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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1963)
to V JANNY 6URK Jenny Burk ; Named Queen BONANZA .Janny Burk. a I junior at Bonanza High School, vwas crowned basketball queen : during the half-time cremonies of the Bonanza-Matin game Feb. 22. I She was escorted in to the gym I bv Eddie Simmons, captain of . the basketball team, and crowned vby last year's queen, Judy Ter- . . pening. -. Other attendants and their es-i :corts were Glenda Albert with . Wayne LaHoda, Virginia Harris .'with Fred Dearborn, Linda Mc ?;Fall with Billy Newlun, and Kathy Angel with Tommy Seater. Participating in many school activities, Janny is presently a varsity cheerleader, junior leader of the 4-H Sheep Club, and chair man of the junior-senior banquet. Past positions she has hold in clude class vice president, news reporter, and junior varsity cheer leader. . Woman Safe After Fall Into Well SANGER. Calif. (UP!) - Mrs. Inez Hiscock. a 50-year-old house 'wife, walked out into her back yard Tuesday morning to turn off a leaking pump. Suddenly the earth collapsed under her. Speechless with surprise, she tumbled 20 feet into a dank, slimy well. She had the presence of mind to reach out and grab a projecting board at that level. Armpit-deep m mud, she found her voice and yelled. But her husband was away on a business trip and no neighbors were within earshot. For 32 hours. she clung to the slippery board in tlie backyard well, half im mersed in mud. Help came when her employers became concerned; site had missed two days of work. As constable Val Vallez and others approached the house, they saw Mrs. Hiscock's three Siamese cats sitting around the crude hole in the earth. 'I'm fine, I'm okay," the plucky housewife calmly told her res cuers as she was lifted from the well with a rope. A physician at, Sanger Hospital, where she was treated for shock and exposure, said she was in "surprisingly good condition. Vallez found her survival "sim ply amazing." I"""" " w ' " ""ft fl II V J ' 1 ALFRED A. MONNER Photo Art Show Slated tltOM' ti (WtlUU HirVtlt l ' BIGGER THAN KING KONG I mm Vt OIII IT1VIITII I tjl I N.V. OAIIV NVt Cotoramo aturtt- litvv f- i.r lAi Book Given To Schools The American Legion's educa- tion and scholarship handbook. Need A Lift?" containing in formation about hundreds of col lege and vocational School scholar ships for qualified high school stu dents of this area, has been pre sented to high school libraries in the city and county by Klamath Falls Post No. 8, American Legion. This annually revised publica tion for the 1962-1U63 school year is recognized as one of the most complete and up-to-date sources of career and scholarship informs Uon in the United Stales. Charles Poteet, post command cr, stated that thousands of young people have not taken advantage of the generous educational aids which are available due to failure to plan early for their future education. He mentioned In particular the Junior GI Bill which provides up to $110 per month for four years of educational help for sons and daughters of veterans who lost their lives as the result of mlli tary service. Over half the young people eligible for this help have tailed to apply. Parents and students are urged to make use of the copies of "Need A Lift?" provided at a service to the community. M lulOICOff 4 J UMMANC STEVE REEVES Photographic works by Alfred A. Monner will be displayed at the March exhibit of the Klamath Art Association which opens Sun day, March 3, at the Maple Park Gallery. Entitled "Images from the Earth," the show will be open to the public without charge from 2 to 5 p.m. and will continue at the same time each Sunday through March 31. Alfred Monner was born in Port land in 1909 and spent his early years on a nomestead and cattle ranch in Central Oregon near South Junction. He returned to Portland with his family In 1023, and after graduation from Wash ington High School in 1027, he worked at the Portland Public LI brary. In 1930 he enrolled at Lin- field College and the following three years he attended Universi ty of Oregon night classes, begin ning the serious study of pho tography. Monner has been a staif pho tographer for the Oregon Journal since 1939. In addition to his news paper work, his photographs have appeared in numerous national and professional magazines includ ing National Geographic, Time, Look, Life, Sunset, and Aperture. Exhibiting in many juried and invitational exhibitions, Monner has had entries in the United States Information Exhibition, 1957, shown in Europe and Asia; "Photography at Mid-Century, the loth anniversary at George Eastman House, 1959; Boston Art Festival, 1961; national invitation al photography exhibition, Lin coin. Mass., 1962; and in several Oregon photography exhibitions as well as a one man snow Visits Teacher Mrs. May Sullivan of Spring Lake Road is spending a few days in Red