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RIBUNE
A itory on the hitory and
attiiitiet of the M'dfortf and
Rngue Valley Ministerial as
sociations appears on page M
f today's Mail Tribune.
United Press Full Leased Wire
United Press Full Leased Wire
34 Pages
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JANUARY 27, 1957
No. 264
MEDFORDOT
Moslems
Riot in Protest
Oyer Annexation
India Takes Kashmir
Despite U.N. Vote
Karachi, Pakistan (U.R)
More than 80,000 Moslems riot
ed here Saturday to protest
against India's annexation of the
State of Kashmir.
Police armed with long wood
en staffs flailed at screaming
Pakistanis to little avail. The
mobs surged through the main
thoroughfares gf this capital city
burning hundreds of effigies of
Indian Premier Jawaharlal
Nehru and screaming
nenru ,
. . . murder."
A number of casualties were
reported.
Calls For War
A Moslem leader called for
war against Hindu India to
regain control of the predomin
antly Moslem state which India
incorporated Saturday. Indian
Independence Day, in defiance
of a United Nations Security
Council vote against such action.
The irate Pakistanis man
handled foreigners in the streets
and surged towards the homes
and offices of Indian diplomatic
offices. Barbed wire and police
reinforcements managed to keep
tile crowds from the Indians.
The demonstrations, led by
students wearing black arm
bands as signs of mourning for
Kashmir, were the wildest in
Pakistan's history.
For a time, it appeared that
the mobs ruled the city. All
shops closed. Transportation
stopped dead. Hordes of stu
dents marched on a United Na
tions building demanding en
forcement of the Security Coun
cil resolution.
Proclaim Annexation
The citizens erupted in this
pro-western capital at the mo
ment when the New Delhi gov
ernment proclaimed annexation
of Kashmir, giving India the two
thirds of the former princely
state it has occupied. -
Pakistan occupied the other
third under terms of a U.N.
ceasefire reached in 1947 after
bloody clashes between Indian
and Pakistani forces over con
trol of the state.
The annexation was timed to
coincide with today's ceremonies
marking India's seventh anni
versary of independence from
Britain.
7,600 Receive Salk
Vaccine Shots Here
Total of Jackson county
youngsters receiving Salk vac
cine rose to 7.600 Friday when
the first of three rounds of
shots was completed at school
vaccination stations.
At Rogue River academy, 40
received the vaccine, including
37 students and three others;
Pine Hurst. 29, including 14
students and 15 others; Oak
Grove, 31. including 18 students
and 13 others; Bellvue. 104, in
cluding 66 students and 74 oth
ers; and at the county health
office, 104 shots were given dur
ing the day.
Anyone under the age of 20
who has been unable to get the
shots at the regular stations, may
receive them in the basement of
the Elks club. North Central
ave. and Fifth st., Monday from
7 to 9 p.m.
Second round of shots will
begin on Monday, Feb. 11. ac
cording to Dr. A. Erin Merkel.
public health physician.
"You'd Think They'd Synchronize Them Some
Way"
II
Jjjl III I 11
Cold Temperatures
To Stay in Valley
Temperatures in the Rogue
valley were expected to dip to
near 10 above this morning as a
mass of cold Canadian air con
tinues to move southward into
northern California.
Weather bureau officials here
said the mercury is expected to
show a warming trend tomor
row, however, with the possi
bility of some, cloudiness Mon
day afternoon. Although snow
is forecast for northern sections
of the state late Monday, none
was forecast for southern Ore
gon. The mercury dipped 18 above
in Mcdford Saturday morning,
wrnie other sections of the state
reported temperatures as low as
4 below. The coldest January
morning on record at the weath
er bureau here is 3 below.
Portland, which recorded a
low of 9 above Saturday morn
ing, expected the mercury to
dip near zero this morning for
the coldest morning in several
years. Thermometers Friday
night went down to 28.2 below
at Ellensburg, Wash., to break
an all time record there.
