2 The Newi-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Mori., May 9, 1960 Sen. Morse Urges Replacement Of McCarran Immigration Law CRESIIAM (AP) Sen. Wayne Morse (Dure) Sunday night tail ed for more liberal legislation to replace the McCarrcn-Waller Im migration Act. Morse made the comment in a speech to a Knights of Coluinhus dinner, at which funds were raised or refugees from Indones ia. Jn his speech, Morse said: "If wc come to grips with the quota in national origin provisions, il will eliminate any basis for a feeling in any nation that we arc discriminating against anyone." There should be new standards, be said, ones which would lake into account "immigration on the basis of need our own needs as well as those of immigrants." The greatest refugee problem in the world, he said, concerns hun dreds of thousands of unsettled Arabs in the Middle Kast. A solu tion must be worked out under the auspices of the United Ma lions, Morse said. The speech was one of a scries in Morse's campaign for Oregon's May 20 presidential primary. To day he will speak in Medford and Ashland. Earlier, in a Saturday night speech in Portland lo a state con vention of Young Dcmoc rats, Morse urged a staunch stand on natural resources. Morse said he wanted the op portunity to carry his fighting rec ord on natural resources to the National Democratic Convention next July in Los Angeles. Morse hit at Sen. John K. Ken nedy's voting record. He said the Massachusetts Democrat voted (Plitf Advertilemint) People 60 to 80 APPLY FOR OLD. LINE LEGAL RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE If you are under 80, you can still apply for a $1, 000 life insur ance policy to help take care of final expenses without burdening your family. You handle the entire transac tion by mail with OLD AMKK1CAN of KANSAS CITY. No obligation. No one will call on you! Tear out this ad and mail it today with your name, sddress and year of birth to Old American In surance Co., 4900 Oak, Depl L53GB, Kansas City, Missouri. against Upper Colorado River de velopment, against Hural Electri fication expansion and against the Omnibus Kivers and Harbors bill that contained important projects for Oregon. Morse asked: "Do you want to underwrile this (Morse's) record or do you want to send across this country the message that for the people of Oregon the record doesn't make any difference? "You can silence Wayne Morse on May 20, but if you do.. .you'll be destroying your own self in terest." Kennedy is one of Morse's op ponents in the primary. Morse pointed to a particular fight he now is carrying on against what he called the upstream bene fits bill, which ho said would al low private power lo build up stream from public dams and llien win government allowances for the use of the water. He said il is before Congress. Recalling his unsuccessful fight against confirmation of Jcrone Kuykcndall as a federal power commissioner. Morse said the I FPC is ready lo license such up stream projects. "This bill is a political deal and is a shocking one," Morse said. "You don't win these fights by passing teacups.... You win them with your nose in a book.. .and by not being afraid of being unpopu lar until the majority realizes how right you are." The Young Democrats nine times punctuated Morse's speech Willi , applause and afterwards gave him a 2'4 minute standing ovation. Reported moves to with draw state Young Democratic en dorsement of Morse failed lo ma terialize at the weekend conven tion. The delegates named as their new state president a Willamette University law student, Fred Chambers. The new vice presi dent is Dan Marsh, a University of Oregon law student. - irnPTTirffPTOi , JW'l' TALKING IT OVER Ray Small, Walla Walla, Wash., secretary of the Tri-State Rodeo Management Assn.; Bill Tipton, Roseburg, president of the Douglas County Rodeo Assn.; and Karl Doering, Douglas County Rodeo manager and Tri-State director discussed mutual problems of rodeo management Saturday in a meeting of the Tri-State group at the Ump qua Hotel in Roseburg. Managers of 30 rodeos in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and North ern California attended. It was the first time the association had held one of its yearly meetings in Roseburg. Several of the rodeo managers remained in Roseburg to judge con testants in the Douglas County Rodeo queen contest. Name of the queen will be an nounced just prior to the rodeo, June 18-19. (News-Review photo) Steelworkers Local Endorses F. Ashley The United Sleelworkers of America, Loeal 5074, has given en