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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1963)
Page 2A EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Thuri., Mar. 21, 1963 U.S., Russia Okay Project ROME Ml The United Stales and the Soviet Union agreed Wednesday to a joint weather satellite program. Representatives of both nations said they hoped the accord eventually will lead to American-Soviet cooperation in interplanetary exploration. Teams of U.S. and Soviet scientists have been meeting in Rome during the past 10 days to work out details of an accord for coordinated satellite launchings. The chief negotiators are Hugh L. Dryden of the U.S. Na tional Aeronautics and Space Administration and Anatoly A. Blagonravov of the Soviet Academy of Science. - They announced at a joint news conference that each nation . will keep a satellite in orbit on Rocket Aid By Germans Hit by Israel BONN, Germany Wl Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer's gov ernment is expected to tell Is rael it cannot prevent German rocket scientists from working for the united Arab Republic because that is their right as private citizens. A West German spokesman said Bonn would not comment until it received an official re port of Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Mcir s appeal for a curb on German scientists she chare ed are helping the UAR build offensivo missiles. In a speech before Israel's Parliament Wednesday night, Jlrs. Meier said: "A number of German scien tists and hundreds of German technicians are helping develop offensive missiles in Egypt and even armaments banned by In ternational law, especially of a particular category serving sole ly for destruction of life. "There is no doubt that the motives of this evil crew are on the one hand lust for gain and on the other a Nazi Inclina tion to hatred and destruction of Jews." The Israeli charge posed a ticklish problem for Adenauer's regime, which tries to avoid any actions which could be in terpreted as anti-Semitic. It has stated repeatedly that private German citizens living abroad can take whatever jobs they please and observers felt it would be difficult for the gov ernment to retreat from this position. a more or less permanent oasis for the collection of weather data. The nations will exchange the information via a special 24- hour communications network It also will be made public. Dryden and Blagonravov also announced agreement on the launching of the U.S. Echo satellite for joint communica tions tests. Broader Agreements Great Britain will participate in the tests, Both Dryden and Blagonravov said they hoped the accords would'open the way for broader agreements. "The first step is always the hardest, Blagonravov added Dryden said the original U.S. Russian accord under which the current negotiations were held envisaged interplanetary probes of Mars and Venus. He said the scientists of the two countries would discuss such probes at a meeting in Warsaw later this year. He add ed: "I hope there will be future coordination to avoid duplica tion. Dryden and Blagonravov out lined the weather satellite pro gram this way: Weather Satellites Probably beginning sometime in 1964 each country will put up weather satellite. Launchings will be coordinated so the satel lites will have different orbits. Each country will replace its satellite as soon as it fails to function. A 24-hour cable and radio circuit will be maintained be tween the weather centers of the two countries. Information and pictures taken from the sat ellites will be transmitted over the circuit. Each will also bear the cost of its own satellites, Mfff A :- ( ' "'i Li X M"-5 x"-r - "i?J ) -7 1:5 i ' t Kayak . Trip (AP Wirephoto) Bjorn Braaten, 22, left, and Kaare An derson, 23, a pair of Norwegians from Oslo, arrived in New York Wednesday. They plan a 4,300-mile kayak trip on three of this country's biggest rivers. Their kayak, coming on a freighter, will be delivered in Portland. Ore., where the youths will visit countrymen before starting trips on the Columbia, Missouri and Mississippi rivers. Election Generating Tension Among Argentine Powers BUENOS AIRES (UPD In formed sources predicted Thurs day Interior Minister Rodolfo Martinez will resign soon as a result of mounting tension gen erated by his plans for the com ing elections. The balloting plan prepared by Martinez appeared to satisfy neither of Argentina! major powers the armed forces and the militant supporters of oust ed ex-President Juan D. Peron. The tension was increased by the government's order Wednes day for the arrest of Andres Framinl, a powerful labor and Peronist leader, on charges of plotting to overthrow the gov ernment. At latest reports, Fra minl was still at large. The Peronists have become more openly active since a fed eral court recently granted their Popular Union Party partial po litical recognition, The court ac tion aroused resentment among the strongly anti-Peronist armed forces. Peron has been living in exile in Spain, and there have been rumors he might try to return to Argentina. OflCf fl SfAftVULIB JUST 16 DAYS LEFT TO SAVE DURING OUR HVtlag SAVE $50 TO - MOO factory authorized ANNUAL SALE To Costa Rica Conference's Challenge Space Age Solid-State Circuitry . . . NO TUBES. NO HEAT. NO TROUBLE! I J5T 5 :. s Hi' p IF: "1 i I jii' il I - TEN TIMES MORE EFFICIENT THAN COMPARABLE TUBE SETS has such great tonal dimension, it can fill a concert hall like a full symphony orchestra. 