctors, former
camp inmates on their way to
testify at a West German war
crimes trial.
In Frankfurt jail Bednarek
joined 15 other Auschwitz suspects
rounded up recently.
"Nazi crimes keep a large part
of the German justice machinery
busy, and nobody can tell how
long It will last," says Chief
Prosecutor Heinz Wolf. "It may
well go until 1970, but I certainly
hope not.1
Scores of suspects are under
arrest in West Germany. Every
three weeks or so last year a trial
involving World War II atrocities
opened somewhere in the country.
Prospects are that this average
will be maintained in 1961. '
Adoll ticnmann will lace an
Israeli court in March as a key
director of the German program
to exterminate Jews. His hench
men from Auschwitz will be tried
in Germany.
Investigations ot war crimes
have been speeded up since crea
tion ir 1938 of a central agency
coordinating the efforts of the 10
West German slates. Until then,
probes were mostly conducted on
hit and miss basis.
"First the Allies handled all
war crimes trials in the early
postwar period." explained Wolf.
"Then, the creation of the West
German Republic on a strictly
federalist principle delayed cen
tral coordination. And work was
made enormously difficult for us
because l!ic Western Allies and
the Russians had seized practical
ly all documentary evidence."
ine complex Auschwitz case
has been going on for almost two
years and is not expected to come
to trial before 1962.
Wolf is helped by a special
squad of police detectives, all
young . enough to exclude the
possibility that they were involved
in atrocities themselves.
The Nazi background of -many
police and justice officials has
impeded the investigation in Ger
many. Hundreds of policemen
who' served In the dreaded
Einsatzgruppen" (or special
groups) of SS boss Hcinrich Him-
ler, have been under suspicion.
Most cases against the rank and
file were dropped because thev
held they acted under coercion
and would themselves have been
shot had they refused orders.
Higher ranks are held for
further investigation and possible
trial.
Many Nazis assumed aliases
after the war. SS LI. Gen.
Wilholm Koppe, i former police
chief In occupied Poland, worked
under a false name in Bonn, the
West German capital. Most other
suspects also have been found
making a good living, chiefly as
Industry employes or salesmen.
The statute of limitations sets a
deadline for the prosecution of
most Nazi atrocities. For man
slaughter, the deadline expired in
1960. For murder it will be 1965.
The statute is automatically set
aside, however, if some sort of
legal action such as a warrant
has been taken against the person
involved.
The biggest trial of 1961 in
Germany probably 'will be that of
Karl Chmielewski, 57, SS captain
and former commandant of a sub
camp of Mauthausen. He allegedly
invented the "cold water death"
in which inmates were drenched
at subzero temperatures and then
frozen to death. Ho is charged on
300 counts of murder.
FIVE PERSONS KILLED
YOKOHAMA. Japan (UP!) -
Five persons were killed and Ml
Injured Friday when a gravel '
truck smashed inln s train nl
crossing, and then was struck by!sm To'n' Als0- il was ,hc
another train coming from the op.
posite direction. Cars of both
(rains were damaged. The truck
driver survived, but was serious
ly injured.
fttralftaiifeSfltr
Kiamim Ptiit. ortgen
Strvlng Soulhwn Orago
and Northern California
Fubtllhad tally la.crot Sat.) am) SurMay
6y
SMtfwrn Oraoon PueiittiMa Company
Mam at Riplanada
Pnona ru-ado Mill
w. I. tttECTLANO. Pueilaiwr
ntarad at iKond clan mattar at ft
pott orflct at Klamath Pant. Oragon.
n Augutt JO. int. undtr act at Care
gratt. March 1 lift. Sacdndlau pott-
gt paid it Klamam Ftln. ortgtn.
and tt additional mailing dtflcat.
JUSJCKIPTION RATES
Carrltr
I Month ,
t Monfhl
1 Vtar ,
Mall in Adyanc
1 Month ,
t Montht
1 Vatr ,
Carrtar and Dtaltrt
Wataday 4 Sunday, cecy
. S 1.NJ
. 110 30
. SJI.00
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lot
UNITIO PfttSS INTEKNATIUNAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUDIT AUP.EAU OP CIRCULATION
Subtcrlbtrt not rtcttving dtllvtry m
thalr Htrald and Ntwt. OlMta pnon
They'll Do It Every
5S? 4? ANOTHER BULLETIN Tt orTMOKE BULLETINS rJ CHORES HE SENDS 1
if THERE'S TOO MUCH WASTE auKmuM AQB ,UST rjANDV-
MYTH OF PAPER IN THIS JOiHTH . 7f "JS , yl gUT SORCV.KID, M
I i cSJa2'?'CSc7S K5aNOTPE(?SAVIN6 NO DIVI06NO7
V f AR6 FANTASTIC" FOR isSr WOULD BE TO LOCK I Jaaii.1aBaaflKaf
(fei Q ESTIMATES, INTEROFFICE UP' WE WCTAtST "
2:3 MEMOS, ETC. USE BOTH, PteSH TAPE WE DOUBLE- I ,J
r? cro 5i J?V -4 HAZEL'S RUNNING JPfelk fsiGN A PAPER
j " '
By AL GEISS
As 1961 begins we will review
the significant things that hap
pened at Oregon Technical Insti
tute during 1960:
Director W. D. Purvine was
awardod tlie honorary LLD de
gree by his alma mater, Lewis
and Clark College, in recognition
of outstanding work done in the
field of education.
