Library .
Ducks Triumph
OSU's Beavers and Oregon's
Ducks recorded gridiron triumphs
over the weekend to boast identi
cal 4. records. For complete de
tails see Sports page.
Hapless Husbands
UPI writer Horry Ferguson says
American husbands are unhappy
lot. See page 2, second section.
Established 1873
20 Pages
ROSEBURG. OREGON MONDAY, OCTOBER 21 1963
248-63
10c Per Copy
Ginny Batters Auto, Hunt
Helpless Ship; Accidents
10 Men Aboard Claim Two
Two deaths by violence were
CAPE HATTERAS, N. C. to move very slowly during the
,imi tt..:nnnn r;n.. nnvi 10 limine ni-nhjihlv tnwarric
stalled 100 miles off the North'the east-northeast about S miles '.'Juried oyer the weekend in
Carolina coast today and bat-!per hour. Intensity should re-!""" - ' 'v.v-
. j . 1 i. .h em rinrino thi.:"8 the discovery of the coun-
with 10 pe on ab a d wSxU2T 24 hours," the Weath-if JJ traffic fatality and the
howlinc wind, and 40-tn.50.fnnt Bureau said. 0l.her the flrst 1,lmtln8 fatallty
I r.ale force winds raked the,01 Ine J'ear " the county
wind nf ahnnt on milns nnr riiitor Bunks hut the hurricane-! The body of Gene Joseph
hour were reported near theiwise inhabitants of the sandj Wcntworlh, 22, of Independence,
center of the storm, seventh of spits off the North Carolinalwas found where his automo
the season and the first to coast refused to move out un-;bile went over a high bank
threaten 'the eastern coast of til the hurricane took on a about a mile west of Drain on
the United States. more definite pattern of move- Highway 38, according to state
Hurricane winds of 75 miles ment. police.
an hour extended out 60 miles i United Press International
in all directions from the cen-;staf photographer Joseph Hollo
tcr of the storm, which boiledjway Jr. reported from Manteo
up Sunday night and sent gale
winds and high tides crashing
against North Carolina's storied
Outer Banks. -
Man Reported Missing
Went.vorth had been reported
N. C. that strong winds almost' ""."'"s
tonnled the phone booth from!'1, believed the accident took
which he was talking. Inla aay- "!s ouy was
Heavv surf pounded the;found riday evening, and the
Bureau advisory located GinnyiCounty coast early today. Wind CHy Police to slate police at
about 100 miles southeast of! gusts up to 70 miles an nour; """""'
Cape Hatteras.
In this same vicinity the dis
abled destroyer escort USS Fogg!
was adrift after its tow rope
snapped two days ago. Ships
and planes searched through
blinding rain for the vessel.
"With just 10 men aboard
they're probably just doing their
best to hang onto the rails in!
40-to-50 - foot seas, a Coast
Guard spokesman at Ports
mouth, Va., said.
The Weather Bureau said Gin
ny would likely continue its slow
progress during much of today.
"Hurricane Ginny is expected
wnre renortcd in the Nags Head! The car was westbound
area. Highway 38 when it went over!
the bank on the south side of1
the highway. The vehicle trav
eled 95 feet over the bank, tak
ing out the tops of several
trees, flipped end over end and
landed on its top on a large
boulder in Elk Creek. The car
was demolished.
Wentworth, listed as Douglas
County's 27th traffic fatality of
the year, is believed to have
been killed outright. The body
was removed to Mill's Mortu
ary at Drain.
The Fogg, a decommissioned
destroyer escort, was bouncing
helplessly in the hurricane with
its engines and most of its equip
ment not operating.
Tides from the Virginia Capes
southward along the North Caro
lina coast were expected to con
tinue 2 to 3 feet above normal
today and tonight with some
flooding at time of high tides,
the Weather Bureau said.
Rough heavy pounding surf
along the outer coast will con
tinue to cause beach erosion.
