University of Oregun Library Eugene, Oregon OOliP loats, Planes Rush Aid To hurricane -Battered Belize Pressure Mounts For US To Call Off Weapons Tests Japan Aims pl Direct Plea ( At Americas UNITED NATION'S. N Y. (AP) The United States was under mounting pressure in the United Nations today to call off plans fur any new nuclear weapons tests as support grew for an appeal to the big powers to agree to a voluntary test moratorium. U.S. Serves Notice The appeal appeared certain of General Assembly approval. But the Lmted Mates has served no tice it may resume test explosions in the atmosphere to counter the Soviet tests. The U.S. delegation announced Tuesday it would vote against the moratorium appeal since it makes no provision for effective controls. A number of pro-Western states from Latin America and Scanui- navia declared their support for the moratorium call sponsored by India and other nonaligned na tions. They declared it was up to both sides to stop testing. Japan aimed a direct appeal at the Americans to call off any test plans. Chief delegate Katsuo Oka zakt denounced the Soviet Union for triggering its 50-mcgaton bomb but declared, "another show of high statesmanship is now de niancled of the United States." Would Accelerate Race 'Vie are aware of another dan gcr, an endless chain of nuclear tests." Okazaki said. "Such a competition would also accelerate the armaments race and threaten the future of mankind." The United States anticipated several weeks ago that it would be out in a ticklish spot by the Indian-sponsored moratorium de-1 mand. U.S. delegate Arthur uean accused the Russians of timing their tests so they could announce I adherence to a moratorium alter they finished testing. Prime Minister Harold Macmil lan pledged Britain's support ot any U.S. testing to maintain the nuclear balance of power between the West and the U.S.S.R. The other members of the North At lantic Alliance are expected to go along, but it was most unlikely, the Western powers could muster enough support to defeat the mor atorium appeal. Elsewhere in the United Na tions: Oil Embargo Proposed Pakistan delegate Khwaja Sar war Hasan proposed a wurld oil embargo on South Africa as a means of forcing South Africa to abandon its while supremacy pol icy. In a round of General Assembly speeches welcoming Mongolia as a U.N. member, the Communist hint tir-aai IVij. ITnilod Kallnna lit regard its admission as a step toward granting Ked China a L..V teat. U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stev enson conferred again privately with Burma's U Thant, but there was no word of progress toward a formula for naming the Bur mese diplomat interim secretary-general. I . " . 1 RUSSIAN DELEGATE Semyon Tsarapkin (right) looks like he wants to interject o thought as British Minister of State Joseph B. Godber (second from left) addresses the U. N. General Assembly Monday. Also shown at the table ore U. S. Delegate Arthur Dean (left) and UAR Represent ative Omar Loutfi. Godber said that Russia's 50-plus megaton bomb is 'a crime against humanity which de serves to be denounced by every U. N. delegation!' One Major Incident Marks Otherwise Quiet Halloween Only one major incident marred ted throwing about seven water. an otherwise quiet Halloween night melons at various locations within in communities of Douglas County, I the cit;-. cneck witn law enforcement! The youths were brouaht to the City Virtually Established 1S73 12 Pages ROSEBURG, OREGON WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBED 1, 1961 257-61 10c Per Copy Car Hits Halloween Parade; Two Die agencies indicated today. Roseburg City Police said there was a minimum of mischief in the Roseburg vicinity although four 16-year-old boys wero taken into cus tody for illegal possession ot fire works and destruction of private, property. The four suspects were brought to the police station where, under questioning, they admitted putting red paint on headlights of several station alter a patrol car stopped a vehicle in which they were occu pants. The arresting officer cited the driver for a tralfic sign viola tion and searched the car. Items in the car