U. of 0. Library
Eugene, Oregon
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TAKING PART in Operation Deep Freeze II, a Navy ex
pedition into Antortica, will be ET3 Reuben Hall, a 1954
graduate of Roseburg High school. Hall, shown at right,
is assigned to the U. S. S. Curtiss. He is shown with local
navy recruiter Joe Kokosenski. (Paul Jenkins photo).
Navy Man Will Take Part
In Operation Deep Freeze
A Roseburg Navy man, Reuben
Hall, will take part in this na
tion's Operation Deep Freeze II
which will take place sometime in
December in Antartica.
Hall is doing duty in the elec
tronic division and is assigned to
the U. S. S. Curtiss. Stops on the
project will be made in New Zea
land, Australia, Little America,
Tahiti and the Fiji Islands.
Hall is an electronic technician
3 Americans At Bottom
Of World Find Out They
May Have To Move Camp
By DON GUY
MCMURDO SOUND, Antarctica
Of! Eight Americans camped at
the bottom of the world found
Wednesday they would have to
move.
The snow vehicle they hoped
would make travel easy broke
down while their own breath grew
short In the thin polar air and
25 below-zero cold.
The party of Navy Seabees,
landed by ski planes Tuesday to
build a U.S. base at the South
Pole, reported by radio that their
survival tents were pitcliea eigne
miles away from the Pole. If they
cannot repair their caterpillar -track
weasel, they must trudge
the distance through powdery,
knee-deep snow.
The men are the first ever to
go the two-mile high polar pla
teau to live for any period. Their
Gifts Of Appreciation
Given Demo Chairman
Gifts of appreciation were pre
sented Douglas County Democrat
ic chairman Al Roll and Mrs. Eda
Bunce at a Democratic go-host
dinner at the Harlequin Club,
Roseburg, Tuesday night.
State Sen. Dan R. Dimick pre
sented a gift, a wrist watch, to
chairman Roll in behalf of the
county central committee for "a
job well done" in the past cam
paign. Mrs. Bunce, who managed Dem
ocratic headquarters on Southeast
, Main Street during the campaign
was the other recipient of a gift.
In The Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
What's the world situation today?
" It's touchy. .
The experts think the anti-Stalinists
in the Kremlin (Kruschev and
Bulganin) are probably under se
vere attack by the pro-Stalinists
headed by tough old Molotov. The
stakes in such a struggle are high
because the big question to be de
cided is who will hold the reins of
power and who will get shot against
the wall.
That's communism for you.
The showdown may come next
week, when the central committee
of the Russian communist party
meets in Moscow. The central com
mittee is the chief policy maker
for the communist party which
runs Russia, although it numbers
only about 10 per cent of the popu
lation. Would a shooting battle between
Russian factions be good for us?
It could be.
But
The gang in power might start
(Continued on Page 4. Col 3)
The Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Thurs
day with patchts of Utt night and
early morning fog. A little warm
er today and tonight.
Hfghast tamp, last 24 hours ...
Lowast ttmp. last 24 hours
Highait ttmp. any Nov
Lowait ttmp. any Nov.
Prttip. last 24 hours
Prip. from Nov. 1 t.N
Precip. from Stpt. 1 M 1.73
Excels from Stpt. 1 ... 1.(2
Sunset tonight, 4:44 p.m.
Sunriit tomorrow, 7:14 a.m.
third class. He enlisted in Janu
ary 1955 under the Nayy high
school program and immediately
went into the field of electronics.
He has since been graduated from
the Navy's Electronic School at
Treasure Island, Calif.
He is currently in Roseburg on a
10-day leave. He is the son of
Mrs. Vera Hall, 1066 Cedar Street,
and is a 1954 graduate of Roseburg
High school.
mission is to builu a base for U.S.
scientists who will make observa
tions during the sunless antarctic
winter.
Four navigators taking ob
servations from the air pin
pointed the geographic Pole at
the place where the Seabees dis
embarked from two C47 trans
ports. But from the ground Navy
Lt. Richard A. Bowers of Harris
burg, Pa., took sun sights with a
theodolite at six-hour intervals to
locate the Pole more accurately.
