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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1962)
Page 2A EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Friday, July 13, 1962 Arms Negotiations' Nearing Stalemate Now in Progress! OPEN DAILY 8:30 .M. FRIDAY NIGHTS TILL 10 P.M. ill By JOHN M. IIIGHTOWER Of the Associated Preji WASHINGTON Berlin set tlement talks between the Unit ed States and Russia seem to be grinding to a standstill. East West negotiations on disarma ment similarly appear on the verge of stalemate. Secretary of State Dean Rusk discussed both issues Thursday with Soviet Ambassador Anato y Dobrynin. The hour-and-45-minule talk failed to yield any progress on cither problem. Just before the meeting Rusk said that if the Soviet govern ment continues to insist on dis cussing only the problem of how to reduce or to eliminate western positions in Berlin "then there is no basis for seri ous negotiations in that direc tion." On disarmament he is report ed to have asked the Soviet gov Brazilian Chamber To Vote on Cabinet BRASILIA, Brazil Ml The Chamber of Deputies was to decide Friday whether to accept a predominantly non-political cabinet and end the government crisis that prompted President Kennedy to postpone his visit to Brazil for the second time in a year. The deputies were summoned into special session to vote on the list of ministers submitted by Prime Minister Francisco Brochado da Rocha. Approval would give Brazil a cabinet for the first lime in 17 days. Rejection would force Rocha to quit and renew the deadlock between the Conservative-dominated Parliament and President ' 1 Joao Goulart, whose Labor par- Single-Party Rule Urged By Ben Bella ORAN, Algeria 111 Deputy Premier Ahmed Ben Bella, flushed by the triumph of his return, has demanded single party rule for Algeria, hacked by the army which regards him as a hero from the war for Independence from France. In his first major address alnce his return, Ben Bella told a cheering throng Thursday: "Wo must have a single, dis ciplined party to achieve the aims of our revolution, not sev eral parties. We will not permit a return to the sterile game of the old parly system." Ben Bella made it clear he wants a one-party system based on the National Council of the Algerian revolution which in cludes many officers opposed to moderate Premier Ben Youssef ben Khcdda. His aides hinted that talks in Rabat between rival Algerian factions failed to produce agree ment and that Ben Bella is in no hurry to proceed to Algiers for talks with Ben Khcdda and oth er members of the provisional government. Instead of going on to Algiers ho returned to Tlem ccn, 40 miles east of tho Moroc can border, Thursday night. Aides said his further plans were uncertain. Ben Khcdda favors close links with France. Ben Bella has in sisted on Arab nationalism as a revolutionary theme. Services Set For Engineer TORTLAND wi Funeral services are scheduled in Port land Saturday for Albert G. Skelton, 65, former Portland division engineer for tho state Highway Department. Ho died in a hospilal Thurs day after a long illness. Skelton, who relired in 1960 after serving more than 40 years with the department, also held the rank of Marine Corps brigadier general. He was active in the Oregon National Guard until li57. Survivors include the widow, Helen; a son. Hohert N , Port land; a daughter, Mrs. Suzanne Nipp, San Mateo. Calif.: a broth er, Joe L. Skelton. Salem; a sister, Mary V. Skelton, Corval lis; and four grandsons. Following the funeral, there will be private burial cere monies at Independence. Trip for Funds DAR ES SALAAM. Tanganyi ka (.f! Agricultural Minister lerck Noel Hrycoon is to leave July 17 for a tour of Europo and the United Slates to raise financial help (or this East Afri can nation. Koch GENE KOCU ernment through Dobrynin that it reviews its opposition to in ternational inspection as a means of safeguarding an arms cut agreement and thus try to find "some way to take some steps to get on with disarma ment." Moscow Speech Earlier this week Soviet Pre mier Khruchchcv insisted in a speech in Moscow that U.S., British and French troops must be removed from West Berlin. The real reason the Western powers want international in spection is to obtain espionage information in the Soviet Un ion, he said. U. S. officials privately sec prospect of breaking the dead lock between the U.S. position reflected by Rusk and the So viet policies stated by Khrush chev. Nevertheless as Rusk said Thursday, they expect talks to ty is in