Bluff with daughter Mau reen (Sister Mary Tcrencine) a teacher at Mercy Academy, where she graduated some time ago. The young teacher graduated from Sacred Heart High School Open Court Bill Rapped By Justices SALEM lUPli Former Ore gon Supreme Court Justice Jamcsi T. Brand said Wednesday a bill to open courtrooms to telecast and broadcasts would violate the con stitution as well as disrupt court room procedure. ' Tlie bill, sponsored by Hep. Kes slcr Cannon, R-Bend, would per mit television cameras and micro phones in courtrooms subject to rules and regulations issued by the presiding judge. Cannon, a raJio station ex ecutive, said such coverage now is permitted in Colorado and J Texas. , He said modern-day equipment would make coverage scarcely noticable. He said telecasting and broadcasting would be at the dis cretion of the judge, giving ample protection to tlie dignity of tlie courtroom and to witnesses or jurors unwilling to be photo graphed. Would Violate Spirit Brand said coverage in Texas and Colorado was permitted by judicial regulation, not legislative act. He said the proposed Oregon law would amount to "the legis lative department trying to control the conditions of the judicial in clear violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of constitutional scpara tion of powers. Brand told the House Judiciary Committee tlie American Bar As soclation has reaffirmed Canon 35, which opposes cameras in court rooms and which is respected in 43 states. Brand denied the Cannon bill as now written would leave cover age up to a judge. v The former justice also said courtroom coverage would "tend to dramatize" the behavior o f judge, jurors, witnesses and attorneys." Is there anyone who makes the same talk to 12 men as 100,000?" he asked. He said newsmen would cover only tlie "racy" cases, jurorsi would be conscious of the fact all the folks back home" were watching, judges would handle the gavel with an extra flourish, and attorneys would lean toward ora tory. ft ':"::t "r l Benefit Lunch Set At Store A benefit spaghetti luncheon with the proceeds to go to tlie American Cancer Society will be held at the new Oregon Food Store on Shasta Way, during the hours of 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., .Saturday, according to Dorothy Dlckcrson, publicity chairman of the Klamath County chapter of the cancer society. In addition to spaghetti, the bill of fare will include garlic bread, cottage cheese salad, coffee and soft drinks and will be sold for 23 cents per plate. Salesmen of the various products will cook and serve the luncheon. WILBUR WOMER Talks Dated On Security . Information on Social Security status will be given to tlie public at four meetings to be held in Klamath County during March, by Wilbur Womer, manager of the local Social Security District. The talks will be of especial in terest to those eligible for retie- ment, survivors and disability ben-; efits, with emphasis on farm families. Meetings are scheduled for March S in the Bonanza High School Gymnasium, March 7 and 11, Klamath County Fairgrounds and March 14 at the Gilchrist First Methodist Church. The same subject will be presented at each meeting. Time is 8 p.m. All present Social Security laws are two years old; Tlie last chang es were in 1961. The meetings arc sponsored by the Oregon State Extension Serv ice. Womer began his work with Social Security in the accounting office in 1939 in Baltimore, trans ferred to Olympia, Wash., in 1941, to Seattle in 1945 and to Klamath Falls. Social Security is now serving 4,050 persons in Klamath County with a total of $287,000 per month. Starts it . mWih-iiiv, mi -w "if ir' HEFIALD AVD NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Thursday. February 18, 1961 High Sugar Price Blamed On Kennedy Control Program By Democrat Leader WASHINGTON IL'PI'-A Demo cratic congressional farm leader said today the American house wife could blame the Kennedy ad ministration for the recent boost in sugar prices. Chairman Harold D. Cooley, D N.C., of the House Agriculture Committee said the United States faces a long period of high sugar prices unless Congress revamps the sugar control program pushed through Congress by the adminis tration last summer. He said the prices American re finers must pay for raw sugar had risen one-half cent a pound since the program was adopted reaching a 24-year high- of 6.9 cents on the New York market Tuesday. Cooley said he and his commit tee were subjected to "a barrage of propaganda, criticism, slanted newspaper articles, cartoons and pressure because they fought against passage of the adminis tration bill. Therefore, he said, he would sponsor legislation to junk the ad ministration's program and pro tect the American consumer "only when those who got us into this mess indicate clearly that they now see the error of their ayt." Under the administration-spon sored program, the U.S. Treasury