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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1963)
-i . v, . P ' ,- " X - I- "f -. h , , ' .'l s "( - . ""A :t- HERALD AND .VEWS, Kfira.lh rfl. Or. MonJay, Wrcl tS, WSJ PAGE MODEL DISAPPEARS Disappearancs of mode! Chris tine Keeler, 21, above, two weeki ago in London, hai started rumors that British Secretary of State for War John Profumo was linked with the missing girl. In a per sonal statement in the House of Commons he denied any connection with the disappearance. He stressed there was no "impropriety" in his friendship with Miss Keeter. ' UPI Telephoto Oil Industry Hit By Over-Abundance Sisters Resent Push Into "Togetherness" By AN'V LANDERS really "self-pity turned inside Dear Ann Landers: We have out " (our children two boys and tuo! You usually make pretty good gins. The boys 18 and 1? haveieiue. 1 agree in this case that never caused usiyou are right. Now. 1 would like say trouble. jto know your views on prolonged They go with courtship. What do you think about the same group couples w ho go together tor years of teen aiders' and somehow never seem to get and get along (around to marriage? well together. j mw of a couple who have ine gins are.been dating lor 15 years. Is this IS and 15. They unhealthy? Mv initials are the got along iairlVsame as yours, A. L. well (though not as welt as the De(ir AL: B ,t ieorBi, bo si until about two years aso (h( couple, I've said It before and Ginger who is IS is full of lun and has a great many friends. Debbie does better in school but she s somewhat unsuccessful so cially. It is ironic that Debbie is much better looking than her older sister but not nearly so I'll say tt again marriage is not for everyone. Some couples "go together" like salami and rye bread but they are unable Jfor a variety of rea sons) to function within the rr ' I them marriage is a disaster and Ginger has always received a j lhfy are better off "going togeth- glt-dl llldll) IllUie 3MVH&MUUS tlldll Debbie. I've insisted that she ar-j range to bave Debbie invited or she must stay home, also. Lately she has become rebellious over this. I 'say sisterly love is more im portant than any invitation and that Ginger should not go where Debbie is not invited. We want your opinion. REFEREE Dear Referee: This Is no way ts enopurage sisterly love, moth er, iou are creating resentment Dear Ann Landers: I married too young like a b'g fool and had two boys before I was 19. My husband (if you can call him that i started (o chase with an old er woman. After three years of running around he asked for a divorce. I was sick of his cheating and lying, and was hap py to be rid of him. I had a wonderful opportunity to: take a road job but it meant between these sisters which may .boarding out my boys. Mom and well last forever, dad told me they would take Insist that Debbie make her " but onl-v if uM own friends. Ginger should not!adPt tlwm !eSaH'. I agreed, see- be placed in the unattractive posi 86 Rioters Face Court In Korea SEOI L HTf! - Eighty-six oi the IU9 perwns arrested here Friday for demonstrating against South Korea's military junta gov ernment w ill be court - martiaied on unspeeiiied charges, police said today. The other 23 have been released but a score o( demonstrators are believed to be in custody in othcr Korean cities, including five ar rested in Taegu Saturday. it was not certain immediately what would be done with demon strators arrested outside Semil. Gen. Park Chung Hee's junta. ignoring the demands of opposi tion politicians, was going ahead with its plan to hold a referen dum in which the people would be asked to approve its continu ance m power. Former students who led the uprising which overthrew ex-Prcs ident S y n g m a n Rhee in 19W threatened to rebel again unless Park abandoned the referendum plan. Political observers said, how ever, that it is doubtful whether the former rebels have enough influence over the present gener ation of university students to command much of a following IReds Face Revolt In East Berlin TULSA, Okla. (UPD - It is a simple but unpopular fact in the oil business: supply is exceeding demand. And ihe situation is get ting worse. New oil reserves are constant ly being discovered in this coun try and abroad. And more efli cient production methods and sec ' ondary recovery practices make more oil available daily. The industry is not sitting on its thumbs while this problem con tinues. It is answering the chal ' lenge by voluntary restraints on production and creation of new