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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1961)
University cf Oregun Library Eugene, Ore con COliP Search Continues Helicopters to end search Tuesday for missing ton of New York's Gover nor. Set Pag 5. Second State Champ The Yoncolla Eaglet brought Douglot County its second state foot ball championship In 'a week. Set sports page. Established 1873 16 Paget ROSEBURG, OREGON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1961 278-61 10c Per Copy Talks Ease De Gaulle's Opposition To Negotiations On Berlin Situation LONDON' (AP) The weekend has been reluctant to approve ne- their Berlin demands before the talks between President Charles i goliations on Berlin, but the chan- West agrees to a meeting, de Gaulle and Prime Minister cellor's talks with President Ken- Walter l lbnciit, East Ger liarold Macmillan apparently nedy in Washington are believed many's Communist chief of state, eased but did no' eliminate the to have shown that West Ger-(showed no yielding in a speech French leader's opposition to I many's policy generally is in line i made public Sunday. Western negotiations on Berlin ! with the Soviet Union. No communique was issued, but this w as the impression that til-1 tered from the prime minister's ' closely guarded country estate I where the two leaders met. De ' Gaulle as usual had nothing to say to newsmen whin be returned to Paris. Talks Friendly John Russell, the British For eign Office spokesman, said the talks were "most friendly, pleas ant and intimate" but "the pat Urn is, in any case, not complete there are still some further moves out in the rounds of the Western leaders." It was learned that Macmillan and De Gaulle regarded the talks as useful and that there had been a thorough exploration of the Ber lin problem and of Britain's appli cation to join the European Com mon Market. De Gaulle was expected to re serve his final decision on East West negotiations until he discus ses with Chancellor Konrad Aden auer the West German govern ment's attitude toward a new Western approach to the Soviets. Adenauer, if he is sufficiently recovered from the grippe, will meet with De Gaulle in Paris Thursday. Adenauer Reluctant Adenauer as well as De Gaulle Local Man Faces Assault Charge Lloyd Lee Kceney, 48, Roseburg, is being held in the Douglas Coun ty jail charged with assault with a i deadly weapon following his arrest for allegedly attempting to shoot his wife with a pistol. Deputies of the Douglas County Sheriffs Department were called Sunday to the home of the com plainant. Airs. Irene Emma Kcen ey. 4918 SW Golding St. Mrs. Kceney told officers her estranged husband threatened her with a pistol in the dining room of her home. The incident was wit nessed by her three children, she told police. She said she ran from the house and went to i neighboring home. Keeney also left the house, report edly heading out across a field. The Sheriff's Department said a deputy followed Keeney's tracks in the snow across a nearby field and located him lying unconscious next to a fence. Deputies said he was apparently passed out from in toxication. A .30 caliber Colt automatic was lying near his hand. The pistol was loaded, with a cartridge in the chamber. Deputies later determined that Keeney is on a 30-day parole from Douglas County Circuit Court, the parole stemming from another criminal action. Sevilla Flood Recedes SEVILLA, Spain (AP) Flood waters receded today from a large section of this historic city, leaving officials with a vast task of relief for thousands of home less. The River Tamarguillo, which heavy rains sent into low-lying sections over the weekend, had dropped 6 feet and smaller streams were also falling. County School Office Due Scrutiny Of Interim Croup Three hours have been set aside; for scrutiny of the Douglas Coun-1 scription of his office, including!(ne Seventh-Dav Adventist School ty school superintendent's office at ! organization, service and other ln nearby College Place The a meeting of the Legislative In-j pertinent information. Bandy j, sophomore. terim Committee on Education! After this, the committee will xhe four collegians were return Tuesday in Roseburg. I hear discussion from represents-1 jng from Thanksgiving vacations The meeting will start at 7:30 tives of school administrators and at home, p.m. in the L'mpqua Hotel. I school boards and other education-1 A representative of the nine- al representatives. Anyone else Af M J al I member committee said the hear- wishing mav make comments if rfjtr? Ot Ullflf Cllll) ing to which school district boards, time is available. l" wastes ihh administrators and educational' Barncburg said the