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The Independent-Record from Helena, Montana • 1
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The Independent-Record from Helena, Montana • 1

Location:
Helena, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'Batters Eas Coast; Violent mam puiuh Tuesday and th weir some of the Hint At Dover, five children nun. tiers of the John A Water family drow ned a they startrj to flee the flooded shmeline of D. Dware Bay A mdi child wa missing and piesunu-d di owned. Two New Jersey couple wert washed away and dn lari mg-s-ing Tuesday night when a Coast Guard amphibious se-e! evactr aling them wa smothered by a 10 toot wave near Beat Haven Inlet Three other evacuees and two Coast Guard men managed to hang on tint with heavy smoke Wildwood J. a sene of severe fires destroyed I luini tuie stole and burned sevin otlr er building Spuiks from a hlae in the two story store were blown to two house a blink away and tt off fuel whuh deployed tin damaged were four one story (dint and a restaurant mar the furmtuie store Thousands fled low lying aieas along the seaboard Damages were expected to mount into the million of dot-la i The storm lit go with its piste liad to lie I loss letaue of huh walsr Tides at Hampton Hoads, wrre about four frit above normal and forced dosing of the Hampton Roads bridge tunnel fur the fust lime sirue it opt lour year ago High water at the Norfolk end deposited dultwood and other debris on the roadway.

Traffic wa rerouted over the James River Bridge A Boston waterfront lire, whipped by 35 winds, laird through a string of wooden sheds on a commercial wharf and tilled the high rent business di Souih Shoie hue and had to handle some passenger by bus flooding of Iratk and stalled train also snarled commuter railroad in noithrrn New Jersty, some of whnh carry passengri into Yoik. A hotel in the Hotkiwiy. Queen. New York City, was declared unsafe because of itorm damage and occupant were ordered out. Tills area I on the South Shore Similar steps were taken at two apartment building.

The Belt Taikway tiv Brooklyn, which hugs the shoreline in many the South Shore of New Yolk Long Island, were repotted to have appealed to the mainland for aorneone to come get them. It was not immediately possible beiause of the high sea. Commuter train and ferry erv-lie in the New York metropolitan aiea was snagged again today. Ferry service linking Manhattan and northern New Jersey was halted, hut boats continued to ply between Manhattan and Staten Island acros the harbor to the south 1 he Long Island Rail Road had new trouble and deUya on it winds reported a high 4 miles per hour or huniianr ve locity at BUnk Island, It I (burned teas into mountainoua wave and sent them smashing into coastal areas from Virginia to New England Authentic were planning tom-plele evacuation of Storm battered Ocean City. NJ.

summer re-sort with a yrr round population of about 1.000. The raging tide had put the town under several feet of water lire destroyed at least two buildings. Some winter resident of rite Island, a iuinmer playground off The Associated Pres Winter's ftMi'l violent storm much of the te.t delivered a riou pelting klik tcxley In the lurin of hurr shattering tide, snarled transportation, devastating firea, flooded tow nji and heavy wind and water damage. At least 20 dentti were counted, and 8 persona wrre reported missing The tempest had carried the remnant of it cargo of snow and fi eezmg ram out to se after dumping up to three feet of flake In some Inland area But it backlash of staggering 1 .4 Heleno, Montana, Wednexdoy, Morch 7, 1962 Vol. XIX Ho Congress to Protect $60 Billion Private Pension, Welfare Funds 1 Auto Firm Sues Helena Bank For $140,000 'V 4MRLING FQlIPMENT DESTROYED Hel- tion.

The illegal gambling table and poker chip P. pJw. wnu- O. McGuire I. Is d.w.u H.M.

Und.p.sdrst shown guarding several pieces of gaming equip- Record photo by Olive Henry) ment while it burned under order for destruc- Brooks Pontiac. has filed i damage action district court here against the Union Bank and Trust in which it seeks $140,000. The plaintiff alleges that it suffered $35,000 damages for great embarrassment, impairment of credit and injury to its business" as the result of the defendant's action in stopping payment on a cashiers check. The plaintiff seeks an additional in exemplary damage allegedly sustained by the action of the defendant bank which was charged with being guilty of malice and oppression toward the plaintiff. According to tho complaint, the.

defendant bank delivered to the (Continued on Page 10) i Plans of Unionsr Employers Come Under Bill Washington CP) Senate-House conferees reached final agreement today on a compromise bill designed to protect $60 billion of pension and welfare funds for the benefit of 90 million Americans. The Senate and House still must act on the compromise. Major JFK Bill The bill, a major item on President Kennedys program, would add enforcement powers to a pension and welfare fund disclosure law passed in 1958. Kennedy, who handled the measure in 1958 as chairman of a Senate subcommittee, succeeded in getting the Senate to include, the enforcement provisions at that time but they were stricken by the House. The bill agreed upon today covers pension and welfare plans operated solely by employers and by unions and those which are jointly managed.

