Charles V. Stanton Editor and Manager George Ctillo Addye Wright Assistant Idifor Imi.wt M..,.r Member of the Associated Press. Oregon Newspaper Publlihen Allocution, the Audit Bureiu of Circulation Entered a tecond elm matter M.y 7, 1920. .1 : the post office it Roieburg, Oregon, under ict of March 2, 1373 Subscription Ritei on Clmified Advertising Pige EDITORIAL PAGE 4 Tho News-Review, Roieburg, THE EASTER MESSAGE St. Matt. In the end of the Sabbath, m it began to dawn toward the irsfday of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the: other Mary to lee the sepulchre. And behold, there was great earthquake: for the ant-el of the Lord descended from heaven, and came ana rolled back the stone from the door, and sat upon : it ; His countenance was like lightning, and hia raiment. WhitAnd forfear of him the keepers did shake and became " dAflnd'the' angel answered and said unto the women, "Fear not ye: for I know that ye seek Jesus which was erucifred. jr, tg jin, M He said. Come, see the place where the Lord lay. "And go quickly and tell His disciples that He Is risen from the dead: and, behold He goeth before you into Gal ilee; there shall ye see Him: Lo, I have told you. St. Mark 16: 18 And when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and Mary, the mother of James, and Salome, had brought sweet spices, that they might come and annoint him. And very early in the morning the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulchre at the rising of the '""'And they said among themselves. "Who shanroll us away the stone from the door of the sepulchre? And when they looked, they saw that the stone was rolled away: for it was very great And entering into the sepulchre, they saw a young man sittintr on the right side, clothed in a-long white garment; and thev were affrighted. And he said unto them. "Be not affrighted: Ye seek Jesus of Naiareth, which was crucified; he is risen; he is not here; behold the place where they laid him. "But go your way, tell his disciples and Peter that he goeth before you into liaiuee: mere snau ye ee nun m he said unto you." St Luke 24: 19 Now upon the first day of the week, very early In the morning, they came unto the sepulchre, bringing fche spices which they had prepared, and certain others with them. And they found the stone rolled away from the sepulchre. And they entered In, and found not the body of the Lord Jesus. And it came to pass, as they were much perplexed there about, behold, two men stood by them in shining garments. And as they were afraid, and bowed down their faces to the earth, they said unto them. "Why seek ye the liv ing among the dead? "He is not here, but is risen : remember how he spake unto you when he was yet in Galilee, "Saying, 'The Son of Man must be delivered Into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified and the third day rise again'." ! And thoy remembered his words. j And returned from the sepulchre, and told nil these things unto the eleven, and all the rest. St. John 20: 1118 But Mary stood without at the sepulchre weeping: and as she wept, she stooped down . and looked into the sep ulchre. And sceth two angels in white silting, the one at the head, and the other at the feet, where the body of Jesus had lain. And they say unto her, "Woman, why weepest thou ?" She saith unto them, "Because they have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid him." And when she had thus said, she turned herself back and saw Jesus standing, and knew not that it was Jesus. Jesus saith unto her, "Woman, why weepest thou? Whom seckest thou," She, supposing him to be the gar dener, saith unto him, "Sir, if thou have borne him hence, tell me where thou has laid him, and I will take him away." Jesus saith unto her, "Mary." She turned herself and saith unto Him, "Rabboni." which is to say. Master. Jesus saith unto her, "Touch me not: for I am not yet ascended to my Father: but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father and your Father; and to mv God. and your God." Mary Magdalene came and told the disciples that she had seen the Lord, and that he had spoken these things unto her. Hal Boyle U. S. Has Most Likewise Backseat NEW YORK (AP- Things a columnist might never know if he didn t open his mail: In the future more American physicians will wear lipstick. The old public prejudice against lady doctori is abating. Last year about 5 per cent of our medical ichoo! graduates were women. Here'i m item that mrprlsed me: The word "smile" dors not