Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 23, 1955, Image 17

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    I
No U.N. Membership
Seen for Red China
Washington (U.R) U.S. offic
ials said here that Red China
won't get into the United Na
tions very soon despite a predic
tion to the contrary by Indian
Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru.
They said Communist China
first will have to make a drastic
change in her ways and that will
take time. Until then, the United
States will combat all attempts
to get the Peiping government
into the United Nations and ex
pects ample support from its free
world friends. '
Nehru told a huge rally in
Moscow "we shall soon see" the
Communist Chinese in the Unit
ed Nations.
Governor Appoints
Transportation Group
Salem (U.R) Gov. Paul L.
Patterson has announced the
appointment of the governor's
emergency transportation com
mittee to work with the public
utilities commissioner on the
problem of freight cars shortage
confronting shippers in Oregon
He had suggested such a com
mittee at a hearing in Eugene
June 10 called by Public Utili
ties Commissioner Charles H.
Heltzel. The 600 representatives
at that meeting, speaking for
lumber, grain, seed, cannery and
wholesale shippers, unanimously
adopted a resolution calling upon
the governor to appoint such a
committee.
Stan E.. Sherwood of Coquille
was named chairman.
Medford
Tribune
Second Section MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1955 Pages 1-8
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Caltech Scientist Produces What May Be
Duplicates of First Cell Lite on Earth
Pasadena (U.R) A noted
scientist of the California In
stitute of Technology says he has
produced in a laboratory what
may be duplicates of the first
primitive cell life that appeared
on Earth.
Dr. Stanley Miller told a Pa
cific Division meeting of the Am
erican Association for the Ad
vancement of Science he created
his duplicates by developing a
mixture like the early Earth's
atmosphere and bombarding it
with electricity for a week.
Submitted in Rtport
The Caltech scientist said his
experiments have been submit
ted in a report to the Botanical
Society of America.
Dr. Miller said that when the
earth was a gaseous ball, slow
ly cooling and developing into
a planet capable of supporting
life, it had an atmosphere com
posed of methane, ammonia, wa
ter and hydrogen.
He stated that one theory as
to the origin of life is this gas
eous mixture, incapable itself of
supporting or starting life, it
Truman To Speak
Friday Before U.N.
San Francisco (U.R) A' U.N.
advisory committee headed by
Secretary-general Dag Hammar-
skjold overruled a Russian ob
jection to the appearance of for
mer President Harry S. Truman
at the United Nations' 10th an
niversary meeting, it was .re
ported.
A U.N. source disclosed that
a second string Russian delegate
raised the objection at a meeting
of the advisory committee in
New York two weeks ago.
The sources said unofficially
that the delegate objected to Mr.
Truman's appearance because he
no longer officially represented
the U.S. government. There was
also some talk about Soviet ob
jection to Mr. Truman's "poli
cies," especially in Korea, the
sources said.
Mr. Truman will address the
United Nations Friday night.
was slowly changed by cosmic
ray bombardment and produced,
in the process, organic com
pounds that started in the form
of plant life.
To investigate the theory, he
said he exposed a mixture of gas-
CHEAP VISIT
. Tokyo U.R) Police arrested
today a 22-year-old vagrant whd
broke into a house; while -the
owner was away and financed
his seven-week visit there by
pawning everything from furni
ture to the host's socks.
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REAL COOL Six pairs of
policemen's hands go to work
to pry 3-year-old Greg Welsh
of Schenectady, N. Y., from
the spin dryer of his mother's
washing machine. He crawled
in to escape soaring temperature.
Barge Capsizes in
Willamette River
Portland (U.R) A barge
capsized in the Willamette river
here Wednesday dumping some
of its cargo of paper products
into the stream.
No one was hurt.
The barge was loaded with
about 200 tons of diversified
paper products from the Crown
Zellerbach paper mill at Camas,
Wash. It was to have been un
loaded today at the Waterway
terminals.
Lyle Ritter, dock superintend
ent of Western Transportation
company, said it.was not known
what caused the barge to cap
size. . It heeled, over and . c.me
to rest on its side. Ritter said
the barge, which measures 137
leet long and 37 ieet wide, would
be refloated.
Testimony Presented
On Columbia Projects
Washington (U.R) Testi
mony on behalf of appropriation
requests for Columbia Basin pro
jects was given here by Hubert
Walter, executive assistant of
the Columbia Basin commission.
Walter testified on behalf of
of the $12,500,000 request for
the Columbia Basin project,
$631,000 for the Foster creek
unit of the Chief Joseph and
$437,000 for starting of the Roza
power plant.
"Our repayment records seems
to us to be proof that the gov
ernment will get its money
back," .Walter told the public
works subcommittee of the Sen
ate Appropriations committee.
es similar to the earth's early at
mosphere to electrical discharges
for a week to determine if
change could be brought about
by electrical action.
Dr. Miller said he found a
startling series of events. At
first, he said, the electrical dis
charge formed aldehydes and hy
drogen cyanide, but later these
compounds reacted with the wa
ter to form life sustaining amino
acids. .
"The experiment shows." he
said, "that not only would the
formation of organic compounds
be easy, but that a significant
fraction of the carbon on the
surface of the earth would be in
the form of organic compounds
of the oceans."
He said these organic com
pounds probably - were the fore
runners of ocean cell life in the
form of plants. ...
Later, the plant life under
went other chemical changes and
evolved into living mobile or
ganisms, he added. ,
Attorney for Hiss
Dies in New York
New York (U.R) Lloyd
Paul Stryker, 70, brilliant crim
inal lawyer who defended Alger
Hiss, died Tuesday of a cerebral
hemorrhage.
Stryker was stricken Sunday
night and had been in a coma
ever since. He died in Doctors
hospital.
He was considered one of the
country's greatest criminal law
yers since Clarenr Darro. and
was an outstanding courtroom
orator. Stryker's defense of Hiss
resulted in a hung jury. He
centered much of his defense
on a withering cross-examination
of Whittaker Chambers, the
star government witness.
Stryker did not defend Hiss
in his second trial which result
ed in a conviction for the former
State Department official, charg
ed with perjury in trying to con
ceal his connection with a Com
munist espionage ring.
There are 11 national military
parks in the National Park Sys
tem of the United States.
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Pharmacists Propose
Voluntary Distribution
Of Anti-Polio Vaccine
Pendleton (U.R) A" reso
lution favoring voluntary dis
tribution of Salk anti-polio vac
cine was approved here by the
Oregon State Pharmaceutical as
sociation. The resolution opposed gov
ernment controls as proposed in
several pieces of legislation now
before congress. ,
The pharmacists, who conclud
ed their two-day state conven
tion here Tuesday, favored the
handling of the vaccine through
normal pharmaceutical channels
they said. The resolution assert
ed government controls might
slow up the entire program.
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