Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 14, 1963, Page 9, Image 9

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ARTHUR WHITTEMORE and JACK LOWE
Piano Team Scheduled
By Community Concert
Arthur Whittemore and Jack
Lowe, who will appear here Feb.
25 on the Community Concert se
ries, have run up a record of
achievement in every medium
open to the duo-pianist's art. Now
at the pinnacle of their prestige
and popularity, the team is uni
versally acknowledged as one of
the best-known and best-liked two
piano teams before the public to
day. A measure of the high esteem
in which they are held is the
number of great symphony orches
tras with which they have ap
peared as soloists. The list in
cludes the New York Philharmon
ic. New York's Symphony of the
Air, the Philadelphia Orchestra,
and the Boston Symphony, as well
as the orchestras of Chicago,
Cleveland, San Francisco, St.
Louis, Washington. Cincinnati.
l.os Angeles, Dallas, Detroit, Okla
homa iCty, Denver, San Antonio,
Rochester, and many others.
On The Record
KLAMATH FALLS
BIRTHS
BOVS
STEVFNS Bnrn to Mr. and Mrs. Jo
s.nh S'evens In Klamath Valley Hnspllel
Feb. 17 boy weighing a lbs . 13 ozs.
PRUDE N Horn lo Mr. and Mr. Wil
Hem A. Pruden In Klamath Valley Hos
pital Fab. 12 a boy weighing 4 lbs., 9 ois.
GIRLS
MILLER Born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Miller In Klamath Valley Hospital Feb.
II a girl weighing 7 lbs., a ozs.
GREGORY Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Gregory In Klamath Valley Hospital
Feb. 17 a girl weighing 7 lbs., ofs
TURLINGTON Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Welter Turlington in Klamath Valley Hos
pital Feb. 17 a girl weighing I lbs.. 7 os
mi SUMMARY
Boys: W Girls: 55
As recitalists, (hey are veterans
of many highly successful New
York appearances, and each year
they cross the American continent
filling solidly-booked itineraries of
engagements. During the current
season their tours take them from
Miami to San Francisco.
Attendance is by membership
ticket only at Mills School Audi
torium.
Pinball Law
Draws Slap
PORTLAND IIIPH Multnomah
County Sheriff Donald Clark said
today the legislature should do
something about pinball machine
laws which he described as "unenforceable."
Clark, who disclosed his depu
ties raided two taverns during the
weekend for allegedly paying off
on free games, said obtaining evi
dence is a difficult and expensive
job.
If I put every man I had into
this investigation with every dime
we could muster, we still couldn't
control the machines." he said.
He said he believed the present
Oregon statute on pinball was
"hypocrisy and that the legisla
ture "should either say the slate
will tolerate this device or label
it contraband."
Pinball machines do not oper
ate in Portland, hut do in the
county outside the city limits.
Tight, New
Drug Rules
Start Soon
WASHINGTON iUPH-Starting
April 1, drug manufacturers will
be subject to new government
regulations designed to give ad
ditional protection to the public.
1 he Food and Drug Administra
tion announced the tighter new
regulations Tuesday night. They
stem in part from last year's
thalidomide scare.
The new regulations would:
Require manufacturers to
prove a new drug is not only safe
but effective before they could get
rDA approval for its use.
Forbid misleading or false
labeling and advertising by drug
makers.
-Require drug manufacturers
processors and packagers to
register with the FDA each year
and to undergo FDA inspection
at least once every two years.
The new regulations were drawn
up under amendments approved
by Congress last year to the Food,
Drug and Cosmetic Act after de
formed babies were born to moth
ers who took thalidomide.
A FDA spokesman explained
that under the old law, only the
safety of drugs had to be proved
to win government approval.
The new regulations require
'clinical data must be adequate
to support a reasonable conclusion
that the drug will be safe and
that it will have its intended
therapeutic effects," he said.
Some clinical testing also must
lake place in the United States
unless the disease to be treated
does not occur in this country.
After approval, manufacturers
would be required to report to the
P'DA periodically on the actual ef
fect of the drug on humans, in
cluding immediate reports of un
expected side effects or failures.
The final printed label must be
submitted before the new drug is
approved. All new advertisements
and mailed promotional informa
tion on prescription drugs must
be submitted to the FDA.
All labels must he worded as
clearly as possible, the FDA said
The regulations crack down on
"artful word-smithing," fancy but
meaningless names, mention of
inactive ingredients and use of
trade names whose spelling or
pronounciation might lead to con
tusion- with established trade
names.
