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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1961)
f AGE t-A HERALD AM) Federal Cash Cut Sep Block To Cancer Cure WASHINGTON' UP) - A pro posed cut in federal spending ' could block a promising avenue in " the fight against cancer the use of drugs a leading Burgeon says, rv uiAnr S. Ravriin. nast ores- f ident of the American College of ' Surgeons, said a cutbacK in can Madras Farm Labor Camp Close Asked Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Oregon Bureau of Labor! asked Jefferson County health . authorities Friday to close a farm ; labor camp near Madras, In ten tral Oregon. The camp was called "one of the worst in the state" oy Bu reau officials. Cal Fouts. wage and hour In spector for the bureau, made an investigation of the camp for sev eral weeks, said Ed Hawes, chief of the bureau's inspection squad in Portland. Fouts said more than 200 pep sons "are herded in the camp and under present conditions the camp is a serious menace to health. Ho said his investigation showed inadequate wiring; an in sufficient number of toilets and buildings which were not structur ally sound. The report was turned over to A. W. Westfall, sanitarian for Jefferson, Crook and Deschutes counties. Westfall, under the health code, should forward the report to the district medical di rector, Hawes said. - 1 The medical director has the authority to- shut down the camp, but Dr. Ruth I. Hickok, former medical director, resigned a few months ago and a new one has not been appointed, Westfall said. WcsUall added that the owner of the camp had made some re pairs but the camp still did not comply with standards of the health code. Cabbies' Vote For Teamsters PORTLAND (AP) - Portland taxicabs drivers for two cab com panies voted 140-21 Friday against leaving the Teamsters Union The election held by the Nation al Labor Relations Board, was held to determine whether the drivers waned to be represented by the Teamsters or Local 757 of 'the Streetcar, Electric Railway ;and Motorcoach Employes Union. An NLRB ruling banned owner drivers Jrom voting. ' ASPHALT PAVING Parking Areas Driveways Streets GEO. R. STACY CO. Ph. TU 4-343 w 4-3568 Ivti. DENTAL PLATES A NEW DENTAL PLATE MADE FROM YOUR OLD, FOR AS LITTLE AS $55.00 EACH REPAIRS and RELINES WHILE YOU WAIT NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED FRSONAL SERVICE Open 9 a.m. to 1033 Main St. PLAYING O O "THE O O o o This exceptional group Portland. P0NDER0SA NOTICI: Our Paul lunyeit A.M. tor Huntti'i IrtaMott! NEWS, Klamath FjIIi, On. icer research funds at this point fvuiM nvtka it imnnccihlff A tpsl 23 new drugs developed by the National Institutes ot Healtn. Abraham RihirWf Ruprniurv nf - health, education and welfare, has announced ne win cut iiuz muuon fi-nm hie ivAi-.sill Hpnartmitnl hnH. get to meet President Kennedy's request lor. less lcaeral spending wis usual year. Dr TtnvHin marlp hie slatpmitnt at a .news conference Friday to ward the end of a two-day mect ine of surgeons and cancer sue- cialists sponsored by the cancer Lncmotncrapy National Service Center, a division of the National Caliper lnstitutA. Joining him in opposing a cut In federal funds were Ren. John E. Fogarty, D-R.I., and Dr. Sidney J. Farber of the Harvard Medi cal School. Focartv said SiiO million nf (hp amount Ribicoff plans to cut had been ticketed for medical re search, including $15 to tl6 mil lion for cancer. "I'm a Kennedy man." he (aid but in this ran I think lh Pri. dent has had some bad advice. I don't want to sec him make a mistake. Focarlv hpad a ttnnco ciihr.ntn Imittce on health, education and welfare appropriations. While carefully staerinif away from the term "breakthrough" one doctor called it a horrible' word at this aiaap Hi mnfor ciice heard these reports on can cer cncmouiernnv Dr. Farber said RPVPral virlimc of choriocarcinoma a m hut I dead! v Ivm of cancer in ummM nave survived live years without evidence of the disease returning ur. emu J. Freire ch nf I ho Na. tiona Cancer Institute reported that a new drue had arhievprl "complete remission" for nine of l.f callenLs with acuta mvo npuil,. leukemia, a blood cancer. Five of the nine have continued to show no signs of recurrence, but four have relapsed. Dr. Freireich nnlprl lhal nn cnlirl conclusions can be drawn but 'pointed out that the drug known as "methyl gag" to scientists is i compound from which closely eiaico suDslances can be do 'ived. Some of these. KiihsinnnnE called