included a can of red spray paint, a number of fire crackers, five watermelons, a sack of mixed candy and a flashlight, allegedly taken from a child. The suspects were turned over to the custody of their parents Driver Suffers Heart Attack; Eight Are Hurt ANOKA. Minn. (AP) The noisy gaiety of costumed children and spectators drowned out warring cries as a car driven by a dying man plowed into rear ranks of a Halloween parade. I shouted as loud as I could but nobody could hear against the1 hubbub." said Joseph Lindberg. a Civil Defense worker helping po-i lice. He also made a futile effort! to halt the car after he saw its stricken driver slumped across! the wheel. The careening car smashed into a parked car and stopped after leaving a trail of felled paraders and the adults Tuesday afternoon. Two women died of their inju ries. Otto Erickson, 76, Anoka, was dead when police pulled him from the car. The car halted almost in front of a mortuary, the body slumped over the steering wheel to send out a continuous horn blast. Eight were hospitalized, some in critical condition, and police estimated another score were treated. It was the 42nd annual Hallow een celebration staged by Anoka, a town of 10.000 just north of Minneapolis. Some 5.000 children from area schools were in the pa rade. Police Chief Cliff Petrick esti mated about 7.000 persons lined streets as the youngsters showed off witch, goblin and clown costumes. A fire truck which had been at mmm mmm hi n imaj imnim i nnmii p ri iimem in niiiima - J' f . , ' V : f ; - Ji , . . J tttwfi4.''i 'tiiiiiyilii-B -iliiirt'riiiii ii iiiiiiiiiiiilalmiMawwMiiiii vehicles which were parked in the land ordered to appear in Douglas at Roseburg Bowl parking lot 2400 MS Diamond Lake Blvd. Watermelons Tossed Police said the boys iho admit County Juvenile Court at a later date. There were some minor Hallow een incidents at Kiddle, according to Erma Best, correspondent. Pranksters set fire to a bale of hay by the bridge at the end of Main St., and one large window in a vacant office building on Main St. was broken when a tire was rolled through it. .Members of the Itiddle Volun teer Kire Department acted as vol Harold Herman Graves, 56. of(untt'er Patrolmen aiding in pouc Kt. I, Box 820, Roseburg tGlen-ln8 tlie area- Logger Killed Near Steamboat GHOSTS, GOBLINS, Witches and what-have-you galore were in the Jaycee sponsored "Neewollah" parade in downtown Roseburg Tuesday night. Cash prizes were given for the best costume in several divisions. A trophy was oworded Rose Elementory School for the best participation. The parade brought out about 250 youngsters from junior high school age on down. Thouoh it was foggy, it didn't seen to dampen the spirits of these "trick or treaters." Paraders Get Some Prizes Roseburg High Athletic Director Dies Following Medford Meeting away by an alarm. "Nobody ran say for sure," Pet rick said, "but if that truck had been in place that car might have hit it first and nobody would even hare been hurt. Radioactive Cloud Necring Kamchatka Burglars Take Cash At School Burglars used the cover of Hal loween to enter Elkton High School, peel the safe and make off with S546.52 plus several other items sometime during the night. Entrance was made by breaking glass in the window panes of Supt. Leo Crisman's office. The of fice faces the highway, and the school grounds are well lighted, ac cording to a report from Elkton correspondent Mrs. C. W. Hender er. The burglary is believed to have taken place after 2 a.m., as custo dian Roy Hoffman patrolled the grounds until that time. Of the money taken, about $150 was in checks. The balance was in cash. All was student body funds Besides fun and merriment, the " Vpeu-nll.