Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 31, 1957, Image 13

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    Medford
United Press Full Leased Wire
Tribune
United Press Full Leased Wire
Second Section MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1957 8 Panes
Aid ForTrujillo Expected
To Have Rough Time at Hearings
PROTEST U. S. ATOMIC TESTS .Japanese police officers, in lines three deep, scuffle
with more than 100 students in front of the U. S. Embassy in Tokyo. The rioting stu
dents were protesting the American atomic tests now going on in the desert of south
ern Nevada.
Body of Mountain
Climber Removed
Shiprock. N.W. HP A
t.-am of veteran mountain I
ciimrsers late Thursday removed
tie body of a 22 year-old Se
a'.ti. Wash., soldier killed in a
gOO-foot fail cn historic Ship-
rock Mountain Wed.-iessiay night, j
Auinoniw's saia me Doay oi
Bernard . Topp had been re
moved from a ledge on "the
l,7C-foct sandstone pinnacle
located or. the Navajo Indian
reservation.
A etiforur' inquest held at
the F,?nc ruled tre death ac
cidental. Topp sM two otner climbers,
Elton K. Earle, another soldier,
and Harry Davis, a scientist at
White S,nds Frov -g Grounds
and preMi?rif ii ih Southwest
Moun'.sin Climber association,
were ericendi'i? sheer cliff
of the peak vA-.f. s piton pulled
loose arn sen; the vung soldier
hurtling throus space.
BPAAK CETsTPBizF:
Aachen, Germany W
Belgium's Fs-tl - Ks.iri Spaak,
new secrelary-'.enral cf NATO,
receives the Kaiuls Prize for
service to European unity today.
Spaak. former Belgian foreign
minister, is the seventh person
to receive the award.
COMPARE
Agiazo Instant Pudding
with m otber Pudding
Instant v Cooked
.
EAGLE POINT
ineral Clubs
Gather
B" MRS. TKOMASINE SMITH
Eagie Point The North West
Pow-Wow Gem and Min eral
c'libs Iroin Washington, Arizona,
Oregon, California, Nevada and
Utah are gathering at the Bar
Lew ranch on Brophy rd. in
F.dgle Point Thursday, May 30,
tr.rouah Sunday, June 2. Ap
I'Toxirnstely six hundred people
are expected. The group will
hun: rock:- on the Bar Lew ranch
and bring with them rocks for
exchange. The trip is sponsored
by Roxy Ann Gem and Mineral
club.
Mr. and Mrs. Sandy Clave and
Mr. ana Mrs. Jake Olsen attend
ed a bowling tournament in Al
bany ths past week end, return
ing home via the Willamete Pass.
Chief Petty Officer and Mrs.
Jack Johnston, parents of Mr.
and Mrs. Stan Smith, arrived
May 25 from Sasebo, Japan
where Johnston has been station
ed the past two years. The John
stons will visit in Eagle Point
and with relatives in Jackson
ville during their thirty-day
ieave before reporting to Camp
Baker where Johnston will be
stationed.
A get a c q u a inted coffee
klatch was held Wednesday May
22 at the C. S. Griffin home on
Nick Young rd. Guest of honor
was Mrs. Darlene Elder, who
with her husband Delbert and
yount; daughter Vickie are mak
ing their home on the Nick
Young rd. Guests were Mrs. Dar-
rell Stephenson and daughter
j Connie, Mrs. Bennie Hefley and
children Martha and Mark, Mrs.
J. W. Martinson and son Rickie,
Mrs. James C. McCary, Mrs.
Burton Jensen, Mrs. Ned Arm
strong and Mrs. Merle Arm
strong, Mrs. Don Geren, Mrs.
Glen Cave and son Gary and
Mrs. V. W. Jackson. Coffee and
rolls were served during the
morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Barnes and
children, former residents of
Eagle Point, were visitors of the
Starr Smiths and Shy Callaghans
one day this week. Barnes is
Principal of the Baker Ore., High
school.
a. ' - i- i :
Costs a littU ! '
Worth, a tstf KeFieara:
Amazo a the tnly
starch ifistant Wsert
IQnly Amaze ies Sr
tectly with milk, a well
a with fruit juices, coffe.
cola, all other liquids
2 Orgy Amazo gies you stel
fashionad, ceekexl pud
ding goodnoas
at Only Amazo tail
O m your rejfrigarater
form a skin
CHOCOLATE VNlllACOCOUTCat
SUTTERSCOTCM
BUY FOR LESS AT-
Amici Horizon club is having
its first project in a luncheon and
fashion show to be held Saturday
June 1 at the Rogue Valley
Country club from 12:30 to 2:30
p.m. Tickets may be obtained
from Molly Gregg, Edna Gray,
Martha Ansted and Lana Mc
Graw in Eagle Point, or Joan
Houston and Sharon Roberts in
Trail. Proceeds will be used to
charter this group, the first one
of its kind in the Rogue Area
Camp Yire Council. This group
is the senior branch of Camp Fire
girls and members are from all
over Jackson County.
