I'AGE I A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, On. Wednesday, January 23, 1963 'Sad' Books Get Approval For Students EDGERTOX, Wis. (UPD Hie school board denied parents' de mands Tuesday night to stop high school classes from reading such Iiltliy books as The Ugly American and 1984. "Wc are no longer living in the age, of Longfellow, a board mem- bar .vnd. The parents, led by Mrs. Edwin Tlialackcr, had attempted to get the school board to ban class readings of "filthy" and "vulgar' books. They named such books as J. D. Salinger's "The Catcher in the Rye; A 1 d o u s Huxley' "Brave New World;" George Or well's "1984;" John Steinbeck "Of Mice and Men;" ryodor Dos- loevsky s Crime and Punish ment;" and "The Ugly American' by William Lederer and Eugcm Burdick. .About 450 persons attended two - hour meeting which ended with a terse statement by board President Thomas Houfe in sup port of the continued use of the books. "We are 100 per cent behind (he teachers and staff of the high school, Home said. "We are no longer living In the age of Longfellow," said attorney John Rothe. "We can't keep a fence around our children. The Rev. Wayne Turner, a Ro man Catholic priest, disagreed, "Parents have the right to put fence around their children," he s.iid, "and I will back them in this right I "The parents definitely have a right to object to what their chil dren are being taught," Father Turner said. "I, a priest, must ob joct to three books on mora! grounds 'The Catcher in the Rye," '1984,' and 'Brave New " World.' " One woman said the books in question were "demoralizing liter ature inspired by the Commu nists." She said everyone ought to read J. Edgar Hoover's "Mas ters of Deceit" to learn what she was talking about. School authorities said the six looks were on a reading list ap proved for college preparatory study by the National Council of Uiglish Teachers. The books are uSod in advanced senior litera ture classes. "DENNIS THE MENACE" Zelma Ochiho Tells BeatinfSiciry At Murder Trial YoU MEAHSOl CAN EATAnYTWINQ VA WANT, AU'VDU'RE GONNA EAT UVB&V.' Racial Discrimination Said Over At Colleges IRS Seizes Newspaper PHOENIX (UPll-The Arizona Journal went to press today de spite its seizure Tuesday by the Internal Ticvenue Service for non payment of about $175,000 in ta-.es. . ;Thc morning daily was pasted fr a tax sale, but government njents authorized management to continue publishing on its own re sponsibility while attempts were being made to refinance. Pressmen voted .shortly after uidnight to continue working in hopes financial arrangement, could be made. Editorial and composing room employes voted Tiiexlay to stay on the job alter I'.ilking earlier with a "no-wage, mi-work" demand. Ken Porter, secretary of tlio Jvurnal organization composed of .ibmt 11.000 stockholders, was confident the matter would be .'titled by Thursday afternoon ;lle told employes Tuesday an .it tempt was being made to rc iifanre nnd reorganize the paper fHst published 1 cb. 14, !2, a! limtigh he said he could not prom i e a deal could be completed He declined to disclose names of tlie backers included in his group A 'government tax sale will fol low if financial efforts are unsuc ccsslul. Internal Revenue Service .vents, however, would not sav w : en a public auction would take place, but promised it would not i v tMav. PORTLAND (UPD - The State Board of Higher Education claim ed Tuesday it "appears" to have ended racial discrimination in fraternities and sororities at the University of Oregon and Oregon State. However, Wallace Pricsllye, a member of the executive board of the Portland chapler of the National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People, said the board will not achieve that bjective until two fraternities re move discriminatory clauses from their national charters. Chancellor Roy Lieuallen read letters from University of Oregon President Arthur Flemming and Oregon Stato President James Jensen which indicated there is no discrimination on cither campus because of race or religion. Two Cited Lieuallen admitted that two fra ternities which have chapters at both schools still have racial lauses in their national charters, but said their chapters in Oregon have waivers. Priestley identified the two as Alpha Tail Omega and Kignia Nu He called the waivers irrelevant. "What self respecting Negro would want to belong to a croup which has discrimination written into its charter?" he asked. In other action I ho