-ili" nararip in itnuntnum Roseburg last niSM netted several, A,M S" Stor 0n SPrt PwjlnjU .upswing in our athletic pr Jnn Aiken, Roseburg High aU- " best costumes, il - ii.. j vountrsti'M some cash Tirizi for ...v w . f"' "M vv i letic mrrrtfir and former colleges - - , . . . r il.j i u . ...... . . .. . . " . . " nf Kc irai & uilh u urn n ua i '" wtii irugiieu uui iiiai Di'iip Such a change In athletic prow- Haltie's Wind MIA.Mf. Kb. (AIM The fir-t relief plane landed safely at Be lize today with food and medicine fr the hurricane-battered British Honduras capital. Capt. Dean Kicker, pilot of the Tan Airlines mercy flight which took off fmm Mi?mi. reported from the air that the Central American seaport "appeared to be 50 to 75 per cent destroyed'' by rampaging hurricane Hattie. The message was relayed to Mi ami via Honduras. Warships Due The British frigate Trowbridge was expected to reach the strick en city today and so were two I'nited Slates destrovers which had been cruising off Honduras. Tan Airlines' Miami office said its airplane was placed at the dis posal of the governor of British Honduras to fly injury victims ti hospitals in Cuatomala and Hon duras if advisable. Most of sea level Belize's inhab itants apparently fled to hicher ground before Hattie, the season's eighth tropical storm, flung 9 to 10 feet of water into the city. The State Department said it had received no word from U.S. diplomats stationed in Belize. They were identified as Consul Richard C.eppert and Vice Consul Richard Connelly. Both have their wives with them and each family is said to have a babv. Rockwood Foster West Indie desk officer at the State Depart ment, said the Consulate was in a two-story wooden building less than 50 yards from the shore. He said the lower floor was used as an office and the upper as living quarters for the U.S. official families. The State Department under stood that the two U.S. destrov ers sent to the stricken Honduras capital arrived about midnight and sent small boats into the city, but no reports had been received by the department on what was found. Hal Holler, operator of radio station HI13HTI for the Standard Fruit Co. at La Cieba, Honduras, said only two known casualties About 230 vouncslcra marched, .v.. ...J, ... ,,..j associated was a habit. - ud; miii at . man no ninn in the parade in about every type most, talking about the merits of of costume lmiinable. Selection j f0lDa"- of the winners was difficult, a I He had just completed a speech spokesman for the sponsoring or-to Medford School District admin ganization, the Roseburg Junior istrators and members of the new Chamber of Commerce, said. Iv-organlzed Medford Linebackers Rose School took the only tro- -'ub and was talking to soma ofijn undefeated showings. His JIc- hmley team won the state cham pionship. , He started with high school coaching, first at East Washing, ton. Pa., then, in-order,- Steuben ville, Ohio, Finley, Ohio, Scolt High in Toledo and then Canton McKinlcy High School in Canton. Ohio. Six of these years resulted ST tion. Individual winners were follows: Best witch Suzy Hunter, Rt. 3 box luav. Best Clown Cheryl Wikstrom, Eastwood School. Most original Tod Wilson and Mark Roberts, dressed as horse, Rose school. Most weird Jimmy Younger, a caveman, Benson. Honorahle mention Bill Hunt er, the devil. Brazilian Airliner Crashes; 48 Dead U.S. Goal Would Be Neutron Bomb NEW YORK (APl-The imme diate goal of the United States in any resumption of nuclear tests would be development of a fantas tic neutron death-ray bomb, ac cording to published reports. The New York Daily News quot ed an unidentified Washington of ficial as saying: "It's a safe as sumption that we will be testing the neutron bomb very soon. The New York Journal-American reported it had learned the ! death-ray bomb "is the prime goal in the resumption of nuclear tests by the United States, and not an other H-bomb." j The neutron bomb was del scribed as producing death with out destruction by blasting out un seen, tinfelt neutrons that could penetrate three feet of concrete. It could wipe out the populations of entire cities without major damage to the cities themselves. Essentially, the difference be tween neutrons and other types of radiation is that they penetrate man-made structures and kill ani mal and human life inside without leaving the building or nearby ground saturated with the casual ty producing contamination. The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Cloudy with occasional light rain Hdaj; and tn9hf. Partly cloudy Thursday. High tody SO, lew to