Warning Issued on Fish From Great Lakes
Hatfield Defends
Choice of Nov. 11
To Open Session
PORTLAND (UPI) - Gov.
Mark Hatfield, returning from
speaking engagements in
Arizona and California, said Fri
day he was surprised at criti
cism of opening Oregon's
special legislative session on
Veteran's Day, Nov. 11.
"There wasn't any vacation
taken on the battlefront," h e
remarked at Portland Interna
tional Airport after arriving
from San Francisco.
Hatfield said he expects a S
io 10 day legislative session,
based on discussions with the
presiding officers of the two
legislative bodies.
"If the legislators restrict
themselves to the single issue
of carrying out the people's will
as expressed in the tax referen
dum, there is no reason why
they can't complete the session
in that time," he remarked.
In San Francisco Friday tht
governor told the Common
wealth Club he believes former
vice president Richard A. Nix
on is an "active" candidate for
the presidential nomination in
1064.
"Nixon is on the track and
running fast," Hatfield said.
He said he believes the 1060
Republican standard bearer's
name will be entered in the
New Hampshire primary next
spring. He also said he thought
that primary would be a wide
open race with each potential
GOP candidate drawing support.
Anti-Bias Law
Put On Ballot
SEATTLE (UPI) - An anti
segregation open-housing ordi
nance was referred by the Se
attle City Council Friday to a
vote of the people next March
10.
The measure would make it
a crime, punishable by a $500
fine, to refuse to rent, lease or
sell housing because of race,
religion, color, ancestry or na
tional origin.
The proposal, written for the
council by a Human Rights
Commission established last
July, was shorn of its emergen
cy clause, which would have
made it effective as soon as the
council adopted it, and then, on
a motion by council president
Floyd Miller, it was referred to
the voters "without petition."
The 7-2 vote came after
a day-long hearing on the bill.
The action disappointed pro
ponents of the ordinance, but
Ihe opponents, represented at
the council meeting mostly by
realty men and apartment
house owners, were elated
3 (
am .403. r ?tz -m.Tr
p
STUDY RESCUE CAPSULE Relatives of
trapped iron ore miners look over a one-man
rescue capsule at the Lcngcdc-Broislcdt mine,
10 miles south of Peine, Germany, as rescuers
tried Friday to reach men imprisoned in the
flooded mine. Later hope for 39 of the men
was abandoned, but rescue Ucams still were
trying to rcacn four otners tnat might still
be alive. (Story on Page 1A), (UPI)
Douglas-Home Opens Fighting
Campaign for Commons Seat
PERTH, Scotland (UPI) -Prime
Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home
Saturday opened a
fighting campaign tor a House
of Commons seat with the state
ment he had helped bring the
world back from the brink of
war three times during his ca
reer as Foreign Secretary.
"The occasions," he told
newsmen later at a press con
ference, "were Laos, Berlin 111
months ago, and the other one
was Cuba. Our role in Cuba was
to sustain the United Slates in
the position they had taken."
But now, he said, there Is a
chance "we have crossed Ihe
Page 2A
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watershed of danger."
Douglas-Home', who must win
the seat In Commons if he is to
servo cttectivcly as Prime Min
ister, outlined a seven-point do
mestic program he pledged
would put Britain in the "van of
progress" in contrast to Ihe La
bor party's pie-in-thc-sky a'p
proach. Sir Alee, speaking to a rally
in Ihe bullring o( the Perth auc
tion market, gave a sweeping
roveiw of the "peace and pros
perity" policies he hopes will
win the next general election for
his Conservative government.
Summing up his domestic pro
gram he pledged modernization
of industry, an expanded science
program, expanded higher edu
cation programs, stepped up
home building and slum clear
ance and increased health and
old age benefits. His seventh
point was "we shall see that no
pai't of the kingdom is left out
of Ihe general prosperity."
The 60-year-old Scottish aris
tocrat put the main emphasis in
his speech on domestic policy
Ihe area in which the opposition
Laboritcs have attacked the
hardest.
But he emphasized the na
tion's future depends "on our
ability to maintain peace in the
worm, lie said tne partial nir
clear test ban treaty was a step
forwards towards better East-
West relations and said "there
is a chance that we may have
crossed the watershed of dan
ger m our relations with the So
viet Union."
! Layoff Of Employes
I Would Be Expensive
! PORTLAND (UPD-The Leg
islative Interim Tax Committee
was told today that layoff of
1 1,000 state employes as a result
of the state' fiscal crisis will
.cost the state $1,040,000.