Glendale Is Seeking
New Superintendent
For School System
Glendale is looking for a new
Bullet Kills Man
In a hunting accident late
Saturday afternoon near Gar
diner, Harry Richard Saville,
38, of Box 931 Woodruff St.,
Coos Bay, was killed when
struck in the chest with a 308-
caliber bullet from the gun of
Calvin Tenberphy Jr., of Port!
Orford. State and county offi
cers are investgiating.
Anpni-Hinu tn Dnwn Pncnmi I
Reedsport correspondent, the
demoting the cook in questionjfatalily occurred in the vicinity
HEADING TO ACTION Royal Moroccan Army
soldiers are shown here being issued hand grenades
at a desert outpost near Marrakech before setting
out for the front Sunday. Algerian authorities said
in Algiers that Morrocan fighter planes violated Al
geria's air space and forced on unarmed Algerian
Army 'helicopter to land on Moroccan soil. Earlier.
Moroccan officials announced that an Algerian heli
copter had been captured by men of the Ait Kabbach
tribe after the craft landed at Ain Choauter, about
90 miles northwest of Colom Bechar. (UPI Tele
photo) New Troops Leave
For Sporadic War
On Algeria Border
to part - time helper. This
brought a major protest from
the community in. the form fit
a petition to theschool board.
The board reversed its deci
sion and reinstated the cook.
It was then the other cooks re
signed. ' ,
For the last week, the dis
trict's two school lunch kitchens
have - been closed, and the
of Big Creek, in the Smith
River country about 38 miles
up Weatherly. Creek out of Gar
diner.- Deputy County Medical
Examiner Dr. Donald Courtney
and Unger Ambulance accom
panied state and county oficers
lo the scene of the fatality fol
lowing a report made at 6:15
Saturday by Carl Buffington,
who was in the Big Creek area
school superintendent in the
wake of some lightning actions
taken by the former superin
tendent, and the-School 'Board.
In a letter received by Thei
News - Review today, Supt,
Jack F. Johnson reported he:
had resigned effective today. Al-I
most simultaneously, the School!
Board announced it had ac
cepted the resignation.
tt,l. 1 -.3 -l-. tll nm.Kn
spou'denlMr, G. IT Fox of ing their lunches.
Glendale that some of the mem
bers of the School Board would
come to Roseburg Tuesday to
confer with County School Supt.
Kenneth Barncburg on action lo
,t ... ' - , rvii.. (agreement with the cookinglger Mortuary at Reedsport.
Meanwhile, Calvin Fucke, staff would be reVealed after!
high school vice principal, hastnjs Wednesday's School Boardi
meeting.
Johnson, meanwhile, reports
that after the story appeared
in The News-Review about the
ALGIERS (UPI)-Comman-
dcered private planes flew three
battalions of fresh Algerian
troops Sunday to the disputed
border area where the army is
fighting a sporadic, undeclared
bolder war with Morocco,
No fighting' has been reported
since Friday, but Algeria
charged that Moroccan fighter
planes crossed the border Sun
day ; and . JorMd.:.aa Algerian
youngsters in the schools have' at the time of the shooting
Hunting companions of Saville
In another new development
today, Board Chairman Rodney
Swanson reported the cafctcr
ia would open again Thursday
with a full staff on duty. He
said details of a compromise
Mrs. Kelsay
Gets State
House Seat
hncirlnc TonVinrnhir iirnra Pinlv
arrt T Will and A Warr hih The Douglas County C 0 u r tj
nf rn. Rav riofaii nf ....this morning appointed Mrs,
cident were' not immediatcIy!,E'izabeth kelsay to serve out
known. I,
The body was removed to Un
been elevated to the job of act
ing superintendent until perma
nent arrangements are made
for a successor to Johnson.