Bowers, leader of the expedi
tion, reported back to this base
on the antarctic coast:
"Still at original camp. Weasel
down for batteries and cracked
transmission, cage and gear lube,
'Can go via dog team to Pole.
located 8 miles . . . from base
but only , with limited supplies for
survival only.
"Require weasel parts . . . will
wait here . . .
"Men affected by altitude, and
snow bothersome. No wheeled air
craft could use area."
A big Globemaster transport
plane took off immediately on the
eight-hour trip to the Pole with
parts for the weasel They were
to be dropped by parachute.
Tree Near Reedsport
Falls, Cutting Service
PORTLAND It took sev
eral hours late Tuesday to com
pletely restore power service in
several coastal areas after a fall
ing tree near the Reedsnort sub
station knocked down a 12,000-volt
feeder line.
Bonneville Administration offi
cials said the power disruption at
1:30 p. m. extended as far as
Winchester Bay.
service was restored at about
3 p. m. to the Reedsport-Gardiner
area, served by the Lincoln County
PUD It was about an hour after
that that electricity was flowing
again to the Umpqua-Smith river
sector, served by the Douglas
County Electric Co-op.
Ashland Pair Injured
In Wreck Near Riddle
An Ashland couple was taken to
Forest Glen Hospital, Canyonville,
at 9 a.m. today following an acci
dent on U.S. Highway 99 according
to Airs, trma Best, Riddle corre
spondent for the News-Review.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Davia were
en route to visit their son, an Ore
gon Stale College music instructor
at Corvallis, when their car hit an
icy spot on the highway and left
the pavement, Mrs. Best said.
The Davises had to be removed
by stretcher and carried across a
creek to tht ambulance.
38
Claim Made
Troops Mass
Along Border
By MAX HARRELSON
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. W
Syria called for urgent U. N. ac
tion Wednesday to halt what it
described as a threat of aggres
sion from Israeli, British and
French forces reportedly massing
along the borders of Syria and
Jordan.
Interrupting a debate on the
Hungarian situation, Syrian dele
gate Farid Zinnedine read a mes
sage to the 79-nation General As
sembly from his government re
porting the troop concentrations
and calling for immediate U. N.
action.
Zinnedine did not elaborate on
his remarks about the presence
of British and French forces in
Israel.
A British spokesman immed
iately called newsmen together and
denied that any British forces were
in Israel.
Zinnedine also charged that
British, French and Israeli Dlanes
had been flying over Syrian ter
ritory lor some days and that, in
some cases, they had encounters
with Syrian aircraft.
The Syrian delegate snoke shortly
after Secretary General Dag Ham
marskjold had handed a renort
to the Assembly asking for bVoad
powers to arrange with Egypt the
details on the deployment of the
Middle East police torce.
ine secretary general said ne
(Continued on Page 2 Col. 4)
Chilly But Fair
Weather Slated
Thanksgiving Day
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Snow piled up Wednesday in the
upper Great Lakes region and
cold covered most of the nation.
For Thanksgiving Day cold
weather was forecast for the
North, and cool weather for the
South.
A storm over the Great Lakes
touched off widespread snow from
the eastern section of the Dakotas
to upper Michigan. Park Falls,
Wis., reported 10 inches of snow
on the ground.
Cold air enveloped all but the
easternmost one fourth of the na
tionexcept for the ! southwestern
corner. Eagle, Colo., had a tem
perature of 20 below zero.
Other readings included: Den
ver 11, Bismarck, N.D., Albuquer
que, N.M., and Salt Lake City 15,
Omaha 16, Duluth 18, Amarillo,
Tex., 19. Casper, Wyo., 20, Spo
kane, Wash., and Kansas City,
Mo., 26, Portland, Ore., 29.
The 7 above reading at Win
slow, Ariz., was the coldest ever
recorded there this early in the
season.
Wet weather Wednesday pre
ceded the eastward movement of
the cold front.
Rain and sleet were reported in
areas east of the snow belt. Rain
and showers fell eastward through
Lower Michigan, through New
York and to the Atlantic coast,
southward through the Ohio Val
ley, and tapering off to a narrow
band of showers in the South
through Arkansas and Louisiana.
The leading edge of the cold air
extended southward through Lake
Michigan, eastern Iowa and
through northwestern Louisana.
