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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1961)
FilmdomVStar Maker, Schenck Dies Af 83 HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Joseph M. Schenek, who made $4.50 i week as an immigrant boy in New York and a fortune as lord of a celluloid empire in Holly' wood, is dead at 83. Schenek helped develop such diverse talents as Fatty Arbuckle and Marilyn Monroe and had a hand In. founding four major en tertainment enterprises during his Jong career. He was generally an off-stage figure, but scandal once brought him prominence and a brief pris on term. , He died in his sleep Sunday at his Beverly Hills home. He had been in failing health since he suffered a broken hip more than two years ago. Buster Keaton, John Barrymore and Constance Talmadge were among those who achieved star dom under Schenck's guidance. He oversaw direction of films starring Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin and Rudolph Valentino. He was one cf the organizers Specialist Says Af tacks Not Caused By Emotions MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) The popular idea that emotional stress or unusual physical effort bring on many heart, attacks Isl simply a myth, a heart specialist! said Saturday. Many judges, doctors and heart! patients, possibly including for me President Dwlght D. Eisen hower, seem to think emotional stress docs play a particular role, said Dr. Herman K. Hellerstein, Cleveland, Ohio. Eisenhower in a recent televi sion interview, said he thought that getting angry during a golf: match had possibly had some thing to do with his subsequent heart attack. . Hellerstein declared, "It it high ly unlikely that acute coronary thrombosis Is associated with un usual physical or emotional ef forts. It takes hours and days for a thrombus (blood clot) to de velop enough"' to block a heart artery. Speaking to the American Mart Association, he said one common misconception was that emotional stress routinely brings a max-1 imum reaction on the body and the heart. , 'thus the death of John Hunter (a famous British physician) in the 1700s after an argument, or Profit-Split Agreement Facing New Vote Threat DETROIT (AP) - The United Aufo Workers Union was pushing for- local-level contract settle ments with Chrysler Corp. today under the cloud of a new threat to the-' anion's profit-sharing agree ment with American Motors Corp. Dow OfMM :4S f 1 1ST 3 nivs ja8uJDon MMITROCOIOR WILFRID HYDI WHITE-RALPH MEEKER MARTIN BALSAM TSBWV JgDAYS! Tfhe laughs keep coming from that hiliarious crew of 'OnNursa" IK CatfW V UKI II I " (,T irTj Til. of Twentieth Cent iry-Fox Film Corp. and United Artists Thea ters, Inc. He later formed Mag na Corp. with the late Mike Todd and at the time of his death was head of Joseph M. Schenek En terprises, a motion picture pro ducing firm. Schenek married actress Nor' ma Talmadge, sister of Con stance, in 1916. She divorced him in 1934 and he never remarried. He lived quietly and alone in later years. Schenek made a star of Fatly Arbuckle and had a backlog of Arbuckle. films ready for release when Arbuckle was accused of causing the death of a girl dancer at a wild party. He was never convicted but his turns were prac tically worthless and Schenek lost millions. . He was convicted in 1941 of two counts of income tax evasion and sentenced to a three-year prison term. The sentence was suspend ed in 1942 after be served four months and five days at the Fed eral Correctional Institution in Danbury, Conn. even more recently the narration over .television by the former president of the United States that his heart attack occurred shortly after his ire was aroused by three annoying phone calls which inter rupted a golf match, have served to fortify this concept. Hellerstein described studies of physical and emotional stresses in many persons and cited works of other heart specialists, to sup port his views. Individuals vary widely in their reactions to emotional stress, he said. Emotional reactions can uv crease blood pressure, pulse rate, alter the- fat content of the blood and produce other effects. At maximum output of physical work, the heart beat can reach 170-175 per minute, he said. Emotional stress rarely pro duces such a peak beat, Heller stein