University cf Oregon Library Eugene, Oregon QOliP Divorce Planned Gov. and Mn, Nelson A. Rocke feller separate in first step toward Divorce. See Page 2. Bound For Finals Roseburg Indions headed for stote finals after 19-0 win over Jesuit. For details see Sports. Established 1873 12 Pages ROSEBURG. OREGON SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1961 272-61 10c Per Copy U. S. Pays Final Respects To Mr. Sam Today fey Vv, I TALKING OVER problems being faced today by the Juvenile Advisory Council were (these four men attending a meeting of the council Friday end today ot the Umpqua Hotel. From left are Amos Reed, superintendent of McClaren School for Boys; W. Dave Williams, Salem, temporary president of the Oregon Juvenile Advisory Council; William Moshofsky, Portland, chairman of the Oregon Council on Crime ond Delinquency; ond Louis Suiter, chairman of the Douglas County Juvenile Advisory Council. (News-Review .Photo) Juvenile Council Told Citizens Call The Shots la our society, it is the citizen who calls the shots in solving ju venile problems. This was the theme of the speech Friday night by William Moshof sky, chairman of the Oregon Coun cil on Crime and Delinquency. He was tit featured speaker at the conference of juvenile advisory councils in the Umpqua Hotel. About 70 people had registered lor tne comerence oy laio uu morning. Moshofsky said the citizen has little choice. He is even calling the shots when he doesn't know it. By our activity, we are voting for the status quo," be said. No Easy Job The Portland attorney said the citizen who is interested doesn't have an easy job in grappling with ! iuvenile delinquency. Beside the I "labyrinth" of governmental au thority, the individual faces: 1. Religion with its wide range of moral values. 2. The economic problems of fur nishing jobs without shaking the economy of the country. 3. The nature of people them selves. . , Moshofsky said the key to solv ing the juvenile delinquency prob lem is research with an open mind." He cited "apathy of peo ple" as a pitfall. Arouse Objection To meet these problems, he said, Rescue Plane Takes Men From Ice Floe BARROW, Alaska (AP Thankseiving. or something like it. came a week early for 11 menITDs in the third quarter with runs stranaea iwo aay uh "'." Arctic Ocean ice floe beside their downed plane. The nine research workers, who have been posted at the Arlis II station of the Arctic Research Laboratory, near the North Pole, and a pilot and co-pilot, were picked up bv a rescue plane day and flown here. u-ith nut shout two hours of davlight in the Arctic this time of; inmans ana me oeaverion Beavers vear a ski-equipped Alaska Na- will go on sale at the Roseburg tional Guard plane piloted by ! High Business Office at noon Mon Maj. Dean L. Stringer air-lifted .day- m The deciding tilt will be played Thev landed apparently in good t P-m. .Nov. 24 at .Multnomah condition Stadium in Portland. The downed plane, a patrol craft1 Roseburg nd Beaverton have on loan from the navy, was forced undefeated season record and Sown Wednesday night on a night:cd ratrf a, the number one V , . . ,:., - and two teams in the state with here because of l P- ,e ,ndian, com, ,. top nk. Diesel oil was pumped into he fj 'Indians fuel tanks by mistake and he h d b plane flew only about 30 miles d ine Gran p.,, ,,., ,nd before the engines fouled. ij, liW) whjIe th, Bpaver, de. It was sighted from the air ealcd jeffer50n of Portland 19-0 Thursday and sleeping bags and and North Sa,,m X l3. other equipment were parachuted, The block of ticket- sent to Rose to the stranded men. bur? j,y the OSAA will be put on I sale Monday on the first, come, Confidence Vofe Won I first serve bam. BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) Pre mier Rashled Karami's newlv formed 14-man cabinet wen a vote of confidence in Parliament to day. The vote was 63 18. The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Clearing snd cold tonight. Cloudy Sunday followed by rain Sunday night. Highest timp. last 14 hours ' Lswttt ton p. last 14 hours 34 Highest temp, any Nov. SS 71 Lawtit limp, any Nov. (55) IS Precis, last 24 hours .11 Precip. frem Nv. 1 .71 Preeip. frem Sept. 1 Deficit frem Sept. I Sunset tonight, 4:47 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:11 a.m. Hi .. .n "you have to arouse the objection ot the public enough to lead it to cither give up or give in. Turning to the Oregon council. wnicn ne neads, he reported the our projects on which it is work ing. He said the council is now study ing: 1. The program of the public wel- fare commission in its service to lamuies gening aiu, 2. The gains to be made from earlier help of children 3. Services provided by juvenile court. ' . 4. A pamphlet designed to ac quaint school pupils with the ini portance of obeying the law and the consequence of violating it. He concluded that "real bene- fits" will be achieved in dollars and lives of children and adults through councils such as ours.' Redskins Down Jesuits, 19-0 After battling through a score less first half, Roseturg's Indians came to life in the third quarter of Friday night's semifinal clash with Jesuit to stamp out a win over the invading Crusaders. 19-0. The game was played on Finlay Field. Led by all-state quarterback Paul Brothers, the Indians, who dominated ground action in the first half, pushed two touchdowns across the Crusader goal line in the third quarter and nabbed a se curity TD in the last quarter. Brothers accounted for tne two of 31 and 54 yards. Both conver- sion attempts failed. In the fourth quarter, after full- back Mike Flury had bulled his way to the Jesuit six-yard line, Brothers was able to hit all-state end Ray Palm in the end-zone with an aerial strike for the final Fri-jTD. Gary Gum converted, Tickets for the state champion- ship battle between the Roseburg Shipwreck's MIAMI, Fla. (AP) An 11-year-old girl, orphaned in a shipwreck she barely survived, was off a hos pital's "critical" list today and ap parently gained strength that may enable her to tell what happened on the ill-fated ketch Bluebelle. A lot of peopie including FBI and Coast Guard investigators want to know. Attaches at Merry Hospital said no one would be allowed to ques tion sunburned, blonde Terry Jo Duperrault of Green Bay, Wis., untu she feels up to par Taken Frem Raff The child, taken semi conscious Finding Cabin Spurs Search For Kidnaper CORVALLIS (AP The search for the kidnaper of an 8-year-old I Corvallis girl was spurred on yesterday by the discovery of the ramsnackie caDin wnere she was held for 12 hours' before being re leased. Marjorie was dragged into a car by a man Tuesday night less than a half block from her home. She was released unharmed 12 hours later. The discovery of the dilapidated shack, which had all but one window boarded up, was the first major break police had had in their search. The hunt continued for the car in which the girl was kidnaped. Police said the cabin was al most exactly as Marjorie had des cribed it. It was located about a mile off the main paved road between Blodgett and Summit, some 20 miles west of Corvallis in the foothills of the Coast Range. Police said apparently no one had lived in the cabin for more than a year. A crew from - the state Crime Laboratory came up with some fingerprints, but they did not know if they were those of the kidnaper. Nationalist China Names Diplomat TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)-The Cabinet today accepted the resig nation of George Yeh as Nation alist China's ambassador to .the United States and named T. F. Tsiang, ambassador to the United Nations, to succeed him. Tsiang will at the same time retain his U.N. post, which he has held since 1947. Yeh was recom mended for appointment as min ister without portfolio in the For mosan government. U.S. officials in Washington ssid last Monday that Yen's future ap- Ipeared to be under discussion in Taipei. Yeh departed for home Oct. 11 for consultation. His departure raised speculation that the Chiang regime was un happy over American efforts to persuade Nationalist China not to veto Communist Mongolia's en trance to the United Nations. Na tionalist China abstained in the Secunty Council voting and Mon golia was admitted. Eight Saved In Fire LONDON fAP) Eight people, including three children, were rescued by London firemen when an American servicemen's club caught fire todav. The club, the "242" at Harrow Road. Paddington, was closed at the time. Only Survivor May Soon Tell What Happened On Yacht from a liferaft bobbing on the At-! lantic Ocean off the Bahamas, is now the only witness to the Blue-; belle's breakup with seven persons abosrd. I The skipper. Julian A. Harvey, survived the Fort Lauderdale char-1 ter boat's destruction as he had several other brushes with death in the air and afloat. But he com mitted suicide Friday leaving a cote that said: "I got too tired, and nervous. I couldn t stand it any longer." Harvey said after being taken to Nassau Monday that the Blue belle's mainmast snapped, yanked down the smalr nuuenmast, and Cities Ask End To Tax Limitation SALEM (AP) - The League of Oregon Cities has proposed that the 6 per cent limitation on an nual increases of local govern ment tax levies be taken out of the Oregon Constitution. Edward C. Harms Jr. presented the proposal on behalf of the league to a meeting of the Ore gon Constitutional Revision Com' mission Fridav. The limitation provides that local governments can increase their tax levies only 6 per cent annually over the average of the preceedmg three years. This 6 per cent can be exceeded for a single year only if the voters approve it in a special elecUon. The base on which it is determined can be increased only through a special tax base elec tion. Harms said the limitation "has not served the purposes for which it was intended and that it has not been in the public interest." The limitation, he said, has im peded progress and orderly growth and is ill-adapted to rapid ly growing communities. It also is ill-adapted to the tips and downs in the economy. He said Springfield, where he was mayor, had a higher tax base in 1926 with 2.000 population than it had in 1955 with a population of some 15.000 because of the 6 per cent limitation. Harms said he did not feel that any limitation should be contained in any new constitution for Ore gon. "We believe," he said, "that all in all the limitation pushes us to ward an undesirable centraliza tion of government." He explained if cities are re stricted in their ability to raise funds for needed . services that then focal government must ap peal to higher government. E.G. Foxley. deputy attorney general, appeared for Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton and recom mended that the office of attorney general be made constitutional as well as elective. It now is elective but not constitutional. AFL-CIO Asked To Stop Feuding WASHINGTON (AP) Secre tary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg has called on his old employer the AFL-CIO to stop internal feuding and get on with the busi ness of organizing workers. In a speech to the AFL-CIO In dustrial Union Department, which he represented as ' chief attorney before joining the Kennedy ad ministration, Goldberg said Fri day: "The country needs a united and not a divided labor move ment." Instead of fighting over which union has jurisdiction in which area, the AFL-CIO should be out getting new members, Goldberg said. He said new labor department figures show that unions have added only 36,000 members since 195S and that union membership of the nonfarm work force dropped from 33.7 per cent in 1958 to 32.1 in 1960. "If you are seeking a challenge, there it is in black and white. Half of all the union members ire in New York. Pennsylvania Illinois, Ohio and California at a time when the geography of American industry is shifting south and west, he said. Walter Reuther. head of the In dustrial wing of the 6 year-old AFL-CIO, has proposed a court barked system of arbitrating Jurisdictional disputes between craft and industrial unions. But C. J. Haggerty, president of the Building Trades Union, a ! craft union, said in a statement that Reuther's proposal was bias- ied for the industrial unions. tore holes through the deck. Then.! he ssid, fire broke out and he hsd time only to launch a boat1 and a raft before the 00 foot, ketch sank. Tall New Six With Harvey's death by rajor slashes in a Miami motel, the Bluebelle tragedy's toll rose to six.: The desd body of Terry Jo's sis-1 ter, Renee, wss in the bost in which Harvey was picked up Mon day. Presumed drowned were the child's father. Dr. Arthur Duper rault, 49. his wife, Jean. 3S. of Green Bay. their son. Brian, 14. and Mary Hartey, wife of the skipper. CONGRATULATIONS IN ORDER Quorterbock Poul Brothers (19) and Roseburg Coach Roy Thompson exchange congratulations while young fan gazes at his hero. Brothers ran for 31 and 54 yards, and passed to Ray Polm for on eight-yarder to lead the) Indians to a 19-0 victory over tho Jesuit Crusaders in the state semifinals. Next in line for the Tribe will be the Beaverton Beavers, winners of a 26-19 decision over North Salem, for the state championship. (Photo by Bob Leber) Red Pressure Viewed Gravely By The Finns HELSINKI. Finland (API-Re newed Soviet pressure for Soviet Finnish consultations on joint de fense was viewed gravely by the Finns today. . A Source close to Finland's government explained that its ! policy has been "to avoid, if pos Isible, an agreement with the Rus jsian view that there really exists an immediate threat of war the Baltic area." "However, he said, "it now looks as if we have been driven into a one-way street." The Soviet prod took the form of a declaration by First Deputy Foreign Minister Vastly V. Kui netsov to Finnish Ambassador Euro A. Wuori in Moscow Thurs day. Kuznetsov said "alarming news" made a threat of West Germsn aggression seem even worse than on Oct. 30, when Mos i"v first asked for the consulta tions. He claimed there was a di rect threat to the security of both nations and called for joint talks as soon as possible. The news he cited came under three headings: 1. The visit of West German Defense Minister Franz Joseph Strauss to Norway, like West Ger many a member of the North At lantic alliance, and his talks there on military cooperation. 2. Imminent North Atlantic Treaty Organization maneuvers off the Baltic islands of Denmark, another member of the alliance. 3. Reports in Danish newspa pers that a Danish-West German agreement on a joint command would soon be reached. The Soviet Union's Oct. 30 re quest for defense consultations was based on the terms of a friendship treaty with Finland signed in 1948. Tear Gas Duel Fought In Berlin BERLIN (AP) - East and West Kprlin nn fancM tun imm oa(WBi i vu - oueis rnnay nignt over me wau dividing the city. At the Waldemsrslrasse in the ' twirmioh nt ti pniiThjiPif U'atf Hor. . n. . ... ......... ..V. liners boned as loudspeakers in the East blared Communist prop aganda. The East police tossed over 21 tear gas grenades. The iWest police threw back an equal number. In a similar incident at the cor ner of Wilhelmstrasse and Zim merstrasse each side hurled I01(licu, ,h German and Berlin , Medical School Hospital about1 West Berlin without incident dur grenades. I problems. I three weeks. 'ing the night The Bluebelle's sinking Sundsy came a little more than two months alter Harvey took out large double indemnity life insur ance policies on both himself and Mary. A 120.000 policy on his wife named Harvey as beneficiary. A 123.000 policy on himself was tak en out in her behalf. Harvey, tall and ruggedly-built had survived two previous ship sinkings, two airplane crashes and an automobile plunge off a bridge into water. Married Feur Times lie apparently ss married at least four timet. More Authority For U Thant In Congo Appears Assured UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP), A move to give acting Sccre - tary-General U Thant stronger authority to deal with the Congo crisis appeared sure today of U.N. approval. But delegates differed on how far it should extend. Corridor predictions were that the Security Council would ap prove a resolution calling for vig o rotis v.n. action to fend seces sionist activities in the province of Katanga and deal witn other trouble spots, in the Congo. The Western powers objected that a resolution by Ceylon, Liber ia and the United Arab Republic dealing with Katanga alone was too narrow in scope. They insisted that IT Thant anJ the Congo command should be empowered to deal with other mutinous areas, such as Kivu Province where Congo troops be lieved headed by leftist leader Anloine Gizenga killed and butch ered 13 Italian airmen. U.S. Ambasssdor Adlai E. Stevenson asked that council ac tion be postponed until Monday to give time for consultations on a "suitable resolution. Meanwhile, a request by the U.N, commander in the Congo for more soldiers to deal with in creasing violence wss questioned by India, whose 5,700 troops make up more than a third of the entire U.N. force in the Congo. Indian Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon took issue with the request made by Maj. Gen. Sean McKeown. head of the Freighter Picks Up Planes, Protests SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)-A Yugoslav freighter moved quickly in and out of San Diego Harbor Friday, picking up U.S. trainer jets and a storm of protests. Th froiohtor flnnritiVii Ipfl with five Navy TV2 planes sold by the United Mates to Yugoslavia. A fleet of 22 light boats belong- m M.,U-- ing to "Patriots Unlimited" m.-i'lVirS. iNeUDergGr th Gnndiilie when it arrived. The ! Co,,t Gu,rd. ",d. "? Picketing; freighter left. Berlin Meet Dut BONN, Germany (AP)-The Federal Press and iniormsuon indicated the tumor was a cancer1 many. East German customs of Office confirmed today that, of a slow-spreading type. Theyificers were said to have fired Prime Minister Harold Macmil- said they believed they removed , several pistols shots. It was not lan and Chancellor Konrad Aden- " r0'h- , , . . ! determined whether anyone was . . , r, v.l Mrs- Neuherger is expected to .hit. auer will meet In December to , h- , 1h, i nlv.r,j.v oreaon Six rpfuaees made it safely into One of his wives. Joan, drowned 'with her mother. Mrs. Myrtle Boy- en of Washington, D C. when a car, i dropped into a northwest Florida bayou near Eglin Air Force Base.! ' where Harvey was stationed in 14 as an Air rorce lieutenant colonel. Harvey told officers at the base that he was thrown clear dur- ing the plunge but the two women : were trapped inside the car. Mrs. Ethel Harper of tort My ers. Fla., said she was married earlirr to Harvey and bore him two sons, one of whom she said is Julian Jr., 18. She told news men the other son died. i She ssid she was u.rt at being 15,400 man force, at a orivate ses ision of the 18-nation Congo Ad. visory Committee summoned Fn day by U Thant. Menon told the Security Council "if 15.000 troops are not enough to police tne Congo, then there is something wrong with the troops.' Tara's Victims Receive Relief ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP)-A government airlift shuttled tons of urgently needed food and medi cal supplies today into flood stricken coastal villages northwest of Acapulco where desperate sur vivors of Cyclone Tara earlier fought over scraps of bread. Restoration of communications with the isolated communities raised the known death toll of the flooding last weekend to 436. At least 300 others were reported missing and Gov. Arturo Martinez Adams said many of them prob ably were dead. Relief workers grimly dug through mud and sand in Nuxco, where about 300 died. A nearby lagoon had surged over its banks and virtually destroyed the vil lage of about 1.000. Work crews labored around the clock to repair highway washouts along a 100-mile stretch of the Pacific Coast and trucks laden with relief supplies began rolling through Friday. Army troops rushed in from Acapulco and Chil pancingo started erecting emer gency shelters. The cyclone the Mexican Pa cific Coast term for a hurricane- struck last Saturday with high winds and torrential rains and lingered over the area for three i days. Its destruction of com muni-1 .... ..m:... j.i I vaiimis lai-iimva uciajcu iryuiia ot Ule damage. iaid KCCOVCring PORTLAND (AP) Sen. Mau i rine B. Neuberger. D-Ore.. who underwent an operation for a tu - nior two days 120. was reported ,,,, nrpiimin.rv tMt.'inK, West Berlin from East Ger- reached by newsmen who learned her telephone number after she in quired of Mismi authorities about' arrangements for Harvey's funeral.! Mrs. Harper said she remarried after being divorced from Harvey in the 1940s. Former Reporter Mary Harvey was a former In dianapolis Star reporter. The Star quoted Harold Pegg of Hollywood. Fla., owner of the Bluebelle, as saying of Harvey: 1 "I think Harvey made up his story. His story didn't make sense for a seaman. I don't know wheth- er he went berserk or what. He ' may have had an accident but I Nation's Top Leaders Due At Last Rites BONHAM. Tex. (AP) Home town people and the nation's leaders paid reverent final hom age to Sam Rayburn today. The funeral for the man who was speaker ot the House longer than any other was one of strik ing contrasts. In many ways, the service was one to rival a president's. In others, the final rites re mained as simple as those of any citizen. Kayburn's funeral took nlace in the First Baptist Church, a new structure of the latest modernis tic architecture. This for a man who believed in the old-fashioned things good conversation, the simplest of drinks, honest politics, the virtue of women. President Kennedy Interrupted a western tour to attend. So did sorrowing Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, who learned his political skills at Kayburn's knee and whom Rayburn tried to make president. And also came former Presi dent Harry Truman. His thoughts must have been flown back to that day when he was chatting with Rayburn in the speaker a hideaway office and word came of Franklin Roosevelt's death, el evating Truman to the presi dency. Former President Dwlght D. Ei senhower took off this morning by air from Augusta, Ga., for the services. RpnrpspnteH went th StunremA Court, the House, the Senate, and administrative agencies, These international leaders sat silent while a man of contrastine Ulale a country Dreacher von would call him presided. He was Elder U. G. Ball, mm-, later of the Tioga. Tex.. Primitive Baptist Church, a small denom ination of fundamentalist beliefs. Solemn, hushed crowds gath ered at the church and on street corners by dawn, hours before the church service. Rayburn died at 6:20 a.m. Thursday of cancer. He had known for weeks it was incurable. Rayburn, 79, had been in Con gress 48 years. He had served as speaker more than twice as long as any other man. His casket stood open In the white msrble Rayburn library. Hundreds walked past in sad faro- well. By two s and three s the aged. the young, the halt, mothers with babies in arms, smartly dressed women, affluent looking men, boys in jeans and girls in bobby sox, Negro and white, all came to pay their respects. They de psrted with stern faces and damp eyes. Late In the night Kayburn's two sisters, Mrs. S. E. Bartley and Mrs. W. A. Thomas, and a nephew, Federal Communications Commissioner Robert Bartley, were there. Both women sobbed as they left. The burial was to be in the Willow Wild Cemetery, three quarters of a mile from the church. Eight brothers and sisters already rested there in the Ray burn plot. East Germans Halt I a P I flMek LAS tvAAflAM , SJU3II r Ul I I CCUtf 111 BERLIN (AP) - West Berlin police had a report today that four young men from East Ger many were arrested in an unsuc cessful attempt to crash a truck into West Berlin from Commu nist territorv. The truck tried to crash ,lh rough the wooden barrier 1 across the road at Babelsherg, Bluebelle don't think it happened the way he said." A Miami son of Harvey t.anre, 13 took word of his father's death sadly but dry-eyed. He told a Miami Herald interviewer the elder Harvey had taught him sea manship and he hopes some day to run a licet n( aightseeing boats himself, even though he recalls be ing huddled on a raft in Chesa peake Bay with his father and sev eral other people when the Harvey yacht, Torbatross. sank in I9ii after striking a submerged hulk. I Lance said he doesn't remember his mother who perished in the auto plunge oft the bridge.