V f""" I'll 1 1 I SEA ADELINES This glamorous quartet of lady har moniiers is from the Puget Sound Chapter, Burien, Wash. They have been organized three and one-half years and this year were crowned first place winners in International 'competition with 41 quartets. Left to right they are Shirley Alfonso, tenor; Jamel Barden, lead; Katie Schwan hans, baritone, and Zoe Thompson, bass. Sea Adelines Win Event The Sea Adelines from the Pu- gel Sound Chapter, Burien. Wash, won top spot for 1062-1903 in In ternational Harmony Singing, competing with 41 quartets. The attractive foursome compet ed twice previously before tagging first award honors. They won first place in Region 13 in the Pacific Northwest in the 1960-11)61 season. Local Sweet Adelines from the Crater Lake Chapter, Georgia Knudson, chapter representative. Mary Phillips, vice president, Kay Simmons and Louise Casscl, were present recently at the regional meeting held in Lverett, Wash and met the new "Queens of Har mony." The local chapter is busy with singing engagements and adding new vocal numbers to its reper toire. Anyone interested in hearing good four part harmony, barber shop style, or in singing this type of music, may get in touch with Bea Amourcu.x. president, or Bet ty Perkins, director. Meetings arc Tuesday nights, 8 p.m., at the! VFW Hall, 515 Klamath Avenue 92 Survive Shelter Stay LIVERMOHE. Calif. UP1'-Ninety-two men. women and chil dren spent .16 hours in an under ground fallout shelter near Liver more during the weekend. They emerged Sunday, cold but other wise healthy. The experiment was the first lull-scale shelter drill of Survival Associates. Inc. Taking part were 50 adults and 42 children, ranging in age from five months to 63. Dr. Duane Sewel', a nuclear physicist at the University of Cali fornia's Livcrmore Radiation Lab oratory and vice president of Sur vival Associates, pronounced the experiment a complete success. "I wouldn't hesitate to take 130 people in there for three weeks." he said. The 23 participating fami lies entered the shelter at 8 p.m. Friday and came out at 8 a m Sunday. The shelter, which cot Jjo.ooo. is 123 feet long and 23 feet wide, with a concrete floor, steel ceil ing and 34 one-family compart ments measuring seven by seven feet. The shelter temperature ranged between 33 and 62. The ground tcm)crature outside was 42 when they emerged Sunday. Individual families used hot plates to cook their own meals, consisting of cooked wheat, raisins, chicken noodles, eolfee and canned milk. .Most of the participants in the experiment are attached to the Livcrmore laboratory. Family memberships in the corporation cost JI.600 plus $10 a month dues for laxes and upkeep. ommuniu Caiendt ar TUESDAY DEGREE OF HONOR, 7:30 p.m., executive meeting, Ednai Long, 4512 Crosby. ALOHA CHAPTER, .Eastern Star, 8 p.m., stated meeting, Ma sonic Temple. WEDNESDAY SOJOURNERS, 12:30 p.m., Founders Day, luncheon meeting, Willard Hotel. Cards following. Newcomers invited. KLAMATH DISTRICT G A It DEN CLUB, 10:30 a.m., execu tive meeting. City Library. Y-NE-MA T W I R L E R S, 7:30 p.m.. beginner square dance class. YMCA. Everyone invited. MERRY MIXERS. 8 p.m.. be ginning square dance class, Pcli- an City Hall. Public invited. GOLDEN AGE CLUB. 1 p.m.. meeting, Klamath Auditorium. THURSDAY EAIRVIEW SCHOOL I'TA. 2:13 p.m., meeting, school gym. KLAMATH COUNTY TAXPAY ERS' LEAGUE, 7 . 10 p.m.. court house. Speaker. William Sweet land, hospital. Public invited. KLAMATH COUNTY TAXPAY ERS' LEAGUE, 7:30 p.m.. meet ing, courthouse. Director Claims Delinquents Different Breeds Of Cats In Rural, Urban Areas HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Tuesday, January 22. 196 PAGE- .1 WASHINGTON UPI A port submitted to a presidential committee suggested today that juvenile offenders in rural and ur ban areas are different breeds of cats. Dr. Kenneth Polk, director of a group planning an all-out attack on youth problems in Lane County. Ore., told the President's Commit tee on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Crime that a different ap proach was needed in rural areas 'My impression is that in rural areas a large proportion of what is called delinquency could be more accurately called hell-rais- g." Dr. Polk said. "The boys here (in Lane Coun ty) don't consider themselves de linquent, in fact they are insulted if you use that term." he said To them, a delinquent is one who wears a black leather jacket has a switchblade knife, has long hair combed into a ducktail, and wears motorcycle boots. 