board ap proved an increase In out-of-stalo luitinn at three schools, and an increase in dmmilnry fees. The dormitory fee increase Is expected to be about $40 a year at all state schools except Oregon Tech. The figure is about $55 at the latter. $KI0 To $750 Lieuallen recommended a $fi0 a year increase each of the next two years for out-of-state students at Oregon, Oregon State and Port land Slate. It would raise the tui tion -from the present $1130 a year 10 $750. me ooara recommended re duced tuition fees for Oregon stu dents at most institutions. Fees would drop from $100 to $90 per term at Oregon, Oregon State and Portland State, and from $88 to $78 at Southern Oregon, Eastern Oregon and Oregon College of Ed ucation. Oregon Tech fees would remain $100 per term. Executive secretary James T. Marr of the Oregon AFL-CIO sent llic board a written request to Halt increased tuition costs. He said he feared many students would lose their opportunities to iltcnd college if costs no anv nigner. Zelma Joan Ochiho, 41, ap peared as a witness in her own defense in Klamath County Cir- cut Court Tuesday afternoon and told the jury of beatings and abuse she received from her boy friend whose life she ended in a shooting incident, at her home, Nov. 14. .Mrs. Ochiho, charged with the first degree murder of ex-prize fighter Bruce Miller, 38, repre sented the final witness to be called by the defense late Tues day, and was scheduled to com plete her testimony when the tri al resumed in the court of Judge David R. Vandenberg Wednesday morning. The defendant's story of her relationship with Miller followed tile testimony of four defense wit nesses which provided the jury with knowledge of the events that occurred at the Ochiho house. 624 Mt. Whitney Street, from July of last year until a few hours following the slaying. The witnesses and the subject of their testimonies incded Ethel Mae Hood, 616 Commercial Street, who was at the Ochiho house when Miller inflicted a beating on the defendant In July ; Jeff Hull 2305 Wiard Street, a friend of the couple who was present when Mil ler threatened to cut the throat of Mrs. Ochiho; Stella Forest, Altur as, Calif., who related telephone conversations which she had had with the defendant during the day of the slaying; Ray Lung, trust officer of the U.S. National Bank, who commented on a tele phone conversation he had with Mrs. Ochiho soon after she was arrested by sheriff's deputies. Mrs. Ochiho's testimony focused on three beatings she said were administered by Miller since July, and the order of events that oc curred on the day the victim was slain. All three of the attacks occurred at the Mt. Whitney Street address, with the first assault oc curring in the back yard, some time early in July. Mrs. Ochiho stated that on the initial occa sion .Miller knocked her down when she refused to give him the keys to her automobile. Another incident occurred some days later when Miller threatened Mrs. Ochiho with a meat cleaver while she was in the company of Ethel Mae Hood. The defendant stated that tnc dispute developed after Miller saw Miss Hood talk ing on the telephone, and con cluded that the two women were arranging to leave t h e house without him. 'Bruce became angry and knocked me into a reclining chair," Mrs. Ochiho testified. 'Bruce then went into the kitchen and returned with a meat cleaver." The remainder of the testimony on the incident was fragmentary, except that Miss Hood came be tween Miller and the defendant. In the ensuing scuffle, Miller struck Miss Hood above the eye and the cleaver struck a nearby table. "Did he hit you with the cleav- Icr?" the defense attorney asked .Mrs. ocnino. "No, he' didn't, but he intended to," she answered. "How do you know that?" she was asked. "Well, why else would he have it in his hand?" she answered curtly. Ikkss Hood, as well as M r s. Ochiho, testified to the third in cident which resulted in the de fendant being hospitalized for a short time at Klamath Val ley Hospital. Miss Hood reported that the attack took place in the bedroom of the house. The witness said that she heard sounds of a scuffle coming from inside the room. She broke through the door and found Mrs. Ochiho lying on the floor with Miller standing over her with his fists clenched. Mil ler left the house and Miss Hood, in the company of Otis Washing ton and Bill Johnson, who were houseguests at the time, drove Mrs. Ochiho to the local hospital for treatment of abdominal inju