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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1963)
Page 2A EUGENE REGISTER De Gaulle, Adenauer Open Talks in Paris By JOSEPH E. DYNAN Of th Associated Preu PARIS French President Charles de Gaulle began Mon day a drive to win West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer over to the idea of a continen tal European "third force" un der French-German leadership. Adenauer was under strong pressure from his ministers, his parliament and West German public opinion to advise De Gaulle to keep the door open for British membership in the Common Market and to recon sider the American plan for a NATO nuclear force. The two old statesmen opened three days of talks at the Elysce Palace. The first busi ness was the new agreement for closer French-German coopera tion in the political, defense and cultural domains. Both men view this as a ve hicle to end hereditary French German bitterness for all time. Signing of the agreement origi Unification Talks Ashed by Ulbricht i BERLIN W-Va!tr Ulbricht, East German Communist lead er, ended his party's sixth congress Monday with warning to West Germany not to put too much trust m the United States. -The spade-bearded Red chieftain said events iii Cuba have shown there is a new power in the world the United States can not: defy. He made plain he meant that power is the Soviet Union. ; Ulbricht asked for talks with West Germany on a basis of - U.S. Dilemma Seen as Key By Viet Cong SAIGON, South Vict Nam '() A captured document indi cates the Communists hope to wrest eventual victory in Viet Nam through what the Reds call indecision in Washington of the scale of American intervention. Authoritative sources here re sard the document, dated Sept. 25, 10152, as genuine and of great importance in evaluating Red strategy. It apparently is a sort of Vict Cong annual report. America's dilemma on the size of forces it should commit, the document says, "is the key weak ness in U.S. -South Vietnamese efforts against the Communists." The document says that the United States is afraid of com mitting large numbers of troops because that would invite inter vention by the Communist bloc of nations and bring about a world war. The result may be that "the enemy may get bogged down," the document continues. "There fore they may bo compelled to negotiate and compromise. If negotiations and a temporary compromise take place, wo will have made an important step to ward victory." Tho document said that a set tlement liko the formula which neutralized Laos or like the Al gerian victory over tho French would be satisfactory to tho Vict Cong. Portlanders Win Operatic Auditions PORTLAND Hi Tenor Wil liam J. Hazclbauer, 26; soprano Valerie Ann Bnhm, 26; and mezzo-soprano Helen Bolton, 24, won Sunday in Oregon district competition for tho annual Metropolitan Opera Auditions, All are from Portland. They will participate in Northwest Region Auditions at Seattle Feb. 3. Winners then go on to New York for further competition. 245 Stores Burn SEOUL. South Korea W - blaze Monday destroyed 245 stores and 30 homes in a mar kct area of Mokpo, a port city 200 miles south of here, press reports said. Some 300 persons wore reported homeless and damag!' was csimatcd at; J.770, 000. lio casualties were re ported. Wardrobe Cleaners "CASH LADIES' SUITS (Men's Shirts, Sweaters . Pacts. Skirls (Plain) 69' 59 - GUARD, Monday, Jan. 21. IMS nally was the chief purpose of Adenauer's visit. But De Gaulle's rejection last week of the U.S. proposal for a .ATO nuclear force and his opposition to British entry into the Com mon Market gave his talks with Adenauer a new meaning. Adenauer's foreign minister, Gerhard Schroeder, who accom panied the chancellor to Paris, said just before leaving Bonn that West Germany will "work with all our power" for Britain's entry into the European Eco nomic Community (EEC). West Germany also has ap proved President Kennedys plan for a NATO nuclear force and is ready to participate in it. Until now West Germany gen erally has approved Kennedy's "grand design" for European union and eventual Atlantic partnership in contrast with the Gaullist concept of a tightly knit group of the six Common Market countries. De Gaulle wants to build this equality with a view to federal. ing the two parts of the country and eventually reunifying them. This is an old demand, repeat edly rejected in the West. East Germany's satellite regime rules 17 million people a third as many as there are in West Germany and has never held a free election. ' The windup came after a week highlighted by the clash between Khrushchev and the Communist Chinese for leader ship of the world Communist movement. Chinese delegate Wu Hsiu chan was in his front row scat for Ulbricht's address. In Moscow, the Soviet Com munist party newspaper Pravda published tor the first time al most the complete text of Wu's speech to the congress last Fri day, attacking Soviet policies. BERLIN OD West Berlin po lice said they heard an explo sion early Monday in East Ber lin. The noise came from the East Berlin borough of Pankow, across from the French sector of West Berlin. A policeman who reported the blast described it as of medium strength but he could not pin point wnere u wem on. Commission Sets Hearing SALEM A hearing has been scheduled Feb. 26 here on an application of Pacific Motor Trucking, a subsidiary of South ern Pacific Co., for authoriza tion to extend service to areas west of Eugene. The hearing will be before the public utility commissioner. The Pacific Motor Trucking application has been protested by Oceanway Transport of Flor ence and Siuslaw Motor Trans port of Eugene. The trucking company is seek ing authority