hearings be- li C.L TahSmLi groups have been invited will take ing held around the state were HI jIUKc I 0 il I Q lIT the form of a round table discus- prompted by the desire to makel a sion. I county school offices part of the The fate of the once-active Glide Questions, Answers Due widespread reorganization which Community Club will be at stake The discussion will include ques-.is going on in the state Depart-1 tonight at 7:30 at a special meet tions and answers concerning thcent of Education and among' ing in the Glide Community Build service provided by the county j school districts of the state. Be-ling. school office and the role of the cause of its size and the number I President Forrest Losee states: office in the county educational of districts. Supt. Barncburg said , "Interest in the community club system, i he didn't think the county office has been completely lacking by County Supt. Kenneth Barncburg in Roseburg will be greatly affect-! citizens of the Glide-Idle vld Park The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Mostly cloudy tonight and Tues day. Occasional light showers, not much temperature change. Highest temp, last 54 hours 4 Lewtir temp, last 14 hours V Hightit tamp, any Nov. 155) 7J Lowest temp, any Nov. (SS) 15 Procip. last 14 hours - 01 Precip. from Nov. I - 17 Procip. from Sept. I 11.70 Eictis from Sept. I J.4J Sunset tonight, 4:41 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:22 a.m. with that of the Lnited Slates and Britain. Kennedy and Macmillan believe ; negotiations with the Russians are i inevitable and are anxious to start Uie Allies on the involved j task of preparing a W estern nego- tiating position. De Gaulle has contended that the West must not go into meet ing under the pressure of Soviet threats and that the Russians must show willingness to relax No Deals Made With Khrush, Says Kekkonen HELSINKI, Finland (AP) President Urho Kekkonen says he made no secret deals with Soviet Premier Khrushchev to secure suspension of his demand for Soviet-Finnish defense talks. "There are no secret conditions of any kind and no secret agree ments between Finland and the Soviet Union," Kekkonen assured the anxious Finnish people Sun day on his return from his week end meeting with Khrushchev. A cheering crowd of 15,000 welcomed the Finnish president back from his successful mission to get Khrushchev to put off de mands for military talks that would bring Finland into the cold war. Moscow had called for military consultations to combat what the Soviets described as a rising West German military threat in the Baltic area Kekkonen. in a broadcast to the atloni 5ajd ne couid .ppreciatg the Soviet fears but that the com munique issued after his talks wtih Khrushchev made plain that "the opening of possible military consultations in the future pri marily is the duty of Finland." Stranded Cat Has Guardian 'Angel' A certain cat in this city has a guardian angel. In fact, that's his name: Da vid Angell. Roseburg City Police said Angell was man of the hour early today when a cat was found to be in distress under the Oak Ave. bridge. Officers said Uie cat had somehow be come stranded on logs jam med against the pier beneath the bridge. When a police patrol car ar rived, Angell was attempting to rescue the feline by using a burlap sack tied to the end of a fishing pole. He was trying to encourage the cat to grab the sack. This effort failed and the po lice patrol car was summoned to other areas. This was short ly after midnight. Later in the morning the po lice officer was notifed that Angell had finally instrument ed a successful rescue. He draped a rope over the side of the bridge structure and went down after the cat. will open the meeting with a de- ed. . .. . , Membership Reported The committees only county member is Sen. Al Hegel of Rose - burg. He will be joined at the session, however, by the county's other two legislators. Reps. Sidney Leiken and W. O. Kelsay. otner permanent members of ihe committee are Reps. Joe Rog- ers of Independence, John R. Del-! ler.hack of Medford. Carrol Howe, 0f Kalmath Falls and Ed Bene-, diet of Portland and Sens. Nancy Kirkputnrk of Lebanon. Alice ( orbett of Portland. Carl Francis nf Dton and Ward Cook of Port- land. I Allies Mutt Withdraw When his government sigiit a separate peace treaty with the Soviet Union, he said, the Western Allies will have to withdraw their garrisons from West Berlin grad ually and negotiate with East Germany for access rights to the Red-surrounded city. llbricht declared the position of East Berlin, the East German capital, is not up for negotiation. He said it was high time the Western powers respected inter national law as to East Ger