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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1961)
r University cf Oregon Library Eugene, Oregon COliP Early ieturns acapagal Leading Philippines Show ilil in vflJ 4- .-.14 J f,Sa3,,:,., - 4 .. , MOTORCYCLE POLICEMEN end a newspaper reporter carry three children to safety os flames' burn through dry brush in foothill orea near Los Angeles. Potrolmen hod their hands full with the children ond ended up carrying them to o car. The fires were controlled early today after at least 20 homes were destroyed. (UPI Telephoto) Park Ready For Talks On U. S. Aid To Korea WASHINGTON (AP)-Lt. Gen. Chung Hee Prk, South Korea's revolutionary leader, met with Secretary of State Dean Rusk to day to lay the groundwork for talks with President Kennedy on economic backing and more mili tary aid for his Communist-menaced country. U. S. Aid Dim Officials said Kennedy, in a!.May wJlen he an.d. 1 ' 'eI' I luncheon session and an afternoon conference, would pledge Ameri- :f i- , Tt:.j c.... ltess- Officials hoped for full con ran aid in principle and approve , A -Th- ?. nf.Tn?1 11 b? tomht- plan to modernize South Korea's ' ,,he .1".t,"?!'T.?".nia.b"t I The homes destroyed were Capitalists Charged With Aid-Cut Try BELGRADE. Yugoslavia (API I with a 19-gun salute and full mili- President Tito Monday said tary honors at National Airport, "certain circles of capitalists' and j In welcoming him. Vice Presi other reactionary people in Amer-oent Lyndon B. Johnson said: "In ica" are urging U.S. militacy and i the next two days President Ken other aid to Yugoslavia be tuf nody nd members of.h" admin off during hard times for the stration i will discuss with you how Communist nation 'we ln Americ can assist in the ."Economic pressure is exer-fulfj"m.ent of P,an5 for .he 8a' cised on us at the time when our J"" !? PP"y ' the country Is so badly hit by drought j Korean people- and when we are in a pretty deli cate situation." Tito asserted in 1 II f . y H-a. a speech before a mass meeting Jr0H JCl 10 KcpOU at Skoplje. !... The State Department con Tft 1 A HoMriliar firmed last month that the United I U l. HUCllUUCI States has shelved at least tem porarily a Yugoslav request to buy 500.000 tons of surplus Ameri- Ambassador Hans Kroll Is return ran wheat. I ins to Bonn today to tell Chancel- Officials indicated the decision i lor Konrad Adenauer his side of reflected President Kennedy's dis-jthe story of how reports were pleasure because of pro-Soviet po- started that the Soviet Union put utions taken by Yugoslavia at the forth new proposals for solving Belgrade conference of non ithe German and Berlin questions, aligned nations last September. Reports coming from Bonn im- A request by Yugoslavia that ply that Kroll may have initiated the wheat decision be reconsid-1 these proposals as his own. But ered coincided with the disclosure according to the best available ui of the controversial sale of sur-1 formation here they came first plus U.S. Sabre jet planes to the from Soviet Foreign Minister An Tito government. jdrei A. Gromyko and then were Tito turned to the West after! discussed by Kroll and Premier Stalin broke with him in 1948. He, Khrushchev at a conference ini has received $2.2 billion in U.S.ja'cd by the latter, economic and military assistance; H also remained possible that since the end of World War II. Kroll advanced some of his own Firemen Called Out 1 The Winston Dillard Fire Depart-1 ment was called out Monday about 8 25 p.m. to the Curtis Abbott resi-i dence at 373 Jorgenson St. Lint in a clothes dryer caught fire, but there was no damage reported, Soviet Trawlers Pose Challenge, kg a Says Naval M WASHINGTON (API - The So- Viet Union's growing and far- ranging fishing fleet poses an amount of fish the Soviet Union West, including those attributed , fourg Planning Commission in re "overt chalience to our defenses." imports from them. i to the U.S. Navv. indicate that o.rH in th hnrrf' rni,ii fr.r says a semi official publication on naval affairs. An article in the November Is- sue 01 ( niira .im fl il stitute Proceedincs also con-1 tends the Soviet fishing fleet is The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Cansuiarahla fan and lam rloudi. nets in nioht and morning hours. Some afternoon clearing. Highest temp, last 54 hours Lowest temp, last 34 hours Highest temp, any Nov. (SS) Lowest temp, any Nov. (SS) Precip. last 24 hours Preop. (rem Nov. I Trecip. from Sept. 1 .. Deficit from Sept. 1 Sumet tonight, 4:S0 p m. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:0 a.m. ... 