Sunday morning May 19, Mr.
and Mrs. Johnnie Johnson gave
a surprise birthday breakfast for
Mrs. Clinton Ayres. Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Palm and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Chamberlain and
family, the honored guest and
her family and Carl Johnson at
tended. In the afternoon the
Johnsons and the Ayres families
took their boat, a recently finish
ed project of the men, to Gardn
er' lake for launching.
Vr. and Mrs. Clarence Rankin,
Portland, spent the week with
Mrs. Rankin's brothers and fam
ilies, the Fred and Earl Farlows.
While here Rankin found the
fishitjg favorable with a limit
catch.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Nagcl mo
tored to Eugene May 20, return
ing Tuesday, with a slop over in
Grunts Pass to visit friends.
A party honoring Mary Bone
brake's fifth birthday was given
Monday, May 27. Enjoying
games and refreshments were
Ellen Pulley, Jerry and Peggy
Prude, Kathy and Susan, Steven
Hayes, Scott and Shelia Chart
ers, Scott Etzel, Dana Bradshaw,
Margy and Karen Mar tin,
Stephen, Pattie and Teresa Bone
brake. Word was received Wednesday
of the drowning of Lee N.
Swope, uncle of Mrs. San Smith.
He, was a resident of Klamath
Falls.
The last meeting of the Eagle
Point Elementary P.T.A. was
held Tuesday, May 28.
Herbert Daniels of Camp
White sang the "Lord s Prayer"
followed by the group singing.
Th intermediate and upper
chorus, under the direction of
Mrs. Maxine Berryman. present
ed a musical program. Tom Per
due and Aedene Jensen sang a
duet and the quartet composed
of Dorene Christian, Edna Gray,
Martha Ansted and Aedene Jen
sen, sang. Ron Weidman con
cluded the program.
The remaining PTA money is
bj presented to the grade school
music department for purchase
of musical equipment to aid in
building a better grade school
band.
Mrs. Dale Ackerman, hist
orian, gave a summary of the
1956-57 PTA year. Installation
of officers was conducted by
Mrs. Ackerman, a past president
and current Jackson county
junior vice president. Officers
taking the oath of office were
Mrs. John Hufman, president;
1
V V
ffll'hJi 'j-T 'v",'d s- Central
GORDON' FROST
T.V.
Next Free Ford June 26
FRIDAY to FRIDAY SPECIAL
PLASTIC CLOTHES mg. 52.9s
BASKET
Sixe 19Vs" Diameter
14's" High
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2 2
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Choice of colors. Guranteed not to break, crack,
chip, peel, dent, rust or fade. PLUS 50 FORTUNE STAMPS
A. Robt Smith '
Br A. ROBERT SMITH
Mail Tribune Correspondent
Washington Members of the
House Foreign Affairs Commit
tee plan to give State Depart
ment officials a rough time with
in the commg(
week on the
question of the
millions of dol
lars In foreign
aid funds that
have gone to
the T r u j i 1 lo
I dictatorship of
the Dominican
Republic,
just how
much has been given to this Car
ibbean government is recent
years, the State Department re
fuses to disclose to the public!
But members of Congress have
been able to obtain that informa
tion for confidential use.
The lever which the House
Foreign Affairs Committee will
have when it questions this pro
gram will be that it is now re
viewing the current foreign aid
budget which President Eisen
hower has asked Congress to ap
prove. How much, if any, money
is in the budget for the Trujillo
government during the coming
year is another secret matter.
Committee members have
been stirred to question this spe
cific allotment of funds by the
public reaction to the Murphy
and Galindez cases, which a
House subcommittee has decided
to look into next week. Various
news gathering agencies have
succeeded in recent weeks in
documenting details of these re
lated cases to show that Gerald
Murphy, the missing Eugene,
Ore. flier, unwittingly helped
Dominican officials spirit Dr.
Jesus Galindez from New York
to the Caribbean with the aid of
Trujillo agents operating in this
country. A grand jury has re
cently indicted one of these ag
ents, John J. Frank, for failure
lo register as a foreign agent.