analogues, might be elfec live against leukemia and umri is continuing along that line, he saia. Ex-Resident Dies In North Lester Cox, a former resident of Klamath Falls, died Oct. 27 at Cle Elum, Wash. During the time he lived here he was cm ployed by the Klamath Cream ery. After moving to Washington ne bought a creamery business which he was operating at the time of his death. He Is survived by the widow Grace, and several children and grandchildren. One daughter. Mrs Mary Clawson, and her family also lived in Kiamath Falls at one time. DENTURE 5 p.i 6 Days TU 4-3284 u features Jim Mandrake at the "ttand-up" piano, Ed Seymour al ternating bats and amplified guitar and Bob Couture on drums , . . wonderful entertain ment, vocolt and Instrumentali! They come to Klam ath Falls from a successful 15-weeki at the Portland Club, CoIIm Shop li Now Opn el 4 (Saturday 4 Sunday anly.) Sunday, Noremher I, litfll HERBERT L. MINARD YMCA Slates Minerd Talk The national secretary of a Christian organization in a Jew ish nation will speak in Klamath Falls at a Monday, 12:30 p.m luncheon at the Klamath County YMCA. Herbert L. Minard, who has been on active service in the Holy Land for 11 years, will arrive here Sunday afternoon for his appearance before community leaders and YMCA officials. Purpose of the Minard program here is to raise funds lor the con tinuance of YMCA International's world-wide program. International will set up YMCA programs, using American and Canadian personnel, at the invi tation of any foreign government, The venture is financed by vol untary donations from United States communities such as Klam ath Falls. Minard has had varied assign ments while in Israel. From 1950 59 he served as general program secretary. From 1950-54 he guid ed tile Y's program for Arab ref ugees in Jordan, including an Arab school in the desert near Jericho. His first world service assign ment was in China. He arrived there shortly after the end of World War II, serving in both Chungking and 'Nanking. A native of Fresno, Minard is a graduate of Chapman College,' Or ange, Calif., and has studied at Drake and the University of South ern Ca norma. He received nis master's.degree from USC in 1032 He has been a church pastor, sec retary ot YMCA organizations in the U.S. and a writer. He is married to the former Marcella Mills of Delta. Calif., who is a graduate of the Univer sity of California. A special meeting lor Minard will be held at Peace Memorial Church, according to Rev. Laing Sibbet, ipaslor. The meeting will be held hun day from 8 - 9 p.m. The public is invited. Police Nab Wanted Man PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-Arizonal highway patrolman arrested John Robert Sawyer Friday, five daysj alter he had been added to the FBI's list of 10 most wanted criminals. Sawyer. 30. was stopped in Wickenburg, 50 miles northwest of Phoenix, by Patrolman Ber nard C. Irwin Jr., who spotted Sawyer's car on the highway and followed him into the city. Saw yer offered no resistance. Brought to Phoenix, he waived preliminary hearing and was held in lieu of $50,000 bond on charges of robbing a branch of the First Wcstside Rank of Omaha, Neb last Aug. 7. A young woman identified a Josephine Miscuraca ot Albany, i N. Y.. was with Sawyer but was not held. She said she had been with him since Oct. 12. ROOM WILLARD HOTEL 2X Colleges Given More Cash By State Board SALEM (API Oregon's Board of Higher Education was given $130,000 Friday by the State Emergency Board, of $2.7 million it had asked to meet an unexpect ed enrollment jump. The emergency board heard higher board chairman William Walsh and institution heads plead for additional money to cope with enrollment that leaped up 15 per cent this year. The budget had been based on a 7.6 per cent en rollment increase this year and 3 per cent next year. President Arthur Flcmming' said the $2.7 million was needed to keep educational quality at the standards set by the legislature when it appropriated a $02.5 mil lion biennial budget for higher education. . I ... The $2.7 million request was modest, Flemming said, because it asked only $328 for each addi tional student above what was expected instead of $307 per stu dent, which was the basis of the appropriation. The lack of this money, he said, would water down the quality of education the state system can give. The emergency board acted unanimously on a motion by house speaker Robert Duncan, D- Medford, to give the $150,000 af ter a motion by Rep. F. F. Mont