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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1963)
KRALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Or. Tuesday, September 3, 3 PAGE S Heavy Work Load May Keep Congress Past Christmas WASHINGTON (UPIl Labor Day has come and gone but Con gress lingers on and on and on. In the past the summer-endinc Slimwear Second Floor hoiiday was a rough target for adjournment. But this year law makers find themselves facing a work load so big they may be in session until Christmas or be yond. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said Mon 512 Main Free Parking 5th & Klamath day he is prepared to keep the Senate in session "until noon, Jan. 3, 1964, if neccssarv," to ' i . ,, push top priority legislation through. Noon of Jan. 3, 19K4, is tile date and time for the convening of the second session of the 88th Con gress. The unfinished business in fcr , Li.tud llL ARMY BAND TO PLAY The U.S. Army Field Band (shown here in front of the Capitol, Washington, D.C.I will present a free concert at the Medford High School football stadium Thursday, Sept. 12, at 8 p.m. The con cert will be presented under the auspices of the Medford School District, the Medford Recreation Department and the Medford Junior Chamber of Commerce. The 1 00- member band is conducted by Maj. Robert L. Bierly and will play selections ranging from popular and classical to military. In addition to instrumental the "Soldiers' Chorus" will present a group of vocal arrangements. Ad mission to the concert is free and the public invited. U.S. Army Photo 20 Off ALL cups and saucers ALL ceramics ALL glassware Gay's Gift- Shop 219 Main Soviets Rap Peking Policy MOSCOW (UPIl - The Soviet Union, seizing on an apparent I ideological contradiction, has DID YOU LOSE A DIAMOND? J50 WEISFIELD'S WILL REPLACE YOU MISSING DIAMOND WITH A NEW ONE . . UP TO I-POINT IN SIZE . . . CLEAN AND POLISH roup. RING . . . FOR AS LITTLE AS NCLUDING LABOR CHARGE IT! charged Communist China with maintaining a foreign policy that dooms many overseas Chinese to suffering under "imperialism." The official government news paper lzvestia said Monday nignl the Peking regime was quick to advocate violence to unseal im perialism hut showed "startling indifference" toward its own na tionals in Hong Kong, Macao, and (he Nationalist Chinese strong holds of Matsu and Formosa. Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's doctrine of peaceful coexistence between differing social systems is one of the key points of. dispute in the ideological quarrel between the two Communist giants. Peking maintains that no com promise should be made in the "bitter life and death struggle" with imperialism and that any nu clear war inevitably would end with a victory for communism. Who takes care of homeless and neglected children in our community? Who mends broken homes, fosters medical research, provides teen-agers with wholesome recreation programs? Who gives aid to the elderly and handicapped? f - mm mmm - 1 fast ' ' Pair Admits To Wedding NEW YORK (UPIl The first Negro girl admitted to the Uni versity of Georgia married a white Southern student at the uni versity last spring, it was dis closed today. Charlayne Hunter, whose arriv al on the Georgia campus two years ago touched off rioting, was reported to have secretly wed Walter Stovall, son of a Dou glas, Ga. mill executive. ine couple expect a baby in December, according to the New York Times, which published an interview with them today. Miss Hunter, 21, and her 25- year-old husband are living in a one-room apartment in Greenwich Village. A journalism major at the university, she moved to New York after graduation and be came an editorial assistant on the New Yorker magazine. Stovall worked for the Atlanta Journal during the summer, and arrived in New York Friday. "This is the end of the world, Walter quoted his father George Stovall, as saying when he learned of (he marriage. In Atlanta, Mrs. Althea Hunter. Charlayne's mother, confirmed her daughter was married bul gave no details. cludes President Kennedy's tax program, civil rights legislation. nearly all of the appropriations bills for the fiscal year which began two months ago. and Sen- ale ratitication of the nuclear test ban treaty. The Senate is scheduled to be gin debate next Monday on the treaty, which was approved by its foreign relations committee lasl week by a 16 - 1 vote. This week the Senate is in ses sion, but the House is extending its Labor Day recess for another seven days. Mansfield, interviewed during a whirlwind Labor Day weekend tour of his home stale, said there would be no attempt "to rush it (the treatyl through. Every sen ator who desires will have a chance to be heard." He said he personally favored the treaty because he felt it more advantageous to the United States than the Soviet Union. "It has the approval of all the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and there are no gim micks, no side issues, no secret agreements involved," he said. Spokane Beauty Wins Corn Title HOOPESTON. III. (UPII-Pret-ty Colleen Thacker of Spokane to day was Miss National Sweetheart of the 1963 National Sweetcorn Festival. The 5-foot 2 brunette won her crown over 17 rivals from 15 states in the linal judging Mon day night. Runner-up was Dawn Cashwell. Pensacola, Fla., a University of Georgia student. Pamela Draemcl, Fremont, Neb., was chosen Miss Congenial. ity. GOOD STUDENT KANSAS CITY (UPIl Hank Stram, head coach of Die Kansas City Chiefs in the American Foot ball League, won the 1943 Big Ten medal awarded annually to the student best combining ath letics and scholarship. 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