Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 17, 1963, Image 1

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62 PAGES SIX SECTIONS
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1963
No. 206
58th Year j Tiff X
United Prew International Full Leased Wire
1....Jy,, . -f.it. -riir ninm Turf f ii iT1sa
SUSPECTS CAPTURED - Two of three suspected bank rob
be:s and slayer of a California Highway patrolman were cap
tured in Sacramento, Calif., early Saturday after a chartered
flight from the Lake Tahoe area. The self-admitted killer.
3 Former Oregon
Convicts Confess
Robbery-Shooting
SACRAMENTO (UPD-Three
ex-convicts from Oregon Satur
day described how they capped
a two-state robbery spree by
shooting and killing a California
Highway Patrolman. .
"I blasted him across the
road," said Roger Mealman, 29,
when investigating officers
asked for details on the death
of Patrolman Glenn Carlson.
Carlson, a 33-year-old father
of four, had stopped . Mcalman
and his two accomplices Friday
night as they were fleeing Cali
fornia for Nevada after robbing
, a Sacramento bank of $4i,626.
about three hours before.
The officer had stopped their
eastbound car for speeding on
U. S. 40 near Donner Summit,
where the transcontinental di
vide goes over the Sierra crest
and descends toward Reno, Nev.
After issuing the citation,
Carlson made a radio check on
the car (a white Cadillac) and
learned that the registration had
been issued to another vehicle.
He pursued and stopped them
once more and walked into a
barrage from Meatman's gun.
Wounded Twice
Nevada County Coroner's dep
uties in Truckee, Calif., about
five miles east of the shooting
site, said that the officer was
wounded twice in the chest,
but that the wounds might have
been caused by one bullet.
After dragging the officer's
body from the road, the trio
drove south to Tahoe City, on
the northeast shore of Lake Ta
hoe, where Mealman and Robert
L. Burns, 31, took a taxi to
Reno. The third man, Raymond
Toycen Jr., 29 (alias Raymond
Patterson) got out of the car
as it went back through Truckee.
. Meanwhile, Highway Patrol
men had discovered Carlson's
body and issued an alarm. An
unidentified witness in Tahoe
City had seen the trio abandon
the car and told officers of the
cab hiring.
Police intercepted the cab
driver on his return from Reno
and learned that Mealman and
Burns had chartered a plane in
Reno for Sacramento. They ar
rested the two as they arrived
here Saturday and picked up
Toycen in a Truckee hotel, all
within five hours of the shooting.
teSlVMIEFS
items wom jSy 0UN0 Wl ol0M
CANADIAN SENATOR KILLED
TORONTO. Ont. (LTD Canadian Senator Duncan K. Mac
Tavish and four other men were killed Friday night in a five-car
accident on the Queen Eliiabeth Way just west of here.
KOREAN MINISTER ARRIVES FOR TALKS
NEW YORK (UPI) South Korean Foreign Minister Yong
Shik Kim arrived Saturday night for talks with U. S. officials
and to make another appeal before the United Nations for the
reunification of Korea.
SOVIETS LAUNCH UNMANNED SATELLITE
MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet Union fired another unmanned
satellite Into orbit Saturday, combining the feat with threat
from a lop military leader that Russian nuclear missiles were
capable of devastating the United States in a matter of minutei.
UN COMMAND CHARGES 'MURDER'
PANMUNJON, Korea iUPI) The North Korean attack on
an unarmed United Nations team in the demilitarized lone was
"an act of murder," the United Nations Command (UNCI charged
Saturday.
State Senate Fight On
Basic School Cuts Seen
SALEM (UPI) - In a sur
prise move Saturday, the Sen
ate refused to suspend rules
and vote on the measure which
would give Gov. Mark Hat
field authority to cut basic
school support.
SALEM (UPI) - The Board
man crisis, ani tun expected
Senate fight over basic school
cuts could dash leaders' hopes
for a Tuesday adjournment of
the special session of the legis
lature. '
And a special bill being rushed
through . to set- dollar, amount
cuts in the capital construction
program could open the whole
allotment procedure to legisla
tive review a process which
could take weeks.