benefits when world sugar prices are below U.S. prices. The new program permits the government to take advantage of the lower price in the. purchase of a part of the foreign sugar this country needs. The Treasury pockets the price differential. Under the old system, which Cooley favors and to which he wants to return, U.S. sugar pur chases were parceled out among foreign suppliers through a sys tem of marketing quotas. Under this system, the foreign producer enjoyed a "price premium" when the U.S. price was higher than the world market price. However, and this was Cooley'sl Weather Temperatures during the 2-1 Gifts Okayed By Society The Oregon Genealogical Soci ety has incorporated in Eugene for the purpose of establishing a gene alogical research library in the Eugene area. The action now permits the receiving of gilts and property. The society s membership, now totaling 112 researchers through out the state, is actively engaged in giving mutual assistance in research by way of workshop meetings, beginner's courses, and in providing a correspondence course for interested persons and members hi more rcmate areas. The research library will be open to the public. Officers all of Eugene will be headed by Mrs. A. A. York as president. hours ending at 4 a.m. PST today. High Low Astoria 52 44 Baker 47 29 Brookings 61 43 Medford 55 35 Newport 52 37 North Bend 58 46 Pendleton 53 41 Portland ' 53 44 Redmond 54 33 Salem 51 43 Tlie Dalles 58 45 Chicago 26 22 Los Angeles 78 57 New York 31 22 San Francisco 69 53 Washington 31 28 Northern California: Cloudy througn Friday. BOB'S Self-Service Laundry 1711 Mela TU 4-234 Da It Yeumlf r W.'ll De It for Yeu! Wash-Dry Dry Clean W. Glt SIH Gram Stimpi central point, the old system pro vided that when wcWd market prices were higher than the U.S. market price the foreign supplier was required to deliver sugar at the lower U.S. price or eb-e suffer loss of part or all of his usually lucrative marketing quota. When the administration-sponsored law was enacted last July, the price of sugar on tlie world market was 2.5 cents a pound be low the U.S. price. Since then, the world price has skyrocketed largely because of poor harvests in Europe, Cuba and elsewhere. The world price now is slightly higher than the U.S. price. Cooley said the new law already has cost American consumers $17 million in higher sugar prices. He said the cost will amount to $110ljgg million if prices remain at cur rent levels for the rest of the year. The price differential which tlie Treasury collected before the world price soared above the U.S. price totaled $9 5 million. . LARGE EL0CKW00D Quality Stove ond DIESEL OIL 7 DAYS A WEEK! CRATER FUEL CO. Ph. 4-9757 How to tell a Tempest from just any low-priced car Does it have Wide-Track? Does it have a lively 4? Does it offer a phenomenal V-8? Does it look like this? Optional at extra cost Now there are two kinds of Wide -Track cars Pontiac and Tempest SEE Y0U AUTHORISED PONTIAC DEALER F0 A WIDE CHOICE OF WIDE-TRACKS AND GOOD USED CAS, TOO ECCLES MOTOR CO. 606 So. 6th Sf. Klamath Falls, Ore. JIM TAYLOR MM UHMKLIUN m mm 1VRIIE Heston Mimieux CUMINS fuUYEM DARREN w YVBTTE T0NITE ! MCI CHIN Dmn Open 4tS JAMES iV'WnO'Howland U'yJtS-- V Sloan I Dean vV ...who ffr .1 g ,..th ilittr I 1 '...the , challenged - . 1 who daftad I .Sjj f hlf.cat S hl "Jt ht WndJ - ..- l wheat love i '.. .fckVi lt, " III; Utanl ",nmm -Jf ,urn,d jfmT. ratw . 1 I love-netl i V- , ""Sly K 'f I jL,JWJ!J l ..the native ' ' , tfV'sfl reached f-- V fl ')! I W 'd' i- . .. ustmm Color ht'f" r4 Taylor Wins Essay Prize LAKKVIEW-Jim Taylor, Lake- view High School senior, was the winner of first place in the Ameri canism essay contest sponsored by the American LcRion and will receive a prize of $3. His essay will also be entered in state com petition which offers $35 for first place and $20 for second. Jim is the ward of .Mr. and Mrs. Burt .:nos of Lakeview, and is a brother of Mrs. Amos. He has made his home with the fam ily since the death of his parents when he was a sm-vLrhild. A second place pri.e of $3 went lo Nancy Lantz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lantz, Route 1, Lakeview. Lnnuic Schadlcr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schadler of Adel, was the third place win ner, with a jirize of !. The title of the ssay was Americanism TNT Today Not Tomorrow" and was open to both senior and junior divisions o the high school. There were no en tries in the junior division here, and 2 papers were judged in fin als of the senior section, all o( whom were from members ol the senior class. Aune MacMahonElizabeth Allen wwMARGUERrrt Roberts..-", kinjumm n Jerry Bresler txt Guy Green Klamafh Futti, Onnn Publltft4 dtily (aiopl Sil t and lundaf Sfrviftfl leuiMrti Ora and N Drift rn California V Klamath PublnMnf Company Main at Bipianada PKona TUttM 4-S1M W. twtaltom). 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