'The urban slum youth knows well that his behavior is crimi nal," he said. "The youth in the rural area may have serious prob lems, and mav get into a lot of trouble, but it has a different meaning to them." All present data, he said, indi cate a great increase in delin quency in Lane County and other rural areas. "Yet these problems are very different than those found in the big cities." he said. "We don't have narcotics use. oi large fight ing gangs they're just nonexistent." For example, he said, statics show that the top youth offense in Lane County drinking ac counts for 22.5 per cent of the juvenile arrests in the area. In Los Angeles, he adaed, drinking is far down the list, acounting or only two per cent of court refer- Is. "I don't think there's any ac- Congress Gets Request For Big Arms Spending WASHINGTON (UPI Cong ress was asked today to approve the biggest military authorization bill in U.S. history, a J15.358.691, 000 measure to purchase new mis siles, aircraft and warships The record measure was offered by Chairman Carl Vinson, D-Ga of the House Armed Services Committee. He said it represented "another tep toward making this country so strong both delensively ana offensively that an attack by the Soviet Union would be unthink able when viewed in any reason able context." Goldwater Raps Robert For Rewriting History WASHINGTON UPI -Sen.' Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., charged today that Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy appeared to be trying to rewrite history in the "latest ex ample of 'news management' by the New Frontier." Goldwater was referring to a newspaper interview in which the attorney general said no U. S. air cover was ever planned or prom ised for the ill-fated Bay of Pigs Cuban invasion attempt in 1961. The Arizona Republican said the statement ran counter to every thing the American people had been led to believe for 21 months. "I suggest it is proper to in quire into this latest example of 'news management' by the New Frontier," Goldwater told the Sen ate. "Has this practice of the administration now been extended to the rewriting of history?" Goldwater said he talked with President Kennedy at the lattcr's request shortly after the invasion fiasco and "I certainly got the impression then that an air cover had been part of the original in vasion plans." Also, he told the Senate, "I am sure the entire American public has understood that the air cover was definitely in the invasion plans until the President was per suadedby some still unidentified advisers to cancel it. The measure also would author ! ize funds for research, develop ment, and the testing and evalua tion of future aircraft, missiles and naval vessels. Vinson also introduced legisla tion to extend the draft act an other four years beyond next July 1. He also put in the House hop per a measure to extend the doc tors draft. Vinson said his committee would begin hearings on the big arms measure next week. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will open the testimony. The bill would authorize $6,039,-; 800.000 for new aircralt. The Air 'orce would receive $3,559,000,000, the Navy and Marine Corps $1, 938,700,000, and the Army $322,- 100.000 for this purpose. The missile authorization would $3,879,700,000. The Air Force ould get $2,177,000,000, the Navy SI. 107.300.000, the Army $580,700, 0O0. and the Marine Corps $14,- 00,000. The bill also would authorize con s t r u c t i o n of $2.310.ooo.oool worth of new warships for the Navy. Board Okays PSC Plans PORTLAND il'PL - The build ing committee of the State Board of Higher Education today ap proved a plan to more than double the campus area of fast growing Portland State College. Tlie proposal was made by Dr Rranlord P. Millar, president of tlie school, at the board's monthly meeting here. He aked approval of expanding the campus to 22 blocks. The 5.500-student school now ficcupies nine blocks. y& MAR 25 Fi 1 2- 8-28 35l