dorsement to Frank Ashley for the office of Douglas County judge. Ashley's "record of service to Douglas County shows very defin ite qualifications for the position of county judge," according to Leo Collins, president uf the local. Ashley is running against Coun ty Judge V. T. Jackson or the Democratic nomination. The Greatest Story Ever Told f llaly Bible. All power U rjiven me in bven and arth. Go y tboroior and teach aU nations &...Lo I am with you always,, unto the end of the world. Mat. 28:18-20. Mosquito Puts Welt On President's Pate WASHINGTON (AP) Presi dent Eisenhower has a small welt on the side of his head today. He laughingly reported he was biltcn by a mosquito while fishing. Eisenhower had breakfast at the While House this morning with a group of Republican congressmen. When he posed with (he group for photographs, newsmen noticed lhat a patch of the President's hair above the left ear was discolored a bit by something which seemed to be medicine. Ren. Robert Wilson of Califor nia explained it to reporters afterward. He said Eisenhower gave I Ins account: When he was playing football years ago at West Point be and another youth cracked their skulls together. The accident cut Eisen hower's head above ihe !')ft ear and quile a scar developed later. White lislung tins weekend ap parently in the small pond at his Gettysburg, Pa., farm the Presi dent was bitten by a mosquito in llie scar area. The area apparently has re mained sensitive, and Eisenhower reported lhat the mosquito bile raised a welt. Two Persons Drown As Fish Platform Fails THE DALLES, Ore. (AP) Four persons stood on a salmon fishing platform above Ihe swift waters of tho Deschutes River. Suddenly, the plalform cave way. throwing all into the water. Two boys managed lo swim to shore. Ihe other two persons, a man and his daughter, drowned as he tried to save her. That was Saturday night, and Sunday a search plane spotted the nociy oi ratricia nioses, 12. lour miles downstream, and a ground party recovered it. The search continued for the body of her father, Oscar Moses, 42. of Warm Springs. Ore. Micnlf hrnest Mnsier said Moses had swain to Ihe aid of the girl, who was being carried down stream. Hut both were swept to their death. Porter Still Trying For Red China Visa Associattd Press Special Servica WASHINGTON (AP) If Rep. Charles O. Porter (D-Ore) doesn't get a passport to Red China it won't be for lack of trying. His efforts are now nearing the end of the road. Porter contends the Stale, De partment doesn't have authority to deny him, or other legislators, the opporlunity lo make a visit of inspection to Red China in con nection with congressional duties. Secretary of Slate Christian A. Hcrler maintains the department can prohibit travel behind the DamiKx) curtain even by con gressmen. The federal district court and V. S. Court of Appeals here have ruled Herter is right, Porter wrong, Porler now has pending an appeal lor a re-hearing before the Court of Appeals. Joseph L. Rauh Jr., Porter's at torney, says if Ihe appeal is re jected. Porter plans to lake the case lo the Supreme Court. . .... lui nuj 1 1 a ' 1 "r"1" v Vz OFF ON ALL CHILDREN'S GAMES PUZZLES ELECTRIC GAMES Play Skoo! Toys Childrens Things-To-Do Chemistry and -Microscope Sets CLOSING OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF CHILDREN'S GAMES - BUY NOW FOR BIRTHDAYS! ROSEBURG BOOK STORE 549 S. E. Jackson Roseburg Mb. Minnie May Woods Last riles for Minnie May Woods, 83, who died at the Riversualu San itarium on Saturday following a prolonged illness, were held today. They were conducted at Wilson's Chapel of the Roses at 2 p.m., with W. R. Riston, pastor ot the Seventh-day Advcntist Church, of ficiating. Concluding services and interment followed at the Roseburg Memorial Gardens. She was born Sept. 18, 1876 In Union, HI., and had lived in the Itoseburg area for the past five years, moving here from South Dakota. Her husband, William, pre ceded her in death in 19jti. She was a member of the Seventh-day Advcntist Church. Survivors include three daugh ters. Mrs. Marvella Back of Rap id City, S C.; Mrs. Marion Shcllen berger of Verndale. Minn.; and Mrs. Neva Olson of Roseburg; four sous, Lester and Elvin. bulh of Roseburg. and Earl and Virgil, both of Rapid City: a sister. Mrs. Esther Brittain of Tygh Valley. Ore.; and five brothers, Chester II a m in of Plainvicw, Minn.; George Ilamm of Finlayson, Minn.; Theo Ilamm of Goodrige, Minn.; Mai Icy Ilamm of Villa! ct, Minn.; and Russell Ilamm of Alexandria, 37 grandchildren and 45 great