Page 8A
EUGENE REGISTER-GJJARD, Sat., April 21, 1962
Forest Safety
Conference
Closes Here
Roster Contains
Record Number
The 28th annual Forest Prod
ucts Safety Conference came to
a close in Eugene Saturday after
two and a half days of concen
trated deliberation on how to
reduce industrial accidents.
E. A. Roles, of Longview,
Wash., conference chairman,
caid that 425 persons had regis
tered the largest number ever
to attend the conference, accord'
ing to Elmer Stcege of Spring'
field, registration chairman.
Besides delegates from Ore
gon, Washington, Canada and
California, the conference at
traded forest products repre
sentatives from New York, Wis-
vuiiaiu miu niftaiiBva,
'Safety Awareness'
Terry Lawson, training and
safety coordinator for Crown
Zellerbach Corp. in Vancouver,
B.C., reviewed a few of the
ideas developed by discussion
groups during the convention.
Problems cited included a need
to keep both employes and em
ployers well informed of safety
problems; the need to make
safety programs an integral part
of production; the need for
safety awareness," and the
need "to assume that man has a
continuing capacity to learn.
Robert L. Wilson, associate
professor of forest engineering
at Oregon State University, had
the job of summing up the con
ference. "We can't anticipate all the
problems that will arise in the
field of safety in the future," he
said. "But I'm convinced that
safety is largely a matter of
common sense.
Communication
Bear in mind, he said, that
safety instruction requires com
munication. At OSU, he said,
there is a sign on the wall which
states that principle: "Engage
mind before starting mouth."
"You have been presented
with much information here,"
Wilson told the delegates. "If
you don't use this information
take it home with you to re
duce accidents then I don't
think you have any place in
your particular organization."
An awards banquet was held
Friday night. The election of
conference officers and direct
ors took place Saturday morn
ing. VJnlil ' Sunduy Morning
Figurol Show tow T'm?rnlufi
Some
Clouds
Emerald Empire Weather
EUGENE-SPRINGFIELD
Forecast: Partly cloudy Sat
urday and Sunday. Low Sat
urday night, 40; high Sunday,
62. Western Oregon: Rain or
intermittent rain in the north
portion; partly cloudy and
warmer in the southern por
tion. Highs, 55-60 in the
north and 63 68 in the south;
low, 40-45. '
Statistics (readings at the
U. S. Weather Bureau, Man
Ion Sweet Airport, Eugene):
Highest temperature Friday,
54: lowest Saturday, 47; rain
In 24 hours ending 10 a.m.,
trace; total for April, .78 of
an inch; average for April,
2.38 inches', readings at 10
a.m., Saturday; humidity, 64
per cent; wind, NE5. Pre
vailing wind Friday, Sfl.O.
Stage of rivers at 7 a.m.,
Saturday, Willamette at
EWEB Steam Plant, 12.2
feet; McKonzie at Armitage
Bridge, 3.3 feet.
Sunrise and sunset: Sun
day, 5:18 a m, and 7:05 p.m.;
Monday, 5:17 a.m. and 7:06
p.m.
SEAT COVERS
CONVERTIBLE TOPS
BOAT TOPS
Gil's Surefit Store
7lh & lllalr Itlvd.
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NBC
Channel u Cable I
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S:1S All Sur Golf Roller Derby Global Zobel Bowlere Tour All SUr Golf
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8:45 All SUr Golf Roller Derby Adventure Theatre Bowlers Tour All SUr Golf
;00 SaL Nite Report Emerald Bowling Frontier Doctor Plnbustera Miami Undercover
8:18 Feature Short Emerald Bowling Frontier Doctor Plnbusters Miami Undercover
:30 Pete it Gladya Emerald Bowling The Calif ornlani Plnbustera Sat News
8:48 Pete it Gladya Emerald Bowling The Callfornlana Plnbustera Sander Vanocur
7:00 Mr. Ed Fight of Week The Third Man Fight of Week Chet Huntley
7:18 Mr Ed Fight of Week The Third Mao Fight of Week Chet Huntley
7:30 Wells Fargo Fight of Week Perry Mason Fight of Week Weils Fargo (c)
7:48 Wells Fargo Make That Spare Perry Mason Make That Spare Wells Fargo (c)
1ft: 00 Wells Fargo Calvin and Perry Mi son Calvin and CoL Wei la Fargo (c)
8:18 Wells Fargo The Colonel Perry Mason Calvin and CoL Wells Fargo (c)
8:80 Tall Man Leave It to Beaver The Defenders Leave It to Beaver Tall Man
8:48 Tall Man Leave It to Beaver The Defenders Leave It to Beaver Tall Man
8:00 Sat Movies Lawrence Welk The Defenders Lawrence Welk SaL Ntght Movies
:1B "Soldiers of Lawrence Welk The Defenders Lawrence Welk "Soldiers of
8:10 Fortune" Lawrence Welk Have Gun Lawrence Welk Fortune"
8:48 SaL Night Movies Lawrence Welk Will Travel Lawrence Welk SaL Night Movies
10:00 "at- Ntght Movies Room for One More Gunsmoka Room for One More SaL Night Movies
10:18 SaL Night Movies Room for One More Gunsmoke Room for One Mora SaL Night Movies
10:30 SaL Ntght Movtea Famous Playhouse Gunsmoke Stump The DJ's SaL Night Movies
10:48 Sat. Night Movies Famous Playhouse Gunsmoke Stump The DJ's SaL Night Movies
11:00 SaL Cinema News S Weekend Sat. Reporter Sat News Review Premiere
11:18 "Assignment In Movie Movie Movie 12 Movie
11:30 Brittany" "Best of the "Monkey On "Five Graves Movie
11:48 Movie Bad men" My Back" To Cairo" Movie
Senator Stennis: Army Should
Decide Case of Major Roberts
WASHINGTON W) Sen.
