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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1961)
University of Oregun Library Eugene, Oregon QOiiP mm d Ml llJ Primate Had No Chance Of Survival V Eitobliihed 1873 14 Poget ROSEBURG, OREGON FRIDAY NOVEMBER 10, 1961 265-61 10c Per Copy CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) A tiny squirrel monkey named Goliath gave bis lite to science today when he died in the blazing explosion of an Atlas missile high above tape Canaveral. Officials reported there was no chance the Im pound animal sur vived the holocaust which oc curred 30 seconds after the Atlas lifted off on an intended 5.000- mile flight to the South Atlantic Ocean. The Air Force said the range safety officer destroyed the mis sile when it became erratic. The blast spread a boiling ball of fire several thousand feet in the air and showered burning pieces of the shattered rocket back onto the Cape area and into the Atlantic just offshore. Seconds after the blowup, the thunder-like rumble of the blast rolled over the nearby beaches and the town of Cocoa Beach. Goliath probably died at the in stant of explosion. He was in a well-padded capsule located near the base of the 12 foot-tall nose rone and just above one of the fuel tanks. There was no escape mecha nism to pull the monkey capsule free in such an emergency. An es cape device is provided on Proj ect Mercury launchings. If all had gone right today, the Atlas would have hurled the nose cone 650 miles into space before it plummeted back for a para chute landing near Ascension Is land. Officials said they believed the (rouble, apparently one of guid ance, is one associated with the Atlas E and would not affect the O. The missiles have different guidance systems. Goliath, who had trained about six months for this mission, is not the first animal to perish in ....I.... alinV.1. linyttA at finrlino 7 ml pace. There have been 28 other I recorded animal deaths. pany arrived in West Berlin to- The latest were two Russian day, beginning a new armed shut dogs that burned up in the atmo Ue acros, Communist-patrolled phere last December when their orbiting space capsule failed to return to earth properly. One other squirrel monkey, Gordo, died in a U.S. rocket flight in December 1958. Radio instru ments showed Gordo apparently aurvived the 600-miIe-high sub orbital mission, but searchers were unable to find his nose cone. Among U.S. successes in this field were the recovery of mon keys Able and Baker from a Jupiter nose cone in May 1939 and Ham, the emmpanzee who went aloft in a mercury capsule last January and paved the way for the suborbital space flights of astronauts Alan Shepard "d,ou.sia Be'rtm. Virgil orissom. The first group of lbout M mcn Able died in a postflight opera- rode in(0 BerU aboard four jeepS lion to remove some bio medical twQ j4.,on iTacSj and three 2V4 instruments. Ham is at the cape, .ton trUcks witn trailers. A recoil one of five chimpanzees training jesJ rife wag mounted on one of for a Project Mercury orbital jeeps flight scheduled next Tw0 .dditional groups were fol- ever. Ham is not expected " t0 compiete the movement make the upcoming test. . into Berlin of Co. D of the 1st The missile was an advanced BaUe Group 15th Infantry, 3rd Atlas E model, this nations most . Division, powerful military rocket. The ear- her, more reliable Atlas D series .Will Return To Base will be used in the U.S. man-in- Tie company is scheduled to space program. A D Atlas is spend a few days training here scheduled to boost a chimpanzee and then return over the Red into orbit from the Cane next i controlled autobahn to its base in week and a man on an orbital: Bamberg, Bavaria, flight hopefully by the end of the Tn Arm announced Thursday year. If successful, the Atlas today! would have covered the 5,000 miles in about 25 minutes. Two aircraft and a ship waited in the planned impact area to at tempt recovery of the 12-foot-tall rone after it made a blazing diveiouent intervals without assigning back through the heat barrier of formal patrols to the road, some the earth's atmosphere from an; thing to which the Soviets strenu- altitude of 6o0 miles. Presence Of Red Trawlers Confirmed Off East Coast BOSTON (AP) A fleet of 50 or; more Soviet trawlers and two large mother ships are patrolling the fishing grounds barely SO miles from the Cape Cod summer home of President Kennedy. That was confirmed Thursday by Associated Press newsman Don Kothberg and AP photogra- pner j. naner ureen. They flew over the scene after the complaint ot a tape snipper .M.u uiv.s su ,, .""" 