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PROCUUflEID IN
Hurricane Esther
Loses Her Fury
Wearing
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hurricane Esther either lost her
punch or took a breathing spell
loaay as she neared Cape Cod,
Ulass.
The Weather Bureau station at
Otis Air Force Base on the Cape
reported before noon that the eye
of the hurricane had closed, that
winds were fast diminishing and
Cape Cod may have no hurricane
ai au.
However, shortly afterward, the
station said the eye of the hurri
cane had reopened and that the
storm was moving forward again.
The U.S. Weather Bureau at
Boston in its noon advisory said:
"Although Hurricane Esther has
decreased slightly in intensity
during the past 12 hours, it still is
a aangerous storm.'
It said hurricane warnings still
Diamond Lake
Trip Scheduled
A group from the Roseburg
Chamber of Commerce will drive
to the Diamond Lake area Satur
day morning to look over areas
for possible future development of
a winter sports and recreation
site.
The group will be headed by
Jack Snodgrass, who with Vondis
Jliller, Umpqua Forest supervisor,
is making arrangements. Snod
grass said there probably will be
at least two carloads of men, some
of them returning Saturday night
and others staying over until Sun
day, Areas Eyed
The areas tinder consideration
are Rodley Butte and Hemlock
Butte. Last February a group
from the chamber went into the
area while the snow lay heavy on
the grounds. They made the trip
through the snow on a California
Oregon Power Co. sno-cat. They
wanted to study snow conditions
at that time.
The trip this weekend is to look
Into the site while it is free from
snow to determine development
possibilities.
The winter sports idea In the
Diamond Lake section will hinge
" entirely upon .whether the North
Umpqua Highway is to be kept
open during the winter months
when it is completed. Otherwise
access would be impossible. The
study at this time is on a long
range basis, according to Jliller.
Road Nessary
Rodley Butte is being given first
consideration but it has some
drawbacks. It lies about three
miles from the highway and the
Forest Service would have to con
struct a road into it. It is about
three miles due west of the north
end of the lake.
Hemlock Butte has a road to its
base at the south end, and in some
ways presents better recreational
development potential. In any
event, the road into either place
would have to be kept open, along
with the North Umpqua Highway,
said Miller.
Marion Davies Near
Death Doctors Report
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Former
actress Marion Davies may die
at any hour, her physicians re
port. They said Wednesuay she had
been administered last rites of
the Roman Catholic Church last
week when her death seemed
near.
Miss Davies, 61, entered Cedars
of Lebanon Hospital May 16. She
was operated on June 7 for osteo
myelitis of the jaw. Osteomyelitis
is an inflammation of bone mar-
Clendale Community Gets
New Post Office Building
Glcndale will soon have a new
post office building.
Postmaster General J. Edward
Day announced today the Post Of
fice Department has accepted the
proposal of Harold A. Cooley to
construct and lease a new building
Cooley, the successful bidder
will erect a one-story structure
containing approximately 1.886
square feet of interior floor space
with a 150-square-foot platform.
Provided also will be 5.450 square
feet for parking and maneuvering.
The new post office will be lo-
The Weather
AIRPORT RECORDS
Partly cloudy today, mostly
ir tonight and Friday, with night
and rly morning fog. High to
day 72, low tonight 4$,
Highest tomp. last 24 hours e5
Lowest temp, last 24 hours 41
Highest temp, any Sept. ('55) 102
Lowest temp, any Sept. ('54) . 32
Precip. last 24 hours 0
Precip. rom Sopt. 1 . .71
Excess from Sopt, 1 - 05
Sunstt tonight, :13 p.m.
Sunriso tomorrow, :00 a.m.
Cape Cod
are displayed from eastern Long
Island, N.Y., to Maine. The hur
ricane watch had been ended over
Connecticut and the New York
area.
At 11 a.m. Esther was centered
about 75 statute miles west-south
west of Nantucket, Mass., the
Boston forecaster said. She was
moving toward the north-northeast
at about 10 miles an hour.
Highest winds were estimated
at 100 miles an hour over a small
area near the center. Winds were
expected to decrease somewhat.
The Miami, Fla., weatherman
said Esther's fate is attributable
to the fact she moved along the
coast so slowly and stayed over
cold water so long, the cold water
modified the storm considerably,
The Weather Bureau observa
tion station at Hyannis Airport
still referred to the storm as a
hurricane.