J 9-12-27-4A STAR GAZER'M By CLAY R. POLLAN- GEMINI 3- 4-19-33 40-59-70 CANCIt ITY0-13-S0-W MJ48 57-82M uo fS) JULT2' -. , AUG. 23 VIRGO i AUG. 2' .,4 SEPT. 77 YF 5-11-J5-37 Uy 561 -80-tol JM Your Doily Activity GuioV JK . According fo Ihm Start. To develop messoge for Wednesdoy, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. sept. OCT. 169-72-78 2 iom 3 Good 4 F-or 5 Look 6 An 7 Got 9 Romonc lOToit 11 And 12 Glrjmorim 13 Inventory 1 Unusual ISSome to Work 17 Wo. I 19Piolvtnrj root ?1 AnJ 2?Pe 23 (tond 24 0rDortunrv b To 25 L .'en L-od 26 Outlook 27 Youf 23 G' quo 29 nut ' o0 Watnfoin 31 Mony 32 Carefully 33 Problem 34 Systematic 3 5 Tok 36 Pay 37 Arrive ?S Your 39 Su.rH 40 Making 41 At A? teem 43 For 44 Attention 45Ne-t 46 Lit 4 7 Somewhlt 48 Po&ietvonS 49 Kerp bO Accotmr 51 Pot-enet V? Stormy You II bA Yo 57 And M V.iHirj 5"Ffih t.O In 61 Hear 6? Outdoor 63 Oldsters 64 Recreation 65 Be 66 In 67 Now 63 Door 69 Sidestep 70 Storts 71 Aocle-pif 72 Any 73 Daring) 74 Order 75 Jrtn-ogt'l 76 And 77 Fed 78 Argument 79 And B0 Somelh.ngj Hi t-or 87 Finance A3 Ret F4 And fib Surpriitng 6 You a7Club flO Matter 89Todav 90 Adventurous 38 51-67 SAGITT AlllTS NOV M DEC W f' l8 39-43-58rtr 152-64-79 83. Good Adverse NeuSl SCORtIO OCT. 24 NOV. 22 4-1 7-21 -30r1 CAMICORM DCC 23 JAN. 20 vX 32.34.49-501 1 171-74 . 1-1 AOUARHJI IAN 21 fib i QI Bl 45-81-86 V risen FEB 201 MAR 21 ' r'. .14-24.37lV1 ll-5tV VzJ lual difference in the amount of drinking by juveniles ill the two ureas. Dr. Polk said. "1 think there's just a difference in the perception of the problem. in Lane county, dnnkins; is considered serious enough to war rant court attention. I suspect that in Los Angeles, if the bovs were just drinking, the police don't worry too much about it." The Lane County youth study ooara, wiiicn Dr. Polk directs, has been given a $129,000 grant by the President s committee to study youth problems. S i m i I grants have been made to H la er cities across the country. be None Injured In Auto Crash five persons escaped injury in two-car collision at 5:u pm. Friday at the intersection of Mit chell and Darrow streets. The damage to one of the ve hides was major and the other car received moderate damage Eugene James Nelson, 18, 3950' Crest Street, was cited for failure to yield Ule right of way. There was one passenger in Nelson's car. The second vehicle was driven by Judith Ouellctte, 22, 2211 Dor- row Street. Two passengers were in Miss Ouellettc's car. According to the police report Miss Ouellctte was traveling east on Darrow and Nelson was south bound on Mitchell when the vehi cles entered the intersection and collided. Landscapers Hold Meet COKVALLIS-Tlic newly organ ized group known as the Ama teur Accredited Landscape De sign Critics Council held its sec ond study meeting at the Coun try Kitchen in Corvallis Jan. 14. Members fr om the Klamath area are Mrs. Crystel Cheyne. Mrs. Hugh O'Connor, Mrs. K. C. Schweitzer and Mrs. Verne I. lira-der. Kach member of this select group has attended at least four of the National Council of State Garden Clubs accredited study courses, successfully completed the outside reading, and passed an CNamination. The National Council Amateur Accredited Landsca)e Design Crit ics are valuable in serving on park boards, city councils, plan ning commissions, etc., to safe guard planning in the hope that future projects will have gcd de sign and make America more beautiful. nuray lopie lor the (lay was! Forms and Textures of Plant Materials," conducted by George r redcen, associate professor landscape design and architecture trom Oregon State University. He stressed that all plant materials are three dimensional in quality ana must lie thought of ns forms outlines and textures, before us ing at all In design. Beauty is the desired result, but chaos could easily result unless nil aspects of the design and materials are tak en into carelul consideration, ho said. The ncxl meeting will be luncheon in the Country Kitchen. Corvallis, on April 8 Associate Professor fllakcly from OSU will be the guest speaker. mmmn PI V-! v I 1 is.rT .. BROTHERS REUNITED Two brothers who had not seen each other for 48 yeari: were reunited in Grants Pass this week because nurse Doris Williams, at left, at Josephine