1", ""'F. crowding us off." I could count 25 Russian trawl The AP pair said some of the rs in one group. A few milct be h.n rarrv the Red flaff and th Tond was another large group and painted insignia of the hammer and sickle, similar to the ones carried in Moscow parades. The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Showers and partial clearing h). night end Saturday. Cooler $,,,. .. day. Highest ttme. last 34 hours Lowest temp, last 24 hours . Highest temp, any Nov. (55) Lowttt temp, any Nov. (55) . Precip. last 24 hours . Precis, from Nov. I Precip. from Soft. 1 . Deficit from Sopt. t . Sunset toni8ht.4:55 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:01 a.m. 4' " .'A r 1 ; ATLAS EXPLODES An Atlas ICBM carrying a lJ4-pound squirrel monkey named Golioth blew apart shortly after it was launched from Cape Canaveral, Flo., today. The nose cone is at the lower left plunging to earth from the exploding missile. (UPI Telephoro). First Motorized Troops Arrive In West Berlin BERLIN (AP)-First elements of a motorized U.S. infantry com highway from West Germany. Lt. Richard P. Jennings, 25, of Cincinnati, Ohio, headed the van guard. He reported no difficulties with the Soviets or anyone else. Troops Battle Dress The journey across the 110-mile stretch of Communist East Ger many took three hours and 40 minutes. The U.S. soldiers, wear ing steel helmets and full battle dress, were checked for 45 min utes at the Marienborn check point. The Russians counted them, but did not force them to dis mount. Twenty minutes were spent at the U.S. Babelsberg checkpoint that similar movements to and from Berlin are planned for units both in West Germany and West Berlin as training exercises This would make it possible for the Army to keep American units rolling along the highway at ire lously object. Rothberg reported that from 200 I feet m the air. at least. It ao peared some of the vessels were not interested in fishing for fish, Flying over the fleet, Rothberj I said, the crews "stopped workinK , momentarily, looked up grinning and waved at us. One of them was a woman. inert! wn. 7 ,"" forms or guns or tanks, only a i group oi iisnermen wno kxkcq m between were tmaller groups of three or four trawlers. The whole i Russian fleet covered a circular area about 50 miles in diameter. gruP7f Ze. :eS?mn - .n. PU 2. every inch of their assigned area. CHRISTMAS BAZAAR and a "Looking straight down at one.Jriety show tonight at the Fair catch which nearly filled the hold.) I ' But h'n ' '"ked.it many others. I searched in vain for any - .. t. u . 1 . .i i jiw uic uu iciiri-unK on lis ... - air Th uer. traui.r. r. ri, i.. t-h - na, ,n lercnt from the others, but from the air, at least, there was no '' nan th-v rn fi&hinff fnn fi,h" Th. Ir.al.nl mmrm Lu.,ll . . -"'20 miles from Chatham. Mm. - and no more than SO mdes from ' the summer White House at Iljan irus Port. -K Grocery Store Dollars Best TAMPA, Fla. (AP) The billion dollars (pent annually for so-called health foods could better be spent for good, every day food in the grocery store, says Dr. Philip L. White. White, director of the de partment of foods and nutrition for the American Medical As sociation, added that a well balanced diet can give the con sumer the same nourishment as vitamin pills at a fraction of the cost. The nutrition expert addres sed the annual meeting of the Florida Dietetic Association' Thursday. -. Driver Risks Life To Avert Accident In a moment of quick thinking. Wendell Simpson, log truck driver for Arnold Hansen Logging Co., smashed his loaded truck into a rock bank along the North Ump qua Highway to avoid hitting a sedan Thursday. Simpson, heading west, had just passed over the bridge over Little Kiver at 1:15 p.m., when a car driven by Gleu Snider, Glide, made a left hand turn from the Little River Rd. onto the highway, according to Mrs. Arthur Selby, News-Review correspondent. Snider failed to see the oncom ing truck, a report from the sher iff's office said. The cab of the truck went up the rock bank, and the trailer remained on the high way 200 feet west of the junction of the two roads. Simpson was unhurt. Simpson chose the left bank of .k. j ",7 . .I. bottom. Traffic, directed by Deputy Or ville Shanafelt, was disrupted fnr 3'4 hours while i tow truck from Walt's Towing. Roseburg. took the logs from the wrecked truck and placed them on another Han sen truck. No citations were Issued. Yoncalla City Council Talks Water System W. S. Perley, Portland engineer, was present at the meeting of the Yoncalla City Council this week and took part in the