Kennedy Greets Official Family At White House Party Sunday WASHINGTON (AB) Presi dent and Mrs. Kennedy shook hands with 300 members of their official family at a gay White House reception Sunday night, featuring champagne and mixed drinks. The President said it was the first chance he had had to meet many of the new members of his team. The 5 p.m. gathering first ma jor social event at the White House given by the Kennedys started off with the swearing in of 15 of the latest appointees, t hief Justice Earl Warren, intro duced by Kennedy as "the busiest man in Washington," officiated at the ceremony in the East Room. Mrs. Kennedy, in a black velvet sleeveless sheath dress, stood with her husband, vice president and Airs, Lyndon B. Johnson and the Warrens to receive the guests in the Blue Room, where a fire burned in the stately fireplace. The guests mingled later in the state dining room, where a buffet table was laden with tiny sand wiches, cakes and goodies. Drinks, including California and New York champagne, were served at a nearby bar-table. The Marine Corps Band played in the north lobby. Invited, to the reception were 149 administration officials. All appointees to major posts in the administration were on the guest list. The Kennedys left for their Sporadic Gas Price War On Again In Portland PORTLAND (AP) The easo line price war, which has been waged sporadically here the past few years, is on again. The president of the Oregon Gasoline Dealers Association, Vir- ' gil W. Rukke, said the price of regular grade gasoline is general ly 29.9 cents a galion at company stations and 28.9 at independents "If the companies would sell gasoline at wholesale instead of at tank wagon prices and cut out the subsidies, then there would be no more wars. Then all deal ers could sell at a price which would give them a fair profit, Rukke said. private quarters after about an hour on the receiving line and did not join the guests in the dining room. The party brought together some of the President's very new est appointees, such as Edward R. Murrow, director of the United States Information Asencv. named only Saturday, and some hold overs from prior administrations, such as long-time FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover. During the day, Kennedy also attended a solemn Red - Mass, celebrated by the Most Rev. Pat rick A. O'Boyle, Roman Catholic archbishop of Washington, invok ing divine blessings on the ad ministration of justice. . Forest Officials End Fire Analysis Workshop About 65 U. S. Forest Service of ficers concluded a week-long fire analysis workshop in Portland Fri day. Personnel from the regional of fice in Portland and from all 19 national forests in Oregon and Washington took part in the work shop. General sessions were held in the Public Service Building audi torium. Discussions dealt with adminis tration, business management, safety, air support, supply, com munication, prevention, law en- torcement, meteorological servic es, recruitment of fire fighters, en gineering services, and other fac tors involved in the never-ending fight to protect the resources of the national forests. Included also was discussion of fire-control ac tivities last summer during the most severe fire season in 29 years. Dunne two days of the workshop, participants formed subject-matter groups and considered related ma terial in the several fields of lire control management. y J. Herbert Stone, Regional For ester, in an introductory statement to participants, emphasized that the protection of all resources is essential to a high level of sus tained yield and effectively coordi nated multiple-use management. "We are confident," Stone said, "that the workshop will result in improved techniques and operation al procedures in fire protection." Mon., Jon. 30, 1961 The Newi-Review, Roscburg, Ore. 3 Worried Newsman, Photographer Join In Search For Elusive Santa Maria EDITOR'S NOTE: AP staff writer Saul Pett and AP photog rapher John Rooney spent much of Sunday chasing around the At lantic in a U.S. wavy plane in a fruitless search for the Santa Maria. ly a freighter, the wrong passen-147 miles'' we remembered Brook-, beat him to it. ger ship or once a tiny craggy lyn. island. One time the radarman an- Three times in the fog or dark- nounced over the intercom, "Sur ness we approached other search- face object now 34 