many's sovereignty "on the! water, on the land and in the air." llbricht proposed "normal re lations" between East and West Germany by acknowledging each other's sovereignty. He said both should renounce nuclear arms and begin negotiations toward a German confederation. As a first step, he suggested that the two Germanys recognize each other's passports and con clude a trade treaty at govern ment level. Weather Bureau Loses (?) Storm The sun shown at Intervals Sun day and again today, and Douglas County's flood danger diminished. This left the Roseburg station of the U. S. Weathe. Bureau in a quandry. it had lost a storm. It was predicted Saturday that a storm with either snow or rain would strike the county on the heels of the big Thanksgiving storm. With it would come renew ed danger of overflows from the1 already swollen streams in the county. j Saturday night was cool and without precipitation. Sunday came with sunshine and then clouded over in the afternoon. Sunday night passed uneventfully, and Monday arrived with the sun shining. What happened to the storm Is still a mystery because the bu reau's forecasting teletype circuits were knocked out by the Thanks giving storm. It has been without them for four days and has had to depend on outer areas for help in compiling forecasts and gathering information, ims has proved spot ty, and the expected storm is still lost. Meanwhile, undaunted, it has come up with a tentative five-day outlook. It calls for temperatures in the 30s and 40s with more than normal precipitation. Salem Girl Killed In Auto Accident WALLA WALLA (AP) A Salem co-ed was killed and an other from Poitland injured criti cally when an automobile in which four Walla Walla College students were riding skidded into a truck Sunday night. The dead girl was Roberta M. Bandy, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Bandy of Salem. Listed in "extreme critical condition" at! a hospital today was Marilyn Drury, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. i Ed Drury of Portland. The Bandy girl's brother. Stev- en. driver of the car, and Ron Renting, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rehling if Salem, were hospitalized with lesser injuries. The accident occurred about 10 p.m. on an icy stretch of highway near Touchet. about 15 miles west of Walla Walla. The state patrol said young Bandy apparently lost control of his car on the ice and slid into 1 . ' . ",. T'.v.' . I area recently, and without support I there can be no Glide Community 'Club" The president continued: "If it , becomes necessarv to disband the club, it will affect many of the people of the community. At least the Glide Kiwanis Club and the 'North L'mpqua Extension I'nit meet regularly at the club build ing. besides other organizations and other area residents using the hall as a meeting place and for no- cial affairs. If the community club must fold, the hall will no longer be available. I urgently request everyone in the area to attend to- night's meeting." Refreshments will be served. Bowles Faces Uncertain Future In U.S. Clashes Kill 16 Persons In Algeria ALGIERS (AP) Lynching, shooting and grenade-throwing by anti-De Gaulle Europeans and Al gerians in revenge clashes killed 16 persons and injured 87 in one of the bloodier weekends of the seven-year Algerian war. French troops and police were caught in the middle as terrorism swept Algiers and the big western port city of Oran. Waving clubs, a screaming mob of Europeans broke into a jail in Algiers, lynched one Algerian woman and savagely beat an other before police reinforcements drove them off. The women had been arrested after a grenade wounded three Europeans in a sidewalk cafe. In Oran. 220 miles to the west, bands of European youths roamed the streets, attacking any Mos lems they encountered in revenge for the killing of Jean Rivas, 22, who was shot in the neck as he walked along a sleet. Three Al gerians were reported killed and six injured in these attacks. Near ly 60 plastic bombs, favorite weapon of right-wing European extremists, exploded in Algiers during the weekend. Curfews were put into effect in Algiers and Oran in an attempt to. curb night attacks. Clandestine broadcasts by the right-wing Secret Army Organiza tion, led by fugitive French mil itary officers opposed to President Charles de Gaulle's self-determination policy for Algeria, stirred up the mobs. A voice claiming to De mat oi former Gen. Edmond Jouhaud broke into an Oran TV broadcast Sunday with a denunciation of De Gaulle's policy. Jouhaud went Into hiding after Itin fihnrtivA "revolt of the Ben- ' erals in Algiers last April ana was sentenced to death in absen tia by a Paris court. The voice