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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1963)
i PLANT DESTROYED Fire destroys the main plant and dry kiln at the M a r y s v i 1 1 e, Wash., Shake Mill Company. The estimated damage of the fire was $500,000. Only six employes were in the plant at the time of the fire. Workers said the plant just seemed to burst into flames. UPI Telephbto Graduate Courses Set For State Universities PORTLAND (UPll-A program which would allow graduate stu dents to take courses at both the University of Oregon and Oregon State University was approved Monday by the curriculum com mittee of the State Board of High er Education. Chancellor Roy E. Lieuallen said the joint-campus plan was designed to permit graduate stu dents at cither school to take' ad vantage of the special strengths of both schools. It is part of drive to expand graduate study in the state. Lieuallen said the program! could go into effect this fall Board members envisioned the program being expanded even tually to provide an exchange of . professors, library books and in struct iona 1 materials, improved exchange of research findings and perhaps a shuttle bus service be tween the two campuses 40 milesi apart. Members of the board w ere scheduled to continue their meet ing here today. Bond Issue Approved In other action, the beard's fi nance committee approved plans for a $10 million self-liquidating bond issue to pay for construction SCHOLAR William Rainey Harper, first president of the University of Chi cago, graduated from Muskingum 'College. New Concord, Ohio (home town of astronaut John Glenn) at the age of 15 and received his Ph.D. from Yale when he was only 18. Reds Capable Of Laughing I HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon Tuesday, July 9, 1963 PAGD EDITOR'S NOTE: Comedian Danny Kaye hit Wen attending the Moscow filni festival u an American ambassador of good will. In the following exclusive dispatch, he tells of sharing laughter with the Russians. projects on several campuses. The funds will be used to con struct Cascade Hall dormitory andj athletic facilities at Southern Ore gon College; a dormitory and a commons building at Oregon Tech: an addition to Hunt Hall and two new dormitories at East iern Oregon College; a college Center addition, parking facilities and a swimming pool at Portland Slate college; a health service building, heating plant additions! and a central food building at the! University of Oregon, and mis cellaneous land purchases. The board approved a building at Oregon College of Education which will serve as a new method laboratory for teachers and as a show-place to display how wood can be used in school buildings. OCE President Dr. Leonard Rice said he hoped to raise the $650,0(10 necessary for construc tion from private contributions. The plans have been financed by Stanford University s School Plan ning Laboratory. A $564,877 contract for construc-l tion of a women's dormitory at the University of Oregon Medical and Dental Schools in Portland! was awarded to A. V. Peterson Co.. Portland. The board approved a modified budget designed to make its ex penses for the next two years1 fit the budget slashes made by the state legislature. The budget includes merit raises! and a new salary schedule for college teachers, but it curtails plans . to strengthen graduate! study research in the Portland area. By DANNY KAYE W ritten For IT I MOSCOW (UPI I Believe it or not, the Communists are just as capable of laughing as the guy next door. I didn't come to Moscow to see tlie men who run the Kremlin or to clown for them. I didn't come merely to see the sights of Mos cow s third International r um Festival, but ! certainly did come to see the people and to reaffirm my belief that laughter is truly universal. Before leaving the United States, 1 had some reservations about going to Russia, even though I was extremely curious to see what it was like. I had originally declined to at tend the film festival, but when the State Department urged me to go to Moscow on a people-to-people mission and when the! United Nations Children s Fund iUNICEFI asked me to visit So viet children's institutions, I read ily accepted. I thought that in a country where the political ideology is so diametrically opposed to ours, in a country where the mere men tion of capitalism causes a nerv ous twitch, in a country where our society is frowned upon, I feared that people would not re act quite the same to laughter. I found, however, that they do react to laughter with warmth and friendship and that they have the same emotions, fears and hopes that we have. I had a better opportunity to observe the people in Moscow than possibly any other city I have visited in recent years, be cause 1 quickly discovered that I could walk in the streets com pletely unnoticed. None of my pictures has ever played here and no one knew who Danny Kaye was. As a matter of fact, when I was coming to Mos cow one Russian movie fan asked, "I hear she is a good actress. Is she pretty?" The cloak of anonymity was helpful because it gave me a greater opportunity to watch the