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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1956)
U. of 0. librrry Eugene, Oregon SchD Corrp New Election Called School esdobmotedl U Y 4 SI;' I I STATE FARMER Joe Sand (left) was awarded Future Farmers of America state farmer degree pin at recent FFA convention in Corvallis. Sand, Roseburg High School senior, is retiring president of local FFA club. Advisor Homer Grow examines golden pin (right). Only 76 FFA members won top award in state, from membership of 3,800. (Staff picture). . Eisenhower Hints Possible Veto Of Farm Bill Unless Measure Sharply Modified WASHINGTON President Kiseohower hinted Wednesday at a veto of farm legislation unless the Senate's bill is sharply modified. At the same time he brushed off any suggestion that Tuesday's Minnesota primary vole reflects a revolt against hit agricultural program. 1 83 Persons Give Blood During Visit Of Bloodmobile A total of 2M people turned out for the visit of lh Red Cross bloodmobile Tuesday at the Elks Ballroom, with 51 being rejected. Collected were 183 pints of blood, reports Mrs. Walter Brittell, blood recruitment chairman. Six teenagers having reached their 18th birthday wera given per mission by their parents to donate. Kour of these donating were Leola l.orenzen, Carolene Garrett, Nan cy Engle and Wendell Carter. Don na Boss and Amaryllis Gladwill were rejected, Mrs. Brittell said. For this bloodmobile visit 61 peo ple came to donate for the first time, Mrs. Brittell said. Eighteen of these were rejected. The "honor roll" of one and two gallon donors was increased by 11. Mrs. Edith Ott and Mrs. Emma Richeson became two-gallon don- ors. Mrs. Marv Ellen Collison, Mrs. Vera E. Matthewman, Mrs. Lucy Todd, Mrs. Mary S. Vladimiroff, Mrs. Vera Cox, George N. Kuhn, Mervin Hisel and Glenn Ward be came gallon donors. The Grey Ladies, under t h e chairmanship of Mrs. Ward Ray mond; the Blue Star Mothers; the Camp Fire Girls; and other volun teers assisted with the bloodmo bile visit. Even though the quota of 250 pints was not reached," Mrs. Brit tell -said, "the bloodmobile visit can be termed a success. With the rale of illness and winter colds being so high, it was a remarkable turnout, and the personnel from the Portland Regional Blood Cen ter commended all those who do nated or tried to do so," Mrs. Brit tell stated. In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Interesting educational note; Mathematics plays a much big ger role in Portland public schools than it does in the country as a whole. In fact, speakers' at a meeting of the Portland school board last night submitted figures showing that Portland high school students get nearly twice as much ninth as the national average. Seventy-four per cent of them get one full year of algebra and 71 per cent take two years or more of high school mathematics. Why is that interesting" Well, our world is changing. There was a time when simple ..itirJitirm nn,i Hivicinn i uti ,o.ut;,i a,.;r,mo,n onnnoh .i L ir - a Store Or a little factory. Simple ; appearance ui uiaic ieny , a i arithmetic enabled him to knowiniovie queen soon to become a how much his customers owed real princess. him, how much he owed his credi-! -Many in Hollywood feel that if i.irc uhat h.. inntnrv ammmt-ithe late James Dean doesn't win) ed to at the end of the year, how much he took in, how much it cost him to do business and how (Continued on Page 4 Col. 3) The Weather Mostly cloudy with Intermitttnt riin through Thursday. Highest temp, last 24 hours Lowest temp, lait 24 hours . Highest ttmp. any Mar. Lowest ttmp. any Mar Prteip. last 24 hours Prtxip. from March 1 Prteip. from Stpf. I Eictst from Sept. 1 Sumtr tonight, 4:24 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow .. 