said, reporting on-the-job studies of factory and steel work ers, TV personalities, surgeons, house ofiicers and sky-jumpers. Generally, he said, the effects of emotional stress on the circula tion were "somewhat equal that: of a brisk walk. One statistical study, he added, found more people died of sudden heart attacks when asleep or rest ing than- when exerting them' selves. UAW negotiators . represent 60,000 Chrysler workers. ' In Milwaukee an official of the UAW's Local 75, which earlier ap proved the UAW-American Mo tors pact, said several hundred members now were demanding a second vole on the contract, The 8,000-member local ap proved the contract Oct. 1, The request for a second vote came following a meeting Friday night. A spokesman for the local said a matter of principle, rather than opposition to items in the con tract, brought the request. The UAW already has ordered a second election for 12.000-member Local 73 at the Kenosha, Wis., AMC plant. Local 72 rejected the new contract by a narro wmargin Oct. 8. The rejection by Local 73 was over working conditions, such as wash-up time, and not the profit-sharing phase of the contract. Kennedy Men To Visit Salem SALEM (AP) Two members of President John F. Kennedy's cabinet may visit Salem next month. State Democratic Chairman E D. Spencer said Friday efforts are being made to arrange pub lic night meeting in Salem iov, 21 when Interior Secretary Slew- art UdslI and Secitb.-- of Ag riculture Orville Freeman will be in Oregon. Tlie two are scheduled to at tend a conference In Portland Nov. 21 and a reception there too. Klamath Pant, oraoan Sorvtof Souttwrn Oraffon an Nartharn California PuWIino daily (axcaat tat.) and Sunfav by Klamath PuftHtMnf Company wain at itianaa Phot TUiado 4-4111 W. t. IweeUAND, Pubiiihar i Snttrad m tat and elau mattar at tha aeat effict at Klamath Pall. Ortowv an Avfuit tt Itoa. untfar act at Can trau, March X 117. ItwArwicUu .Mitt. Mt MM at Klamath Pail. Orov ana: at additional maiiinf efficaa. warriar 1 1 . t in .IKK ..UI.M Wenthe 1 rear Men m Mvenee O 1 Monm .1 i.n ..tlOM . tiioe l'MMH .,, t Veer Cerriar end DMleri Weefcaev 4 tundav. easy It! WNiriB MM INTIKNATIONAC AUDIT IVIItU OP CIUCULATION luHcrlHri no) ramvtni delivery M their MereM ere) Newt, eleete eftene Kooky Wife Abets Daughter's Fantasy Bv ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: My wife is a little kooky and I'm afraid she's making our 11-year-old daughter the same way. Flora is a bright child but she's small for her age and ra ther babyish compared with some of her girl jm friends. Yester day Flora shewed up at the breakfast table fully dressed, ex cept she had no blouse on just brassiere, mis Ei ooesn i have any more use for a bras siere than I have. I said nothing but the minute I got to my office I phoned my wife and asked her why she allowed Flora to wear a brassiere. . She said the girl begged lor one because some of her friends wear them and she saw no harm in saying yes. I say this is nuts. Who is rigni; -MERE FATHER Dear Mere: Some girls at 11 need a bra and they should wear one. But your youngster obviously needs one like South Dakota needs more grasshoppers. Many of today's children can't wait to grow up and their foolish mothers are aiding and abetting them. And rushing the process Inevitably breeds trouble. Putting Flat Flora In a bras siere advances her fantasy. She Is playing at being grown up and her mother Is part of the game, What she will want to do next is anybody's guess. Dear Ann Landers: I'm sick at Hoffa Files Slander Suit DETROIT (API James R. Hof fa and his Teamsters Union filed a million-dollar libel and slander suit today against AFL-CIO Pres ident George Meany and 24 other top AFL-CIO officers. The suit, brought by Teamsters President Hoffa in U.S. District Court, charged Meany with trying to "lie and steal away" members of the Teamsters Union. Meany and the codefendants, the suit said, conspired to portray Hoffa as "perpetrator of a fraud upon the American labor move mem. This was done, the suit added as a smoke screen to conceal the true picture of the defendant. AFL-CIO, as a loitering house of labor which has all it can do to keep Hs own ranks Irom falling to pieces." Minutemen Hold Drills; Some Guns Confiscated COLLINSV1LLE, 111. (AP)-Thel Minutemen" held