General Hospital was struck by resemblance of Roy Parker, center, cur rent patient, to one she had a few weeks ago. She asked Roy if he had a brother and learned he had one he had not seen since 1915 and presumed dead. Checking hos pital records, she located Harry Parker, right, and effected the reunion. Oddity was that both men had lived in Josephine County for the past 21 years. Separation came when the family moved West after Roy joined Canadian troops during World War I. UPI Telephoto Malm Chamber Meets; Lists New Committees MALI.N The regular meeting of the Malin Chamber of Com merce was held Jan. 14 with the president, Marion Kirkpatriek, presiding. Directors present were W. W. Clark, Bill Schmidli, Art Fvans, Dick llalousek and Jim Conroy. It was voted In give $20 to Parent and Patrons to assist with the Christmas treats for the school children. The nominating committee, Dick llalousek, Jim Conroy and Art Evans, presented the slate of can didates for the five new direc tors. Nominees are Larry Bar bour, Gerry Brown. Charles Dun can, Adolph Drazil, Dale Iloll. lack Lindsay. Hon McVay George Hajnus, Ralph Stearns and Norman Unis. the committee chairmen ap pointed to serve for the annual crab feed arc: Reception, T. A. DeMerritt and M. M. Stast ny; entertainment. Jim Conroy; crab cracking, Earl Wilson; cot- Ice, Dick llalousek; ballot count ing. Art Evans, Bill Schmidli and W. W. Clark; auditing, Cy McCol gin, Dick llalousek and Jim Con roy; food, Cy McColgin and Louis Kahna: table setup, Bill Schmid li; hall, W. W. Clark; serving Merle Loosley; table setting, Art hvans. nnd tickets. Jack Story. JUDO INSTRUCTION In Defensive Judo 12 WEEK COURSE FREE LESSON Tuesday - Jan. 22 At 7:30 p.m. in the AUDITORIUM EVERETT POTTER Instructor, will ttch deftm agilnit hand, knife and gun at tack. Count for Man A Woman. Ht has had many ytars axperi trxt In Judo Instruction, and his mtthodt ara aasy to matlar. Laarn to da. and yountlfl I--Have You Had haJOLLYTlMEl Lately? VI 1A ... I mm C B - for family fun TONIGHT, POP HEAPING BOWLS OF JOLLY TIME -THE TEMPER EA5Y EATIN POP CORN J JULUJu I'm JIM I'm KIRK Our Daddy Says . . GET THE FACTS about a guaranteed educa tional plan. It's later than you think. JIM CRISMON First National Bank Bldg. But: 2-3454 Rti: 4-4628 Great-West Lifo Mawuutca coatMNV O-m "Your Future ft My Buiin.tt' - Today" A panaycr is tlie Turkish equiv alent of a county (air. ENROLLMENTS arrrpl.il al r.ilnnlnf ! any monlh. Fir an Inumllnf. rrward Int rarrrr In ('mrlolAiy . . . Call TU 3-IIII Klamath Beauty College MAMIE" I.K KS VIHIS PALM DliSKRT. Calif. ilTl- Mamic Eisenhower was nearly recovered" today from a virus in fection. She was taken ill shortly Iter she and the former presi dent arrived here .Ian. 7 tor tne winter. Your utoblo ditcordt will hlp ut to help othtrt. Don't throw m away. CALL: The SALVATION ARMY THRIFT STORE llh A Klamath 11! 4-MI Entomology is the branch of zrmlopy concerned with the study of inect.. IT'S OUR ANNIVERSARY CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAVE! (25c) Good For (25c) ! (50c) Gfod For (50c) i ONE 10-lb. ' 8-lb. LOAD t WASHER LOAD ! DRY CLEANING ! Annit.rtarr Vr.h Jan. J Annlfrary Sfk Jan. -Jfl-St a l.lmll I prr ppr.an J l.lmil I P'r ..Man Nart. Villa... Ml s. Mb Naff. Villa.'. M lh I Open 8 to 10 Weekdays 9 to 5 Sot. & Sun. J. W. KERNS Norge Laundry & Cleaning Village 734 So. 6th TU 4-4197 o Now at Exclusively For Ch t Mam Idrcn (QYjijg) Klamoth Falls Class Forming! Develop These Basic Traits: DALE CARNEGIE Author of "How To Win Friends and Inftucnct Ptoplt" O SELF CONFIDENCE O SPEAKING SKILLS O HUMAN RELATIONS INSIGHT O DECISION-MAKING ABILITY O POSITIVE MOTIVATING ATTITUDES Preview Session f WEDNESDAY I January 23 MOLATORE'S 7:30 P.M. joav a Mpji Coll Bus Thompson, . DALE xoSy Ncorly 1,000,000 groduorei from oil wo I In of lift, with oil typi of cducotionol bock 9 round hovf goincd a new confi denco in themielvti, new ottitude toward their future. Why not give yourself the same opportunity! FOR MEN AND WOMEN Approved for Oregon Korean Veterans J. R. (Bob) Taylor, Associate Sponsor 548 Loiier Lont, Medford, Oregon CARNEGIE COURSE CONVENIENT SWIVEL TV TlojurVhta TV UNUSUAL VALUE! 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