Seneca, Ore., reported a low
of 41 below Saturday morninff
while Klamath Falls reported
zero. Prospect 5 below. Green
Springs 10 below, and Pendle
ton, 15 below.
State police said traffic was
moving over the Siskiyous and
Green Springs without chains.
They reported two inches of
new snow on the Green Springs
Friday night and three inches
on the Siskiyous.
Motorists "ere advised to car
ry chains while traveling Ore
gon mountain on Highway 199,
King Saud Arrives
In U.S. Tuesday
Washington ;U.R The
United States hopes to win a
solid endorsement of the Eisen
hower Middle East Doctrine
from King Saud of Saudi Ara
bia when the Arab monarch
visits here this week.
Officials feel a Saud statement
of approval could do much to
sell the President's plan in the
turbulent area and thwart Rus
sian designs on Its rich oil fields.
King Saud, a strong anti-Communist,
is believed to favor the
Eisenhower plan but wants more i
details on how it will work.
The tall, Hespectacled king,
one of the las', absolute mon-
archs of the woriu, .arrives i
New York Tuesday with a reti
nue of more than 80. He comes
to Washington to begin a state
visit with Mr. Eisenhower the
following day.
The United States is rolling
out its most sumptuous red car
pet in an effort to impress the
king. A squadron of five Navy
destroyers will meet the liner
Constitution carrying the ruler
and escort it into New York
harbor. Before landing, Saud
will transfer from the Consti
tution to the lead destroyer for
a triumphal entry into port.
. Rome !U.P.) James D.
Zellerbach of San Francisco ar
rived here last night to assume
his new duties as U. S. ambas
sador to Italy.
Washington U.R) Secre
tary of the Treeasury George M.
Humphrey has proposed that all
future U. S. economic aid to for
eign countries be in the form
of repayable loans.
and Highway 99 north was re-
ported good.
Prospect reported nine inches
of new snow Friday night, and
state highway department crews
sanded roads after plowing, ac
cording to reports.
Communists Free
Photographer; Four
Students Charged
Budapest (U.R) A Commu
nist court freed American pho
tographer Mrs. Georgette Dickey
Mayer-Chapelle from prison
Saturday and ordered her out
of the country within 24 hours.
At the same time, it was an
nounced that four British stu
dents, including Judy Cripps, 19-year-old
granddaughter of the
late Chancellor of the Exche
quer Sir Stafford Cripps, are
being held indefinitely on spy
charges.
The public prosecutor's office
is "bringing charges" against the
four students, the interior min
istry said. It charged that two
of Miss Cripps' three male com
panions "took part in the activ
ities of counter-revolutionary
troops in Budapest."
The British foreign office de
nied the four were spies.
All western nations were un
der fire. Istvan Szirmai, head
of the government information
service charged that American,
British and West German intelli
gence agencies played an import
ant role in the Oct. 23 uprising,
entering Hungary in Red Cross
cars.
However, there was no ques
tion of espionage in the trial of
the American photographer.
Mrs. Chapelle, 37, of Mil
waukee, Wis., pleaded guilty be
fore a municipal court here of
entering Hungary illegally and
was sentenced to 50 days In
prison. But since she already
had been held more than 50
days, she was released and
ordered expelled.
A U. S. legation official at
tended the 5 '2-hour trial. A le
gation spokesman said the
tousle-haired free-lance photog
rapher would leave by legation
car today. She was spending the
night at the home of U. S. Min
ister Thomas Wailes.
Vaccine Effective,
Officials Report
Chicago iU.R) A national
survey has convinced federal
health authorities that the Salk
anti-polio vaccine is an effective
weapon against paralytic polio
myelitis, it was reported Satur
day. , Dr. Alexander D. Langmuir.
of the U. S. Public Health Serv
ice epiedmological center at At
lanta, made the report to an
American Medical association
meeting called to plan an inten
sive national vaccination pro
gram. Langmuir said the polio sur
veillance study by the communi
cable disease center at Atlanta
in 1955 and last year showed:
1. The poliomyelitis vaccine
used during 1956 has been safe.