gomery, R-Eugene, to give $300, 000 died for lack of a second. Walsh said the higher board was grateful for the money, al though it would have liked more He said the money probably1 would go for teaching fellowships to lighten teaching loads but this would be decided later by the board. He could not say immed iately where the board would cut in the face of the fund shortage. Montgomery protested that $150,000 was too little in the light of earlier board action reserving $377,640 for a radiation center at Oregon State University. The money was granted to meet matching federal money for an $800,000 radiation research facili ty at Corvallis. Bus Talks Stalemated PORTLAND (AP) - Negotia tions lor a new contract between the Rose City Transit Co. and the Motorcoach Employes Union weic at a stalemate when talks ad journed Friday. No time was set for another meeting, said federal mediator George Walker, but he added that one probably will be held the first of next week. No progress on wage increases was reported by Walker, but he said some success was made in settling fringe issues. The union has asked a 25-ccnt hourly raise for drivers and 30 cents for mechanics. The com pany has offered 6 cents for the first year and 7 cents for lhc second on a two-year contract STAR -By CLAY Your Doily According To develop message lor Monday, read words correspond ing to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. M-70-76-8: . fAUtUS JZ APR Jl I MAY 21 t Mov 2 Don't 3Wit b Ttndcncy V 32 33 J5 .1ft .17 3 39 JO A) 4? AS A4 ! At- A7 lOvtt-lS-M-W 8384 OIMIM CO. MAY 23 7 Pfonwt 9 Ma( 10 W.th 11 Put 12 A U A 1 A 16 6 ' 17 ChOTj lANvw 10 A ?0 Wrvry 21 Over 22 S'ort ?.1CV 24 Pvlnfwnt H.i.lrling 27 PfPiKU l 5-39 5M CANCfl 1U 7-10-33 AS Or 37 41-74 49 50 (Q July n 51 Look 5.1 54 IIH, New Kll5-17.W-7. ks:'l3.J-87-88 55 Utt V At vuoo 57 Anel AUG 34 SIPT. 2: ?8 Cnmm.imriH Action V Prwll 59 JO I hO Ytxir You IMI-14-1838 ') DRY CLEANING 10 LBS IN 30 MINUTES ... FOR JUST $2.00!!!' IP Yes, You'll Save 75 on Dry Cleaning The Self-Service, Coin-Operated Way At MERIT'S C01N-0-MATIC LAUNDRY 333 E. Main Equipped with Dollar-Bill Changer! Duncan said he believed the whole problem of higher cduca lion financing had been met with a lack ol vision and imagination. He said (he fundamental cduca tion techniques needed to be ex amlned. He said without , some basic research in this field higher education financial problems' would continue year after year. Duncan proposed initially that the emergency board money be for basic education research, but this failed for lack of a second. He said he hoped that higher ed ucation would use some of the $150.1X10 to find ways to educate more economically. Flemming said new techniques are being lound, but he said some cost more money while others do reduce costs. He pointed to four sections of English with 750 students at the University of Oregon, overloaded language classes and heavily load ed U.S. History classes. He said students in these classes are not getting the education they are en titled to get. While there may not be agree ment on where lo find the money. Flemming said, he hoped all could agree that a need exists. Emergency Funds Drop To $501,000 SALEM (AP) - The Stale Emergency Board, after a token contribution to a major need of the State System of Higher Edu cation Friday found itself with only $501,000 to meet emergency fund needs in the remaining 14 months before the 1983 legisla ture. The emergency board started the interim between the 1961 and 1063 legislatures with $1.3 million. 11 still has its hands on an addi tional $625,435, which it has re served. This money is promised but if the agency to which it is promised or the board decides the! money is not needed for that use it will return to the general emer gency fund. This $625,405 includes the $240,- 0O0 for timber tax administration by the State Tax Commission, $377,640 (or Una radiation center at Oregon State University and. $7,855 for the secretary of state to administer the new trade mark law. When the board met Friday it. faced requests for $3,241,706 out of its remaining $1,056,733. Out of the $1,056,733 it re served the $377,640 for the radia tion center and the $7,855 for the secretary of stale. The board also parceled out $5,731 to the new State Labor- Management Board and about $15,000 to Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton to provide a legal staff lor the labor-management board. GAZER? O R. POLLAN Activity Guid SEPT. 23 to lh Start. . OCT. 23 3- 