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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1961)
SIMULATING THE BURIAL of the dictatorship of President Jose M. Velasco Iborro, university students corry coffin during visit of Ibarra in Cuenca, Ecuador Wednesday. Sign on coffin reads, 'Dictatorship of Velasco.' Students in Quito decended on the pal ace Thursday with brooms and soap to 'sweep it clean' for the induction of 0 new president, extreme leftist Carlos J. Arosemeno. (UPI Telephoto). Army Gathers Teams Of Experts To Identify Air Crash Victims RICHMOND, Va. (AP) The i sources will be used in an effort Army assembled teams of experts to speed the process. Families of today to begin the grim and difd- the victims' will be notified offi eult task of identifying the bodies Icially as the work progresses. of the 77 victims of the flaming ! crash of an airliner carrying re emits to camp for training. The bodies of the 74 recruits and 3 of the plane's crew are be ing moved today from a tempo rary morgue here to the field house at Ft. Lee. There men of the Army'a recovery and disposi tion units will aeek to make identifications. The Army said all available re- Mrs. Roosevelt Says U. S. Must Be Nation Of Leaders PORTLAND (AP) Mrs. Elea nor Roosevelt said in Portland Thursday night the United States must become a nation of leaders to lead the world out of the crisis which continually grows worse. She said the crisis is mounting as the U.S. and the Soviet Union continue to pile up nuclear power to greater heights. "Too often we shy from knowl edge of the world'a problems be cause we would rather not face the facts. It takes courage. . . ," the widow of former President dent Franklin D. Roosevelt told a Pacific Coast regional meeting of the American Association for the United Nations. The 77-year-old former first lady said she was worried about an attitude of despair, which prompts many to say. "Whafs the use. The world Is about to be blown up any minute." I won't say such an accident couldn't happen," Mrs.. Roose velt added, "but (Soviet Premier Nikita) Khrushchev doesn't want such a war. The Russians will Hospital News Visiting Houra I t. J:J0 o.m. and 7 te " Mercy Hospital Admitted Medical: Timothy Tavenner. Myrtle Creek; Mrs. Arden Ban ner Dillard: Mrs. Thomas Dod son, Sutherlin: Mrs. Harold Mar low. Winchester. Surgery: Mrs. Arthur Weber, Winston. Discharged David Gangle, Jennie Jory, of Pn.phnrf Mrs. Frank Leighton. Grants Pass: Mrs. Clarence Slay, Riddle. . Douglas Community Hospital Admitted Modical: Mrs. Norman Johnson. Bnsehure: Farrell Van Burger, u.n.tnn- Mrs. Corwin Fullerton. Winston: Mrs. Lloyd Greene, Suth erlin; Roy Hardin, Kiddie. Surgery: Jimmie Bristel, Rose burg. Discharged Stanley Sherman. Portia Palm er, of Rosehurg: Noble McMillen. Idieyld Park; Marilyn Ledbetter. Winston. by ROY O. YOUNG Four out of five homes today are under-insured! Know why? Because most of you nome owners have not had your fire in surance policies adjusted to cov er today's hiaher property values . . . We wiil glad ly help you fig gure the value ol your property at today's higher value. . .FREE. . .if you will tust give us a call. . .and wh not also let us figure your house hold possessions and bring them ip to date. . .Your protection against kiss of these possessions is complete only when you havf adequate insurance protection it today's higher values. . . Adequate protection is of vital necessity under today's ever in reaung prices. . .Give us a -all today. . .you'U be glad yot lid. . . ROY 0. YOUNG I SON Our 45th Year. Ft. 1916 Pacific Bldj. OR 3 671 i is Families To Be Notified The Army said Thursday that no positive identification had been made yet. But a spokesman said there were clues such as personal effects and teeth. The Civil Aeronautics Board has flown personnel to Richmond to investigate the circumstances of the crash of the Imperial Air lines Constellation near here on Wednesday night. bluff us as far as they can, but they are afraid of our power of production. , .He knows as long as we have this power