5$ ...34 ...85 18 .OS 2.13 44.04 20.01 Eisenhower conceded at his news conference that the Min nesota returns, in which the Dem ocratic vote, far outnumbered the Republican count, are something to be studied and analyzed. But he said in his opinion farm ers generally believe his admin istration is seeking a program that would give producers 100 per cent of parity in the market place. As for the Seriate farm bill, plastered with amendments which the administration does not like, Eisenhower said it is not a good bill. He added it is not workable and would buy farmers under sur pluses they couldn't stand. The President voiced hope that a Senate-House conference com mittee, toward which the measure is headed, will write a good bill that will really help agriculture. The House has passed its own version of farm legislation, center ing on price supports at 80 per cent of parity something the adminis tration likes as' little 'as some of the features of the Senate 'bill.- The- White Mouse discussion came as the timing of new farm (Continued on Page 2 Col. 1) Several Parking Meters, Fines Box Take Beating The city's parking collection gad gets took a beating Tuesday ac cording to Roseburg police reports. Police are investigating several meters knocked loose and one broken from a standpipe in front of the First Methodist Church on Lane and Main Tuesday. They were also investigating an attempt to "jimmy" open a Fine-O-Metcr box in the 400 block of Southeast Jackson Street. The in cident was reported by Lston Du mon of Glide shortly before city police .discovered three teen-age bovs grouped around the box. The boys fled when they saw the police officer coming. Nothing was taken from the box. Benson School Cirl Finds Flower Rarity An' 11 - year - old Roseburg girl found what she believes to he rarity in the flower world Tues-lsjn day. Linda Gluesing found three daf fodils on one stem in her parents back yard at 1842 NE Fremont Ave. She's the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd B, Gluesing and is a pupil at Benson School. Usually Gay Oscar Award Night Tinged With Sadness; Dean Gone, Kelly Leaving By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD lifl Tonight is Oscar night in movietown and for the first time this traditionally gay night will be tinged with a little sadness. Never before in the 28-years of the Academy Awards has a dead man been one of the favorites to ; win a top Oscar. Then too it is pvnerteH to he the last Hollvwood 'the top acting award, the Acad - emy snouia give nun m special i Oscar. I be brilliant young actor j was nominated for "East of Eden." I Dean was killed last September car crash, but he still gets more fan mail than any other ! star on the Warner lot the ! He could well win. He's choice of manv, including Frank Sinatra, who was nominated him- For best picture. "Marty" and self for ' Man With the Golden "Mr. Roberts" are the favorites, Arm." jbut tough competition can be ex- But Hollywood in a practical ; pected from "Picnic," "The Rose town. Most of the voters want to: Tattoo" and "Love is a Maay see an Oscar go to someone who Splendored Thing." can get some good out of it. That I The nation will bt able- t km makes Ernest (Marty) Borgmne . and hear the big show over Nt'- r the favorite. Oo er lb bW o Heotoc ctrtl litobliahed 1873 14 Pogei ROSEBURG, OREGON WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1956 PRICE it Kefauver Beats Out Adlai Stevenson Upset Marks Minnesota Primary Vote MINNEAPOLIS W Sen. Estes Kefauver bagged the victory and 24 of 30 Democratic national con vention votes in Minnesota's presi dential primary election Tuesday. And he was striking hard Wednes day for four mora convention votes. Vanquished Adlai Stevenson came out of the balloting with only two convention voles cinched and .stunning defeat. The- Tennessee senator swept in 12 convention votes by winning the state as a whole. The other dozen he pocketed were two each from six of nine congressional dis tricts. Stevenson had two from one congressional district in Minneap olis. That left two districts in doubt. Kefauver nosed ahead in one- made up of suburban Minneapolis and five counties to the north with the count nearly complete. Previously, he had trailed there. The senator was going strong, though still behind, in the eight districts stretching through the iron range and Duluth in the north east. More than a third of the pre cincts there were missing. That was the picture from 3,306 of 3,868 precincts. And it showed Kefauver at that point with a statewide victory