discussion of the proposed new water system for the town of Yoncalla, according to Mrs. George Edes, Yoncalla correspondent, Tentative plant call for bring- m water ovtr hlU jrom Adams Creek to the present reservoir. At the meeting the councU grant- e() t ctJI p B jiq,lor ijcenge to Ralph Sixes and a P.A. liquor 11 cense to Dale Bassett. All council members were pres ent. In Today's News-Review JFK AND NEHRU in agree srounas, page NAVY SECRETARY gets a bump'to 0 m the eye with a bayonet, page 3.1 . . I A tec A.l MAT M RnnHnam An Riua. i hntam i ...v.a n t. a-1 ma I in nunnnwn nn nnw. burs vs. Grants Pass in state ouar - teninais lonigni. ipont page Galvao's Fans Hijack Plane, Drop Leaflets LISBON, Portugal (AP) Five men and a girl hijacked a Portu guese airliner at gunpoint today and dropped antigovernment leaf lets on Lisbon in the name of Henrique faalvao, the hijacker of the liner Santa Maria tte are now at war" with the regime of Premier Antonio de 01 Iveira Salazar, the pamphlets said After droDDing them, the hiiacked plane flew to Tangier, where Gal- vao was waiting to congratulate uie nijacaers. Two police cars took them to Tangier police headquarters and the pilot of the plane followed in another car to make an official statement. The six hijackers, informed sources said, boarded the plane in Casablanca, as tourists heading for vacations in Portugal. Officials of the Portuguese air line TAP taid 18 passengers and seven crew members, including two hostesses, were aboard the hijacked plane. The flight was staled onlv two days before Sunday's parliamen tary election an election in which ail opposition candidates have withdrawn, charging that Salazar had made a free election impos sible. Salazar's government party, the National Union, replied that the opposition was Communist-infiltrated. The pamphlets, headed "Portu guese Anti-Totalitarian Front," urged the people to "tear up the ballots on Sunday," adding that the people of Portugal "will vote against Salazar by not voting at all" Galvao, from his exile in Brazil nd with the aid of a revolution ary band, seized the liner Santa Maria last January as a symbol of opposition to the government. San Francisco Bank Hit By Two Gunmen SAV FPAVrKrn iPiThr. gunmen, after holding families - two bank officials prisoner over- night, robbed a Bank of Amenc. branch today of around $i8.000. A spokesman for the Bank of America, the world's largest pri - vately owned bank, said the gun men virtually cleaned out the vault at the Union and Webster Branch, eight blocks east of San Francisco's Presidio. Police reconstructed this) se quence: The three gunmen appeared Thursday night at the home of the branch manager, Joseph Fi nocchio. One gunman stayed be hind with Mrs. Finocchio and her daughter while the other two drove with Finocchio to the home of the assistant manager, Henry Lupori. They stood guanj ever Fi - nocchio, Lupori and the two Lu pori children. The gunmen took Lupori to 1S. bank before opening time and forced him to open a vault. When ( teller. Sue Romweber.'. . mm .rt.r M ih entered for work, she was forced another vault. second teller. Csrol Hicken- i , j . , . . . rail a m . irr vra All vrre n n iin i before the eunmen cleaned out the I vaults and fled. Good Luck Indians Hutchins Umoaua Road r i Sclmar A. Hutchins. Roseburg, was the low bidder Thursd mnstmrtinn nf fh final linlr North Uinpqua Forest Highway i project. His bid was $126,630 lower than the engineer's estimate. wime supremacist government : an amendment to the milder The Bureau of Public Roads said lliron out of the United Nations, leijilit nalion resolution denouncing Hutchins' bid for reconstruction ,r,si' Switch South Africa's apartheid policy grading of 8.6 miles of the road I Tlle tralc' twitch by the 31 but leaving the question of diplo was So97,320. The government en-1 spon5or of tne boycott proposal malic and economic penalties up gineer's estimate was $723,950. i wa . dlsclosed at the 103-nation I to individual member nations. There were eisht other bidders, i sueclal P0'11'"! committee neared - As the stormy two-week debate The project begins just cast of .vole on rival resolutions dealing neared its end, South African For Toketee Falls and extends to , with Souln Africa's race policies. ! eign Minister Eric Louw warned Briggs Camp. Informants said the 31 will 'Thursday that expulsion of his The westernmost 1.1 miles of the project, which extends east from I the confluence of the Clearwater i and North Uinpqua rivers, is to be 1 topped, according to the Associated i Press report from Portland. I The Hamer Corp., Roseburg, was ; second low bidder, with a figure of $680,415. His bid was followed by that of M. J. Brassfield Co. and B. & F. Construction Co.. Salem, at $697,985. Other bidders were S. W. C roes- beck and W. R, Durbin Construc tion Co., Eugene, $717,683; White Bros. Construction Co., Walla n al ia, Wash., $735,129; Fred H. Slate and E. C. Hall Co., Portland, $729.