Rep. Kessler Cannon, R-Bend,
asked Atty. Gen. Robert Y.
Thornton for an opinion on the
legality of the allotment proce
dure. A reply is expected shortly-
One Vote
The emergency program ask
ed by Gov. Mark Hatfield to
deal with the fiscal crisis re
sulting from the Oct. 15 tax
referendum was only one Sen
ate vote away from approval.
Higher Education
Probe Suggested
SALEM (UPI) - The Ways
and Means Committee has rec
nmmended that the Legisla-
live Fiscal Office hire another
analyst and have the Interim
Education Committee proceed
as planned with a probe into
hieher education.
The decision was made after
Sen. Walter Pearson, D-Port-land,
charged there was an
"iron curtain between the leg
islature and the State Board of
Higher Education."
Pearson said "we have to find
out what is going on in the sys
tem of higher education."
He wanted $35,000 set aside
for such a study.
The committee action, how
ever, restores one staff analyst
budgeted by the regular 19B3
session. The position was not
filled when it became apparent
the tax increase would be referred.
1
Roger Mcalman, 29, (1.) and
of Salem, Oregon, are shown
airport. Mealman reportedly
(UPI)
But it was indicated Saturday
a Senate fight may be brewing
on the measure to allow the
governor to make the cuts in
state aid to local school dis
trict.
In a surprise 15-14 vote Sat
urday, the upper house refused
to suspend rules and vote on
the basic school bill.
Sen. Walter Pearson,; D-Port-land,
said action was delayed
because "there's lots of opposi
tion to the measure in the Sen
ate." Both the Senate and House
have approved a speedup, of tax
collections to bring in' an addi
tional $12 million this bienmum.
The basic school measure, and
the tax collection bill were the
only legislation asked by Hat
field when he called the special
session.
But Friday it was learned
the governor did not have the
constitutional right to eliminate
the capital construction pro
gram, so a special bill doing
so was introduced. 1
Abdicating Authority
It was a victory for the bloc
of legislators who have charged
the legislature was abdicating
its authority to let Hatfield make
the cuts.
While legislative leaders hoped
the measure would zip through,
there was the possibility that
debate on the bill could spread
to the entire allotment proce
dure. Many Republicans and a few
Democrats feel the legislature
should make all the cuts, rather
than have Hatfield do it.
The Boardman issue remained
a question mark.
He le Speaker Clarence Bar
ton seemed to feel it would not
delay adjournment.
But the emergency bill asked
by Hatfield to clear a legal
cloud that threatens Boeing's
lease of the Boardman site still
rests in the Ways and Means
Committee.
Further hearings are sched
uled Monday, and the commit
tee has indicated it is not too
enthusiastic about having once
again to pull the Boardman
chestnuts out of the fire.
The fact that the state will
have to pungle up another $522,
000 to complete the deal isn't
being well received by lawmak
ers who came to Salem to trim
budgets and eliminate construc
tion projects.
Study In Contrasts
The first six days of the spe
cial session were a study in
contrasts. Many lawmakers had
no committee assignments, and
had nothing to do except for the
few minutes each day the houses
were in session.
But those with committee as
signments were working 8-12
hours a day in an effort to find
solutions to the fiscal crisis.
It was a disastrous week for
Hatfield. Two of his vetoes were
overthrown, and the Boardman
project blew up.
Democrats seemed to be rid
ing high, having so far been
able to confine the session to
the fiscal crisis. Democrats also
beat down Republican moves to
hamper the governor with rigid
guidelines, and GOP efforts to
enact sales and cigarette taxes.
As lawmakers left for a week
end off Saturday afternoon, It
appeared the special session was
on the verge of ending.
Robert L. Burns, 31, (r.), both
at the Sacramento municipal
shot Patrolman Glenn Carlson.
Both Barton and Senate Presi
dent Ben Musa have predicted
a Tuesday adjournment.
But nobody was talking too
much about adjournment for
fear the Boardman crisis would
explode into a nightmare.
Mme. Nhu's Bills
Not Being Paid
' Washington (UPI) An offi
cial of the Viet Namcse .embas
sy said today the embassy is
getting bills run up by juaaame
Ngo Dinh Nhu during her recent
tour of the United States but
is not paying them.