night 40. Highest temp, last 54 hours 45 Lowit Hirp. last 24 hours 40 Highest temp, any Nov. 1 5$) 71 L.w.it tmp. any N.v. (55) 15 Precip. last J4 heurs . .14 Precip. fr.m Nov. 1 .14 Prscip. fr.m Sept. 1 . S OT Exc.ts from Spt. 1 W Sumt tonight, 5 OS p m. Sunrita hrnwriw, i 4 a m gary District), was killed in a logging accident about 10 miles up Steamboat Tuesday. According tc Douglas County Medical Examiner Dr. John H. I Donnelly. Graves was employed i u" V . , i? . , . iVACMTVr.Tnv up, T. was m checks. The balance was in RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) mm aim wuimuk on a iukkiuk " ' . T , V"- cash. A was s udent body tunas a Brazilian airliner smashed ..K n Dn.nnM. rri Weather Rurpail estimated tnHv ... rt ji dnidii auniitr Hniasncu V" '"'"''-"? '-c,,c .i.:: .u" "v." .:.:r V" ' and covered nv insurance. ' intn a hillside and hurned in a Re V R': Z UL:LZI ."' .y. ,uburb today and an airline vumuv iiuc. n iuK urniK iiidKKu - - . 1 u-alrhes a trarK startine Bun ana i.. ia ,u- oc - sons aboard perished. He said 35 of the 76 passengers and two of the crew of nine sur vived. There were no U.S. citizens aboard, tile airline said. The plane, a Panair do Brasil DC7 was en route from Lisbon, Portugal, and was coming in for a stop at Recife, on the northwest roast of Brazil, before making its final scheduled stop here. The two crewmen who escaped were the purser and a stewardess. The plane was making its land- ,10 i ' 4 ' f sT is reponea to nave caugm on a f - ...- - miPrnfim of student seho asUc rec- .TsnckchLlout expert .. J'-l-l ..n. ves by the leg. flipping him:" expec s u,e c.ouu io cross overi - fMal,. The sher- me Aleutian isiano cnain inurs- . , ceda lea Gra into the air. He landed on his head, according to the report. Dr. Donnelly said examination showed head injuries and hemor rhage as the cause of death. The accident occurred at 8 a.m. Graves was brought to Roseburg by a company vehicle, arriving late in the morning. He was dead on arrival. The body has been removed to Wilson's Chapel of the Roses and funeral services will be announced later. Police Question Sutherlin Youth The Douglas County Sheriff's De partment said today officers have questioned a 14 year-old Sutherlin boy who has admitted the theft of S35 from a Sutherlin home last Sunday day and reach Alaska later in the day. unless the winds shut. List said the cloud will most likely soar high over Canada and miss the United Stales alter crossing Alas ka. List said the winds stalled out at 45 miles an hour after the big blast, increased to about 55 as of today, and miiit reach 80 Thursday. Meanwhile, the Public ill's office is investigating. Blue Scout Rocket Fails On Takeoff i Luw.iJ! Service said the hiehesl measure- CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) A Blue Scout rocket spiralcd by crazily out of control and explod-' led in flight today shortly atler it I Health was launched in an effort to orbit satellite to test the worldwide ,. B..lf mnnt nf pqHinqnlii'it u in f lis air in.l'C nnn.ill..nit trn-1rin0 nm. . ' u.,.. .. fh. n,M,nl'll"nse w by heat and ... u. a ... ....:!inok. Traffic Deaths Drop broke up. he collapsed. He was dead on the arrival of a doctor. A shocked M. C. Deller, super- in this country Tuesday was 25 mi-igram. witnesses saia iwo explosions cromicrocuries per cubic meter at. The TS foot projectile rose from ' occurred before the plane hit the Montcomerv. Ala. its pad at 10 32 a m. and it was hill and burst into flames. The Montgomery reading had apparent almost immediately been the same on Monday. Gas-1 something was wrong as the rock tonia, N.C.. whic'i had the high et lurched violently from side to reading Monday at 35 8 showed a side. mnn. i.vw.n.nn, 1ft ( Tiia.J.- I TV. llllA nint IIKlam trii1 V . i A.i. 1...1' .!i. ,.. ik.' 