to make regular runs between Eugene and Cush man near the coast and return via Route F and Highway 36. It would provido service for all intermediate points. Service would be extended to points one mile from the road and to the Vaughn community. Service to Mapleton and Veneta would not be included, the PUC explained. Cardinal Resting LONDON Ul William Card inal Godfrey, 73. "had a fair night but his general condition is unchanged," a spokesman at his home said Monday. The Roman Catholic archbishop of Westminster suffered a mild heart attack Saturday night. ' McAYEALS AND CARRY SAVES YOU DRESSES (PLAIN) COATS and W omen's) CLEANED ONLY 10 $139 LBS. JL FIVE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS TO 768 E. 11th 24th & Hilyard it 7th & Lincoln Drive-la 17tb snd Willamette group around a special French German partnership. German sources said Adcnaeur intends to resist French proposals for a sort of inner bilateral alliance They said he would tell De Gaulle: 1, West Germany sees no rca son to break off the negotia- tions of British entry into the Common Market, a position shared by the other four EEC nations. 2. West Germany approves President Kennedy s NATO nu clear force plan and intends to participate in it. 3. West Germany earnestly wants closer cooperation with France, especially on the cut tural level, but will not sign any exclusive political-military treaty with Pans. The French and the West Germans arc prepared to agree that closer French-German co operation is an "indispensable precondition to the unification of Europe, and that further European unity is the mutual aim of their respective policies. While De Gaulle and Adc- nacur planned to confer most of the time with only intepret- crs present, their ministers scheduled separate conferences on the details of future Franch- German cooperation. The talks are expected to end Wednesday noon with the sign ing of a series of administrative agreements on future coopera tion, including exchanges of military officers; joint maneu vers, and student exchange pro grams. 1 Rocket Shift Under Study WASHINGTON Wt The United States and Turkey are now considering the replace ment of Jupiter missiles de ployed on NATO bases in the strategically important Middle East country with the Polaris, authoritative sources reported Monday.. ' Since the Polaris is used from submarines, this would mean the closing down of land bases In Turkey, officials explained. They said that although discus sions are in a preliminary stage, the Turkish government ap pears to be satisfied with the U. S. suggestion. The whole process is within the framework of modernizing the weapons system at the dis posal of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and is be ing discussed by NATO organs, officials said. Officially Washington is re luctant to go beyond the ver sion of modernization, the same word used in the joint commu nique issued after the recent talks between President Kenne dy and Italy's Prime Minister Fanfani. There are a reported 30 Jupiters in Italy, and 58 in Turkey. Both the Jupiter and the Po laris are IRBM (intermediate range ballistic missiles) with a range of approximately 1,000 miles. Chinese A-Bomb Cited by Official TOKYO (AwThe director of Japan's Defense Agency has re ceived information that Red China has two nuclear devices but hasn't tested them and may need at least 10 years to turn them into practical weapons, spokesman said Saturday. The newspaper Yomiuri quoted informed sources as say ing the Red Chinese might even have four atomic bombs by now. The defenso spokesman said the director, Kenjiro Shiga, told Defense Agency officials of his information, the subject also was discussed at a meeting of the U.S.-Japan security con sultative committee Saturday.) Shiga, the spokesman re ported, said Red China is ex pected to test one of the de vices this year, but would need at least 10 years to arm her self with nuclear weapons even if tests are successful. MONEY" $H 25 Cleined tod PresMd DRESS SHIRTS LAUNDERED 4 ro, whtn accompanied with tny dry elMnlnt order SERVE YOV 10th & Olive I i I it , (AP Wlrephoto) Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hudgins of Livermore, Calif., with their two CI li children, Richard, 5, and Carol, 3, leave a large underground shelter Shelter Sunclay after a 36-hour survival test with 23 other families. A total of 92 persons were involved in the weekend test. The steel and pp 1 concrete, fallout shelter was constructed as a joint project by 34 1 eSteCl families. Hudgins, a nuclear physicist on the staff of the Livermore Radiation Laboratory, said the test was a complete success. It in ' , eluded a nine-hour period with ventilation system closed off. 25 Families In Weekend LIVERMORE, Calif. (UPB Ninety-two men, women and children spent 36 hours in an underground fallout shelter near Livermore during the weekend. They emerged Sun day, cold but otherwise healthy. The experiment was the first full-scale shelter drill of Survival Associates, Inc. Tak ing part were 50 adults and 42 children, ranging in age Mental Health Chapter Studied Representatives of many Eu gene professional and civic or ganizations will meet Tuesday noon at the Eugene Hotel to consider formation of a local mental health association. Mrs. Leonard Jacobson, a rep resentative of the state board of the Mental Health Assn. of Ore gon, said that the local unit probably would become a branch of the state association if it is formed. She said the primary function of the Eugene branch would be educational, acting as a resource for information about mental health in this area. .W 41 For reiterations Old Hermitage has srown in favor with the growth of the West. Westerners like things straight. Old