- 808; Natt McDougal Co., Portland, S793.670; J. N. Conley and G. D. Dennis & Sons, Portland, $819, 594: and J. W. Briggs, Redding, Calif., $1,385,734. This forest highway project is a continuation of the improve ment of a log haul route which was started in 1948. The highway when completed, will not only provide access to additional timber, but an improved and shorter fair weather trans-Cascade route be 1 tween U.S. 99 and Roseburg and Diamond and Crater lakes, as well as to U.S. 97. This is the final reconstruction project. Only paving remains. VA Hospital Sets . Veterans Day Rites acUvVpart in Vere7. Day cere- monies Nw. 11 to demonstrate to the world this country's determina tion to maintain peace. To this end. the Veterans Ad ministration Hospital will have a Veterans Day program at the hos pital, starting at 9:30 a.m. and con tinuing until 11. State Sen. Al Flcgel will give an address and Dan Dimick of the Veterans of Foreign wars will be master of ceremonies. Invocation will be given by the Rev. John Adams; benediction by Father Ca millus McCrory. Ralph McClana wiil make short speech of wel come. Selections will be played by the Joseph Lane Junior High School Band. Duane Schulze of Troop 4, Boy Scouts of America, will play taps. Miss Virginia Young will fur nish piano accompaniment for a solo to be sung by Wayne Wagner. This Saturday marks the eighth observance of Veterans Day. The day was formerly known as Armis tice Day. The purpose of Veterans Day is to honor all veterans on the 11th day of November of each year a day dedicated to world peace. Tribute is paid to those who sacri ficed their lives in time of war and to the veterans who continue to serve their country. Area veterans organizations par ticipating in the VA Hospital pro gram are United Spanish War Vet erans and Auxiliary: Veterans of r- : nr n.-:nt. w lll foreign nr riii. jTrKii TZ DiabCd American Vet- beane-Perrm Chapter 9 and Auxiliarv; Veterans of World War i Douzlat Barracks 178, and Aux ;jliary: Daughters of the American D.-niMtinn- niii.hter nf t nion Veterans: Gold Star Mothert and Blue Star Mothers. Glen Murdock of the VTW Is the committee cnairman ior ins veter ans Day program. Rayburn Spends Restless Night BONHAM. Tex. (AP) House Cnalrf Kmm Ravhtirn vii wake- fuj m0,t of the night, his doctor today. It was one of the few jhad nights for the speaker, tuf- 'fering from cancer, l Dr. Joe Risser, hit physician, said Rayburn was in no pain. He I had some breathing difficulty but " "llr cleared. Risser ir'Er v ' t. i ti .- it- n r.ii Jr I Co'nniliy glld. "He seemed very alert." i , ; . i . . . i h, hand and smiled. Connallv Havntirn r posznirpn mm. nanpn i added. Asian-African Nations h Try To Bar S. UNITED NATIONS. N Y. (AP) -An Asian-African bloc of nations ! ay on'" r?Prlt'd "dy today to drop; of the t'leir demand for a worldwide lw:otl against South Africa and concentrate on trying to get the Scientist, Four Killed In Antarctic Crash MCMURDO SOUND, Antarctica! (AP) A University of Minnesota scientist and four U.S. Navy men died Thursday night in the crash of a Navy plane homeward bound from a magnetic mapping flight across the frozen Antarctic. The other four Navy men aboard the P2V7A Neptune were reported burned about their faces and hands but a medical report said they were "recuperating well and fit to travel. Weather permitting a C130 Hercules will take off Saturday to bring them back to McMurdo Sound. On Last Flight Lt The Navy Neptune crashed as it was taking olt from Australia si Wilkes Station on the last leg of a 2.900-mile flight over largely unexplored areas of the ice- capped continent. The expedition left the main U.S. base here Mon day and spent two days at the Soviet scientific base at Mirny on the Indian Ocean. The Minnesota scientist, Dr. Edward C. Thiol, 33, had made magnetic measurements from the air which were expected to help throw light on geological myster- i be'" & wotetadi. Navy officials said the expedi tion a phase of "Operation Deep Freeze 62 was by far the long est airborne scientific flight ever undertaken by the United States in Antarctica. It also was the first American aerial mission to the Soviet Un ion's Mirny base. A Soviet mis sion flew direct