margin of 225, 499 votes to 173,815 for Stevenson. For the Republican, in 3,306 pre cincts, it was President Eisenhow er over his "token" opponent. Sen. William T. Knowland of Cal ifornia, 187,722 to 3,324. Minnesota, like all other states, will send twice as many dele gates to the national convention in Chicago as it has votes, rne Democratic National Committee figured that one-half vote would be allotted to each delegate. In this state. Where delegates are pledged to the choice in the primary a complicated system will allow i some of them to vote.m odd frac tions. But that won't alter the totals with which Kefauver and Steven son will wind up. Stevenson's backers attributed his upset in large measure to Re publicans who crossed into the Democratic race to support fauver. Ke- Disaster Caseworker Leaves For Grants Pass An American Red Cross disaster caseworker, in Douglas County to make an official inspection of three disaster cases occurring since the last high waters and rain, has gone to the Grants Pass area. Mrs. Loretta Webb, ARC Mid western area, is one of 125 such caseworkers sent to the west, fol lowing the December floods. With county home service chairman .Mrs. Jess Bowman, she visited the southern part of the county Fri day, TRASH FIRE A trash fire burning in the area hehinrl Merrill's Auto Bodv Shop. NW Garden Valley Road, at 2 a.m. Wednesday brought Rose burg rural firemen to the scene. They reported no damage. Fire men said a resident had reported "a large quantity of smoke com ing up 1 and didn't know what it was. are James Cagney and Spencer Tracy. Both are previous winners and both gave performances, Cag ney in Love Me or Leave .Me and Tracy in ''Bad Day at Black Hock," that are Oscar caliber. Among the girls, it's a down-to-the-final-gun race between the i Italian Anna Magnani and Brook- lyn's Susan Hayward. Magnan one of the world's treat actresses. stui eu in nue i mtw. ii a her first American picture and the part was tailor-made for her b? playwright Tennessee Williams, Miss Hayward. in the charmed ! circle for the fourth time, is up i ior ine L.nuan noin siory in try lomorrow. Her portrayal ot a lush was superb. Others in the top actress race are Katharine Hepburn ("Sum- mertime"!. Jennifer Jones ("Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing ) and Eleanor Parker "Interrupt- led Melody"). TV ; ticot fee t ( U la tST. McKay To Resign At Earlier Date To Start Campaign WASHINGTON (fl Secretary of the Interior McKay may open his active campaign for Republi can nomination to the senate at the April 13-14 meeting of the Ore gon Young Republican Federa tion. He said he will know by Monday when he will resign from the cab inet. 'It might be in time for me to be able to speak at a meeting of young Kcpublicans in Oregon next month. 1 might be out bv then but if I am still secretary, there will be a conflict unless I can break engagements 1 have. If 1 am in a position to sneak to the Young Republicans there isj'ng down race segregation in pub- nothing I would like better. Supporters of Mckay are ex pected to seek endorsement of his candidacy at the Kugene meeting. But backers of Philip Hitchcock, another candidate, also are ex pected to ask Young GOP en dorsement. The federation's College T.eacue last weekend announced it was supporting Hitchcock, a former state senator, now director of de velopment at Portland's Lewis and Clark College. .McKay said he intended to flv from Washington to Oregon Wed nesday to stay through the rest of the week. 'I'll be doing only organization work. I won't be making any speeches. I'm not campaigning while fm still in the cabinet," he said. Dave Belch of Portland, who Is working on Young Republican convention plans, reported that Vice President Nixon has declined an invitation to speak at the Eu gene meeting. Earlier Nixon had planned to attend but will instead be at a national convention plan ning meeting. Winston Man's Auto Involved In Severe Crash A car registered to Woodrow Webb of Winston caused considrr- able damage in an accident at Win ston Tuesday night, state police at Roseburg said today, but they still had not found the driver. The local