markets. Holding down production, of course, is the unpopular way. Commission Affects Production Tile Interstate Oil Compact Commission and the 33 oil pro- Grad Center Incorporated . SALEM (UPI Trustees for an Oregon graduate center took a final step here Friday toward be coming a legal entity. Eight of the 15 trustees attend ed the meeting. They adopted articles of incorporation. When the articles are signed and filed in a few days; they will formally and legally become the board of trustees for the proposed Oregon Graduate Center for Study and Research. They then will be in a position lo proceed with specific plans for financing and creating the Port . land area center. The intent is lo finance the center from private sources and through grants. Acting chairman Richard Sulli van, president of Reed College, told the trustees he was encour aged during a recent, trip to Washington, D.C.. to find "much interest" in the proposed center. He said signs were it would be eligible for a number of federal research contracts. ducing states that make it up has a tremendous effect on how much oil is produced. But it has no way of entorcing its recommen dations. The Texas Railroad Commis sion, after hearing nominations from producers, sets the oil-pumping allowable for the vast Texas resources, it is under pressure now to let the state's oil flow at a faster pace. Besides conservation practices, U. S. producers keep up a strong campaign to hold import quotas down on foreign oil, which can be produced and shipped for less than production costs in this coun try. Secondary recovery makes oil available from wells that would have written off a decade ago. With better technology, oil can be produced at cheaper prices, at least offsetting some of the loss of volume. But by far the best solution to the industry - wide problem is the finding of new markets. Look For New Ways The major oil companies are always looking for new ways to use oil. U. S. firms also watch the economic growth of foreign nations and count them as poten tial marketplaces. Scientists have found ways to make food from oil, to cover crop land with an oil-based product to keep moisture in, and to make new fuels. But these experiments have been on a company-wide has is and have not really produced a' major new market for oil. Earlier this month. Midwest- em gram-growers announced a possible solution for their surplus grain problem. A Texas research organization suggested distilling it into alcohol for mass use m auto mobiles for smog-proof driving. Whether the grain men succeed will depend on further studies. But the idea might be applied to them. Maybe it is time the producers joined file major integrated com panies in "brainstorming" and possibly finding a new market for large quantities of oil. lion of begging for an invitation for her sister. You are not being fair to either of these girls. Dear Ann Landers: I see by our newspaper that you firmly believe prolonged mourning is unhealthy. You say it serves no useful pur pose and long-time mourning is Tear Story 'Nonsense' WASHINGTON (UPl-The Pen tagon has described as "non sense a report that Defense Sec retary Robert S. MeNamara was in tears during an emotional mo ment while testifying before the! Senate subcommittee investigating the TFX airplane contract. "I am saving my tears for the person who made up that story." MeNamara said Friday night through a spokesman. According to a report heard at the Capitol, MeNamara was sup posed to have become upset and cried while testifying behind closed doors Thursday before the subcommittee looking into the award of the $5.5 billion fighter contract lo General Dynamics Corp. no other wav out. Two years have passed and I'm through with the road job and am now settled in town. My sons, 1 m sorrv to sav. are grow ing up like a pair of savages. They talk back to everybody and have no manners whatever. When 1 correct them my father says. 