grandchildren. Fast-Draw Earp's Shooting Awry SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) The man who plays the fast-drawing Wyatt Earp on television is having a lot of bad luck with his gun work. Hugh O'Brian has had trouble with his shooting irons two days in a row. First he suffered powder burns while attempting his draw, then he wounded a fellow per former slightly when a cartridge was placed in a pistol by mistake instead of a blank. The latest accident occurred Sunday before some 2,000 persons attending O'Brian's western-style show. The big fight scene was on. O'Brian drew his pistol and fired. Frisco Estcs, 22, promptiy col lapsed on the stage and writhed in pain just as called for by the script. .. But he wasn't situpuseu lo con tinue to toss and groan. Investigation showed the pellets came from a special target-shooting cartridge placed in the pistol by mistake. At Wilmington, N. C, Saturday, a blank cartridge exploded in his pistol as O'Brian was practicing his draw. The show was delayed while he was treated for powder burns on his right thigh. Nasser Refuses Canul For Israeli Shipping DAMIETTA, Egypt (AP)-Presi-ident Gamel Abdel Nasser de clared defiantly Sunday that be will not open the Suez Canal to Israel shipping despite pressure from American congressmen. The United Arab Republic presi dent told a rally here that some U. S. senators are creating "an uproar about Ihe passage of Is raeli ships in the canal." "We won't pay any attention to it and won't be terrorized by those people who are threatening us in America," he added. The U. A. R. maintains that a state of war exists between the I Arabs and Israel, despite the truce, and this gives Egypt the right to bar Israeli ships and car goes from the canal as sceurtiy measure. Nasser spoke at a rally after opening a textile mill built with Soviet help. He praised the "noble and wise" policy of Ihe Soviet Un ion in honoring its economic agreement with the V. A. R. de spite the differences of social sys tems of the two countries. World Reaction Varies In US Spy Plane Incident LONDON (AP) Moscow radio declared today activity by the U.S. military such as sending a spy plane over the Soviet Union i threatens to involve the world "in the greatest calamity." Implying that President Eisen hower could not be held responsi ble as did Premier Nikita Khrushchev himself in announcing the plane had been shot Moscow radio declared: "The Pentagon is the father of the many war blocs that encom pass the main areas of the globe. However, authorization (for the spy plane's flight) was not re ceived from Washington by the U.S. military and the intelligence service." But Radio Peiping, the voice of Red China, declared that "the re sponsible officials of the united States, headed by Eisenhower, have brought the cold war ma chine into full operation." Meanwhile, throughout Western Europe and in the Far East, most newspaper editorial comment agreed on these points: 1. That Khrushchev has scored magnitude just before the sum mit conference opens in Paris next Monday. 2. That the incident weakens the position of the Western powers in general, and the United States in particular, at the conference. 3. That it reduces the possibility of some progress toward easing international tension, much less of even the most tentative agree ments at the summit. While recognizing that both East and West engage in intelligence activities, many observers felt that the United States blundered in its timing. "The most disturbing feature of the incident is how the Americans came to authorize a flight of this kind on the eve of the summit meeting," ;sid the influential Lon don Times. "Whatever the reason, there ought now to be a stringent tight ening up in the control and coordi nation of the Central Intelligence Agency's activities." The conservative Paris newspa per Le Figaro said that "history offers few comparable examples of clumsiness." It said Ihe inci dent gives Khrushchev "argu ments with which he can cover his intransigence if the adventure of the summit conference runs into difficulties." London's leftist Dailv Mirror rie "sheer insanity." The liberal News Chronicle called it a "crass blunder." The Western leaders will start the summit conference with the knowledge that their "most powerful member has been outwitted with painful ease." The State Department's explana tion of the flight brought mixed reactions. Konnie Zilliacus, a lcftwing member of the British Parliament, said it was the "classic excuse of the young lady who pleaded that her illegitimate baby was