Old Law Had No Power The 1958 law required managers of the plans to file public reports with the secretary of labor, but gave him almost no power to uncover or deal with abuses. The new bill would give the secretary authority to require full and accurate details; give the (Continued on Page 10) -f Found Downtown GamblingEqui In Raid Here Destroyed was seized Monday night by Police Chief Donald J. Raw, Capt. Art Bell and Capt. J.

L. Wines and stored overnight in the police garage. Secretary of State John Carl. Judge Doyle is on a speaking tour in connection with a nationwide Americanism program and was absent from the city. FIRST STATE OFFICE FILING The nominating petition of Associate Justice Stanley M.

(Larry) Doyle was filed today by his wife, Aileen, right. She hands the fee check to Deputy fendants in the complaint filed by County Attorney Thomas J. Hanrahan in the justice court of Judge A. J. White.

The order signed by Judge White noted that no persons were arrested for the possession of the gambling paraphernalia, there are no charges pending against any person or persons for possession, no person has been held to answer any original charge and that the equipment was not being held to be used as evidence. Police Make Seizure Hanrahan said Ihe equipment Four gambling tables and a drawer of poker chips were destroyed late Tuesday afternoon by city and county law officers following a raid in a vacant second floor room of a downtown Helena business building. Officers declined to name the exact location of the building and pointed out that only the gambling equipment was named as a defendant in the states action to destroy the illegal apparatus. Equipment Named Defendants Two 21 tables, one poker table, one crap table and one drawer of poker chips were named de Mrs. Joel Roth Is Dead at 31 Mrs.

Joel G. Roth of Great Falls, daughter of Mrs. Archie Watson of 608 North Rodney, died early this morning in Great Falls after an extended illness. She was 31. Mrs.

Roth, the former Anne-marie Beatty, was born Feb. 6, 1931, in Helena, a daughter of Ella and Raymond Beatty. Her father preceded her in death in 1951. MSU Graduate She attended Helena elementary schools and was graduated from Helena Senior High School in 1948. She received her degree in business administration from (Continued on Page 10) French Hold Peace Parley With Algerian Rebels Charles A.

Bovey, Cascade Senator, Seeks Re-Election Great Falls (AJ Charles A. Bovey, a veteran of 20 years in the Legislature, filed for Democratic renomination to the State Senate. He is the first to file for one of 10 county legislative posts to be filled this year. Bovey, who has gained wide attention for his efforts to restore Virginia served in the House in 1943 and 1945 and has been Cascade Countys senator since the session of 1947. Cascade County this year will elect a senator and nine representatives, an increase of two House members from the previous total Will Not Run MSU Coeds Flee Sorority in Smoke Bombing Missoula (JP) Someone threw a smoke bomb in the back hallway of the Sigma Kappa Sorority during the night Out they dashed, into the street clad in pajamas and other night clothes and fearing their home was on fire.

None of the girls was injured by the 1:46 a.m. incident. But one fireman, George Johnson, 35, was overcome by, smoke while trying to find thg cause of the smoke. was Hospitalized for several hours. I Algerian affairs, headed the territory, kept up terror raids, French French negotiators waiting injand the Moslems retaliated.

UEvian's Hotel du Marc to hammer Krim predicted a lasting, sat- and Algerian rebe officials sat QUt inal details of an accord). and happy 8olution as down at the conference tabid pr0viding for a cease-fire and jhe arrivcd -n ncarby Geneva. again today for what may be the referendum to give independence from final round of talks in their long, to strife-torn Algeria. I eparrh for an agreement to end Amid videspread expectations i negotiations, the two aides will Aleer an rebelhon. that a peace agreement would be try to fill the gaps their tents- the Algerian rebellion.