"It was. purely- a personal
trip," an embassy official said.
"We advised that the bills be
sent directly to Mrs. Nhu."
It was reported that the em
bassy has been getting bills for
lodging, luggage and limousine
service, allegedly resulting from
Madame Nhu's trip. She had
visited a number of U.S. cities
in an effort to Improve the im
age of the regime of her late
brother-in-law, Ngo Dinh Diem.
The Diem government fell in
a coup d'etat, however, and
Diem and her husband were
killed.
When Ambassador Do Van Li
arrived here to replace Mme.
Nhu's father, Tran Van Chuong,
as ambassador, he emphasized
that Mme. Nhu, who was in
the country at the time, was
not visiting in an omcial ca
pacity. Burned San Francisco
Girl Succumbs Friday
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Little
Cathrvn Reeves' seven-
week fight for life ended Friday
night in an isolation ward at
San rrancisco uenerai Hospi
tal. The 8-year-old crippled polio
victim, who had told police she
was set afire bv two boys, died
of pneumonia indirectly caused
by third degree burns over 45
per cent of her body.
Football
Saturday College Scores
WEST
Oregon 28 Indiana 22
USC 28 OSU 22 (Friday)
Santa Clara 32 SOC 0
UCLA 14 Washington 0
Washington St. 32 Stanford 15
California 35 Utah 22
Olympic 27 OCE 7
Utah St. 7 New Mexico St. 6
Arizona St. 35 Wyoming 6
San Francisco St. 21 Nevada 6
Utah 14 Utah State 0
Kansas 43 Colorado 14
Colorado St. 20 Montana 12
Colorado Western 19 Weber
St. 6
Central Washington 20 Whit
worth 7
MIDWEST
Michigan St. 12 Notre Dame 7
Purdue 13 Minnesota 11
Northwestern 17 Ohio St. 8
Illinois 17 Wisconsin 7
Michigan 21 Iowa 21 (tie)
Kansas St. 21 Iowa St. 10
Dayton 27 Miami (O.) 27 (tie)
SOUTHWEST
Texas 17 TCU 0
SMU 14 Arkansas 7
Rocky Hits U.S.
Foreign Policy,
Scores Goldwater
Senator Said Not
In GOP Main Stream
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller of New
York Saturday night in his first
major speech since becoming a
candidate for the Republican
presidential nomination charged
that the Kennedy administration
is jeopardizing the peace and
demoralizing our allies with a
weak, indecisive foreign policy.
At a news conference earlier,
Rockefeller said Sen. Barry
Goldwater is "not in tune with
the main stream of Republican
thinking."
"The fog of soothing state
ments coming from Washington
will not be able to hide indefi
nitely that all is not well within
our position in the world,"
Rockefeller said in a speech
prepared for d e 1 i v e r y at an
awards dinner of the Press Club
of Metrooolitan St. Louis.
"We must realistically face
the fact that our world position
has deteriorated under the pres
ent administration."
Rockefeller had a busy day,
which included two news confer
ences and two television inter
views. At one conference he said
Goldwater. considered by many
Rockefeller's top rival for the
nomination, will not be the 1964
Republican standard bearer if
the Senator does not make
some radical changes.
Rockefeller challenged the
Arizona Senator to modify his
stands on foreign and domestic
affairs. "These positions are
not in tune with the main
stream of Republican thinking,"
hesaid. Unless Goldwater
modifies his thinking he won't
hold the support he has now."
The New York Governor saia
"Goldwater has been in opposi
tion to President Eisenhower
and the majority of the GOP
Senators on civil rights legis
lation." However, Rockefeller pledged
to support "whoever wins the
(GOP) nomination.'.'
He indicated he has not count
ed out former Vice President
Richard M. Nixon as a con
tender for the presidential nomi
nation. "Nixon is in the wings and
peeking around the curtains,"
he said.