Otis weather officials said the
center of the storm was 35 miles
south of Martha's Vineyard when
the eye disappeared.
Otis has radar facilities which
permit observers to track the path
of the storm and determine its
strength.
Esther slammed by the eastern
end of Long Island this morning
with 100-mile-an-hour winds but
the effect on the populous New
York area was considered tame.
Most serious consequences ap
peared to be power failures in
thousands of homes, flooding of
highways, broken windows and
signboards.
Esther seemed unlikely to chal
lenge the record of her unnamed
sister which swept up the coast
just 23 years ago today. That
storm took 588 lives ana caused
$300 million damage.
Prenaredness was the watch
word in Esther's path. About 700
persons left their homes in the
Montauk, N.Y., area, at the east
ern tip of Long Island, for emer
gency shelters or higher ground.
Massachusetts uivil ueiense
headquarters evacuated 1,000 fam
ilies from areas in the path of high
tides or coastal flooding ia Buz
zards Bay and Cape Cod.
Kennedy Rushes
Request For Aid
wAcutNirmM f APWPresident
Kennedy rushed to Congress to
day a request for an extra $55
miiiinn in hnln nav for the dam
age of hurricanes Carta and Es
ther and otncr possime naiurai
disasters.
Tho funeral pnvernment now be
lieves the damage from hurricane
Carta, wmcn nit primarily in icx
as and Louisiana, plus the effects
nf Pettier which is still hammer
ing New England, could run as
high as Uie total lor inreE siuruu
which struck the east coast in Au--
and Kentemher 1955. The
damage then was close to a bil
lion dollars, and the federal gov
ernment put nearly $65 million
into disaster relief.
Kennedy also officially declared
that six Louisiana parishes (coun-
triael art msfiT disaster SreaS.
and thus eligible for federal finan
cial help. A numner oi lexas
counties previously had been de
clared disaster areas.
The Louisiana parishes: Calca
sieu, Cameron, Iberia, LaFourche,
St. Bernard ana vermiuon.
Messiah Practice Set
First practice for the Roseburg
Messiah will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in the Episcopal Church
parish hall. Mrs. George Gratke,
president, said anyone interested
is invited to participate.
cated on the south side of Pacific
Ave. west of Second St. It will
be leased -to the Post Office De
partment under a 10-year con'
tract.
Cooley, who operates the Glen
dale Rexall Drug Store, is also
owner of one of the two lota on
which the new building will be lo
cated. The other lot was pur
chased from Paul Archambeau ot
Cleveland, Ohio.
When contacted this morning,
Cooley said construction on the 35-
by-60-foot concrete block structure
would start as soon as blueprints
are completed and approved by the
Post Office Department. He told
correspondent Mrs. G. B. Fox he
will contract the construction to
some building firm.
Howard T. Edson is postmaster
: at Olenuaie.
The announcement heralded the
' latest in a series of new post of
fices for the countv. New build
ings have been constructed in the
, last two years at Roseburg. Idle
yld Park, Winston and Sutherlin.
: The Sutherlin Post Office was just
dedicated last weekend, and an-
other dedication is planned soon
fnr a new building in Myrtle
Creek.
Established 1873
28 Page
Rusk, Gromyko Open Cold War Talks
Berlin Crisis
Is Top Issue
Of Parleys
NEW YORK (AP)-U.S. Secre
tary of State Dean Rusk started a
series of eoid war conferences
with Soviet Foreign Minister An
drei Gromyko here today to find
out whether a peaceful solution to
the Berlin crisis may be possible.
The two men met on the 28th
floor of a tnidtown Manhattan ho
tel where Rusk had invited Gro
myko for lunch. Each was accom
panied by a panel of advisers in
cluding U.S. Ambassador Adlai E.
Stevenson on the American side
and Deputy Foreign Minister Val
erian A. Zonn with Gromyko,
Berlin Central Issue-
Berlin was the central issue of
the meeting but aides of both men
said there was no doubt they would
also discuss the crisis in the Uni
ted Nations arising from Soviet
opposition to appointment of a suc
cessor to Secretary General Dag
Hammarskjold.
Gromyko gave no advance sign
of any Soviet yielding on either of
the two great problems that have
brought the world's two mightiest
powers into threatening conforma
tion. Rusk was reported in an ada
mant mood, determined to warn
the Soviet government anew of
war dangers in the Berlin dispute
and of Western fears for the fu
ture of the U.N.
