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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1963)
HERALD A VP NEWS, Klam.lh Falli. Orrgon WHwriiy, ARMED FORCES NEWS August St. 1963 PAGE s A Pvt. 2 Larry E. Fox, 17, son of Mrs. Robert Hclmick. 2452 Eberlein Avenue, arrived in Okinawa recently with the 503 Army Airborne. Fox enlisted in the Army Jan. 1, 19M and had six weeks of . basic training in Fort Ord, Calif., and after 15 days' leave at home he was flown tn Fort Benning, Ga., where he spent six weeks at jump school. He will be stationed in Okinawa LARRY E. FOX 18 months. Fox attended high school in Morrill and Salem. Philip E. Anderson and Mor ton E. Le Beau recently joined the Marines, according to the local Marine Corps Recruiting Of fice. They enlisted under the "Buddy Plan," which will enable Ihcm to stay together during their training period. After 12 weeks of recruit train ing and four weeks of individual combat training they will have a 20-day leave before assignment tn school or permanent duty. Anderson and Le Beau are both 11163 graduates of Sacred Heart Academy. Anderson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. Anderson, Route 3, Box 417 and Le Beau is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Le Beau of Top penish. Wash. Dennis Cross. Mount Shasta High School graduate, is spending a month's leave from the Air Force with his parents, the Roy all Cross family. He has been stationed at Goodfellow Air Force Base in Texas. Following his leave the Mount Shasta man will be stationed in Alaska. He was a standout ath lete during his high school days where he excelled in high hur dles. Marine Pic, Earl B. Brinsnn, son of Jesse D, 'Brinson, 4630 Clinton ' Avenue, recently cum pletcd a week of testing and screening at the Naval Air Tech nical Training Center,' Memphis, Tenn. During the week he received a battery of aptitude tests and an interview by a senior staff non commissioned officer to determine his aptitudes for technical train ing in preparation for specialized duties with Marine aviation units. Army Sgt. l.C. Theodore S. Clawson. 38, son of Mrs. Bessie E. Clawson, 2021 Homedale Road. is one of more than 75.000 armed forces personnel who par ticipated in Exercise Swift Strike III, a U.S. Strike Command ex erase in Georgia and North and South Carolina. Swift Strike III pitted two task forces against each other in a month-long mock war which end ed Aug. IB. Clawson. an assistant opera lions sergeant in Headquarters Company of the 2d Division's 2d Battalion, 87th Infantry at Fort lienning, Ga., entered the Army in August ItiSO. The sergeant attended South ern Oregon College. Ashland. His wife, June, lives in Columbus, Ga Army Reserve Lt. Col. Alfred P. Jelley, 40, son of Mrs. Sadie E. Jelley, Route 1, Mount Shsta, completed the reserve associate command and general staff course at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College. Fort Leav enworth. Kan., Aug. 10. The five-year course, compris ing 120 hours of instruction yearly at Army training centers through out the nation, prepares students for duties as commanders and general staff officers. The final two weeks of the course are held at the college during the officers annual active duty training peri od. The college, the Army's senior tactical school, was established in 1881 as the School of Applica lion of Infantry and Cavalry. Colonel Jelley is regularly as signed to the 4152d Army Reserve Service Unit in New Orleans. La He is a 1939 graduate of Willcox 'Ariz.) Union High School, re ceived his bachelor's degree in 1913 from the University of Ari zona. Tucson, and his master's de gree in 1954 from Tulane Universi ty. New Orleans. La. The colonel is employed by the Freeport Sul phur Company in New Orleans He and his wife. Marguerite, live at 5910 Alfred Street, New Or leans, La. Bruce R. Baxter. USX. son of Mr. and Mrs. I). L. Baxter, 111 Second and West. Alturas, recent ly completed nine weeks' basic training at the Naval Training Center, San Diego. Calif., gradu