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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1962)
University cf Oregon t Oregon COJ Established 1873 12 Pages ROSEBURG, OREGON TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1962 180-62 10a Per Cony bipake Hocks Colombia . . L I r -ill T: fel. -' V -'aWvl:vQr mm i mi. lilt jj '.AWJJ. 'V vvr J,!1 ,i - ' -. j i TS WAITING to be token off the bow section of the listing British ship Montrose late Monday are its orewmen. The 350-foot ship collided with a cement barge on the Detroit Senate Leaders Aim Gag At Satellite F ilibuster WASHINGTON (UPI) A new effort to' reach a compromise in the space communications fili buster collapsed today amid bitter Democratic debate and demands for a quick gag on further talk. Sen. Spessard Holland, D-Fla., one of the few southern members who has voted in the past to limit debate, told the Senate be hoped a cloture petition would be "offered very shortly." Democratic leaders aid it would be filed later today. The compromise, first proposed Monday by the Democratic leader ' ahip, called for the bill to create Boat Operators Face Illegal Fishing Counts Two Douglas County fishing boat operators and guides have pleaded innocent to charges they allowed party members to exceed salmon bag limits. Police officers were stationed aboard the two boats involved when the offenses allegedly occurred, it was reported by the state police of fice in Roseburg. Arraigned on the charges in Douglas County District Court Mon day were Del Wayne Dungey, 43, ot Winchester Bay, and Donald Spencer Hughes, Rt. 4, Reedsport, Both pleaded innocent to the com plaints and requested trials. Trial dates were not set. - The complaints were issued July 27 in the coastal fishing area. One complaint states that Dun gey, guide and operator of the boat "Valauris," permitted a member of his party to catch a total of four silver salmon and one Chinook salmon. The complaint alleges the offense occurred at Winchester Bay. Daily salmon limit is two fish. The other complaint states that Hughes, guide and operator of the fishing boat "Marsadon," permit ted a party member to catch three silver salmon while aboard his boat. 's Cave-In Claims Man PORTLAND (UPI)-Edward J. AIM, SS, of Portland died Monday in a sewer cave-in. A second cave-in almost buried three other workmen who tried to dig him out. Albi left a widow and three children. Ladies Day In Senate Maurine Joins Senate The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Variable high cloudiness today and Wednesday with a chance of early morning low clouds Wednes day. Cooler Wednesday. High to day 93, low tonight SI. High Wed nesday 17. ia u n I xumiI mmn in Julw Ibli 3? Prteip. last 24 hours 0, Preeip from July 1 T' PncZ from Sept 1 IZZ 12 49 Excess from Sept. f ! . "T7 V ' ' Sunset tonight, 7:37 p.m. ,..,.. .,. e.(n . Sunns tomorrow, s.oj a.m. Logger's Fire Weather Temperatures today in the mid- n. anH uliBhtlv cooler Wednesday, Humidities 30 to 35 per cent both days. Light northwest winds be- coming westerly 8-12 m.p.h. both afternoons. Outlook lor inursaay! is pa'ly cloudy and cooler. a privately owned, government- regulated space communications corporation be sent to the Foreign Relations Committee for about a week's study. But Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., rejected the move on behalf of the Democratic liberals who are filibustering against the administration-backed bill. Morse's refusal brought a re joinder of Tidicule from Sen. Robert S. Kerr, D-Okla., chairman of the Space Committee, one of two units which cleared the com munications bill. Chars of Monopoly Morse snapped back that Kerr was "standing for monopoly con trol" of space communications de velopment. The exchanges opened with Sen ate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., hotly telling the filibustering liberals that they were guilty of "dilatory tactics" which should end at once. He re peated the charge when ques tioned by Sen. Estes Kefauver, D-Tenn., another leader of the filibuster bloc. The exchange got so bitter at one point that Morse renounced Stocking Bandit Draws 15 Years William Mathew Simmons, con victed gas station "stocking band it," was sentenced Monday to serve an indeterminate period of time not exceeding IS years in the Oregon State Penitentiary. The 25-year-old Winston man was convicted of assault and rob bery while armed with a danger ous weapon in a Douglas County Circuit Court jury verdict return ed July 24. Simmons was tried in connection with an armed robbery at Hillcrest Service Station May 22. Bill Ernest Hunter, 27, also of Winston, is awaiting trial in con nection with the same case. Hunt er, too, is charged with assault and robbery while armed with a dangerous weapon. The two men were charged with holding up Clarence Edgar Lemon, station