appear in the King James Bible. tan you name the only four fooled animal unable to lake all four feet off the ground at the lame time? It ii the elephant. Three out of every four auto mobiles in the world today ire in the United Stites. And so ire five out of every six of the world's backseat drivers. Do you give up when you ire fared with l hard task? Napoleon once laid, "impossible Is a word only to be found In the dictionary of fools." On the other hand Napoleon himself lost 6 of the 12 battle campaign! he fought in cluding the list one. Hoy a I itudent: Queen F.Inbeth, who owm a racing stable, takes "the iport of kings" leriously. She studiei documentary movies on the training of thoroughbred!. Talk Is cheap until you get the phone bill. The United Stitei leads the world with it telephones for Ore. Sot., April 16, 1960 28: 17 Automobiles; Drivers every 100 inhabitant!. Sweden Is next with 34 and Canda third Willi 30. Quip of the week: Actress Lihbv Jones points out, "people ind steamboats toot loudest when they re in a fog." Leap Year note: In the Tro- nnant Islands the woman is in variably the aggressor in court ship. She shows her love by biting the male of her choice around the eyebrows, neck and shoulders. He demonstrates his manhood by ac cepting this torture with a brave smile. Lightning kills about 500 Amer icans each year and injure! an other 1,500. It still Is i bit early to start booking vacation trips to Mars. Traveling it the rite of W,0 m p h. i speed rocket experts dream of reaching It would lake you Ihrty weeks to reach the red planet. Wisdom from the past: An in dent Arabic proverb warns. "Nev er give idvice in i crowd. Few things ire more forlorn than a pet without home. The American Feline Society estimates there ire now in this country about lO'i million itriy cats most of them hungry, ill ind oft-abused. In The Day's News .By FRANK This mrdern world note: I Mme. Bogner (it would have been A factory in Munrich, Germany, Frau Bogner back in the old sauer - which once was devoted to the malt-: kraut days) doei the designing ing of humble sauerkraut is today! She aUo doei her full share of the turning out some of the haughtiest 'skiing. She lavs: -You can't rie. iki apparel worn on snow slopes I all the way from Squaw Valley toi w.. . s""-!oi tne sKiers wno watch ner ex- nounce Sangt Mo-RLETZ if you,cain,t partially in admiration andhe "ld- J hope to move in the best ski cir- partially in envy. She has just something. M. Mauritz which you should pro- This modernized sauerkraut fac tory is owned and operated by Maria and Willy Bozner. a bus- band-and-wife team of skiers and manufacturer! credited in many sports circle! with i whole revolu tion in recent years since they ibandoned sauerkraut both in col or and in construction of ski wear. Away back in 1952, they invented "stretch pants." which is a gener ally used term for ski trousers made of combination of wool with elasticized nylon. In the case of stretch paints, they were aiming more at speed than at sex appeal. These garments ire now known as Bogners. Explaining them, 'Willy says: "The less wind resistance the better. Ski pants need to be ciose lining lor downhill where ev ery second counts." From stretch pants, the Bogners went on to drastic changes in color. No more dark blues and blacks and browns. The Bogners brought in all the colors of the rainbow. They use some 40 hues, some of which they developed themselves and have made to their order. They also took the ancient cover all, which Winston Churchill made famous during the war as his "si ren suit," and glamorized it into a ski uniform that was worn by the members of the German ski team thi! winter at Squaw Valley. Rockefeller Displays Signs Of Edging Back Into Race Nelson A. Rockefeller, who ruled himself out of the race for the Republican presidential nomi nation last December, is showing distinct signs of edging back in. Item: Next week he'U start a series of out-of-state tours, speak ing for Republican candidates and displaying his smiling person ality again among Republican pol iticians in many parts of the coun try. Item: He still refuses to endorse Vice President Richard M. Nixon for the GOP nomination. Asked Thursday if he had any doubt Nix on would be nominated, he replied i (ion i want to discuss it. Item: He has not ruled out a convention draft. He says he doesn't expect one, but will "cross that ontlgp, ir it comes." The kind of straw in the wind that cheers Rockefeller's ardent admirers came Thursday