ating at the weekly Recruit Bri gade Review involving some 3,000 men. The training included naval ori entation, history and organization: basic military regulations; ord nance and gunnery: damage con trol: shipboard routine and sea manship: sentry dutv: military drill and physical fitness; swim ming, first aid and survival. During their training period re cruits receive tests and interviews which determine their future as signments in the Navy. Upon completing the program they are assigned to service schools for technical instruction or to ships or shore stations for on-the-job training in a Navy rating specialty. Naval training produces the power behind scapower by sup plying qualified personnel to man the ships, aircraft and shore sta tions of today's Navy. Armory Funds Are Authorized WASHINGTON l'PI - The Defenne Department Monday au thorized S300.0O0 for a new Na tional Guard armory in the Port land area, according to Rep. Wal ter Norblad, R-Ore. The state will be expected to contribute another $143,000 and purchase the land. The armory would house Headquarters and Headquarters Company, First Bat talfon, 162nd Infantry Regiment, and Headquarters and Headquar ters Company, 162nd Battalion engineers. Man Revolts Against Number Identity, But Digits Continue To Grow EDITOR'S XOTK The "numbers game" the length ening lUt of digits tacked on to the name of every Anieriran ii becoming an increasingly dominant factor in modern computerized culture. The fol lowing dispatch, the lut of three, reports on the past and speculates on the future of the numbers system. By BARXKY SK1HKRT I'nited Press International Your grandfather couldn't have played the numbers came. The gradual replacement of hu- LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE )2 DOWN rrj ," j5 19ACR055 , vtrr 1 6 across) ;J - 5 across jm 8 TT TT J I lh- - ,-TTT -r-. W K man identity with numbers is product of the mid-2ixh Century. In the 19th Centurv birth re gistration was uncommon aiwt a task for the churches in many areas. Death certilication was not required. There were no credit cards. Social Security numhers or Federal Bureau of Investiga tion iingerpnnt liios. Military serial numbers came into existence with World War 1. lt wasn't until tlie final decade of the 19th Centurv that airtn li. censing began. Before that, many were suspi cious of numbers Puritan Oliver Cromwell said. "A few honest men are better than numbers." Abolitionist William Lloyd Gar rison said, "The success of anv great moral enterprise does not append on manners. Beilhy Porteus. nn lllth Con Shasta Rotary Plans Barbecue t MOUNT SHASTA The Mount Shasta Rotary Club will stage a barbecue on Saturday, Aug. 31. with the proceeds going to the ciub's scholarship fund. A grad uating senior will be selected at the end of the school term to re ceive a $500 scholarship award. Chiefs for the barbecue will be George Thebolt and Martin Cooper, both members of the lo cal school board. The cost w ill be S2 for adults and $1 for students. tury poet, said, "Princes were privileged to kill and numbers jsanctified the crime." Samuel Johnson said, "Round numbers are always false." Essavist Syd ney Smith said. "Nothing was so fallacious as lads, except fig ures." But 20th Century man accepted the motto of Uilii Centurv Gpr- 'man mathematician Adam Riese: "figures don't lie." With the multiolicilv of num. hers, the gradual conversion of identity into a digit is causing many 20th Century scholars concern. Semanticist S. I. Hayakawa ol San Francisco State College says "A man needs recognition of him self. He needs to le identilied as a unique individual. He doesn't want to be known hv a numher and lie will rebel against it and the system." Sociologist Bruno Bottelheim ol the University of Clucaco savs the numbers tame "is a Dart of the general mechanization of the world m winch we live. It is a symptom of the general deper sonalization of society. We must take steps to preserve the dig nity ani identity ol me individual." Even in the prisons, where "It is