police office said the car was against a power pole when officer arrived, and a snare wheel had crashed through a plate glass window of the Aly rile wood Cafe. Police said the car apparently was headed south when t hit the shoulder of the highway, went across the roadway and into a ditch, then flipped on its top and skidded into a traffic island. The car struck some signs, then turned back on its wheels and came to rest against the pole, an officer said. The driver was not at the scene when police arrive, and it was not known this morning whether the driver was hurl. Personnel at the local office said the accident apparently occurred between 6 p.m. and midnight. Win ston Chief Ben Scheele said he was pa troli n g about 11 p.m., but knew nothing of the mishap. Jn anoiner accident, driver Keith Lucas called the state police office to report he hit some sheep on Highway 99 about two miles north of the Yoncalla junction. A ewe and two lambs were killed. It was not immediately determined who owns the sheep, police said. Tax Appraisers Attend Short Course At OSC More than IZ0 county and deputy county tax appraisers from Oregon ami Wasnmeton. ine udinff f n ii r ; from Douglas County, are attend- me a five-dav anni-aiia s mrt course at Oregon State College for "le ' bonds. The council thii week. lagain passed an ordinance allow- The Douglas County tax work- in the bid opening. It was orig ers are Jack P. Bathrick, Vincent inally scheduled to open the bids P. Derig, lrus M. Wells and Neil 1 ast night, reports correspondent Kaser Jr. The course is designed to give' I annrakpr latent rievelnnmenti ' (JUJirtji 1 id tunni wn k. oinr jeets emphasize methods of ap - praising various types of OreRon iproperty for lax purposes. Instruc - tion is being handled by OSC staff 'members and representatives of ir ru-ue ia i.uiiimiiun w:y Certificates of completion be awarded rnday. POLICE SEEK MAN Police Chief Stan Olson today is- nart tall ffii- lati tl Sullivan who is reported to b workina in the Rosehurg area. Olson aikrai q,,ii;,.. i .n hn..,.nr in mi Woodward. Okla . for death mc- sage. ccmviijsicm to hut rs 4 la. D.mlas 0jy ula- aVelfar Co. tissict ilHvi'e graduate w-ill teach the sixth ear' Imus iwut at President Says To Be Cautious On Race Matter WASHINGTON I President Eisenhower Wednesday urged the nation not to regard the school integration issue as one which could separate Americana and create a nasty mess. Eisenhower again, at a news conference, appealed for modera tion. He said the problem of de segregation is one of ripen pmo. tion. But he said he is confident progress can ue made. For the second week in a row Eisenhower spoke with feeling of controversy created by the supreme Court s decisions strik lie schools Eisenhower said it is incumbent upon the people of the south to show some progress in good race relations. That, he added, is what the Su preme Court asked for. The court, in implementing its segregation ban. called for progress with "all deliberate speed." Eisenhower said he should not stagnate, and declared that again ne waniea to pieaa tor understand ing between the races. He also dealt with other matters including: MIDDLE EAST Anw mithrnnlr of major hostilities in the Middle Hast would be a catastronhe for the world, Eisenhower said. He added the United State must re gard every bit of unrest there as most serious thing. The President's remarks were i comment on the U.S. reauest Tuesday for a United Nations Se curity Council meeting to seek a solution for the Middle East crisis. iMsennower said, n the disout- ing nations can be made to see that mediation is the true way to a solution, then maybe we can get POLITICS Eisenhnurpr mvn'td- ea direct comment on eon tent ion that the upset victory of Sen. Ke- fauver (D-Tenn) in the Minnesota presidential primary Tuesday re- uecii-u a rovon against adminis tration Inrm policies. He said (he results will have to be studied further. Clerk Loses Bid To Win $64,000 NEW YOHK M Robert Kdwarn" Bennett, 48-year-old store clerk of Kingsland, Ga., has failed in a bid . for the grand prize on The $64,000 Question. I He thereby loses his winninei of $32,000 piled up over the