Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 10, 1957, Image 6

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gntX9ESrORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Biggest lilt Job
At The Dalles Dam
Is Accomplished
Tie liaWti V The b;g
fej. a rg l:fi to be made dur
I'lt cooitrjuwn of The Dalles
dam a erpiished Saturday
w:Hn the a:;5-ton aentrator rotor
nd siiR for i j.r.wr one power
ioue unit ii lifted into p!?re.
Two oeiei erarses each with
-i 350-ton- renocit. were press
ed into service and r. ere linked!
together w.th Iif'ing beam
wcighii.Jj 5 ton" for a total left
of 457 tor. I
The grw-retov rotor measured
33 feet, two inches in diameter
and the shaft attending through
it measured about SO feet.
Official vftnimem
The rotor e ?har. ert as
sembled inside the powerhouse
and lifted into p!sc under su-1
perwsion of M. F. Guile Jr. a
General 1 trie Company offic
ial from Schrnect.dy, N.Y.
Assistant Resident Army En
girter Glen legen said the gen
erator rotor and shaft and the
turbine nd khaft below it will
be suspended fnwn a thrust bear-'
ing which will carry a total load ,
of 3.9:15.400 pounds, including1
the hydraulic thrust of the wa-j
ter Blren said the generator j
will tra-.el at the rate of about
lA m p h. 8- the periphery when I
in full rjeration.
Tl 6 first two powerhouse un-1
its H'9 scheduled to go on the i
line hv Nov. 1. The remaining1
1 H'ithoried units will follow I
if three month intervals.
Home Expected To
Reject Amendment
Washington 1 House Re
pi.hJican Leader Joseph W. Mar
tin Jr., said Saturday he is cer
tain the house will reject an all
out drive by Southerners to at
tach a jury trial amendment to
the Civil Rights bill.
He based his prediction on
talks with members and on early
fragmentary returns from a poll
of Republican members on the
issue.
Rep. Edwin E. Willis. (D-La.).
one of the Southern leaders, said
ha is confident the administration-opposed
amendment will
draw enough support from
Northerners to be adopted.
I am confident the amend
ment would have been adopted
if the vote were taken today or
yesterday," Willis told he Unit
ed Press. "And 1 don't expect a
change in sentiment."
The conflicting forecasts cams
as tbe house girded for a fight
vr th issue. Southerners gen
fliT. conceded the chamber will
pa th bill but they also hope
to rvitrnp it. If this fails they
"wiD Iflofc to the Senate which
ift th past has bren a grave
yard for such legislation.
" Thfe houae fight centers on a
gouern attempt to assure jury
tr.: tor persons accused of vio
launs: federal eourt orders is
sued 'a support of voting or oth
er civil right.
Navy Crash Trucks
Prevent Tragedy
Xoxfdlk, Va An Eastern
sir liner with 74 persons aboard
and one engine aflame made a
pre-dawn emergency landing on
s Navy strip Saturday escorted
b crsh trucks which raced
alongside ths taxiing plane and
q Spewed foam on the fire.
"Thanks to the Navy it was
a routine landing," said Capt.
E. Q. Ford, pilot of the four
engined DC7B. "The Navy's
quick action was the main rea
son we had no trouble. We got
down from 19.000 feet in five
minutes and our only injury was
some woman who turned her
ankle while stepping out of the
plane."
"There was absolutely no
panic." Ford said. "We had all
68 passengers and six crew
members out of the plane with
in four minutes after we
landed."
The big passenger plane was
on a flightlfrom Miami to Bos
ton with the first stop slated
for Newark. N.J.. when fire
broke out in the engine as the
plane was passing over Norfolk.
Ford reported the trouble to the
CAA and was advised to land
at ;he Naval air station instead
nf the Municipal airport because
the Navy was better equipped
to handle the fire.
Urban Real Estate
Fids Said Lacking
New York IP Architectural
Forum magazine said today the
lack of basic economic statistics
in building and real estate is
critical.
The magazine noted that more
facts are known, literally, about
a siheIp aericu'.tural product,
peanuts, than about urban real
estate.
Although construction makes
up about 15 per cent of gross
national product, and while ur
ban real estate accounts for
more than half of all estimated
reproducable wealth. Forum
said, "most of the decisions in
the fields are marie in semi
darkness as far as facts go."