attendant, and taking $200, the property of Norman Berna. Prosecutors contended it was Sim mons who entered the station wearing a silk stocking over his head to disguise his features and held up the attendant. The bandit was armed with a revolver. ' Hunter is suspected of being an accomplice in tne holdup. WASHINGTON (UPI) It was ladies day on the Senate floor Monday at least four hours and 30 minutes of it. Oregon's lady senator, Demo crat Maurine Neubcrger, joined the filibuster against the adminis tration's satellite communications bill and proved the equal of many long-winded male colleagues. Mrs. Neubergcr set two records she was the first woman to take i - wuiiian st-naior. ......... , ... . !iy ana in low tones. Mucn of We Not "red !n t,h? lt after her time she wa, bareiv audible in lone "int- ,he lo,t for New York the gallery. without pausing to rest "In fact," while holding the floor she had " -r 1 ,e . ur. ana repienisning ner iipsucn, i , .u. ,t, She then hurried by her senate office for a few minutes and headed for New York to bid good oye to some memoers oi ner; familj- on tneir way to turope. iter uregon colleague, a e n. i Wayne, L. Morse, D-Ore., was River late Monday. All of the The ship later turned over and river bottom. (UPI Telephoto). his party's Senate leadership and declared that "I don't believe' the word of Mansfield. Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen, III., accused Morse of violating senate rules in question ing Mansfield's 'Veracity." But, Morse declared that as long as Mansfield and Democratic Whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., pursued their crackdown tactics on the satellite filibuster, "they are not my majority leader or my whip." Pen nsy Train Jumps Track, Hits -Homes VANDALIA, 111. (UPI) Twelve cars of a 23-car Pennsylvania Road mail train leaped from their tracks today and smashed into a string of homes. At least, six townspeople and crew members were injured. The rampaging cars damaged three homes in this sleeping south ern Illinois town, tore out a small wooden overhead bridge, and top pled telephone and power poles. One of the cars wound up in Kaskaskia River. Another rammed into a garage, smashed it into a house, and wound up standing on end against the wreckage. None of the injured was seri ously hurt and five of them were released from a hospital after treatment. They were mail clerks Maurice Wallace, St. Louis; Ed ward Roley, East St. Louis, 111.; and Edward Tillman, Columbus, Ohio; and townspeople Sirs. Mamie Bowles, 76, and Mr. and Mrs. James Walker. Mrs. Bowles was the only per son who remained hospitalized. The train was en route from St. Louis to Indianapolis. The other seven : mail clerks aboard the train escaped unhurt, as did the rest of the crew of the 17-car train. The train, No. 14, carried no passengers. George Hiatt, Newark, Ohio, chief mail clerk aboard the tram, said the mail car "began to weave" about a half mile west ot the point at which it left the rails. "We were eating dust and let ten were flying everywhere. Everyone grabbed for something solid and we just rode it out," he said. Hiatt speculated that the acci dent might have been caused by a broken rail. Filibuster among the first to greet her. They posed for pictures together and Morse told her it was a fine speech. Only nine women have ever served ai senators and two o f them never actually attended a session. None of Mrs. Neuberger's predecessors had ever made long speeches and none had ever taken part in an acknowledged fi- I ' 'i. - j ...tithe hoard nf Pnrifio Pmm-t Slu -"ichmiik sijccuii. one laiKfU SlOW- B. -n ,, ... , ! only a couple of hard peppermint candy drops and occasional sips of water. Mrs. Neuberger's aides insisted she wasn't consciously aiming at any records and dtdn t want any special lavors. as one oi tnem iput it, "sne'd ratner De just one oi me Doys as iar as ncr acnaie (duties are concerned. crew were rescued safely. settled on her side on the Ben Bella Foe's Capture Perils Move For Peace ALGIERS (UPI) The can- ture of a bitter opponent of dissi dent Vice Premier Ahmed Ben Bella threatened today to blow up the cautious moves toward peace among leumng Algerian National ists. Forces supporting Ben Bella seized Nationalist Vice Premier Mahammed Boudiaf at his Bar ents' home at M'sila, about 150 nines from his Tizi Ouzou head quarters, Monday night. The action brought an angry reaction from Boudiaf's colleague, Belkacem Krim, and the Berber troops of Willaya (military dis trict) inree at nzi uuzou. They indicated Krim would re ject any further conciliation moves by the Ben Belltsts unless Boudiaf were released. Boudiaf's seizure, by troops of willaya one, came at a time when chances of peace appeared better than at any time since In dependence Day July 3. Mohammed Khider, Ben Bella's chief aide, had