weeks by answering questions about Abra ham Lincoln on the CBS television show. He'll receive a Cadillac as a consolation prize. Bennett lost out on the program last night by not knowing how much Lincoln offered to compen sate the states per slave for vol untary emancipation. He guessed $2,000. Ralph New man, proprietor of the Abraham Lincoln Bookshop in Chicago, who was serving as Bennett's expert adviser, said he thought the offer was closer to SI .600. Master of ceremonies H a 1 March said $400 was the figure. Bennett was the first contestant on the show to gamble for the grand prize and lose. Three have won the $64,000 prize. New Dart Set To Open Myrtle Creek Bond Bids A new date for opening bids for the purchase of bonds to construct the new water system filter plant at Myrtle Creek was set Tuesday ! night by the City Council. The new unn; is nuiu ju The date had to be changed be- cause oi an error in auverwsing Ruih M. hvans Other items were discussed, butjdiameter at its widest point will m no other actions were taken dur ' CanyonvilU Board Gives 1 r . -I pi,-- Annrnval ,cno' riam approval The Canyonville School board Tuesday night gave final approval ,to plans for construction of the eiKhl-room primary building pro - i posed there Correspondent Virginia Proctor said it was deemed to call lor ouijtion in tne International oeophysi about two weeks, it is nopen the nchool will Im ready tor occu iPanry next fall. Hrnreentativc of th arrhitec I""! firm of Kreeman. Hayjlip, Hewlett and Tuft of Porllaad at tended the mcetin. Die boars also hire a law tcdehrr, t aul Hart;i, Um Cres- II. The Souther oregni col srsrie and nhvsical education ' '" -v. i J . Vf'. WILLIAM MEEKS . . . disqualified - Meeks Disqualified As Superintendent Position Candidate William M. Meeks of Looking- glass nas been disqualified as a candidate for county school super- inienuem, according to Counly Clerk Charles Doerncr. Doerncr said that, although Meeks apparently has a lone baek- giuuuu in scnuoi worK, ne does not meet state requirements for candi dacy on at least two points. The county clerk explained that the law requires that a candidate shall have taught school during 12 01 m scnoot momns immediately prior to election. Also, the candi date must nold a valid teacher's certificate for this state at the time of election. Mccka has not submitted proof ot either, Doerncr saia. The turn of event leaves Incum bent Aennctli jr. Baraebiira all alone jn the race for the non non partisan post. Therefore, the coun ty clerk said, it will not be neces- I sary to list liarncburg on the pri mary election nuuoi may is. m the general election for the non partisan office, Barnehurg's name will be listed, and there will be space for wrilo-m candidates, in accordance with law. $2,500 Damage Estimated From Fire In Sulherlin Damage of $2,500 has been esti mated in a fire which destroyed storage building just off West Central Avenue in Sulherlin late Monday night. fire Chief Jerry DeMuth said the building, the former Pete Slon er residence, was being used for storage by Medford's Service Sta tion. It contained some old tires and an old car. 'he three-room, one-slory build ing had no foundation. It recently was condemned by the city build ing inspector. Nearby petroleum storage tanks created a hazard for time while the fire was being fought, DeMuth said. BIKE FOUND City police Tuesday recovered a bicycle which was reported stolen from Jack William Powers Jr. of 575 W. Harrison St. It was ported stolen Monday. It was found abandoned near the Christian Science reading room on South Street. Another bicycle was found a ban doned Tuesday nrar the Umpqua v,onee auop in itoseourg. Rocket 72 Feet Long, 45 Inches Wide Will Carry First Man-Made Satellite BALTIMORE Jfr- rocket re sembling a huge rifle cartridge 72 feet long and only 45 inches In carry the earth's firnt man-made moon 3O0 miles into outer space in about 10 minutes. The first public description of the 22K00pound Vanjjunrd. rocket was yiven yesterday in a joint Navy-Glenn L. Martin Co. an nouncement, Martin is building the thrce staife rocket, which ii scheduled 1 for launching from ihe Air Force