0 Sv - ' - .4 600.000-man armed forces. "We got off to a very good start," Rusk commented after his one hour and 20-minute meeting with the Korean leader. Park had no comment. He rushed off to see Fowler Hamilton, head of the U.S. For eign Aid Agency. Park came to prominence last low officers overthrew the elected government. ' . V . . iT j ..' i Dort as the lunta attacked craft i and corruption in government and undertook a series of social re forms. Red Carpet Welcome I Park was met late Monday with la red' carpet welcome, complete MOSCOW (AP) West German ideas during the talks with ! Khrushchev. The two have been known to talk frankly and at times with considerable heat. The Soviet news agency corre- 1 spondent in Bonn reported that diplomatic and press observers there "believe that Kroll would hardly return to his post in Mos- cow." t f f ss. fl I Affairs Publication an economic threat to Western nations by rutting down on the umm nmn These are the views of Bernard in-,.... nassrii, . reu.ru ....Ji commander who reads Kussian and told a reporter he gets much information hy studying Soviet piihliMtion of the United Slates ! iii-muir. ... u.n...i...i. tot iavy, toast t.uara ana si arine : the campus cf the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. naval operations. Kassell'a article anncared a few ......... ..... .c . days after a stir was caused by the a-.nearance of a larje fleet m soviet trawlers and other tiit- ing vrstels in international atert n unit nitnoucn ine ounucaiion an- ,H,if..j ... . ....... .... uNiiiu fund onv mis :r nm doubt at to Jordan a claim, anv official connection, it j ing concern that the Russians ' 11 ,s wmplianre with order, ci nnnis ariirl.. nnlv aftr th.v u . . ., , riu""l,n" contained in their divorce decree "ul " "' mm , .. , , . . . , I ; " ZT b "UC.;provedV bv a board c'hdcrd 1 ""b'8 , Judge Don H.'mUSCULAR DYSTROPHY Viollfl i "eorr'w inrter on chief of' JhB ' Ih, M. jlecum .. sen-! Mlrch du D"' P'S Z CREMONA, Italy (AP) - This 15 'Cors!fl . Anderson, chief ol mhnut "..iv. ..nt.rit. p.." U - ' . . . nnrih Its nn eitv vher Antonio if j New Fire Claims 20 More Homes LOS ANGELES (AP) Fire fighters today contained a 2,3JO acre brush blaze that destroyed 10 Kaget Canyon homes 20 miles north of downtown Los Angeles. Roads were reopened to resi dents, and the more than 300 evacuated Monday from Kagel and Little Tujunga Canyons re turned to their houses. Ijvu.rincr winds hnrl .fiflht.rt nt. fjcjais to reduce the fire-fighting force from 825 men to 600. The air was nearly calm and smoke- mostly in the $10,0O0-$15,000 price ' ' " range. Jur:t a week ago two other fires destroyed 4ti5 homes and denuded 14.000 acres in the Bel-Air and Topanga Canyon sections Toughly 10 miles west of Los Angeles. Burglars Re-Enter Schools At Elkton Burglars continue to be active in Elkton, returning in one in stance last night to the window in the high school building which was jimmied open on Halloween night, I according to a report received by Mrs. C. W. Henderer, isews-Ke- view corresDondent. Nothing was taken from the high school, but $100 in cash is report- ea missing irum uie uu.io ... ...c grade school. Entry was gained, bv forcing oDen a door to the build ing. The break ins were discovered at the opening of school this morn ing. Also burglarized was Joe's Chev ron station where the door was pried open and the cash register forced. The owners report no cash missing but an undetermined mount ot merchandise, presum- : I : V-1 ed to be mostly cigarettes, wasim a cheap hotel for two days. taken. The burglaries are presumed to have occurred late at night as the School Board was in session at the grade school until midnight. State police along with Deputy Sheriff Jim Carstensen are investi gating. x J- D.,t . 1 ,aae racT 3er LAGOS. Nigeria (AP) A trade agreement between Nigeria and 1 Then, after each had other spous Poland was signed here today. It es Lindsey four they got back ! is the first such pact negotiated i between Nigeria and a member of j the Communist bloc and also the first trade agreement to which! 'Nigeria has subscribed. off the Massachusetts roat. I "Reports from sources in the 1 there are from 200 to 400 such ! ships always st sea in strategic areas," the article said. ..Adrf , ,nj, mimher the COunt leM f,n,n. craft ,hl,tli,ng back, : ,h forih through strategic wa. ! ,nd the pictre becomes a nl,turb,ng ,, particularly to ,. tIon, bordering on the B B,,t,c if""" "UKT, . , craft are capable of mining stra - tacJif fnuafnrst 1 1 aft nimloa a. tin. hfallt ! Kassell auvcrti the Soviet lih.u. 1 . - . k'. ...V.