Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 11, 1961, Image 2

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    K
Board Studies Budget Problems
l SALEM (AP) - The Stat Fi
nance and Administration Depart.
'-ment joined the State Board of
.-Higher Education Tuesday m an
intensive study of budget prob
lems that have resulted from a
'. drastic enrollment increase in
. Oregon colleges,
The legislature approved
$92,613,204 appropriation for
higher education based on a 6.7
per cent increase in enrollment,
but Tuesday tic enrollment in
crease turned out to be . 15
per cent.
As registration neared comple
Starts
THURSDAY
ft X-
AT LAST...
DAVID O. SELZNIOCS prodtioa of
MARGARET MITCHELL'S Story rfU Old South
GONE WITH THE WIND
IN TECHNICOLOR Honing
Clark Gable rhuu Buiur
IKSITE OUVIA
Howard DeHAViixAND
aae) sti-esaeilag
VIVIEN LEIGHw Scarfad O'Hara
A StlsaJek letteraatloaal Production
v
One Show Nightly
7:30
Doors Open 7:00
Drt Open Tenlte
At 7:45
LAST DAY!
T
Starts
HE WAS THE
MAN THEY CALLED
0
, i mm
4 U lJ
it
I
-THE STORY OF ARNOLD ROTHSTEIN"
-gOtV'O eNI JACK ftiANk f)iN
JANSSEN FOSTER CARSOMlXJSSOHERLIHY
CHNESSYN REST fTT
3
' OCOWM MCCCOtt JOAN HCNRV etUW miS Ai,OMI
I w6 cmildwe uhdHi it AHnrTWt usitst AccoMAwt6 it an adult 1
tion, enrollment in the state's
nine branches of the state system
of Higher Education reached
28,869, which was 2,000 above the
figure on which the appropriation
was based.
The projected increase in the
state budget was kept close to the
6.8 per cent increase in 1958-59,
the 7.1 per cent increase in 1959-60
and the 8 per cent increase in
196041.
Finance Director Freeman
Holmer said Tuesday his staff
was working with the board's
staff to find where the unexpected
enrollment came. He said a better
economic picture or a higher per
centage of high school graduates
in college may account for it, or
possibly both.
Presidents of the seven schools
and deans of the dental and
medical schools were scheduled
to meet Friday in Eugene with
the board staff to consider the
big financial problem presented.
Already the board has .
thorized the use of some $413,000
in student fees to help meet the
situation.
If the pattern continues through
the present 1981-62 biennium high
er education could end up witn
a deficit of $2.4 million or more.
Finance and administration was
Diven two similar estimates of
enrollment as a basis for planning
the governor's budget request to
the legislature. The one adopted
was based on a fall enrollment
of 26,898.
The Gravest financial problem
suggests itself for next year when
the estimated increase in enroll
ment, for the 1962-63 year, is only
per cent. The 15 per cent in
crease this year already has car
ried the budget beyond that.
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Recently a
friend had a small party at her
home. The women put their
gloves, purses,
and stoles in the
bedroom. When
I got home I no
iced that a love
ly handkerchief
was missing
from my purse.
Then 1 discov
ered that a $10 bill was also
missing.
The next morning one of the
other guests phoned to say she
had lost her coin purse that night
and asked me to look in our car
because we had driven her over.
Later in the day I received a
phone call from another guest who
asked if I had missed anything
after the party. I was stunned
and asked how she knew. She
School Heads
End Conference
SALEM (AP) Oregon second
ary school principals wound up
a two-day conference here Tues
day, and set Oregon State Univer
sity as the site of next fall s meet
ing.
The educators nominated How
ard Horner of Portland's David
Douglas High, and Carl Aschen-
brenner of South Salem High for
vice president of the association,
with election to be held at the I
winter conference in Eugene.
Maurice Burchficld, Bethel
(Lane County) already is presi
dent-elect.
Rock Hudson
GinaLOLLOBRIGIDA
Sandra Dee
Bobby Darin
Klcptoinaiiic Guest
Poses Big Problem
3
Alone together L,Qj
or love-happy
teenuge
Ieurl.lt!
i 1 4.
mm.
WALTER SLUAK
Ml SUMIM
ENDS TONIGHT
"MARJOKIE
MORNING STAR"'
THURSDAY
The wild
country
was only
for the V
brave iF
and f j
strong- pi Sf
manor jjfV' yv
H& DOB OF Wf NQNN
MICKIY
amsiiN flf )
Money Cures
Gypsy Curse
PORTLAND (AP) - George H.