I The statement was made by
Ralph Miner of the State De
partment of Kinance and Ad
ministration. The stato does not
I participate in the uncmploy-
; nient compensation fund and
unemployment payments must
come out of department budg
ets. Miner also told lawmakers at
a meeting here that expected
school enrollment will require
an $11.5 million increase in the
basic school support fund if the
p r e s e n t law r e m a i n s un
changed. ; He estimated that higher ed
ucation enrollment would in
crease from 3,'t.OOO now to about
45,000 by the lti-fi7 school year
if present tuition and admission
requirements are retained.
Community college enrollment
faces an anticipated jump from
.1,115,) to 9,50, Miner added.
Governor Opens
State Olympic Week
SALEM (UPI) - Gov. Mark
Hatfield opened Oregon's Winter
Olympic Week at 6 a.m. Satur
day when he lit an Olympic
torch in front of his home here.
Then he handed the torch to
the first of 10 University of
Portland cross-country runners
who were to carry it to Port
land. A Li-fool high Olympic bowl
has been built on Portland's
northwest side to hold the torch.
The activities are being held
In call attention to the city's
Olympic lund-raising drive,
which has a goal of $15,000,
About half of the total already
has been raised, according to
the chairman, Mrs. Donald Ren
wick.
Consumers Urged
To Destroy Fish
From That Area
Canned Goods Not
Affected By Move
By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
nation's housewives were urged
today to destroy all smoked
fish known to have been caught
or processed in the Great
Lakes area.
Commissioner George P. Lar
rick of the Food & Drug Ad
ministration (FDA) ordered the
emergency measures into effect
Friday night in a move to stem
new outbreaks of the deadly
type-E botulism poisoning.
Larrick said the "destroy"
order was aimed at smoked
fish products that are "pack
aged in sealed plastic wrappers
and those that are sold in bulk
without any package." Canned
fish products are not involved,
he said.
Study Recent Deaths
Larrick issued the order aft
er receiving a report from FDA
scientists and from an advisory
panel of experts who made an
independent study of seven re
cent deaths traced to botu
lism-E and stemming from
smoked whitefish processed by
the H. J. Hornbos & Bros. lo.
at Grand Haven, Mich.
In the course of the investi
gation, the FDA said, traces of
botulism-E were found in at
least three other fish process
ing plants in the Great Lakes
area.
In a notice to wholesalers,
retailers and processors, the
FDA urged that all supplies of
smoked fish products made
from Great Lakes fish or proc
esscd in the area also should
be destroyed.
Larrick said that some of the
fish could be retained if it
could be established with cer
tainty that:
The fish was heated imme
diately after it was packaged
in a manner that would assure
a temperature of at least 180
degrees for at least 30 minutes
in the coldest part of the fish.
The fish was frozen imme
diately after packaging and has
since been maintained continu
ously in a frozen condition.
Constitution Gets
Bi-Parfisan Support
PORTLAND (UPI) - The
Young Democratic Clubs of Ore
gon and the Young Republican
Federation of Oregon have
promised bi-partisan backing for
an initiative campaign to amend
the Oregon Constitution to re
quire single-seat legislative dis
tricts. The announcement was made
in a joint statement by the pres
idents of the two organizations.
The proposal would divide all
multi-seat legislative districts
into single-seat districts.
The initiative campaign, an
nounced by the Oregon Junior
Chamber of Commerce at a re
cent annual meeting, received
endorsement by Jancn McLen
nan, Portland, president of the
Young Democrats, and Robert
Bell, Milwaukie, president of the
Young Republicans.
. The two explained that the
present Oregon system has one
senatorial district with eight
senators while a dozen other dis
tricts have only one senator a
piecc. A ballot title is being prepared
by the attorney general's of
fice, they said.
Former U2 Pilot
Weds in Virginia
CATLETT, Va. (ITD-Fran-cis
Gary Powers, Ihe American
pilot whose highflying 1'2 plane
was shot down over Russia in
I'.HiO, was married Saturday to
Mrs. Claudia Edwards Downey.
Mrs. Downey, like Powers, is
a former employee of the Cen
tral Intelligence Agency (CIA). ,
Towers was divorced in Janu
ary from his first wife, Bar
bara, who once said her life
with Ihe CIA pilot was "like be
ing married to a disappearing
Iloudinl."
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