Workmen Collect Rocky
Rubble Following Blast
LAKESIDE, Utah HI Work
men have begun collecting rocky
rubble from the residue of a cliff
face pulverized in the nation's
third largest non-atomic explosion.
The mighty blast of 560.000
pounda of explosives was touched
off on the western shore of tbc
Great Salt Lake yesterday to pro
vide rock for a Southern Pacific
railroad causeway across the lake.
Established 1873
Syria
yliSX- No Paper 3
Nov. 22 S
fukUSWm DAY!
Pages
Asks Action To Mak
Molotov Returned
To High Position
On Kremlin Staff
LONDON I Soviet Deputy
Prime Minister V. M. Molotov
was appointed minister of state
control Wednesday night in what
appeared to be a victory for the
Stalinists in the Kremlin power
struggle.
Moscow Radio indicated Molo
tov, an oldtime Stalinist, retained
his office as a first deputy pre
mier. -He is a former foreign min
ister. His new post gave him extensive
control over a wide range of So
viet activities.
The dead dictator Joseph Sta
lin was minister of state control
for three years before he took over
as supreme boss of the Soviet Un
ion in 1922.
Moscow Radio said Molotov was
relieving V. G. Zhavoronkov in the
conirol ministry.
In recent years the holder of the
post has held relatively little
prestige in the Kremlin hierarchy
and Zhavoronkov is almost un
known to the outside world.
But the fact that the post has
such wide paper powers and was
given to a man presumably re
taining the title of first deputy pre
mier was viewed here as indicat
ing a big step up for the pro
Stalinist former foreign minister.
Molotov left the Foreign Min-
istry this year just before the
Moscow visit of Yugoslav Presi-
dent Tito, the first of the rebels
against Staun-une communism.
Tito only last week publicly dis
closed a rift between Stalinists in
the Kremlin and the "soft" fac
tion led by Nikita Khrushchev,
rariy.
Tuesday a report reached Brit
ish diplomats indicating far-reach
ing changes were imminent in the
Kremlin hierarchy.
Molotov's new post was the first
clear indication that the Stalinist
faction was gaining in strength,
The majority view among diolo
mats here was that Molotov was
back in a position of real power.
The revolt in Hungary, develop
ments in Poland and restlessness
in other areas of the Soviet sphere
had led to speculation that the
Stalinists would move back into
the spotlight.
Glide School Census
Down From '55 Figure
The 1956-57 Glide school census
just completed, shows a total of
1,139, down 18 prospective students
from the 1955-56 census of 1,157.
Supt. Harry Harvie said there
was an unusual balance in the
total figures between the Glide
schools and the Deer Creek School.
Last year's total for Glide was
733 compared to 711 for this year,
down 2 registrations. Deer Creek
last year's count was 295 compar
ed to this year's of 317, a gain of
22, which balances the Glide
loss.
The debit side of the count is
charged against the Toketee Falls
School, 1955-56 total being 129, this
year's 111. Harvie stated this loss
could be explained by the comple
tion of Copco construction in that
area and employees moving away.
Inscription Turns Up
In Wall Of City Hall
The inscription of "4-9-92, P. A.
Blackey" turned up on a two-by-six
board in a wall of the Rose
burg city hall today. It was found
by workmen cutting a door through
the wall between the police depart
ment and the city recorder's of
fice. The wall, formed of the two-by-sixes
stacked one on top of an
other, was once part of the city
jail, according to the police.
The city hall was built in 1884.
Several other names were written
on the wall.
Every Bit Of Oregon Farm
Land Said Necessary
PORTLAND I Every bit of
Oregon farm land will be needed
eventually to feed the increasing
population, the slate agriculture
director said Tuesday.
James E. Short, speaking at a
Kiwanis Club farm program, said
the current farm surpluses are
only temporary and the situation
will ne reversed in the future.
He said Oregon's farms create
400 million dollars annually in
new wealth, and credited crop di
versity and good yields for keep
ing the stale farm economy in a
healthy condition.
CABINET MEETS
LONDON in - The British Cab
inet held a special 90-minute ses
sion Wednesday to consider con
ditions for a British-French with
drawal from Egypt. The Cabinet s
conclusions, if any, were not dis-1
closed. I
ROSEBURG, OREGON WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1956
Federal Action Planned
To Halt Waterfront Strike
NEW YORK Wl The govern
ment planned to go into federal
court here Wednesday in an ef
fort to eliminate one major issue
in the 20-million-dollar-a-day At
lantic and Gulf Coast dock strike.