The administration of Oregon
Technical Institute was trans
ferred from the State Board of
Education to the State Board of
Higher Education.
Two potential new campus sites
were reviewed by the Higher
Board and one was selected adja
cent to the north entrance to the
city limits of Klamath Falls. Two
good wells, one hot and one cold
were drilled and surveys were
made for preliminary location of
buildings. - ;
The Owl football team had the
first untied, unbeaten season hi
the history of Oregon Tech and
won the Oregon Collegiate Con
ference championship for the sec
ond straight year.
National Defense Education Act
funds in (he amount of $45,000
were made available for long
term student loans.
Health services on the campus
were made available' to students
for the first lime. A nurse has
been on duty for first aid and
minor medical services for sched
uled morning and afternoon hours
for every school day.
Oregon Tech offered its first
two correspondence courses
through extension during the year.
uregon Teen was awarded asso
ciate membership in the National
Association of Intercollegiate Ath
letics.
Dr. Purvine was appointed
chairman of ECPD (Engineering
Council for Professional Develop
ment) Kcgion 7 Accrediting Com
mittee, and a member of Gover
nor Hatfield's Science, Eneincer-
ing. and New Technologies Com
mittee of the Oregon Department
of Planning and Development.
The decision was made by the
State Board of Higher Education
and the General Extension Divi
sion to includo Oregon Tech's ed
ucational program in extension
courses throughout the slate.
Highway Technology received
ECPD accreditation for the first
lime and electronics was reac
crcdited. More recruiting teams from
electronics and engineering firms
relating to national defense have
been on the Oregon Tech campus
than in all previous years at Ore-
est year of placement of Oregon
Tech graduates in high-level tech
nician positions in these firms.
We should report the. happy
ending of our dog story. "Bear,"
the tii-cd. sore-footed, lost pot
hound that wandered onto our
campus on Dec. 19 has been re
turned to his owner in El Pao.
Lieutenant Bassard. stationed at
El Paso, was ir. Klamath Falls
visiting his parents. The dog
strayed away and the lieutenant
(.pen! the last live days of his
vacation searching for him. Upon
his return home, he found the let
ter from Oregon Tech personnel
and the search ended happily.
Bob Baird, Don Orrcll and Fred
Fotilon are planning an event for
National Engineers Week, Feb.
1 Ptople Rad
SPOT ADS
you or
Time .
THE OWL
HOOTS
19 to 20. People of the Basin will
be invited to a special tour of the
Engineering Associates facilities
on the campus. If tentative ar
rangements are carried out, tours
will be arranged in both after
noon and evening.
Winter term enrollment will be
725 unless more students regis
tered in last minutes permissible
on Friday afternoon. Women stu
dents numbered 71 and men 654.
There are six foreign students
and 141 students are registered
from 20 other states.
J. D. Bassett, executive assis
tant. National Argonne Labora
tories, Idaho Division, and
H. Dean Strand, personnel repre
sentative, interviewed 46 students
in the electronics, auto, diescl,
machinist, and drafting technol
ogies on Tuesday, JaQwlO. Sixteen
Oregon Tech graduate! are pres
ently employed at the Idaho Falls
plant. . ;
Robert Tannenbaum, professor
of personnel management and in
dustrial relations, and Professor
Koontz from the Graduate School
of Business Administration. Uni
versity of California at Los An
geles, conducted special meetings
on the campus on Friday and
Saturday for division heads and
deans.
Larry French, Roy Green, and
Del Folk attended a meeting 'at
Medford Saturday sponsored by
the Industrial Air Products Com
pany. A welding show was pre
sented by factory representatives
from Victor, Hobart, Bay State
Abrasives, Miller, Westinghouse,
Jackson Products, and Stulz Sic
kles Company. The man who rep
resented the Industrial Air Prod
ucis company in niedtord is a
buddy of Del Folk from the days
ot 1942-43.