'Shut up. These bovs arc mine." What can I do?" HEART ACHES Dear Heartaches: Very little. When ysu allowed your parents to adopt the children you signed away your rights as a mother. Try to get the point across to your father that the boys need discipline and must learn io re spect others or they will be i problem to themselves and to ev eryone else. If you can enlist your clergyman's help, I heartily recommend it, By JOSKI'H FLEMING East Germans, in letters to nespaper Laisk-siertoog in the I nited Pre ss lateraatiaaal 'their newspapers, at t ommunist-1 province of Thurtn masked its BERLIN' IT! "Communism called forums and at factory meet-1 readers to write it n the theme "What Would Make Me Hapw." Alter four weeks the newspaper appealed to its readers to "I Mjrrecuy politically ft nsade this reeomnseadaJasji, st said, because morf of the let- means to us lies, threats iu:mgs, are asking why they nuclear weapons, the waii, barbed not visit Use Best " wire, forced evacuations, machine, Prnuemda Fails guns, the murder of refugees,! They say they have friends and! suppression. (relations m the west and want to! This excerpt fiorn a letter from see them. a resident of Leipiig to the The Cammwit propaganda Iters il received tied together hap-)1 .uneocan-run radio siaiwns campaign Sias tailed because It piaess and trips to the West, m West Berlin indicates the mood has provided m clear answers. ! Heal Rrasoa m the Soviet rone alter 19 month: East Gerraaa Communist leader (Juste Ztwrn. one of the wsasra1 of the anti-reiugee wall j Waller L'ibrichi set the tone of agiiaMrs assigned to make the!1 East Germans are fed up snd the campaign with the remarklwaM iisular. wrote in the Cscb-v they are saying so out loud. Theithat West Germans with relations muniit magazine Einheit that fbel' widespread dissatisfaction eveniin the East could move to East campaiKn was failing with wobms. had infected the rank and file oi Germany. 1 she reported, ior example, that I the Communist party. The esl Benin newspaper (sen she spoke at an East Beriaiset themselves at toraassibk W To combat aittt-wall feeling the',TagessBiegd. in a comment oniirawliisi? in favor of the wail a!iiwauu ihrv n mat Am il party has stepped up its propa- j the remark, saui, "The keeper has i woman in the audience got up and i real reason they halt the waD to ganda campaign to justify whathnvited us io move into his jail."ikft the hall. ikceu East German; Imm Beata. it cans us security measures pa lac discontent oi tast Germans, "I later Jearaed flsat he is all atone and her fafflBy lives fa West Germany. Her doBriaatasj feeling was her desire to see her re- kttons," Frail Zoerrt wrote. Party officials ia the Pstsdam district bordering m Wert Berta assigned "agitators" to vWt every house to explain the sersssity of the wail. "Often the agitation mast fsean inside the party because mere than a few comrades haie to be coavinced of Use correctatess of our measures," a Potsdam farty directive said. In fact, the Communists have ihe state bonier, iwas disclosed clearlv when Photoengravers Delay NY Paper Settlement NEW YORK d'l'ii A dead-1 publishers to start at 10 am. EST lock between publishers and MOiiodav, striking uhotuengravers tndav puslied the New York newspaper blackout into its WBth day. de spite a 3-2 vote by printers to end their walkout. Atlas Rocket Placed On Pad CAPE CANAVERAL iLPlt Astronaut Gordon Cooper's Atlas rocket was installed on a launch ing pad Friday for the attempt still about six weeks away to send Cooper on the longest space ride ever taken by an American The next project is the placing of Cooper's space capsule atop the rocket. That task is scheduled for April. ff the shot goes as planned, Cooper w ill make 22 trips around the world in a little more than 38 hours and return for a landing in the Pacific Ocean near Midway Island. The present American manned space flight record is six circuits by Walter M. Schirra Jr. John Glenn Jr., and Scott Carpenter made three trips each. The Court Records First parking meters in the Unit ed States were installed on the streets of Oklahoma City in 1M35. 1 STAR GAZER V 16 TAURUS WAV 2f OtMlM rz, wr 7k 1UMX iflMM7-35-33 Bt-76-81-88 CANCfC 6-18-51-39 tt.'2-50-46 uo r-5 . AUG. 23 -M- 35-41 J- 43-70-74 vttoo ,J SffT K -26-33 V37.4771 By CLAY K POLLAN K Your Doily Activity Gutd M According (o ih Stars. To develop messoge for Tuesdav, read weds correspond irg to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. 3 See 3!He"jf t.1 Pr- or i Trie 34 Ti7thr fr 0-cs S SiO'i si S-t H - A.;i.vj tlou'l 36 N St'P 3-Wm cF.fs lTe. ft'3i 7! ;rfcTG1)fl JA- 45Ari 7? we till A 31Q 7 f fVJ 15 V. nt n T5Mcy I6O1 4ft Sw 7 t. 17 fhrng 47 f v-h3d 77 Arlmnj iSB 40-dend 7?Dov jpcnr 49 S M 79W-.1 2 fitpo d 5! v- fn ft' O 22 Pev 9 52 O ? Thn 23v"Dton S. M 80' : ct $ T-. w "tf J " -hJ Sen ;90-t ft?Ar,t 30 Hor J BSfC 0 OCT. 23 4C 4- 5-13-160 II -49-57 vgr $COfiO XT 24 t NOV 73 12 27 2 52 f 9-82-8? , NOV DEC 2-10-15-201 KLMTH FULLS MUNICIPAL COURT TitSFFIC CASES Marcft 33 Paul Lsuls Bcllm Jr., excessivt t - noise, S?.SS. Warren A. SenseO, driving thrsusH pri vl cropH, SIS larlail. Anmonla K. SrsKn, rtn sioo sigt. S1H: