I r Names, To, Mad News In County Dm '63 HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon Wednesday, January 1, 1964 PAGE9A ''V .. M -.--AN - - - xJ. ;- ' ft -- y, BRIDGE COMPLETED One of the largest construction projects completed during the year in Klamath County was this bridgo over the Link River designed to let through Highway 97 traffic bypass the city. The bridge was built at the end of Main Street on an $861,000 contract and was opened to traffic late in the year. One work man on the bridge died while saving a young boy from drowning in the river. liM If r Vv SCHOOL PLAN SET Years of work by school officials and interested citizens bore fruit Dec. 10 when the County Court announced its plan for reorganization of the county schools into two districts. Public Hearings on the plan will be held in January, ! and it will probably come to a vote in the spring. Members of the court are shown . here with a map of the school districts. They are, left to right, Commissioner Frank . Ganong, Commissioner Ken Allison and Judge Robert Walker. I as I JHjrysaii . rv If i-" -JL, I H I lie i verify JM L-WJ WQJa PP&L DIRECTORS MEET Directors from all sections of the Pacific Power and Light system met in Klamath Falls in September to meet local employes and business men and to study the area's industrial capacity. The directors toured local facilities and discussed clans at the Winema Hotel. Shown here, left to right, are Don McClung, president of PP&L; Si Cramer, ex-mayor of Dorris, and Glenn Jackson, vies president of the firm. FIRE, STRIKES AND SUIT Three more major news events of 1963 concerned a fire, strikes and a lawsuit. At left is an aerial pheto taken at the height of the Hamaker Mountain forest fire 15 miles southweet W Vlarrwrth Falls in August. The fife ravaged more than 500 acres of timberland enA leMnjo subdued. It was the biggest fecal . . . . . - t . v if - 'Hi-' .'... .vawipawrfl! J HERO DIES William Lown, 41, drowned in the Link River Aug. 18 while rescuing a young boy. Lown, an employe of the firm working on the Link River bridge, dove into the river to save I l-year-old Steven Michels. He managed to keep Steven afloat until other men could take the boy, but was unable to stay afloat himself. Lown's body was recovered by skin divers, shown here working in the river. Year Marred By Tragedy And Death (Continued from Page 8-A) August by Floyd Domuiy. U.S. commissioner of reclamation. The project involved construc tion of several new pumping plants, and the enlargement of existing plants and canals. But ns new buildings arose, old ones came down some times amid bitterness. The city continued its policy of condemning and destroying structures it considered to be unsafe and by mid-1963 had condemned about 100 buildings. But when the city tiied to condemn (our old houses on Portland Street near Highway 97, the owner, Frank Weaver, fought back bitterly. He pro tested the condemnation pro ceedings in a public hearing, then filed a lawsuit challeng ing the action in court. The suit has yet to be settled, but the city's condemnation campaign has been halted until it is set tled. As usual, names made news. Some names in the local news in lfH3: Sheriff Murray "Red" Brit ton, indicted by the grand jury for allowing a prisoner to go loose illegally, and acquitted of (he charge, also Charged with contempt of court; Sen Barry Goldwater, who spoke twice in Klamath Falls in May, once at Kingsley Filed and once at the dedication of the new hospital site; Herbert Floyd Mitchell, the first man to be sentenced to death from Klamath County in .'10 years and the second in history, whose appeal is still pending with the State Supreme Court ; 'Merchant Frank Bcgalay, shot in the shoulder and hand by a woman who thought he was responsible for Daylight Savings Time. Weyerhaeuser Company's Klamath operations were plagued by labor difficulties during the year as was the rest cf the Northwest lumber industry. The plant at Klamath Falls was closed for exactly two months June 7 - Aug. 7 with the rest of the industry during the 'Northwest dispute between big lumber companies and two unions. Tlie dispute affected about 100 men locally. Weyerhaeuser was hit by an fire of the yew. ftv center photo are shown pickelt at Company pW tisre, hit teveral times during the year 1 . J IL. . t Al A .1 . J . I o sioie cwo or more 1 luwfcar fi-gf n1 bit other one-day walkout in No vember as roving pickets from the C o o s Bay Weyerhaeuser plant demonstrated here in sup port of their dispute. Klamath's pride rode high in July and August as the local all-star Babe ftuth League base ball team won the Oregon state championship, then the North west regional championship and trawled to 'Farmington, N.M., for the