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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1963)
t I. She Loves Him Despite Temper By A. LANDKKS Dear Ann Landers: Please ex cuse the mistakes in this ie(ter. I liave two black eyes and one oi them is com pletely shut. 1 married a man I knew only tluee weeks. He seemed like f such a perefet I '"'f S'ntleman 1 V dfcwun i could hardlv he. lieve it when he knocked out my pivot tooth on our honeymoon. He loses his temper over the silliest things. Like last night he hit me because the TV broke down. He said 1 should "watch those things." We've been married less than seven months and I've already spent $380 of my own money wilh the dentist.' I've had so many bruises and shiners I've lost count. When I ordered beef steak from the butcher yester day he said, "To eat or for your eye?" I'm ashamed to go out in the neighborhood anymore. Please help me. Ann. but don't tell me to leave him. I love this man. He is truly wonderful be tween these spells. Thanks a lot. QUEE.ME Dear Quccnie: So you love the man and you don't want me to tell you to leave him. Kine. Slay with him until he scrambles your brains and puts you in the hospi tal with a fractured skull. Perhaps when your money is Rone, and your credit at the blood bank runs out, you'll write for some advice you can use in stead of telling me what not to lell you. Dear Ann Landers: I am a col lege graduate, 26, and have been dating a very beautiful girl since last February. Lila is 21 and she is really terrific. The only thing missing is that she refuses to express an opinion. Last night the two of us had dinner and instead of going to a movie I suggested a long drive. I wanted to make one last ef fort to get her to talk about some thinganything. Her contribution to four hours of conversation was as follows: "You can say that again." "Well, I'll be darned." "Isn't that the truth?" "A n d how!" When I asked her direct questions she replied, "I don't know how I feel about that." Why would a girl be so reluct ant to express herself on any subject whatever? Please ex plain this mystery. 8TH WON DER Dear 8th: Don't look now. Bud dy Boy, but the girl is brainless. If she had an idea it would prob ably give her a headache. And if you can listen to "And how!" "You can say that again." "Well, I'll be darned" for seven months and call the girl "terrific" you obviously do not require intellec tual stimulation from your female companions. Dear Ann Landers: Three cheers for you. You've scored again! You've given frustrated American parents across the con tinent the key to handling their children. In your reply to "Ma ple Leaf Mother" you said, "Teen-agers have a truly magni ficent way of living up to their parents' high opinion of them." I'm a teen-ager who can tell you from experience that this approach really works. I used to live next door to a girl my age who was being raised by an aunt and an uncle. They told her she was "no good" so often that the poor thing finally got into the worst kind of trouble. She had nothing to live up to. My parents have always made me feel trustworthy. They just expect me to live up to their high opinion of me. And I would rather die than let them down. TEEN 16 Dear Teen: And three cheers right back to you. And a loud hurrah for your parents, loo. Let ters like yours brighten my day. It's good to bear from someone who chooses the high road and discovers il. leads to happiness. Monday. August 26, 1963 PAGE HERALD AXD NEWS. Klamath Falls, Oregon "DENNIS THE MENACE" "m MA 'Its A SMIL SAME. No MATTER WHO WINS. ME AN' DAD WAYS SET A TV DINNER1. Red Delegation To View U.S. Reclamation Sites BOISE i UP1 1 Southern Idaho, eastern Oregon and Washington eclamalion developments will be viewed this week by a delega tion of seven Russian irrigation specialists. Officials of the regional office of the U. S. Reclamation Bureau said the Russians will tour the region under a 1962 agreement between the United States and Soviet Union calling for certain exchanges of information. The seven Russians arrived in Idaho Sunday evening from Salt Lake City and spent the night at Twin Falls. Tuesday alternoon the group will go to Eastern Oregon (or Mexican-American Organization Builds Strength In Different Type Of Racial Conflict In Texas EDITOR'S NOTE gro demonstrations crushes the spirit as much as out right segregation, Fuentes feels rucntes, 33, is stale executive secretary of the Political Associ ation of Spanish-Speaking Organ izations (PASO i. PASO is growing rapidly. Fuen tes said it is organized in more than 50 Texas counties, part of which have more Mexican-Ameri cans of voting age than Ameri cans of other extraction. The battle cry of PASO is po litical and economic eciualitv. But Education