tho minority. Rocha represents Goulart's third attempt in the past two weeks to form a new govern ment to deal with Brazil's deep ening economic troubles marked in recent days by food riots which left more than a dozen persons dead. Rocha is a member of the middle-of-the-road Social Demo cratic party and his nomination to the prime minister's post won overwhelming approval from the chamber last Monday. But this was not considered a guarantee he could get approval for his program or his cabinet. In presenting his choices for cabinet posts to the chamber Thursday night, Rocha promised to put ; forth immediately an emergency plan to deal with tho growing problems ot Latin America's biggest nation. He said the program will include "short term solutions" to such problems as food shortages, spiraling inflation and agrarian and institutional reform. The governmental crisis be gan late last month when Prime Minister Tancrcdo Neves and his cabinet resigned to become eligible under the constitution to run for re-election to Parlia ment. Goulart first nominated Neves' foreign minister, Fran cisco San Tiago Dantcs to suc ceed him. But many conserva tive deputies considered Dantcs too friendly toward Castro's Cuba and his nomination was rejected. Goulart then named a con servative, Senate President Auro Moura dc Andrade, whom the chamber approved. But An drade quit after only 36 hours in office in a dispute with Goulart over selection of min isters for the air force and navy. Employes Approve Union Representation PORTLAND Mi The Nation al Labor Relations Board em nounccd Thursday that em ployes havo voted for union representation at two Portland firms. At Allied Plating Co., em ployes voted 24-12 for repre sentation by the International Machinists, AFL C10. At Port land Ice & Cold Storage Co., the Teamsters' Dairy Ice and Ice Cream local won 4 to 2 with one vote void. A building does not erist . . . that cannot be air conditioned with . . . Chrysler Air-Temp Sre C&B ELECTRIC & APPLIANCE RI 6-SMS 1970 Main, Springfield Refrigeration j 3800 Coburq Road DI 4 6422 GENE KOCH says set the dial and for get it! Heating. Cooling air condition tng . . . complete trouble-free indoor com fort with the famous . . . WRIGHT-rWP HEAT PUMP continue on the ground that both Moscow and Washington prefer to maintain contracts on i major world issues even if their ! efforts at agreement get no I where. Rusk is due to go over mych the same ground with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gro i myko at a meeting in Geneva toward the end of next week. The two are scheduled to go to Geneva to sign final accords on the neutralization of Laos. State Department Press Of ficer Lincoln White said Rusk and Dobrynin covered Berlin and disarmament and men tioned Laos. White said the meeting was preliminary to the Rusk-Gromyko conference. Disarmament talks which be gan at Geneva last March in a 17-nation conference are sched uled to resume next Monday after a month-long recess. Rusk declared at his news conference that U.S. Ambassador Arthur H. Dean was returning to Gen eva for serious negotiations and he added: "We hope some how that we can find a way to get started on this process of turning down the arms race." 'Major Obstacle' But he said that Khrushchev had "seemed to confuse inter national inspection . . . with espionage." "This is a major obstacle which has to be overcome," Rusk said, "because it is diffi cult to see how we can take the road toward disarmament without effective insurance that the agreements are in fact be ing kept." Talking about his exchange of views with Gromyko and Dobrynin on the Berlin issues, Rusk said the Russians have ex cluded "a great many things which are of interest to us." He cited as examples "the permanent peace settlement for Germany as a whole ... or ar rangements with respect to Ber lin as a whole." "If the only thing that is to be discussed is Western inter est, vital interests," he con tinued, "and the only purpose of such discussion is to serious ly reduce or to eliminate West ern positions, then there is no basis for serious negotiations in that direction." i a . Deaths Held Accidental JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. un Funeral services are scheduled Sunday for former Gov. and Mrs. James T. Blair who were killed by carbon monoxide fumes at their home Wednesday night. Services will be at Jefferson City's First Presbyterian church. Sheriff Horace Debo said au thorities agreed the deaths were accidental. The former governor apparently left