The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 03, 1960, Page 3, Image 3

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    Convicts Killed
mim ,um ii;f n prison Rio,
To Get Rid Of French Rule
NEW YORK (AP) Soviet Pre
mier Khrushchev has called pub
licly for action by the Algerian
Seople to free themselves from
ranee.
"The colonialists know no other
reason but the reason ti force,"
he told Algerian leaders Sunday.
While dodging a question as to
whether Moscow would recognize
Seltns Ask Reprt
Oh U. S. Econtmy
WASHINGTON (API - Sens
Henry M. Jackson of Washington
and Wayne Morse of Oregon
joined 11 olner Democratic sena
tors Sunday in asking Secretary
of Commerce Frederick H. Muel
ler for a report on the nation's
economy.
In a telegram, the senators
noted that a national news maga
zine has said a secret study by
the Commerce Department shows
the nation is in an economic re
cession. The department denied
last week a report to this effect
by Newsweek Magazine.
The senators said in their telegram:
"It has been our observation
that when the economic statistics
are favorable, your department
loses lime time in rushing them
into print.
"It would be an Immense dis
service if facts' to which the peo
ple are entitled are being sup
pressed because an election cam
paign is under way."
Other signers of the teleeram
Included Sen. Frank Church of
Idaho.
the Algerian rebel regime, Khrush
chev said, "This government does
exist."
Khrushchev's move was I blow
at France's president, Charles de
Gaulle, whose plan for self-determination
for Algeria Khrushchev
bad once supported.
The French say the North Af
rican area is a part of France.
De Gaulle has avoided any recog
nition of the rebels as a govern
ment. Khrushchev had three cabinet
ministers of the rebel outfit in for
a two-hour visit at the Soviet Glen
Cove, Long Island, estate.
A spokesman for the Algerians
said without contradiction from
Khrushchev, that "we were in full
agreement" and that Khrushchev
"expressed his wishes for libera
tion of all colonized countries and
for Algeria."
Khrushchev s session wttn uie Al
gerians was . one fragment in a
weekend flurrv of diplomatic ac
tivity which observers speculated
may set uie siage lor a oramauc
Khrushchev exit from the big show
at the United Nations.
The Kremlin chieftain started off
Saturday with a free - swinging
speech at the General Assembly.
His Sunday rest included seven
hours of diplomatic appointments
mostly with African leaders, i
cocktdil party served by the Gui
nea delegation, ana two meetings
with newsmen. i
Khrushchev has no announced ap
pointments later than Tuesday. Sev-
Fiscal Committee
Hits GOP Attack
SALEM (AP) The Legisla
live Fiscal Committee, smarting
from a political attack by Sen.
Robert F. White, R-Salem, assert-
ea Saturday tnat it was not a
"breeding ground for Democratic
candidates."
White made that charge re
cently. Rep. Robert Duncan,- D-Med-ford,
chairman of the committee
said White's attack was unwar
ranted. He was joined in the state
ment by two Republican repre
sentatives, Stafford Hansell of
Athena and George Layman of
Newberg.
In other action, the committee
called for a study of the electron
ic data processing equipment be
. ing installed by the slate Depart
ment of Motor Vehicles. The
equipment will cost about SI mil
lion per biennium. Specifications
for what may be a better pro
firam will be studied.
The committee also decided to
ask the next session of the legis
lature for funds and authority for
two additional positions on its
staff.
Interstate Compact
Signing Set Monday
SPOKANE (AP) The Colum-1
bia Interstate Compact was due
to be signed here Monday by 42
members of the commission that
worked it out after a series of
negotiation! stretching over 10
years.
The seven-state compact lays
down principles for development
of water resources in the Colum
bia River drainaee.
It will need approval of the leg
islatures of Oregon, Washington,
Montana and Idaho and of Con
gress, The compact also includes
Utah, Nevada and Wyoming but
could go into effect without them
if their legislatures did not ap
prove. Two previous compacts failed to
get legislative approval. .
REIDSVILLE, Ga. (AP) Two
convicts were stabbed to death.
and- two others were wounded
earlv today in an outbreak of vio
lence at the big State Prison
eral government heads are slated here,
to leave this week, starting with
Yugoslavia s President Tito Tues
day. However U. S. security men,
who have lost several bets on
Khrushchev s departure date so far
said()hey have not yet received a
departure notice from the Soviets.