from Denver. Colo, when the Denver Post said editorially Rockefeller appears to be "the most attractive Republi can candidate that could be of fered. . . ." Nixon's own preconvenllon pol icy, in the meantime, got n nod from Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois. Said Dirk sen, "1 think his present techni que is pretty good." West Virginia's Republican Gov. Cecil H. Underwood said in New York that while Rockefeller would make "a very strong candidate . . . right now Mr. Nixon is the strongest candidate we have." He added, "I do not foresee any change in tho national picture. In the Dcmocrntic rare Sen. F. Kennedy (D-M.iss) was Hie leading candidate for the party's nomination in the opinion of a largo majority of potential Penn sylvania convention delegates who answered an Associated Press questionnaire. Tho AP asked the delegate can didates who they thought was the leading man, not necessarily their own first choice. Thirty-four of 41 who replied said Konnedv. Sen. Hubert 11. Humphrey (D Minn), concentrating on what may he I cmcial test for him in the May to West Virginia primary The Cartoonist ''.?. :j ;;-v;v :).!;; i fb '.V-J,-. .-.i.v -HH i -St (- i fcmwmmiMm-,. JENKINS i sum ski wear unlesi vou ski." So she skis AD HOW'- "vim. it., -...-i. v. turned 45, and at that crucial period of life when the middle-age spread is supposed to be getting in its deadly work she has the lean shape of a tenager, the snowy hair of grandma and a wind-tanned face that deepens the blue of her eyes. Back in the sauerkraut days, her figure would have had its full share of what the French cautiously de scribe as "embonpoint," which comes from too liberal indulgence in sauerkraut and its natural com panions, pig's knuckles and beer. Her clothes, in those days, would have been adapted to her shape which is to say mat stretcn pants and rainbow colors would have been out of the window so far as she was concerned. And- She would have spent her time on the sidelines, unobserved, instead of out on the ski slopes, the cyno sure of all eyes. Along with the rest, the sauerkraut factory has been transformed from a drab, smoke-darkened brick building in the factory district of Munich to an elegant glass and steel structure set in the countryside and sur rounded by gardens and tree! Ah. well. The world changes, and if we are to keep up we must change along with it. Mrs. Bogner says i h e ADORES change. against Kennedy, has shifted about half of his Washington head quarters staff to that state. That gave rise to some talk that he is short of campaign money and might be prevented from carrying out his West Virginia campaign as planned. An aide scotched the report, said Humph rey will continue with his plans in West Virginia and elsewhere. He added that Humphrey has made no secret of his financial problems but the campaign is sol vent. In Sacramento, Calif., Gov. Ed mund G. Brown said it was "ab solutely not true" that he has de cided to support Kennedy. "I have not committed myself to Sen. Kennedy in any way whatsoever, or to anyone else." he added. denying a published report. Brown will lead the California Demo cratic delegation to the convention as a favorito son candidate. In New York, a newly formed Stevenson for president commit tee said it will seek a million or more signatures there urging that Adlai Slevenson, two-time party canamate, do nominated again. Controversial Film Case Set For Trial PORTLAND (AP) - The Guild Theater Thursday was given un til April ?o to prove ils contention that Portland's movie censorship ordinance is unconstitutional. Municipal Judge J. J. Labadie continued until then the city's case against the theater over the con troversial film, "The Lovers." Although the film has been wilhdrawn Manager Nancy Welch still faces the charge of failing to delete materials which censors said was objectionable. A federal district court Judge at Chicago Wednesday found that the film was obscene and upheld cen sorship of it. The Chicago case be gan last September when city cen sors banned exhibition of "The Lovers." Says: He Is Risen i. :t:., ! i i : . f i Mass Entertainment Said Big Sleeping Pill Potion ' 'EW V0KK F) Director ' solve the problem They II on y be 1 Sidney Lumet believes there 11 ; nuking you pay for Queen for a ne thin wron8 "th .mass-pro-'bay instead of letting you lee dueed entertainment - it doesntjit for nothing entertain the masses. An interesting thing to me is "Entertainment in the future f will have to do more than