PAGE ft A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
Thursday, March 21, 13
Dunsmuir
Eyes Road
Link Plan
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iGood
DUN'SMUIR-A Sl,100,000 proj-
cct proposed by the stale division
of highways to link Dunsmuir
proper and north Dunsmuir met
with little opposition when pre
sented to the city council Monday
night.
The project, scheduled to Ret
under way early next year.
eludes construction of a frontage
road bridge across the Sacramcn-
to River canyon, parallel to the
four-way Interstate 5 freeway
bridge which is now the only link
between the two halves of the
community.
Herbert Miles, Redding, district
engineer for the division of high
ways, said at the meeting that
studies show intra - community
traffic coming on and off the hea
vily traveled freeway constitutes
a grave hazard. Conversion of the
north Dunsmuir expressway Into
a full freeway has been updated
because of this intersection con-
gestion. Miles said,
General features of a freeway
agreement were approved by the
city in December, 1958, with the
understanding that construction
was at least 10 years in the fu
ture.
The project presented for city
approval Monday night will com
plete only one phase ot the tree-
way plan. In addition to the two
lane bridge across the Sacramen
to River, a two-way overpass
will link Siskiyou Avenue to Park
Avenue at its southern end. Inter
sections at Stagecoach Road and
the north end of Siskiyou Avenue
will be closed.
A traffic interchange at Pros
pect Avenue to complete the full
freeway project will not be con
structed at this time, Miles said.
Principal objections to the planlwed the high tribunal s ruling
1 Kind 31 M. rjnd
2 Fin. 32 Too 62
3 Rd 33 RomonttC 63 Oidn
4 Moke 34 G.H. 64 Sfc
SB 35Good 65Fooo
6 Use 36 In 66 Publy
7 Word! 37r.m 67fj"ig
SB. 3S 5wrol 68 Expiotfung
9 Jingling 39 To 69 ltos
10 Shop 0 Understood 70 Train
11 An 41 Do 7IL.khf
1 2 Words 42 N. 72 Movw
13 For 43 Rusty 73 Wiring
WLMtsr 44 Or 74AdSmrtiie
15 All 45 Am 75 And
!6Sur. 44 Advice 76 Sign
17 Your 47lnv. 77Conrort
'18 Shorp 48 And 78 Acro
WPrtporad 49 En-mow 79 Count
20 Coins 50 Put 80 Your
21 Around 51 Your UlSrort
22 UnKpKd 52 A 87 Portnerlhrp
23 N. 53 Music 83 You
24 Getting 54 imphsrMntl 84 And
25 Dor 55 SocmiI 85 Intonttom
26 Your 56 Anrorss 86 Woy
270thm 57LiHki 87 Now
28 "Pull" 58 Brtlf 88 Soving
29 Gel 59Fstrvir 89Drido
30 To 60 Thrill 90 Action
JAd-rcnc
2 Six Students Involved In Thefts
SCOOTO
4MS.26-37C-I
-87VSI
154-63-73 V;
CAmcorN
DEC 23
MAR.2I .
students who were involved in nu
merous burglaries and larcenies
since Feb. 2.
The investigation of these
crimes and the subsequent ar
rests come in the wake of con
tinued discussion and concern
over the growing disciplinary
problems the school administra
Court Spells Out Legal
Protection For Indigent
WASHINGTON UPI)-Thc Su
preme Court has spelled out rules
to insure that needy persons get
full legal protection when they
face criminal charges in state
courts.
The high court acted Monday
in four cases involving the Issue.
In the most sweeping decision it
reversed by a 9-0 vote a 20-year-old
ruling and held that state
courts must provide free legal
help for indigent defendants in
criminal prosecutioas.
Previously, the court had ruled
that such legal aid was mandatory
in cases where there was a pos
sibility of the death penalty or
under special circumstances
such as denial of fundamental
fairness.
The decisions partly ovcrshad-
came from residents of Siskiyou
Avenue, who felt their access
to the freeway would be awkward.
Miles replied that the interchange
design was dictated by federal
specifications limiting access to
the serving of areas.
Proper signs, lighting and pe
destrian walkways were promised
by the highway officials present.
Councilman F. M. Creason
charged that the division of high
ways is bankrupting the commu
nity by removing valuable prop
erty from the tax rolls. Miles said
this project will require purchase
of only two homes, a filling sta-
tion. and a restaurant. The res
taurant building could be moved
just west of Its present location
and stay in business, Miles point
ed out.
Mayor David Anderson asked
that tlie council be given until its
next meeting to consider the
plans. A discussion session will be
held by the council Friday at 1
p.m. in Die city clerk's office,
with representatives of north
Dunsmuir business houses, Siski
you Avenue residents, and the
planning commission to review
various phases of the plan.