Khrushchev kept mum on this
point Sunday. He did say he would
be back next year. Then he turned
this into a joke, saying he planned
to return to go trout fishing. ,
Mon., Oct. 3, 1960 The Nwi-Reviaw, Rweburg, Ort. 3
Arrests Follow Clash Of Workers In Strike
Two Hunters Find
Wrecked Airplane
MEDFORD. Ore. (AP) The
four bodies found by a hunl-r
Saturday in ana near a crashed
plane have been identified as
those of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee
Klefeker of Hawthorne, Calif.,
and Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Smith of
lnelewood. Calif. .
fht plane vanished Aug. IS on
a flight from Bellingham, Wash.,
to Modesto Calif. Klefeker, 27,
was the pilot.
The plane had smashed into a
steep canyon near Dutchman's
Peak, about 25 miles south of
Medford.
The hunters, Cliff Childers and
Jim Fossen of Applcgate, said
two of the bodies were in the
wreckage.
The four had gone to Belling
ham to visit Smith's parents. They
were last seen on a refueling stop
here Aug. 15.
An extensive search had been
conducted in Northern California
and Southern Oregon for several
weeks for the missing aircraft. No
other plane has been reported
missing in the area.
The riot was auelled quickly
when guards rushed to the bar
racks after hearing shouts and
then cries of pain.
Dead were:
Gordon Rex Andrews, 22. serv
ing seven years from Bleckley
County on burglary convictions.
Gerald Frost, 22, under sen;
fences totaling 13 years from
Glynn County for a long suing of
burglaries. O
The wounded:
Tommy Gay, 36, under sentence
for robbery by force.
John David Williamson, 19.
serving burglary and auto theft
sentences.
Jnck Forrester, slate correc
tions director, said preliminary in
vestigation indicates that only Uie
four were Involved in the violence.
He said they used crude knives
fashioned from kitchen instru
ments.
NEW YORK (AP)-Supervisory
employes and production workers
clashed at plants in Massachu
setts today as a nationwide strike
against General Electric Co, en
tered its first working: dav.
folice arrested six persons in
Pittsfield on assault and battery
charges. Pushing, shoving and
other minor violence were re-
Nigerians Favor
Western Nations
LAGOS. Nieeria (AP) Nigeria
is confidently looking forward to
its development as a free nation
"with the good will of friends like
tne umtea states ana uie unuea
Kingdom."
Prime Minister Sir Abubakar
Tiifawa Ratewa told a U.S. dele
gation that his nation the newest
and most populous in Atnca ex
pects to draw on American and
British exDerience.
"We Nigerians are friends of
the United States, he said.
"There is no doubt about it. We
want that friendship to become
stronger."
Kennedy Comment
Rapped By Lodge
CORONADO. Calif. (AP) The
world struggle, aays Henry Cabot
Lodge, is not a publicity contest
in which Uie victory goes to the ing without a contract.
ported in Lynn and Everett and
at other GE plants in Uie stale
The strike was called Saturday
by the International Electrical
Workers Union, but members of
the union's largest local. No. 301
at Schenectady, N.Y., reported
for work as usual today.
The local has 800 of the T.000
IUE members in Uie -55 plants in
volved. A spokesman for the local said
the members would remain at
WV'k at least 'until Thursday. A
union ' spokesman in New York,
however, predicted they would
take another strike vote Tuesday
and strike Wednesday,
The IUE leadership has warned
its members not to continue work-
A traffic Jam developed In Sy-,' GE also has refused to extend
racuse's Electronics Park when the old contract which expired
More Comfort Wearing
FALSE TEETH
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looaa plate discomfort. FA8TEETK,
an Improved powder, sprinkled on
upper and lower plates holds them
firmer so that they feel more com
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taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non
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odor" (denture breath). Get FAS
TEETH today at an; drug counter.
Brigitte Leaves
French Hospital
NICE, France (AP) Brigitte
Bardot today left the clinic where
she has been under treatment
since a suicide attempt on her
26lh birthday last week.
The sexy movie star, appearing
wan, wore poma-aot slacks, a
black blouse, dark glasses, and a
white scarf around ner nead.
It was her first appearance
since she was brought into the
clinic suffering from an overdose
of sleeping pills and razor cuts on
her wrists. The story is that she
had been brooding about the un
happiness of her second marriage.
She departed for an unan
nounced destination after photog
raphers took a few pictures. No
reporters asked any quesUons.
and none followed her when she
departed. Brigitte's mother ap
pealed to the press Sunday night
to let her aaugnter alone.
Georgia-Pacific
Merger Ratified
PORTLAND (AP) Stockhold
ers of the Georgia Pacific Corp.
and the W. M. Ritler Lumber
Co. of Roanoke, Va., have rati
fied, merger of the two firms.
R. B. Pamplin, Georgia Pacific
president, said the action was
taken at special, separate meet'
ings.
