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MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1957
No. 143
52nd Year
BRAVES GO' AHEAD
M1 10 t lOTlY
Portiip
Missile Caught
In Space; Going
Around Earlh
Disclosure Fails
To Surprise Scientists
London W Moscow
Radio announced today that
part of the missile which launch
ed Russia's satellite- is also en
circling the earth in a moon
like orbit of its own.
The last stage of the rocket
apparently was caught in space
and became a second satellite.
"It is not only the satellite
which is being watched," Mos
cow Radio said, "but also the
rocket that carried it into the
orbit.
Nearly Same Altitude
"This rocket is also encircling
the earth at approximately the
same altitude as the satellite.
"But it is separated from it
by some 1,000 kilometers (680
miles). This distance will alter
in the future."
This announcement was the
latest in Russia's stepped-up
scientific and propaganda battle
with the West. Shortly before, it
reported it had exploded a
"new" hydrogen warhead Sun
day. This came only a few days
behind Moscow's achievement
of launching the first earth
satellite into outer space.
Scientists Not Surprised
Tracking the shell, as well as
the satellite, would provide
highly important information on
the character of space.
Moscow's" disclosure was not
a surprise to scientists.
Theoretically, anything fired
outside the earth's atmosphere
and gravitational field at suf
ficient speed would become a
satellite, regardless of shape or
design.
Drs. J. Allen Hynek and Rich
ard E. McCorsky of the Smith
sonian Astrophysical Laboratory
in Cambridge, Mass., told news
men earlier today that they be
lieved the satellite might actu
ally include the third-stage rock
et. May Have Been Rocket
McCorsky said at that time
there was a possibility the rock
et itself had become a satellite
of even greater dimensions than
the original. McCorsky said that
on this basis it was possible that
a reported sighting of the satel
lite in Alaska Sunday was actu
ally the third stage rocket.
Observers said the orbiting of
the Soviet rocket gave convinc
ing new evidence of the Krem
lin scintists' ability to aim a
guided missile.
Only One Rocket
it would have to be delivered
into space at exactly the right
speed on precisely me correti
course to "orbit" into a perfect
trajectory.
ablv. only the last
stage of the launching rocket
was revolving aDOut we earm.
Scientists believed it required at
least a three-stage rocket one
rocket firing after another, with
the spent one dropping out to
carry the 184-pound satellite to
its orbit 560 miles above earth.
The news of the second acci
dental "satellite" was broadcast
to Soviet listeners in the Mos
cow home service early in the
evening.
Salem RF The State Board
of Control has formally appoint
ed Amos Reed as new superin
tendent of MacLaren school for
boys.
Retire Sen. Neuberger,
Alcorn Urges
Bav RB H. Meade Al
corn, chairman of the Republi
' can National Committee, told
the annual convention of the
Oregon Young Republicans here
Saturday evening that he is con
vinced the Republican party can
make a comeback in Oregon in
1958.
Alcorn told the group that
their "first step" must be to
"retire" Democratic Sen. Rich
ard L. Neuberger "to private
life" in 1960.
Speaking of Sen. Wayne
Morse, also an Oregon Demo
crat, he declared, "Unfortunate
ly the people have no early op
portunity to get rid of Morse."
Sen. Morse was elected last year,
and his term expires in 1962.
The GOP official told the con
vention delegates there ia a "vast
sim Satellite
GUEST SPEAKER At a dinner meeting of
the Democratic Social club in the Medford
hotel Saturday night, Representative Charles
O. Porter outlined different phases of the
Rogue basin development bill which he put
belore Congress this year. Cost of the pro
posed project will be over $66 million. At the
head table with Porter, seated left to right,
are Mrs. Porter, chairman of the Democratic
Porter Flies Over Project Site
Prior to Auto Tour of Same Area
Congressman Charles O. Pos
ter this morning flew over sev
eral widely-separated portions of
his proposed Rogue Basin de
velopment project to see from
the air proposed da"msites""ah"d'
alternative locations.
He made the flight before an
automobile caravan tour of some
of the locations, and after a
briefing session at the Medford
hotel, at which two representa-
Couple Brought Back
By Mercy Flights, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brooks,
907 South Ivy st., were returned
to Medford by a Mercy Filghts,
Inc., air ambulance Saturday.