what Ihey1 called successful guerrilla field maneuvers Sunday despite the confiscation of part of their ar senal. One of the group's leaders. Rich Lauchli, 35, a onetime paralroop sergeant from Collinsville, was arrested and some heavy weap ons were seized Salurday. Eleven persons, including Lauchli, a woman and a teen age boy slogged over cold, fog- shrouded wooded ground in a two-hour field exercise Sunday, National leader Robert DePugh 37, of Norborne, Mo., and Lauchli agreed the dnll was successful Lauchli is charged with willing and unlawful possession of illegal firearms. His arrest came upon the complaint of Philip Taylor, Shlloh, III., township supervisor, after the group set up a weapons display in Shuoh. Lauchli, free on 91.000 hond, is to appear In magistrate's court Nov. 3. Seized with Lauchli were two Browning automatic rifles, Browning machtnegun and an M4 automatic rifle. He brought a 00 mm mortar and a 57 mm anil-! tank rifle for Sunday's demons tration. The minutemen practiced an at tack on an enemy outpost, move ment behind a screen from smoke grenades and a skirmish line charge. DcPugh's wife, mother of five children, charged with the rest. lugging an automatic rifle. DePugh said similar maneuvers havo been held In San Antonio. Tex., Omaha, Neb., Philadelphia, Powder Room Facial Tissue . 400-Ct. Boxei 5 -$ 1 Thit special, ) ell elher recerr specie It fram fart waek't ad feed rtirv Wednet-day. Market Basket trh and Mm Savtr) atk 4 Shaeta War hsart and need seomeone to tell me if I am wrong so I can apol ogize. My sister came to visit the family. She lives 2,000 miles away and none of us had seen her for six years. She stayed with a niece who has a lovely, large home. Several , parties were given in my sister's honor and 1 was not invited to a single one. She was here for 10 days and I did not get to see her. When I heard she was leaving on a certain train my husband and I went to the station to see her off. I told her I was sorry we didn't get together and she really exploded. She shouted, You knew I was in town. Why. didn t you invite me over? I didn't know you had to in vite your own sister to your home. Am I wrong? Please tell me. I'm a nervous wreck over this.-S.L.M. , Dear S.L.M. According to the social rule books, the visitor is expected to call those he wishes to see when he arrives In town. But your family situation has some fairly obvious missing links, Why were yon excluded from the parties? It's difficult to pro vide a complete answer when 1 get only fragments of the story, Dear Ann Landers: Frequently I visited in the home of a friend who has a large Persian cat. I don't happen to care for cats but whenever I go over there out of a roomful of people the cat picks me to sit on. Last evening the cat became fascinated with my shoes. He be gan to take a few swipes at my shoelaces. I said Scat," but the hostess Ignored my signs of dis pleasure. So did the cat. When I glanced down I saw that both my stockings were in shreds. The only comment from the hostess was "I hope they weren t expen sive." - Well, she should know you can't buy a pair of decent nylons for less than $1.15. Do you think the hostess should have offered to replace my stockings? FUMING Dear Cuming: A good hostess pays for damage inflicted on guests by her minor children and pets. if alcohol is robbing vou or someone you love of health and ditmitv. send for Ann Landers' booklet, "Help For The Alcohol lie." enclosing with vour reauest 20 cents in coin and a long, sclt- addressed. stamoed envelone. Ann Landers will be glad to heln vou with vour nroblcms. Send them to her in care of this newso&Der enclosine a stamDed self-addressed envelope. Columbus, Ohio, Kansas City, Mo., and Newark, N.J. Launchli described his arrest as a "misunderstanding about the nature and purpose of our organi zation. He said he had legally bought the weapons and they are "used solely for instruction. All are deactivated and none of our mem bers have any ammunition for them." j DePugh said "we're just loyal American citizens who are tired of being pushed around by the Communists and who want to do something lo stem the tide of their advance." DePugh says he and nine other, men founded the Minutemen in June 1900 and it has grown to a nation-wide membership of some 25,000. Husbands