The11 Do It Every
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COFFEE FOI? OU HE'S OUT WHERE Li KETCH KW" th Sy dthf W!
I OiE OF THESE CAS- L THE WEST ,- cITrTstM SWSSER' T
V.rtERES TmE - "v NEITHER''
CL I T'ERE'S OHE OF THESE
Vi-C,ir L sTyJ BRUNOI B4MDITS IM
VNjfcCsS EVERY OFFICE-DO YA .
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Japan Slowly Striving to Become
Spokesman
By DAY INOSHITA
United Press Correspondent
Tokyo 'ti" Japan is striving
slowly and consciously to be
come the spokesman for Asia
and a powerful voice once again
in world councils.
It leaders have avoided direct
expression of this aim in words.
But they have hinted at it re
peatedly. Prime Minister Nobuske Kishi
indicated this last Wednesday,
the day after he returned to
Tokyo from a quick tour of
six Asian countries the first
made by any Japanese premier
to at least four of the nations
either before or after the war.
"I have formed an idea of
the thinking of Asia's leaders,"
Kishi told a news conference.
"What we discussed will con
tribute, I believe, to my talks
with American leaders in the
United States this moith."
Do Countries Like It?
Whether the other countries
of Asia like this development
is another question. Some, like
the Philippines and Burma, are
still deeply suspicious of Japa
nese motives, fearing a revival
of world war militarism.
Others, like the Republic of
Korea, are openly hostile. Still
others, like Thailand, Ceylon
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! of Medford Mail Tribune. Pat
i tern Dept.. 232 West 18th St..
j New York 11. N Y. Print plainly
Name. Address with Size and
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FQ THE TUWMT
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SIZES
1220
Monday. Juns 10, 1957
Time
''
for Asian Countries
and Pakistan, apparently do not
mind.
But even if they objected,
there appear- to be little they
1 can do to stop Japan from re
gaining a position in the in.
Irani' of the struggling natici
j of Asia most of them new.y
I born and caught in a morass of
j problems of newly-won inde
; pendence.
Japan is the only really in
' dustrialized nation in this sec
tion of the world. Its people are
energetic, ambitious and skilled
in handicrafts. Their literacy
rate is one of the highest in the
world.
Nation Has Coma Far
The road back was not easy.
But Japan has come far since
it lay in ruins in 1945, half of
Grange News
Eagl Point Grange
Members of the Eagle Point
Grange were surprised at their
meeting June 4, when Mr. and
Mrs. John Clark of Lakeside,
Calif., appeared for a visit. The
Clarkes, former residents of
Eagle Point, have maintained
their membership in the Eagle
Point local since leaving here
years ago.
Committee reports were the
feature business of the evening
meeting. Charles Hoover and
Milroy Charley reported on ag
riculture, both pointing out the
decline of beef stock on the
farms, and Hoover emphasized
the excess of hay and pasture
over local livestock require
ments. Paul Olson, chairman of
the legislative committee, re
ported, together with C. F. Da
vies. Mrs. Paul Force, heading the
home economic committee, call
ed to the attention of the mem
bers the selection of June 23
for church-going Sunday. It was
planned, she reported, that after
the service the members would
picnic on their own lawn next to
the church.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Gertrude Stanley, Very
Mathews, and the Nobles family.
Attendance was unusually light
because of the haying season and
excessive heat.
Phoenix Grange
Phoenix Grange will meet
Tuesday, June 11, at 8 p.m.
The serving committee will be
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Cox. Mrs.
Bernice Jenosky, Mrs. Marion
Niedermeyer and Miss Evelyn
Niedermeyer.
Upper Rogu Grangs
Upper Rogue Grange met in
regular session Thursday eve
ning, June 6, with Master Caro
runjnj-jiJijnjTj-Ljaj-m
Memo from Reddy. . .
fS -zioXiP I
a.
Xflfu 27. mwAAjddt6 .
By Jimmy Hatlo
lMOf?TE COFFEE, My
j3vroi'4f?.' THE CtJLy THlN'S
HEU. EVER BWMG IS iJM
aPPETTTE
its capital city and most of its
industrial factories razed to the
rround.