Both were injured in an auto
mobile accident near Palmdale,
Calif., recently.
Mrs. Brooks, more seriously
hurt than her husband, was
taken to Sacred Heart hospital
here. She had been hospitalized
in Palmdale.
The couple was picked up at
Bakersfield, Calif., after engine
trouble held up the air am
bulance plane there for repairs.
They were taken from Palm
dale to Bakersfield by ground
ambulance.
The Brookses were the 726th
and 727th patients flown by the
non-profit air ambulance cor
poration. It was the first time
since 1952 that a patient was de
layed by mechanical difficul
ties, and the third time since the
service began operations in
January, 1950.
New Disarmament Plan
To Include Satellites
United Nations, N. Y. (IP)
The United States will present
to the General Assembly early
this , week a disarmament plan
that may urge controls over
earth satellites such as the Rus
sian sphere hurtling around the
globe. . ,
Young GOP
reservoir" of solid Republican
strength in Oregon.
Earlier in the day, the Young
Republicans elected Jack Miller
of Salem as new chairman and
Joyce Spillman of Portland as
cochairman. Harvey Osborn of
Portland was reelected YR com
mitteeman and Carolyn Larson,
Eugene. was elected national
committeewoman .
The hottest floor fight of the
convention came on a resolution
which would have recommend
ed allowing the Justice Depart
ment greater powers in guaran
teeing civil rights. The resolu
tion was beaten with the final
version saying "We, as Young
Republicans, urge that as a state
we should clean up our own
house before criticizing other
states."
tives of the corps of engineers
told of progress in their study
of the projects.
The Eugene Democratic con
gressman is sponsor of a bill to
authorize the project, at an esti
mated "cost' of some' $66V miF
lion. Additional studies, supple
menting earlier work by a num
ber of federal agencies, are now
under way.
The congressman, flying in a
Rogue Flying Service plane, and
accompanied by Henry Stewart
of the engineers and Jack Hoff
buhr of the Medford Irrigation
district, first went over the pro
posed Apllegate dam site, just
above Ruch and just below the
confluence of the Big and Little
Applegate rivers. They then pro
ceeded to the Copper area,
where an alternate dam site is
under study, which would cur
tail some flood control benefits,
but be better for the Applegate
fishery.
Follows Applegate
The plane then followed the
Applegate down to the Rogue
just below Grants Pass, then
upriver to the Lewis creek dam
site, over which most of the
controversy in the project has
arisen, and then over three dam
sites which are under consid
eration as' alternates to Lewis
creek. They are on Elk creek,
Juveniles Arrested
For Torpedo Thefts
Police arrested three juveniles
and are looking for several more
in connection with a series of
thefts of railway torpedoes and
fuses from a Southern Pacific
caboose standing on the right-of-way
near Jackson and Clark sts.
during the week end, according
to city police.
Police said they first arrested
a 15-year-old in the Craterian
theater on Saturday night and
arrested a 15-year-old and 14-year-old'
on Sunday afternoon in
connection with the torpedo
theft. When questioning the"
three youths at the station, po
lice said they admitted to taking
the flares and fuses and also
told police of other youths in
volved in the theft.
A police officer, making a
routine check, found a box of the
torpedoes and fuses on top of a
stairway leading to the roof of
the Fluhrer building Saturday
night. Acting on a "tip," police
arrested the first boy while he
was watching a movie.
The other two juveniles were
arrested while placing torpedoes
on the Southern Pacific tracks
in front of freight train, police
said. Police said also they had
recovered 32 torpedoes and a
number of fuses from the three
boys. A number of fuses and
torpedoes are yet unaccounted
for despite the number the boys
say they used, officers said.
The three youths were re
leased in custody of their par
ents pending action by juvenile
authorities, police said. Investi
gation is still underway to locate
the remaining flaxes, they added.
Central committee Larry Sheehan and Demo
cratic Social club president Marvin Madden.
Other guests at the dinner included Rep. and
Mrs. Robert Duncan. This morning, Porter,
along with Henry Stewart of the Army engi
neers and Jack Hoffbuhr of the Medford Irri
gation district flew over various 'proposed
dam sites along the Rogue and Applegate riv
ers to study the terrain from the air.
Big Butte Creek, and on the
Rogue itself, near Lost creek,
about 10 miles upriver from
Lewis creek.