said the underground army was responsible for the ex ecution several days ago In Oran of a municipal councilman, Khell lil Taieb. It also admitted a ma chinegun attack on an Algerian cafe where eigni persons were wounded. Two Plead Guilty To Perjury Counts NEW YORK fAP) Two per sons involved in television's quiz show scandals pleaded guilty to day to charges they lied in deny ing they received neip in answer ing questions. They received suspended sentences. The pleas were entered by Timothy lloran of White Plains, N.Y., and Joseph Rosner of Man hattan, who had appeared on "Tic Tac Dough." Moran won $34,800 and Rosner 11,700. Each had been indicted on two counts of second-degree perjury for telling a grand jury they had received no help. As their trial in Special Sessions Court was to be gin, they were permitted to plead guilty to one count each. Asst. Dist. Atty. Joseph Stone asked that Judge Thomas E. Ro han approve the move because both men had been cooperative in assisting the two-year investiga tion and had showr remorse over giving fa.se testimony. lloran and Rosner were among a number of persons indicted as a result of testimony before the grand jury. They included such famous win ners as Charles Van Doren, who received $129,000 or the "Twenty One" program. Van Doren and 13 others still are facing trial. Chinese Reds Kill 30 HONG KONG (AP) More than 30 refugees from Red China lost their lives and 101 others were captured by Red border patrols in attempts to flee the China mainland over the weekend, the local Chinese press reported today. Family Gets AChilly Bath In Waters Of Canyon Creek ! The three members of the Leon ard Jarvis family of Amity and ifour pets took a bath in the swol len, muddy waters of Canyon Creek, just south of Canyonville, Saturday night. I Jarvis told Canyonville Police Chief Reed Gross that snow slush from the hizhway was thrown up onto his windhicld. blinding him temporarily. The car went off the side of the roud. In his attempt to get it back, the car skidded across the road and turned over onto its top in the stream. It was two to three feet deep at this point. The family, badly shaken and suffering from shock and expos ure, was taken to Foret Glen Hos pital for the night.The Jarvis' COACH BLAIR HARRINGTON occepts the trophy ond individual owards for the Yon calla Eagles ofter they had battled the Pilot Rock Rockets to a 12-12 deadlock to reign as state co-champions in B 11 -man ball for the second time in three yeors. Quarter back Dwight Pontius (No. 12) stands at the head of the line for the Eagles, while assist ant coach Ted Bennett watches. (East Oregonian Photo) New Parking Meters Due In Roseburg The Roseburg Meter Mainten ance Department this morning be gan installing the first of 180 new two-hour parking meters which will be placed in the "core" busi ness area. Two Hours Set Purchase of new meters for the uuwmuwa uusuiess area wis mr nroved earlier in the fall bv the provea earuir in uie inn uy uie Roseburg C t Council Police i Ch el , 10 ,he DuSlas County Sheriff s De- John H Truettsa.d a narking me partmcnl- Bortlen '' cattle ?er "chaover ih'SiSeg'm.l"" " ' ""al are. lo - panics the new meters will result I in a general two hour maximum ifor all meters, all over uie city, Moverovtr. all meters will ae cept pennies, nickels and dimes. Truett said the transition has been effected in cooperation with down town business firms and the driv ing public which have urged uni formity in the parking meter pro gram. Joe James, meter maintenance supervisor, is directing installation work which started today on SE Jackson St., the crew planning to work south on Washington Ave. Most of the new meters will be received by SE Washington Ave., SE Cass Ave. and SE Oak Ave. Conversion Due Truett explained that the old me ters now established in the "core" downtown area will be converted to two-hour parking and moved to business district "outskirts" areas. The old outskirts units were part of a trade-in arrangement on the purchase contract for the new me ters and these will be turned back to the parking meter company. Truett said the installation work will require about two weeks to complete. A number of the old 12-minute meters is also being eliminated. The chief said one innovation of the installation is that the meters will be set into the concrete at an angle for easier visibility from the street. U. N. Troops Control Mutinous Congo Town r,nnn r1 I r ,1 r n n A IXUrULUHLLI., UIE l. u lk Tho I'nitcrl Natinnfl todav announced its Ethiopian troops i ..!.! nf ii, mni i. lldVC I4ALII Vulluui nous town of Kindu. where Congo- e e troop, slau hlered 13 Italian UN airmen ' ' j . i ' i ,u . i. . .. No details of the