we are more powerful than he is." Mrs. Roosevelt said Americans can not gain the moral and spirtual courage to be leaders without sacrifice, "but it can be done. We have never failed to face up to our responsibilities when we understood them." She said, "We can't have busi ness as usual in our schools any more than in our everyday life. We must teach our children in school what we stand for, what Communism is, and the nature of the problems we face. "Every youngster must be made to understand that he is vitally needed in the struggle for world understanding." , Some 60 delegates art attending the regional UN conference. Upon her arrival in Portland Thursday, Mrs. Boosevelt ex pressed opposition to the "Con cert of Free Nations" plan ad vanced as an alternate to the UN by Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. PTA MEET SET The regular meeting of the Riv erside School PTA will be held at 8 p m. Monday in the Riverside gymnasium. Ai-hur Sclby, Douglas County civil defense director wll be the guest speaker. Mrs. Gene Cooksey will give several vocal selections. Refreshments will be served by fourth grade room mothers. COMING AROUND FAIRFAX, Va. AP The coun ty of Fairfax plans to bring its zon ing ordinance into line with reality by giving Lena S. Carter approval of a store in a residential zone. The store has been there for years. 100 BUDGET ELECTRIC BLANKETS Choice 4 Colors 2 Year Warranty Washable Dependable Sleep-Guard S)C The four-engine craft crashed into a wooded swamp near Rich mond's Byrd Airport a few hours after the 74 new soldiers parted from their families for training a' Ft. Jackson. S.C. Only two crew members escaped from the twist ed, burning wreckage. Landing Gear Fails The pilot, with one engine of his plane dead, was making a desper ate attempt to land at the airport when he radioed: "I can't get my (landing) gear down and I'm los ing another engine." Seconds later, the ship skimmed over the runways, tried to gain altitude, then sank out of sight behind the trees. Its broad wings cut a path through the marshy woods near the airport, and the ship burst into flames. All but two aboard were entombed. The ship, a nonscheduled air liner, had picked up its passengers in Newark, N.J.; Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and Baltimore. Two Survive The two survivors, pilot Ronald Conway, 29, of West Hollywood, Fla., and the flight engineer, Wil liam Poythress, 31, of Miami, managed to escape the burning plane with only minor injuries. The CAB said four teams would be set up to determine the cause of the crash. Alan Boyd, chairman of the CAB, said the plane'a four gines would probably be moved to a hangar at the Washington airport for a complete tear-down. He said: "The board is naturally looking into the question of possi ble eneine failures." Conway and Poythress have thus far both declined to talk with newsmen. They are in latis factory condition at Medical Col lege of Virginia Hospital here. Mississippi Engineer Fetes 100th Birthday CARUTIIERSVILLE, Mo. (AP) Sterling P. Reynolds, known here as the greatest engineer on the Mississippi," was 100 years old Thursday. Still active as chief engineer of the St. Francis Levee District. president of the Little River Drainage District and mem ber of the Tennessee-Missouri River Bridge Commission, Rey nolds had a busy schedule lined up. He was to be honored by the levee district, which he has served for 62 years, and by citizens of Caruthersville. where a park bears his name. Revnolds. who goes to the of fice every day. says he owes his 'long life "mostly to behaving my I self and working hard." TERMS PER WEEK Sale Price 15.88 Ut it $... OR 2-Ul XI 5 Sets Record Speed, Aims Nov At Altitude EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE. Cilif. AP-The X15 rocket ihip, forerunner of the space ihip thai will take man to the moon in thin decade, hai achieved one of iU British Beauty Is Miss World LONDON (AP) A British beauty who placed second in the Miss Universe contest In Miami Reach two months ago was named Miss World on her home