The merger will involve ex
changing one share of Ritler stock
each for l.s Georgia Pacific
shares.
Ritter has large holdings of tim
ber, natural gas and coal in Vir
ginia and West Virginia. Its last
annual report showed a share
value of S18.5.
The merger is subject to ap
provalby the Securities and Ex
change Commssion.
Mitchell Starts
Northwest Trip
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
James P. Mitchell, secretary of
labor, is campaigning for the
Republican ticket in Oregon to
day and making a brief foray
across the river into Washington.
His schedule put him at John
Day Dam site in the morning and
The Dalles at noon. Then he is
to be at Hood River, Camas and
Vancouver, Wash., and into Port
land for a dinner and a reception.
Tuesday he will be at St. Helens,
Longview, Kelso. Uien farther
north in Washington.
man who makes the bifieest noise.
Lodge, Republican candidate for
the vice presidency, made the
comment at a news conference
Sunday before commencing a day
or so of relaxation at -this fashion
able .San Diego suburb.
He said that Sen. John F. Ken
nedy, the Democratic presidential
nominee, complained in a cam
paign talk that President Eisen
hower had failed to get the news
headlines that Soviet Premier
Khrushchev and Cuba's Fidel
Castro had been getting.
Lodge, until recently U.S. am
bassador to the United Nations,
said he felt President Eisenhower
had addressed the U.N. General
Assembly with dignity last week.
"Now, President Eisenhower
could easily get publicity such as
Mr. Khrushchev or Mr. Castro
have been getting by the simple
device of making a. spectacle of
himself. But Senator Kennedy
should realize that the world
struggle is not a publicity contest
in which the victory goes to the
man who makes . Uie biggest
noise. Lodge said.
In Syracuse, where GE em
ploys about 14.000 in 23 plant!,
the IUE said only about two per
cent of the nonsalaried production
workers naa reportea tor work
today.
State Migrant Laws
Evaluation Urged
SALEM (AP) Former stale
Rep. Don Willner of Portland
Saturday urged that a statewide
conference be held to evaluate
the success of Oregon's migrant
labor laws. ,
Willner, a Democrat, was chair
man of the Legislative Interim
Committee on Migratory Labor
which drafted the five laws ap-
nrnvprl at t)i 1050 aAHlinn
winner, speaking at uie .uregon i
Public Health Association conven-1 1
tion, called for new legislation
a law to require farmers to take 1 1
out stale or private industrial ac
cident insurance if they hire
workers to do hazardous jobs.
the first workers began reporting
and pickets crossed in front of Uie
gates.
Insults were exchanged, but no
violence was reported.
At Cleveland, Ohio, only 100 out
of 3.100 workers at GE's lamp di
vision. Ncla rain, went past
massed pickets. There were no
disturbances.
James B. Carey, union presi
dent, sent notices to all locals
Sunday, instructing members not
to perform any work except essen
tial maintenance until a contract
was in effect in their plants.
But a GE spokesman predict
ed that more than 10,000 union
members would report for work
today.
No negotiaUons art under way
now.
The strike resulted from union
dissaUsfacUon with a GE wage
offer in a proposed three-year
contract and GE's refusal to con
tinue a cost-of-living escalator
clause from the old pact,
midnight Saturday.
pud Advirtittmtnt
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About: th Ftutwood Sixty SptciaU Bttow: tht Scrim 8ixtyTwa 8tdan '
A NEW INSPIRMTON FOJfcTHE MOTORING WORM
You are looking at the completely
new Cadillac for 1961 a motor car
that will inspire the automotive world
for years to come.
While unmistakably Cadillac in
stature and in majesty, it represents a
totally new concept in fine car design.
Its graceful silhouette reveals less
over-all length and increased be'ad
room. Its delicately formed roof lines
provide an almost uninterrupted pan
orama of vision while a crisp, new
VISIT. YOUR
sculptured 'design of front, rear and
sides confers a degree of distinction that
is entirely new to motoring.
Beneath this visual elegance resides
a host of dramatic engine&ng advance
mentsan even finer, 'quieter and
smoother-performing engine . ; . an en
tirely new front suspension system . . ,
a lubrication-free chassis . . . wonder
fully improved steering and braking . . .
and greatfy increased maneuverability
and handling ease.
. This new world of motoring pleasure
has been interpreted in eleven indi
vidual body styles each with an ex
ceptionally wide selection of beautifully
crafted and appointed interioM...
and an unusually generous choice of
accessories, fabrics and colors.
Your dealer Will be proud to introduce
you to the entirely new 1961 Cadillac
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