John Stennis, D-Miss., says it's
up to the Army not the Senate
to decide the case of Maj.
Archibald E. Roberts.
Stennis, who is chairman of
the subcommittee investigating
charges that military officers'
anti-Communist speeches have
been muzzled, said Friday his
committee would take no action
until the Army completed its
inquiry.
Man, Wife Die
In Same Hour
TAMPA, Fla. W) An elderly
Tampa couple, married for 62
years, died within minutes of
each other.
Doctors said both died of nat
ural causes. The man, Jacob
Lott Lightsey, 82, had been ill
for three weeks, doctors said.
He died early Friday.
His wife, Bessey Anderson
Lightsey, 71, discovered the
death a short time later and
telephoned relatives and the
family physician.
At 2:15 a.m., less than 15 min
utes after the doctor arrived,
Mrs. Lightsey died.
vV'-?DofoYroiti7V.S. Wf A"?Mf "BUM aTH
vpecfud
(AP Wlrephoto)
Partly cloudy weather is forecast for the Eugene-Springfield area
while showers and thundershowers are due Saturday night in the
upper Lakes and through the Mississippi Valley and eastern Plains
to the western Gulf area. It will be warmer in the Mississippi Valley
and southern Lakes areas while colder weather is expected to spread
into the central and southern Plains.
TKMrKBATUBKS
(24 houri ending 10 a.m.. Sat.)
Noon Friday 51 Midnight Frl. 49
2 p.m. " 54 2 a.m. Sat. 48
4 p.m. " 53 4 a.m. " 47
6 p.m. " 52 6 a.m. " 4B
B pjn. " 50 6 a.m. " 52
10 p.m. " 49 10 a.m. " M
Reading! at U.S. Weather Rureau,
ftlahlon Sweet Airport, Eugene.
OREGON
(24 houra to 4:30 a.m., Saturday)
Max. Mtn. Prep.
Ailorla 51 49 ,29
Baker 56 .12
Bend 53 2
Brooking! ... ... 61 43
Burn! 54 3 4
Klamath Fall! 53 M
l.akevlew 55 3.1
Medford 5 33
Newport 50 4 5 .03
North Bend 55 46
Pendleton 60 4.1
Portland 54 51 T
Bedmond 57 32
Koseburg 58 39 T
Salem 53 48 T
The Dallel 57 49
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TELEVISION SCHEDULES
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Channel Cable
SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1962
"The basic question involved
is whether Major Roberts vio
lated military regulations by
prior policy clearance as re
quired by established proced
ures," said Stennis in a state
ment.
Stennis said he could not con
done a breach of military dis
cipline but added he expects the
Army to give Roberts a "full,
fair and impartial" hearing.
Roberts, who served under
former Maj. Gen. Edwin A.
Walker and says he drafted
Walker's controversial pro-blue
troop indoctrination program,
was suspended by the Army
Thursday night shortly after he
gave a speech without Penta
gon clearance to the Daughters
of the American Revolution.
Roberts contends that the
United States is menaced from
KOAC Radio
550 Kilocycles
IH HI'TH'IW I
SATURDAY
6:30 Current Affaire
6:00 Newa and Weather
6:15 The Oregon Scene
7:15 Grand Opera
10:00 Sign Off
NATIONAL
Max. Mln.
Prep
.06
.04
1.00
Atlanta 65
Blimarck 74
Bolae 58
Boston . ...... 52
Chicago . 57
Denver ..... 83
Dea Molnea 51
Helena 60
Honolulu 83
38
40
33
38
49
39
72
33
63
55
69
46
51
44
63
58
51
31
46
24
49
33
49
46
39
62
39
Juneau
44
S3
73
Kansaa City ...
l.oa Angelea ...
Miami
Mlnneapolli ...
