VP' DENNIS BARRY J it., MYRENE CUNNINGHAM Top Schoors Seecfed U Merr High School MERRILL Top scholastic hon ors of the Merrill High School sen ior dase were achieved this year by Dennis Baity, valedictorian, and Myrene Cunningham, saluta lorian. both 12-year students in Merrill schools. Dennis, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Barry, maintained a grade average of 3.39 for four years of high school. His school activities include membership in the speech club and lettermen's club, 19(i2 Boys' State representative, and vice president of the senior class. Recently his essay on the history of Merrill was one of two selected from Merrill to be entered in an essay contest sponsored by the Tulclake Rotary Club. Dennis plans to attend Oregon State University upon graduation and will major in mathematics. Myrene. 18. is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cunningham. With a high scliool grade average of 3.29, she plans to attend South ern Oregon College and major in home economics. During high school Myrene was a member of the pep club and GAA, student librarian for two years, secretary and news report er oi tne student council, senior class officer, and a member of the annual and newspaper staff. She has also served as past president of Theta Rho, presently holding a slate office, and is active in 4-H work. Graduation exercises will be held May 31 in the Merrill High School gym, with baccalaureate in the Merrill Presbvterian Church on May 20. The junior-senior ban quet is planned May 4 and the dance Mav 11. Navy Finds Meningitis At Center SAN DIEGO i bTIi The fourth case of spinal meningitis among Naval Training Center recruits in the past week was confirmed by the Navy Friday. Robert E. Leheuquet, 19, son of Mrs. Leon Leheuquet, Milwaukie, Ore., was admitted to naval hos pital Thursday night. He was re ported in critical condition Friday. Navy officials ordered men ofi Recruit Company 119, of which he is a member, quarantined. Re cruit Company 118 was quaran tined Thursday when David . Hall. 17, San Leandro. Calif., was stricken with the infectious disease. The latest outbreak of the dis ease began last Thursday when Thomas C. Hester. 20. New Or leans, a member of Recruit Com pany 129. was stricken. The com pany was placed under quarantine lor three days and was qua:an tined again last week when anoth er member of the unit, .lohn G Ronton, 18. Manchester, da., re ported sick Tuesday morning and died that night. Officials lifted the quarantine on Company 129 Friday morning be cause no new cases had been reported in that unit. The current outbreak is the sec ond at the sprawling training cen ter during the past month. The first outbreak began March 10. Five recruits were slricken and one died. STAR GAXJEK0 ARKS yW-J MAR. 22 54-78-80-901 TAURUS APR. 21 MAY 21 37-39-42-57 '64-77-84-8 GfMMI rj MAY 22 JUNE22 ,48-5640-631 65-68-74 CANCIR JUNE 23 JULY 23 h 5- 7-20-25 D uo 1 JULY 24 4-11-14-17 36-43-81-871 VUGO yft AUG. 24 & SEPT. 22 ! 10-1 2-15-33 66-69-82- -Bv CLAY R. POLLAN- f Your Doily Activity Gutdt J According to the Sfort. To develop message for Monday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. 1 Constant 31 Stort 1 Mit. ? Rtecorat 32 Yog t2 Wov 3 Step 3 Don't 63 Meeting 4 Your 34 Or M New 5Btrtf 35 To 50r 6 ForKird1 36 Lois 6ft Legil 7 Jom 37 You Most 6 Work 3S Making 68 Musicol 9Tints 39 Con -9 Attain 10 Ptrtact i0 Repair 70 For 1 1 Gam 41 Be.ng 71 Your 12For 42Colm 720f 13 And 43 Try 73 Chotn 4S 4iBuy 74Circ't 15 Attending 45 Mod 75Proiiort loAggresvv Aft Paves 7C'dit 17 Someone's 47 Borrow 77Th 18 Bury 48 You'r 78 You 19 Someone's 49 The 79 Ne -30 The 50 Partner 0 S ing 21 The ' 51 The 81 To . 22 Rtodv 52 Sun 82 Taxation 23 Hatchet 53 Shines 83 Snare 24 To 54Helpi , 84 Storm's 25Hovride 55 On ' 85 Fnfntj. 26 And 56 Expected ,. 86 Over 27 Effort 57 Down 87 Help 28 Money's 58 Or 88 Time 29 Promote 59 Ask 89 Matters 30 Person 60 At 90 Deal Good (g)Advfr NeutMl OCT. 23 sfs 2-1 3-40-61 df 7 72-83-88 SCORPIO OCT- 2 tJiii NOV 23 3- 6-19-22.rO K4-29-32 V" Sagittarius NOV 23 DEC. n fi' I59-70-76 Vr. LIMA IPX. 23 CAetlCOBN DSC 23 MKT 30 4 18-21-23269 Pl.38-79 85t, AOUARIUS 'AM 21 Ft.. It ,J -52-53-55(C FEt; 20)Jj. WAJ.'2I. 3 1- 8- 9-27 AT 16-51-6? WiJ Midland Grange Names New Steward, Pomona A new steward and pomona were elected at the April 3 meet ing of the Midland Grange at 8 p.m. in the Grange Hall. Guy Gal lelti will he the new steward and Sylvia Andricu was chosen pomo na for 19M. At the regular business meet ing. Home Economics Committee Chairman Alice Hoover reported that the H.E.C. would serve for Ihe Extension Festival at the Klamath County Fairgrounds April 23. About 200 people are ex pected to attend the affair. The next H.E.C. meeting will he held May 7 at 1 p.m. at the Power Bill Okayed WASHINGTON (UPP-The Sen ale Interior Committee Friday roc ommended passage of legislation li, give the Pacific