Senate Vote Kills
Cigarette Tax Bill
SALEM (UPI) - A House-
passed bill to ask the voters to
tax ciearettes at four cents a
package was killed by the Sen
ate Saturday me minute n m
rived. The Senate voted 19-10 to table
the bill on first reading. The
vote to kill the measure witn
out ever sending it a commit
tee was a rare one.
A majority of the senators had
promised earlier to kill any
"new taxes."
The House passed the meas
ure 36-23 Friday. If it had clear
ed the Senate and won voter
approval, it would have raised
about $10 million during the
last 11 months of the 1963-65 bi
ennium. Snow Piles Up in
Rocky Mountains
Bv United Press International
Twelve inches of snow piled
un in Wyoming and more than
six inches of snow covered other
Rocky Mountain areas Saturday
while mideastcrners enjoyed
mild fall weather that sent
temperatures over 70.
Scores
Tulsa 22 Houston 21
Kentucky 19 Baylor 7
Nebraska 20 Oklahoma St. :
Oklahoma 13 Missouri 3
Air Force 30 New Mexico 8
Texas A&M 13 Rice 6
SOUTH .
Mississippi 20 Tennessee 0
Tulane 10 Vandcrbuilt 10 (tie)
Alabama 27 Georgia Tech 11
Auburn 14 Georgia 0
Navy 38 Duke 25
Clemson 21 Maryland 6
Wake Forest 20 South Caro
lina 19
EAST
Pcnn St. 28 Holy Cross 14
Dartmouth 12 Cornell 7
Princeton 27 Yale 7
Columbia 33 Pcnn 8
Pittsburgh 28 Army 0
Syracuse 50 Richmond 0
Harvard 24 Brown 12
Boston College 30 Virginia 21
Saturday Prep Scores
North Catholic 33, Willamina
0. (A-2 Playoff)
Eagle Valley 33, Ml. Vernon
27. (B Playoff)
Beds Release Professor
Due to Kennedy 'Concern
Election Slated
In South Talent
Sanitation District
Oettinger, Jessen .
Seek Board Seats
TALENT-A. W. Oettinger and
W. B. Jessen will be the candi
dates for a seat on the board
of directors of the South Talent
Sanitary District in a special
election Monday, Dec-2.
Petitions bearing sufficient
signatures to nominate the two
men were filed prior to the
deadline last week. They are
seeking the seat now held by
Donald Grimes, who is not run
ning for re-election.
Oettinger is the proprietor of
the Resmore Motel on South
Pacific Highway. Jessen resides
at Route 1, Box 227, Talent.
A public hearing has been
scheduled by the Jackson Coun
ty Court for Nov. 27 concern
ing requests from several prop
erty owners who wish to with
draw from the sanitary district.
The owners involved are located
in a part of the district which
would not be served by the
sewer system initially proposed.
District board members have
assured owners in this area,
however, that they would be
served as soon as it is finan
cially feasible for the district
to do so.
One week after the director
election on Dec. 9, voters in the
district will go to the polls again
to consider approval of a $135,
000 bond issue to finance the
major portion of the initially
proposed sewer system.
Former M-T Stall
Member Killed in
Portland Crash
PORTLAND (UPI) - Robert
Keith Walters, 29, entertainment
editor and columnist for the
Portland Oregonian, was killed
in an early morning auto crash
in Portland Saturday.
A passenger, Joan E. Fletch
er, 29, of Portland, was listed in
satisfactory condition at St. Vin
cent Hospital. She suffered a
fractured right ankle, head in
juries and a leg injury.
Portland police said Walters
car struck a power pole and
veered into the side of a rail
road boxcar. There were no
witnesses to the crash. Walters
was pronounced dead on arrival
at a hospital.
He came to the Oregonian in
1960 from the Medford Mail
Tribune, and before that had
worked for the Humboldt Times
at Eureka, Calif., and a Japan
ese news agency. He was a na
tive of Jackson, Ohio, and at
tended Ohio State University.
Stassen May Toss
Hat in GOP Ring
WICHITA, Kan. (UPI) -Harold
E. Stassen said Satur
day night he will announce
"sometime in December" wheth
er he will seek the Republican
presidential nomination.
Stassen said at a news con
ference he does not feel Sen.
Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., or
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New
York would win the Republican
nomination. He was scheduled
to address the Sedgwick Coun
ty Republican Women's Club
later Saturday night.
The former Minnesota gover
nor, who served as President
Eisenhower's disarmament ad
visor, said he was not interest
ed in the vice presidency. Stas
sen said that as a candidate
for president he would bring
together Republican lorccs and
enough independent votes to win
election.
He said an "Increasing but
limited" number of persons
have recently urged mm to seek
t h e Republican presidential
nomination.
Sports Bulletin
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (UPI)
The Southern Oregon Col
lege Red Raiders were defeat
ed by the University of Santa
Clara here Saturday night
32-0. The Red Raiders were
unable tn mount a real scoring
threat against the stronger
hint team.
SORTS PAPERS - Yale University Prof. Frederick Barghobrn,
52, sorts papers in his wallet as he walks towards Customs and
Immigration offices at London
spy charges by the Soviet Union,
anu expeueo aaiuraay because oi
oy x-resicteni Kennedy," Kussian
President Observes
Underwater Shot
Of Polaris Missile
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI)
President Kennedy watched the
underwater firing of a Polaris
missile for the first time Satur
day in a spectacular windup of
a whirlwind visit to America's
No. 1 spaceport.
Clad in a Navy-blue windbreak
to ward off the ocean chill 25
miles out, the Chief Executive
flashed a grin when the misisle
tnundered from the ocean and
sped away to a target 1,500
miles away.
"Wonderful," Kennedy said
later.
The President, combining
TFX Plane Costs
Revised Upwards
WASHINGTON (UPI)-N e w
Pentagon estimates indicated
Saturday that total spending un
der the controversial TFX plane
contract may shoot upward to
between $8 and $9 billion (B).
Original estimates were be
tween $6.5 and $7 billion (B),
but they have been creeping
upwards, as predicted by De
fense Secretary Robert S. Mc
namara in his testimony be
fore Congress.
The total outlay could go
still higher, possibly to $10 bil
lion (B), if the Navy is granted
its request to acquire more
than 200 additional TFX's.
The disclosure of the rising
cost estimates came as Senate
investigators summoned Ros
wcll Gilpatric, deputy defense
secretary, for questioning Mon
day morning in a renewed in
quiry into the TFX contract.
FBI Hunts Pair in Robbery
Of U.S. Naval Station Bank
SAN DIEGO. Calif. (UPI) -
A pair of "Mutt and Jeff-type"
sailors were wanted Saturday
by federal agents in connec
tion with the daring $125,000
bank robbery at the U.S. Naval
station here.
Federal Bureau of Investiga
tion agents said descriptions of
the short sailor and the tall
one fit Victor Lawrence Tay
lor, 22, and Jeremiath R. Tcr
rence, about 20.
Both sailers were reported ab
sent without leave from the
nearby North Island Naval Air
Station.
The FBI said there were "no
new developments" Saturday in
the cash robbery Friday !n which
airport Saturdav. Arrested on
he was dramatically released
tne "personal concern expressed
authorities said. (UPI) . . ,
business with relaxation on
trip to Florida, flew to Cape
Canaveral Saturday on what
was interpreted as a renewed
pitch for support of U.S. plans
to land men on me moon be
fore the end of this decade.
Kennedy appeared particular
ly impressed by a giant Saturn
"super-booster" rocket sched
uled for an attempt next month
to send a 16-ton satellite, the
world's largest, Into orbit
around earth. The moonlet
would dwarf a new "Cosmos"
mooncl put into orbit early Sat
urday by the Soviet Union.
Stoje Show
On this occasion, American
and Russian space plans and
space races had to take a back
scat. The U.S. Navy stole the
show in a day that Kennedy,
a former Navy man himself,
called "wonderful."
The Navy whisked the Chief
Executive 25 miles out to sea
aboard a helicopter, landed him
on the deck of the Laboratory
Ship U.S.S. Observation Island
and gave a submerged nuclear
submarine, the U.S.S. Andrew
Jackson, a "go-ahead", for the
Polaris shot.