81
60
82
60
86
66
86
New Orleans ....
New York ...
Oklahoma City ...
Omaha
Phornix
Pittsburgh
56
Bapld Lily . 89
Beno 58
St. Loula 60
Salt Lake City 70
San Kranctico 60
Seattle 54
Spokane 64
Tampa . 83
Washington 51
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within by communism and says
he wants to tell his story be
fore Stennis' Armed Services
subcommittee.
"It has been said that Sen.
Stennis' investigation of mili
tary muzzling is one of the last
surviving freedom forums in
America," said Roberts. "I hope
to prove this."
Asked if Stennis' decision not
to summon him before the
group was disappointing, Rob
erts said no not so long as
he ultimately gets a chance to
testify.
Sen. Strom Thurmond, D-S.C,
whose allegations that the Pen
tagon was muzzling military of
ficers brought about the creat
tion of the Stennis subcommit
tee, said he also favored leav
ing Roberts to the Army, for
the time being anyway.
Californians Hurt
In One-Car Mishap
Two California men were hos
pitalized in Eugene Saturday
morning following a one-car
mishap on Highway 58 at the
Crescent Lake junction, east of
Willamette Pass.
Admitted to Sacred Heart
Hospital for observation were
Henry Meyer, 24, and Donald
Pisor, 24, both of Woodland
Hills, Calif. Both received lac
erations and abrasions and were
in good condition.
The two men were injured
when their car overturned.
Cause of the mishap wasn't im
mediately known.
Portlander Elected
By Editors' Group
NEW ORLEANS W) Robert
Notson, managing editor of the
Portland Oregonian, was elect
ed treasurer of the American
Society of Newspaper Editors
Friday.
The group is holding its con
vention in New Orleans.
Lee Hills, executive editor of
the Detroit Free Press and ex
ecutive editor of the Knight
newspapers, moved up to the
presidency, replacing Felix Mc-
Knight, executive editor of the
Dallas, Tex., Times Herald.
Dial-Lights
KUCN (NBC 590)
KEED (1050)
KEBO (CBS 1280)
KOBE (MBS 1450)
KP1B (1500)
HASH (ABC 1600)
SATURDAY EVENING
NEWS
KUGN-, .
KEED 5 minutes to every hour.
KERG 5, 5:15, 6, 7, 8, 9.
KORE 5:30.
KPIR 4:45.
SPORTS
KUGN 45 minutes on every hour.
KASH 5:35.
HIGHLIGHTS
KUGN 7, World Tomorrow.
KERG 6:15, Lifeline! 7:10, World
of Jais
KORE 5, Square Dancara; 6. Hawaii
KASH-915. storkllnei.
DON'T MOVE
Phone DI 4-3682 lor FREE Estimates
100 FHA or
Conventional Financing JktkJ mJ
Room Addition Specialists
Room
Additions I
Kitchen . I
n.mocounq r
ratios
Painting
Papering
AM work done by
contractors
Eugene
450 W. Broadway
Television Previews
'Defenders' Tops
Tonight's best bet for tele
vision entertainment is "The
Defenders," which will be
shown at 8:30 on Channel 6.
Once again Lawrence Preston
finds himself acting as defense
attorney in a kangaroo court,
this time in a good show titled
"Reunion With Death." A crew
of a bomber shot down during
the Korean War feels one of
their men was a traitor. The
whole play takes place in a ho
tel room and it's a tribute to
writer, director and actors that
it holds audience interest from
start to finish. All performances
are good but Leonard Stone as
Movies
8 p.m., (2) "The Men."
Marlon Brando, Teresa Wright,
Jack Webb. Paralyzed war vet
tries to adjust to society with
out the use of his limbs.
Brando's first film and a superb
one. Dramatic, persuasive, with
fine work in every department.
(1950 excellent).
8:30 p.m. (13-8) .Soldier of
Fortune." Clark Gable, Susan
Hayward. Just another routine
adventure story set in Hong
Kong. This production is hand
somely mounted and has name
stars but it can't disguise the
commonplace plot. (1955 fair).
Beginning of re-runs for sum
mer. 11 p.m. (13) "Assignment In
Brittany." Pierre Aumont, Su
san Peters. Secret agent dis
guised as a Nazi bears the usual
"amazing" resemblance, goes to
France and scores a victory for
the underground. Trite melo
drama. (1942 fair).
11 p.m., (8) "Easter Parade."
Judy Garland, Fred Astaire,
Ann Miller. Forget the plot and
enjoy the talented cast-perform
ing 17 Irving Berlin tunes and
you have more than enough.
(1947-good).