Atkinson, Westport, Conn., had
the "Curse of the Gypsies" placed
upon him this week, but wasn't
particularly concerned after hav
ing $200 returned to him by a
group of Gypsy women.
The incident in which Atkinson
almost lost his money was chron
icled in an unusually colorful
police report by a pair of literary-
minded Portland policemen,
Henry Pylkki and Lawrence
Straub.
Atkinson set out from the Mult
nomah Hotel, where he was stay
ing, toward a nearby restaurant,
the two patrolmen wrote, "but
being unfamiliar with Portland,
he chanced upon an address on
W. Burnside Street where the
usual reception committee o f
Gypsy women hungrily awaited
outside Its door."
"Upon learning just what kind
of a den it was that lies behind
that Innocent door, the complain
ant, with a determined look,
waded his way out, through a
cloud of Gypsy women with fortune-telling
and other intentions
and a large flock of small, noisy
children," reported Straub and
Pyllki;
Atkinson finally found the res
taurant, but when he paid his bill
he noticed some $200 missing
from his wallet. He called the
police.
Straub and Pyllki contronted the
Gypsies with Atkinsons com
plaint, they said, where upon,
"with a volley of Gypsy profanity,
floods and floods of tears and soft-
soap, hand-wringing and wild em
bracing, the throng of Gypsy
women finally came forth with
$200 in hard cash.
"The complainant was given to
understand, however, that if he
accepted the money, he would
also take with him the much
dreaded and fearful Gypsy curse!
"But with his gaze fastened on
the bills returned by the women,
it is rather doubtful that the
complainant noticed the pain of
the curse," concluded the two
patrolmen. (
Atkinson, with the money re
turned, decided not to press
charges.
Two Fatals
Raise Toll
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Two Fatal traffic accidents
Tuesday raised Oregon's highway
death toll for the year to 386 in
the Associated Press tabulation
as the states traffic fatalities
climbed toward a record high.
Six-year-old Nancy Call,
Metolius, was run over by a car
as she darted across a street
Tuesday afternoon.
Harold D. Rice, 37, Albany,
told state police the girl ran in
front of his car from behind
another vehicle as ha was driv
ing through Metolius, a small
Central Oregon town.
Police said the girl had lust
left her first grade class at
Metolius Grade School. Her
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Kay
D. Call, Metolius.
Leroy J. Christenson, 50,
Eugene, died when the pickup
truck he was driving collided
headon with a truck-trailer about
five miles west of Oakridge, near
Eugene.
Klamath Pain, Oregon
Serving Southern Oragon
and Northern California
Published gaily (except Sat.) and Sunday
Klamath Publishing Company
Wain at Eselanarie
Phone TUedo 4-elll
W. I. SWEP.Tt.AND, Publisher
Entered aa eecond class matter et the
post office at Klamath Fella. Oregon,
August TO, lo. under act of Con-
grass. March 3, 1179. Second-class post,
ago paid at Klamath Palla. Oregon,
and at additional mailing offices.
SUBSCRIPTION rates
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weekday A Sunday, copy log
UMIICD PRESS INTeRNATIONAl
ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION
Subocrlbere net receiving delivery of
their Hereld and News, pleese phone
Ceng Carpenter. Circulation Manager.
TUiodo 4-sill patera i p.m.
said she has been suspicious of
Mrs. X for a long time so she
followed her when she left the
living room. She saw her ran
sack the purses.
The question is, shall we tell
Mrs. X's husband? He works
with our husbands and perhaps
he ought to know. QUANDARY
Dear Quandary: Don't tell her
husband tell her. The woman
may be a kleptomaniac (not the
same as a thief) but it Is not up
to you to make the diagnosis. Let
her know that you know and then
forget it.
Dear Ann Landers: My girl
friend wears that silvery kind of
nail polish and matching lipstick
and I hate it. To me it looks
like the paint they put on kootch
dancers so they'll glow in the
dark.
I've told her how I feel about
this but she claims a girl should
not allow her boy friend to in
fringe on her private rights or she
will be pushed around forever.
I'm not trying to push her around,
I lust want her to look like a
lady. We've been going steady for
over a year and I plan to give
her a ring for her birthday. If
you tell me I'm out of order
I'll never mention it again. Please
print this in the paper because
we have a bet on your answer.