Concert Set
In Lakeview
LAKEVIEW-Voral. piano, and
violin numbers will be presented
at the concert to be sponsored by
the Lakeview Parent Teacher As
sociation at 3 p.m. Sunday,
March 31, in the. junior high
school auditorium.
Vocal selections will be pre
sented by Mrs. Edward Zarosin-
ski, Mrs. Hal Hargreaves, Robert
Shotwell, and .John Jordan. Piano
numbers will be played by Mrs.
Philip Lynch, Mrs. John McDon
ald, and Mrs. Henry McCor-
mick. Mrs. Sam Lonidier, a for
mer instructor in Hie local schools
and now a resident of California,
will play tha violin selections.
Piano accompaniment (or the
vocal selections will bo furnished
by Mrs. Herbert Sanderson, Mrs.
E. J. Busacker, and Miss Janet
Farris.
Tlie concert is a fund raising
project of the PTA, and tickets
will be available at tho dour.
Mrs. Bob Cover Is chairman of
the arrangements.
Monday that Georgia's county unit
election system is unconstitutional
because it discriminates unfairly
against city dwellers in favor of
rural voters. The vote was 8-1,
with Justice John M. Harlan dis
senting.
Others Have System
Maryland and Mississippi also
liave unit system election laws but
Mississippi's statute is rarely
ased. Georgia did not use the sys
tem in last November's elections
because its constitutionality had
been challenged in the courts.
In the main decision affecting
Indigent defendants, the high
bench overturned the 19(11 convic
tion of Clarence Earl Gideon who
was sentenced to five years In jail
on charges of breaking into a Bay
Harbor, Fla., pool room. Gideon
had acted as his own trial attor
ney.
Speaking for tlie Supremo Court
Monday, Justice Hugo L. Black
said: "The right of one charged
with crime to counsel may not be
deemed fundamental and essential
to fair trials in some countries
but it is in ours . . .
"Tliis noble ideal cannot be re
alized if the poor man charged
with crime lias to face his accus
ers without a lawyer to assist
him."
Gives No Definition '"
There was no definition in tlie
Black opinion of what constituted
a criminal case or how far down
in tlie scale ot offenses the re
quirement for counsel should go.
Justice John M. Hurlan, concur
ring in a separate opinion, said
the requirement should clearly be
applied to an offense like Gideon's
which carried tlie possibility of a
substantial prison sentence.
'Whether tlie rule should extend
to all criminal cases need not
now be decided," Harlan said.
Legal authorities declined to go
into detail on the scope ot the
decision but said that it undoubt
edly would have its greatest im
pact in Florida, Alabama. Missis
sippi. North Carolina and South
Carolina.
Other Actions
On other indigent actions, the
court:
Voted 7-2 that a needy de
fendant must be supplied with
court-appointed counsel on his first
appeal of a stale criminal action
The decision won further Califor
nia court proceedings for William
Douglas and Bennie Will Mcyes.
two Los Angeles men convicted
of robbery and assault charges.
Ordered another state court
hearing for George Robert Brown
who was sentenced to death in
Indiana for a 1937 robbery-mur
der. In Brown's case, tlie state's
public defender refused to pursue
his appeal further after losing an
initial series of legal moves.
City Polite Juvenile Officer I tion has been pointing to at KU,
Hay Howard released information the separate jurisdiction of school
Wednesday concerning the arrest and parental responsibilities and
of six Klamath L'nion High School it he arguments over split shift
and extended schedule at the
school.
Three of the youths involved
are juveniles and their cases will
be handled by Francis Mathews,
county juvenile officer. Mathews
said that hearings for two of the
boys have been set for April 1
A hearing for the third juvenile
will be scheduled at a later date.
Robert W. Johnson, 19. Bisbee
Hotel, was arrested March 13 on
charges of burglary. Johnson is
suspected of being involved in the
burglary at Albers Feed Store,
South Sixth Street and Washburn
Way, at 8 p.m. on Feb. 18. He was
released on bail.
One of the 17-year-old juveniles
was arrested March 12 and ad
mitted he had taken part in the
burglary.
Ray Howard's initial investiga
Sewed Arm
Recovering
BOSTON lUPIi A 13-year-old
little leaguer is regaining use of
Ins right arm that was sewed
back on after it was severed in
a train accident.
Massachusetts General Hospital
officials said Tuesday that Everett
i Red I Knowlcs of Somerville can
move all five fingers on the in
jured arm, can move his wrist
in one direction and has feeling
his upper arm.
