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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1959)
Red Radio jammers Work Against Langelle Reports WASHINGTON (AP) Washing ton monitors reported here the Soviets apparently have turned on; their radio jammers against the Voice of America's broadcast of the Langelle affair. Russell A. Langelle is the U.S. diplomat whom the Beds kicked out of the Soviet Union last weekend, saying they caught hin in spy work. The United States has denied the spy accusations. Langelle, who had been ton se curity officer at the American Kmbassy in Moscow, is now on his way back to Washington with his family amid protests and counter-protests between the two capitals. Soviet jamming of the Voice of America's Russian-language pro grams stopped for the first time in a decade when Premier Nik'.ta Brother Asks For Aid For Dalai Lama UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) A young man who looks more at home in an English suit than the monastic robe he occasionally wears is buttonholing U N. dele gates to plead the cause of his brother Tibet's Dalai Lama. C.yalo Thondup, 31-year-old emissary for the exiled Dalai, bears little resemblance to the quaintly garbed holy men one us ually associates with Tibet. Suave and immaculate, he min gles easily at receptions, sips aper itifs and converses in good Eng lish. They Bring Duck Thondup's visit to this country timed to coincide with the Tibet an debate coming up in the Gener al Assembly this week is being managed in American style. Rep resenting him are a public relations firm and Ernest Gross, an interna tional lawyer. Thondup and his party are at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. They have been fi'ting the press with luncheons featuring such delicacies as duck with wild rise. Representatives of Thondup sav the bill for all this is being footed by the Dalai Lama's exiled gov ernment. They hint that the ruler managed to take considerable mon ey on his flight from Lhasa to In dia last spring. Thondup appears to be a dedi cated crusader for his oppressed land. He feels it is the duly of the U.N. to see that a peaceful solu tion is reached somehow between Tibet and Red China. He has in dicated he would like to see the assembly set up a U.N. Commis sion to restore conditions that ex isted before 1950, when T;het was a sovereign state, linked to both India and China. Life Faarttd Thondup is openly distressed at the reluctance of some Asian na tions to help his brother's cause, but he says he realizes that coun tries bordering on Red China hesi tate to give outward support for fear of endangering their own posi tion. Actually Thondup's knowledge of recent events in his land is second hand. Fearing for his life after the Red Chinese occupied Lhasa, Thondup went to India in 1952. He spent the seven years there as a student and unofficial liaison be tween India and Tibet. Before the Communists seized power on Uie Chinese mainland in 1949, Thondup was a student in China and married a Chinese girl. They have three children. Rip Van Winkle Couldn't Sleep with NaggingBackache Nov I You ran net tilt fait relief you nerd from naiwmic backache, headache and muscular achea and paint that often cause restless ntirhu and miKrahle tired-out feflinn. When these discomforts come on i with over.exertinn or stress and strain you want relief want it fasti Another disturbance may be mild bladder irritation following wroniz food and drink often set linn up a restless uncomfortable feelinK. Doan's Fills work fast in 3 separate ways : 1. by speedy pain-relieving action to ease torment of nagging backache, head aches, muscular aches and pains. 2. by soothing effect on bladder irritation. 8. by mild diuretic action tending to increase output of the IK miles of kidney tubes. Enjoy a good night's sleep and the same happy relief mllliona have for over. years. New. large site aavei money. Get Doan'a Pills today I Khrushchev visited the United States last month, ll has been sporadic since. The U.S. version is that Lan gelle was seized last Friday by live Soviets in civilian clothes as he alighted from a bus near the embassy who took him to a near by building, and questioned and threatened him for several hours. They also tried unsuccessfully to get him to act as a spy for the Soviet Union. Langelle, on his way back to Washington, said in Amsterdam Monday night he got "pretty rough treatment" from the So viets. He didn't elaborate. The version of the incident re ported by Soviet newspaper sources is that passengers on the bus seized two men after one handed the other a large package that appeared to contain money. Authorities found one man, a So viet citizen, had a package con taining 20,000 rubles (about $5,000) and material for making secret inks. The other, Langelle, volun tarily handed over a notebook containing secret data written in invisible ink. The story was published today for the first time in the Soviet Union, in a brief account by the Soviet news agency Tass. It brief ly outlined the charges against Langelle and made no mention of the U.S. version of the incident. State Engineer Says Veto Right On U.S. Dams Wrong i- ' " j KLAMATH FALLS (AP)-Ore-Son should have no right to veto a federal hydroelectric project un any stream in or bordering the state, the Oregon Reclamation Congress was told here. State engineer Lewis Stanley said, however, that he drew a di ; Unction between dams built by federal agencies and those author ized by the Federal Power Com mission. The FPC, he said, sometimes is opposed to stale objectives and uesiies. In a paper presented to the opening session of the two-day meeting. Stanley said there is great support for federal legisla- lion to clarify the water rights of the