-. i ino rraft am .np.oMt in nff lie nan air rngaKru in UII V a. I coasts. Passive rountermrasures 1 is a technical term for listening ( in on American military radio 1 communication. Oik Ettobliih.d 1873 UPegei UN Group Asks Halt To Nuclear Tests In Africa TTVlTPn viTiovc xj v adv nusruuig Kny iimniiKfr .L ,, ',. ; Ar'for the past 2 years, Monday The main U.N. political com mittee today brushed aside oppo sition of the Western nuclear powers and called for recognition, w,u terminate his service! with of Africa as a denuclearized zone The vote on the African-spon sored resolution was 57 0 with 42 abstaining. It not only called for a halt to all nuclear weapons testing in Africa, but urged all countries to refrain rom transporting or stor ing hydrogen or atomic bombs on African territory. The United States and France voted against two key provisions of the resolution in paragraph-by-paragraph voting, but on the res olution as a whole they abstained along with Britain, a substantial number of Western European countries and some Latin-American delegates. The So let bloc voted with the majority for the resolution. The Western powers objected to having such restrictions voted for only one part of the world. The move hit directly at France which has a nuclear testing base in the Sahara. Roustabout Dies In Gas Chamber SAN CUENTIN. Calif. (API- Richard Linsey. a roustabout who craved women, liquor and cars, died calmly today in the state gas chamber (or raping and killing a 6-year-old girl with the help of uis preguani sixm wile. Blonde, blue-eyed Rose Marie Riddle, who fainted at the least excitement because of a congeni tal heart ailment, was lured to her death last Jan. 12 from a la bor camp at Shatter, Calif. LIndsey, 30, an ex-convict, en tered the green-walled chamber at 10:02 :02 a.m. The deadly pellet. ?n u2T,eaJ s?,s; A "."it" m"" released- at 10:03 into m panH0 V.u,r. de'"-'t rled B'm . were under th. rhi r In ch rh ho w stranneri He wa nrnnn.inx.vl ' r ' - dead at 10:12 a.m. Lindsey's common-law wife, Dixie Elaine, 23, gave birth to a son two months after the crime. She is serving two life terms for bludgeoning Rose Mane with a tire iron after Lindsey raped and choked the child. Lindsey and his 208-pound wife abducted Rose Marie from a la bor camp at Shafter. Rose Ma rie's father, Everett, had brought his wife and two daughters there from Chandler, Ariz., so be could work as a farm migrant. The Lmdseys drove to a remote , .... . ii-j,.. r.nH the M , . m - if . in the bark seat. Then he choked her. But he wasn't sure she was dead. "If you don't do It, I will," Mrs. Lindsey said. She grabbed a tire iron and struck the girl 19 times. The couple dumped the body on a desolate alkali flat, drove to Sa? Francisco and stayed drunk Three days after the crime, the Lindseys were captured asleep in j their blood stained car across the bay from San Francisco. Lindsey pleaded guilty Jan. 20. On March 22, Mrs. Lindsey, was removed from jail to a hospital where she gave birth to a 6-pound, 3-ounce boy, later given in cus tody to her mother. Lindsey and Dixie Elaine first were married several years ago. together a year before Rose Ma- lie's murder, Cnvarnet On Srhflfi-I iBicCHal wfl ttilUOl Enrollment Is Slated An enrollment forecast anticipa ting teacher and school room needs wnnin ine noseDurg stcnooi uis- zi:au.tr at the board's regular meeting Th'hl'.''lii'".!.-.nn.in.r ih. ---mm.H,i,. f ,k. nn... 1 certain street vscations on school j property. Recommendations for the vacanrv nn the hoard nf ari. - missions for Park School will also be studied, iiJna ftrrfare Vieitntlnn : JUflge UfOerS VISlTatlOn Rights To Be Allowed An ex-wife was held in contempt I mrt for fllllre to gr,nt ,he ' - . ... 1 1 1 ..1.. t-.-i f..M U..J ntnO, Leslie rreflrlCt. tleCUm, VIS- nation rights. The judge suspended the sentence upor. provision that 1 Mrs. Mecum comply with the court i order of Sept. 27. I 9!ews-tWM ROSEBURG. OREGON TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1961 Roseburg's City Manager Resigns II. John Warburton, who h a s ; night mbinitted his resignation to the Roseburg City Council. Warburton advised the council ne pians to enter private industry. the city on Dec. 15 and move to I the Portland area after Jan. 1. I The manager's resignation was accepted by the council with regret and with many expressions of ap preciation to the official for his "outstanding service to the city government and community." namurton, wno won the Rose- burg city managership from a ! large field of applicants, came i here from Laramie, Wyo., where i ne nad served in a similar muni- 1" JOHN WARBURTON . . . resigns city post. cipal managerial capacity. He suc ceeded George Farrell. The coun cil was attracted to Warburton be cause of his talent and background as an accountant as well as en gineer. Deficit Faced