The State Department says, in
effect, that it sees nothing wrong
with giving aid to a dictatorship
if it believes this to be in Amer
ica's national interest. The de
partment expressed this view
point in a letter to Rep. Charles
O. Porter (D-Ore.), who has been
pursuing the Murphy case for
months. In a letter to State Sec
retary Dulles, Porter said:
"Our official relationship with
certain dictators, and I refer
specifically to Trujillo, Batista
(of Cuba) and Franco (of Spain),
have been and are so carried on
as to identify the United States
with their regimes. We have
gone far beyond the diplomatic
necessities and our own moral
standards to woo these dictators
for alleged military advantages
in our defense against the USSR.
U.S. BelieTCd Hypocrite
"As a result of this indentifi
cation, the oppressed and im
poverished peoples in these re
gimes tend to believe that the
United States is a hypocrite with
Morse Announces
Examinations for
Academy Choices
Washington, D. C. Senator
Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) has an
nounced that preliminary Civil
Service examinations will be
given in Oregon on Monday,
July 15, to young men interested
in nomination to a service
academy.
Unmarried men in good phy
sical condition who will have
reached their 17th but not their
22nd birthday by July 15, 1958,
are eligible to participate in the
examination, the Oregon Sena
tor explained.
The tests are the first step to
ward possible appointment to
the Military Academy at West
Point, N. Y., Naval Academy at
Annapolis, Md., Air Force Acad
emy at Colorado Springs, Colo.,
or the Merchant Marine Acad
emy at Kings Point, N. Y.
"Because I am allowed to
make only a very limited num
ber of academy appointments
each year," Morse declared, "I
base my decision solely upon
the results of the impartially
conducted, competitive examin
ations." The Senator urged that young
men interested in participating
in the July 15 exam write to
him immediately to obtain full
information and learn the exact
locations at which the tests will
be administered. His address is
417 Senate Office Building,
"Washington 25, D. C.
Morse emphasized that the
deadline for receipt of inquiries
by his office is June 22.
Mrs. Herbert Perdue, vice presi
dent; Mrs. Shy Callaghan, teach
er vice president; Mrs. Leroy
Bedingfield, secretary; Mrs. Clin
ton Ayers, treasurer; and Mrs.
Ray Palm, historian. The meet
ing adjourned to a coffee hour
served by the eighth grade mothers.
reference to its tradition of de
mocracy and justice and, further,
that they perforce must look for
help from our rivel, the U.S.S.R.
In particular, our giving military
aid to these dictators helps them
entrench themselves against
their own people, many of whom
feel genuine yearnings for a gov
ernment based on consent of
the governed.
"If our foreign policy is to
be moral, we should be friendly
to democratic nations, and cold
and disapproving to tyrannies
such as those named above. We
should be proud of our form of
government and its provisions
for fairness to the individual
and, it follows, aloof and disap
proving to government sustained
by terror and fraud."
In a reply signed by Assistant
Secretary Robert C. Hill, the de
partment stated:
"The cooperation of the Uni
ted States with other countries
of the free world facilitated by
the far-sighted comprehension
existing in Congress of the ulti
mate objectives of the United
States would appear to be ample
and recognized evidence of its
frank determination to help oth
ers advance along the same paths
of freedom and progress which
we seek to follow in this coun
try. To my knowledge, no re
sponsible or appreciable portion
of the population of the coun
tries you mention nor indeed of
any of the countries of this hem
isphere has turned to the coun
tries of the Soviet orbit for help,
jior am I aware of any indication
that they contemplate doing so.
"The basic principle which
must guide the executive branch
in the formulation and imple
mentation of this country's for
eign policy is determined by the
practical and diplomatic neces
sities of safeguarding the secur
ity and general welfare of the
people of the United States in
collaboration with the rest of
the free world.
"In achieving this we do not
intervene in the internal affairs
of other countries. Non-intervention
forms one of the keystones
of this country's foreign policy.
We strive by setting an example
to prove the advantages of the
democratic system. The depart
ment cannot accept as accurate
the statement that in conducting
its affairs with any friendly
country this country has depar
ted from the recognized moral
standards of the United States."
Jealousy Problem
When Porter asked why the
department refused to make pub
lic the amounts given the Do
minican Republic, State explain
ed that it doesn't like one coun
try to know what another is get
ting because apparently jealousy
and envy then become problems
in our foreign relations.
"I believe," concluded Porter
in his letter to Dulles, "that my
constituents do not approve of
our present official policies of
friendship and support of dicta
tors. I believe that all American
citizens will be astounded to
learn of the military aid we
have given these worthies."
Porter said he has taken up
the matter with members of the
House Foreign Affairs Commit
tee, who were equally "astoun
ded." Providing additional steam
for their questioning of the wis
dom of granting this aid in the
coming fiscal year is the public
demand the lawmakers are feel
ing for cutting the federal budget.
f w
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