2. The vaccine has been effec
tive in preventing the paralytic
form of the disease.
Gasquef Man Serious
After Car Accident
Grants Pass (U.R) August
Birschy, about 32, of Gasquet,
Calif., was in serious condition
in Josephine General hospital
here Saturday after being trap
ped in the wreckage of his car
overnight in near zero weather.
Hirschy told authorities he
could not remember whether he
skidded on the ice or fell asleep
while driving about one-half
mile north of the California
state line on the Redwood high
way. He was brought to the hos
pital today by a passing motor
ist who found him about 9 a.m.
Attendants said Hirschy suffered
frost damage to both feet, sev
eral broken ribs, a punctured
lung and facial cuts.
Bloodmobile To Visit
Medford February 13
The Red Cross Bloodmobile
unit will be stationed at the
Elks club in Medford from 1 to
5 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 13, it
was reported today.
Medford's quota for this blood
mobile visit has been raised
from the usual 250 pints to 290
pints. Red Cross officials said
more biood has been used here
recently than donors have sup
plied, making the quota increase
necessary.
Government Ousts
Russian Military
Attache From U.S.
Major Expelled for
Improper Purchases
New York (U.R) A Rus
sian embassy military attache
was ousted from the United
States Saturday in the aftermath
of the smashing of a Soviet spy
ring here.
Maj. Yuri P. Krylov was ex
pelled for improperly purchas
ing "quantities" of electronic
equipment and trying to buy
U.S. military secrets. He left
with his wife and two small
children aboard the French lin
er Liberte.
There were indications that
U.S. government officials plan
ned to implicate other Soviet
officials in the spy ring, re
garded by the FBI as the big
gest such case since Ethel and
Julius Rosenberg were execut
ed in 1953 for wartime atomic
espionage.
Spreads to Canada
The investigation of the al
leged new spy ring spread to
Canada, where authorities
sought possible links with the
three Lithuanian - born defen
dants being held here in $100,
000 bail.
Krylov's ouster was ordered
last week as FBI agents closed
in on Jack Soble, 53, his wife,
Myra, 52, and Jacob Albam, 64,
who were arrested in their
homes here Friday. They were
charged with conspiracy since
1947.
U. S. Attorney Paul Williams
said Soble had succeeded Soviet
Embassy Second Secretary Vas
sily M. Zubilin "as a dominant
figure in the espionage ring
after World War II."
NKVD Head
Zubilin, who returned to Mos
cow in 1944, was identified by
the FBI in 1953 as head of the
NKVD in North America. The
NKVD was describecr by FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover as
"one of the primary branches
of Soviet intelligence in North
America."
A Federal Grand Jury inves
tigation of the Soble-Albam case
was set for Monday, U. S. of
ficials were expected to intro
duce evidence implicating Sov
iet officials and others believed
to be involved in the alleged spy
ring. There were reports that
other arrests would be made.
Sports Bulletins
Ashland Medford High
school downed Ashland, 42 to
35. here last night to complete
a two-game series sweep over
the Grizzlies. The Black Tor
nado had period leads of 11-9.
18-15. and 30-29. Dick Copple
with 15 and Dick McLaughlin
with 12 paced Medford's scor
ing, and Mel Dailey got 11
for Ashland.
Phoenix Phoenix scored its
third Rogue league basketball
victory by tripping Glendale
52 to 43 here last night. The
home club had , quarterly
bulges of 11 to 9. 27 to 19
and 39 to 31 . Jim James
tallied 16 points for Phoenix
and Ray Munyon 15 for Glen
dale. Eagle Point Eagle Point
high trimmed Jacksonville 54
to 44 here last night in non
league basketball action.
Wayne Christian and Jack
Greb, who did not start, led
Eagle scoring with 16 and 14
counters, respectively. Marion
Do well got 13 for and Gary
Hueners 12 for Jacksonville.
Klamath Falls 62.
Pass 41.