miles, other planes. When the radarman aircratt 41 miles." ing announced "aircraft dead ahead! "Good, said Kraius, "we may I Several planes went out Sunday The two planes exchanged head-1 to hunt for the Santa Maria. She mgs and altitudes and finally was hard to find because the passed us on the right which Brazilian government had ground seemed the only docenl thing toied all flights lor a full day for do. The surface object turned out i reasons never made clear. When to be the wrong ship. the clearance finally came, Hen rique Galvao had a 34-hour start in which he could have covered :I7. miles in any one direction since his lust known position. This circle more Uuin 7"0 miles in diameter had to be searched and that's a lot of ocean. By SAUL PETT OVER THE ATLANTIC OFF BRAZIL (AP) Hunting the Santa Maria is like a weird dream craz ily fluctuating between Black beard's 171h century and today. We are heading back to Recife after 11 gruelling hours and 2,000 miles up and down the Atlantic, chasing the floating revolution. Something went wrong in the fuel mixture feeding the two piston en gines of the Navy Neptune and so the hunt was cut short with 600 miles of black ocean remain ing between us and home. We have two jets on the wings that can be turned on, but they use up 400 times as much precious fuel as the propellers do. The pilot, Lt. Daniel Krauss of St. 1 nomas island, ua. doesn t seem too worried. But being natural-born cowards, AP photog rapher John Rooney and 1 are plain numb. Mostly we have been flying in soupy, rainy, bouncy weather in a plane designed for the comfort of electronic gadgets, not people curled up like pretzels. For 11 hours tha two pilots haven't left the cockpit. The ra darman hasn t looked away Horn the scope or the navigator from his instruments or the radioman from his dials. Seven times we had something on the radar. But coming down to investigate we found it was on- 11480 TO A BOOK M BANK THEM $3 WE GIVE WE REDEEM Egg SAVE THEM i K780ToTbc5k Wn BYRD'S LOW COST MARKET Hunt For Oregon Oil Continues LAKEVIEW (AP) Drillers have gone down 7,850 feet and still are drilling in their search for Lakeview County oil. The Sun Drilling Co. is doing the work for Humble Oil Co. Humble has leased large tracts of land here for oil exploration. A spokesman for the drilling firm said that the 10,000 foot level, the probably final depth, will be reached in 20 to 25 days. , ""sC J LjLiiiiiiiii' 11111 f "' - 1 S ' FABULOUS AUTOMATIC : ' I wr . p5 BUACH DISPENSER '1 ' l .l,MIiE-ILUTES ' J A0BS kl,t i..ficolly. ' .jvl V Ik f MiMk Umft A " f jhays1?' "!' -t'V'-'.'f'' ! SH srsrflj 266 S. E. STEPHENS PHONE OR 2-3393 FIRST-OF-THE-WEEK eP All Prices Good Thru ' mjh Wed. February 1,1961 v s Ft n 3 CMDDADT mm or A"rnr nr f r wi 1 Jvlli DL HV, live RrJSM IN YOUR NEW Y.M.C.A. GERBER'S STRAINED BABY FOOD ALL PURE Limit Please 121 10' BYRD'S BREAD EVERICH- IN CUBES White or Brown LARGE LOAF MARGARINE sugar CfirHPure Cane SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS IQ) Medal fL ye RIVIERA Minestroni SOUP -99 BOYD'S COFFEE HORMEL'S LEAN 'N MEATY CORNED BEEF .b. ea. I ir 1ml ,D.b.ef(l iS, bag w a U) s '97? Irs BONELESS, CENTER CUT HAM SLICES ARMOUR Fresh Frosted BUTTERED VEAL STEAKS k Pk. NEBERGALLS THICK SLICED BACON- .89c 1.29 A1B TUNA-FISH. d Peach Halves Similac Milk ; 2 pound pkg. DUNDEE ALBACORE o. Vi tin BEACH CLIFF MAINE SARDINES p No. V tint BYRD'S PEANUT BUTTER 3-lb Jar 991 CHEERIOS 10'l ox. pkg. CORN FLAKES i2.pk,. WHEATIES ioi2 ox. Pk9. 4$r Del Rouge Freestone No. 303 tin Prepared formula 3 ox. can 3 Cheese Enchilades Facia! Tissue ts-4 Tillamook Oysters Castile Shampoo Wesson Oil Mayonnaise Popcorn El Paio 303 can 10 ox. can Amber Reg. 1.00 . Pure vegetable cooking oil Borden't 24 ox. jar . Buddy Boy White or Yellow . 59' 489c 3$l 69' QT. 43 39c 49' Metal Waste Baskets Filler Paper : Crayola Crayons Big 100 00 iheet pkg. Ss99 599' 239' Decorated Alj' Your choice"' 499' 19' Box of 24 Colors, Reg. 35c 4 lb. - bag ARTICHOKES 219' New Potatoes 10 lbs .59c Rome Beauty Apples 179 ml Lorge Sixe Real Meaty For Your Treot 1 1. "II V 22 JJ I COMBS I mf Ai'f of 10 ) Combt. O Barber, fl Beauty, . Pocket, pkg. Si TIDE DETERGENT Laundry I SEX 1 I O Sixe O U H WE REDEEM SAVETHEM 930 WEST HARVARD 2 Blocks West of Community Hospital All prlct In tlfxt thru W., Ilrrm.tian right. rtirv WE GIVE n WE REDEEfA