significant that the in-Alexander said. every man has a number, herent dignity of a man's name But such isolated revolts show there was revolt against the num-jneed not be taken away from him'no sign of stemming the numeri- bers systems. I merely because he enters orison." leal avalanche elsewhere. M y r 1 Alexander, Southern """""""""" Illinois University criminologist and former assistant director of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, said the trend away from numbers be gan in the federal penal system about 25 years ago. Numbers are still used in fed eral prisons, but only for record keeping, and prisoners are called by name, not number. WALLS CLEANED BY MACHINE ftetrrgrfl for prrfrrt rruIU. NavM paint and rrdrcnrilin. Ytr t fc timatri. BARRY'S llnmr Wall riraninf S?rvl till HolUhlrd hi. 1'h. 11 i-HHM TRY IT AT THE LUCCA CAFE 4is-i S World Famoui-Dtlicioui S j: BROASTED j CHICKEN j PIZZA PIE S Rial Italian Styla S Rio I Italian Sty' Orders to Go, Too LUCCA CAFE PHONE TU 4-3276 2354 S. 6th QiaMl11 Dance 9udio IMr HOTEL sswartavc ? OJDAII MAIM NROLL HOW O BALLET TAP ACROBATIC BALLROOM TRANSPORTATION for KINDERGARTEN and all DANCE ART CLASSES Attention KINGSLEY FIELD Thurston Studio will have transportation for MamthaJlsMseai ENROLL YOUR CHILDREN NOW SIX ACCOMPLISHED INSTRUCTORS Call the Wincma, TU 4-4181 or TU 2-3244 ,niieu FAtvRE syndicate" -xc-tM jooh '8 'nino 'asnoH N33JIO "C 'SMVlflDONia T umoq -33,131 '6 '!!30iin8WVH '8 'wrma v 'noii '9 "i3NNfiJ s 'abva 'i oj'v 'So3MSNv Liquor Banned In Washington WASHINGTON (UPI) - The nation's capital was bone-dry for today's civil right march. The District of Columbia com missioners issued an order ban ning the sale or serving of alco holic beverages by bars, restaur ants or package stores from midnight Tuesday until 2 a.m., EDT, Thursday. The Liquor Dealers' Associa tion e s I i m a t e d the shutdown would mean a loss of more than SI million in regular business. COLOR TV SPECIAL! Widest part of North America is from Labrador to British Co lumbia, about 3.000 miles. Q A. Why give your favorite student a really fine pen when he'll just lose it? PARKER won't let him lose t it. If he does it will be replaced free GUARANTEED AGAINST LOSS FOR ONE FULL YEAR! (5re dMlils intirif Pttpi 41 bn) Now there's no pvcuse (or not giving students a really fine fountain pen. And the Tarker 45 is just thai. Solid 14K gold point that comes in seven widths, extra-fine to hroad. The 45 is "ron'vertihle," ton. Load it with a car tridge, or slip in an ingenious convener and fill it from an ink bottle. (Great (or students who are afraid of running out of ink during a tough exam.) For only $5 you get the pen, a giant cartridge, the converter PLUS Parker's loss guarantee. But hurry the free replacement offer applies only to pens bought before Ocl. 31, 13. NEW PARKER 45 CONVERTIBLE 1. loid it 'th 1 O'lnriRf 2. or (.11 it Imm jn ink bollle Ever Before N V Tho Rotnsr l U) RCA VICTOR New Vista Color TV 265 Square Inch Picture glar $ proof! 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Tou betl We'll take em! NEW 1964 MODEL WASHER & DRYERS Now on display! Sec Them Now! New '64 Model 650Y G-E WASHER Completely new design with beautiful slant back" styling. Basically the M IOC -Al nAt J ft fl at right New '64 Model 620Y G-E DRYER Matches washer above with basically same features as '63 dryer at right. See it! .... $ 139 95 If5 ; . ' V: 'm D-GE DRYER 12 1B95 Li .r"u Model WA 654X GE USHER with exclusive "Filter-Flo" mm . If El 19 El Only with trade 3 wash temperatures hot, warm and cold plus warm or cold rinse. 2 cycle with soak cycle, and 3 water levels to suit your clothes load. Big 12 lb. capacity, porcelain top and tub. SAVE BIG ON THIS USED APPLIANCE CLEARANCE! $49 General Electric Westinghouse Excellent condition. Refrigerator Matching Pair WasherDryer r Montgomery Ward lryer Good condition 21" Table TY Wos"n9hou" 17" TUI TU Mognovox 1 lOUIC I f 21" Table TV Wl -L-j, Kenmore Auto. 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