Grants
Santa Clara 77. Stanford 61
Washington St. 74. Oregon 67
Washington 58. Oregon St. 51
State Senators Take Week End Off
Salem UJ.R) Most of Ore
gon's legislators were home Sat
urday, getting their personal af
fairs in order preparatory to the
"long haul" of the session and
perhaps getting some first hand
ideas from their constituents
about what they think of the ses
sion so far.
It was a rugged first two
weeks, especially in the Senate,
which started trying to elect a
president Jan. 13 and didn't suc
ceed until late Thursday, when
Sen. Boyd Overhulse, Madras
Democrat, was unanimously
elected.
With President Overhulse on
the rostrum, the senators quick
ly got down to the business of
organizing Friday. Committees
were named, and resolutions
passed enabling the financing of
l'' J.,'.. ". ':ii:..'-.f 7 ": t ' y
H i (triiiiiriAnr ni miai?' iiin mriin rf IwMreTrr imt until i mnar'hn
OUTSTANDING CITIZEN Clifford M. Mc- of Commerce at a ceremony at the Rogue
Ginty, center, is shown as he is congratulated Valley Country club Friday. The award was
by Secretary of State Mark Hatfield after made by Charles Jones, right, president of the
receiving the distinguished service award pre- Jaycees. Hatfield was guest speaker,
sented by the Jackson county Junior Chamber
Two Architects Are
Retained to Draw
New School Plans
Two young Medford archi
tects. Jack A. Edson and Wayne
E. Struble. have been retained
by the Medford school board to
work on preliminary plans for
the two new schools proposed
for construction.
They were selected after dis
cussions about possible plans,
materials and designs. Leonard
M a y f i e 1 d, superintendent of
schools, said they will compile
information regarding costs, al
ternative plans and materials,
and other data. They have been
asked to work out the most eco
nomical plans possible while
maintaining acceptable school
construction standards, May
field reported.
Edson has his own architec
tural office, and Struble oper
ates the Medford office of the
James Paine architectural firm,
Salem.
School Needed
The school board recently an
nounced that the 1956 school
census taken last October in
dicates the need for a least one
and probably two new schools
in east Medford. Mayfield said
the census has disclosed there
was an unpredictable increase
in school-age population due to
immigration during ' the past
year.
If the schools are to be built,
a bond issue will have to be
approved by the voters of the
district, and Mayfield said the
work of the architects will be
valuable in preparing plans and
cost estimates for the informa
tion of the voters.
The board is continuing its
study of the census results, and
the impact they will have on
the school system.
Three Drown When Boat
Capsizes in Napa River
Vallcjo, Calif. (U.R) Two
men and a boy were drowned in
the Napa river near here Satur
day when their rented boat cap
sized while they were on a fish
ing trip.
The body of one man and the
boy were recovered and search
continued for the body of the
other man.
the session, including pay for
the officers from chief, clerk to
sergeant-at-arms and for the sec
retaries and stenographers.
That business attended to, the
Senate recessed at 12:20 p.m.
and took their first Friday aft
ernoon and Saturday off since
the session opened. The House
had adjourned in the morning,
also until Monday.
The Senate recess came just
after Sen. Alfred H. Corbett,
chairman of the Senate Ways
and Means Committee, announc
ed a meeting would be held at
8:30 a.m. Monday to acquaint
members with ways and means
background, and he invited all
of the senators to set in at the
"exploratory" session.
The House adjourned after 46
bills were introduced Friday, 11
of them relating to teachers.
McGinty Presented
Jaycee Service Award
Clifford M. McGinty, 2110
Whittle ave., Medford, received
the distinguished service award
for 1956 from the Medford Jun
ior Chamber of Commerce at
their annual banquet program at
the Rogue Valley Country club
Friday.
Charles Jones, president of the
Jaycees, presefited the award.
The award is presented an
nually to the man between the
ages 21 and 35 who has been out-
$434 Collected in
Vheelbarrow Race
A total of $434.86 was col
lected Saturday afternoon on
downtown Medford streets when
members of the Medford Ki
wanis club and Medford Lions
club staged a wheelbarrow race
for the March of Dimes.