territory Thursday night. She was the first British girl to win a major beauty competition. The international contestants as usual indulged in considerable ac rimony after an earl, a duchess and seven other judges awarded the title to brown-haired, blue eyed Rosemarie Frankland, 1, a model. But the tantrums dis solved, probably temporarily, as the 37 girls danced and drank champagne until the early hours at the Cafe de Paris. JoAnn Waa Finalist The U.S. entry, Jo Ann Odum of Huntington, W. Va., was among the seven finalists but didn't place in the money. Comedian Bob Hope crowned Miss Frankland and saluted her as "the most beautiful girl I ever saw." When the girls started bick ering, Hope commented soothing ly: "Name any of these gir's and I'll say they deserved to win. I want peace." Rosemarie won 2,500 pounds (57.000) and a movie test but said, "My ambition is to be a glamor ous wife." Her measurements are par for beauty contest dinners in the Monroe-Bardot age 36-22 36. Miss China Second Second place and 500 pounds ($1,400) went to Miss Free China. Grace Li, 19. Her family comes from Shantung Province but she was born in Korea. Carmen Cer vera of Spain, 18. waa third and got 250 pounds ($700). Entrants from South America expressed bud displeasure over the way they had been presented to the public. Miss Italy, blonde Franca Cat- taneo. protested that she thought she should have at least reached the semifinal. Miss Argentina, Susana Pardal, let it be known that she thought Miss Denmark, Inge Jorgensen, waa no lady. Th mbodimM ol ntdtbilitf and driving ease from ih gltamtng tuptnit of hood through tht tmtttst htrnf-crmftod doftt. fu 1vf whotlbut; Thundorbolt V-t OHV origin; 3-$pttd Irtmmitiion ittndard. Option orordrvt, fhor-mountod 4-iptod gr bo of A&tomothS Vtritblt-ntt front coil ipringt ind tntl-iwty bar; tsymmotricof root tpringing. tolttcople ihoek abtorbon; flnnod-drvm bnko. e Tm Oram Tortmo Morion: twH fir-p$$ongtr capacity; iporta car typo bockot $tat forward, optional front nellntng aoat. lot-dow arm root t root, Lutory-poddod sarery daih, roconod inatrumtntation. Rich, ploattd vinyl upholttory, ooap pit earpoL enqulait dotaM lit at appotntmnta. Tha long Bat of Gran Tariamo Hawk option mcludf. Hitt-Holdar, limltad alip dffarantiat, air conditioning. 5S th IhUTIm mam Orw Turismo Hew and ad tm model of the glamorous now ti Lark todajL JMAY MOTORS 1410 S. E. STEPHENS 'twin goals record speed. Now it : will be aimed at record altitude I Air Force Major Bob White I opened it up all the way in levei 'flight Thurday and set a new ' KiveH msrlc tit A iita ...;)., hour six tunes the speed of sound, twice as fast as a rifle bullet. Altitude Try Set Next week another pilot, Joe Walker of the National Aeronau tics and Space Administration will point the X15 skvward and try for a new altitude record of 250.000 feet. Four thousand miles an hour and 250.000 feet-this is what the stubby-winged black Sky Dart was designed to achieve. It already has reached 217.000 feet, last October 11 with White in the cramped cockpit. That day, as Thursday, swift temperature changes of more than 1.000 degrees in less than three minutea splintered the outer panel of his windshield. "I expect the metal frame hold ing the windshield will be modi fied before the altitude attempt," White said after his flight. Windshield Cracked The right side of his windshield was so badly cracked by the heat, that White could not see out of it. "Good Lord." he breathed, "1 hope this one holds." Then he radioed to the chase pilot on his right aide: "Stay right there, buddy." The chase pilot. Air Force Ma jor Walter Daniel, did exactly that, keeping his F104 just above the XlS and radioing instructions to White all the way down. White landed aafely. At a news conference an hour later. White appeared calm and unshaken. Never In Danger Never at any time was he afraid, he said, and never was he in any real danger. He admitted, however, that if the windshield had given way, "the decompression in the cockpit would be explosive." But even if this should occur some time, White