states. "Those of us who have done so much shouting about requiring federal agencies to comply with stale laws governing water rights must realize that there is a limit and there should be no such un qualified requirement," Stanley said. V.to Said Unneeded "The state of Oregon doe? not need to have and should not have the right to veto a federal project f on the Columbia River or the i Snake River where such streams form our state boundaries. "Neither should Oregon have the right to veto a federal project on the Deschutes. . . . ' Why, 1 ask you, should Ihis matter be injected into legislation j which is needed to throttle the ! Justice Department, the Supreme ;tourt and (lie Federal Power jloinniission?" Stanley asked. Stanley said he drew a distinc 1 lion between projects authorised by Congress and built by federal 'agencies, and those which are eoii-tructed under license front 1'ie i Federal Potter Commission. The j first has congressional renew, he said. I "In the latter case, the control ling action is taken by a federal executive agency which can, and sometimes does, act contrary to slate objectives, and desires," Stanley said. Anniversary Not.d The convention here is beiig in iu ,,1 .tt-iiio nun tut ui tiuir.tt- turn ot tiie Congress, which is de I signed to promote development. I control and conservation of Ore gon's land and water resources. At a dinner held here dele gates honored Dr. W. L. Powers of l a Mesa, Calif., who retired as chairman of the soils depart ment in 1952 after 50 years on the Oregon Slate College faculty. Powers was a pioneer in irri gation development in Oregon, ami it a airnicr corpl :irv nf irlft 1 Keclanialion Congress. China Likened To Nazi Rule PORTLAND fAP) Red China bears a sobering resemblance to Nazi Germany. The U. S. economy is expanding at only 1.8 per cent, while that of Russia is moving at a isle of 8 per cent. Nikita Khrushchev's recent visit to the United States should not be taken as a lullaby to go to sleep and forget about U.S. prob lems. These were just a few of the admonitions issued by Chester Bowles upon his arrival here. The former ambassador to In dian and Connecticut congress man addressed the World Affairs Council of Oregon. China, unlike Soviet Russia, "has economic as well as ideo logical grounds for expansion," he warned. He said, too, the failure of the U. S. economy to keep pace with the growth of the Russian econ omy presents a stiff cold war chal lenge. "It is no solution lo offer stag nation as an alternative to infla tion," he declared. Bowles declared this nation's failure to come to grips with ra cial discrimination "the greatest denial of democracy which our so ciety contains." It is relevant to this nation's in ternational affairs, he said, that two-thirds of the world's popula tion is not Caucasian. There is a "revolution of rising expectations" the world over, he said, "and the revolution would go on even if every Commuitist handed in his card." BOISE (AP) A compromise settlement was approved in If. S. District Court here in a damaue suit that resulted from a truck-car collision which killed three per sons. The accident, July 7. 19:,8. near Mountain Home, involved a Bur eau of Land Management fire truck which was en route to a range fire. The truck and a t. in which live yuunc pcoole were riding, collided. Three " of the young people were killed. The seltlenieni, approved hv Judge Fred M. Tavlor awarded S19.U00 to Air. and Mrs. Charles Ft Mraiu.e ,,f 11,-.,..,.,..,.... u-... the parents ot Gordon M.' Draper! ! 20. one of those killed The original i soil asked SjO.ouu. The defendant j was the I'nilcd States government. I Also killed were Dick Allium! j sen, III, of Snohomish, Wash., and iJau Borselh, 20, ot Seattle. ! do FALSE TEETH Rock, Slide or Slip? KASTKKTH. n lintirovi-d powtVr to b hprmkli on upper or lower phi tea, huldf fa ls tneih nioie (irmly in place. Do not slid., slip or rock No vtunnnv, Kihwv. p.t-tv tnsio or ferlinii. FAS TKfcTH Is ulk.ililir (nnn-arldl. Dn not sour, f'litfkfc "nlftip orinr" (den ture brent hi. (Jet FASTLETH at any tiiuti counter. Canned Applause On Video Probed 7 NEW YORK (AP) The Colum bia Broadcasting System is con sidering whether it should con tinue to use phony applause and laughter on some television shows. A spokesman for the network said this week CBS is review ing the use of "canned" applause and other practices in lisht of a recent statement by CBS Presi dent Frank Stanton. Stanton said in New Orleans last Friday that all big money quiz shows were being eliminated by CBS and added: "We accept the responsibility for content and quality and for assurance to the American people that what they see and hear on CBS programs is exactly what it purports to be." For years, even on the big radio shows long before TV was devel oped, loud -applause and uproari ous laughter on one show were recorded for use on other shows. The CBS spokesman said the network also was reviewing the "spontaneous" interviews that ac tually had been rehearsed, and shows purporting to take place in one locale that actually had been filmed elsewhere. The spokesman was Kidder Ev erard Meade Jr., executive direc tor of the CBS Information Services. NOW I Take Off Pounds & Inches! Lose up to 5 pounds a week . . or your, money back ! DONT BE FAT! Here's an amazing new way to help you lose weight . . . and stay slim! It's America's foremost reducing aid in chewing gum form . . delicious, effective SLIM-MINT Gum. In clinical tests by leading physicians, 90 of those tested lost an average of 2.3 'pounds a week. SLIM-MINT Gum helps satisfy vour craving for food . . . makes reducing easier than you ever dreamed possible. No starvation Idiets, no strenuous exercises. 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