Hermitage is straight Kentucky bourbon aged to perfection. Westerners like honesty. It is honestly made, honest in value. Tonight, try smooth Old Hermitage, respected by the West since 1869. THE OLD HERMITAGE V7 N "At Participate Shelter Drill from five months to 65. Duane Sewell, a nuclear physicist at the University of California's Livermore Radia tion Laboratory and vice pres ident of Survival Associates, pronounced the experiment a complete success. "I wouldn't hesitate to take 150 people in there for three weeks," he said. The 25 parti cipating families entered the - shelter at 8 p.m. Friday and came out at 8 a.m. Sunday. The shelter, which cost $50, 000, is 125 feet long and 25 feet wide, with a concrete floor, steel ceiling and 34 one family compartments measur ing seven by seven feet. The shelter temperature ranged between 55 and 62. The ground temperature out side was 42 when they emerged Sunday. Individual families used hot plates to cook their own meals, con sisting of cooked wheat, rais ins, chicken noodles, coffee and canned milk. Most of the participants in the experiment are attached to the Livermore laboratory. Family memberships in the corporation cost $1,600 plus $10 a month dues for taxes and upkeep. When you grow up in the West... you grow up to gfiennitage! j m. - j - iu OlSTtLLEBV CO., tOUISVUUE, KY 88 PROO Y i Labor Party Seeks Chief LONDON Wl Labor Party figures assembled Monday in the anterooms of the House of Commons to plan the election of a leader to fill Hugh Gaits kell's place. Informants said private dis cussions in party circles thus far have been marked by a pro fessed desire by various groups to avoid a major clash of per sonalities or a reopening of the old leftwing-rightwing split. Gaitskell, who died Friday, had succeeded in the last months of his life in giving the opposition Labor Party a sense of unity it had not possessed since its big 1945 election vic tory. The list of likely successors to Gaitskell includes the present deputy leader, George Brown, 48; - Harold Wilson, 46, the party's expert on forign affairs; James Callaghan, 50, the finan cial expert; Patrick Gordon Walker, 55, a defense expert, and Sir Frank Soskice, 60. The Labor party elects its chieftain, with the balloting done by Laborites serving in Parliament. The process will take about two weeks. v c 1 HSfJUHf U UNTVCKT H U WHISKCT j, V feilItiM!$46Qt One of 'Worst' Winters Snow, Winds Whip Shivering England LONDON Ut Freezing winds and snow whipped across Britain Monday, burying the shivering country deeper in one of its worst wintors in recorded history. After almost a month of bliz zards, record cold and searching winds, the nation was running short of fuel and electric power. Its railroads were struggling and its road network was in chaos. More than 100 major high ways in 80 of Britain's 86 coun tries were blocked by snow drifts and treacherous ice. Vir tually the entire country lay beneath a thickening crust of Three Killed On Highways Br United Preu International Three persons lost their lives in traffic accidents in Oregon during the weekend. Otis Buffman, 36, Hermiston, was killed when his pickup truck went off State Highway 32 and overturned near Hermiston Saturday night. ' A 56-year-old woman died in a one-car accident on the Red wood Highway near Grants Pass Saturday. The victim was Mrs. Gertrude Glidden of Selma. Rodney Morrison, 22, Beaver ton, was killed when his sports car overturned and crushed him near Beavcrton early Saturday. In addition, Mrs. Florence Nelson, 59, Portland, died at a hospital Sunday where she had been under treatment for in juries suffered when she was hit by a car in Portland Dec. 30. LYONS JANUARY SALE OF RCA WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES MUCH LESS when you THAN ZUU trade ' slightly over $200 without trade . RCA WHIRLPOOL REFRIGERATOR Large across-top freezer super storage drawer full width porcelain crisper, quiet sealed unit. MANY OTHER MODELS ALL WASHER PRICES REDUCED! Dial NORMAL for regulars, GENTLE for ilfllr.ln, ir WASH'n WEAR for "no iron" fabrics. ( InthM rnm nit so clean . . . thanks to the exclusive Surjllalnr ft mllalor that creates a unique "million" current water srtinn. Its sure and see it today. OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 9 1203 Willamette snow that has been there since Christmas. The Thames River froze bank to bank at Kingston. It was the first time since 1895 that the river has frozen so far down stream. Searchers looked for three men feared dead beneath avalanches in the Pennine hills of northern England. Snow and ice on runways forced British European Air lines to cancel 44 flights out ot London Airport Sunday. Trains between London and the suburbs ran hours late. Ths intense cold froze the wheels of some trains to the tracks. Italy also continued to take a beating from the weather. Freezing temperatures gripped the peninsula after a weekend of snow and rain. Four persons died in unheatcd homes. Venice's lagoon was frozen over. Icicles formed on Rome's famous fountains. In the Appen nines, snowdrifts and landslides disrupted road and rail traffic. Several villages were isolatei Dorm Councils Protest Fee Hike CORVALLIS (UPD The Worn-" en's Intcrhall Council and Men's Interdormitory Council at Ore gon State University have an nounced opposition to a pro posed $40 a year increase in meal costs. In a joint statement the two groups said they would con tinue the opposition "as long as the service and the quality of meals" do not improve. T. F. Adams, director of dor mitories, said the increase is needed because student and civil service employes are seek ing higher wages. 3-CYCLE, 3-TEMP AUTOMATIC WASHER $198 No Trade NrM Dl 5-0388