The new administrator arrived to find the city's fiscal ship sailing numui raii 00 April 27, 1959. XfDUA Pal Mayor Peter B. Serafin, who was a councilman and president of the council at the time of Warbur ton s appoint ment, believes the manager's efforts played a large part in the administration's suc cess in pulling the city out of its financial predicament. "The city's financial situation has gradually Improved to a point that last July the city ledgers ac tually showed a few thousand dol lars surplus," Serafin said. But Warburton had hardly be come settled in his new respon sibilities when a new problem was tossed into his lap. The disastrous blast of Aug. 7, 1959, brought new administrative problems and com pounded the city's financial diffi culties. Crisis Met Calmly Serafin said the manager met this crisis as calmly and vigor ously as he has met others. He solicited community confidence and support, and his efforts were Manufacturer Cites Loss In WP Hearing SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The president of a firm which fur nishes refrigerator cars to West ern Pacific Railroad through a company owned jointly by Union Pacific and Southern Pacific said Monday his firm would lose $200, 000 worth of business annually if Santa Fe gains control of Western Pacific. Testifying for Southern Pacific at the Interstate Commerce Com mission hearings on the battle for control of WP, W. Gordon Robert son, president of the Bangor and Aroostook Railway, said his firm would be badly hurt by a Santa Fe-WP merger. Robertson said the Bangor rail way now furnishes refrigerator cars to Pacific Fruit Express owned by UP and SP for use by Western Pacific. Santa Fe has contended that lt could save S2 million a year by furnishing its own refrigerator c,r to WP This contention was hit earlier Vnnrfa h A F. rhiamon. een- eral manager for Pacific Fruit Express. Chiassnn said there would he no savings but only a transfer to Santa Fe of payments Western Pacific now makes to his firm. In Today's News-Review given on Roseburg team, sports pise 1 BOWL I Of WISK named In' Doc Wellman t Pocket SpliU, sportt page. instrumental in the public acccp- umce ui a aiw.wu general oona issue to provide improvements ne- cessitatcd by the blast. "All members of the council re- gret losing John." Serafin said. "We liked the way he operated He was above-board in aUhii elty10 Premier Tatnce Lumumba dealings and kept the public well informed on activities of the city government. He encouraged civic and service organizations to be- uganizations to come interested and participate in'"'" l "Pe responsibility municipal activities. This led to;lur. U1T ara,n- good acceptance of budget elec- ... ,ouf-mn commission said lions and set up a climate in Ith"' Probably among the eyewit whiih the eiliien. knew what wa I nesses was Moise Tshombe. p re- going on within their city govern- mem." Council Doubtful Serafin said the council is doubt ful that a replacement for the de parting manager can be found be fore Warburton's retirement is ef fective. He said he has called a special meeting of the council for next Monday night at which the City manager vacancy will be the chief topic of discussion. He said the council will have to make arrange ments for temporary administra tive leadership until a permanent manager can be appointed. S.Africa Beats Expulsion Bid UNITED NATIONS, N Y. (AP) South Africa today had weath ered twin moves to expel her from the United Nations and place her under a worldwide po litical-economic boycott. But her white supremacy policies were condemned by a resounding 72-2 vote. The 103-nation special eolitical committee voted 47-32 Monday for the demand by 30 Asian-African nations and Cubs to get the Se curity Council to consider ousting South Africa from the United Na tions. The vote fell short ot the two-thirds majority required , for fmpeoval by the General Assem bly. Same Pat The same fate befell the boy cott call by the 31 sponsors. It was approved by the slim margin of 48-30. The censure resolution by India and seven other nations de nounced South Africa's apartheid policy of strict race segregation and asked member nations to take whatever action they deemed fit, individually or collectively. Only Portugal and South Africa voted against it, but there were 27 abstainers, including the Unit ed States, Britain and France. The denunciation of apartheid was similar to a resolution ap proved by the assembly last year after a boycott proposal failed to get a two-thirds majority. Three Amendments This time the committee tacked on three amendments which, since they did not get two-thirds majorities, probably will not clear the