only a little one. The fact that the Presi- Nancy Jane Foster Nancy Jane Foster, five-month- old daughter of Mr. and Airs. George Foster of Winston, died suddenly at home early Saturday. She was born at Canyonville on Dec. 1, 1959. Surviving besides her parents Is a brother. George McKinley Fos ter, at Winston. Graveside funeral services will be held at the Tcninile Cemetery on Tuesday at 2 p.m.: with the Rev. James Black of the Assem bly of God church at Tenmile of ficiating. Arrangements are in charge of Long and Orr Mortuary. dent apparently knew nothing of the dispatch of the spy plane makes matters, if anything, worse. Germany's influential Frankfurt er Allgemeine said: "You don t make things better by claiming that the other side's exaggerated sence of security morally justifies the flight." But the Straits Times of Singa pore said: "The American govern ment has done the proper thing to bnn ii.inne in nrnnnrtion bv ad mittingor all but that their air craft was seeieing Minimum"". The newspaper said it was iu....i..i,n.,. ii.b that ihe Ameri- jlu uain.ue a uv - - can plane had been caught 'when its becoming Clear uiui auvi bombers are flying regular sorties at high altitudes in Japanese air Pi?e-" . 11, The Hindustan auuiuaiu commended the State .Depart ment's admission but said the i , -r .1, nr4miccinn I O S ft S canuur ui wic am...." - - - - -somewhat in the explanation. Indian government souiees so they "very much appreciated Urafkinatnn'a "m ndid statement and added they hoped "nothing will be done or saia win further vitiate the amosphere. .tn-i.. mapiinf IS tOO me auuim.v o - golden an opportunity to be spoilt by this single inciaem, s ment spokesman said. i a.....,iu ih SvHnev Morn ing Herald said, "Not the least of the benefits Mrusncnev may hope to derive is that the uncriti- nn milllnnc in Asia nnH the West will now believe that every Com munist lie must have somelhinz in it." A Pakistani government spokes, man in Karachi said an investiga tion showed that no such plane as Powers' Lockheed U2 had been at Peshawar at the lime. Foreign Secretary Mohammed Ikramullah. who is in London, said if Khrushchev's allegation proved true, he would lodge a strong protest with the United States to insure that such a thing does not happen again. The Norwegian Foreign Minis, try said it knew nothing of any plan for Powers to land in Bodo. Maj. Gen. E. Tufte Johnsen, air force commander for northern Norway, said no permission had been asked or given Turkey, where Powers' jet was based, declared in a statement: "No permission has been given by the Turkish government to a n y American planes for research flights over Soviet territory or for any other purpose." Two British newspapers the Daily Mail and Daily Herald said both British and American aircraft have flown special rccon naisance missions deep inside planes have been spotted flying over the United States, Britain and Canada. "But on all sides," it said, "the sightings of spy planes and even clashes with them have been kept secret. The fact that Russia has now called a halt, and has proved her ability to do so against the highest flier of ail spy planes, wiil have serious effects." for Safety's Soke Get Our BRAKE REUNE MAY SPECIAL Andy Schlick f "f il Brake For Andy When You Are In- $1095 B REG. $28.05 Formosa Highway Open 'TAIPEI (AP) The new east west highway across the moun tains of central Formosa was opened to traffic today after 3 years and 10 months of building. It links the Formosa Strait with the Pacific. FOR ALL FORD PASSENGER CARS Here's wicrf we do: Clean and inspect brake drums . : . Install new Genuine Ford Brake Lining . . . Check wheel and master cylinders . . . Clean and repack front wheel bearings . . . Add brake fluid if needed . . . Adjust brake pedal clearance ; : : Adjust parking brake . . , Road test. Your Ford Dealer Knows Your Ford Cor Beit L0CKW00D MOTORS 745 SE Rose Ph. OR 3-4487 TRUE AIR CONDITIONING PROVIDES COMFORT THE YEAR AROUND! There's a big difference between air conditioning and air cooling. True, modern electric air conditioners can cool the air if you want it cool. But air conditioners also purify the air you breathe, control humidity winter and summer, clear the air of your home of odors, and remove pollens and other harmful elements in June or January! DON'T WAIT 'TIL IT'S TOO LATE When hot weather. arrives in southern Oregon and northern California, air conditioning equipment is often at a premium. See your favorite Cal, Ore Electrical Dealer now for immediate delivery, and . . . AIR CONDITION ! i