tho motor run ning when he put their car in Iho garage about 7:30 p.m. An air-conditioning unit in the ga rage circulated the fumes through the house. Blair, who was 60, had been a leader of Missouri Democrats almost 40 years. He served as governor from 1956 to 1960. Fits Standard IWCasement Windows NEW 1942 oma dd U40TU POWEREUE ROOM AIR CONDITIONER Ttui capacity iutwgi INEMV! ImImm Wal NifdNM ' OSkTk tfttt4 fer Natal dactmal Avtomortc TWwoitrt Jwtt t ktf i Wi Watfcabto Pittvr Sff thf KOLPWAVE today! a at CALL ONE Ctf JHESE DEALERS Starmer Refrigeration mnnr Kl 1-9.M , e King RcfrigAation - mime Mt-IIM 0 tocPhceten Electric Cj. mom r mil .".'fri'i-i X lodcl lH7sa' mi 1 Hopes To See Winnie Engineer Blames Brakes Rail Wreck Cause Matter of Dispute MISSOULA, Mont. Ml The engineer of a passenger train which crashed last month in Western Montana says brake failure was responsible. But his opinion was disputed Thursday by Carl H. Burgess, a Northern Pacific Railway vice president. Burgess tertified at an Interstate Commerce Com mission hearing that the wreck was caused by the negligence of the crew. Engineer Eldcn Lynn of Mis soula said he closed the throttle of the Northern Pacific North Coast Limited and three times tried to brake the train without effect. One child was killed and more than 200 persons were injured as 15 cars of the 17-car Seattle to Chicago train sped off the tracks on a mountain grade northwest of here June 10. Lynn's testimony,- recorded earlier at a closed company probe into the wreck, was en tered as evidence as the hearing closed. Lynn and his fireman, Gerald Haines of Missoula, did not testify at the two-day ICC hear ing, walking out of the session with their attorney early Thurs day. The attorney, Jay Kurtz, ob jected to introduction of testi mony on the train's speed. Rail way officials said it was travel ing at 87-89 miles an hour when it plunged off Evcro hill. The speed limit on the grade is 30 miles an hour. The descent is about 50 feet per mile on the eight-mile grade, steepest on the NP line. Burgess, of St. Paul, testified the derailment was caused by negligence of the crew. He said at your fingertips Come On In . . . The Weather's Fine The weather is just the way YOU WANT IT when your home is air conditioned. TOTAL air conditioning cools in the summer, heats in the winter, cleans the air and dehumidilies. Your family will live belter, feel better and live a more comfortable life ALL YEAR ROUND. COMPLETE air conditionin-i can be installed at low costs especially during construction of your home. Don't put it'or . . see your Air Conditioning Con tractor or dealer soon. ' Electric Association w OF P.O. Box WMMmnEIMmtA (AP Wlrepboto) Bernard Baruch, 91-year-old U.S. finan cier, looks from his car at London air port Thursday after flying from Geneva to see the ailing Sir Winston Churchill when the wartime premier's condition permits. Sir Winston, 87, was reported improved Friday at the London hospital where he has been recuperating from a thigh fracture. ' there was no indication of me-1 chanical malfunction. i An NP doctor, John A. Evert, said blood tests indicated the engineer was under the influ ence of alcohol when he took command of the train about 2V4 hours before the crash. The engineer and firemen were identified by witnesses Wednesday as being patrons of two taverns before taking con trol of the train. However, Lynn claimed he had only one beer. W. P. Kennclley of Seattle, superintendent of motive power for the NP, said the 6,003 horscpowcr diesel locomotive must have been wide open when the luxury train left the tracks. Rex Bell's Will Filed LAS VEGAS, Nev. LB Lt. Gov. Rex Bell left the bulk of his estate to two sons and made no bequest to his widow, former movie star Clara Bow. In a will filed for probate Wednesday, Bell's estate was estimated only as "in excess of $10,000." The will, dated Nov. 17, 1961, mentioned Miss Bow, the one time "It Girl," only in a clause declaring, "I am married to Clara Bow Bell, but ... we have lived separate and apart for many years." Miss Bow has lived in seclu sion for 10 years or more in the Los Angeles area. However, she came out last Monday to attend a second funeral service for i Bell, conducted in Glcndale, Calif. The initial rites were con ducted in Las Vegas. -- LANE COUNTY. INC. . 321 Eugene, Oregon ANNIVERSARY FAMOUS MAKER HIDE - Early American $219 SALE PRICED FREE DRAWING REGISTER 48 WINNERS $2000 IN plus ... iiirnii other stovewide values ... 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