6- 8-3i I Ot A Tci Truilftrf WlCom FrxH Ictoq Roh V.i.tor And Into Of Prohla SudH Betor rVlrof H SCOtFrO 61 ShouU 61 Fftr AS Qvrtf 6ft Monrv 68 Statu 6' Coirwi 70 RsHlf r 71 Po.hit 7? From 73 tlt.tnev 74 AvToot 7 Making 76 B 77 Wayi OCT 24 NOV 71 P2-35-27 52V S4-62-65 V SAcrrr aiius MTV 91 ro a fcT 2- 9-28-31 b4M3 CANKOtN JAN. 20 Vt BV 1-16-19-3A01 fcrwimnmtnt 79 To 1(0.48-81 -82Vl Procf col AOCVii 8! A 8: O-tt (11 A 84 F.,fvj 85Mof 8ft CfWWrVOtrv 87 h 89 A AOUAIMS JAN 21 jt, inrf U7-72-73 J men Advene Ai-w-An.A.i,r-J pi 77-79 80VS' Thot'i right . . . and wt mean ANY. THING THAT'S DRY-CLIANABLE! Try rhti timt'iaving, montr-taving dry Start ing mtthod today. Arttndont on duty to onswtr any question . , , 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.! Little or no pressing needed! Dry to Dry ... in 30 Minutes! SIMPLY AMAZING! Yti, actually simple to usa than your automatic wathar . . . just aik tht lady who hai uted our tquipmcnt. Btttar yat, coma try it yountlf! They'll Do It Every lOTO TOPUTSKV, ALL-AMEOlCAM lULFBACK.IS AS GRACEFUL AS RWLOVA As me rums thru the opposish mm With l 1W1. kJ 1 U'-utW it M,u. Children Led To Safety PORTLAND I API Doug Lowes, 5, and his brother, Rich ard. 3, were rescued from their bed in the second story of a burn ing house Friday by the efforts of a service station operator, a min ister, and firemen. The boys, the sons of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Lowes, Portland, were taken to Providence Hos pital, where their bums were de scribed as serious. The Rev. R. A. Dodd, Portland, stepped through a window from the porch roof to enter the boys' bedroom and hand them to wait ing fireman and safety. Fred Emburg, Portland, the service station operator, helped the Rev. Mr. Dodd enter the windows, and held the minister by a foot as he groped across a bed for the children, in the smoke- filled bedroom. Mrs. Lowes, 25, said she was home with the two boys when she smclled smoke. She tried to go upstairs to get the children, she said, but her way was blocked by heat and flames. Children Find Haven In Plush Miami Home MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) , TWo little Negro cildrcn whose parents perished in hurricane Hattie have found a plush home at Miami Beach and may be adopted by a white man. "I'm going to bring them up as mine, said Ned Davis, a native of Defuniak- Springs, Fla., who was a smalltown banker in north west Florida and South Georgia; before he went to Honduras seven years ago. I'm going to try to adopt them. but 1 may have some trouble," Davis said. "I'm going to put them into a private school with my children but 1 may have some trouble with that, too. But from now on, as far as I'm concerned, their name is Davis and they are already learning to say it." Hobby Aids Check Probe OLYMPIA (API - A Portland man's hobby was bookkeeping. and Olympia police say it certain ly helped nut their investigation of his activities. So James Frederick Marshall Smith. 32, and Joyce E. Fischer 29, Albany, Ore., are held on first degree forgery charges. The charges are based on a $35 check cashed at an Olympia hard w are store. But police said Smith had writ ten records of cashing 140 checks in five Western states the past for months. The checks totaled S3. 141, officers said. Smith was quoted as saying he kept the journal partly as a hohbv and partly because he didn't want In take a check to a store twice. He was also quoted as say ing he knew he would be caught finally and he "wanted In help law enforcement officers.'1 Said Police Detective W. H. Shepard: "It made il real easv for us." KUrndtt Ortoon Publish! duly (cpt Sat ) rwi Sunday Sfrvlrtfl SMithtrn Ortflftft nd NOrtharn Calllorni bv Klamath Pub'Nng Company Vfn at Eidanaot Pnont TUittM 4-1111 W. B. SWEETLANO, PubtljMr Entertd as ttcond clau matter at post oitka it Kimm Faiiv rxoon. an AuQisl M, ltM. undf ct of C Q'Ml. March J. 