just announced in Oran that he was coming to Al giers to talk to Krim and Boudiaf. Provisional Government Pre mier Ben Youssef Ben Khedda, whose dispute with Ben Bella touched off the present crisis, had called on "Algerian leaders" to return to Algiers. "Their simultaneous presence in this city can only bring-, togeth er viewpoints, calm spirits and pave the way for unity, he de clared. But after Boudiaf's capture, Krim declared, "I am no longer in contact with Khider" and the Tizi Ouzou command post de nounced the seizure as a premed itated "act of barbarity." Textron Plans To Open Plant Announcement that Textron, a nationally known manufacturer of a wide variety of industrial con sumer and military products, will establish an electronic manufac turing plant at Grants Pan was made known today. Robert C. Thompson Jr., chair man of the board of Textron, an nounced in Providence, R.I., that the company hopes to have the operation going by Sept. 15 in a plant already purchased in the brants Pass Industrial Park. Thompson said the company ex pects to employ about 100 produc tion workers within a short time after operations begin. The Textron official reported a group of Grants Pass business men and officials of Pacific Pow er & Light Co. had formed Jose phine Development Co., Inc., for the purpose of acquiring property and building plants to house Tex tron's new company, Oregon Tech nical Products. The Textron firm will operate as a division of Textron Oregon, Inc. It was reported the facility will replace the program that had been announced earlier by Burton Electronics, a Los Angeles firm. The initial product will be for the defense department. Incorporators include the local development group, Glenn L. Jack son, Meriford, vice chairman of " . ...... rasa business men. and Dave Irv ving of Medford, manager for PP&L's industrial depart ment there. ; BABY SOCKED RECTOR LONDON (UPI) Lord and Lady Brabourne got an indication of I what their seven month old son i minp, may be when he grows up ni nu cnnsicning, i-iuup punched the rector on the noss. Cargo Ship Rams Barge, Takes Dive DETROIT (UPI) - An English cargo ship carrying win and olives from the Mediterranean to Chicago was rammed by a ce ment barge in the Detroit River Monday night and dipped bow first to the murky bottom. The 44 crewmen aboard the 440 foot Montrose were quickly res cued by Coast Guard boats. There were no injuries. A throne of thousands lined the riverfront in both Detroit and neighboring Windsor, Ont., to watch three tugs try to drag the foundering vessel to the U.S. shore. The mid-river collision occurred minutes after the Montrose, which was only one-year-old, had pulled out of the Detroit harbor terminal. Douglas Lowe, 21. Dundee. Scot land, an engineer aboard the Montrose, said he was in the en gine room when he felt a bump. The ship started to keel over." Lowe said. "I stayed below to keep the generator running and the lights on. Almost immediately, water started coming in the bil ges." , Lowe said he and other crew men below were ordered to the deck about 45 minutes later. "We were ordered to out on lifejackets and go to the starboard side of the ship," he said. "Then we got in the rescue boats." About half of the crewmen were English and the rest were Ital ians. ' Raginq Deschutes Blaze Controlled By United Press International A raging fire in the Deachutm National Forest 12 miles sooth- west of Bend was reported con tained, but not controlled, this morning. The blaze threatened replica of a frontier fort late Mon day. The 150 acre fire, which started in brush and second-growth tim ber, moved toward Fort Benham, the replica used in making the movies "The Indian Fighter" and "Tonka" and episodes for the tel evision show "Have Gun, Will Travel." Clarence Edgington.' U.S. Forest Service dispatcher, said more than 200 men were fichtlns the fire today. Crews were brought in trom Medford to join the 150 men wno worked against the flames Monday. Edgington said another fire had begun in the Okanogan National Forest near Okanogan, Wash., where some 50 men were working to hold back a blaze caused by lightning. The fire covered some 20 acres, he said. The Oregon Forestry Depart ment reported 14 fires on state protected lands, 10 of them were man-caused. None of them burned more than a half acre. More thunderstorms were fore cast for today, continuing the danger of lightning-caused fires. The outlook for the next few days is for little precipitation and temperatures above normal. the high in Oregon Monday was iw at oiearoro. Wolf Creek Crew Aids At Blaze The 14-man Wolf Creek fire sup-1 pression crew of the Umpqua Na tional Forest Mondav at R n.m left in two airplanes to help fight a iMi-acre ire in the Deschutes National Forest. According to Larry Thorpe, fire control officer for the Umpqua Forest, the fire In (he Deschutes is in the Crescent District. The crew had just returned at 3:30 a.m. Monday from fighting the Mt. Hood National Forest fire. The crew had left for Mt. Hood Friday morning and joined the crews from Redmond and the Wil lamette National Forest. Truck Spills Load; Driver In Hospital A truck loaded with lumber went out of control on Highway 38 near Drain at 12:10 p.m. Monday, spill ing the load and sending the driv er to the Cottage Grove Hospital. W. J. Solsman, 54, Reedsport, the operator, suffered head and shoulder injuries, investigating state police report. He was taken m tne hospital by Drain Ambu lance. The vehicle was eastbound with lumber and lot off onto the srav- el shoulder of the highway, when me ariver lost control, police sid, State police at Roseburg also re port recovery of a 1959 car reoort- ea stolen from Eugene. Tha ve Ihicle was abandoned her. 3 J&pfiQm.m ' 'Lm"" 1 '-t" ' RECEIVING a king size shipping tag from United Airlines stewardess Barbara May at Son Francisco International airport Monday was Beggar, a 165-pound St. Bernard from, Sacramento, Calif. Beggar rescued her 3-year-old master Bobby Mitchell, left, from the American River May 19., The Mitchell farrily and Beggar are en route to Ohicago where the dog will be honored as the most heroic dog in the nation. Prizes include a gold medal and a $1,000 U. S. Savings Bond, awarded by a dog food company, (UPI Telephoto). Vtf Telstar Ike Urges Attack On Foes Of Truth STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) Former President Dwlght D, Eisenhower called today for crea tion of an International university to "promote a universal attack on the enemies of truth." Elsenhower, who is to join Swedish Premier Tage Erlander on a Europe-to-America Telstar broadcast tonight, told the world confederation of Organization of the Teaching Profession such a SP Freight Derails Near McMinnvillle MCMINNVILLE. Ore. (UPI) Eighteen cars of a heavily-laden Southern Pacific freight train de railed early today on a flat stretch of track eight miles south of here. Fourteen of the gondola cars. loaded with cement rock, were badly smashed, Track was twist ed for at least a quarter of a mile. Bits of metal, couplings and rock littered the shoulders of U.S. Highway 99, which runs parallel to the track. Cause of the derailment was under investigation. No Injuries were reported. The engineer detached the front part of the train and continued on toward Oswego. A foreman for the mechanical department of Southern Pacific said it would be a major job just to clear the line, a secondary line. He said he was unable to esti mate how long it would take. C. V.Stanton Park Revenues Are Reported Douglas County's Charles V. Stanton Park near Canyonville has returned 1212.20 to the county sine it was officially opened July 2. The park, which offers over night camping and a swimming beach, is the former Dodge Inn. It is intended as a center for In formation for persons entering the countv from the south. During the last week fees for overnight use of the park totaled $98.50. Fees are charged for overnight camping in tents $1 per car- and overnight camping in trailers (1.50 per car and trader. DOWN ON JOB NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) Mayor Hugh J. Addonulo has ordered more uds and downs for elevator operators at city hall. He ordered them to work 5W hours a day between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday after he learned their pracliee was to alternate an hour of work with an tour of rest for an average of about 4 hours. BEGGAR f962 DOG HERO OP ME R0S ,0SFO "CHI virtu o ah, imii 1 college should be free of "rigid doctrinaires, propagandists and proselyters." The search for truth, Eisen hower said In his sole reference to the cold war, would defeat those societies which, "insist upon regimentation and the closed soci eties for their people." i make a 10-minute appearance on No Nd for Secrecy As truth and understanding spread across the world, security reasons for secrecy will disap pear," he said. "World enlighten ment will speed the day when the burdens of armaments and the fear of others will be removed from the backs and hearts of men. Then no slightest justification for the closed society will ejist. An International school would be "a new and different kind of clearing house for world thinking . . . An adjunct to machinery now existing for promoting a universal attack on the enemies oi truth," he said. "On the campus," he said, would be gathered an interna tional faculty of scholars whose concern would be objective truth, purged of national and regional bias, hatred and prejudices. Two-Year Course "Its students numbering possi bly 2,000 or 3,000, say, ia a two year course could learn about the things that separate nations and tend to prevent them from living peacefully and securely