Officials said in Washington the
National Labor Relations Board
will seek a temporary restraining
order to bar the strikers from
insisting on a coast-wise or multi
ple port contract.
However, the strikers could obey
such an injunction and still con
tinue the walkout on economic is
sues. The crippling tieup threatened
to spread to the Pacific Coast.
West Coast longshoremen were
working but there were indications
they had voted overwhelmingly to
strike in support of the six-day-old
East and Gulf coast strike being
waged by the International Long
shoremen s Assn. (1LA).
The West Coast strike vote was
by Harry Bridges" International
Longshoremen's and Warehouse
men's Union (ILWU), which has
6,000 members on the coast. Of-
(Continued on Pag 2 Col. 2)
Menon Leads
Drive To Get
Observers In .
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. I
India's V. K. Krishna Menon led
a concerted drive by neutral
Asia Wednesday to get Hungary
to throw open its borders to U.N.
observers.
Menon appealed directly to Hun
garian authorities to invite Secre
tary General Dag Hammarskjold
to Budapest and discuss with him
the question of admitting on-the-spot
investigators.
He called on all nations, "with
out a dissenting vote," to support
a resolution insisting on immed
iate entry of an observer team.
A high Russian source indicated
Tuesday the resolution was unac
ceptable. Representatives of Ceylon and
Indonesia also voiced the same
demand. They were part of a ris
ing tide of indignation over de
portation of Hungarian patriots.
The 79-nation General Assembly
was scheduled to wind up debate
on two major resolutions and a
number of amendments. Heavy
majorities were expected for anti-
Soviet resolutions.
United Spanish War Vets
Croup Sets Dec. I Meet
The United Spanish War Veter
ans. Camp No. 19. and Auxiliary.
No. 18, Dept. of Oregon, will meet
at the Veterans Memorial Hall in
Roseburg Saturday, Dec. 1.
The meeting will follow a turkey
dinner which will be served at
12:30. The past dept. auxiliary pres
ident of Oregon, Clara T. Starmer,
will install new officers.
All members are requested to
attend and all persons eligible for
membership in the camp or auxil
iary are invited. For p"r '---.
mation call OR 3-5431, Zanna Kel
ler, auxiliary president.
Porter Stops In Roseburg
On Post-Election Swing
By BUD BODINI
Staff Writer News Raview
Rep.-elect ' Charles O. Porter
stopped in Roseburg Tuesday on
his post-election good will swing
through the district.
Meeting with friends and sup
porters, Porter sought voter opin
ions and problems and commented
on several issues that will f a e e
Congress in 1957.
Mv office is open to serve all
the people of the fourth district,"
he said, "whenever they need their
congressman's aid."
The timber slump and social se
curity were two questions that the
people throughout the district have
discussed with him, Porter aid.
The present slump in the lum
ber industry is not temporary if
present conditions continue, he
said, and it has been reflected in
Oregon's smaller share in the na
tion's increasing income.
To counteract this, Porter stated,
he will work tor more public hous
ing 225.000 units in the coming
year and for more liberal terms
for financing nrivate housing. The
congressman-elect said that he
. thought the latter was closely tied
(Continued on Page I CoL 1)
Dockmen Work
Amidst Indications
Of Vote To Strike
SAN FRANCISCO Wl W e s t
Coast longshoremen worked today
amid indications they had voted
overwhelmingly to strike in sup
port of an East Coast walkout.
Ben McDonald, president of
Hie International Longshoremen's
and Warehousemen's Union Local
13 at Los Angeles, said a strike
was approved by more than 95 per
cent of the ballots were. McDon
ald said there were 2,905 votes
but did not give a breakdown.
Harry Bridges' ILWU has 16,000
West Coast members. Union offi
cials in San Francisco said the
vote was overwhelmingly in favor
of a strike.
McDonald said. "The vote here
in Los Angeles means our mem
bers are in tavor of going along
with whatever the negotiating com
mittee decides to do, including a
sympathy strike with members in
Eastern and Gulf ports."