said coolly, "t still have my pressure suit. It would inflate to compensate for the loss of pressure in the cabin. Heat is the factor that may keep the XlS from going much higher than 250,000 feet. Its builders, North American Aviation Inc., have estimated the XlS could go twice that high a hundred miles out into space. But the problem is getting back isalely. STUDEBAKER invites your inspection of a distinctive new sports classic The Gran Turismo Hawk designed and made with the traditional quality of great European road cars and offering the comforts and conveniences preferred by the discerning American moton'st . 1 v O v NAVY SECRETARY John Connolly (left) holds a handker chief to his injured eye after it was accidentally struck by a bayonet as he was inspecting an honor guard of University of Texas Naval ROTC cadets that greeted him ot Austin, Tex. oirport Thursday. Commandont of the unit, Copt. Dale Reed (right), talks to the secretary. Connolly came to Austin to receive the Distinguished Alumnus Award today from tha Texas Ex-Student Association. (UPI Telephoto). Santa Monica Fires Doused LOS ANGELES (AP)-A hun dred men, hollow-eyed and foot sore, patrolled still-smoking can yons today, the final stage ot a five-day fire disaster in the Santa Monica Mountains. They kept dousing flareups throughout the night, hoping to avoid a renewal of Southern Cal ifornia's worst fire outbreak. They finally controlled the 8.400- arre blaze in Topanga Canyon Thursday night but were still plagued by "hot spots sparks flying out of smoldering stumps and flaring into flames. The 5,750 acre fire in nearby Bel-Air was controlled Wednesday night. Official estimates of damage re mained unchanged: 456 homea de stroyed; property losacs that may exceed $20 million; 14.150 acres of vital watershed ruined. There have been no deaths re ported. About 150 firemen have been injured, none seriously. Los Angeles County has been declared a disaster area by Gov. Edmund G. Brown, who ia seeking federal laid. fti., Nov. 10, 1961 The Bayonet Injures Navy Secretary AUSTIN. Tex. (APl-Secretarr of the Navy John B. Connally Jr. spent three hour in a hospital Thursday night after he was struck near the left eye by a naval kuiu cadet s rifle. The accidental blow opened a nasty cut in the left eyelid below the eyebrow," said Connelly's aide, Capt. William R. Anderson. Connally had iust arrived at the municipal airport for an ap pearance today at the University ot texas and was reviewing a university honor guard when the accident occurred. Capt. Anderson said the secre tary asked the midshipman his name and leaned forward. "The midshipman thought the secretary wanted to inspect his rule, so ne Drought it up sharply into the 'port arms' position and struck Connally," Anderson said. "It was the end of the rifle barrel, or sight, not the bayonet attached to the rule that struck i him." I Capt, D. C. Reed, commander of the ROTC unit, said he didn't know the cadet a name. I Sun., News - Review, Roseburg, Or. 3 Farm Production Must Double Says Sen. Morse KLAMATH FALLS (APV-Amer-Ica'e crop and livestock output will have to be doubled if the people of the country are to be as well fed 50 years from now as they should be, Sen. Wayne L. Morse. D-Ore., said today. Morse, in remarks prepared for meeting of the Oregon Associa tion of Soil Conservation Districts, said that soil and water conserva tion are needed. "If the job of conservation it done well and fast enough," he said, "We can have good food in abundance. If a poor job ia done. future generations of Americans may not eat as well aa we do." a nw, tiny bchincMhtir htaring aid calltd sub-miniatur ! ffcej tmatltit wrme both by Qualitww. UnWIimMr tncomplcvoot, door mntl powortvl 4ipit Ht tiny MM. H yOJ llflVO 'keMfeft Bf40)st Itrm, SutvMtiiiatw to day it oovld tpM m WtvoI mw wondt rfvl world f hearing for y. Hoortnf k prkmUtm pttm ' mion vm R pro tect IH Com I r Coll foe fcww op potntmoftt nywfcf l Dv Ut County. LEE CAMPBELL MAKING AID JPICIAUST SI i. I. Jackson DIAL OR 3-7117 the 3 6:30 pm Ch. 6 xfAs- THE Hl? HARD