missile test center at Cocoa, Ha i as part of this country's narticina- cai Year, iaj7-.'it Martin said the Vanguard will be the "first liquid fuel rocket de signed to be controlled without the use of fins," an innovation termed - 1 "a scientific reak - through by !.Marun engineers The rocket will be guided ny a power plant installed on a semi- pivot, making possible directional 1 changes in the stream ot Dower , from the rocket's tail. This plant Long Disputed Westinqhouse Strike Ended ,. By NORMAN WALKER WASHINGTON M The West inghouse Electric Corp. strike, one of the longest in the nation's mod ern labor relations history is over. Strikers weary of picketing idle pianu lor iw days headed hap pily back to work. the dispute punctuated at limes by violence probably cost hundreds of millions of dollara in lost wages and business. ( Settlement came last nieht when the striking International Union of Electrical Workers (1UE) vot ed to accept a peace plan proposed two weeks ago by government me diators, but changed somewhat in me union s favor since then. The new contract gives IUE woraers annual pay raises rang ing from S to 22 cents an hour added to their prcstrike average of $2.10 an hour. Additional raises up to 12 cents an hour were pro- vmeu ior sKiiteo worKers. ten sions and insurance benefits were improved. For example, the com pany will take over full cost of employe insurance after November 1S.18. Westinghouse announced that nine ' of its consumer products will get back into production to day, Plants are at Springfield, Mass., Metuchen, Bloomfield, Belleville and Trenton, N. J.. Fair mont, W. Va.: Elmira. N.Y.: and Mansicld and Columbus, Ohio. Court Approves Option To Buy Futurd Park Site Itrpmhnr rf tUa fii,nli fn,.nlthtt itnmalinn mttaf (.nmnilintf - (Tuesday approved an option the county to buy a 15.41 - acrelover the past three years. piece oi property six miles hit stream from the Steamboat Hridire on me ionn umpqua Highway. Total price for the property, planned for future park use. is $7. 000. with $1,000 payable now to owners N. W. and Mabel McMillcn and $6,000 on or before July 30. County Park Dept. Supervisor manes s. Collins pointed out that the land is the only acreage in the area not a part of the Umpqua National Forest. It was ncarlv "lost to the public" through sale to a private parly. The property includes Stea m- boat Falls and a strip of Steam boat Creek about 2,000 feet above the falls and 600 to 800 feet be low the falls. No development of the property is planned at present, but the area will be open to the public. It is hoped the Forest Service will take over development and op eration of the park area if and when funds are available, Collins said, because the area is much closer to the Forest Service's rec reation program than the county's. The property is termed the old Olive Placer Mining Claim. The McMillens reserve 25 per cent royalty on any minerals whieh might be mined. ASSAULT CHARGED James Peter Smith. 31, Reeds- port, has been lodned in the coun ty jail in $500 bail after arraign ment before Justice of the Peace Hobert H. Goodwin, Heed sport Smith was arrested on an assault and battery charge upon complaint oi nis wile. The first stage will boos' rocket practically straight about 38 miles above the earth The secord stage, which fits iust above the first, will ignit.! mime-1 a charge of child stealing, accord diately upon separation and pro-ling to Sheriff Ira C. Byrd. Justice ceed on a progressively more in-!"f the Peace Clarence Leonard set dined trajectory to an altitude of bail at S.VX) and turned the case anout 140 miles. At a predeternnn-Over to me granu jury, i no yuimi cd point in its flight, the second. is accused of eloping with a 14 stage rocket will ietlisnn in! year-old Klkton girl after the par streamlined nose encasing theients refused permission for mar-third-stage rocket, leaving it aml;nage, 1 tic sheriff said. the satellite exposed. After Its burnout, a, about lid miles altitude, the second - and third-stage combination will roast upward until it reaches the satel lite's orbit 300 miles alxne the earth and about 700 miles horizon tally from the launching