assembly. The Western pow ers had announced they would abstain in the vote on the resolu tion if the amendments were ap proved. One, by Ethiopia, asked the Se curity Council to consider what steps should be taken against South Africa. Another, by the So viet Union, calls for an embargo on arms to South Africa, and a Pakistani amendment calls for an oil embargo. Trial Jury Favors Former Prisoner PORTLAND (AP) A man who served 22 years in prison for a killing at Klamath lalls, had a winning day in court Monday on another matter a tube of tooth paste. Theodore Jordan Jr., 55, was paroled from prison in 1954. Last year he was arrested in a Portland supermarket and charged with pocketing a tube of toothpaste. He a- a .n, ui.-li in Mutiiirtnl fntirt hut appealed and won in Circuit Court. Then he went into Federal District Court and sued the super market, Safeway Stores, asking damages for the embarrassment of false arrest. The jury Monday found in his favor with an award of 1500. Jordan's Klamath Falls convic tion in 1932 was for the killing of F. T. Sullivan, a Southern Pacific dining car steward. Jordan was sentenced to death, but then Gov. Julius Meier commuted this to life. A special commission hsd re ported to the governor there wss guilt. Stradivarius was born is sending a representative to New York to buy one of the prized violins made by Cremona's most famous, son. It will bo the first to beiytllii. 1 owned by the city. Among construction work listed 268-61 10c Per Copy Probers Say l-umumba's Death Staged UNITED NATIONS, NY. (AP) - A U.N. investigating body ex- pressed belief today former Con-' n!uered last January with n,Kn 'anga oniciais as eyewit-1 "j"' aeciarea also that.iw lead over Hep. ber- be-p"", -" government " . . mrai vongo government , mler. of secessionist Katanga rrovin ce. It added that there is a strong suspicion that a Belgian army colonel was the actual neroctrator of the crime. Account "Staged" The commission deserihed as "staged" the account released last Feb. 13 by Katanga authori ties saying Lumumba and two associates were killed by tribes men on the day before. On the contrary, the commis sion accepted as substantially true evidence indicating the fiery Congo leader and his associates were killed almost a month be fore in a villa not far from Elisa bethville, the Katanga capital. It fixed the day as Jan. 17. There were unconfirmed reports three days after the Katanga an nouncement that Lumumba and his two associates were killed by a oeixian army captain. Gets Special Blame ine commission tinoipH nut Godefroit Munongo, Katanga minister of the interior, for spe cial blame. It said its findings 'bristles with evidence indicative of the extensive role" played by Munongo in the deaths. The commission said that the Congo government nreventert it irom going to ine scene of the crime to carry out its investiga- It expressed hope Its findings cuum serve as a D&sis tor tnrThr 1 investigation in the Congo, and 'also in judicial proceedings which, in Ms view, should be in stituted as soon as possible." Testimony Taken The commission took testimony from witnesses at four meetings in New York, two In Brussels and 10 in Geneva. Among those who testified were former mercenaries ana u.N. officials who had been in various pans or me Congo. The U.N. General Assembly e. tablished the commission last April upon recommendation by the security council. Its members were Justice Aung Khine of Bur ma. AtO Tashoma H&ilemariam of Ethiopia, Dr. Salvador Martin et de Alvt of Mexico and Maitre Ayne a Almeida of Togo. Flames Destroy Television Tubes EUGENE (AP) Mnro than S12.000 worth of television picture tubes were destroyed Monday night as a large truck owned by vamumia electronics firm was engulfed in flames on Highway 58 The four-hour blaze began about :30 p.m. as Newell Rufus Shirley, Lynwood, Calif., was driving the truck, owned by Cal Video Elec tronics Co., Compton. Calif., on Highway 58, about five miles east of Oakndge. bhirley told sheriffs deputies and state police the truck's brakes apparently overheated. He said he first noticed flames shooting from a front wheeL The fire quickly spread Into the cab and trailer. Fire trucks from the U. S. For est Service and the Pope tc Tal bot Lumber Co., fought the blaze. The firefighters were hampered by the exploding tubes which tent out showers of glass. City Awards Part Payment On Washington Aye. Bridge The Washington Ave. bridge wit estimated 75 per cent complete in a summary of project! presented to the Roseburg City Council at its meeting Monday night. A partial payment of $68,093 was approved for the contractor, Tom Lillebo Construction Co. of Reeds port. Total contract