just divert a man from his worries 11 will uave w ie win "Man is getting a lot more : curious. He wants something in i his life that will make him feel I differently, to see differently a sense of discovery. "He is not just looking for 1 sleeping pill." At 35, Lumet, who began acting it the age of 5, has put his di rectorial stamp on several hun dred television shows, two Broad way pla and four films. The young director has an acid disdain for big-business influence in the creative fields. "The greatest danger in the en tertainment future is that, as the need for more entertainment I grow! and more money can be made, it will become more organ ized on an assembly-line Dasis, he said. "But I don't believe mass-produced entertainment winds up as real entertainment. It winds up as time-filler like so many drops of water on the head. "And the pay-TV boyi won't Lab Test Shows Space Travelers Can Use Air-Making Chemicals DAYTON. Ohio (AP) An en gineer today emerged "feeling fine" from a week in a sealed "space capsule" after a test the Air Force said proved that space traveler! can safely use oxygen providing chemical! instead of bottled oxygen. I The Air force said tne test also demonstrated the feasibility in a long flight of spacemen re using the water from their own exhaled breath and urine for drinking purposes. The test conducted at the Air Aero - Space Medical Laboratory of the Wright Air Development Division also constituted the long est sustained trials in a manned, sealed capsule of certain other life-sustaining equipment. The test subject was Courtney A. Metzger, 40, a laboratory en gineer from Springfield, Ohio. Aft er a medical checkup. Air force doctors pronounced him okay. Within the capsule, seven dif ferent devices had been engi neered to operate in the weight less, airless environment oi or bital flight. The equipment was scaled inside an air tight, but not pressurized, capsule resembling the nose cone of an Atlas inter continental hallistio missile. Tested during the period were a closed respiratory system and odor removal system, a waste disposal system, a food-warming unit and storage system, food tubes and cleaning equipment. During the test, flight surgeons and engineers observed Metzger through a 20 by 31-inch window. Meantime, Metzger relaxed by watching television through the window of the capsule or by read ing. His menu during the test con She Went East, He West; But Twain Met Head-On LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sixteen year-old Reverly Hagen and Thomas Embrey, 17. friends, de cided lo take their driver's license test. In separate cars, they were driving around the block in nib urban Bellflower Thursday. Beverly went east and Tom went west but the twain met, head on. Only their driving reputations were injured in the minor mis hap. They'll try the test again. n I -biWvst. .-.-ii.v-iKi i t 1 .J.'vt H 1 a not one mm Pay- terns has guaranteed that it won't carry paid advertising not one. "They're not going to take a chance. They're going to try to get it both ways." Lumet feels that an unwilling ness to take chances is the curse of "the business mentality" and bigness itself in the entertainment field. "The businesi mind keeps look ing for a safety area for an ab solutely sure thing. "There is no such thing in en tertainment. "It's an out-and-out gamble like a horse race. "The stereotype that most Hol lywood movies have become re sults from the business mentality trying to duplicate success. The theory is that if one car looks good you make 12 more like it. The theory may hold good for De troit, but it hasn't worked out in Hollywood. "The itory of entertainment is that we don't know for sure in advance what is good. I don't know anybody except business ex ecutives who are certain what an audience wants or will come to see and they are constantly wrong." sisted of "squeeze tubes" of liq uids: semi-solids; solids in diced portions; some bite-size solids, and an assortment of dehydrated, frozen, and stable articles kept at room temperature. Lenten Devotions Tixt: Colossiins 3:1-15 These verses contain four divine imperatives, all based on one basic assumption. Paul, the author of this text, begins with this condi tional phrase: "If you have been raised with Christ then ." He is referring to one's conversion ex perience with its climax in bap tism when one is "buried with Him in baptism . . . and raised with him through faith . . ." to a new and different way of life. The foundation upon which he builds ill our text then is that one's com mitment to Christ involves a par ticular way of life. The four di vine imperatives in this text for those committed to Christ are as follows: 1. Seek the things that are above . . ." (Verses 1-4). Our citizenship is in heaven. We are to be in the world but not of the world. If we seek that which is earthly our reward will be unsatis fying and temporary, "for the world passes away . . . but he who does the will of God abides forever." (1 John. 2:17). 