Faces Tricky Task
Rusk, who took the initiative in
setting up the talks, faced the
tricky task of sounding out Soviet
views on Berlin negotiations with
out giving Groymko any impres
sion that the western allies are
acting from weakness or fear of
war. Such an impression. West
ern diplomats said, would increase
the danger of war over Berlin' ny
encouraging a Soviet miscalcula
tion of Western intentions.
S. Douglas Road
Bought By U.S.
The Bureau of Land Manage
ment's Northwest regional office
in Portland today reported the fed
eral government had bought the
Robert Dollar Co. Rd. m southern
Douglas County.
The announcement was made by
Russell E. Getty, Oregon director
of the BLM in a release today.
It was part of a package in which
two logging roads, this one and one
in Lane County were bought for a
total $1,413,400, Getty said. It was
not immediately determined what
the cost of the individual roads
was.
Companies Soli
The Robert Dollar Rd. was
bought from the Robert Dollar Co.
of San Francisco, and the Big Riv
er Rd. in Lane County from Wey
erhaeuser Timber Co.
Getty said the rock-surfaced, sin
gle lane roads will provide access
to more than four billion feet of
timber, which will be hauled W
many mills of southern Oregon.
In addition to purchases, the
BLM has signed long-term recipro
cal right-of-way and road use
agreements with the two lumber
companies for mutual use of exist
ing or future roads that the com
panies or BLM may build in these
areas.
Getty said the purchases and
agreements are "vital to tne lum
ber industry in that they will pro
vide equal opportunity of access
to all BLM sales areas and orderly
harvest and protection of Umber
involved.
Money for the purchases came
from a fund made up of O&C coun
ty timber sales refunds. Part of
the refunds from sales is desig
nated for road development. Use
of these funds is determined by
the BLM and the Road Committee
of the Association of O&C Counties.
Douglas County Commissioner El
mer. Metzger is a member of that
committee.
Bridges Suffers
Coronary Attack
CONCORD. N.H. (AP) U.S.
Sen. Styles Bridges, R-N.H-, has
coronary attack," his personal
: . ij
physician said today.
"His conoiuon is sen.ius "";
critical," said Dr. 1. Dunbar
Shields Jr.
"ft will be several days," Dr.
Shields said, . "before a definite
prognosis can be made."
Bridges, the Senate's senior
ranking Republican and chairman
of the Senate GOP Policy Com
mittet, was readmitted to Con
cord Hospital Wednesday.
ROSEBURG, OREGON
WAVES CLIMB High winds from Hurricane Esther whip
the storm moves up oiong the New England coast-. This photo
Pier, R. I. (UPI Telephoto)
U. Si Locks
Coos Daily
COOS BAY AP) The Internal
Revenue Service Wednesday night
closed the Coos Bay World, a
daily afternoon newspaper.
Agents oj the IRS padlocked the
front door of the World's building
ana posted a sign which read:
"This property seized for non
payment of internal revenue taxes
by yirtue of levy issued by the
district director ef internal rev-1
Tho tax man romov.d tfia pad.
lock from rh door of tho Coot
Bay World today and tho news
papor prepared to return publi
cation a?tr an overnight cloture.
enue. All persons are warned not
to remove or tamper m any way.
The notice was signed by James
Baumgartner, revenue officer.
Sheldon F. Sackett, editor and
publisher of the World, could not
be reached for comment at once.
Arthur G. Erickson, the district
director of internal revenue, said
m Portland the property was
seized because of failure to pay
withholding taxes by the Times,
Inc., the corporation which owns
the paper.
The amount the government
claims was not disclosed.
The government hopes to reach
a satisfactory agreement with the
paper, krickson said.
Staff of the Coos Bay World
were reported to be on a standby
basis as the firm maneuvered to
reopen its doors by late morning.
This is the latest incident in the
past week about The World. Mon
day shifts in top personnel occur
red when the office manager and
managing editor were released
from employment.
Portland Man Dies
After Car Accident
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oregon continued Us two-deaths-
a-day rate in September as an
other traffic victim died in Port
land early today.
That made 42 traffic deaths in
the state this month in the Asso
ciated Press tabulation. For the
year 349 persons have been killed.
That is 40 more than at this date
last year, and only 8 under the
record pace of two years ago. The
death toll that year reached 497
by year s end.
The Portlander killed was
Michael Vocana, 40, whose fatal
injuries were suffered Wednesday
night. His car veered off a road
on the outskirts of Portland and
crashed into a pile of concrete
blocks and an utility pole.