At the 8 a.m. briefing session,
Steward and Ross Hatch told the
70 Of "more- "persons"-attending",
the engineers' study is well
along, and should be finished
soon after the end of the cur
rent fiscal year.
Developing Plan
They are developing a com
prehensive plan to take into con
sideration the needs and desires
of all interested, they stated, and
are particularly interested in the
reactions and suggestions of lo
cal people who know the area
They don't want to "miss out"
on any sites which are suscepti
ble to more effective develop
ment than the sites already un
der consideration, they said.
The projects' costs are being
measured against the benefits
which would accrue from them,
it was explained, and concur
rent studies have been requested
from the U.S. Fish and wildlife
service, and from the state fish
and game . commissions.
Col. Paul H. Weiland, speak
ing for himself and for organ
ized fishermen and conservation
ists, spoke 'at the meeting, her
aiding the coming "battle of the
Rogue river," if efforts are con
ttinued to get the high Lewis
creek dam, saying that nation
wide organizations would battle
such a development, no matter
how strongly it was supported
in this area.
Porter Speaks
Congressman Porter spoke
after Weiland, saying this was
not the time for a detailed re
ply, but pointing out that as a
conservationist himself, he is de
termined to see that all phases
of the project shall have approp
riate emphasis and protection.
"We must look at this in bal
ance," he said, "and not just
from one viewpoint alone. He
also cited new developments in
the protection of fish life, and
stated he believed it would be
possible to end up with even
better fishing on the Rogue, af
ter the project is completed,
than there is at present.
His mail indicates some 98
per cent of Jackson county peo
ple want this development, and
he said the proper procedure
now is to let the engineers and
other agencies complete their
survey, and everyone cooperate
with them so that the best pos
sible proposal will result.
Weather
FORECAST: Increasing cloudi
ness tonight. Cloudy with oc
casional rain Tuesday. Low
tonight 42. High Tuesday 5S.
Temp.
Highest Yesterday 53
Lowest This Morning 42
Prec. to 4:30 a.m. Today 28
Our Skies Tonight
Sunrise
Sunset
Monrise
Full Moon (Hunter's
Tuesday
PROMINENT STARS
Altair. high in south
Arcturus, sets
VISIBLE PLANETS
Saturn, low in
southwest
Venus, set
6:15 a.m.
5:43 p.m.
5:03 p.m.
Moon)
6:53 p.m.
8:07 p.m.
6:49 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
Faubus Says Troops
Accompany Girls
To Dressing Rooms
Army Spokesman
Denies Knowledge
Little Rock, Ark. (IP) Gov.
Orval E. Faubus charged today
that federal troops guarding
Central High school have been
invading "the privacy of the
girls' dressing rooms."
He made the charge in a letter
to Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker,
military commander here.
A spokesman for Walker said
the Army had no knowledge of
any such incident.
Superintendent of Schools
Virgil T. Blossom, after check
ing with Central High school of
ficials, told reporters:
"The troops are not following
the girls into the dressing rooms.
Why the governor takes the
word of a bunch of agitators to
make such a charge I do not
know."
Assistant School Superinten
dent Fred Graham said the ac
cusation was "ridiculous."
Complaints Received
Faubus told 'Walker in his
letter that he has "received a
number of complaints from par
ents, mostly mothers, about your
troqps accompanying the girl
students to their dressing
rooms."
The governor,' who distribut
ed the letter to the press before
it was received at Walker's head
quarters, suggested that the
general bring in a number of
Women's Army Corps members
to police the dressing rooms if
he feels tropps are needed to
protect Negro girls there.
He said it would be "more
seemly" for Wacs to handle such
guard duty "rather than male
soldiers armed with rifles, bayo
nets and billy clubs."
Tensions Seen Easing
The governor's latest blast at
the federal troops came after a
Negro leader said racial ten
sions seemed to be easing in
Little R'.'ck and the atmosphere
at Central High was "getting
back to normal pretty fast."
Mrs. Lucius C. Bates, Ar
kansas leader of the National
Association for Advancement of
Colored People, said the nine
Negro students attending Cen
tral High under the protection
of federal troops are beginning
to look forward "hopefully" to
the day when "they can walk to
school like everyone else, with
out armed guards."
The Army escorted the Negro
boys and girls to school as usual
this morning. Informed sources
said Maj. Gen. Walker had no
immediate plans for reducing
the force of paratroopers and
national guardsmen patrolling
the school.
