Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 21, 1955, Image 7

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EXPLAINS Secy, of State John Foster Dulles (left) con
fers with Chairman Walter George (D., Ga.) before closed
door session of the Senate foreign relations committee.
Secy. Dulles was called before the committee to explain
how a New York newspaper obtained the Yalta documents
before they were released generally. He admitted that
Asst. Secy, of State Carl W. McCardle gave the papers to .
the New York Times 19 hours ahead of the general re
lease. However, Dulles said, this involved no "breach of
security."
Estate and Trust
Forum Set by Bank
The U. S. National bank will
present an estate and trust
forum in Medford Thursday
night, April 28. ,
The meeting will begin at
7:30 p.m. at the Jackson hotel,
according to Allan F. ' Perry,
manager of the Medford branch,
who will preside. Residents of
Medford, Grants Pass and the
surrounding area are invited to
the forum.
Estate planning, management
and settlement information will
be presented by a four-man team
from the bank's head office in
Portland. R. M. Alton, vice-president
and head of the trust de
partment, will make the opening
remarks and introduce the
speakers.
The 1955 series marks the
sixth year the bank has pre
sented trust forums throughout
the state. More than 2,300 per
sons attended the 16 forums,
which the - bank presented in
1954.
Portland (U.R) ' Dr. Henry
C. Blair, an orthopedic surgeon
and professor, has been elected
president of the University of
Oregon medical school alumni.
He succeeds Dr. Howard C.
Stearns.
Thursday, April 21, 1953
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
Bock Stairs: Air Conditioned Church
Washington (U.R) Back
stairs at the White House:
President Eisenhower's church
in Augusta, Ga., the Reid Me
morial Presbyterian Church,
will be air conditioned this sum
mer. The pastor, Massey Mott
Heltzel, says this will not only
help Sunday attendance during
the torrid months in Augusta,
but aid his disposition, too.
When Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles left Washington
last Sunday to confer in Augusta
with Mr. Eisenhower, it was
cold in the capital and Dulles
wore a heavy, mid-winter tweed
suit.
He suffered admittedly while
fte was in Augusta where the
mercury was pushing 90 degrees.
The White House office lobby
is seven feet shorter than it was
before the chief executive went
to Augusta. Mr. Eisenhower re
turned yesterday to find that
in his eighteen days absence, a
new wall had been erected in
the lobby.
The effect of the new wall, if
not the purpose, will be to keep
out of plain view of the lobby
callers who leave the President's
office via a side door.
This is the first major altera
tion to the lobby in about 20
years.
Bursitis or not, the President
rfiot reasonably good golf dur
ing his recent stay in Augusta.
He had'at least one 84 which,
for him, is good. Considered
against his handicap of 18
strokes, this would have given
him a net 66 which is what Mas
ters Champion Cary Middlecoff
shot last Saturday with no
handicap.
If Mrs. Eisenhower still is in
Gettysburg this week end, the
President is sure to join her,
even if only for a brief stay.
Watch for the President to
drop some new foreign policy
material at the annual Associated
Press lunch meeting in New
York next Monday.
Denver again will be late
summer headquarters for Mr.
Eisenhower, but not for the eight
weeks stay of last year.
Just about the hardest White
House souvenir to come by a
golf ball stamped "Mr. Presi
dent." The Chief Executive gets
p'enty of these balls as gifts, but
they are such good golf balls
that he is somewhat loathe to
give them away.
Mr. Eisenhower was the hero
of Western Union during his re
cent stay in Georgia.
The Western Union wires for
the White House staff, set up in
the Bon Air Hotel, handled close
to 200,000 words of news copy
during the course of the eight
day trip. This wordage total is
remarkable in that it shows the
trip was far from a total vaca
tion. Fewer reporters than usual ac
companied Mr. Eisenhower to
Augusta and they apparently
made up in big stories what they
lacked in number of colleagues.
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GOP Women Leaders
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Washington (U.R) President
Eisenhower discussed Republi
can party activities with 19 GOP
women leaders from throughout
the nation today in the sixth
of a series of breakfast meetings.
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