takeover were announced except that the Euro- pean popuiation-estimated at 81 .. u ll anA -afn Since the massacre two wecKs ago. L.N. forces had been con-, (he uU partii Iulo electrical and appeared frequently as an ora fined to the airport, with onl? ; prtSi and spark plug business torio soloist. Winner of both the occasional reconnaissance forays tcMTlj ini to wipe out Elec-i Metropolitan and San Francisco into the town controlled by the c Alll0jte a, , "important 'Opera Co. auditions, she has sp- vuiiKiei. ui. small daughter was most seriously hurt, but her condition was report ed as very good. Sunday, relatives from Amity came after them. Their car was "totaled," according to the report received bv Can onville corre spondent Virginia Proctor from Gross. I The four pets of the Jarvis fam ily consisted of a dog, a rat, a pig and a turkey. These had to be cared for by Canyonville folks over night, as Hell, ihe pig was kept at the fire station, i Ed Oaks' wrecking service at .Canyonville got the car out, and i other lanonwl!e folks lent sssistr lance. Modern Day Cattle Rustlers Hit Ranch At Modern day cattle rustlers ap-'cated under an elevated barn. parenlly worked under the coverlMust of the cattle missing were of midweek snow storms to remove I whiteface stock. about 40 head of faille at I h.. Hun. Mm um h. HiH tmt ml, il, r,i. py Valley Ranch located on the lappy Vallev Rd. south of Rose- burg. The loss was estimated al about S4.0O0. i : .-T.7j .".Y ." nuyuiunu Doroen, owner 01 lnei t.-uuiieu uif men nunnayiwas specuiaira me men was per . n , ,...,., c. .Iir. ... ... '... Anti-Trust Suit Hits Ford Firm WASHINGTON (AP) The Justice Department filed a civil antitrust suit today against the rord Motor Co. over its acauisi- uon oi tiecinc Autome Co. The suit was filed in U.S. Dis trict Court in Detroit. A department spokesman said the suit asks the court to order Ford divest itself of two manu facturing plants, sales facilities and the "Autolite" trade name it acquired last spring from the Electric Autolite Co. of Toledo, Ohio. The government charged that Ford's acquisition could substan tilly decrease competition in the spark plug business and in other auotmobile parts. An April 4 letter to Electric Autolite stockholders, the govern ment said, reported the firm re ceived about $28 million in the deal. Electric Autolite had been one of the nation's biggest independ ent suppliers of automobile parts. Autolite, the Champion Spark Plug Co., and General Motors produced more than 90 per cent of all spark plugs turned out in this country last year, the government said. Besides spark plugs, Electric Autolite also had produced bat teries, generators, electrical mo tors, instruments, and ignition ' SIC 111 111 IUU IIIIC VI UUIIIU . nr-J,,. ,, " j """"j added. "Autolite,' the government Before its purchase of Autolite, " complaint filed in Detroit said, iord bought spark plugs and bat- tcries from independent compan- automobiles it manu- , . l".V , .,,. Fr,i-. ... 1 "v " 1 ' ' . . quuiliun of Autolite could tend to ip,scn competition markedly in mmrwtitiva factor" in these areas. As a result of the acquistion, the suit said. Ford's 8.000 dealers al-0 have been eliminated as pos sible outlets for independent sup pliers of automotive parts pro duced by Autolite. Adlai, Frondiii Discuss Castro PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) Argentine sources said today Argentine President Arturo Frondizi told Adlai t. Mevenson he feels an inter-American foreign minuter' meeting Ui condemn the Fidel Castro regime in Cuba . would lie toe hasty. I Frondizi and Stevenson, the chief U.S. delegate to the United Nations, conferred for two hours and 40 minutes late Sunday night 'on Cuba and other problems fac iing the Western Hemisphere. Happy Valley tie until he went to feed thein , ,h i.i Borden told deputies he was,fst years presidential race, has not sure when the animals werebn. controversial figure in the removed from the corral but " '. .". .' " petratcd during the heavy Wed I nesday night snow storm or per hP. earner on the vnv 91 Borden said nothing susplciousl " up , nnounwroeni. wa noted around the farm. Drob- ably occause a number of trucks . . . r have been coming and going from uie farm during the week. Investigation by deputies indica ted the theft was carefully plan ned. The barn unde" which the cat tle were being rorraled is only i.suu icet east oi the ranch house. To remove the cattle from the ranch, it would have been neces sary fur rustlers to pass in front of the house, deputies noted. It was apparent that a vehicle had Deen utilized in conducting the larceny. Borden told deputies the cattle averaged from ioO to S00 pounds