Economically the turning
point was the Korean war with
its military orders which inject
ed fresh blood into Japan's strug
gling industries. Politically, it
was Japan's admittance into the
United Nations last year after
lo-ij years of waiting.
Last year Japan ranked first
in the world in shipbuilding. Its
volume of trade was the biggest
in history with S2.47 billion in
imports and S2.402 billion in
imports. Even with an unfavor
able invisible trade balance,
$5i5 million in American mili
tary orders left Japan with a
plus balance of S293 million in
foreign exchange earnings for
the year.
line Harding presiding.
Bruce Grieve, fire insurance
agent, reported three renewals
of car insurance, three renewals
of fire insurance and two new
employee liability policies. Herb
Carlton reported on agriculture
Harold Barber on legislature
and Bob Conger on roads.
A public dance will be held
in the near future. The dale is
to be announced later. The July
meeting has been postponed be
cause it falls on the fourth. The
first meeting in July will be
Thursday, July 18. The next
meeting, June 20, will be pot
luck beginning at 7 p.m. Each
member is to bring two dishes
of food.
The next Pomona meeting
will be July 27 at Enterprize
Grange at 8 p.m. The secretary
was instructed to write a letter
to the State Highway commis
sion in regard to the dangerous
cuive on highway 62 near Cas
cade gorge, where so many acci
dents happen.
During lecture hour Meryle
Carlton told a bear story and
each man had to tell what their
wives wore on their wedding
night. The Andertons and Rich
ardsons served strawberries and
ice cream after the business
meeting.
SHADY COVE GRANGE
Shady Cove Grange will meet
Wednesday, June 12, at 8 p.m.
in the music room of Shady
Cove school.
BEER CAN DEPOSIT
Lincoln, Neb. W State
Sen. Willard Waldo was defeat
ed in a bid to put a two-cent
deposit on all beer cans. Waldo
didn't necessarily want to see
the cans used again. He said his
measure would help cut down
on the littering of Nebraska
highways-and parks with empty
- beer cans.
Dulles Sees Folly in
Dismantling Defense
On Russian Promises
Washington 'V Secretary
of State John Foster Dulles said
today that the United States will
never disarm "merely because
of Soviet promises'' to behave.
Dulles made the statement be
fore the House Foreign Affairs
Committee in defense of Presi
dent Eisenhower's foreign aid
budget. He said the aid funds are
needed to bolster U.S. allies
around the world against the
threat of Communist aggression.
Stassen Returns To London
His testimony came as U.S.
Disarmament Negotiator Harold
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E. Stassen concluded week end
conferences here and prepared
to fly back to London, where he
will lay the American "limited"
arms reduction plan before Rus
sia. Britain. France and Canada.
Dulles told the committee that
Russian leaders hae constantly
propagandized the world about
peace and disarmament.
He said the U.S. can never for
get that international Commun
ism has seized by force or the
threat of force nearly 20 nations
with populations of about 900
million people. He said these na
tions were seized before creation
of the free world's mutual se
curity and defense system.
He said Russia's record ."shows
what folly it would be for us to
agree to dismantle our common
defense system in reliance on un
supervised Soviet promises.
Equal Folly
"It would be equal folly to dis
mantle that system by our own
action and ourselves wreck or
weaken the collective defenses
which provide a proved deterrent
against aggression at the least
cost."
In riefenriinff F.isenhower's re
quest to Congress for 53.800,000.-
000 for foreign military and
economic aid, Dulles said that
these programs allowed the U.S.
to build its defense against
Communist aggression more
cheaply than if this country
stood alone.
Scientists Seeking
Vaccine for Flu
Washington W The pub
lie health service was to tackle
"oriental flu" today.
A spokesman for the service
said scientists will meet in Wash
ington to discuss plans for the
development of a vaccine against
the new kind of influenza which
has killed hundreds in the ori
ent. He said American drug
firms are convinced they can
develop the vaccine within two
to three months.
In San Francisco, army tech
nicians are studying blood sam
ples from 10 victims of "oriental
flu." The 10 were passengers
aboard the SS President Cleve
land which docked yesterday.
Ninety -six passengers and
crewmen came down with flu
during the voyage, but by the
time the ship docked, all but
four had recovered.
