The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, July 20, 1962, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Peace Corps Training Strenuous,
Former Glide Instructor Reports
Peace Corps trainees are kept!
extremely busy, according to Gene I
Kosascni. former Glide High School
instructor.
In a letter to Mrs. Arthur Sel
by, Glide News-Review correspond
ent, Rosaschi states that trainees'
days begin at S a.m. and end at
J p.m. six days a week.
Rosaschi and Jerry Lemert, for
mer junior high science instruc
tor for the past four years, were
accepted for the Peace Corps and
arrived in Washington July 7 with
other members of the corps. There
are 352 in the project.
Training Rigorous
Rosaschi said the daily training
in specialized education required of
Peace Corps members begins with
a period of physical education,
which includes a mile run.
From 8 to 9 a.m., Rosaschi and
Lemert, assigned to Ethiopia, study
the Amharic language which is
spoken by 40 per cent of the peo
ple and is the official language of
Ethiopa. Others, assigned else
where study the languages of the
country of their assignments.
NOTICE
TO ALL PATRONS OF
LaVERA'S
BEAUTORIUM
All customers of LaVera
Butter's will be taken care
of at her shop during her
absence.
World Affairs, language labora
tory (similar to the ones at Glide
and Roseburg high schools) and
American Studies take up the time
between 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. From
3 to 5 is a course in technical stu
dies. Rosaschi explains: "They
have us divided into areas which
we will be teaching. In my case
it is geography. In Lemert's, it is
science. At this time we study the
field thoroughly.
From S to 6, it is physical edu
cation again more exercises and
learning Ethiopian games.
Hike Taken
Rosaschi wrote that one night
the Peace Corps members were
taken on a nine-mile hike from 7
to 10, with a two-hour swim at
their destination, as part of their
physical training.
The former journalism instruc
tor related an incident that occur
red the night of the group's ar
rival in Washington, D.C. Ail
project members were transported
to a theater to view the grand
opening of the play, "Rhinoceros."
They arrived early, so . several
members of the group, including
a few negroes, went across the
street to an inn for refreshments.
Upon entering, they were told by
the manager the inn did not serve
Negroes. Everyone walked out.
Someone called Peace Corps head
quarters. A hearing was held, and
the incident hit the front pages
of the Washington newspapers.
WIPING OUT DEBT
WASHINGTON (UP1) Italy
planned to wipe out its Marshall
Plan indebtedness to the United
States today with an $85.6 million
payment.
The Treasury said that the
Italian government also would
pay the , United States $92.5
million to satisfy debts owed for
the purchase of surplus (J. S.
farm products.
100
WIN
THIS FRIDAY NIGHT
BANK NITE
LAST WEEK
NAME OF WINNER FOR $500.00
Raymond Lee Hughes, 242 W. Bradford St., Roseburg,
Present
Name of winner for $25.00
Mary R. Delaney, Riddle, Oregon
Not Present
Name of winner of Mystery Prize, $5
Fiorina F. Geissler, 1723 S. E. Mill, Roseburg, Oregon
. Present
$1320 has. been given away already by Roseburg's
Friday Night Merchants. You may be the Lucky,
Winner this Friday. (Eligible Only If In Store
Within 5 Minutes),
SHOP DOWNTOWN EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
B at on ef th following downtown merchant
t t p.m. Friday night and you may win ...
$100 BANK NITE PRIZE
All CAFC
CLARK'C STUDIO
DIANA CRAIG
COAST TO COAST
FOOD MART
SINGER
STYLE SHOP
SVOBODA TOTS
TOGGERY
TROWBRIDGE
UMKJUA VALLEY
WEISFIELD'S
JACK WEST JEWELRY
WOOLWORTH'S
RICKETT'S
ROSEBURG PHARMACY"
SANDER'S SHOE
SEARS ROEBUCK
LUVERNE'S
NEWBERRY'S
PAVI'S SHOES
PHOTO LAB
PAYLESS DRUG
JOHNNY'S TOYS
GIMRE'S SHOES
GRAVE'S MUSIC
HORN'S
Flying Is A Hobby
Of New Local Medic
Arriving Tuesday to begin prac
tice of obstetrics, surgery and
medicine is Dr. Lewis H. Hart. He
will be associated with Drs. A. B.
Munroe and Gerald L. Casebolt in
the Roseburg Medical Dental Clin
ic on Jackson St.
Dr. Hart was graduated from
Walia Walla College at College
Place, Wash., and taught mathe
matics and science at Campion
Ac-idemy at Lovcland, Colo., for
two years before taking his medi
cal training at Loma Linda Col
lege in Los Angeles. He interned
at Deaconess Hospital in Spokane,
Wash. He began the practice of
medicine at Rockford, Wash., then
moved to Troy, Idaho. His lOVi
years of practice there was inter
rupted by two years as a flight
to
DR. LEWIS H. HART
... to practice here
surgeon In the U. S. Air Force.