Given Davies Estate SANTA MONICA. Calif. lUPIl Actress Marion Davies has left most of her estimated $8 million estate to her husband and other relatives. Superior Court JudRe Orlando H. Rhodes Friday approved the actress' will when it was admit ted probate. The document was 'Med Dec. 5 1959. Mis Davies died Sept. 22 at the age of 64. She left her estate to her sister Rose Douras Ada- Ion, a nephew, Charles Lederer. a niece. Mis. Patricia Van Clcde Lake, wile of actor Arthur iDni!. wood Lake and her widower, Capt. Horace Brown Jr., among others. A New Color Travelogue ly Archibald Mills School Auditgiun Friday, Oct. 27th - 1:13 P.M. ' Something ditterent frem the utual raeleiiie. Haw rha common people live and work , In everyday life, along with the colorful costumes onrio scenery theta countries hove to after. Beautiful and exciting scenes from O India O Pakistan Oeylon O Turkey o Switzerland O Yugoslavia Admission 1.00 Porton Khrushchev Tries Gaftfcte; r - Makes Big Berlin Gains Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (API-Premier I Khrushchev is doing pretty well lor himself, probably better than he expected. It hasn't cost him much. He resumed nuclear testins without getting any severe reac tion from the neutrals. He made an issue of West Ber lin and seems to have the Allies floundering for a way to deal with him. He showed the myth in Western talk of reunifying Germany by walling in East Berlin.' He used the wall as a symbol of his pos session. In all this, with his trumpet- ings and threats, he has shown a more persistent leadership than anyone in the West, He has done the pitching, the West the catching. . From the beginning there was a fear in the West that Khrush chev might push his luck too far and create a situation which left no out but war. Still, he was so clever in his tactics of pressuring the West that he gave an appearance up steadi ness. The most frightening thing 'is not so much what he has done as what he intends to do. At the end of this month, he said, Russia will explode a 50 megaton bomb. American, mili tary people have said neither such an explosion nor such a bomb is needed. Why then do it? There seems only one answer. It's a terror tac tic to show the West and the rest of the world Russian strength. But there is danger from the fallout of such an explosion. Therefore, this move indicates a Solons Start Checking Exports To Red Nations WASHINGTON (AP)-A Senatej group takes a -look today at the type of goods being exported to the Soviet Union and other Iron Curtain nations. The Senate Internal Security subcommittee wants to find eut if strategic materials that could increase the Soviet bloc s war- making potential are included and, if fo, why. Two days ot dud lic hearings have been scheduled. In the House, a special com mittee headed by Rep. A. Paul Kilchin, D-N.C, has been ap Dolnted to conduct a similar in quiry"." It wlfT start Wednesday with closed-door hearings. The Senate subcommittee orig inally scheduled a series of hear ings in September, shortly before Congress adjourned, but they were called off. At that time Sec retary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges', whose department han dles the granting of export li censes, was scheduled to be a witness. Earlier this year the Internal Security unit sharply criticized the Commerce Department's granting of a license for the ex port of 45 precision grinding ma chines to the Soviet Union. Official Urges Editors To Become More Vigilant VIRGINIA BEACH. Va. (AP)-i A high FBI official called on ed itorial writers Saturday night to lift their green eye-shades and become more vigilant against Communist infiltration of their profession. Assistant FBI director Cartha D. DcLoach said hqnest news men and newswomen are up front in the nation's struggle against Communism. But "a contrary record is still being written by a small segment of so-called journalistic enter prise, DeLoach said in a speech prepared for a banquet of Ihe Vir ginia Association of Press Wom en. Some press representatives. supposedly giving the reading public unbiased news accounts. and Infiltrators into legitimate newspapers are spewing forth a stream ot vilification which has Ihe effect of helping to weaken our foundations of security," he said. When Uiese persons hear a voice