The West Coast longshoremen
had returned to work Tuesday aft
er 24-hour ston-work meetings, call
ed to discuss the East and Gulf
Coast strike by the International
Longsnoremen s Assn. and the
ILWU'i own demands for more
pay.
Contract negotiations on the Pa
cific Coast are with the Pacific
Maritime AsBn. and involve a
wage reopening clause. PMA con
tends negotiations are subject to
arbitration and that a strike would
violate the present contract. It also
contends the ILWU cannot strike
here legally in surmort of the II. A
In New York ILA President Wil
liam E. Bradley declared his or
ganization did not want help from
unages west uoasi union.
Partly Cloudy Weather
Seen For Thanksgiving
Cloudy, but warmer, weather Is
forecast in the Roseburg area for
Thanksgiving. The U.S. Weather
Bureau here said it would be part
ly cloudy, though with more night
and morning fog.
Warmer temperatures are in the
offing after two freezing nights.
The low temperature this morn
ing was 27 degrees, 3 degrees bet
ter than Tuesday morning.
The five-day weather outlook by
the Weather Bureau calls for tem
peratures averaging above normal
by Friday or Saturday. The warm
er weather will be accompanied by
some rain, but less than normal
for this time of year.
Clendale Cirl Treated
For Cuts On Arm Tuesday
Margaret Kaper, 6, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kaper, Glen-
dale, was treated at the Glendale
Clinic Tuesday evening after she
had put her arm through a window
glass at tier home.
According to Mrs. Gerald B. Fox,
News-Roview correspondent, sev
eral stitches were required on a
three and one-half inch cut.
i' I ii m i a i nil 1 1 'li r'-'' t i t 1 1 . lai nmamk.h
CHARLES O. PORTER, (right) congressman-elect from the
fourth district, met with friends and supporters in Roseburg
Tuesday. Among tho, visited were Douglas County Dem
ocratic chairman Al Roll (left) and Miss Loura Olson Por
ter's newly appointed research assistant (center). (Paul
Jenkins).
PRICE 5c
Threat
Army Camp Set
To Welcome
62 Hunaarians
CAMP KILMER, N.J. Wl-This
sprawling Army camp is ready to
extend a warm welcome on this
eve of Thanksgiving to 62 Hunga
rian refugees from Soviet terror.
Posted over its gates is a huge
sign in Hungarian reading "God
has brought you."
The refugees were expected to
arrive at McGuire Air Force Base
today aboard a four-engine DC4
chartered from the Flying Tiger
Airlines by the Intergovernmental
Committee for European Migra
tion. They are the first of 5.000 to come
under orders of President Elsen
hower. Four other planeloads are
expected Thanksgiving Day and
Friday.
Rep. Francis Walter (D-Pa), co
author of the .".cCarran - Walter
Immigration Act, said in an in
terview in Vienna Tuesday that
America should admit 17,000 Hun
garians, not just 5,000.
"I don't know where that 5,000
figure came from," he said.
"My information is that as many
as 17,000 could legally be admitted
as 'escapees' and they should
bo."
In Austria, meanwhile, the flight
of refugees across the border from
Hungary continued at the rate of
more than 3,500 a day three or
four times as fast as they can be
resettled.
Thirteen nations have offered to
resettle 27.500 and Canada has said
it will take as many as want to
come. But more than 40,000 Hun
garians were already in Austria
last night, most of them living in
uncomiortaote transit .camps.
Another Turncoat
Ready To Come
Back To America
URANIA, La. 11 Aaron Wil
son, who decided not to come
home after his capture in Korea
nearly six yctvs ago, now hopes to
be back by Christmas.
Mrs. Henry Wilson said Here
her 24-year-old son had written
that he had applied for permis
sion to come back and was being
aided By tno Chinese Heel cross,
I will be with you all for Christ
mas, the onetime corporal with
the 7th Infantry Division said in
his first letter home in eight
months.
Wilson was captured Nov. 28.
1950, near the Changjin Reservoir.
He refused repatriation after the
war ended.
He gave no reason for coming
home. Previous letters indicated
he was homesick.
Court Issues Order
To Open Ballot Boxes
The Douglas County Court has
issued an order, permitting the re
opening of several ballot boxes
used in the recent election.