2. "Put to death what is earthly in you." (Verses 5-11). He does not let us wonder what he means. Note the list of attitudes and ac tions he classifies as "earthly": immorality, anger, impurity, wrath, passion, malice, evil desire, slan der, covetousness, foul talk. First must come the catharsis, the cleansing, the "crucifixion of the old man." the destruction of all that is evil and earthly. Then the vacuum must be filled, and so in verses 1214 he adds the third imperative: 3. "Put on then ." the follow ing: compassion, patience, kind ness, forbearing one another, low liness, forgiving one another, meek ness, above all put on love. Finally, he adds an unusual, and yet extremely significant com mand at the very end of tne lstrt verse: 4. "And be thankful." Our age has often been called materialis tic and selfish. To the extent that this is tme Paul's; words are cer tainlv needed. Be thankful not greedy. Be thankful not selfish. Be thankful. George Knox, minister Westside Christian Church Army Reveals Low-Cost Air Safety Equipment WASHINGTON (AP) - The Army said today it has found a low-cost radio system that could eliminate 99 per cent of mid air collisions. More than that, the service Said the system ilso would perform navigation and traffic control chores. It reported the proposed setup would pave the way for eventual automation of flight control. Three scientists at the Diamond Ordnance Fuse Laboratories here evaluated a number' of proposed collision avoidance systems. They endorsed one called N A T C A S. which is short for navigation, lir traffic com ml and collision avoid ance system. They said NATCAS operates un der ill weather conditions, is low in cost and simple in design, pre serves military ind lecurity ind is suitable for all sizes of aircraft. NATCAS would enable traffic controllers on the ground to keep a constant check on ill planes loft. Planes also could be con trolled by automatic signals from unattended radio device! on the ground. Vie system would warn a pilot of the danger of collision and in dicate what action to take. The re port said the success of the sys tem would hinge on pilots heeding the warnings. 9 NAft.'AS involves transmissions' on i radio frequency which varies' witn a plane s altitude. It tunes in other aircraft fling it idia cent altitudes and compute! the 'Express' Rider Sans Mail And SACRAMENTO. Calif. (AP)-A modern Pony Express, beset by problems the original never would have dreamed of, headed for San Francisco today by truck and horse. Rider Jack Nolan arrived in the state capital Thursday on a tired horse and without the mail. A shortage of riders, tired horses, an unexpected snowstorm and a disabled truck made the arrival a day late. "We burned out the valves of the truck engine on the Austin (Nevada) summit," , explained driver George Launder. "Not enough horses ajid riders," said Nolan, who also lives in Cul ver City. Calif. The real Pony Express, which carried the mail from St. Joseph, Mo., to Sacramento in 1860-61. used 70 riders who switched horses regularly during the 1,966 mile gallop. Nolan, a gunsmith, alternated riding with Bill Cower, a driving instructor. They had four horses. The original Pony Express start ed it! first run April 3, 1860, and arrived in Sacramento April 13. From here, the mail went on down the Sacramento River to San Francisco by steam boat. The modern-day version drove in from Placerviile, Nolan riding hi! tired horse only from the city limits. The mayor's office had tele phoned Gov. Edmund G. Brown to tell him that the Pony Express rider was arriving with a letter from Missouri's Governor James T. Blair, Jr. Round Butte Vote Cloudy PORTLAND (AP)-StockhoIders of Portland General Electric Co. apparently will not be able to force an early vote on whether their company should build Round Butte Dam on the Deschutes River. The company has said all along that stockholders can throw out the directors if they don't like what they do. but they cannot vote on individual projects approved by the