TV visits to the Malheur River si phon and the Ore-Ida Company food processing plant at Ontario. On their way back to Boise, the Soviets will stop off at the Crook- ham Seed Co. plant at Caldwell. Later Tuesday evening Hie Rus sians will enplane from Boise for Pasco, Wash. From a Pasco base they will inspect Columbia Basin irrigation projects and the Grand Coulee Dam. While Nc occur in other states, a Latin-American movement for political and economic advancement gathers strength in Texas. It is I'ASO, the Political Association of Spanish-Seaking Organiza tions. PASO has directed t h e takeover of one city's govern ment in Texas. It looks on this as a start. PASO (First Of Twol By PRESTON MCGR.UV I'nitrd Press International CRYSTAL CITY, Tex. (UPD - The way Albert Fuentes Jr. sees it, the Mexican-American is worse olf than the Negro in Tex- LjCiritS OkflVGd WASHINGTON iUPH - The Department of Health, Education and Welfare today announced ac ceptance of several new applica ions for federal assistance to es tablish or expand non-commercial educational television facilities. They included: Oregon Stale Board of Higher Education for $208,258 to expand facilities of Channel 7 at Corval lis; lolal project cost $277,678. Oregon State Board of Higher Education for $106,2112 to expand facilities of Channel 10 at Port land; total project cost $141,723. When an application is accepted for filing, il means the applicant has met initial requirements of application procedures. Such ap plications are reviewed and eval uated to determine whether and, in what amount, a grant will be approved. and other southwestern slates. The Negro has a tangible cause segregation. He can dem onstrate against it and seek help in courts. The Mexican-American, accord ig In Fuentes, is not segregated. He can go anywhere, and every where he finds himself tolerated but not accepted. tolerance, but not acceptance. WWI Veterans Plan Fair Booth I he Veterans of World War 1 will have a registration booth for World War I veterans and their wives or widows at the Oregon Stale Fair in Salem. Aug. 30. The booth will be in the com mercial exhibits building, second building to (he left, or west of the 18th Street gale. its leaders, already successful men, appear to be driven as well by a Dinning desire for more than tolerance. Win One Election Crystal City is PASO's show piece. Last April a slale of live Mexican-Americans took over the city government from a city council that other Americans al ways had dominated. Crystal City has 9,500 resi dents 85 per cent of whom are Mexican-American, 14.5 per cnt of whom are not Mexican and .5 per cent of whom are Ne ro. The 14.5 per cent white non- Mexicans pay 65 per cent of the taxes. Those whose heritage is not Mexican (called "Anglos") in Crystal City do not like this new government. They arj trying toj do something about it. M. Dale Barker, editor and publisher of the weekly Zavala1 County Sentinel, summed up the Anglo attitude as follows: "We have no objection to officehold ers of Spanish extraction, but we do object to outside interests coming in, directing things and putting puppets in office." By "outside interests," Barker meant PASO and a local of James Hoffa's Teamster's Union, SCHOOL SUPPLIES JONES' OFFICE SUPPLY 629 Moin TU 4-4197 which provided the backbone in Crystal Cily for the Latin victory. Represents Cannery Workers "If they would just let us alone we wouid have something real nice here," Mayor Juan Cornejo said. Cornejo (pronounced cor- nay-hol is the local agent of thel Teamsters' Union, and his Anglo constituents call him "Mayor Corney-Joe. Tlie Teamsters Union got into Crystal City politics because it represents approximately 100 workers in the California Packing Co. canning plant in Crystal City. The cannery workers are not only 100 per cent Latin; they also are the best-paid workers in town, according to Fuentes. And since Ihey work under outside contract, they cannot be intimi- dalcd. Fuentes and his boss, Albert Pena Jr., 43, live in San An tonio, 120 miles to th-5 northeast. Pena is a lawyer, a commission er in Bexar County 'San Anton io) and state chairman of PASO. Fuentes and Pena, the father of PASO, see their Crystal City victory as the beginning. They al ready are organizing an assault on the county government in Za vala County in next year's pri maries. Seek Negro Aid They also think that PASO can work itself into a coalition with Texas Negroes, union members of all races, and ultra-liberal members of the Democratic par ty. Pena, in an interview, cited these figures: In 1960, there were 900,000 Latins and 830,000 Negro of voting age in Texas. HOUSE HONORS HALLECK WASHINGTON (UPO - House Republican Leader Charles A. 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