Firemen Answer Call
A fire that started near a stove
flue and burned into an attic
brought the Roseburg Fire De
partment to a home at 1964 SE
GUes st-. morning. The fire
'ss quickly contained and fire-
! n gmaw mm
Occupant is Oiiie Ysrborough.
Claims Take Drop
SALEM (AP) The
number!
of claims for unemployment in
surance at mid-September was 15
per cent below the number at
mid-Aueust, the state Employ
ment Department said Wednesday.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1961
UAW Aims New Approach At
Settlement Of Local Problems
DETROIT (AP) The United
Auto Workers Union its threat of
a nation-wide strike against Gen
eral Motors Corp. quashed aimed
today at a new approach to local
problems holding up complete set-'
tlement of a new contract
with GM.
Waiter P. Reuther, UAW presi
dent, said Wednseday night the
union has "developed a new ap
proach to pediie the settlements
of unresolved local issues.
He scheduled a 10 a.m. meeting
today ox the General Motors Coun
cil, a union advisory board, to
discuss the new approach. Readi
er declined to elaborate on the
plan.
Today's meeting followed a hee
tic night which saw the council
vole to accept a GM-UAW nation
al agreement on the money pack
age and national work rules, A
few hours later, however, the
council voted to ask the UAW In
ternational Executive Board fnr
authority to strike GM in support
of local contract demands.
The board, governing body of
the UAW, met quickly. Less than;
two hours later, Reuther an
nounced that the board would not;
authorize a general strike against!
GM. He said the advisory coun-1
cil's action was an "action by I
members demonstrating the bit-!
terness of some toward soma lo
cal practices. This was a cutain-i
ation of resentment over local
problems and the locals way of
protesting. j
He said a general strike "can
not in good conscience be Justi
fied, therefore it will not be
authorized," He added: "AU Gen
eral Motors employes in plants
where local issues are resolved
are instructed to stay on the Job."
Local unions which still had not
reached agreement with their
managements retained 0i author
ity to strike.
GM officials declined eomment
on the union's actions.
Wednesday night's flurry fol
Kennedy Children
Taken From Cape
HYANNIS PORT. Mass. fAP
President Kennedy's 3W-year-old
daughter Caroline and 10-month-oid
son John Jr., were removed
from their Cape Cod summer
home today for protection from
Hurricane Esther.
They were taken to Otis Air
Force Base at Falmouth, 18 miles
from Hyannis Port, With them in
a five-car caravan went all per
sons at the "Kennedy compound,"
including six cousins.
They made the trip fcy automo
bile at 8 a.m., the While House
said, at the request of the Secret
Service which is responsible for
the protection of the President s
family.
In addition to the President's
children, those at Hyannis Port
were the two children of Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen Smith; three of Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Lawford; and one
of Mr. anil Mrs. Edward Kennedy,
None of the parents was with
them at Hyannis Port, the White
House said, but the President's
father, Joseph P. Kennedy, was
there.
The While House said the chil
dren were beine cared for at a
Stratcgic Air Command installs -
linn at the base. 18 miles from
Hyannis fort. '
waves today over seawall as
was token at Narraaansett
lowed a day to which GM and the
UAW apparently reached agree
ment on national contract de
mands and made substantial
progress on the various local
demands.
Negotiations at GM started
June ZJ and the strikes heaas a
week ago Monday after the union
authorized walkouts at plants not
having agreement on local de
mands. More than 250,000 of GM's
350,000 hourly workers were idled
at the peak of the strike
Urn
paralyzed CM production.
MTS Plane Missing
With Crew Of Six
OX.VARD, Calif. (API A miU
iary transport plane carrying a
crew of sis failed to land at Ox-
nard Air Force Base after radio
ing Wednesday night that it was
approaching the field.
The two-engine C47 was last
heard from at 9:36 p.m. when it
radioed that it was m the landing
pattern 12 miles west of the base.
There was no indication of
trouble.
The Western Air Rescue Service
declared the plana missing at
12:35 p.m. today.
Planes and ships began a wide
spread search over the ocean off
the coast of Ventura County.
An Air tores spokesman said
the C47, hieh was on a local
proficiency flight, had sufficient
fuel to keep it aloft until 3 a.m.
Russian, U. S. Representatives
Clash On Nuclear Weapons Ban
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)i
The United Slates today de-:
manded that the question of ban
ning nuclear weapons testa be
given urgent consideration by the
United Nations, The Soviet Union
insisted it should not be taken up
separately, but as part of a gen
eral disarmament debate.