'I Styx-ial Mil q paid at Klamath Fa"). Ortfon, and at additional ma"Q eMictt. SUBSCRIPTION ATS Crtif 1 AAOAth ttl 4 Vonthi ttfl W 1 vtar tit 00 Man m Advanct i umth 1 1 n A Vonth ftff M t Vtar DIOO Carrtf and DtaWn watkdav 4 Sunday- coor tee UNITED PRESS iN I fc QS ATiONAi. ASSOCiAtED PftPSS auoit supo op circulation SitbXMPf'a no : vinf Otl'vtfV tntT HcaV K Na. pim enoa, Laa Carpntf. C-tt'iat'dn Mna9f TUiattt 4-lHI Mrt 7 PM. Time . a is ir , Labor Protests Change In Constitution PORTLAND (AP) Opposi tion lo complete revision ot the Oregon constitution wasi expressed by organized labor Fri day at a public hearing of the Oregon Constitutional Revision Commission. Stale research director for the AFL-CIO, Thomas Scanlon. said labor feared a full rewriting oil the document because the prohi-l bition against the emergency clause on a tax measure might be dropped. This would open the way for a tax to be passed by the legis lature without an approving vote by the people. Scanlon said Irbor also was op posed because the initiative and referendum might be dropped. A commitment to completely re write the constitution, rather than just revise it, has been made by the commission. Two political science professors, Charles McKinley of Portland State College and Richard Frost, Reed, argued measures they said would strengthen state govern ment. The children are Granville Arnold, 7, and his sister Phyllis, Their parents worked on Davis' plantation in British Honduras be fore hurricane Hattie roared in early Tuesday and flattened their home. The children still do not know their parents were killed. Davis is divorced and has cus. tody of his two young children, Richard, 7, and Nedine, 5. A housekeeper cares for them. Davis brought the children to Miami Thursday night. "I had 20 offers from persons wanting lo adopt the children," Davis said. "It's amazing how people are so interested in these little orphans. Not one telephone call was unpleasant. He said immigration and cus-1 toms officials didn't question ad mittance of the children although they had no papers. Journal Moves With Oregonian PORTLAND (API - The opera- lions of the Oregon Journal, an afternoon newspaper, will be moved into the building of The Oregonian over the weekend of Nov. 11-12, M, J. Frcy. president of the Oregonian Publishing Co., announced Friday. Samuel I. Ncwhouse of New York owns both paper s. The Ore gonian is a morning newspaper. Ncwhouse recently purchased Ihej Journal. Frov said the Journal's news and editorial staffs will Like over separate quarters in the Oregoni an building beginning on . that weekend. COIUMBII FlOUftS presents iwPFii - W f kh s M 'LvTx h 1 1 greatest M STANLEY BAKER- AvJTH0N' QliilE I RENE iWiS-GIASCAlA .m JAMES DARREN ' cl iosimin!.,!-! wm iiohkin I Jiff ihokpsok !STm - By Jimmy Hatlo But oh tme dance floor-me'5 sTOCTLy FROM FAMINE TWO LEFT FEET GOINiS IN ALL DIRECTIONS or Among these were a modilica tion of the direct primary system and strengthening the power of the legislature. If slates want lo head off the general trend of the federal gov ernment Idling voids left at local and state levels, Frost said, they must modernize their constitu tions. TVTTl THE REVELS...THE RAVAGES THE REVOLT OF THE AGES! RHONOk FLEMING JEFFRIES MORENO CERVI R1VELLES - 6UIDA tnOK ..owliMAINWARINGtNiw.ioMALASOMMA EASTMANCOLOR V.M-1-t, k, DUCCIO ttbSAHi MMri k, PAOLO MOFFA MONSTERxfF Ts Wlto Bust Of Crrrr bcJATHIAS- rosannaSCHIAFFINO-wmoLUPO- bwBAITAGUA iawitu-( r.ouEGui win tumius. M TECHNICOLOR TOTALSCOPE Continuous From .TJ , 1 1 r, '""hi mvmmvFN'; fcCUaRlREwS F NAVAROH CClOl rt CiltHSCOPf ;'..fc'iW':' .K vii x...-. I'M il . r i Army Gets Gen. Walker Resignation WASHINGTON (API - The Army has received the resigna tion of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, who says he will "find other means of serving my coun try in the time of her great need." The secretary of the army Has the right to turn down the resig nation, but Pentagon officials in dicated Friday there was no prospect of this since Walker has completed the normal 30-year span of a career officer. Walker has not indicated his plans but some senators said they expect him to tesify at Senate Preparedness subcommittee hear ings later this month into charges that the Pentagon is muzzling the anti-Communist efforts of milita ry men. . The 51-year-old West Point graduate announced his decision to quit the Army in a blistering statement made public Thursday by a Senate Armed Services sub committee. Walker complained that he was baned from speak ing out on communism. .. - Walker said his removal last April as commander ol the 24th Division in West Germany de stroyed his career "in its use fulness to my country." Under Army regulations, any oflicer may tender his resigna tion whenever he considers it ap propriate and resignations will be accepted from an officer who has fulfilled requirements, including lenp.th of service. Continuous Today from 12:45 GINO RtfUEL sicrNu 3nim.t.ni r.-kJ!XHNICOLOR - ,,UNI!tDH ARTISTS THE AGES! Shows Today 12:45 anturc ever filmedl SEE IT FROM THE BEGINNING ?v . ii'n: