University cf Oregon Library Eugene, Oregon 001 iP Yoyfths Steirm order Wei BerBflim o) 3 Adenauer, JFK In Second Meet On Worlds Problems WASHINGTON (AP) West I German Chancellor 'Konrad Aden auer went to the White House to day for his second conference with President Kennedy on grave issues of the times. The German ambassador, Wil helm Grewe, told reporters that Adenauer's cold is better. Be cause of his cold, Adenauer did not attend a '"working dinner" Rail Bridge Collapses; Two Are Dead N1TR0. W.Va. (AP) A railroad bridge over the Poca River col lapsed early today as a New York Central freight train crossed over it. Two units of the four-unit die sol locomotive plunged into the stream. Two crewmen died in the chilly waters. Four other crew members aboard the New York Central en gine escaped when the bridge gave way at nearby Poca, about IS miles northwest of Charleston. Thirty-two of the 73 freight ears derailed. The first two units of the engine roasted across the bridge as it suited to collapse. The third unitiresUme negotiations Nov. 28 for a plunged into the water. The fourth .treaty to ban nuclear weaoon perched for a time on the bank and then slid slowly into the nar row stream. Tank cars loaded with chemi- rals were among those derailed. One started leaking and caught isumed testing in the atmosphere, fire but the flames were soon ex- Soviet acceptance of the West tinguished. I era proposal indicated that it has The two victims were identified i completed its current series of as R. A. Turner, about 48. of 1 tests which included explosion of l.inesville. Ohio, and Charles O. Mulford, about 3a,. of Hobson. ohm. Turner was a fireman and Mulford a brakeman. They were aboard the diesels third unit. The train was en route f rom ! Dickinson, near Columbus, Ohio. Charleston, Ig Night Club Singer Shot In Anchorage ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) A young night club singer from San Diego, Calif., was shot to death, and the co-owner of the club was critically wounded Mon day by two bandits. The dead woman was identified as Rose Mane Niedzwiecke, 23, . . , , , n ' wuu wrin u t me uatuc nine Dawn. She came to Anchorage from Lai Vegas, Nev., last Sep tember. The wounded man is Robert Dana Adams, 35. The shooting took place about 5 a.m. after all customer, except , two young men left. Police said,f. Adams told them the gunmen made him and Miss Niedzwiecke lie down on the floor. Then he wan hit on the head with a bottle, and, while semiconscious, heard shots. The gunmen took $800 from a cash register. About 40 minutes later, Gerald I.ee Cox and Tcrrance Wayne Brady, both 22 and both of Anchorage, were picked up five blocks from the club. They had no pistols, no loot, and they denied robbing the place. Cox and Brady were charged1 with first degree murder assault with intent to kill and armed , robbery. King Saud Ailing BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) King Saud of Saudi Arabia is to leave today by special plane for medical treatment in Boston, an authonta - live medical source reported. Saud is suffering from a possi-jwith his running mate, Emman ble gastric ulcer. uel Pelaez, as vice president . Death Claims Charles Doerner, County Clerk, Former Teacher Charles Doerner. Douglas Coun-the office as an assistant in 1950. of rationing wer placed in I h e ty clerk, died early this morning Doerner gained considerable . hands of rationing boards, at his "onie on Doerner Rd. 1 state-wide note in 1960 for com- Doerner was on of the county's He had been ill for several piling a Civil Defense rationing I utroneest vote letters. Me Houhierf weeks, and recently had under-1 gone surgery. 111s oony nas Deen taken to Long & Shukle Memorial Chapel, and funeral arrangements are pending. The lifelong Doug'as County res- ident had held th office of county clerk since 1952. He had gone into The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Mostly cloudy with occasional rain tontqhf. A few showers and partial clearing on Wednesday. A little warmar. i Highest temp, last 4 hours 4S Lowest temp, last 24 hours 3z Mighatt temp, any Nav. (551 73 Lowest tamp, any Nev. (55) 15 Precip. last 24 hours . . .OS Pracip. from Nov. 1 .M Precip. from Sept. I . $71 Dtficit from Sept. 1 . 1.31 Sunset tonight, 4:44 e m. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:1S a.m. last night of U.S. and West Ger- man otficials. Grewe and two German min isters. Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder and Defense Minister Franz-Joseph Strauss, preceded Adenauer by a few minutes at the White House. They had held an earlier meet ing with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McN'amara and other U.S. officials at the Stale Depart ment. Kennedy and Adenauer were reported to be making steady progress toward agreement on policies the Western powers may follow in prospective negotiations with Russia for a Berlin settle ment. Reach Understanding In a lengthy private discussion at the White House Monday they are said to have reached an under standing that any decisions they work out must be subject to fur ther discussion with British and French leaders. Their aim is four power agreement on a wide range of Berlin and German issues. Soviets Agree To Test Talks MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Union today agreed to a call by the United Stjitj anH Britain tn tests. The Russians agreed to re sumption of the talks in Geneva where they were broken off Sept. !9 after the Sovie' Union had re a hydrogen bomb of more than SO megatons. In notes delivered to the British and American embassies today, the Soviet Foreign Ministry warned that if some other power iesis nucicar weapons wnne tnt new iaiKs are going on, ii will oe forced "'o draw the correspond ing conclusions concerning nu clear tests. When the Allied notes were de livered here Nov. 13, the United States made clear that even if the talks were resumed. It would not begin another uninspected moratorium on testing. The State Department said that the United States would "pursue its own program of carefully circum scribed testing. It was not clear whether this difference of view-, might result ., , . , . , side or the other not to resume the negotiations. The Kremlin's note said the So viet government is "ready to make one mor- attempt (at(h. ljhrtifin in the near future ?r.?!me"i " nl?r.iist.l:a"2 having in view that the three tiati(m hav proclaimed fhlt . ' , .,p .. , , and complete disarmament." Previously, in the current ses sion of the U.N. General Assem bly in New York, Soviet dele gates had rejected calls for nu clear test negotiations unless they were part of general disarma ment talks. Tempers Cool As Garcia Promises To Concede ,4vn ,ah i . . MANILA (API - Politicians' tWs cooled today as President crlo p Garcia promised to graciously Dow to tne voice ot me peupie mna cunceue me pres idential election once he is satis fied that he lost. All tabulations by government , and private organizations of last 'week's election showed Vice Pres. ' ident Diosdado Macapagal of the opposition Liberal party elected I president by a wide margin, along nd accounting procedure in case u uiiei. wuuur a, uim uuues IT J f t CHARLES DOERNER . . . dies at 58 i "'"Mi The West German chancellor and the President scheduled an inten sive round of conferences today. Their final talk is expected to be held Wednesday with a commu nique to follow. The prospects are that the communique will call for removal of the Communist- built wall separating East Berlin from West Berlin, and will stress! eventual reunification of East and. West Germany as an objective! of Allied policy. It is also expect ed to emphasize the determin ation of Kennedy and Adenauer to protect West Berlin from Soviet! and East German pressures. Meet Alone Kennedy and Adenauer met alone with their interpreters at the White House late Monday for WASHINGTON (AP) The De an hour and 45 minutes, thenjfense Department has fired the joined their principal advisers for additional talks lasting 15 min utes. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and other U.S. of-1, ficials met separately at the White House with German For eign Minister Gerhard Schroeder, Defense Minister Franz-Josef Strauss and other West German officials The adviser groups also held 1 1 "luviilrlntf Hinnar" Mnnrlaw ntcthr I ".u n i L ceaiment and removal of a docu- with Rusk as host. Adenauer didjment ,, an officiai fie not attend. Aides said he was suf- The nsa nmm .u,u fering from a slight cold. I When the two-flour long White for tne Defense Department and House session ended at p.m. 80 secret the size of jtJ Monday, Adenauer emerged smil- anj operations is not made nub ing, but reporters in the White uc House lobby noted Kennedy was j The House committee's atten unsmiling. U.S. officials said this , tion was focused on Klein last had no significance. They char-july during closed-door hearings acterized the mood of the first on personnel policies within the meeting as excellent and said the agencv. It was disclosed then that talks had gotten off to a very NSA had fired 26 sex. deviates as good start. Algerians End Hunger Strike PARIS (API Mohammed Ben Bella and three other captive ministers of the Algerian rebel government ended their hunger strike Monday night after the French government agreed to ease the conditions of their con finement. Moroccan Ambassador Moham med Ctierkaoui, who played an important part in the negotiations that helped end the prisoners' fast, said France's concessions should facilitate the resumption of Algerian peace negotiations be tween President de Gaulle's gov ernment and the rebel regime in Tunis. Didn't Win Freedom Although Ben Bella and his col leagues did not win the freedom they demanded. Cnerkaoui saidit,. he hid checked Klein's se the agreement "is a step toward of the Algerian Ministers." Theltl0B form had n0 .ecunty signi- rebel government had said itficance. would not reopen negotiations with the French until Ben Bella and his group were freed. Ben Bella and the other three were weak after 20 days of fast-1 ng but their condition was not believed serious. A fifth rebel minister held by the French hadl been too ill to take part in the strike. They were to be moved to a convalescent home near Paris with Moroccan as well as French physicians attending them, and the French agreed that a repre sentative of Moroccan King Has san II could live with them. Retain Responsibility The French refused, however, to put the Moroccans in charge of Ben Bella and his group and said "French authorities retain responsibility for guarding the prisoners and the administration of the establishment." Ben Bella, vice premier in the rebel regime, and the four other ministers were captured in 19.V when a French fighter forced down a Moroccan 'airliner taking them from Morocco to Tunisia. i the number of his opponent's votes )n tne 1960 election He was a graduate of the Rose burg schools and Linfield College where he earned a bachelor of sci ence degree in political and social sciences. He taught in Roseburg High School from 1930 to 1936. He cnooi trom 1930 to 193. He to farming for 10 years be - iking a job as a department turned lur lasniK too as a nepanmemi urn,? ,,95oMomgomer), w,rd 1 10 Doerner was a former president of the Oregon State County Clerks and Recorder. Association in 1957. He also served as vice president .A ,... v..r. nn ih. lT.,.i.i,.' committee I"- 1,,a' m u An auemptea oreax-in at ner He was 'married to the former F-Iline M- Husak. ate . prisoner , home wss reported to Roseburg Olive E. Conney June 3. 1931 They "t P'r ' handcuffs. ' City Polire by Gertrude Brown, had one daughter, Mrs. Larry 1 11 ' learned the youngster and 1226 SE Mill St. Investigating offi Aenn nf F.usenr a compa kin had been playing cers found that an effort had been - - Doerner originally served in the clerk's oface under long-time clerk 'd handcuffs. After the cutis were door open sfter the door jam had I Wayne L. Morse, D-Ore., are Roy Agee. He was elected to the secured on Elaine s wrists, it was, been pried loose. The resident said 1 former itate treasurer Sig Unan post when Agce retired and took discovered the key had been lost. .the attempt was made Sunday orlder of Portland, R. F. Cook of over the job in 19V1 He was re- elected again in 19:4 and 1960. Established 1873 16 Paget ROSEBURG, OREGON Supersecret MSA Lie Revealed In Application For Position personnel director of the suoer- secret National Security Agency on grounds he lied on his own job aDDliratinn 12 vr n,. , . . :,.ATC.!." !' ... j vviuiuiiicc b,iu uir n: I sonnet cniet, Maurice H. Klein. ss, was lorced to resign Nov. 10. The committee said it plans to ask Atty. Gen. Robert F. Ken nedy to prosecute Klein on three government document, and con . . . ciiarges: perjury, falsifying a communications 24 hours a riav security risks after two of its code clerks, William H. Martin and Bernon F. Mitchell, defected to the Soviet Union. As personnel director for sev eral years, Klein supervised the hiring of about 1,000 NSA em ployes. The committee said Klein made several "false and misleading" statements while undergoing questioning about personnel poli cies. It said the statements con cerned his own application fori government employment in 1949, when he was hired by NSA. Specifically, the committee said Klein stated he obtained a law degree from Harvard Law School, when he actually attended Har vard only one year and received the degree from the New Jersey College of Law, now part of Rut- ger, University! Committee aides said Klein gave conflicting birth dates and conflicting statements about the spelling of his name and about his mother's birthplace. S. Wesley Reynolds, NSA se curity director, told the commit- curity clearance in 1955 and de- .i.. ,u. Committee sources said Klein apparently took a 1949 applica tion form, erased what was on it nd iyped ,in new information with a kind of typewriter that as not developed until after 1949. Indians To Have Large Following 01 Local Fans Mystic Indian spirits of the West never have had such a following as the mighty Indi ans making up the Roseburg football team. Indian fans Monday cleaned out the Roseburg High School business office of its 5i0 tickets to the Friday night clash be tween Roseburg and Beaverton a half hour after they went on sale. Today at noon, another 750 were to go on sale with no one wishing to wager how long this supply will last. To give the Indians a proper sendoff to the state champion ship game, representatives of all the town's service clubs, the Chamber of Commerce, the Indian Club, city officials and anybody else who wishes will be on hand Thursday at 9 a.m. at the high school to bid them good luck. From the respone over the local 11, persons hoping to get a good view of the sendolf, better get to the hieh school early or be lost in the crowd of well-wishers. . , 1 MflCPT CfimP? Tfl Aid , WIH6J I U Miu 1 Of Damsel In Distress ,.., -.,.. ti.,. ff . " ? ? Ih T.r a n. WV J ,f,' 'n distress Sunday afternomr An officer was summoned to 1033 ,I- . .k... ha fr.im '"h a pair of military nirkle plat- The officer used his on key to t unlock the cuffs. , , ...... .,. a1" - fv a . - MICHAEL ROCKEFELLER, youngest son of New York's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, is shown ot tiller of boot while on anthropological exploration in Dutch New Guinea. Miss ing since Saturday, there are hopes that he will be found on the jungle coast. (UPI Telephoto) Dutch Officials Hold Hope Rockefeller Is IIOLLANDIA, New Oul neat (A I1) A land, sea and air rescue force combed a savage coastal area of southwestern New Guinea today for Michael Rockefeller, Fire Destroys Yoncalla Tavern A 4:30 a.m. fire today complete ly destroyed the Logger's Tavern in Yoncalla, according to a report received by Mrs. George Edes, Yoncalla correspondent. The fire was discovered by a freightline trucker who was de livering mail to the Yoncalla post office. The trucker sounded the alarm from the volunteer fire de- partment station located around the corner from the post office but by the time volunteers arrived the fire was progressing too rapid ly to be contained. I he tavern was owned and oper ated by L. Wiley of Sutherlin. He had purchased the property only a year ago. No estimate has yet Deen made of the loss, but Wiley stated he carried insurance on the building. Cause of the fire was believed to be from a lighted cigarette plac ed in a trash container under the bar. Nothing was saved except a cooler kept in front of the tavern. Towner To Inspect Naval Facilities Rear Adm. George C, Towner, commandant of the 13th Naval District, is scheduled to arrive in Roseburg Wednesday morning to tour Naval Reserve facilities here and meet area government and business officials. Towner will arrive at Roseburg Airport after an overnight stay in Medford. Lt. G. W. Larsen, com manding officer of Naval Reserve Electronics Division 13-7, Rose burg, will meet the admiral and take him on a tour of the unit s facilities. The unit recently received full use of the old soldiers building on the grounds of the Veterans Ad ministration Hospital on West Harvard Ave. Adm. Towner will meet city, county and stste officials at a uncneon in uie nose n. a.so on hand during tho luncheon will! ; be business f.gures and news media I -"'"r u 'representatives from the Rose In rg not be a candidal for the Repub larea. lican nomination for U.S. senator The 13th Naval District has IUun,, oe geU ,ub,t,ntial finan headquarters in Seattle , -r I Brejk-ln Try Report.d , ' made to forre a night lock of Mtnday while she was away from , the house. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1961 Official 1 ft-"- . Still Alive and Dutch officials ateadfastly held out hope that ne would be found lata. Four rescue parties set out through Jungle swamps . while score of ships and Papuan canoes, Dutch navy Neptune planes and a Beaver of the Dutch New Guinea Airlines searched from sea and air for New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's 23-year-old son, who disappeared Sunday after a boat ing mishap while on a scientific expedition. Naval units plucked a Dutch companion of the youth. Dr. R. W. Wassing, 34, out of the sea Monday. Wassing said he last saw Michael whom he described as a strong swimmer about 14 miles ,..-...... ...c,.,,.,,., """" with the help of a makeshift float of empty gasoline cans. Wassing told rescuers that the misadventure started last Thurs day while he and Rockefeller toured the mouth of the EUenden River in a small native boat. They were collecting primitive art and sculpture for the New York Museum of Primitive Art and for a museum to be built in Holland!:. He said they lost their outboard motor and that the river current carried them into Flamingo Bay where heavy seas overturned the craft. Two tribesmen with them swam ash6re and alerted Dutch authorities. A Dutch plane sighted Wassing clinging to the overturned boat Sunday and guided rescue vessels to the area with flares. Officers of the patrol ship Tasman, which took Wassing aboard, said his condition was satisfactory despite three days of exposure to the sun and sea. American missionaries stationed on the south coast Joined in the hunt for Rockefeller. They in cluded Catholic brothers using canoes propelled by outboard mo tors and a doctor from the Protes tant mission at Pirimapun. Wassing rested todjy at Pirima pun and was tn be Town Wednes day to Hollandia. where he will see Gov. Rockefeller on his way south to the search area. Senator Hopeful Needs Money Aid CORVALLIS (AP) - Dr. Harold . .. . ' . cial support. Livingston, a speech professor at Oregon State University, told the Corvallis Republican Club be had ref ised two offers of financia aid because stipulations were at tached to t' em. Already announced as esndi- dates for the Republican nomina aition to seek the sea, held by Sen. I Silverton, and Glenn Brixer of Corvallis. 274-61 10c Per Copy Released Communists Fail To Hit Sign-Up Date nnJiuiiuiu,! (All ineiirionti HMina th rnmmimicl VUU1I1IUIU31 pany nas lauea 10 meet the deadline for registering under the Internal Security Act. The Justice Department with held action todav, waiting to see ii me panys oiucers wouia sign Communists' water gun. up within their later time limit. The flareup came as East Ber The party, as an organization, I lin labor forces struggled fever had until midnight Monday night ishly to strengthen the 25-mile to register but the Justice De- wall into a concrete and steel partment said no representative ! showed up. The officers now have until Nov. 30. If the officers do not heed the deadline, individual party members must register within 20 days Dec. 20. A spokesman aaid the Justice Department plans to wait at least until after the time has expired for the officers to register before taking action. Then, officials said, the first move will likely be di rected against the party itself. Under the Internal Security Act mbattlcd in the courts since 1950 until the Supreme Court up- Ulbrlcht Condemned held its provisions last June the Before the thousands who gath party was to have registered asjered at the eternal flame in the an arm of the Soviet government, i Reichskanzklerplatx which i listing its officers, finances and supposed to burn until Germany other details. 'is reunited a student leader con- In view of the party's formal I deinned what he called the enm notice last week that it would notlinal actions of East German Corn comply with the registration re- munist leader Walter Ulbncht. quirement, department officials "Away with the Communist said it was unlikely the form had criminals away with Ulbricht. been mailed. The party refused on grounds registration might in criminate Its otficers. The act carries a penalty of up to sio.uuu lor eacn day a Com munist-action or Communist-front organization fails to register, Individual vlnlatlma 4h ..hI. trations requirement could re- ceiwr-the same penalty, plus a five-year prison term tor each day of noncompliance. UF Drive Hits Halfway Mark The Central Douglas United Fund climbed over the 50 per cent mark Monday during the drive's fourth report luncheon In the Umoaua Ho tel. Contributions reported during the luncheon and in the early after noon rparhi1 tlQ A7B Ct. n, U m. ceni ot tne goat or 3.kj6. I.yle Fenner, president of the CDUF, noted that a great number of the pledges to the drive have not been received by the CDUF of fice but are soon to be turned in. The total received represents 417 accounts of 1.090 possible contact. Monday's report luncheon was sponsored hy Umpqua Insurance, Fullerton Beverage and Lockood Motors. Rod Durham, executive secre tary of the United Oregon Appeal noted that on the previous Mon day I30.993.S1 had been collected by campaign workers. One more report luncheon has been scheduled for Dec. 4 to get an idea of how the neighborhood campaign, which begins Nov. 27, is moving. Mrs. Lotus Knight Porter la in charge of the campaign. Durham, who has acted aa an adviser during the campaign here, told the luncheon gathering he has to begin aiding the fund m Gold Beach and Brookings. He intro duced John M. (Jack) Gallup, western field director for the Ore gon United Appeal, who will work in the Roseburg area with CDUF officials. Glendale-Azalea Area Hit By First Snowfall Snow fell on the Glendale Azalea area yesterday after noon and some remains on the surrounding hills this morning, according to a report received by Mrs. Gerald Fox, Glendale correspondent. The town of Azalea still has a light covering this morning and a quarter inch still re mains of the 1A Inches record ed last night in the Cow Creek and Starveout Canyon areas. Glendale temperature at 10 a.m. today was 37 under cloudy skies. The Roseburg Westher Bu reau ststion reported that snow began falling on Sexton Sum mit, 60 miles south of Rose burg, about 2 p.m. Monday with an inch remaining on the ground at 8 a.m. today. Tem perature at the Summit, which has an elevation of l.aoo feet, was 2 degrees at 11 a m. Also on Monday snow was reported above the 2.000-foot level in the North Umpqua area. Strike Comes After March In W. Berlin By CARL HARTMAN BERLIN (AP)-West Berlin po. lice brandishing night sticks rolled back hundreds of West zone youths who tried to storm the Communist-built border barrier Monday night with cries that "the wall must go." East Berlin police also opened up on the angry demonstrators with water cannon and tear gas grenades and drew tear gas fire in reply from the West Berlin po lice. Authorities estimated that about 2UO grenades sailed over the wall during the exchange. The demonstrations marked the 100th day since East Germany started erecting the wall which, virtually sealed off the main es- PBIW mill fnF lTaet lltMWman Ma. gime. Ne Serious Injuries There were no reports of se rious injuries but many were drenched by cold blasts from the tank trap. The work got under way Sunday and prompted spec ulation that the Communists were preparing for a complete shut down of the East-West border. The youths' charge on the wall followed a torchlight procession in which an estimated 20.0(10 marched five miles through down town West Berlin in an anniver sary observance led by Ernst Lemmer, West German Cabinet minister, and Otto Bach, speaker of the West Berlin City Parlu- iment. snoutea juergen woniraoe, cnair- man of the West Berlin Student Federation. The crowd replied with thunder ous applause. "Hang them," some shouted as the rally wound up with the singing 01 the national 1 anthm. Then a cry ot "to the wall swelled through one group which broke off and headed down the Kaiserdamm towards the historic Brandenburg Gate, where the Communists have erected a sec ond concrete wall . MmM In Side Streets Reinforced police herded most into side streets but about 1,000 of the demonstrators aurged past the Soviet war memorial and down the street of 17 June which commemorates the 1953 East Ger man anti-Communist uprising to ward the Brandenburg Gate. A solid line of 150 police blocked their advance and the youngsters sat down in the rosdway. Police then drew night sticks and dis persed the crowd. About 400 others, chanting "the wall must go," marched within hearing distance of the wall at Wilhelmstrasse where Red labor forces could be seen ramming steel ban into concrete tank traps. When the group refused to heed a Communist loudspeaker's or ders to disperse. East Berlin po lice opened fire with a water can non and hurled tear gas grenades while West Berlin police fired back with grenades of their own. West Berlin ponce men orove back the marchers and by mid night reported all was quiet, Counterfeit Bill Found In Salem SALEM (AP) First National Bank of Oregon officials discov ered another counterfeit $20 bill Monday. lt wtj the second to turn up at the Salem bank within two weeks. Another was found Nov. 7. Counterfeit 120s have been wide ly reported in the East for some time. During me psai wcv ure-j k . i .i-latin In nave Dern iwuuu vnwu., seversl Oregon cities, including Klsmalh Falls, Eugene and Port land. . Secret Service Agent rranic Kinney said Monday there are several ways to spot such bills, which are imitations of the Fed eral Reserve Bank of New York, series of 15-A. Andrew Jackson's portrait H very dark and tho left eye is poorly reproduced. Then am no shading lines in the backs, ound of the words. The White House," on the back. In Today's News-Review TODAY'S YOUTH What the youth of Douglas County are do in, tabloid section. ST ATI CONTENDERS Round up on the two grid teams from Douglas County. Roseburg and Yoncalla, entering the state fi nals, Sports Psge. FIRE, NOW MUD Bel Air area in California dumaged by mud, page S. FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED Mas murder indicated in Bluebells tragedy, page 3. WHO WON Notre Dame, Syra cuse hassle over questionable field goal, sports pgge.