'in,,. ki !tra(Iic deaths in the first nine I Medford. said he looked good and rea.!in of 202 Tuesday and i the nrooer course, but about Mimonths this ycar-27.110-were j was well received as speaker at I The building, including; adjacent Fairbanks tho level was 11. Mon- seconds alter littoti tne vehicle V' ' ". V u . Th- il,ft n-c mnnrlnA tn ii.a'Hiv lh finro. hat hn 971 ntlcntin nut of rnntritt and hlpwame perioa in JbiM, me ,-auonai department by .Mrs George War-j Ancliura-Je and 18 at Fairbanks! apart. jSalely Council said today. liej son Rd She said thai I he service savs tne nithest ra- rieees 01 tne oroxen rocxet i ne mncaKc oeain raie ior ine JIM AIKEN , . , death comes suddenl the guests at the head table when he collapsed Looking hale and hearty, tie gave one of his best speeches in the inimitable gravel voice which had become his trademark. He had pointed out the virtues of football and its favorable effect on youngsters. Collgs B.iwfit Moving Into colleges, he made the W'olfpack of University of Nev ada a national power for the Funeral sarvics for Aik.n are arp schadul.d at Long A Shukl. M.merlal Chap.1 Friday at II a.m. Among survivors are his wife, Eleanor; sans Jimn Jr. of Eu g.np and J.rry of Astoria; and a daughtar, Mrs. William (Carol Ann) Domanighini of Salt Lake City. Aik.n was 62. first time in its history on the grid iron and later raised University of Oregon's fortunes to a new high. The same magic touch became evi dent when he started in February 19t0 as Roseburg High athletic di rector. His gridiron success wasn't lim ited to coaching. While playing for Washington and Jefferson in Wash ington, Pa., he played in the Rose Bowl. He was an end. Before becoming athletic direc tor, Aiken taught mathematics as a substitute in 1958 59 and as a regular teacher in 1959-60. Tri-City Grocery Store Damaged In Fire Today with 31,000 population, was vir tually destroyed. The government radio station and the tower at the air field" were smashed, Holler reported, but a police emergency radio was in operation. Radio Tewe'r Smashed "The damage is appalling" said a radio message from the gover nor of the crown colony. Hurricane Hattie struck Belize with great severity. Damage to property is devastating. The sea invaded the town to depths of 9 to 10 feet," he said in an appeal for help intercepted by a ham radio operator. It was reported that 30.000 Be lize residents hd been evacuated. The Mexican consul in Belizo sent a plea for aid. Mexico's minis ter of health and welfare put his staff on an emergency basis and ordered supplies and medical per sonnel sent into the ravaged area. Soviets Explode Two More Devices WASHINGTON (AP) The Soviet Union has exploded two more nuclear devices, both much smaller than the massive Soviet blast of Monday. The U.S. Atomic Energy Com mission announced the explosions were touched off Tuesday at an Arctic test site. The first was reckoned at several megatons and the second was "probably below a megaton," the AEC reported. A megaton represents the ener gy from one million tons of TNT. The explosions were the 27th and 28th announced by the AEC since the Soviets resumed testing Sept. 1. Soviet Premier Khrtrshchev told the Communist rarty congress that Monday's big blast exceeded Nearly 14,000 damages were in curred this morning at a grocery store operated by Lcnson Osborne in Tn City when the area around a megatons. Which no ua was the flue caught fire. Most of the more powenui man expeciea. in reiatea developments: 1. Uruguay called on the Oriian. The Tri-City Rural Fire Depart ment answered the call at the store ,ni...i..f ni ih. uoh,- ch,.i lo( itcd on Laura St., reports CHICAGO (AP)-The nation's1 District, who accompanied him to News-Review correspondent Lor- UI1C11MMU1II. rtn. money was discovered missing dioactiuty levels reached in this tumbled from a money sack which her son' country during the recent Soviet earth. used in making a paper route col-!''' series, wnne undes.rame, ao lc(.tlon I not pose a public health ha7ard She said the family was at ' unlr,s maintained oer a long church when the theft occurred. Prriod of ,'me- Thc h'ghest read Oflicers said investisation led them 1 m reported was a one-day count to suspect a Sutherlin junior histi , of M " L""e RimI(- Ark school student, and the boy wasi , - . questioned Tuesday afternoon at fjfg FlQnf 6TS COFltrOI Hie school J The vouth 'old oflicers he spent $prrQ Mnrjre BlOZe all of tre money since taking it "s""n S-.inday. The cie was referred to ti.e Douglas County juen:le authorities. ization of American States to con demn nuclear tests. 