Babe Ruth World Series. There, tlie team started out well with a victory, but lost two consecutive games to be elim inated from the tournament. IN MEMORIAL Twenty five persons who lost their lives on iKlamalh County highways in 1M3, -including three persons who died Sept. 15 in a two-car collision cn rain slick Highway 97 north of Klam ath Falls, and State Rep. Wil liam O. Kclsay of Rose-burg, who died in a collision on the same stretch of highway Oct. 4 ; Six persons who drowned in lakes and rivers in Ihe county; At least six persons who died by fire or by accidental shoot ing; Six more who died violently by the bands of others; Capt. Harold Smith, who died when his parachute failed to open as he ejected from a jet fighter-interceptor over Klam ath: One woman who froze to death. There were no deaths, but tens of thousands of dollars in damage in a big train wreck 10 miles north of Klamath Falls Nov. 4. More than 25 cars cf a 93-car Great 'Northern Jtuilway freight derailed and two cars were hurtled into Upper Klam ath Lake. The line was lied up for more than VI hours. There was another, smaller derailment Aug. 16. 2fl m i I e s south of Klamath Falls. Ten cars from two Southern Pacific freights were derailed between Dorris and iMacdocl. Damage was not extensive. S e v e r a 1 landmarks fell to flames in the year Ellingson Lumber Company mills in Klamath Falls and Pel ican City, burned to the ground within 17 days of one another in December; Lakeshore Drive home of Dr. and iMrs. R. IWayne Espcrsen, Tnen two monrns curing tab wsmmwr mi wif Mar?nwsf by ene-day walkout in NoemboC -ftj i$i,prHj tion destroyed May 4 by fire: Simplot-DeVce Lumber Ccm p a n y sawmill in Chiloquin, gutted by flames in August. The largest forest fire in t h e county during the year was in August on -Hamaker .Mountain about 15 miles southwest of Klamath Falls. Flames de stroyed more than 500 acres cf white fir. At the same lime, flames raced over 400 acres of grass in the Loma Linda area, nar rowly missing several homes. And in July, 300 more acres of grass land were razed by flames near Merrill. Through the hct summer months, firemen from all de partments were kept busy with the i sj.nl rabh cf grass and br'.is'.i Hies. As hot as a forest lire was the battle between the Oregon Game Commission and the Ore gon Fish and Game Council during the year over the size and future of the Oregon deer herd. The commission, which sets game management policies in the state, maintained that the herd was large enough and would remain adequate. But the council, representing a group of sportsmen, said those policies were diminishing the herd and called for buck only hunting and a shorter sea son. The council also called for the commission's resignation. The fight has vet to be re solved. Another bitter fight was waged in the early part of the year over the proposed zoning of the area outside Klamath Falls, affecting mainly the South Suburban area. The city county planning department submitted the zoning plan and in a scries of (hearings, It was bitterly opposed by several groups, nolably the Klamath County Taxpayers League. Dis position of the plan is still pending. Planning of another sort was the main topic in September as the directors and officers of Pa cific Power and Light held their quarterly meeting in Klamath Falls. Tlie directors toured the area's industrial works and pledged their support of any plan to promote industrial and agricultural expansion in the (Cnntinurd on Page 14-A) the' WeyerKesuter Timber by labor iisputei, The plant . ... . .. .1 ,1 . j """''i 1 K AIR RAID SIRENS Air raid sirens were installed In Klamath Falls in May. Seven sirens were installed by the county civil defense office. Here, amployes of the Rose burg firm which supplied the sirens are shown raising one of the sirens to the top of pole at Biehn Street and Oregon Avenue. The seven sirens were purchased for $6,485.75, with half of the cost borne by the U.S. government. h fin f fl Prft I 14 ll Lv;:-: II t All I .1. tuniip fltfpf Tl UMrviruD KiiH i ne new campus ror wragon iecnnicai iniiuuTe rose mrougn rna a year on a hillside northeast of the city and is expected to be finished in time for -j occupancy next fall. Two classroom buildings have been completed, and work is Mi under way on an administration building, a library-cafeteria and a gymnasium. V Work started late in the year on a dormitory. Here, workman are shown on th -Sj framework of the library-cafeteria. V ..!. .rt. l P-;. tfWJlfc -i sWA v .vy y putt f: A' .t four houi wPwt'JfiqJ: vJiieli the CKy CoaaoM oide5ie)- condemned as being subsfanderilt T6e en, RrimU VffwM, rerrqb ptobtbkdtf. J)Js fiAn and filed suit r-- T. 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