from Mirny to McMurdo by way of the South. Soviet and American scientist are regularly stationed at the So viet base. Adm. David M. Tyree. com mander of Operation Deep Freeze said an intense fire broke out on the Neptune's flight deck just aft er the takeoff and apparently the heavy smoke obscured the vision of the pilot and copilot. There were suggestions also that they were affected by fumes. An Ohio State University biolo gist, Dr. Madison Fryor, made the flight to Mirny but remained there. He is to spend the coming year at the Soviet base under the scientific exchange system the United States and the Soviet Un ion carry on in the antarctic. The Navy said the service per sonnel killed in the crash were Lt. Cmdr. William Douglas Counts, I SN. husband of Jeannclte V. Counts of (15 Lafayette Way) Med ford Woman Hurt In Wreck A woman belicved to be Isla Goobey of Hertford, is being treat ed in Forest Glen Hospital in Can- I yonville today for undetermined I injuries receivea in an auio acci "dent on the CanyonviUe - Days Creek highway late tint morning. The accident occurred 6'i miles east of Dayt Creek. Correspondent Mrs. it. t. Proctor says the car apparently slid on a curve. It shot, up a bank and turned over. Thelsion Thursday near the Congo- car was towed to CanyonviUe. County Christian Endeavor Convention Starts Tonight All youth from Junior high through high school age of the Christian Churches of Douglas County will be meeting this week end for the Douglas Union Chris tian Endeavor Convention. The convention begins this eve ning at Riverside School in Rose- . burg. . Featured on lhe program for the evening will be Mont Smith. m.m.TJkP mnn nun ii ai-nm.i t.,,t, " ..." hsi - from Brownsville, Ore. He is Bill- ... . ,t. n ii- , i... ...... mtiri iji mo ui , im v 1110 luniiiiii nm uivic ,i untie unci 1.111 ISIIHII I Church and is also the superintend-1 Camp at Glide where the day will I.EOPOLDVILLE, the Congo, ent nf the Crawfordsvilla (lrle be spent in discussing the needs (AP) Army chief Gen. Joseph School. He presently it a mission- ( nf Christian Youth. Classes and I Mobutu announced today 12 mu ary candidate under the Christian fellowship will be characteristic of tineers will be court-martialed for Missionary Fellowship and will the day's program. The group will the antiwhite rampage which sail lor some pot next summer, return to Rosebur; Saturday eve-1 broke out Nov. 1 at Luluabourg He will be ipeaking upon the ping. Iin Katal Province.. 1 Africa From U.N. scran the boycott demand if th.. committee fails to give it the two-lot thirds majority it would need to1,, u B. clear the General Assembly. Ifj"' . ".'hf "'Puted .that happens, they will move that their ouslrr call be inserted as i Navy Men East Greenwich, R.I.; Wayne Chastain. aviat on struc tura. mechanic l.C, husband ot Shelby Gene Chastain of (78 Bav View Ave.) Mt. View, North King ston, R.I.j James Leonard Gray, aviation machinists mate 2.C., son of Margaret Marv Gray of (9 Allen St.) CresskiU, N.J.; and Lt Ronald Philip Coinpton, son of John R. Compton of (4935 West Byron Place) Denver, Colo. The injured were Lt. Elias J. Stentz, Hicksville, N.Y.. pilot of the plane: Clarence C. Allen Jr. Portsmouth. mouth, Va., aviation elec- s technician 2 C. Jark C Ironic: Shaffer, Greenwich, R.I., Aviation electricians mate l.C. and Lt. ().g.) truest L. Hand, Elm Mott, I Tex. Schools To Talk Consolidation Members of the -Myrtle Creek scnooi ooara win meet Tuesday in Roseburg with the Dounlii Conntv School Reorganization Committee, according to a decision made by the hnarrl at itm n,Hnt ihlm 1. School boa rrf f mm Ririii. n..' Creek-Tiller and CanyonviUe will also participate in this meeting. school administrators have also Dccn invited to attend. The pur pose of the meet is to discuss consolidation and reorganization of tne districts Involved. W.ivtr Atksd Myrtle Creek School Supt. Al Neet read a letter from the class room teachers requesting the board to waive the present require ment of nine hours on-campus training every five years. The tparhprs aslrtwi nartnistinn tn iim instead, at least in n.rt h, cumulated in extension courses. The board voted to require the teachers to send a committee to the next board meeting to state further their position on the matter. Expiring terms of school budget board members John Markham Jr. and Louis llagbert were con sidered. Supt Neet will request them to serve additional three year terms. Instrument Money Asked Music department representa tives appeared before Uie board requesting replacement band in struments at a cost of $2,800. The