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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1955)
o 0 O enator Represents American Ideals Put Sen. '"Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) Friday night said international disputes should be settled through "judicious procedure" (pd that the United Nations "is the American ideal of govern ment; put to work on an inter national front." Senator Morse spoke before a small audience at Medford High school auditorium in con IN m U.LAPPftOVID w ELECTRONIC Service Company HITZLER & KELSOE 18 N. Grape Phone 3-1971 EG CHE Long Distinct AM Reception Radio Turns On and ' Off Automatically Turns Set On and Off I Turns Appliances On and Off Automatically TRANSOCEANIC PORTABLE RADIO Gives you world reception. It has detachable Wavemagnet and world time indicator. Also has phone plug-in, ear phone jack. Use it on AC, DC or batteries. 149.95 TAKE A YEAR TO PAY (Has Telechron 1(a) Electric Op Morse nection with United Nations Week, which starts today. He discussed three interna' tional conferences held in 1955, the World Court, and an eco nomic approach to foreign rela tions, pointing out that it is "intellectual intercourse" which settles international disputes. The greatest potentials of the United Nations, Senator Morse ti alter gives you You clean Wall Insert and Surface Mounted Cavaliers this way MINU TIS OR LESS ALL MODELS AVAILABLE AT I .... ; "- J I Beautifully Styled and It Has Dozens of Uses! Here is a famous radio you will enjoy in a hun dred ways. It has all the convenient, automatic features. It is ex ceptionally hand-. some . . . iupernear circuit means clear, full tone, finer per formance . . Wave magnet antenna. See it tomorrow. NO MONEY DOWN 1.00 ORDER BY MAIL Weisfield's Jewelers (122 East Main St., Medford) Please send me. Zenith Super Clock Radio at 41.95 ( ) Zenith Transoceanic Portable at 149.95 ( ). I am encos. ing $ and will send $ per month or $ per week until the entire balance is paid. NAME :......... PHONE.. ADDRESS . HOW LONG. CITY .. ZONE.. STATE.. WHERE EMPLOYED , HOW LONG CREDIT REFERENCES i. . (Firm Names and Where Located) Declares said, are procedure technical ities for the world, and the rais ing of the standard of living, "That," he said, "is the heart of the fight for political and eco nomic freedom of choice. The world organization, he said, has to be strengthened " so it can function in the future, and can function as a judicious procedure in the court of the world." Senator Morse discussed the United Nations and judicious procedure in connection with the "summit" conference at Geneva, the conference on peaceful uses of atomic energy at Geneva, and the Bangkok conference. Urged Summit Confidence The foreign relations commit tee, of which Senator Morse is a member, urged the "summit" conference against the wishes of the state department. He said the conference "put Communism back on its heels, and made strides for American ideals.'.' State department officials, Senator Morse said, did not favor the "summit" conference be cause no agreement would be reached. He added that the for eign relations committee did not expect agreements, but the con ference provided an "opportun ity for the nation to set objec tives in foreign policy." ' The committee favored and urged the conference, he . said, because, in a contest "between freedom and totalitarianism, we have to bring the minds of men to the cause of freedom.. We have to get millions and millions who do not now know to under stand our,, way of life." The con ference was favored also, he said, to show Russia that 'Amer ica wanted to put her ideals of peace in the spotlight." Cannot Be Isolated Senator Morse said nations today "cannot be isolated in in tellectual fields." The confer ence on peaceful uses of atomic energy, he said, "greatly ad vanced the cause of the people because the leaders of every na tion' know now what other na tions have in destructive pow er." CQGEBB A WEEK m99 ' United1 The Bangkok conference, Sen ator Morse said, is where the United States . state department "missed the boat." The depart ment "took a hands-off policy," he said, because it believed the conference was chiefly for com munist nations. Senator . Morse pointed out that several neutral nations were represented at the conference. The prime minister of Ceylon, Senator Morse said, provided the greatest service to western pow ers at the conference, at which the prime minister spoke favor ably to western ideals. The speech, he said, "was a great rally for the free nations, and sent Communist Asian countries back on their heels." ,. Overlooked Program "The World Court" of the United Nations, Senator Morse said, "is one program over looked by Americans." To appre ciate the court, he pointed out, it is necessary "to be able to lose, because not all decisions will be favorable. You need to be will ing, to let. rules of reason deter mine the case." Looking at United Nations as a 'great judicial body", he said it is an organization which will not "decide domestic issues, and the country concerned decides what is domestic." "We cannot sell political free dom of choice to empty stom achs," Senator Morse said, com menting on the economical ap proach to foreign relations. "Freedom is both political and economic," he said, "and we can not find a country with political freedom without economic free dom." With complete monopoly, Sen ator Morse said, there is no "eco nomic freedom. That is why I believe in minimum government controls to protect our economic freedom of choice." Dollar Follows Flag . Foreign policy, he said, should be changed from one of the "flag following the dollar" to one in wmcn tne "dollar iouows me flag." He said new economic treaties between , the United States and other countries should be signed so American investors could be invitad to other coun tries without fear of being taken over by other governments. He called it "un-Christian" for surplus food to be stored, while people throughout the world go hungry. Senator Morse said surplus food, some of which has spoiled beyond human con sumption, could be "dumped" in 'areas of the world where we have to win freedom for the peo ple." He stressed that "dumping" would be the type used by Amer ican businessmen in "clearance sales." He pointed out . that any sur plus food program "should grow over a period of years," and the food should be used "interna tionally until there is a need for it domestically." He added that "surplus is a good asset for arty country." Cites