The boxes will be opened so that
poll books and payroll sheets that
were left inside the boxes may be
recovered from seven precinct box
es. They are the Lane, Fairhaven,
Mucrcst, Norm Brown, Yoncaua
West, Fair Oaks and Elkton precincts.
275-56
r-.s..-iWI ' - . . T . , ,
Be Made To
Ease Tension
British, French Make
No Move To Withdraw;
Atrocities Discounted
PORT SAID, Egypt 11 United
Nations troops were greeted at
Port Said's railway station
Wednesday by a cheering crowd
of Egyptians shouting, "Nasser,
Nasser. - .
The Norwegian infantry com
pany of 190 men, equippped with
guns and antitank weapons,
entered the Sues Canal port after
a slow ride over shaky railroad
tracks from the cease-fire line be
low El Cap.
A defiant crowd of about 300
broke through the ranks of Port
Said police at the station and were
forced back by British troops. A
handful of agitators urged the
crowd forward, but it was slowly
pushed from the station and across
the street.
The troops then marched to
their camp of British army tents
pitched on the beach.
The six-car train, decked with
blue and white U.N. banners, was '
greeted at the cease-fire line 30
miles from the port by cheering
British soldiers. They rushed from
their front line positions and shook
the hands of the Norwegians lean
ing out of the windows.
"Glad you're here, Bud. Glad
you're here," a British soldier
shouted, others took up the cry
and one predicted that "it can't
be long now" until the British and
French forces with-draw from
Egypt.
But this observation met no en
couragement in official quarters.
Lt. Gen. Sir Hugh Stockwell,
British commander said any Brit-'
ish-French withdrawal "if it's
done in four weeks won't be dig
nified." Port Said has been a center of
tension since a cease-fire halted the
fighting in the canal area. Egypt
has charged the occupying forces
with atrocities against Egyptian
civilians. British and French au
thorities have complained of cease-
nre violations ana nave cnargea a
calculated campaign is being con
ducted to prevent the city's civil
ian population from cooperating
wun tneir occupation.
figypis latest cnarges ot atro
(Continued on Page 2 Col. 7)
Committee Seeks ;
Financing Data v :"
On Green Dist.
At the last regular board meet
ing of the Green Sanitary District,
some of tho terms in the proposed
contract with the city of Roseburg
and the matter of financing the
whole project were discussed.
It was decided to set up a com
mittee for the purpose of getting
more information regarding fi
nancing the project.
An election will be held Dec. S
in the Green Elementary School to
vote on the question of increasing
the board from three to five mem
bers, and electing one or three
members, as the case may be.
Geneva Toi, Lucile Johnson.
Mary Weikum, Mary Oakley and
Esther Suiter have been appoint
ed to serve on the election board.
Labor Dispute Settled,
Seals To Be Distributed
PORTLAND I A labor dis
pute that had threatened to delay
Christmas Seal distribution was
settled Tuesday.
A committee appointed by the
Portland Central Labor Council
arranged an election for members
of the Office Employes Union em
ployed Dy tne Oregon Tuberculosis
and Health Assn. The Friday
morning vote will be on whether
the employes want a union shop
clause in the contract.
That was the only douu that de
layed signing of the contract.
Supreme Court Ruling
Favoring Yates Arrives
A Slate Supreme Court mandate.
officially roversing a contempt of
court ruling against Roseburg at
torney Spencer Yates by Judge
Carl E. Wimberly has been re
ceived in circuit court.
The mandate order awards Yates
$604.25 costs to be paid by Douglas
County. It also orders dismissal of
the state's case against the attor
ney.
Police Reserve Chief
Quits; Successor Named
Robert Horn, chief of the Rose
burg Police Reserve, resigned at
a meeting of the reserve Tuesday
night. Police Chief Carl E. Rumpf
said that Horn resigned because of
other personal commitments that
are taking up his time.
Kuinpt announced today tne ap
pointment of Donald Brown as
chief of the reserve, Robert LeBleu
as captain and Roy Cutler as ser
geant. -
Levity Fact Rant
By L. F. Reizensteln
And not so long ago, a cer
tain country, posing at a pure-In-heart
apostle of world
peace, through it press and
yelping spokesman, branded
the United States as e "war
monger." You have en
gueti.
1