The Kiwanis club won the
race, collecting $21.14 more than
the Lions club. Members of the
Kiwanis solicited $228 while the
Lions collected $206.86.
Members of the two service
clubs pushed wheelbarrows with
large containers along North
Central ave. between Sixth and
Main sts. beginning at 12:30 p.m.
Team members solicited com
tribtitions to the March of Dimes
with the wheelbarrow pushers
advancing one foot for each dol
lar collected. Both teams travel
ed about a block and a half.
By agreement prior to the
race, pusher of the losing team
wheeled the pusher of the win
ning team in to the United States
National bank building where
the money was deposited.
Cave Junction Couple
Finds House Wrecked
Cave Junction (U.R) Mr.
and Mrs.. Glen Rawson of Deer
Creek, near Cave Junction, re
turned home from a California
vacation Friday to find their
home in a shambles.
They said an itinerant bobcat
had broken into the house, rip
ped the new draperies, eaten
their groceries, smashed dishes
and clawed the floor to shreds.
They said the visitor had ap
parently stayed several days.
One bill would give perma
nent teacher status to persons
hired for their fourth successive
year. The tenure law would ap
ply to any school district with
more than 2,000 students in daily
attendance.
Another bilL'would give the
State Board of Education author
ity to set standards on qualifica
tion of teachers, adequacy of
school plants, to establish re
quirements for graduation from
high school, teacher certificate
regulations and approve teacher
training programs.
A bill introduced by Rep. Rob
ert Klemsen, St. Helens Demo
crat, would forbid discrimination
in the employment of teachers
on the basis of race, sex, religion
or embcrship in teachers' organ
izations. (Sea Story on Page 14, See. 2)
Hi
standing in community leader
ship and service the previous cal
endar year.
Civic Activity
McGinty, owner of McGinty
Fuel company, is a member of
the YMCA board of directors
and trustees, Crater Lions club,
the Red Cross blood committee,
a member of the Lone Pine
school board, chairman of the
Grandview water district board,
and is active in St. Peter's Luth
eran church.
Other finalists were Glenn
Jennings, 2397 Jacksonville
highway; Robert A. Johnson, 20
Valley View drive; Dr. William
J. Thompson, 209 Fluhrer build
ing; Ray Johnson, 117 Vernada
place; and Clifford Ouellette,
1532 Terrace drive.
Don Carlon is chairman of the
DSA committee.
New secretary of Slate Mark
Hatfield, speaker at the banquet,
said there are three institutions
in this country making these
awards possible.
Prevailing Factor
Referring to the six finalists,
Hatfield said the prevailing fac
tor in their distinction is that
they were born in a country with
a free public school system.
Oregon has one of the finest
educational systems in the coun
try, he said. The secretary of
state pointed out that Oregon
has the highest starting mini
mum wage in the country for a
teacher with a BA and the sec
ond highest starting wage for a
teacher with an MA.
The second institution is "our
democratic way of life," often
known as the "great American
experiment," Hatfield said. He
added "we are living in such a
pragmatic age, people oflen con
sider democracy only from a
theoretical or mechanical view."
Rehabilitation Hope
"We must have a heart-feeling
as well as an intellectual under
standing of democracy," he said.
Because of the enlightenment of
democracy, Hatfield added, there
is hope of rehabilitation for the
criminally and mentally ill.
According to Hatfield the third
and most important institution
in America is its freedom to be
lieve in God. Service to man
must be rooted by a love in God,
he said.
Hatfield said Oregon reflects
this wisdom by being a leader in
the nation with laws encouraging
equal opportunity for employ
ment, civil rights and de-segregation.
Robert Boyer was master of
ceremonies at the banquet.
Weather
FORECAST: Low cloudines.
clearing early this morning, be
cominc fair thii afternoon and
tonight. Increa&ine cloudiness
and a little warmer Monday.
Chance of a few showen over
the mountains Ute Mondav.