rorfeil. Loren Kelin Chejinal. conlesl of jpetd, S25 lorlell. Roy Lee Csiiins, defecllve tall HqMs, S7.JS forleil; lailyf lo aim neadltghH, S7.S0 tortetl. Palricia, Cerlez; overllm sarkins war- rams Ifftel, ill fsrteir. cniteo rress iinernanonai prtvaw properly, sig iorfe?. Wesley V, slop, ran nop sign, forlert. Wayne Dallas Dahie, V8R ii in 3S, S10 lorleii. Raymond Daicore, no operaior'a license, V SO lerleil. Ben De Vore, overtime parking war-i rams tmoi, ss or(en. wary Anna Osygnerty, no operalef'a license, $?.55 Jar leil. Cornelius j. Oreen, VBR 40 In 30, S25 torren. Opal tee Hawkins, VSR 30 in 20, SIS forletl. James Hsssn, disobeyed slop sign. S10 forfeit. Gesroe w. KnigM. failed lo yield figni of way lo vehicle. $19 lorleit. Josepli . LyczycNl, fan red light, S10 rorren. Edwin I. Lyndberg, driving wrong way on one way slreel, J?.S0 ferfeil. Addte Newman tux, defeciiv oraites. $10 forfeit. checked the report, but could ob tain no verification. There were indications that he was emotion ally aroused during his testimony, but sources declined to describe his actions. Tlie UPI check covered more than a hall dozen Senate members and included interviews wilh sub committee staff personnel. All de clined comment on the incident. A I3-hoosg bargaining session ended late Sunday night w ith the two sides described by Wagner a. "stalemated." The photoeiseravers are de- Tlie printers, who had rejected manding a cut in the work week a $12.63 weekly package increase proposal a week earlier, reversed themselves Sunday and voted 1M2 to 1.7S3 to accept the con- ract terms. While Uie printers cast their ballots on 50 city votiaa machines at Madison Square Garden, their striking sister union, the mailers. used black and white marbles as ballots to approve their contract by 6 to 258. Says It's Wonderful jt's womlerfulf exclaimed Walter N. Thavcr, spokesman for! the Publishers Association of New York City, on learning that Hie printers had changed their stand. Mayor Robert F. Wagner called for a new round of negotiations between ihe photoengravers and Local . from K'a hoars to 33. which thev claim wouki be in line with their craft's work week in commercial firms. Publishers contend that re sulting increases in overtime pay would be too costly. Use printers maintained their picket lines today outside plants of the eight dailies involved in the shutdown. The union said they would keep picketing until a set tlement is reached with the photo engravers, whs went on strike last Monday. "We won't be back to work un til the photoengravers and we sign a contract, but that can be done very fast," said Ifertram A, Powers, president of Use Interna tional Typographical I man ilTui the w nessf . tcwo sii tvtr c tOv ttw . t r " B0UEB0N 'J years old SHiil The success of the "Ages' f I a.t,. ,r iiiiI I.XIH i.., .,.M.., !.'jeWii, atrfi&i.T '-if - 4 ! .1 f '4K JaKffitatW, Jfpwiv I3"- mh Penney's ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 8TH end MAIN OPEN DAILY 9;30 TO 5:30 FRIDAY NiTE TILL 9 P.M. turn, m ferltil. Witmen Edward McGtH, drMns Jftfmjgls Mvrc Noble Mtcftem. VSR 4$ in 15, James Eimr MfHer, grivNis fffif? prosit firoCferiT. $10 taritti. MicMC Thomas Meyer, Wit4 is rmm i?f way io vthlcie, lis. jami 8, Peirson. drJvins wrooj way m one 4 11.58 rafteil. mtmti Ry Pkkelt, ltd Is yield Ffsacis Ramuy overturn pFbs r. Roger Waycx $c hoc rr, u ism &e?rveer Aibtti Dean Shucy. eci$?t myfHtr Ism't Mr Sluirt, Imp? ct&tf itll tutn. (?s S'ubbi. ovtriim fti'k'mg 4ffasff Desa Emery Troi( firivia ftraygli srWmlt efjrfy. HO (tvftil, wesfif Wiitism amife. snwins mfSKJsn William . underoodf txaitivm ef iayregr mat JJ.S0 iorfeS. fft iU Isrttrt. Sim Ltrat Yoono, dtob frMic ia- K. Zather, dftvtog thtmtm P& fsrtert. end-of-monfh clean-upi i SORRY, NO HOLDS' NO PHONE CALLS! NO LAY - AWAYSI ASSORTED ODD LOTS, BROKEN SiZESt SLIGHTLY SOILED MERCHANDISE. REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT 300 PAIR MINS FINE TWILL SLACKS 100 corded col-ron firtelina twill in popular University Grad models. ! Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 8TH and MAIN OPEN DAILY 9:20 TO 5:30 FRIDAY NiTE TILL 9 P.M. LITTLE OA LEAGUE CAKCOtN AOUAfttuS n. it i 9-HM-35.E? b5i6-80-Bi eiit , 36-45-4 ftfO- I6572-78 NEW LOCATION - KUHLMAN INSULATION 1721 MAIN Call or step by eur "Houtt af Atum iftum" tor frf estimates an elamiftoffi sidina. roofina. car parts, petias, sterm wfnaowf efta doors. NOWf DOWNTOWN (USINESS CANOPIfS! t.ip5 Marvin KuMfntfl KUHLMAN INSULATION Ph. 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