Johnson came to Glendale to, resignations of the cooks, he
take the superintendent's job in told Glendale News-Review cor
r 1962 from Lakeview. j respondent "she was not to con-
In his letter. Johnson indicat-ltact him any further regarding1
cd his decision to resign was news and that as long as he
prompted by "the latest issue,"jwas superintendent, she would
a protest lo what he calledinot be taking any more pic
"inaccurate articles" covering lures in the schools." He cx
a school lunch story last week, plained that last spring, the
The incident occurred when the board had decided to allow
school district headcook, ele-jMrs. Fox to take student pic
mentary head cook and elemen-itures in the schools, "so they
tary assistant cook resigned. I were reluctant to go along with
They allegedly objected to re-jthe superintendent's decision."
taining one of the members of! Johnson, father of seven chil-
Two Missing
In Air Crash
HAMILTON, Bermuda (UPI)
Local fishermen aided the
U.S. Navy, Coast Guard and Air
Force today in an intensive
search for two missing crewmen
of an American air tanker
which crLshed near here Sun
day with eight men aboard.
The names of the two missing
men the pilot and radioman of
the Air Force s big KB50 tank
er were not made public. The
six other crewmen were picked
was
tlin pnnlcim? staff. Thev indicat-ldrnn. savs hp. has nn immpdi
ed she was not able lo carryjate plans other than to find:" "-v "encupier aunudy.
her full work load. i employment. He owns h i s! The cause of the crash
The board had taken the step home in Glendale. Inot determined.
The four-engmed plane, an
adaptation of the B29- Super-
FREE
SEAT
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IN YOUR
NEW 1964
CAR
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an economical First National auto
contract and enjoy the safety of
seat belts with our compliments.
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V
the remainder of her husband's
term in the. Oregon House of
Representatives.
W. O. (Bun) Kelsay wr,s kill
ed Oct. 4 in an automobile ac
cident near Klamath Falls.
Appointment of Mrs. Kelsay
was recommended to the board
fortress of World War II, was
on the way from Bermuda to its
base at England Field, ncari
Alexandria, La., when it
crashed 16 miles west of here by ,e Douglas County Derao
early Sunday. Icratic Central Committee.- She
r
KELSAY
in House.
army helicopter lo land in Mo
rocco. I
(Moroccan authorities said
five of the nine men aboard the
helicopter forced down ut the
border hamlet of Ain Chouccr
were Egyptian officers. The
nine wore civilian clothes, but
at least one was armed with a
submachine gun, the Moroccans
said.) , ,
"The' reinforcements picked up-
Sunday, at Maison Blanche Air
port here were flown to Colomb
Bechar, a forward post in the
"combat zone" about 1,000-milcs
southwest of Algiers.
The official Algerian Radio
announced today that Ethiopian
Emperor Haile Selassie is post
poning a visit to France and
will fly here today, four days
ahead of schedule. There was
speculation that Selassie might
try to mediate the dispute.
The fighting began two weeks
ago. when Algerian troops oc
cupied the border posts of Hassil
Beida and Tinnjoub in territory
claimed by both nations.
Moroccan troops reoccupied
the outposts a week ago today
("inflicting heavy losses andi
damage on the Algerians,") ac
cording to the Moroccans, and
they have been the focus of
sporadic fighting since.
Viet Battle
Claims 13
Americans
SAIGON, South Viet Nam
(UPI) Communist guerrillas
killed 42 Vietnamese soldiers
and wounded 13 U.S. officers
and men in one of the biggest
battles of the war, U.S. mili-j
tary spokesmen announced Sun
day.
The Communists lost 30 dead
in the fighting 150 miles south
west of Saigon. Vietnamese
wounded numbered 83. The
American casualties eight of
ficers and five enlisted men-
was the highest cumber incur
red in a single battle since U.S,
advisers began aiding Vietna
mese forces in the fullscalc pro
gram that began in 1961.
The military spokesmen with
held word of the battle 24 hours,
The Communists attacked Satur
day morning, driving, against a
government force twice as large
as their estimated battalion
strength.
The battle was not fought on
the usual hit-and-run guerrilla
plan. The Communists made a
frontal attack, cutting down
government troops with ma
chinegun fire and pinning them
down in rice paddies.
Most of the Americans wound
ed were pilots, and crewmen of
aircraft ferrying troops to the
battle area and striking at the
Communist positions. The guer
rillas shot down one troop car-!
ricr helicopter and damaged a
twin-engine B26 bomber so bad
ly it crashed while attempting
to land. They hit a total of 14
aircraft.