-n a matter of days, vio-tive accord. They already have Three Sws army i dand bloodshod continued agreed on general provisions of flew the Algerian aiut, unabated Algeria. Tuesdays toll there was 24 killed and 32 across Lake Geneva from their the Swiss the accord calling for Algerian self determination and eventual Hatfield Said Quitting Try Unseat State Secretary hotel headquarters on T1 1 If- if indrpendencpiot AlficnaliL. JO cent of people 90 per -H-hMVrPienicr Bolka-! woundctl.as.-thcj-ightist European Side. Rebel Alppmn team Secret Army Organization bentjmillion Burl Hatfield, deposed business nanager of the Slate- Tubercu-osis HospitalR Galen, was re-lorted today to Have abandoned lis plan to oppose Secretary of Itate Frank Murray in the 1964 lection.

Signals Received Scientific Payload to go to the West Coast to accept a top job with a distributor of hospital supplies. When' the 'Galen jofnrarplimt-nated by the examiners Hatfield, blamed Murray for the action. HC said he would file for secretary The "ex-hospital official shortly! of state, had not decided fter he was removed from his whether he would seek the office ost at Galen last June by the I as a Republican or a Democrat tate Board of Examiners, an-ounced he would attempt to Murray. The Independent Record today from a reliable jurce that Hatfield is planning U.S. Troops Roll Again in Berlin Berlin (P) -The U.S.

Army Today resumeijexchange of two battle groups in the Berlin garrison after a days delay caused by heavy snow. Today the sky was blue and the sun shone. U.S. Puts OSO Into Solar Orbit Cape Canai eral. Fla iPlA solar observatory satellite was fired into orbit today to learn how solar radiation influences the weather and other conditions on earth and how great a threat it is to manned space flight.

The satellite, nicknamed OSO for orbiting solar observatory, State, National Weather was packed with mstrumen give scientists look at basic sun. Forecast, Helena and vicinity Fair through Thursday. Cooler ro Regents Next Week Dr. L. O.

Brockman NMC Head to Make Report -i rr rltvt -f aTentral foodservice and tonight with a low, of, 18. High! Thursday, 40. house" 'a women's dormitory. I 1 Dr. L.

O. Brockmam president I mass meeting of students andTac Northern Montana College I ulty. i ice 1951. is scheduled to re-i The Board of Regents agenda, yd Dispose of Quarters at p-ni was to his bosses Monday or more detailed than in the Plans for disposal jjftemjiorary po i-i Hei Quarters for married students at sute 1 d0" SS'emX- may b. made.

Guide lines for a standardized I Bticrde for discussion. 350 Miles Above-Earth The 458 pound (OSO) -payload ss Thor- Della roOM. All three I stages ignited as planned and propelled the craft orbit 33 about 350 miles above. the earth 2 at 17.000 miles an hour. J' less than an hour later, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration reported that ra-4 d.o signals received by ground stations indicated the 32was in orbit One of the most complex scien-J7 tific payloads ever sent aloft, OSO 33 was designed to make the first WdJ esday on the once challenged (lists rale situation at the Haire pr0p0sas fis report to the Board of Re-, Standardize Six Units 1 Butt its is expected to show that one item calls for standardize-( 196 lc hdiscussed.

fe 1 The Ubo a Vcbr ary among the unlts of spe' other topic will be the master nd eting has been resolved- fecs for advance registration. pian being developed to guide ort Fain I a registration, transcripts, the system a future growth. Helena 41 37 39 39 36 46 41 36 23 49 39 50 50 35 45 Faculty Morale changes of enrollment, special Bids on the second phase of tjie Kaiispeu he college executive board ad-'examinations and listeners. anu usicncia. heating plant extension at SU tLlliniJston tending from base spin control jystem.

Ean shaped Wice at top contains solar cell. (AP Wlrepholo) the regents last month that' Scheduled for acceptance is an are to be opened by the board vim- cuz jlty morale at NMC had addition to the Liberal ArtsTuesday morning. ls pped to a critical level. Later, building at Montana State Uni-' That afternoon members of the lavre. Brockmann and two of versity.

Resolutions may be adopt-'curriculum study committee are executive hoard's three mem 'ed 'approving preliminary plans expected to meet in Butte with joined in a statement of bar-1 for two NMC buildings author jthe School of Mines executive ly which they announced at ijized in October 1960. These wouldlboard. wAtone s.i'i- 02 wen Niitioral ia- ves. York 01 precipitation Bint Tr Dillon, mmnrchensive study ot tne sun Yelio.Mone oi point above the precipitation Chlcato- P3. from a VdMiii0c o.

La Anteiea, 25' New distorting influence ot tne eartn ORBITING EARTH The first orbiting solar observatory O.M) was put aloft today, the NASA announced. The base is a wheel whith spins for stabilzation. Balls at ends of.arms ex Salt Lake San Francisco. Washington .53. atmosphere..

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