Kennedy flashed his famous
grin when at 11:55 a.m. EST
the bottle-shaped Polaris broke
the Atlantic's surface 1,200
yards away in a towering geyser
of salt spray after the sub
rammed it from a tube atop a
column ot compressed air.
The President watched in
tently for a moment with a
naked eye as the missile began
its fiery climb. Then he lifted
a pair of binoculars to catch
a better view of the missile as
its boosters stage separated one
minute later.
two men garbed in Navy shore
patrol uniforms and made up
with grease paint made their
getaway in a stolen car. '
It was one of the largest bank
robberies in Pacific Coast his
tory. A month ago four men
robbed a bank in the Los An
geles suburb of Torrance of
more than $200,00 in cash, se
curities and savings bonds. They
were arrested a short time
later.
Nearly 50 persons were in the
bank when the two bandits fired
two pistol shots Into the ceiling
as a warning.
The customers were ordered
tn lie face down and five wom
en tellers were herded Into a
small staff room as the taller
arghoorn Flies
o England; Due
n U.S. Today
Reds Decline to
Drop Spy Charge
LONDON (UPI) - The Soviet
Union unexpectedly freed Yale
Prof. Frederick C. Barghoora,
52, on spy charges Saturday be- .
cause ot resident Kennedy s
"personal concern" and ex
pelled him from Russia. He
flew to London where he said it
was "sure good to be out."
Barghoorn, "tired and nerv
ous," arrived In London aboard
British European Airwav.i
Comet jet a few hours after his
release, apparently on personal
orders of Premier Nikita S.
Khrushchev in an effort to pre
vent a freeze in U. S. - Soviet
relations.
Few Details
His first words relayed bv
embassy officials was that "I
don't want to talk about" his
arrest on spy charges 16 days
ago and his time spent incom
municado in a Soviet prison.
But after r. short rest at tha
home of embassy friends ho
disclosed a few details of his
release.
Embassy spokesman James
Pettus said "the professor was
very tired and nervous. He waa
told at 2:15 this afternoon ha
was to be released. He was
taken under escort to the air
port and put straight aboard
the plane.
Despite his release the offi
cial Tass news agency still was
informing the Russian peopla
Barghoorn was guilty.
Barghoorn, apparently still a
little frightened by the experi
ence, told embassy representa
tives here he had spent 16 days
in orison without any knowledca
of what was going on in tha
world except what he read in
the Communist party newspaper
Pravda. ,
Pravda had reported deten
tion of "tourist Barghoorn" and
said an investigation was un
der way but Barghoorn said he
had no idea of the international ,
furor over his arrest or that
Kennedy had personally de
manded his release until fellow
passengers told him on the
plane.
To Leave London
The embassy said Barghoorn
would leave London at 11 a.m.
(6 a.m. EST) today aboard Pan
American flight 101 due at New
York's International Airport at
1:40 p.m. EST and that ho would
go direct from there to New
Haven, Conn.
One of Barghoorn's first ac
tions was to telephone his moth
er, Mrs. Elizabeth bargnoorn,
i, in New Haven, conn.
(Mrs. Barghoorn said in New
Haven that her son told her
that he' had also telephoned
Yale University President King
man Brewster Jr., wno is vaca
tioning in Italy. She said her
son was hopeful that Brewster
would be able to return to tho
United States with him.)
Group Inks Contract
To Salvage Temples
CAIRO (UPI) - A contract
to salvage the 3,000-year-old
Abu Simbel temples from the
Aswan dam waters was signed
Saturday night with an interna
tional consortium.
Six construction firms signed
the $23 million contract with
U.A.R. officials.
bandit scooped the money from
cash drawers. The shorter
man kept his gun on the cus
tomers. The holdup was completed in
a matter of minutes and tha
men fled to their getaway car.
The car was found abandoned
later and identified as a ve
hicle stolen from the Mira Mar
Naval Air Station Thursday.
One teller, Marian Asman, .12,
San Diego, said bolh bandits
also wore pink gloves and the
shore patrol white helmets.
"The smaller man was ner
vous during the holdup," she
said, "but the big man was as
calm as they come. When hn
(tha tall man) left he said,
'goodby folks.' "
X