Representatives of the two coun
tries clashed in the General As
sembly's 2! -nation Steering Com
mittee, which was drafting the
agenda for the current session.
Each Mama! Urn other for the
collapse of the Geneva talks on
a nuclear test ban.
The committee ended its morn
ing session without resolving the
controversy. It also had before it
other issues, including seating
Bed China. Both the Unit
ed States and the Soviet Union
were expected to support debate
on that issue.
U.S. Delegate Adlai E. Steven
son declared the Soviet decision
to resume nuclear testing had
made the situation more acute by
increasing atomic radiation in the
atmosphere and forcing the Unit
ed States to resume underground
testing.
Stevenson called tor high prior
ity in the 99-nation Political Com-
mitlee for a test nan denate. He
was supported by Britain's Sir
Patrick Dean,
Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister
Valerian A. Zorin remarked sar
castically that the United States
for years had opposed U.N. de-
! bate on nuclear tests, but now
'found the nuestion urgent.
i Stilt opposed to admitting lie
PRICE 5e
JFK To Address
Assembly Monday
WASHINGTON (API Prui
dent Kenntdy will aa'dresi tha
United Nations- General Assam
My next Monday, the Whit
House announced today,
Kenntdy is expected to sat
forth the United State posltisn
on disarmament and a nuclear
lst ban.
He is certain to express U.S.
policy toward the organiretisn ef
th United Nations itself in Mm
wake of tha daaffc ef Setratary
General Dag Hammankjeid,
Th White Hsu M the
United Nations has sriwdulad a
Kennedy speech for Monday
morning.
Press secretary Pirr SHn
ger said the President would
appear at that time unless same
thing ynforseen interferes.
Breakers Smash
Fishing Vessel
Man's eternal battle with the sea
was re-enacted Wednesday after
noon as 10-foot breakers smashed
a Winchester Bay fishing boat and
almost cost its owner serious in
juryor possibly his life.
James Campbell, SS, owner ana
operator of the "J.C." a JMoot
commercial fishing vessel, today is
recovering from the harrowing ac
cident. He spent a chiliiag So min
utes clinetne to the ngn of his
capsfaed boat while awaiting res
cue irom crashing ocosn break
ers.
Campbell had been KsMng out
side the mouth of the Ummua Biv-
er until S;30 p.m. when he headed
for the "bar" (the nana where the
umpqua Klver current and the
ocean current meet).
'Sneaker Hit
According to Coast Guard Chief
Petty Qfncrr Elmer A, Stevens,
Campbell wr on tne bar when
sneaker fa large breaker) came
behind Mm, picked up bis boat
smail fishing skiff taM to
manuever close to Wis foundered
boat to rescue Campbell, tat the
hugo breakers drove i" hack.
This rjrf r.nd jmbwwt 40.1
foot utility boat and a 36-foot mo
tor lifeboat to the sec-no m the
capsized boat and Campbell were
washed toward the remains of the
south jetty on the Umpo.ua Biver.
Three Coast Guardsmen were
sent out on the rocks of ttio Jetty
whe-n it looked like Uie rescue
boats might become Imperiled by
the hard-breaking surf. The three
sot a line to Campbell ana pnuea
him to safely. He was taken to
Umpqua Lighthouss Station.
and treated for shock.
His boat with its atom torn off
and the cabin atove-in was wash
ed throash the surf by Uw pounds
tag breakers and a line fastened to
it. A halftrack hauled It up on the
beach.
Chief Stevens said the 1?M beat
was a total loss, lis said Camp
bell took IS breakers after he was
capsized before he could be res
cued. It war. the first commercial
boat to capsize on the bar this
year.
Peieing regime, the Unitrf States!
has agreed only to assembly Se
nate on tne issue. i
The Red China issue was one!
of several serious cold war dis
putes that cropped up either on'
the agenda or in the background
almost as soon as the assembly
met Tuesday, Among others are
Berlin, disarmament and the fu
ture of the United Kations itself.
This last involve the task of
choosing a successor to the late
Secretary-General Bag Hammar
skjold, in the face of stem Soviet
opposition.