board agreed to secure price quo tations from three music stores. John Briscoe, Eugene architect, will be present at the next hoard meeting Nov. 29 to show further planning on the proposed eight room addition to the elementary building, according to Supt. Neet. Earl Dooley 'and Loretta Taven- er, senior students in the Ameri can Problems class, were present at the meeting as observers. Katifungu Killed NDOLA, Northern Rhode.iia (AP) Lawrence Katiluugu, act ing president of Northern Rhode sia's African National Congress, was killed in an automobile colli I Northern Rhodesia border. theme of the Convention: "Ven ture With Christ.' Mrs. Veloris Baxter of Roseburg is the regional vice president of Oregon Christian Endeavor and will co-ordinate the convention. The Rev. Donald H. Smith of the Westside Christian Church is the pastor-counselor lor Uie Douglas Union Christian Endeavor a n d ! shares the Convention responsibil- ,.. ....... -- . u , , n i, r. ki,i On Saturday, the convention' I. .ii i ml. u..... ....""" the end" of the United Nations I.. u"PU'ing the right of the Ln"ea Nations to "meddle what his government rAr,Biri South Africa's internal affairs, Louw declared that those who had denounced his government had not come into court with clean bands. Louw also accused U.S. Ambas sador Francis T. P. Plimpton of making "an unbridled attack on South Africa" and questioned how the United States had carried out the "all mcn are created equal" provision in the Declaration of In dependence. The first real steps, he said, "do not go much further back than the Supreme Court de cision on school integration in 1954, and the appearance of the National Guard with fixed bayo nets at Little Rock." wiiiiam',,..; ;r ; ""tt. a.a V" ',". .,"nln.. ? m! Z h"r? , ana aisunguisnea American in 186882 years after the Declara. tion of Independence was not in tavor of political and social equality of the white and black races in this country." Plimpton Replies Plimpton in reply reminded Louw that Lincoln had signed the emancipation rrociamation in 1863 and "wiped out forever the stain of slavery in this country." I "All in this room " Plimntnn tdded, "would welcome a procla. nation by the South African Pnlne minister emancipating his people from the stain of racial dis crimination." Indonesia has warned the Gen eral Assembly that war may re sult u the U.N. endorses a Dutch plan for self-determination in Netherlands New Guinea (West Irian). Indonesian-' KnrtieT Minister Subandrio assailed the Dutch pro posal to send a U.N. commission to the jungle terrilorr tn rft ine whether a plebiscite should h held there. In the mounting Congo crisis. Belgian Delegate Walter Loririaii i"ked Aciinl Secretary-General 17 Tnant for U N- investigation ot -- - - "r ' i ucjgitu women .at Luluanourg by troops of the cen tral Congo government. Indians, Cavemen Will Clash Tonight Despite nine-weeks tests anrl ail the nerve-wracking anguish that goes with them, studenU are ex cited at Roseburg High School. Matter of fact, the whole town is excited as its favorite football team the Roseburg Indians pre pares to ao oatiie with the Grants Pass Cavemen at ( tonight on Finlay Field. The Tribe goes forth In ouest of the school's first football State Championship in the state quarter finals. In the first game ot the season, non-league counter, the Indians tent the Cavemen back to their caves after trimming them, 15-0. ine cavemen would like to re gain some of the "hair" they lost in that battle, while the Indians would like to trim the invaders again to go to the semifinals. For the game, Finlay Field will have facilities to hold all fans interested in the game. School Principal Ralph Teters said 1.800 seats in the form of portable bleachers have been erected. Teters said the bleachers bring the seating capacity of the field to 4,500 the largest in its history. Schools in the Roseburg vicinity nd the Douglas County Fair Board have provided the extra bleachers. While general admission tickets are available at the school's ath letic office, all of the 1.400 re served teats have been sold. Da Gaul l May Retire MARSEILLE. France (AP) President Charles de Gaulle taid today he may retire from office after the Algerian issue Is settled. sources who attended a closed meeting with him reported . The 70-year-old president's seven-year term expires in 19M. Leaves For Moscow HELSINKI, Finland (AP) Foreign Minister Ahti Karjalainen . ),ft by train today for Moscow to discuss the recent Soviet not rallina for Finnish-Rutiian talks : on ioint defense measures aesinst West Germany. (". AAp:. I C.a