Northwest tirsl call on federal power produced in Ihe area This came on a voice vole in a brief closed session and paved the way for the bill to reach the Senate floor. The bill, introduced by Interior Committee Chairman Henry M. Jackson. D-Wash.. would give Northwest power uers preference r.ver those in other areas in the event (lie Bonneville Power Ad minislration system is intercon reeled with California. the area that firm power needed Q by Pacific Northwest industry would be drained away because 1 home of Grace Stork of Midland James Flowers, who gave the legislative report, said it would be a good idea for some grangers to run for public office. Flowers also discussed tax reduction for farmers, the zoning issue and the Presbyterian Intercommunity Hos pital proposal. Youth Committee Secretary Ida Scala said she has application blanks for the State Grange schol arships and any youngster is el igible who has completed one year of college and is a member or have parents or grandparents that are grange members. The next regular meeting will be held Wednesday. April 17, at 8 p.m. at the Grange Hal and there will be a no-hnst potluck dinner. Aid Refused Aged Masons SPEECH MEET WINNERS These Merrill High School speech students won the first place trophy in the Klamath County High School Speech Festival held March 28 at Chiloquin. From left are Alan Hobson, special speaker who introduced several speakers; John Chatbum, Jean Lyman, Lois Hobson, Suianne Kandra and Betty Ann Chapman. Merrill Orators Win County Speech Contest students were victorious at the Klamath County School District Speech Meet held at the new Chil oquin High School March 28. Merrill students who were coached by Frances Koortje took home Ihe championship trophy. The meet was direclcd by Janet Navv officials said there was. nnlClark. language arts teacher at The Merrill High School speech . Barbara Pitts, Malin and Linda Met all, Bonanza: persuasive speaking; Lois Hobson, Merrill humorous interpretation; Suzanne Kandra. Merrill; Diane Melsness, Bly, and Rick Trullinger, Hen ley. Judges for the meet were Mrs. Robert Davies, Mrs. H. F. Smith Mrs. Carl Goldshy, Mrs. Joseph apparent connection between the two outbreaks. The 20.000 navvmen at the cen ter were ordered to take medica tion Thursday after Hall was stricken. He was reported in seri ous condition at naval hospital. Officials said there wore no plans to extend the quarantine at tile present time. All 12.000 re cruits at the center were quaran tined for four days after the first outbreak last month. Two Unions Join Strike Chiloquin and Howard Bingham. secondary supervisor of the dis trict. The quality of the blue-ribbon speeches indicated that the Mer rill group will be strong contend ers at the Oreson state ispeecn Meet at Corvallis April 18 to 20. First place w inners in the vari ous events were: roetry; bynn Nickerl. Henlcv: Nondice McFall. Bonanza and John Chatburn, Mer rill; radio; Tom Brown, Malin: serious interpretation: Edith Pitts, Malin and Fred Castro. Gilchrist: impromptu; Sherri Col lisler. Gilchrist and Betty Ann Chapman. Merrill; ex tempore: Lois Hobson. Merrill and Alex Sapiens, Bonanza: alter dinner: SALEM (UPD Residents of the Masonic and Eastern Star Home at Forest Grove are not eligible to receive old-age assistance, Atty. Gen. Rnlwrt Y. Thornton said today. Thornton said that so long as residents of the home receive liv ing requirements equivalent to those provided for by the Stale Public Welfare Commission, exist ing law does not allow them to re ceive welfare aid. JACKSONVILLE. Fla. IUPP Two operating unions joined pick ets from 11 non-operating unions Friday in sinking the Florida East Coast Railway (FECI. Labor Secretary Willnrd Wirtz was trying In get Ihe FEC back lo full-scale operations at the time of the walkout. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and the Order of Rail way Conductors and Brakemen, already out of work since tile non-operating unions struck Jan. 23. went on strike at 12:01 a.m. This will be the first strike by operating unions since a recent Supreme Court ruling that rail roads may abolish "featherbed" jobs. Wirt met with FEC President William B. Thompson in Wash ington Thursday in an effort to find a possible solution lo the walkout that began when FEC refused a 10.28-cenl-an hour wage hike for the II unions. Thompson said he told Wrilz (here was no possibility of end ing the strike if the unions per sisted in the demands made at the outset of the dispute. But he said he would "stand by" for fur ther talks with Wirtz. Wirtz said he plans to discuss the strike with labor leaders to day. The slate Railroad and Public t'tilities Commission got inlo the dispute Thursday by ordering the FEC lo resume regular opera lions or face the possibility of n stiff fine. Commission Chairman Edwin Mason ordered the carrier back lo full-scale service or to show cause by April 15 for