VVV It
: -
HELEN PRINCE MRS. SHARON MITCHELL
Two Queen Contestants
Picked For Mardi Gras
Two of the squadron queens-
elect who will be competing for
408th Fighter Group queen at the
Kingslcy Field Mardi Gras on
Feb. 22 are Helen Prince, 19,
and Sharon Mitchell, 18.
Miss Prince is a 1961 KUHS
graduate, with brown hair and
brown eyes, and is an employe at
the Kingsley base exchange.
Among her hobbies are bowling
and swimming.
She is the daughter of A.1.C.
Carl Prince, and considers her
hometown to be Ankara, Turkey,
where Airman Prince was sta
tioned for a number of years.
Mrs. Mitchell, Fresno, Calif.,
is representing the 827th Radar
Squadron at Keno Air Force Sta
tion, where her husband works
in radar maintenance. The Mitch
ells live at 382fi Boardman Street
in Klamath Falls.
The Mardi Gras festivity is the
first Kingsley Field activity which
has been scheduled lo raise mon
ey for the Intercommunity Hos
pital Fund. Eight squadron
queens-elect are vying for the
Fighter Group queen position. The
winner will be announced during
the evening ot reo. 22.
Hornof Rite
Held Feb. 13
MAUN Frank Hornof, 76, died
Sunday, Feb. 10, at Malin. Hornof
was a native of Mccholupv, Czech
oslovakia, and came to Chicago.
111., in 1904, where he met and
married Carrie Rader, Nov. 2,
1907. They resided in Malta.
Mont., several years before com
ing to Ashland, Ore., where they
lived for three years prior to
moving to Malin to make their
home.
Survivors are the widow, Car
rie; a son, Frank, Ixis Ange
les; and two daughters, Mrs.
A. C. Lins, Bremerton, Wash.,
and Mrs. Flovd Harmon, Malin.
Services will be at Ward's Fu
neral Home Wednesday, with the
Rev. Ethan Whitman in charge
of the services. Cremation will
follow in Portland.
Psychiatric
Care Awaits
Clift Girl
BOSTON UiPfi-,Su7.anne Clift.
21, niece of actor Montgomery
Clift, awaiting the birth of the
child of the man she admitted
shooting to death, today began in
tensive, 1 o n g-term psychiatric
treatment.
Miss Clm. live months preg
nant, escaped imprisonment Tues
day when she pleaded guilty to a
manslaughter charge in the shoot
ing death last Sept. 30 of Piero
B. Brentani, 27, her Italian-Swiss
boyfriend.
Superior Court Judge Lewis
Goldberg placed her on probation
for 10 years with the stipulation
that she voluntarily commit her
self to the Massachusetts Mental
Health Center until doctors decide
she is ready to take her place in
society.
Miss Clift previously was
charged with murder. Brentani's
nude body, a 22 caliber bullet In
the head, was found in her pad
locked bedroom of the exclusive
Beacon Hill townhouse she shared
with her socialite grandmother.
Her lawyer, Claude B. Cross.
said that Suzanne "wants to have
the baby it's all that's left of
Piero."
Following the hearing, Suzanne
said the ruling "will give me a
chance to be with my baby after
it comes. . .
"I expect the baby early in
June and I'm living for the day
it comes. H will be the first thing
in my life that w ill be truly mine.
It's the first thing I've ever
cared for.
The judge has given me the
first chance I ever had for a real
life." she said.
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Thunday, February 14, 1963
PAGE 1 -B
WW
vv,
'--iV-r--r n -fi i -J
ONE-TWO-THREE-FOUR Th number 2 plays an important part in the lives of the
four Walker men of Klamath Falls. Left to right are great - grandfather George
Walker, 82; Grandfather Noah Walker, 52; Father Don Walker, 22, and younq Billy
Walker, just 2.
Mathews Heads Devil Pup Program
The Klamath County Marine
Corps League recently elected
lolin Mathews, city fire depart
ment captain, as chairman of the
league's Devil Pup Screening
Committee at the group's meet-!
ing last week.
Other committee members
elected were Willys Solis.
three-year term; Sid Allen, two-
year term; Lawrence Mitchell,
one-year term, and "Swede"
L. W. Harroun, one-year term.
The committee will accept ap
plications from the league
members for boys between the
ages of IS and 17 and choose the
youths to be sent to Camp Pen
dleton to participate In a 10-day
Devil Pup program. The pro
gram emphasizes character build
ing and body building in a typi
cal atmosphere of strict Marine
discipline.
Six boys attended the camp last
year and the local league will be
able to send 10 this mimmer.
INCOME TAXES
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Surfaces of planes (lying at
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Aik about daily
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