directors. Wednesday a circuit court ruling delayed matters to a point that an election this year would be unlikely' A group of stockholders opposes construction of the proposed dam and went into court seeking an election order. Wednesday Circuit Judge Herbert Schwab upheld a company motion but gave the reb el group 30 days in which to ad vance further arguments. But by then the company's an nual meeting of stockholders will be over, without a vote having been on the agenda. Kennedy Winner In Adlai Domain CHICAGO (AP)-Sen. John F. Kennedy (DMass) received 19 write-in voles for president to 11 for Adalai E. Stevenson in Tues day's state primary in Stevenson's home precinct in suburban Jlct-taw-a, in Lake County. Stevenson, twice-defeated Dem ocratic presidential nominee, is a Mettawa village trustee. The write-in vote for president in 110 other precincts of the 183 in Lake County showed 1.595 for Kennedy; 761 for Stevenson; 135 for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D Minn); 53 for Sen. Stuart Sym ington (D-Mo); 15 for Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex). Kennedy's brother. Robert, a former Senate committee counsel, got 20 votes, one more than given Chester Bowles, former governor of Connecticut. neither n bug nor barge Bi moush for a family of fivt end thrir vacation tutmre. Small enmish ft (tu eronomv, for raw parkin, for fun dnvinc. Check the Volvo quaiity Swedish through and through. Cherk the olvo features tporu car engine and performance, w hite walls, heater-defroster, nist-proonng all these and more at no extra cost. $fxttd whftrvrr fou t evrr 3V) i'&rrr vMiw ur Symbol of nprb Swedish tzifflnoortnf and erailonanshlp PAL MOTORS 84 $. E. Stephens At Destination, On Tired Horse Then Nolan looked in the pouch and the letter wasn't there. "Forget it," he said. "They for got to put the letter in our pouch." At St. Joseph Roy E. Coy, di rector of the St. Joseph Museum and general coordinator for the Pony Express project, said it wasn't a case of forgetfulness. "No letter was intended to pass between the two governors." He could not say how such an idea originated. There were some commemora tive papers for the mayor to sign, however. This ride is part of a centennial celebration. Another commemora tive run will be made this sum mer sponsored by the U.S. Post Office and the Chamber of Com merce. Chances are they will have more horses and riders and a better truck. taurine Says Hatfield Entry Is Possibility WASHINGTON (AP) - Mrs. Maurine Neuberger says the en try of Oregon Gov. Mark Hat field into the race for the U.S. Senate is "within the realm of possibility.," Mrs. Neuberger is seeking the Democritic nomination for the Senate seat vacated by the death of her husband, Sen. Richard Neu berger (D-Ore) last month. She is regarded to be without major opposition in the primary, as is former Gov. Elmo Smith, an Albany newspaper publisher, who is seeking the Republican nomination. However, Mrs. Neuberger told a press conference here Wednes day, it would be possible under Oregon law for Smith to drop out and for the state GOP committee to nominate Hatfield. Hatfield has denied such a possi bility she said. But Mrs. Neuber ger added that she didn't rule out the possibility, if Hatfield felt running against her would be "easier pickings" than opposing Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) in 19R2. In her campaign, Mrs. Neuber ger said, she will ask the citi zens of Oregon "to 'ote for me for myself." and not as a re placement for her late husband. She added: "I am not adequate to be a re placet -:nt for Dick." Mrs. Neuberger said she hopes to return to Oregon about May 9 to campaign. The primary elect ion is May 20. "I'm just discovering the facts of life," she said. "You've got to have money. This is the part of politics I find distasteful. At the conference, she comment ed that Sen. Morse probably will win the stile's democratic presi dential primary test. She was asked whether she ex pected Morse to support her can didacy. She replied: "I can't fig ure why he would oppose me. I certainly have no quarrel with him." Strayed or Stolen? SALEM (AP) Has livestock rustling increased, or are the ani mals just walking off the ranchesT The state Agriculture Depart- mpnt ia IrvinO t fin1 lha inemnri after getting reports last month of 60 strayed or stolen animals trom 11 ranches. flna nulUr Incf rhann ..J lambs, and another lost 17 beef! came. ORchard 3-4401 i i IVOIATO hi nA3t3Lfci 'rection of both planes.