ries. Later, Mrs. Ochiho testified that Miller had threatened to cut her throat while the couple were play ing pinochle wih Jeff Hull the night before the episode which ended Miller's life. Mrs. Ochiho noted that her automobile was again the basis of the argument which led to the threat. She told he jury that Hull arrived at the house a short time after the de fendant had refused Miller the use of her car to take a hunting trip to Table Mountain. Hull remarked in earlier testi mony that Miller was becoming mean as the evening progressed Finally he stood up and shouted at Mrs. Ochiho, "I'm getting sick and tired of you. According to Hull, Mrs. Ochiho admonished Miller and told him to sit down and play cards. Miller then snapped, "I'm go ing to cut your damn throat." He then started toward the kitchen but was restrained by Hull. Mrs. Ochiho then told Miller to get his clothes and leave the house. He left soon after with Hull, stating that he would return the following day to get his clothes. Early the next morning. Mrs. Ochiho told .the jury, she tele phoned her cousin's wife, Stella Forest, in Alturas, Calif., and stated tliat she would visit her later during the day. Mrs. Forest, who preceded the defendant as a witness, told the jury the substance of the con versation. She remarked that Mrs. Ochiho was coming to Alturas be cause Miller wouldn't leave her alone, On the morning of the slaying Mrs. Ochiho said she awakened early, talked to Mrs. Forest, and then took a cab downtown to asK someone to chauffeur her to Al turas. (Mrs. Ochiho's driver's li cense was suspended at the time. ) Some time later she' arrived at the Pastime Tavern, where Otis Washington agreed to drive her to Alturas. Mrs. Ochiho also met her cousin, Florence Baker, and a friend, Kenneth Wilson, at the tavern. 1 In the meantime. Miller had ob served Mrs. Ochiho on Klamath Avenue, and followed her into the tavern. Later, Mrs. Ochiho and the four other people, including Miller as the unwanted guest, left for the Mt. Whitney Street house where Miller was slain soon aft. er. Mrs. Ochiho was then asked in direct examination how she acquired the .308 caliber rifle used in the slaying. She replied that the weapon, a shotgun, two weeks' provisions, and various camping equipment were purchased during the Cuban crisis, when t h e President and everybody was tell ing you to get ready for a nu clear attack." Ray Lung, another of the four witnesses testifying Tuesday, said lie answered the telephone at his desk in the U.S. National Bank be-' fore noon on Nov. 14 and heard Mrs. Ochiho's voice, "Mr. Lung, I finally did it. I finally did it. I killed Bruce. ... I tried, I tried, you know I did. I tried." H Your Own MEDICARE Equltable't Majar Medical Plan John H. Houston Service Since Mark Asked About Prayer SI.1-;m il'I'li - Sen. Edward Kadeley. D Eugene, today asked (iov. Mark Hatfield to spell out the prayer amendment he would like made to the V. S. constitu tion. In a letter to Hatfield, Fadclev referred to Hatfield's inaugural address in which tlx governor suggested the legislature could in itiate an amendment "if it shares with my view alxiut the privilege of prayer in our schools." Fadclry said the l!. S. Supreme Court decision did not ban school prajing. hut only "official pray ers. . . cameo on bv government He said it decided that "Caesar, the stale, could not consliltilion ally decide or colled what is to be rendered unlo CihI " Fadeley said if lialficld f;ion constitutional Simcndiiicnt. "logic ally, then, ou must favor t .'hance to permit Caesar to drcidi what is to bo rendered unlo (lodll ri i I m the vhooh jVias oiuTea "If not. what aie your views that you hope the legislature shares? What specific amendmonl do vou propose" he said Spur Road Plan Okayed PORTLAND (UPIl - Multiple use access roads to tile Deschutes River in Central Oregon will be spur roads instead of one high way along the river bank, it was announced Tuesday at a mectinc of the new Multiple Use Advisory Monro oi tnc Bureau of Ijnd Management. Russell Oily, slate FILM direc tor, said the spur roads to (lie river will protect the natural beauty of the Deschutes canyon. Kinservalion groups opiKised the initial arms plan, which called lor a road along the banks of the river. SliK-kmen attending the meeting varied violently when confronted Mh a Presidential order which reduces three-year tonus on grazi ng district advisory hoards to one ear. I hey said the change will eliminate all continuity