not obeying the order and why it should not be fined. Pact Ends News Strike CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPH Ma chinists and printers ratified new contracts Thursday night bringing an lend to the record 127-day Cleveland newspaper strike. Bui publishers of the morning Cleveland Plain Dealer and the Scripps-Howard aflernoon Cleve land Press, with a combined daily circulation of about 700.000, said they had no plans to resume pub lication before Monday. Ratificalion by Ihe International Typographical Union of a 20 month contract came 20 minutes after the International Association of Machinists approved a pact providing a $0.75 wage increase ever 25 months, plus $2.70 hospital ization benefit increases. The printers contract called for $5 pay increase in the first year, with $2.50 oi it retroactive to Oct. 1. 19(i2, and a similar pay increase to be effective Oct. 1. Wfrl. Fringe benefits were set al 3.!)5, including increased hospital ization, sickness pay and pensions, provision for four weeks vaca tion after 20 years also, was in the pact. All picket lines at the newspaper ants were withdrawn. Riker, Arlene Skaugset, George Callison, Joe Mercer, H. F. Smith and Eugene Larsen. White peacocks never are found in the wild state. HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Sunday, April 7, 1963 PAGE S-A House Turns Down Request For Fallout Shelter Funds WASHINGTON I UPH In a 'Voted by the previous Congress battle on the House floor this double economy move, tlie House for the program. wnich wiu pr0vjde the first Appropriations Committee Friday denied extra funds for stocking fallout sliellers and refused Presi dent Kennedy's request for $500 million in new emergency public works. The committee, handing the Re publicans the biggest victory to dale in llieir current economy drive, decided that: Civil Defense boss Sluart L. Pittman could get along without Sfil.9 million in supplemental ap propriations. He said the money was urgently needed to complete a fallout shelter program with space and supplies for 70 million persons. It would not grant one cent of the $500 million in emergency public works requested hy Ken nedy to help head off a possible recession. The government now has almost $1.5 billion in applications from communities around the country seeking federal funds to help fi nance local projects. But the government has run out of money A House appropriations sub-lreal test of the sincerity of the committee, headed by Rep. Al-jbudget-cutting drive. The question bert Thomas, D-Tex., had drafted is whether the members are will- a bill containing $450 of the $500 million sought by the President. But Ihe entire committee, on a 22-19 vote, knocked out all of the funds. Five southern Democrats joined 17 Republicans in the surprise action. The GOP triumph could bu only temporary, however. The action could be modified at some later stage of the appropriations process. The committee denied extra funds for stocking Ihe fallout shelters despite a warning that 3 million to 8 million lives might be at stake. The committee's action set up a ing to forego federal funds re quested by their local communi ties for various projects. INCOME TAXES Sa Your Reltoble Incom TAX CONSULTANT CHAS. HATHAWAY Auditing Bookkeeping 120 N. 10th TU 4-5473 WE PREDICT Hi the Weather will be BEAUTIFUL this Weekend Have PALM SUNDAY DINNER at the Cattle Crossing Cafe Fort Klamath Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY Kim Leaves Movie Set LONDON (UPH A spokes man (or Seven Arts Productions: said Friday that "at this point we do not know whether Kim Novak has or has not walked out" on the film "Of Human Bondage." She left Dublin for London Thursday night without telling any one," the spokesman said, 'and we have been trying to find out all day what she ' intends to do. "We undersland she planned to go to Paris. But we do not know whether she will appear on the set Monday as she is scheduled to do." If Miss Novak does not show up, new approaches may be made lo Elizabeth Taylor who was of fered $1.5 millon lo lake over the role last week if and when it became open. But some officials of Ihe film company are worried by Ihe over tures to Miss Taylor, who cannot be covered by insurance because of her illness during the filming of "Cleopatra." Miss Novak apparently camcj here to see her close friend.! journalist Roderick Mann of (lie Sunday Express. They were to- gether constantly in Dublin where the film is being shot. Meanwhile, the Daily Herald said Miss Taylor, c u r r e n 1 1 v ! in London, had turned down the $1.5 million ofler to play the "Of Human Bondage role opposite Lawrence Harvey. DKAR MR. MANNED HOUSTON. Tex. (UPD - A let ler arrived at the space agency's Manned Spacecraft Center Friday addressed to Mr. NASA Manned, Pub. Affairs Off., Comm Rr., Spacecraft Center, Houston 1, Tex. 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