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The Diamond Stylus is guaranteed 10 years. lft YEARS YOUR MAfiNAVOX DIRECT FACTORY DEALER Commies Plan Swift Retort By WILLIAM L. RYAN or th. Anoclated Preif The Castro-Communist alli ance in Latin America plant a swift retort to the challenge of a new deal for the Western Hemisphere, laid down at San Jose, Costa Rica, by President Kennedy. Communists of the hemisphere gather next Thursday in Rio de Janeiro, in what will be called "The Continental Congress in Defense of Cuba." The principal aims will be to plot more aggressive strategy to step up the pace of revolution ary activities, and to rekindle mass sympathy for Fidel Cas tro's regime. Moscow propaganda has been paying much attention to this congress. It claims that "hun dreds of organizations, political and social personalities, and plain people of Latin America" are rallying to the Castro ban ner. In one respect, Moscow's sup- Gas Rates Reduced SALEM Wl Natural gas cus tomers in the La Grande area will get a 20 per cent rate re duction. Public Utility Commis sioner Jonel C. Hill said Thurs day. The new rate was filed by the California-Pacific Utilities Co. They are effective April 20. port of the congress is an an swer to the Red Chinese, who have been accusing Premier Khrushchev's party of timidity in pushing revolutionary vio lence in under-developed areas. It also can serve the Soviet party as a weapon for counter ing Peking's influence in Latin America. The Communists and Castro ists th" terms are virtually syn onymous will use the congress to inventory their assets and prospects. Positions of the par ties and revolutionary situations, country by country, will be un der microscopic analysis in the back-room meetings, while the oratory in the congress hall lays down a smoke-screen. The Rio meeting is expected to come up with some sort of blueprint for action. If the congress follows Mos cow's general directives for such enterprises, with what the Kremlin calls "the new logic of scientific communism," it will map out those areas where vio lence will pay off and those areas where struggles for elec toral and economic, power offer the prospects of better divi dends. A hemisphere Communist meeting held in Mexico in 1961 resulted in refinements in plans and methods of attack. These probably included the combina tion of terriorism and political conflict adopted in Venezuela, which is considered a prime target. After that meeting, Moscow explained the problem to Com munists in this way: "The working class of some countries can seize the power by peaceful means, as through the parliamentary system or other - democratic ' systems. Therefore the working class headed by the Communist party should unite the people. "The working class and its (Communist) vanguard depend on the revolutionary struggle OEA Convention Opens in Portland PORTLAND Ofl The Oregon Education Assn.'s annual con vention opened in Portland Thursday. Some 6,000 teachers and administrators are here for the two-day session. Speakers scheduled Thursday include Mrs. Hazel Blanchard, National Education Assn. presi dent; Mrs. James King, presi dent of the Oregon Congress of Parents and Teachers; Frank Bash, president of the Oregon School Boards Assn.; T. M. Stin nett, NEA assistant executive secretary; and Rep. Robert Dun can, D-Ore. N carried out by the masses, as well as ipiritual and ideological support from socialist (Com munist) countries, to counter attack opportunists and defeat the imperialist force politically. "The Communist party pro gram (of October, 1961) pointed out that all this can be realized through' continuous develop ment of the economic, struggle by the laboring people." That means that where the opportunity arises, the weapon of strikes and economic violence must be employed to the fullest extent while the party works within the political framework of the country. This means an attempt to seize power short of revolution and civil war. This is not the only way, Mos cow points out. The other way is by open revolution, "estab lishing a dictatorship of the proletariat, eliminating the ex ploiters' rule and transferring" all property and power to the workers (Communists)." In backward countries, where armies and police forces are not too strong, the nonpeaceful means is highly recommended. If the situation is right, Com munists should "call upon the masses to carry arms." But the Communists should not resort to armed rebellion if there is a good chance to win by means short of that. 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