on the boards. The IT-mcmhcr advisory board adopted a resolution declaring the onler impractical, but accepting it lor one war. Alter that, it recommended returning to (lie lluee-vear lei ms. Union Votes Boeing Pact SEATTLE (UPD - Machinists union members in Boeing Co. plants throughout the country will vote today on the latest contract offer by he company. Union olficials here advised members to reject the offer. Rejection of the offer by a simple majority of the :!0.ono to 35.000 employes belonging to the International Association of Ma chinists could pose a new thrcal of a strike. A union spokesman said if the contract is turned down, a new- deadline would probably be set possibly ru3y. He added, how ever, that he expected the Taft Hartley Act would be invoked to prevent a walkout affecting the huge aerospace operation. Union members at Seattle, Ren ton. Wash.. Wichita. Kan., Van- denburg Air Force Base, Calif. Great Falls. Mont . Cape Canav eral, Fla., New Oilcans, Rapid City. N. D.. Ogdcn, Utah, and other scattered plants thimigliout the country will he voting. Results of the secret balloting were expected late today. The company has made conces sions on wages, fringe benelils and employe-rating systems but las refused to concede lo IAM lemands for a union shop, the issue which has deadlocked nego tiations for months. Hunting Safety World War I Meeting Slated The Ladies Auxiliary of the Vet erans of World War I will hold o regular meeting, 8 p m. Tliurv daw Jan. 24. at the VFW Hall on Klamath Avenue. There will be nomination and election of officers fur the com ing year. All rhembers are urgco to attend. Ruth Wishard is presi dent. There will be light refresh ments. DOORS OPEN TONITE AT 6;4S ("TARAS BULBA"JTTO) THE THRILLS OF OUTER SPACE. ..THE EXCITEMENT OF THE GREAT OUTDOORS! jmes mm jody um uoo mi Guns o Texas Mm mm SSSSR i : SUMMER Lh'.; - mil Smith and lloyd Claggell of the Sum mer Lake (lame Commission are conducting ,. class in hunt ing and s,i!rl I. ir Udioy Robin -on. IVmicI.is and P;iid I'lark. lorn I'ailnn and Willie Weav er. The class is meeting twice weekly alter school for a maxi mum ii right hours instruction. The instructors had the boys out Sal ui day lor some target prae- There hae been oniv 22 re corded tornadoes ill Vermont since 1782. according lo records. tire I ktemath ram, (Vtn Pubhiried cuiiy (tpi Sal ) ad Sunday Serving Southern Oreittn aod NaMftem California Klamat PMthin tampan? Man f eplanrt Pr TUlM 4 ItH W. t. Swfiad. FvimtrMr VnftrM ai cntf-(ia( matter at fft pfltf '()( at K la ma In Pain, Ortftin, n Awtvtf H, fU. vntftr act t C Mart 1 mt l(tfltti ait at p4 at KlimMh Faiii. Ortfo I and at Miinai maiiiitf '. SUBSCRIPTION KATES Carritr 4 Mrwtthl i t ta Vtai Matt m Advance 1 Vl I I T( t MantM SUM ' Vaar SUM Carntr and DftUrt) Wttkftay Svnajav, enpy llr UNITED PVFt', INTUITIONAL AUDIT BUREAU CP ClOCUlATlON SntKrisrt n4 rwttvmf tiitrv a tair Htra an hawv iaia atoMa MONEY IN THE BANK UP TO $50,000 IN PHIZES ' 1,010 PRIZES x ' 1,010 CHANCES TO WIN SUPER PLENAMINS MONEY IN THE BANK Sweepstakes Corri in net ly b!m mttt 1 1 tfttuli ind nter todiv! Softs, itiku eiM Much 31, 19,3. Wood's Drug 10lh t Mum Reddy Kilowatt had a busy year serving you in Pacific Powerland DELIVERIES OF ELECTRICITY SET NEW RECORD In 1962, PP&L customers used 7.4 billion kilowatt hours 400 million mofe than the previous year. Reddy Kilowatt is doing more jobs than ever belore to bring you the comfort and convenience of modern electric living. $40-MILLION IN CONSTRUCTION LAST YEAR And PP&L's long-range program calls for $58 million more in con struction during 1963. This action program is geared to produce and deliver vital electric energy whenever and wherever you need it in Pacific Powerland. tux r fcA. i .'lr. iJ-Clc-i- - Jul n mi ... 1 1 ANNUAL PAYROLL REACHES $26 MILLI0N IN '62! Operation and construction activities throughout the PP&L sys tem provide a major payroll for hundreds of men and women who live and work here in Pacific Powerland. Their paychecks mean more business for the widespread area PP&L serves. $10,825,000 IN LOCAL AND STATE TAXES! These big annual PP&L payments help support such vital commun ity services as schools, parks, fire and police protection and reflect the large investment Pacific 'Power has made to assure you dependable electric service. Now, more than aver, modtrn PPtL eacfrc service is your bi'ggesf value for better living Pacific Power & Light Company Your Partner in Progress