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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1960)
6 The Newt-Review, Roceburg, Ore. Wed., Sept. 28, 1960 FT V 1 U ! .i i lit Hvj f yt I - N .A r i J 4 . SURPRISE You too would look like Lani Stephens did when she looked up from her ' typewriter In the American President Lines office in San Francisco and sow a tiger. She ' didn't take time to learn that it was a stuffed ten-footer, biggest ever brought bock from India. A 74 M v NYLON STOCKINGS ARE FOR THE BIRDS Jim Madden examines nylon stockings which, have been placed over the heads of Milo which plant breeders of the Missouri State Farmers Assn. wish to save for study and observation. The nylon is sheer enough to let grain dry, yet protects it from greedy birds. The nursery is located in Marshall, Mo. Aerial Tramway Doomed At Hood PORTLAND (AP) - The Mt. Hood aerial tramway will be dis mantled, ending a career that was on the edge of failure from the start. It was built as a million-dollar project in the 1940s to carry pas sengers from Government Camp to Timberllne Lodge, a verticle riso of 2,200 feet in 3.1 miles. There were two self-propelled cars that jerked along on fixed IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE NEWS-REVIEW ADVERTISERS cables. They never d 1 d run smoothly and often they would not run at all. The last passengers carried were a group of Ohio school teachers, three years ago. W. M. Simon, an officer of the tramway company, said it would have taken $400,000 to modify the coaches so they would run prop erly. He said a government loan of $250,000 was available, but the 400 stockholders construction was sort of a civic enterprise would not put up the other $150,000. So the cars, cable and support ing towers were sold to a wrecking company for $50,000. They are to be down in 30 days. Porter Charges Durno Turnabout EUGENE (AP) Rep. Charles V. I'orter, JJ-ore., says his Ke publican opponent in the 4th Bis trict now favors a measure he voted against in the Oregon Legis lature. ...... Porter said state Sen. Edwin R. Durno advocated in a recent speech support of a November ballot measure for veterans hous ing loans. "This is the same Sen. Durno who was one of only three out of 29 state senators who voted against tliis measure in the last session of the Legislature,". Porter said in a release. " - . Khrushchev Showed Self A Hypocrite, Bully & Bore WASHINGTON (API-Premier Nikita Khrushchev, having done his best to naralvze the Unilen Nations, has no reason for staying around now except to watch a cripple try to walk. He had two purposes in coming here to make propaganda and to undermine the united Nations. He accomplished both. By his performance last week in New York despite the bleed ing heart be exhibited to back ward peoples he showed himself a hypocrite, a destructive force, a bully and a bore. It is perhaps no accident he seems upset by the thought of death and disaster. It may be a pattern of his mind. Just read his speech to the United Nations and many previous speeches. tie dwells on anniruiauon. His twu-Iiour speech to tile United Nations could have been delivered in an hour. It was a long-winded kind he delivers to captive audiences in Moscow. It had a few moments of thunder. As a whole it was a bore. Khrushchev talks peace but he acts like a man frightened of it. For more than a year he . des perately wanted a summit meet ing. Then at the last moment, aft er the U2 spy plane incident, he backed away and wrecked it. It was thought at the time he might have been trying to save face. But he came -to this country where it was possible at the United Nations to make a new start toward peaceful settlement. instead, he exploded in denumca tion and undermined the world's greatest agency for peace. ue talked, as ne has many times before, of the need for dis armament. The next day he made disarmament impossible by de claring there could be none un less he had his way in demand ing a basic change in the U.N. itself. This was when he castigated Dag Hammarskjold, U.N. secretary-general, who had been criti cal of the Soviets' efforts to pene trate the Congo when the United Nations was trying to restore peace there. Khm.hrhptf raltpil fnr rpvt.incf tho ""fundamental structure of the United Nations by eliminating Hammarskjold's job and creating a three-man secretariat to run the show. One man would represent com munism, one the West, and the third the neutral nations. Under the setup a veto by any of the three would paralyze the United Nations. But Khrushchev knew his idea was impossible of achievement when he offered it. What it boils down to is an ef fort to bulldoze the world organi zation into not interfering with Russian adventures in the future. Khrushchev did it by expressing a lack of confidence in the organi zation. This leaves the future useful ness of the United Nations badly damaged if not ruined. Khrushchev spent more time in his speech on the evils of colonial ism than he did on anything else, demanding that all territories now held by any power oe immediate ly freed. Here he was at his hypocritical worst, for he said: "It could be said that it is easy for the Soviet Union to speak for the elimination of the colonial regime since the Soviet Union has no colonies." But the Soviet Union is the new. est and biggest colonial power. Witness the bondage of Russia's European satellites. The proof- Khrushchev's bloody supression of the Hungarians when iney mea to shake off communism. Why does he act this way? Per haps it is in nis nature, crude ana explosive. Perhaps he feels it is necessary, as has been said, to convince the Red Chinese and his Kremlin critics that he is stalwart indeed. Perhaps it is none of those but this: Russia has now tremendous power in weapons and he is bent on using that force if only through threats because he fears American countenorce to DiacK mail his way through. Communications Set MOSCOW (AP) Tass an nounced direct radio telegraph communications were established Tuesday between Moscow and Ha. vana. Glide Area Hunters Choose Locations By MRS. ARTHUR SELBY Several deer hunters from the GUde area left last weekend for Eastern Oregon to select choice camping spots for the opening of the deer season. Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Brooks with t new trailer house, will hunt at Paisley. They were joined by Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ball of Glide and Mr. and Mrs. John Frederickson with a trailer house. Leon Simpson and son, of Idle yld Park recently drove to Eugene to spend a day visiting the for mer's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Royal Wilkinson. Mrs. tiladys Coleman has re turned to her home at Portland after a week's visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Casebeer. y 7 Straub Chargs Smith Opposed Education Bills PORTLAND (AP) A Demo cratic Party leader today said didate for U. S. senator, time and time again opposed education bills wnue in tne Oregon senate. Robert W. Straub. of Eugene, the Democratic state chairman, made the comment in one of a series of weekly releases which call .at tention to what he terms short comings in Smith's record. While a state senator, Straub said. Smith voted against key bills to aid education, including: estab lishment of a junior college in Portland, creation of Portland State College as a four-year, de gree granting institution, raising minimum salaries for teachers, improving sick leave for teachers, creation of new teaching hospital and medical center at the Univer sity of Oregon Medical School. "In contrast to Mr. Smith's rec ord of obstruction to education, Maurine Neuberger, the Demo cratic nominee for u. S. senator, has an outstanding record of achievement on behalf of im proved schools in Oregon," Straub said. SITTY PRETTY Bill Sewell and Jean Jarrett make a startling picture as they try out new "cone" chairs de signed by young Danish architect Verner Panton and shown at New York home furnishings show. The chairs have : X-shaped sheet metal frames covered with foam rubber. Off-Car Delivery ALL ROOFING MATERIALS 1 iFhCYf 0n All Orders BO O P,aced By Friday, Sept. 30 GERRETSEN Kyco. Flegel Warehouse, Odell & Casper Sts. 1 Blk off Diamond Lk Blvd. OR 2-2636 News-Review Want-Ms Will Work For You MOST advertising seeks out the pro spect, while prospects seek' out the Classified Ad because they already recognize that they have a want and are looking to see who can fill it for them. 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