2. The Voice of America an nounced an all-out attempt will bo made Sunday to tell the Russian people about the Soviet tests and their worklwiiie effects. 3. A group studying nuclear at- back harmlosly to nine-month period was I low, the council said. living quarters, was not destroyed. It is a terrific loss to our school It was damaged to the tune ofltack estimated that a 20-meg.iton district, both of a man and as a j about $2,500 and the stock loss i bomb exploding in midtown New main cog in our athletic depart- was estimated at $1,000. The re- York City would kill six million record ment," Deller said today. ' Jim 1 1 maining J500 in damages was lo'of th city I eight million resi 'advert on our scene marked a def-ithe living quarters. I dents. Soviet Congress Ends Willi Endorsement Of 20-Year Plan MOSOW (AP) The Soviet tomb on fled Square, and (4) for every Russian family. ( Khrushchev and other speakers ' In" Oct. 17. He accused the Al- Commum-t party ended its 22nd completed the disgrace of V. .M.I yne of the resolution got at the congress charged that , banians of clinging to the Stalinist Iconsrcss Tuesday night with en- Mobptov. l,cor,'i Maienkov ana 1-a- idorement of Premier Khrush- zar haganowen. !rhev 20 year plan to transform' Khruhrhev. reelected to head the Smiet I nion into the worlds the mo-t powerful Communist prompt and of trying practices greatest industrial power with the party world s hii;he-.t standard of living. f,orn of plenty under communism the world, promised a ,., m0 hl, ,'hrin(., tn4 told what the Western First Lady Visits M'.W YORK (APt-Mrs Jac queline Kennedy pawl a 10 hour i SIERRA MAD RE. Calif (AP) Fire fighters succeeded today in learning 80 per cent control nf a 1 bruh fire that burned over X2 million worth of watershed above this Iis Anseirs tiihorb. 'eiiht-rinv session that also ( 1 ) un " "' nernneo ponry oiiierrnces nr-i. ... .,,.,,,., lh... ,,. ,.. ." '" sig sau! l.M acres m brush were tueen Khru.hciiev and Commti- ', ' ... V": '. ;' most ica'img lommunists are in- ..., md. t action. At the delegates' !,""n1 , w" ""P01"!"", 'Z ttnl cult "f V"Mr " .: slaughter of thousands of old Bnl- h,h o. i, nl,i 'request' statins Body was re- ,h,k. mnA inn mm officers in : , . ' . . mos.-d from Un.n's b granite he la(e 1930,' It .' the f,r ' "'n- m " "??" "L.. "'' ne Soviet people had been' "X- 'nist (.'hina'i leaders, (2 brought iiit la New 1 fir it L it v I ursrlav ritinna which !ihe attrnded a w- blackened by tle blaze. jlt-v n -. t-iiar iv.nf . ( fnr t ha Vatsu. I If f V lfl(n t S Mho IClililfn thpir 4lhama nnai In nsmiUinn frftm nort R I Prr.i r vatinn Kapipiv 1 hillsifi hnmpn. Jnanif in the 12j - thu Snvit hlrr (H hrtv.prt Stilin caPat"y "ihn fir" h.n- if tn Wahmptnn nn O'O n tift fMul hrar liit rrturnpd a m.i miirrirer ind tnok his steel orld had ChoU Kn a. premier of Commu- uiiiin. . . , .1 . i i . " ( hmi sit in irwiv iiitanr The resolution approved by the uh.h he described as "the most n"m" t""c nown for years. ,' . .'.,,. ,M ,h, -.. 4.400 wildly applauding delegates ,n(luntial political force of our, , , . .... I With the disclosure to the Rus- fc disapproved of Khrushchev's rang down tie curtain on the ,,.- I Iraula reported tie dictators ,n people n,e murder of . fommumst differences to . rwwiv nd noin iraniicrri'ii in in i Aam - But he warned the delegates in i' ,: ",i U " , j un.usan.in 01 p- the world. haul juns OI new irouoie ui uic vum-. r. . i the family's priM'e plane. i Tuesday. 1 Chou returnol to Peiping before i..rrrf u., i irii,. h,. n... on,. id ....... ,,br (ungre,, eniieu. aiao we-iung fill such goals as a production v.;n ..',, ,h". Khriuhdiev opened lire or i in- ni oxh Ked China leaders con- of 2..0 million tons of h nd .. ' , . b . , lie Albania, aenouncmg us wm-(rnd Khrushchev's policy toward tvs ire the present I S. ca- inr erases of fise Oftier former munist leaders in his lirsl six- the rapiUUsl world IS not tough I body out of. the hallowed Lenin pacity and rent ire apirtmtn'.s Lommunist leaders. 'hour speech at the Congress open-1 enough.