each. The sheriffs office said investi gation is continuing. Caroline Is 4 Today HYANN1S PORT. Mass. (API- Caroline Kennedy, who had two birthday parties last week, was 4 today. She had her first party at tho White House last Tuesday along with her brother, John jr. who was 1 Saturday. Caroline's second party was given here Saturday by her grandfather, Joseph P. Kennedy. Messiah Chorus To Feature Talented Portland Soloist Soprano soloist Gloria Cutsforth of Portland will be a featured per former when the Messiah festival Chorus presents the 12th annual Roseburg rendition of the famed oratorio Sunday afternoon at the rairguunds Community Building. Three other soloists, chorus and orchestra members totaling more than 150 musicians will combine in the 5 p m. presentation. Miss. Cutsforth is a well-known soloist in the Portland area, where she has given numerous concerts i twared in "La Boheme. " "Manon Alarm Sends Fireman Running Literally "Mike" Neeley, fire chief for the Winston Dillard Fire Pro tection District, couldn't get his panel truck to start when the fire alarm sounded Satur day morning. But the fire was just around the corner anyway, so he grab bed a lire extinguisher and ran to Ihe scene, much to the I amuremeni ot nis wue ana i other witnesses. The alarm turned out to be a flue fire al the Russell Worthlcy home on Ford Dr. There was no damage. The department's resular fire rrew arrived at the icene without mishap. Shakeup No. 2 State Department Official Out Also Sm Story Page Tw WASHINGTON (AP) The fu ture of Chester Bowles as a top otficial of Uie administration waa clouded by doubt and uncertainty today after his removal by Presi dent Kennedy as undersecretary of state. Hours after the announcement of a 10-man White House-State Department shakeup in Uie for eign policy high command, presi dential associates and Bowles himself were silent on what job he would take over. The an nouncement said merely that he would move into a high policy making position. In its over-all effect, the 'reor ganization Was a tidying up op eration, in most cases fitting men into positions involving the kind of work they were already doing. One major result probably will be to slrengther foreign policy control in the hands of Secretary of State Dean Rusk and to lessen somewhat the amount of interven tion in i'late Department opera tions by members of the White House staff. Officials considered it significant that two moves in volved Uie transfer of Walt W. Rostow and Richard N. Goodwin from White House posts into jobs involving operational reponstbu ities in the State Department. mere were reports that Walter P. McConaughy, outgoing assist- nt secretary of state, would be- come ambassador to the Philip. I "?? ... No one " bcm8 dropped, Bowles, former governor of Con- "ecjicut and ambassador to India ana a ivennoav aaviser auriniz it1 uinimsirauon since lis iirsi weens in nffin. Th Pr.i,lt . c.. - ." - . ', V; retarv of Slate Dean Rusk wen - 1 retarj; ' Sll Dean Rusk, were - "P?1 to cons.der him misplac- J&!1 N' 2 p0Sl I uon as unuersecreiary n",a O'wnay uigw uom me Ma, 1 titvlv hnurinitiiHai-e nedy headquarters at liyannis t-on, juass., said that Bowles is to get a high policy-making posi tion on reJinauishm" his orentnt duties. There was no immediate) statement from Bowles. Officials here understood that ha was being offered a combination assignment of roving ambassador and special foreign adviser tn Ken. nedy and Rusk. Aa undersecre tary he has spent considerable time traveling abroad and ha hpn interested, within the State De partment, chiefly in promoting pol icics ot assistance tn underdevelop ed nations in Africa and Asia. Administration leaders consider ed him misplaced as undersecre tary, officials said, because he was more concerned with the broad lines of policy development in func tioning as an idea man than ln the day-to-day conduct of foreign relations traditionally handled by the undersecretary. Bowles is 60. Light Fixture Smokei Roseburg city firemen were call ed to the J. J. Newberry store Sat urday at 9:33 a.m., when a light fixture started smoking. There waa no damage other than to the fu ture. It was reported. "CusI Fan Tutte," and other op eras and will soon be seen in "Faust." Miss Cutsforth has been a soloist with the Portland Sym phony Orchestra, the Portland "Pops" Orchestra, and is fre qent church soloist. She has ap peared for the last two seasons In leading roles witli Oregon's Gilbert and Sullivan Festival Co. SOLOIST Glorio Cutsforth's Isoprono voice will be heard j by Roseburg residents when the Messiah oratorio is pre sented Sunday ot the fair grounds. Miss Cutsforth is well-known in Portland musi col circles. 1