The Communists incurred
most of their casualties in air
strikes. They withdrew without
difficulty at nightfall, military
sources said.
Although the American cas
ualties were described as the
heaviest of the war in a single
Ibattle. at least 12 and possibly
13 U.S. crewmen were Killed
two weeks ago in the crash of
fighter bomber and of two
helicopters searching for It..
Apparently the military didl
not consider these victims bat
tle ''casualties, 'although there
was a possibility the helicopters
collided because of ground fire.
from the Communists.
U.S. Assembles
Troops, Planes
For 'Big lift'
FT. HOOD, Tex. (UPI) The
United States assembled troops,
fliers and planes from Texas to
Maine today to show the world
that it can put 16,000 Army and
Air Force men with supporting
aircraft in Germany within 72
hours.
The project, whose code-name
is Operation "Big Lift," begins
one minute after midnight lo
night when a C135 jet transport
takes off with 70 men from the
2nd "Hell on Wheels" Armored
Division in it.
The 2nd Division will supply1
13,000 of the troops.
Transport planes will take off
from four air bases at intervals
ranging from 35 minutes to an
hour until a total of 14,500
troops-tankers and infantrymen
from Fort Hood and artillery
men from Fort Sill, Okla., are
in Germany.
New PM Seeks
Delay In Start
Of Parliament
MRS. W. O.
. . .to serve
The rescued crewmen were
taken to the hospital at the U.S.
Air Force's Kindly base here.
T.Sgt. E.M. Corbin suffered a
broken leg in parachuting from
the crippled plane, but the
others escaped serious injury.1
The other rescued crewmen
were Capt. F.W. Sellers, 1st Lt.
N.T. Tilton, T.Sgt. J. Samaripa
and Airmen 2-C D. Strong and
W. I. Webster.
Coast Gets Second
tidal Wave Warning
SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-Forl
the second weekend in a row,
an earthquake near Japan put
the Hawaiian Islands and the
California coast on a tidal wave
alert.
And. for the second weekend
in a row, the threatened tidal
wave amounted to little more
than a ripple in the Pacific.
The earthquake struck north
of Japan Saturday night. Civil
defense officials in Hawaii
sounded the alert on all islands
and ordered the evacuation of
all beachfront areas.
But the tidal wave measured
just one foot as it passed Mid
way Island and was even lower
when recorded at Hawaii.
whether the wave ever reached
the California coast.
will hold the office until the
next county election, and her!
immediate duty will be to at
tend the special legislative ses
sion on Veteran's Day, Nov. 11.
This session was called by
Gov. Mark Hatfield to consid-
er tne liscal crisis caused ny
last Tuesday's defeat of the $W) ,
mt:. 'SydviSelWonoxide Poisoning ,
court today of her acceptance. Diife Mnn In HoSDitOl
Cbunty Court members indi-, r
icated they were pleased to ap- , u Sullivan of Roseburg
State Health
Croup Sets
Local Meet
Dr. Byron Woodruff of Rose-1
burg, member of the slate
Board of Health Advisory
Board, reports the advisory!
board will meet in Roseburg
Wednesday.
The meeting is scheduled to
start at 9 a.m. at the Douglas
County Courthouse.
The two major subjects will
be (1) the problem of domestic
and wildlife animal rabies and
(2) sewage disposal problems
created by individual and in
dustrial sewage disposal sys
tems, particularly when concen
trated in larger fringe arca developments.
Three Roseburg men are tak
ing part in the program. Dr.