point. Stage 3 will he given a spinning motion to insure stability on its orbit before the second-stage rock el drops off. Stage 3 has Ihe task of Increas ing speed up to 18.000 miles hour, a velocity high enough to counteract the earth s grav nation-! Policy Test Light Vott Said Hot Indicative Of Feeling; Visitors Give Opinion A test vote on the educational policies of Roseburg School Dis trict 4 has been recommended for April 12. Budget board members voted 5-1 Tuesday evening to resubmit the dislrict blgct to voters "as is." It seeks $1,069,631.35 outside the six per cent limitation to bat. ance the proposed budget of $2, 407,764.02. The budget board pro. posed an April 12 election date to the school board. That board will set an official date. Member Robert Bashford voiced more than his own opinion as he commented: "It will be a test of the educational policy as it now stands." Lone dissenter was board Vic Chairman Kay Doerner. Doerner carefully pointed out his "no" vote came "because we're not getting to the heart of the problem." Favoring i rcvote were A. G. (Mike) McLain, Walter Dage, ilrs. Mary Roberts, Wayne Crooch and Bashford. Absent and not voting were Chairman Sidney C. Moon Jr., Gordon Smith, Harold Hoyt and Dudley Walton. Chairman Moon's letter to the board was read by acting Chair man Doerner. Moon noted the March 9 light vote (1,911 of a pos sible 9,292). He did not believe people had expressed their wishes and suggested a "token cut of no more lhan $20,000 to $30,000" or resubmission of the budget as is. Budget members present ap peared to agree that the 1,911 vota was spase and did not indicate much of anything. Member Crooch expressed tione that citizens would "get out and vote regardless of how they felt." more than 35 men and women (Continued on Page 2 Col. 5) Dimick Scorches Juror System Used In Douglas County Courthouse officials were accus ed today of "shocking disregard of our Jury system" by a Demo- ocraue candidate ior nominauon for state senator from Douglas County. D. Ji. Dimick, a Roseburg: at torney and former president of tha Dnuclas County Bar .Assn.. mada iorilist of flames of jurors serving According to Dimick. liis analy sis shows a duplication of names that is "almost unbelievable." Ha revealed he has a list of 20 legal- size typewritten pages of three col umns showing the duplication ot names on jury panels. statistically, he said 468 dupli cate names appear in two out of three years. There are 178 times when the same juror'a nama ap pears for all three years, he said. The compilation of names cov ers the jury lists for 1953 through 1B5.1. Dimick said that jurors normal ly are chosen at random from the list of registered voters m Douglas County. It said mat ' tor lite sain jur or s name to appear year alter year reveals the shocking regard by courthouse officials of our jury system." The candidal said ne wouiii pro pose legislation, if elected to I J; State Senate, to "remedy the oo- vioua defects of the present law." lie said new legislation he would sponsor would "guarantee that jur ors wilt be chosen from citizens of all walks of life and from all parti of the county." Ihe Koseoure attorney mention ed no county officials by name. .lury lists normally are drawn by the sheriff and county clerk. He is one of two Democrats seek ing the nomination for state sen ator, a post now held by Paul E. Geddes, a Republican seeking re election. The other Democrat is Lloyd V. Arant. Additional Disaster Funds Allocated Oregon Rep. Harris Ellsworth wired The N'ews - Review from Washington, D.C., to announce that President Kisenhower today allocated an ad ditional $7(10,000 to civil defense for use in Oregon flood disaster areas. Two previous allocations to taled $o.'0,0O0, the wire said. YOUTH JAILED A 17 year-old Dram youth has been lodged in the county jail on Levity Fact R ant By U F. Reizenstein Only one thing equals the national government's wast of taxpoycri' money. Its the waste of time by the Hoover Commission in its parade of recommendations for reduc- federal expenditures. 7 i n at too ' 'Stfice. 'classes lor grades four through six.1 will guide the rocketo !l pull. in9 o 1