A public health official said
the flu lasts about five days
and usually is accompanied by a
100 to 101-degree temperature
fever.
TERMITES IH SCHOOL
Herrin, 111. (If) School of
ficials here are taking no chanc
es that termites might be hun
gry for learning instead of just
hungry. The termites popped up
last year at Lincoln School, then
disappeared. Now they're back
again. An exterminating compa
ny has been hired this time.
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WORKING at microscope,
Rose R. Ichelson, Philadel
phia researcher, is credited
with making important dis
covery in war on multiple
sclerosis. (International)
900 Degre
es Said
Possible
Humanly
San Francisco IP1 A
human being can stand a tem
perature of 900 degrees fahren
heit for a brief period before
collapsing, a University of Wash
ington scientist reported today.
The scientist, Konrad Buett-
ner, reported on the effect of
high temperatures on human per
formance in a paper delivered
to the semi-annual meeting of the
American Society of Mechanical
engineers.
Buettner's figures indicated
that under specific conditions, a
man "covered with one centi
meter of clothing might remain
as long as a minute and a half in
air at 900 degrees fahrenheit
without collapse."
"Without protective clothing,
he might survive a 300-degree
temperature for the same pe
riod," Buettner said.
The question of heat tolerance
is 01 vital importance to engi
neers designing aircraft travel
ing at supersonic speeds since the
aircraft are liable to become
heated by friction of the air.
Billy Graham Would
Preach in Russia
New York API Evangelist
Billy Graham has challenged So
viet leaders to permit him to car
ry his "Crusade for Christ"
throughout Russia.
Given the opportunity to
preach unrestricted, Graham
said, he could win more converts
to Christianity in Russia than in
any other country he has visited
during his seven-year-old cru
sade. But the 38-year-old evangelist
said he would go to Russia only
if he could have complete free
dom of movement and was able
to preach wherever he desired.
Graham said he was convinced
that "the greatest religious re
vival in history would take place
in the Soviet Union."
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UMC Publicity
Committee Plans
Breakfast Meet
The third in a series of break
fast meetings for the United
Medford Crusade publicity com
mittee will be held tomorrow at
6:30 a.m., at the Jackson hotel.
G. Roderic Durham. Salem,
executive director of the Oregon
Chest, will be speaker. Dur
ham was in charge of Salvation
Army work here during the 30's
and has served the Oregon Chest
for the past seven years. He will
teach in an institute for cam
paigners to be held at the Uni
versity of California in July.
Others Invited
Larry Horton. chairman of
the UMC publicity committee,,
has invited his staff as well as
representatives from radio, tele
vision stations and newspapers
to these meetings. According to
Horton, plans have been adopted
to develop some new visual aids
which will help to bring infor
mation about the UMC agencies c
to the public in a new form.
Bob Johnson, UMC campaign
chairman, has called C meeting
of his division heads and their
assistants for Tuesday noon in
the Chadwick room of the Jack
son hotel. Durham will be pres
ent to give help and advice on
campaign plans. 1
Workers Ready
According to Johnson, the ma
jority of workers needed for all
soliciting divisions, except the
residential division, have a!- (
ready been recruited, reaching a
new high in advance planning
for the UMC work. Earlier con
clusion for the fall campaign
is expected this year as a result
of early recruiting of workers.
Mrs. Raymond Refer, a mem
ber of the UMC board and mem
ber of the joint budget commit
tee of the Oregon Chest and the c
Portland United Fund, spent last
Friday and Saturday in budget .
sessions in Portland. These
meetings will result in determin
ation of yearly budget figures q
approved for Oregon Chest
agencies both for the Oregon O
Chest and for the Portland
United Fund. Raymond Reter is
a member of the Oregon Chest
board, and was in attendance at
an Oregon Chest executive
meeting held last Friday at Portland.
Canadians Voting
In General Election
Ottawa. Canada HP) Canad
ians were voting today in an
election that will decide who
runs their government until 1
1961.
Some 6 million Canadians
or about two-thirds of the na
tion's voters are expected to.
vote in the nation-wide generar
election.
Prime Minister Louis St. Lau
rent and his liberal party are
expected to win over his con
servative challenger John Dif-fenbaker.
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