Woodruff will report on the Ad
visory .Board budget; Dr. Dal
len Jones, veterinarian, will
join Monroe Holmes, public
health veterinarian, in a dis
cussion of the rabies subject;
and Dr. James K. Gray. Doug
las County health officer, will
report on public health prob
lems, programs and activities
In reporting on the rabies!
subject, Lloyd Clark, Salem
chairman of the board, said,
The problem apparently has
been one dangerous to public
health in Oregon for some time.
land the cdvisory board wishes
to explore the situation fully
Clark also said the matter of
sewage disposal also needed in
vestigation. He said that county
There was no indication of! and city governments needed
j point someone who has had the
was taken to Albany General
The Weather
arivaniapp nf lootclativA lrnnurl.
jedge and experience. Mrs. Kel-HospitaI over the weekend as
..J. itorf ho- hHGhanH a.'the result of what appears to
nd gusty wind, tod.y, tonight secretary during his legislative.have been possible carbon mon
and Tud.y with h..vi.r;service. Oxide po-sonng
AIRPORT RECORDS
Cloudy with periods of
more and better laws to do
some pre-planning for fringe de
velopmenU." He said people
now wait until there is a public
health hazard from sewage,
rather than prevent the prob
lem before it occurs.
Bomb Warning
Empties Movie
KLAMATH FALLS (UPI) !
LONDON (UPI) Prime!
Minister Lord Home, first peer
to head a British government
since 1902, sought today to de
lay the opening of Parliament
until he can move from the
House of Lords to Commons.
Home spent the weekend at
tempting to patch the split in
the Conservative party caused
by the battle to succeed ailing'
Harold Macmillan, who retired
Friday, selecting Home as his
replacement;
Home won all but two of his
opponents for tlio, cabinet,, in
cluding former Deputy Premier
R. A. Butler, who had been con
sldered the favorite to succeed
Macmillan.
i Those who refused to serve
were Ian MacLeod, co - chair
man of tho Conservative party
and leader of the House of
Commons, and Enoch Pow
ell, former health minister.
Both led the revolt against the
selection' of Home, but neither
gave a reason for not joining
his cabinet.
I am sorry they did not feel
they could accept office," Home
said Sunday. It does not mean
the parly is split. I have no
doubt they will give me the
most loyal support."
Home was reported consider
ing asking Queen Elizabeth to
delay the resumption of Parlia
ment until after Nov. 7, when
he will run for election in the
House of Commons.
Labor has opposed such a de
lay Parliament now is set to
reconvene Oct. 29 b u t the
Queen has the right to set the
date. Labor leader Harold Wil
son said such a request would
be "an impertinence."
Home, a 60-year old Scottish
peer, could remain in the House
of Lords and still serve as pre
mier, but he would not be able
to function effectively. Peers
cannot appear in Commons and
it is in the lower house that the
policy debating and decision
making takes place.
Home said Saturday he would
resign his earldom a title
more than three centuries old
and contest a byelection in
Kinross, Scotland, to get in
Commons. The Conservative
candidate withdrew in Home's
favor. The seat is considered a
safe one the Conservatives
won the last election there by
more than 12,000. voles.
The moment the first C13S
takes off from Bergstrom Air
Force Base in Austin, Air Force
support planes will start taking
off for Europe from Dow and
luring Air Force Base in Maine
and Myrtle Beach AFB, S.C.
The Air Force contribution to
"Big Lift" is 1,500 men.
The support planes, including
about 100 rocket-firing jet fight
ers, will cover the 2nd division
when it tries to stoD an "at.
tack" on West Germany bv an
enemy division.
Another U.S. Division alreadv
in Europe will play the role of
attacker.
In addition to the iet fichters
42 other planes including recon
naissance air craft and C130
cargo planes with mechanics
and repair facilities will fly to
Germany.
The troon-carrvins transnm-t
planes will take off from Bcrg-
suum ah a, james Connally
AFB at Waco, Tex., Shcppard
AFB, Wichita Falls, and Gray
Army Air Base, next door to
Ft. Hood.
Men Catting Prapared
Second Division men assnm.
bled in battalion areas at Ft.
Hood today, checking equip
ment and packing duffelbags.
The personnel carriers they will
use are already in Germany.
The first units will start mov
ing out by dusk at 10 p.m. EDT
from Ft. Hood lo the air bases.
ine troops will move out hnni-ri
planes and take off by a sched
ule as precise as that which
governs the launching of a man
into space. !