'Jack Frost took his family to
We do the
hard-to-do . . .
that's
Fluff - Dry
SERVICE!
Your linens and shirts come bock to you
immaculately laundered ond beautifully pres
sed. All other items are fluff dried, springy"
and spotless. We call this service simply
Fluff-Dry. Housewives call it simply great!
When you want this service, ask for it by
name . . . Fluff-Dry. It's handy, it's conven
ient, it's economical.
For example:
8
AM ftatwork-sheets, pillow cases,
table cloths, tone's, etc., ironed
ond folded. Shirts finished for
only 25c in this service!
Phone 4 51 1 1 or 2-2531 for fast and
courteous to-your-door service!
v Send Your Cleaning with Your Loundry
CASCADE LAUNDRY & CLEANERS
Drive In Service Right Down Town!
Opp. Post Office
Jfofi&fl&t
Speaking of not
wasting paper and
all that confetti
-fUANX ADOA UATIO War TP V -V.
MUHOAV DRVDEN. fa))
HUMSEB VAU.SY UMbt,
JSUNOTON.ONTARIO
Phoenix, Ariz., for a family re
union over the Christmas holi
days. He made the trip pay off
for Oregon Tech, and for the elec
tronics department in particular.
The General Electric Corpora
tion's Computer Division at Phoe
nix donated several transistors
and a couple hundred diodes
to Oregon Tech. The units, which
were out of specifications for tlie
corporation, will be useful (or
demonstration and laboratory ex
periments at OTI.
Frost also visited Airesearch
Manufacturing Company for
whom he was employed prior to
coming to Oregon Tech. They do
nated a number ot strain gauge
and some literature which is ap
plicable to Jack's course in Con
trol Systems.
Both of the above companies
will be sending recruiting teams
tp Oregon Tech as a result ot
hearing about its programs from
Jack.
The new officers of Oregon
Tech's faculty chapter No. 75 of
OSEA were formally installed dur
ing a Tuesday afternoon meeting
on the campus. Officers are Leroy
Fisk. president; Bernice An
drews, vice president; Truman
Johnson, secretary; and Max
Saunders, treasurer.
We have only the authority of
the grapevine to mention that
Joe Lovell, tool room supervisor
who went to a hospital in San
Diego for surgery about a month
ago, will be back on the jod on
Monday. .
"Tech . Mates." the student
wives organization on the cam
pus, met Wednesday night wun
their advisers, faculty wives, Bar
bara Olson and Virginia Madsen.
It is rather interesting that Bar
bara was a member of the stu
dent wives organization when her
husband Lloyd was a student at
OTI several years ago. Lloyd
came to the OTI staff this year
as an instructor in the auto tune-
up department. '
Eighty three student applica
tions have been submitted for
membership In an Oregon Tech
chapter of ASTME (American So
ciety of Tool and Machine Engi
neers) according to Ray Garri
son, faculty adviser. A petition has
been filed for the student chapter
with Portland Chapter No. 6 as
their sponsor. Gene Culver, Bur-
dette Dodge, Dick Pope, and Earl
Sweet are other staff members
promoting the organization. Dean
Meier showed his slides on Pakis
tan at tlie Tuesday night meeting
of the group.
22
Pounds only
Use Our Free Parking Let
iOregon Employment Picture Looks
Up In 60; Surpasses 1959 Record
SALEM (Special) The Oregon
Employment picture took an up
lifted look lor 1960 surpassing
even the record set in August,
1959, when total employment
reached an all-time previous high
of 724.200. A year-end summary
for 1960 by the Oregon State De
partment of Employment shows
that employment reached a peak
of 737,900 in August, 1960, and on
Dec. 15 showed a preliminary es
timated total of 647,700. The peak
was 13,700 more than the previous
1959 high, according to the sum
mary Issued by David H. Camer
on, commissioner. Employment
covered by unemployment insur
ance also peaked higher in Au
gust, I960, than in 1959, 456,600
compared to 436,493 in August,
1959, the previous all-time record.
Labor dispute cases in Oregon
during 1960 affecting the unem-
plyoment insurance remained at
minimum. Actually only four
new disputes started in 1960 in
volving 616 employes, and two of
these were settled involving 570
employes. Hearings on the prin
cipal dispute pending since 1959,
the Oregonian, Oregon Journal
newspaper case, are scheduled
to start Jan. 19 in Portland.
Cases reviewed by fraud inves
tigators of unemployment insur-
Berry Growers
Accept Offer
HILLSBORO. Ore. (AP)-Berry
growers ui the Hillsboro and
Gresham a-eas accepted at a
meeting here Friday night an
offer of an additional one cent a
pound from Birdseye Division of
General Foods for their' 1961
strawberry crop.