In the Steering Committee, the
Onited Stater is determined to
Work the Soviet demand that the
United Nations recognize Peiping
ss ngMBii sower of vm seat sow
occipied by Nationalist China,
ro u.f. delegation announced
Fail Fashion Section
Due In Friday Edition
On af rh big vent of the
faH astiai season will b lb an
nual "Pared, of Partiss" staged
by th Mercy Hospital Auxiliary
In October,
This wilt b a feature ef the
fait Ulhior and women's wction
which will b part of Friday's
Ntwi-Rtvitw.
In addition to fstur taller
td for wemn, rh-s ttttian will
outline th cloth f l h I o rt s
wWch will b part el Aw fall
and winter seen m Dsoglss
County and th rit of Hi ra
222-61
War Danger
Still Looms
Over Katanga
KDOLA, Kerfhent Rhodesia
(AP) An uneasy cease-fire was
proclaimed today in embattled
Katanga but the danger of civil
war still hung over the Congo.
President Moise Tsnombe ot
Katanga and Ike CN. command
signed a provisional tease-firs
fiat froze the positions of their
warring forces. Still unsettled is
the issue that ted to the shooting
Katanga's secession.
While a loH in the fighting was
already evident Before the sea
pact was reached there were no
immediate reports whether afl
shooting had stowed according to
the timetable set for one minute
past midnight.
A new threat came from tha
Congo central government, which
has bees a bystander during the
eight days of fighting between the
Katangan fortes and V.N. troops
acting at the government request.
With Tshombo as adamant as
ever in keeping his minerai-rich
province independent, Congo Pre
mier Cyriito Adouia alerted th
Congolese army wita the declara
tion tile central government would
"spare so eHort to end Katanga's
secession,"
Speaking In LeopoIdviUe before
the cease-fire was announced.
Adouia warned his government
will reply to force with force."
The shadow of the la! Patrfr
Lumumba hung over tie Conga
capital. Supporters of the slain
leftist former premier demons Ira -
tea m the streets shouting anti
Western slogans, and Soviet dip
lomats, kicked oat after Lumum
ba's overthrow, moved back to set
up shop again.
The provisional cease-fire call
ing for a freeze ia ail mill.
tary operations in Katanga was
reached Wednesday night la a
cordial tut cool atmosphere on
neuirai growls la this Kortbern
Rhodesian frontier town.
Smiling and outwardly conil
dent, Tshombs made the an
nouncement Sirst at a news con
ference, Juhmoud Khiari of
Tunisia, who took over as chief
UJv. negotiator after Dag Bam
roarskjoM met his death m a
plane crash flying to the peace
taiai. comtnnett the agreement
later.
A British attempt to get the two
to appear together for a joint an
nouncement xattea,
n . u , . i t i .
.TSETE
""KS BgT but backed dWn
I ""1 .."'J ."... -ir., . I.
XSjKm
L5a?H?,5L t: . .
,
claimed, the Katanga government
m as open letter to the United.
Nations said Conga unity is "sotn
ing but fallacious myth, hoi
low idea, aa Imaginary vision."
Man Admits Af facie,
Death Off 'SiW
SALT LAKE CUV. Uiah fAP)
Police say a married laborer
has admitted raping and kitting
an 11-year-old baby-sitter at
American Fork, Utah.
Sheriff Ralph Chappie said Oar.
rell Bevere Penben, 22, of Prow,
Utah, signed a statement Wednes
day admitting the slaying of Sar
en Ass Meehling last Sunday,
Karen was attacked Is an apart
ment where she was tending two
children, She was beaten to deaib
with a calkmg gun, the sheriff
said.
support for New Zealand pro
posal to debate the over-all cues
iion of who should represent
China. And the U.S. or one of
its allie is expected to move for
creation of ipecial committea
to study the issue and report back
to the assemoly next year, ,
Aware that this would nave the
same effect u shelving the issue,
the Comntimhte are certain to
fight the maneuver. But delegates
believe the study plan Kill jet
majority support.
in the mm for m new secretary
general, the Soviet Union killed
hopes ef Eat-West agreement by
turning down a widely supported
plan to same a representative of
a nonaugnefl nation as interim
successor until a permanent feo
relary-gesenu san be ag
upon.
FOREST FfGE
DANGER THAI
KEEP ORESON CREEK
The fire outlook today ia moder
ate with a high temperature ex
peeled from 65 to "0 and low hu
midity near 40. Prospects are for
northwesterly wind from S to IS
m.p h. except easterly winds ol
IS m.p.h. expected over ricigei.
Winds of about 10 m.p.h. will be
come northeast to east tonight a4
Friday,
t v