DUKE
Dear Duke: Fads in cosmetics
come and go. It's foolish to at
tach so much Importance to a
passing fancy.
The smart woman lets her man
win the little ones and this one
Is plenty little. Since you obvious
ly have such a strong aversion
to frosted polish and lipstick, she
would be wise to select something
else.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm 30, at
tractive, and married to a nice,
boring guy. We have four Jbeauti
ful children. The problem is Mac
my husband's brother. I'm in
love with him.
Mac is three years younger than
am and has never been mar
ried. If I had rriet Mac before
I married Tex it would have been
him and me. Mac lives with his
mother. She and I hit it off swell
together. I've never told her (or
anyone else) about how Mac and
I feel, but I ra sure she d oe tor
us.
I have no real grounds for di
vorce and I can't even think of
any that would hold up in court.
If they would add boredom as
grounds It would release a lot of
neoo e from dull lives. Please
tell me, Ann. how can I get out
of my marriage gracefully?
HIGH WALLS
Dear High: Sorry, but I know
of no way that a mother of four
can gracefuly dumi her husband
and marry Uncle Mac.
Had you married Mac Instead
of Tex, you'd probably be writing
to ask me ihow to unload him so
you could marry his older broth
er. The grass on the other side of
the fence always looks greener
perhaps because somebody else
has to take care of It,
Docs almost everyone have a
good time but you? If so, send
for Ann Landers' booklet, "How
To Be Well-Liked," enclosing with
your request 20 cents in coin and
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.
'AGE
Teamster's Conference
Quits York Day Early
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Wednesday, October 11,061
PORTLAND (AP) The West
ern Conference of Teamsters ad
journed Tuesday a day earlier
than scheduled amid rumors
of a cooperation agreement be
tween the Teamsters and the
international Longshoremen's and
Warehousemen's Union,
Harry Bridges, president of the
Longshoremen, was in Portland
Tuesday, but said he was just
visiting. However, he showed up
at the Sheraton-Portland Hotel,
where the Teamster delegates
were in session, and was reported
to have conferred with Teamster
President James R. Hoffa.
Hoffa addressed the conference
Tuesday.
Neither Bridges nor Hoffa would
comment on the possibility of any
sort of merger of their unions,
both of which have been ousted
from the AFL-CIO.
But Einar Mohn, director of the
Western Conference, said the
Teamsters and Longshoremen
both represent many warehouse
workers, "so it was natural that
we should get together on con
tracts and contract negotiations."
A document circulated among
the conference Tuesday called for
a master contract to cover the
warehouse industry on the West
Coast by 1964.
The document, a three page
mimeographed sheet without sig
natures or letterhead, proposed a
Pacific Warehouse Council, which
would consist of all warehouse
locals and general locals includ
ing warehouse workers In both
unions.
The council's objective would
Boy's Death
Trial Short
PORTLAND (AP) - The first-
degree murder trial of David H.
English, 18, ended Tuesday after
noon, after only two days. Cir
cuit Judge Alan F. Davis was
scheduled to instruct the jury to
day. English was charged with first
degree murder in the fatal shoot
ing of his mother in Portland on
April 10. His defense attorneys
contended the shooting was accidental.
Young English was carrying a
loaded .22-caliber revolver while
looking for a prowler when the
gun accidentally discharged and
his mother, was shot, the defense
argued.
Oscar D. Howlett, assistant dis
trict attorney, said English had
plotted to do away with his mother
and the prowler story was part ot
that plot, Howlett said Tuesday he
would not ask for the death
penalty.
be to set up common expiration
dates of contracts involving ware
house locals by 1964.
Mohn said agreement could be
reached between the warehouse
units of the two unions on a local
level.
"There is no way to avoid a
realistic alignment with the ILWU
as far as working conditions,
jurisdictions and contract nego
tiations are concerned," Mohn
said.
But, Mohn added, he could see
nothing in the offing that might
lead to the organic merger of the
Teamsters and Longshoremen.
Now!
you can fend Christmas
Cards that are really
different . . . cards that
are so truly personal oly
you can send. This
year send Photo Cards with
your favorite square,
vertical or horizontal
pictures. Pictures can be
removed without damage,
for mounting in
permanent albums. .
Order Now!
Pay as little at
12 c par card
Black and White
and Color avoilabl
706 Main
SOCIETY
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Next to Oregon Food
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