The doctor owns his own plane
and is an active member of the
Flying Physicians Association. His
hobbies are flying and photogra
phy. Dr. Hart is married and has
two sons, Kenneth, 19, and Dick,
17, both of whom are in college.
His wife, Ruth, is an ardent gard
ner. The family is residing tempor
home in Melrose. '
. One of the reasons that Dr. Hart
chose Roseburg for his home was
the desire to be associated in prac
tice with Dr. Casebolt, a former
medical school classmate.
County Court To Open
Radio Equipment Bids
Opening of bids on the purchase
of a base radio station and two
way transistorized mobile radio
equipment, for the Douglas County
Civil Defense office has been set
for 10;30 a.m. Aug. 10.
The County Court will open bids.
All bidders are required to
demonstrate the efficiency of the
proposed installation prior to
opening of the bids. Specifications
may be obtained from the County
Civil Defense office.
READY to vie for Queen of the 1962 Douglas County
Fair, Aug. 15-19, is Donno Bourassa, 16, of Rt. 4, Box
826, Roseburg. The 5-5 beauty weighs 120 pounds,
has brown eyes, dark brown hair and will be a senior at
Douglas High School this coming school year. She will
be 1 7 when the fair opens. Miss Bourassa's hobbies include
the school pep club, drill team and Girls' Athletic .As
sociation. (Bob Leber Photo).
High School Band
Appears Tonight
At Courthouse
Tonight the Roseburg H 1 e h
School band will give a free con
cert to the public on the lawn of
the, Douglas County Courthouse.
A 90-member band will present
the same numbers they will play
as the "band of the day" at the
Seattle World's Fair Tuesday, The
concert is a form of "thank vou"
to the citizens of the communityl
wiiu nave uiautj UU3 nip pussiuie,
according to Gary Wilson, band di
rector. It will last from 7:30 to
9 p.m.
The band will leave Roseburg
Sunday for the fair. Tuesday the
memDers wiu give two perform
ances, one hour long. They will
be the only official band present
that day.
Monday and Wednesday will be
free-time days for the students and
they will be able to tour the fair
itself. They plan to return Thurs
day. ,
While at the fair, they will be
quartered in University of, Wash
ington dormitoriea..-irf ij
A large-' number of' marches;
overtures and other selections will
be played in the open air under
specially installed lights by Pacif
ic Power & Light on the Court
house lawn.
This is the second group from
Roseburg to have the honor of be
ing the only official band of the
day at the fair. The Knights of
Pythias Drum and Bugle Corps re
cently returned with the same hon
or.
Rangers Won't
Close Book On
Marshall Case
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) Texas
Ranger Capt. Clint Peoples said
today that the book will never be
closed on the Henry Marshall
case until his murderer is found.
Texas Ranger Chief Homer
Garrison Jr., who also is direc
tor of the Department of the
Public Safety, said Thursday that
there Is conclusive evidence Mar
shall was murdered. Marshall
was the first Agriculture Depart
ment official to question Billie Sol
Estes' cotton allotment dealings.
Peoples, who dug up the evi
dence that led to the conclusion
of murder, said "I feel like one
of these davs wa will mmn im
with something. We will never
ciose me dook on it une case)."
The Rangers are seeking a man
whnm thpv hnliaua mnv hnua In
formation about the death. The
man is not a suspect. A compos
ite description of the man has
been broadcast throughout the na
tion. ; ,
."We . are receiving numerous
calls and checking out all leads,"
Peoples said. "We trust, some'
thing will develop."
U.S. Plans
New Altitude
NuclearTest
HONOLULU (UPD-The United
States plans to conduct another
high altitude nuclear test over
Johnston Island in the Pacific
early next Tuesday.
Although it will not be as high
or as mighty as the blast which
illuminated skies across the Pa
cific July 9, scintists said today
that the forthcoming test could
prove more damaging to ordinary
radio communications throughout
the Pacific Basin.
A Joint Task Force 8 spokesman
said Thursday the device would
be fired between 1 a.m. and 6
a.m. PDT. He said it would be
in the submegaton range and
would be exploded at an altitude
of "tens of kilometers."
The Atomic Energy Commission
in Washington said it would be a
thermonuclear device, meaning a
junior size H-bomb.
Unofficial speculation was that
the blast would occur some 30
miles up and would be equal in
power to 100,000 tons or more of
TNT. The July 9 explosion was
between 200-400 miles in height
and was in the one million tons
of TNT range.
Tuesday's blast is expected to
disrupt raJio communications se
verely because it wiir loose rnore
of its energy directly into the
radio-reflecting layers of the upper
atmosphere which start at around
20 miles.
President Kennedy said March
2 when he ordered the most re
cent series of tests', that they
would be completed in two or
three months.
The three-month deadline falls
next Wednesday, and if adhered
to strictly, the coming shot would
be the last of the Pacific program.
It was reported, however, that
the deadline might be stretched
a couple of weeks to get in one
final 500-mile high submegaton
shot.