lifted against them, the FBI official said, "they cry ol persecution and abridgment ol certain instability in Khrushchev. A man who has to make a grand gesture, particularly at the expense of other people, can be considered neither truly sure of himself nor stable. West Berlin, a Western outpost with Western troops 110 miles in side Communist East Germany, was an old problem anyway, even though a sore one. The Russians were certain to do something about jt some day. Khrushchev started to do some thing about it in 1958 and then dropped it. He waited for the new adminis tration of President Kennedy be fore stirring up the Berlin issue again. Months have passed now since, he announced he wanted to make Berlin a "free city" without the1 presence of Allied troops and that the Allies henceforth would have! to deal with the East German Communists to get to and from Berlin. After all this time the Western Allies are still not agreed on how to deal with Khrushchev on this le. Fur at least a decade it has been a Russian hope somehow to split the Western Allies whose solidarity was an absolute block to Soviet ambitions in Europe, For Khrushchev, raising the Berlin issue since the popula tions of the United States, France, Britain and West Germany have varying attitudes toward war1 over Berlin was a good way lo test Allied solidarity. It has worked out nicely for him so far, with nothing for him to do but sit back and watch. The United States and Britain want to move toward negotia The license first was granted during the Eisenhower adminis-! tration and then renewed in Feb ruary by .Hodges in both in stances at the objections of the Defense Department. However, Hodges announced in! March that he had reconsidered and permanently canceled the ex port license that had been grant ed to the Bryant Co. of Spring field, VI. The subcommittee had called granting of the license a grave error, It said export of the ma chines would have enabled the Soviet Union to speed up by sev eral years the production of bet ter and smaller missile guidance systems. Hodges had taken the position,' as had his predecessor, Frederick H. Mueller, that the Soviet Union could buy the machines elsewhere and that an American firm might! as well get the business. Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., a subcommittee mem ber, said at. the time that the case pointed up the need for a thorough review of exports of strategic materials to the Soviet Union since World War II. freedom of speech." DeLoach said there was a time when newspapers kept a watch ful eye on other newspapers and attacked their competition unmer. cifully when they were caught off- base." There still is an exchange of differences among newspapers, he said, "but seldom do we see one newspaper today excoriate another periodical which is not functioning in the best interests of the nation." NO I XT It A CHAROf FOR STA ietwL pete Send Your Cleaning With Your Laundry Just Phone 4-5111 OPPOSITE POST OFFICE DPark Free or Use Drive-ln w Window! tions. Negotiations wil mean some compromise. But France wants uo compromise, thinks it's too soon for negotiations. West Germany apparently is not yet sure how far it wants to go in meeting the Russian de mands, or in wanting the United States to. Khrushchev himself was prob ably surprised at how little bad reaction he got from the neutrals when he decided to resume his nuclear tests, even though he did it in a cunning way that throws doubt on any future agreements with him. He and the United States had an agreement perhaps an under standing is the better word not to test. Then suddenly Russia tested. Because it has now had a whole series of tests one con clusion is obvious. These tests needed plenty of preparations. So Khrushchev,! while carefully planning them,! gave no indication, of it until he was ready to begin. As for East Germany: The Western powers have collaborat ed with the West Germans in keeping alive the myth that East and West Germany could be re unified in the reasonable future. But when Khrushchev said the West must now deal with the East Germans and when he built the Berlin wall which the Allies did not dare attempt to pull down the myth was exploded. jmnnoxiisr.ci..iH TAKE A NEW LOOK AT SUNNY BROOK... 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