to gether," Eisenhower laid, Eisenhower spoke to the meeting not as a former president of the United States but as a former president of Columbia University and as the head of the American pcople-to-people program. Eisenhower is scheduled to make a 10-minut appearance on the program to be beamed to the United States live by Telstar to night. White House Every Kilt Of WASHINGTON (UPI) The White House hastily assured the people of Edinburgh today that President Kennedy knows their city is in Scotland rather than England. The While House explanation added sorrowfully however that a misaddressed letter which riffled every kilt in the Highlands origi nated In the office of a presiden tial aide with the fine Scots name of Malcolm Kilduff. Kilduff is an assistant to Press Secretary Pierre Salinger who told newsmen today: "We have Instructed him to take a night course in history and geography." The incident which had the Tremor Worst n 10 Years; 35 Are Dead BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI) The Colombian government today rushed relief supplies to the scene of Monday's earthquake in Caldas Province, tne worst here in 10 years. Authorities listed 35 dead but local newspapers reported fatali ties between 40 and 50. It was feared the death toll would mount. however, because many of the es timated 300 injured were reported in serious condition. In badly hit Pereira. Mavor Mario Delgado Echeverry report ed 13 dead, 3 missing and feared dead, and 123 injured. The 99-year -old city is a bastion of the Roman Catholic Church in Colom bia. Delgado decreed three davs of official mourning and ordered the work of reconstruction to start immediately. The newspapers El Tiemno and El Signo listed 40 and 50 dead. The official toll of injured was '. . 300. The shirt factory and churches: were the buildings hardest hit, , ana inus most of the casualties were women. A doien churches were destroyed in the city of Pe-. ' reira, and three-quarters of the otner Dutldings in the 200,000-pop-ulatlon city were reported dam- - agea or leaning. Among the dead was rancher Jesus Maria Botero of Pereira.-. Only last week he was kidnaped by bandits and paid a $1,200 re- ward lor nis freedom. Almost every one of the 50 towns and villages in Caldat . Province was hit by the quake. Anotner so in the neighboring province of AnUoqula and the tauca vauey also were damaged. For two dreadful minutes at mid-afternoon, the earth heaved , and : shook, causing panic that spread far beyond the area of major - damage. Minor earth shocks were reported at about tha same time in nearby Venezuela, but there was no report of cas- ; ualties or serious damage there. In Colombia, the heaviest toll was reported in the city of Pere ira, about 100 miles west of here, where eyewitnesses said a three- story shirt factory employing ' about 200 women "folded up like : an accordion." Early reports said at least eight of the factory workers were killed and many more trapped in the ruins of the factory. Rescue crews were combing the rubble for survivors. Other casualties m Pereira in creased the known toll there 'to 11 dead and 128 injured serious- ' ly enough to require hospitalise-' tion. Another 50 persons received first-aid treatment. The west tower of the treat Gothic cathedral In Manizales. ' Colombia's biggest church, tum bled in ruins,, and convent in that city was ruled unsafe for ' habitation Monday night The earthquake also wrecked an aqueduct in Manizales, pro vincial capital with population ' of 200,000 about 100 miles north west of -here, leaving the city without water. Its electric power system was largely knocked out by the quake in cau, a provincial capital US miles south of Manizales, five women were killed and five per sons were injured in the collapse of the Church of Our Lady of rerpeiuai Help. - Similar reports of death and devastation came in from cities, towns and villages throughout , western Colombia. GIVIN BUM STIIR ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI)-Donald M. Wilson said a burglar rifled hla home and then told him, "I was given bum steer. You have ' no money here. You look like working people." The intruder apologized for fail ing to replace the screen on a window through which he entered, , turned off the lights and left through a rear door. ' Letter Riff les Bonnie Scots clans up in arms occurred when letter from the President's of fice arrived in Scotland addressed to "The Weekly Scotsman, North Bridge, Edinburgh, England." Calling a Scotsman an English man is like calling Hatfield McCoy. Scottish newspapers emerged with outraged headlines over the episode. Salinger absolved Kennedy of any responsibility. "The first the President knew about this was when he read about It this morning In the pa pers," Salinger said. "He defi nitely knows where Edinburgh It. 1 He's been there."