11:15 p.m. (6) "Monkey On
My Back." Cameron Mitchell,
Dianne Foster. Often interesting
dramatized biography of boxer
Barney Ross, his early rise to
fame in the ring, his high spend
ing days as a gambler, his
heroic career in the Marines
during World War II; and his
eventual downfall to narcotics
addiction and his struggle to
"kick the habit." Brutal at times
in its realism, with helpful per
formance from Mitchell. (1957
good).
11:15 p.m. (9) "Best of the
Badmen." Randolph Scott, Rob
ert Ryan. Marshal goes after the
Sundance Kid, who heads a
murderous band of outlaws.
Fairly good western. (1948
iair).
11:15 p.m. (12) "Five Graves
to Cairo." Franchot Tone, Anne
Baxter. Tedious comedy about a
soldier who loses his outfit and
promptly outwits the Nazis in
North Africa. Distinguished by
Erich Von Stroheim's portrayal
of General Rommel. (1943
fair).
KATU-TV
Channel 2
SATURDAY
6:00 City Hall Reports
6:30 The Deputy
7:00 Championship Bowling
8:002 For the Show
B:30 Doug Baker'a Notebook
10:00 World and Northwest at Ten
10:15 Play of the Week
12:15 News, Weather, Meditations
12:35 Sign-Off
Beautiful Shower Doors
and Tub Enclosures
MIDGLEYS
MILLWORK & GLASS
4th & High DI 3-1131
NO
job
TOO
LARGE
or TOO
SMALL
loco?
ill-If
Pacific Construction
the plane's captain is particu
larly good.
Other Saturday previews:
7 p.m. Opening at Century 21
(2) An hour-long broadcast
will highlight the opening day
activities of the World's Fair at
Seattle. Twenty-one television
cameras were used to cover the
official opening ceremonies and
to take viewers on a capsule
tour of the fair.
7:30 p.m., Boxing (9-12) Joe
Brown of Baton Rouge, La., de
fends his world lightweight
title against Carlos Ortiz of
New York City in a 15-round
bout live from Convention Hall,
Las Vegas, Nev.
8:30 p.m., Leave It To Beaver
(912) No real crisis here to
night, just a normal incident in
a boy's life. Beaver gets a new
typewriter and hopes to make
his schoolwork neater, but he
finds typing is hard to learn
and soon he finds he is paying
Eddie Haskell a dollar to type
his work. Things finally come
to the point where he has to
pay Eddie weekly or do the job
himself. As usual, Eddie steals
the show even though he's only
on for a few moments.
10 p.m., Gunsmoke (6) Some
action in this leisurely series to
night when a gunman sets up
an ambush for Marshal Dillon.
One of the plotters for the am
bush is a girl and the good mar
shal bites. It's a wonder this
isn't the last show of the series
Russell Asks
Neutrals to Act
LONDON Wl Earl Bertrand
Russell Saturday urged the
leaders of eight nonaligned na
tions to dispatch their naval
and merchant fleets to the
Christmas Island area of the
Pacific in defiance of U.S. nu
clear tests expected to be car
ried out there this month.
The philosopher, 89, leader
of a British campaign against
nuclear tests, sent cables to the
chiefs of state of India, Ghana,
Mexico, Sweden, Yugoslavia,
the United Arab Republic, Bra
zil and Indonesia.
"The full-scale resumption of
nuclear tests imperils man
kind," Russell said in his ap
peal. "The great powers vio
late international law with their
ruthless behavior. I appeal to
the neutral countries to act in
the name of man."
c s
ELECTRIC
Has Moved To..
507
Willamette
across from the Post Office
HOW'S YOUR
irv
Come in Monday and
see why General Elec
tric is more trouble
free than other brands.
EUGENE
PLANING MILL
3rd & Lawrence DI 5-8773
I lit Till"- I .
TtiifciriiiiiiniM i
DI 4-3682
TV Fare
but Dillon manages to get out
nf thp u-rnns
10 p.m., Room For One More
(9-12) An episode very much
in keeping with the theme of
the series, this one is titled
"Too Many Parents." Mrs. Rose
takes on a foster child only
temporarily, hoping to place
him with one of her friends.
The child has a bad habit of
running away, but she eventu
ally finds two homes simultane
ously which creates some pleas
ant confusion.
I l GENE KOCII
FASTER COOKING on your present
electric range with new
The elements used by most manufacturers
as original equipment
Will tit GE, Westinghouse, Frigidahe,
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U0 Shifts Date
Of Spring Finals
The University of Oregon has
moved up .the date for begin
ning Spring term final examina
tions two days to avoid conflict
with Alumni Day scheduled for
June 9.
The examinations will begin
Saturday, June 2, instead of
Monday, June 4, so that exams
will end on Friday, June 8.
GUILD GUITARS
.Magnatone and Ampeg
Amplifiers
Chester Pietka
1251 Lincoln
Eugene Accordion Center
Koch Refrigeration
3800 Coburg Road DI 4-6422
GENE KOCH says call for details on the
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11
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