When the troops arrive in Cm-.
many, they will have a couple
of days to get tanks out of stor
age. An advance party of 472
men arrived in Germany Satur
day to establish communications
ana set up a' headquarters.'
It. will take from 10 hours and
25 minutes to 31 hours , and 25
minules for troops to reach Eu
rope, depending on the type of
plane they ride and the route
it takes.
Tito Will Visit
Princeton Today
NEW YORK (UPI)-President
Tito of Yugoslavia heads foi
Princeton University today lot
a tour of the campus.
The stocky Communist leader
was scheduled to lunch with
Princeton President Robert F.
Gohcen following a tour of the
plasma physics laboratory at
the university's Forrestal Re
search Center.
Tito also was lo' meet with
George Kennan, former U.S.
ambassador to Yugoslavia and
now a professor at the Institute
for Advanced Studies.
Tito's arrival Sunday at Idle-
wild International Airport was
uneventful, but he was greeted
a short time later by about 50
demonstrators when his motor
cade arrived at the Waldorf-
Astoria Hotel in Manhattan.
The demonstrators carried
placards denouncing him for re
ligious and poltiical crimes and
chanted: "Tito murderer." Po
lice kept the demonstrators
from Tito's party.
Tito was accompanied by his
wife, Jovanka, and appeared to
be in the best of health despite
his two-day bout with the flu
late last week.
Mushroom Hunters Safe
In Woods Near Florence
Lowest temp, list 24 hours 51 jjoerner, on behalf of the court, bany report, his wife stopped
-l T .J... "' am rnnfirlont thai chp He as DCUCVeO 10 nave DCCn
er Tuesday ! will represent Douglas County poisoned while riding in the searched the building for a
' .... u i. as caoablv as her husband back of a camper-style pickup! bomb a phone caller said was
" """P- " r J:J I-:., n . .. tm-lr Annrrf.no In Iho Al-iUlPflV
imii-ers saia ine patrons were
ushered into the street for about
45 minutes after a voice on a
telephone told a theater worker
a bomb was planted in the
building.
Officers said the call was ap
parently the work of a prank-
$69,936 $34,836 ports. sier.
FLORENCE, Ore. (UPI) An
elderly Hollywood, Calif.,
couple, missing overnight in a
heavily-wooded area near here,
was found safe today, police reported.
John Farneman, 79, and his
wife. Ethel. 70. were located by
The Tower Theater here w a s searchers about 9:15 a.m. and
evacuated by about 200 patrons! were reported in "pretty good
late Saturday while police condition. "
The couple became lost about!
Highest temp, any Oct. (58) 91
Lowest temp, any Oct. (54) 26
Precip. last 24 hours .10
Normal Oct. precip. 3.02
Precip. from Sept. 1 2.03
Pracip. from Oct. t 61
Sunset tonight, 6:21 p.m. j
Sunrise tomorrow, 7:36 a.m.
for gasoline at a service sta
tion in Albany and found when
she opened the door that he
was unconscious. Fumes from
W-a.1. 1 1 . J r A llne u- 5 eximusi apparently
ith United runa came under the door while sui
Goal Score To Date livan was sleeping, his wife re-
PLAY BALL
eight miles south of here be
'tween Highway 101 and Siltcoos
Lake Sunday.
More than 100 searchers, aid
ed by three helicopters, fanned
out on the search today. The
couple had been last seen at
10 a.m. Sunday when they told
other residents at the Fish Mill
Lodge on the lake they werelfacilities to
I going on a mushroom hunting;the search.
trip.
They left a note saying they
would be back at 1 p.m. A
search was started when they
failed to return by 4:15. About
i35 men, aided by bloodhounds,
covered five square miles b e
fore darkness forced them t o
give up about 10 p.m.
The bloodhounds did locate
four searchers who had become
lost in the heavy underbrush.
Heavy rain fell and a light
wind blew during the night, but
the temperature stayed about
50 degrees. The couple was
wearing only light clothiLg.
Oregon State Police, the Lane
County sheriff's office, Florence
city police and the Siuslaw Ru
ral Fire District combined their
coordinate