people in everyday life. When 1 landed in Moscow I was startled to see entire families watching planes land and take off just as thev do m New York, Los An geles, or any other large capital citv. When I took a walk in the mid dle of Moscow one night, I saw a group of boys teaching some girls how to do the bessa nova right there on the sidewalk. I chuckled because that could have been anywhere in Greenwich Village, the Sunset Strip in Hol lywood (or Gollyvood, as they say in Russian'. I have talked with Soviet offi cials, actors, film producers, bal let dancers, factory managers, welfare workers, nurses, doctors, hospital attendants and many others. But just about the best fun 1 had, and one of the most exciting experiences, was an aft ernoon I spent playing with 600 children at a pioneer (youth or ganization! camp. My visit was arranged by Prof. Georgy Mitricv of the Soviet Red Cross and Red Crescent. It was met at the camp by the children who didn't know me from Adam but almost all had bouquets of flowers. All they were told was that I was an honored American guest an actor. A little 9-year-old girl made a presentation speech in halting English but perfectly understand able that is to say understand able to me. It was really very touching. I kissed her check and suddenly she got very embarrassed, but then I pretended 1 was embar rassed too, and covered my face with my hands. The reaction was immediate. From then on the children lost any reserve they had. Even though the children and I could not talk to each other, I found that behaving like a child with children made for immediate communication. Wo played games, sang songs and danced together. It could have happened anywhere in the world. It leaves me w ith the hope that someday, somehow, our children will grow up in a peaceful, happy world. Ban On Discrimination Move Returns To Senate WASHINGTON (UPI - Burke Marshall, the Justice Depart ment's civil rights expert, goes back to the Senate today to press for the administration's proposed ban on discrimination in public businesses. Marshall faces more question ing by Sen. Strom Thurmond, D- S.C., of tlie Senate Commerce Committee, which is considering the administration s controversial public accommodations bill. The hearings are expected to continue into next week. MCTO COMPLETE LIQUIDATION N! ALE Barry Needs More Backing WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen John G. Tower, R-Tex., a leading supporter of Sen. Barry Gold water, doubts that the Arizona conservative can win the GOP presidential nomination solely by a dralt movement. "He'll have to announce his de cisionone way or the other by the first primary," Tower said Sunday In a television interview He appeared on Meet the Press -NBC. Tower said New York Gov Nelson Rockefeller's chance for the nomination have been dam aged by his divorce and remar riage. But, Tower said the "back Barry movement was gaming momentum before Rockefeller married tlie former Mrs. Mar- garctta (Happy) Murphy. If Goldwatcr does not win the nomination, Tower said he would urge him to remain in the Senate rather than accept .the vice pres idential nomination. AT FORMER ROGER'S 2nd HAND STORE 2626 Laverne Corner of Washburn Way SAT. & SUNDAY -10 A. This is a complete LIQUIDATION SALE! We ore cleaning out to the bare walls. Nothing held back! No gimmicks! No bid-ins! EVERYTHING MUST GO. This building has been leased for a new business! Look at this partial list of items that you will be able to buy at your price: Two House education and labor ubcommittees also scheduled hearings on bills designed to im prove Negro opportunities. One subcommittee called three Negroes to testify on a bill that would withhold federal fund; from segregated schools. The wit nesses were Rep. Adam Clayton Powell. D-N.Y.; Dr. Itufus Clem ent, president of Atlanta Univer sity, and James farmer, nation al director of the Congress of Ra cial Equality (CORE). Anthony Celehrczze, secretary of health, education and welfare, was called by the other group considering a bill to expand the federal program of teaching lob skills to the unemployed. Other congressional news: Space: The House Space Com mittee hoped to end its review of the $5.7 billion budget request o( the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The committee probably will rec ommend a cut of $488 million. against previous advice of Prcsi dent Kennedv and key U.S. space officials. The group already has called for a $393 million cut in manned space flights and ad vanced space sciences. Economy: Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon and Robert V Roosa, Treasury undersecretary for monetary affairs, appear be fore tlie House-Senate Economic Committee. The issue; How the administration hopes to trim the U.S. balance of payments deficit and stem the flow of U.S. gold abroad. War: The Senate Foreign Rela tions Committee hears a closed door briefing by outgoing U.S. Ambassador to Saigon Frederick E. Noll ing Jr. on the war in South Viet Nam. l Push up your with First Federal Space men might be reaching for the moon. 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