Independence Senator Morse said the idea that prosperity at home is based on " some sort of isolationist . policy is not true. He said if liv ing standards in India, for exam ple, were increased five per cent in the next 25 years.the United States would witness "greater prosperity than ever before." The real fight against Com munism, Senator Morse said, "is where there are empty stom achs." The senator said he believed a shift has occurred ' in Russia since the death of Joseph Stalin. It is not one man rule in Rus sia today," he said, "because the leadership knows how dangerous extra 'tiny extra lighf hearing 'md - ' with dime-size earphone -; ; Mtnietvre Zemth eorphone is startimgty Buy and light in weight, yet tr -repnxfocet Zetiift's wide range of iound output with to' marfcable clarity' I i H t-T H f .to assure superb new performance., New Miniature Permophone ' ' V : . - Smart Gold-colored Anodized Case Fingertip Volume Conttol Sensitive 4-Way Tone Control con be worn or Nations to Work i that is. The nation has changed to a rule by several rather than by one." The change, he said, "in the type of procedure in leadership is of great significance the most significant thing since World War II." ., "If we hope to understand the approach of foreign affairs," he said, "we must know the ap proach of judicious process." He added that "secret diplomacy is a thing of the past." . UN Is Open Forum "One of the greatest strengths of the United Nations," Senator Morse said, "is; that-it provides an open forum to bring the Com munists point of view into the spotlight.". :; If the "judicious process" is' going to work, he said, "we have to have tools to put it to work." The only practical experience "is an ideal put to work," Senator Morse said, "and as free people, we have put ideals to work." The " senator, speaking at Southern Oregon college Friday morning,. deplored conditions in schools throughout the country, and said he would introduce a bill in the January session of con gress to inter-mingle federal and state funds under state super vision for schools. 5 'r- He said the bill would ,elimi nate arguments that federal aid means federal control. : Senator Morse emphasized the need 'for federal aid to education because "the next century will be a continuing fight for free dom which is the fight for men's minds." He ' pointed out that there can be no political freedom without economic freedom and that "the wealth of America lies in its people." ' Supports Hospital -' In an appearance Friday at the Camp White Veterans Ad ministration domiciliary, ' the senator told of" a full audience of members that he supports ex pansion of facilities there to in clude hospitalization, and would work for such a program." He pointed "1 out that ! Camp White is the . only VA installa tion of its kind between Portland and San Francisco,- and added that it would be a logical place for a hospital unit because of the availability of already - c6n structed buildings.- - (See story on Page 1) IN CRITICAL CONDITON . . Glendale, Ore. (U.P.) Mrs. Ethel E. DeLarme was in critical condition in a. Canyonville hps-. pital Saturday from injuries suf fered when she slipped and fell beneath a tractor driven by her husband Friday.. . Court Records POLICE COURT Ernest L. Holbrook, violation of basic rule. S10. ' Agnes Lindstrom, failure to yield right of way. $10. , . Richard Wayne Casey, violation of basic rule. $10. Gale Gwendon Kimball, violation of basic rue.l $10. Gene Floyd Chamberlain, violation of basic rule. $10. James Anton Peterson. . failure to yield rieht of way.-$10. . Glenn Elvin Cave, violation of basic rule. $10. Cordelia G. Root, failure to stop at stop sign, $5. DISTRICT COURT Raymond Hex Note, overload. $59. Charles Haary Shotwell. violation of the basic rule, $10. ; Robert Merrill Carr. overload. $51. Alvin Allan Alexander, overload, $62. Arthur Leonard Brooks, failure to stop before entering a through high way, $6. CIRCUIT COURT ' Lola Ellen Dixon vs. Donald E. Dixon, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS . . . Philip Otto Schwartz, 56. Sawyer: Bar. calif., and fcstner Lovinan Kirov, 47. Sawyers Bar. . Robert Lee Bretches, 27. 376 South Pacific Hwy., .and Barbara Elizabeth Carter, 21, of 247 Va Seventh St.. Ash' land. - I HEARING AID Here is truly' tiny size and fight weight in a highest-quality, topper forming bearing aid. New4-transts-tor Zenith circuit is combined with is; smaller, more efficient components in a woman ha'trl. dipped to a neefcfe Sunday, October IS, I9SS Jet Stream Shift May Have Resulted In UA Plane Crash Oklahoma City, Okla. (U.PJ A shift of the jet stream may have affected the altitude and instruments of a United Airlines plane which crashed and killed 66 persons in Wyoming last week, a specialist in upper air meterologist said Saturday. Wally Kinnan, an Air Force trained weatherman and pilot, said the crash, worst in U.S. civil aviation history, occurred as the lower-level portion of the high-speed air current whip ped southward along the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains. The jet stream, Kinnan ex plained, ordinarily flows from west to east. But in the autumn, massive domes of cold air move down the map from the arctic, causing the jet stream to bend around them. Kinnan, who has flown in the area, said on the morning of the crash the "jet stream suddenly swerved south." "At 12,000 feet, the jet sjream that day had a velocity of about 80 miles an hour," Kinnan said. "This would definitely cause downdrafts on the southerly apr proach to Medicine Bow peak and would affect the altimeter of any plane in that area." Holbrook Attends Meeting at Eugene Charles Holbrook, Jackson county service officer, last week attended the 17th annual confer ence "of Oregon county service officers, held at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Oct. 12 through 14. A program of training, in struction and advice on a num ber of subjects of importance to service officers was conduct ed during .the three-day meet ing. Many of the talks were giv en by faculty members of the university. WEATHER By United Press Northern California: Mostly fair today except fog on coast. Carries Like Luggage Opens at the Touch of a Button . . . Folds Easily Exceptional construction means years of use for this rust proof, weatherproof table. Use it for camping', barbeques, picnics or indoors. Easy to'carry, too! Weighs Only 22 Lbs. GAMES DINING Weisfield's Jewelers, 122 E. 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