Frl., July 20, 1962 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3
Morse Bids Kennedy To Oregon
For Look At Lumber's Plight
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.'
Wayne Morse. D-Ore., Thursday
invited President Kennedy to Ore
gon to see the results of what he
called the administration's failure j
to aid the Pacific Northwest lum
ber industry.
Morse again served notice that
he would not support Kennedy's
trade expansion bill unless steps
were taken to help the depressed
industry. i
The Oregonian reviewed the
lumber industry's many problems I
in meeting competition from lum
ber producers in British Columbia.
His remarks were made during
a two-hour speech urging the Sen
ate to delay action on a com
promise $4.6 billion foreign aid
biU.
House and Senate conferees
agreed on the compromise Thurs
day night.
Morse said Congress should re
fuse to act on foreign aid until it
had considered measures affect
ing the U.S. economy, such as
the tax bill and the President's
trade expansion bill.
He accused U.S. allies of not
shouldering their share of the
burdens, charged that foreign aid
funds had been misspent, and said
Congress should make certain it
preserves the strength of the U.S.
economy.
On the home economy, Morse
called for action to keep the lum
ber industry of his home state of
Oregon from "going broke" while
Canadian mills took over their
business.
BEST WISHES TO
Dallas Bennett
TEXACO
Service
LIGHTING and
WIRING by
MADSON & STOKES
Electrical Contractors
526 SE Lana OR 2-4488
CONGRATULATIONS
to
Dallas Bennett
TEXACO
SERVICE
LENNOX
HEATING
System by
YOW'S
AIR CONDITIONING
HEATING, SHEET METAL
1540 NE St.ph.nt . OR 3-6055
Commitees Are Named
At Drain Lions Meeting
The Drain Lions Club held Its
regular meeting this week at the
Drain City Hall and discussed proj
ect ideas for the current year, re
ports correspondent Jo Carlile.
President Miles Hutchins made
appointments to the following com
mittees: Civic improvement, health
and welfare, public relations, con
stitution, by-laws and education,
program and membership and at
tendance. Others were set ud for
tne convention and the North
Douglas County Fair.
A board meeting was scheduled
for 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 24, at
me nome oi riugn wmppie.
BEST WISHES
DALLAS BENNETT
TEXACO SERVICE
FROM YOUR
PAVING CONTRACTOR
ROSEBURG
PAVING CO.'
OR 3-5166
utinett Route 99 S.
Across Mark'i Southgate
DOUBLE BILLS
PITTSBURGH (UPI) A lo
cal drive-in movie today offered
this enticing double bill "P.ara-
disio" . and "Portrait of Sinner."
A rival theater countered with
"Premature Burial" and "The
Horizontal Lieutenant."
00
FURNISHERS
Warehouse Address
628 S. E. Rose St.
622 S. E. Jackson St.
WAREHOUSE
Phone OR 2-1821
CLOSE-OUT
SALE
SOFA-BED
Reg. 199.00 $4 A
SALE 1 07
' Early American
DIVAN -SWING
ROCKER
Regular
309.00 SALE
t199
Black
4-Pc. Sectional
Regular 3?Q
$569. SALE30gT
TAPPAN
RANGE
y. L.Y.I i-J S
30" I 40" J Troda
Dbd. Ovtn Allow In
7C
Fashion Craft
Davenport &
CHAIR$1
Regular
$339 SALE
269
HOTPOINT
APPLIANCES
20 OFF
MOTOROLA
T.V. BIG TRADE!
.Used Sett $15.00 oi it
LAMPS
20 ,
BOX SPRINGS
& Mattress
89
Regular
129.00 SALE
BEDROOM
SETS
now $onoo
ONLY
99
DINETTE
CCTC
v J, mm
Reg. 109.00
SALE
7-Pc.
79'
MAYTAG
100
YOUR OLD T
WORTH T
tree
durine tale
Used AUTOMATIC
WASHERS
I Lot
Namt Brendi
0
$24
00 At
Used AUTOMATIC
WASHERS
Been Repaired t PA
1 LOT-OV
Used AUTOMATIC
Washer-Dryer
SETS
79-100
TERMS
TOO!
Dallas Bennett
Corner S. E. Oak and Pine
SATURDAY (Tomorrow), JULY 21
feJWrT . .... A Ijkt-
i. 4 i
FREE COKES!
FREE
TEXACO FIRE CHIEF
HATS
AND LOLLIPOPS
for the kiddies
FREE
6 -PACK
COCA COLA
with purchase of 10 gallons
or more of Texaco Gasoline
l
FREE
LIVING BABY
PALM TREES
WHILE THEY LAST,
for the ladies
BE SURE TO REGISTER FOR VALUABLE DOOR PRIZES
TOY TEXACO SHIPS and TANK TRUCKS
HUNTER'S HAND 1IGHT
OTHER VALUABLE DOOR PRIZES WELL-WORTH OWNING
Open 7 days e week, 7 AM re 10 FM . . , Phone OR 2-9081