cost of Lille bo't part in the project it 1399,280. Completion Nears City Engineer Kenneth Meng not ed a number of street, sewer and other protects, contracted this year are completed or nearly completed at this time. One of the larger partial pay ment! wtt received hy Jeske Bros. Construction Co. of Eugene, A sum of 128.S.U 47 was granted In connection with the firm's contract on the East Roteburg sewer prot ect. The improvement wss listed 70 per cent complete. Two pay mentt In connection with enffineer- in work ($1.480 09 and $1.476 99) -.re approved for Cornell. How! Isnd. Hayea Merryfield of Cor- Election Day Most Serene In History MANILA. Wednesday (API Vice President Diosdado Macapa gal took an early and expected lead today over President Carlos P. Garcia in first returns from the Philippines general election. With about 2 per cent of the vote counted, Macapagal, of the Liberal party, had 104.561 votes to 74.301 for Garcia, leader of the Xacionalista party. The count was unofficial and too small to estab lish a trend from MonHav'i hat. loting. In the vice presidential race, Emmanuel Palaez, Macapagal's running mate and a close asso- "ate of the late and popular rresiaeni it am on Magsaysay, in visniena jr Palaei led with 76.322 votes. Osmena, son of the late president running as an independent, had a.ius. sen. uil Puyat. Garcia s running mate, was way back with 28.503. Macapagal got his early lead from traditionally anti-adminis tration Manila. However, early returns from generally pro-Gar-cia areas in the central Philip pines showed some districts going over 10 macapagal. Election day was the most peaceful presidential balloting of ine islands 15-year history as a republic. By the time the polls closed only one confirmed shooting and two unconfirmed incidents ot serious violence had been report ed, an unusually low figure for this young Asian republic which counted at least 22 political slay ings during the campaign. In the South Mindanao Prov ince of Cotabato a poll watcher was shot and critically wounded. The national ebnstabulary were investigating reports that a poll inspector was shot at Zamboanga del Norte, also on Mindanao, and that another inspector was killed and several wounded in Ilouo City, on the central island of Panay. lucre were reports of mauungs, vote-buying and intimidation, but these are usual for Philippine elections. The outcome of the election probably will not be known be- i ,ore late we!nedy when re- "ngnia m me central ana Springfield Of ficer Holds Police Class Caot. Wayne Dodd of the. Springfield Police Department con ducted first-day tessiont of 1 po nce omcert training school that opened in the Douglas County Courthouse Monday. Roseburg Police Chief John Trv ett said about 15 police officers are participating in the school, spon sored by state law enforcement agencies. Dodd's subjecti included police o-'ficer procedure In the following matters: complaints, warrtnt of arrest, laws of search and seizure. examination of complainant and witness, homicide, pursuit of sus pects, search without a warrant and citizen's arrest. Lt. Jerry McNew of the Eugene Police Department discussed re port writing at this morning's ses sion. Scheduled tt afternoon speak, er wit Lt. Robert Mason of the Salem Police Department on pa trol techniques. The school con tinues through Saturday. Americans Determined To Fight For Freedom FT. POLK. U. (AP)-The high morale of reservists called to ac tive duty shows that Americana are determined to defend free dom, says the commanding gen eral of the Continental Army Command. Gen. Herbert B. Powell made the statement at a news confer ence Monday after an inspection of this base, manned almott en tirely by reserve units. at complete It (he Vest Slopes paving improvement in West Rose burg. The council approved a final payment of $lt,M7. to the con tractor, J. R. McAllister Sewer and Excavating. Payment Approved The council approved $6,582.45 payment to Roseburg Paving Co. for another completed Job, the West Oriole St. psving, and ap pioved an $8,J9 50 check for Todd Building Co. which is wrapping up the City Council chamber remod eling improvement. Other projects, their degree of completion and the amount of par tial payment approved for the con tractor were reported at follows: NW Lynwood Dr. sanitary sew er project, $529.30 to Jeske Bros., only clesn up work remaining; W. Center St. paving. $1,026.41, J. R. McAllister, completed; SE Jack son St. Main St. sanitary sewers. Bowen Bros., $3,610.52, only clean up remaining; West Tanager St. paving. J. R. McAllister, $1.2X0. 25. completed; Mercy Hospital I drive way relocation, Roseburg Paving Co., $446.19, completed.