The offer was accepted under
protest because it did not come
up to the average price paid in
California and Washington last
year. About 125 growers from
Northwestern Oregon and South
western Washington packed the
city hall here at the meeting,
Washington growers disap
proved, contending it will depress
the price in their state. Average
prices paid last year were: Cali
fornia 15.3 cents per pound, Wash
ington 14.4, and Oregon 13.04.
The growers appointed commit
tees to negotiate with 12 other
berry processors in Oregon.
Amendment 14
Passage Asked
SALEM (AP) - Sen. Alfred H.
Corbett, D-Portland, announced
Friday he will introduce a reso
lution to ratify the 14th Amend
ment to the U.S. Constitution.
This Civil War period amend
ment guarantees every citizen
equal rights.
He said that the Oregon Legis
lature ratified it, and then with
drew its ratification in 1868.
Corbett said that attempts to
deprive Southern Negroes of the
right to vote are reprehensible,
but that Oregon's failure to be on
the list of states approving the
14th Amendment makes him
wince even more.
iafeebMawM
1
gently
dried by
GAS
TOU OIT PURR-FECT DRYING
SVBRT TIMS WITH A OAS DRYER
VISIT OUR DISPLAY FLOOR OR CALL
ON YOUR GAS APPLIANCE DEALER
'CALIFORNIA-PACIFIC
CITY GAS
ance division led ,to prosecutions
for fraud in 25 cases with 17
convictions for misdemeanor and
eight cases, pending Dec. 30. Dis
qualifications were issued in 586
cases. More than $14,000 in over
payments were recovered and
more than $158,000 saved in
weeks benefits denied because of
misrepresentation.
The appeals board of the unem
ployment insurance division dis
posed of 265 cases with 21 pend
ing on Dec. 30. This number com
pares with 249 reviewed during
the fiscal year ending June 30,
1960.
The summary further shows
that employers subject to unem
ployment tax payments reached
an all-time high, 36,807 in Decem
ber, 1960, compared to 27,468 in
December, 1959, The increase was
mostly due to the new coverage
which went into effect Jan. 1
1960.
The Oregon State Employment
Service made 384,728 placements
during the 1960 calendar year in
all categories of employment. The
placements included 16,725 veter
ans, 3,761 handicapped persons,
313,858 in seasonal agricultural
jobs and 9,377 youths, 14,864 from
21 to 45, 14,318 from 46 to 65
and 546 over 65. Migrant workers
hired through the employment
service totaled 14,654 in 1960 as
against 15,436 for 1959. The trend
seems to be toward hiring of
more local labor as mechaniza
tion takes over and increases the
need for more skilled workers.
Seasonal work in the state em
ployed a peak of 66,367 local work
ers in 1960 compared to 51,266 in
1959.
As the year neared the end,
unemployment insurance pay
ments increased perceptibly as
expected. Total benefit payments
MATERNITY (
SALE (gK
.ops OQj
Formerly to 7.91 hjif I
- '
m fluffy...
v v -vt f
UTILITIES COMPANY
1011 Main St
Phone TU 4-5175
for the year, of 1960 were 822.83S
for the sum of $28,470,427 as com
pared to 716,058 or $23,814,805 in
1959, up 14.9 per cent. A heavy
falloff in employment in lumber
ing, logging and allied industries
during the last half of the year
brought about a large part of
the heavy claim load at year's
end. Total benefit payments in
lumbering, logging and allied in
dustries reached 262.846 or J9.977,.
295 as against 559,989 or $18,493.
132 in all other industries during
1960. Average benefit check in
1960 was $34.56, in 1959, $33.22.
up 4 per cent. At the present
time it is $35.90.
The total unemployment tax col
lected from employers in 1960 to
taled $35,641,192 as against tha
previous high in 1959 of $33,
909,413. The Oregon trust fund
stood at $47,086,015 on Dec. 30,
compared to $38,645,978 a year
ago.
The advisory council on unem
ployment compensation met nine)
times during the year. The coun
cil's report to the commissioner
was published in November, 1960,
and transmitted to the governor.
The .Department of Employment
summary also mentioned the fact
that Oregon unemployment trust
fund should remain at about tha
same level during 1961 with all
employers continuing to pay at
the 2.7 rate.
1
N. J. Rosenboum
INCOME TAX
CONSULTANT
Commerce Bldg.
1 1 1 1 Wolnut Ave.
Ph. TU 4-5903 or
TU 4-5863
In Klamath Falls Since '46
Mendtya In Malla thru Fab. IS
J1
soft and
1
TANK GAS
lOtn Carptnttr. rirculatwi
1Uac Mill Pttart t P.AA.
ti