Ballot Urged
SALEM UPli-Leadcis of both
parties urged passage of a bill
Monday that would divide Multno-
fn.lh r'niiniu inln 17 t-lmico onrl fl
riu ui umy a UuUui u, pcnale "single-member" districts
At present all Senators run at
and sling on the arm, which is
out oi a cast. ,rge Tne l7 Representatives arc
Doctors said there was good elected in four districts,
reason to believe that the sense I Witnesses said voting for a sin-
of touch would return to the tie Senator and a single Repre-
fingcrs. tentative in a smaller district
Everett's arm was torn from would make it easier for the voter
his body near the shoulder when end the legislator or candidate to
lie fe from a Boston and Maine Know eacn otner.
freight train while hitching a ride,
last May 23.
A team of Massachusetts Gen
eral Hospital surgeons, headed by
Dr. Ronald A. Malt, performed
the delicate scries of operations
which to date have made medi
cal history.
"Although it is still too early to
make predictions about tlie ulti
mate extent of recovery there are
some hopeful signs," a hospial
official said.
"Many months of observation
and treatment are still in pros
pect," he added.
tion into this series of cases began
when Oregon State Police recov
ered tools, a radio, spurs and oth
er riding gear hidden along the
Old Fort Road.
The articles were identified as
those stolen in the feed store
burglary.
Kenneth Ellis, 18. 2110 Wiard
Street, was arrested for stealing
a transistor radio at Montgomery
Ward March 13. Ellis appeared in
district court and was sentenced
to one year probation.
Delbcrt T. Steppe, 19, also 2110
Wiard Street, was arrested after
he was implicated in the theft of
two tires and wheels from a ve
hicle belonging to Conrad Hart
on Feb. 2, while Hart's car was
parked at 1371 Lakeshore Drive.
Two of the juveniles were in
volved in the theft with Steppe,
according to Officer Howard.
Steppe also appeared in district
court and was sentenced to one
year probation.
Other cases cleared in the in
vestigation by Howard and Officer
Culp, Oregon State Police, after
the six youths were apprehended,
were the theft of a outboard mo
tor and sanding machine from a
boathouse at Lake of the Woods,
March 9. and a break-in at an
other Lake of the Woods cabin
owned by B. L. Gressett. Med
ford. Gressett determined that
nothing had been taken in the
break-in.
Two other cases cleared during
the over-all investigation were the
thefts of a license plate from a
vehicle owned by Richard Teater,
UNIQUE HONOR
PHILADELPHIA UPI - Miss
Mildred Custin, president of tlie
Bonwit Teller Store, Monday was
named "Man of the Year" by the
Chestnut Street Association.
DOWNTOWN
OFFICE SPACE
Inquire At
GUN STORE
714 Main
23 Applegate Street, and the at
tempted theft of a Pacific Power
and Light Company car Feb. 2,
while it was parked at 1990 Fre
mont Street. Police found the car
several blocks away stuck in the
mud and abandoned by the would-
be thieves.
Howard said that another ju
venile who is suspected of being
involved in the rash of robberies
from a Klamath Falls Distribut
ing Company truck was taken into
custody this week.
Tlie police juvenile officer said
iiis investigation will continue and
the search for articles not yet re
covered will go on.
He disclosed that numerous cas
es of shoplifting in Klamath Falls
and Medford stores were uncov
ered during the investigation so
far. Howard informed the Med
ford police that he has in cus
tody tools, clothes and a transis
tor radio that were shoplifted in
Medford.
Some of the stolen articles have
already been sold, and much of it
probably won't be recovered, he
said.
Howard told the Herald and
News he has determined that
many of the thefts these six boys
were involved in had been com
mitted after the youths had
skipped school.
STORE OPEN
FRIDAY NIGHTS
TILL 9:00 P.M.
Farmers! Loggers!
Bulk Gasoline
Competitive Prices
TANKS AVAILABLE
Cliff Yaden's
SERVICE
2560 So. 6th TU 4-3681
OPEN 24 HOURS
Big Dance!
WEE WEE
SPOT
Dorris, Calif.
FRI. & SAT.
March 22nd & 23rd
WESTERN and
POPULAR MUSIC
COME ON DOWN!
BRING THE GANG!
The Spot is Under
New Management
& MONTGOMERY WRD
NO LAUGHING MATTKR
NEWARK, N.J. iL'PD-Giggling
is no laughing matter as far as
police director Dominkk Spina is
concerned.
Spina started an inveslignlion to
find out Just who were the two
women heard giggling over a pa
trol car radio curly Monday.
KEWSPVEIS
suimnsT!
KM
9th & Pin. TU 4-3118
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