High todav 38. Low tonight 20.
Highest Yesterday 3S
Lowest Yesterday 18
Our Skies Tonight
Sunset 5:19 p-m.
The Moon rises Monday
. 5:51 a.m.
Near It appears the planet. Mer
cury, which is making its first
brief appearance as a morninr
star this year. Mercury is now
ahotit S3 million miles from the
Earth.
a f xf
$; I'll,-"
Roseburg Man Held
After Incident on
Tiller-Trail Road
Plow Crew Stops at
Overturned Car
A 56-year-old hiehwav main.
tenance crewman. Sum w
Cathey, 105 G St., Eagle Point,
was snot through the left side
Friday night and a 23-year-old
Rosebarg man was lodeeri in th
county jail on a charge of assault
wnn a deadly weapon, accord
ing to state police.
Officers said Clarence Edward
Michel, an employee of the Rose
burg Lumber company, Dillard,
admitted shooting Cathey with
a .22 caliber revolver
Attendants at Roeue Vsllov
hospital, where Cathey under
went a three-hour nnerati nn dur
ing the night, described his con
dition as "satisfactory" Satur
day. North of Tiller
The shooting occurred about
9 p.m., nine miles north of Till
er on the Tiller-Trail highway.
Officers said Michel's car had
overturned there and Cathey
and another highway depart
ment employee. Chnrlps A
Cearly, Eagle Point, arrived at
tne scene with a snow plow a
short time later.
A motorist, whose nam wn
not known, also arrived, but left
to report the accident to Ray
Harnish, maintenance foreman
for the Eagle Point highway de
partment sector, cathey and
Cearly remained at the accident
scene.
At .9:44 p.m., Harnish called
state police and relayed the
message that the car had over
turned. The motorist said he
then started back to the scene,
but before arriving, noticed the
previously overturned car trav
eling toward Eagle Point.
Reaches Scene
When he reached the accident
scene, he found the snow nlnu.
but could not immediately find
the two crew members. A few
moments later he found Cathev
suffering from the bullet wound
ana niamg in the snow. Cearly,
who was not injured, was also
hiding in the snow nearby. The
men said . they were afraid
Michel was returning to harm
tnem.
When state Dolice arrived.
Cathey and Cearly said Michel
naa commanded them to put the
car back on its wheels. When
the maintenance men expressed
reluctance, they said Michel shot
Cathey.
Thev told officers Michel then
ordered Cearly to get into the
snow plow and prepare to pull
tne car to its wheels. Despite his
htlllpf wound r'athpv urac nr.
dered to hook a chain from the
snow plow to the car. After the
car was righted, Michel report
edly sped away.
Arrested Later
Michel, accompanied by hit
22-year-old wife, Rosetta, and 13-month-old
son, Steven LeRoy,
was arrested by state police at
10:55 p.m., near the Eagle Point
junction of Highway 62. Police
said he admitted the shooting.
Officers said Michel told them
he consumed a pint of brandv
after getting off work in Rose
burg. When he got home, he said
he decided to take his wife and
child to Brownsborn tn visit hi
wife's mother. He told police he
intended to leave his family at
his mother-in-law's home, then
make his "get-away".
Cathey was reported to have
lost a considerable amount of
blood and suffered an intestinal
perforation as a result of the
wound. He was given two blood
transfusions at the hospital. He
was taken to the hospital by
Harnish and police officers in a
state police car.
Philharmonic Concert
At High School Today
The Philharmonic Society of
Southern Oregon will give the
second concert of the 1956-57
season at 3 p.m. today at Med
ford High school auditorium.
Richard D. Werner, orchestra
director, will conduct the pro
gram which includes numbers
by Massenet, Grieg, and Tschai
kowsky. Mozart's "Symphony
No. 40 in G Minor" will be the
featured number. Coffee will be
served by the Philharmonic
guild during intermission.
The program will be repeated
at 8 p.m. in Grants Pass Junior
High schooi.
The orchestra is made up of
musicians from southern Oregon.