Power Outage Occurs
In Southern Oregon
An outage throughout the gen
eral svstem of California-Oregon
Power company was reported a
little before 10 a.m. today wnen
trouble developed in the sub
station yard at Dixonville, near
Roseburg. company officials said.
The sub-station serves South
ern Oregon and northern Cali
fornia areas. The power was off
for about 30 minutes.
Local hospitals reported the
use of auxiliary power during
the period, with Sacred Heart
hospital switching to an auxil
iary generator. Both Osteopathic
and Rogue Valley hospitals
switched to battery powered
lamps. Several x-rays and one
operation were delayed at Os
teopathic hospital due to the
power failure. At Rogue Valley
hospital an operation was re
ported in progress at the time.
Battery lamps supplied the pow
er in the operating room, hos
pital officials reported.
City police reported normal
operations from stand-by gen
erator for police radio, teletype
and office lights. Several small
traffic jams .were reported in the
downtown area due to the lack
of traffic signals. Police directed
traffic in heavily traveled inter
section. Radio stations in the valley
were off the air during the pow
er failure, station spokesmen
said.
Drill Planned Tonight
For National Guard
A drill will be held tonight for
headquarters company of the
first battalion, 186th infantry of
the National Guard, Capt. S. J.
Fa gone announced this morning.
Pay checks will be available
for those who have not already
received them, he added. Many
of the previous drills had been
cancelled due to curtailment of
National Guard funds on a na
tional level, the captain reported,
"What Are You Going
Students Pour Into
Riot-Torn Warsaw
Warsaw HP) Hundreds of
students from other Polish cities
poured into riot-torn Warsaw to
day for a mass meeting in de
fiance of a police ban.
The location and exact pur
pose of the meeting was kept a
secret and steel-helmeted militia
men patrolled every street in
the center of the city on the
lookout for it.
The city was quiet but tense
and there were fears the meet
ing would spark another riot of
the type that, has rocked the
capital four nights in a row.
Hundreds of young persons
were reported under arrest but
there was no accurate count.
Students Summoned
Thousands of out of town stu
dents were summoned to. the
meeting but not all' of them
came into town. A police ban
on student meetings apparently
dampened the spirit of the oth
ers, o-
The Polytechnic Institute, the
scene of the first bloody riot last
Thursday, did not open for class
es today.
Little, was known about to
day's meeting but it was appar
ently was called in connection
with the government shutdown
Rolarians Net $1,000
In Suit Sale Proceeds
Approximately $1,000 was
netted in the suit sale sponsored
by the Medford Rotary club here
Friday and Saturday, Ken Cook,
general chairman of the sale,
said today. '
The $1,000 estimated in net
sales receipts is approximately
half of the net proceeds from
last year's sales, Cook said. Then
the Rotary club committee
raised $2,000 to give to the Rogue
Valley hospital.
Cook said about 200 suits were
on sale this year and all but 20
of these were sold. Last year
many more suits were placed on
sale through donation.
This year's . proceeds will be
used by the civic club's youth
activities. A major project is
bringing a foreign exchange stu
dent to this area through the
American Field Service. Such a
student would attend public
schools here for a pear, Cook
explained.
Cook added that he had ob
tained 25 suits by sending a form
letter throughout the United Air
Lines system. He is manager of
the local office.
Gromyko Fails To Budge
During Dulles .Conference
Washington Oh Soviet For
eign Minister Andrei Gromyko
hewed to the Kremlin's hard
line and refused to budge during
the lengthy week end parley
with Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles.
Neuberger Says Foreign Aid Program
Supported To Keep Boys Out of Uniform
Salem (Ut Sen. Richard L,
Neuberger (D-Ore.) said today
that in supporting President Ei
senhower's foreign aid program
"I felt that I was voting to keep
young Americans out of uniform
in distant and dangerous parts
of the globe by helping to arm
brave and valiant allies who
want to fight at our side."
Neuberger' told Chamber of
Commerce members here that
the Mutual Security Program is
designed to meet a certain as
sumed world situation. He listed
"four basic ideai or assump-V.
To Do About It, Chum?"
"l tSrt '
of the student anti-Stalinist
newspaper "Pro Postu."
Polish writers were reported
to have jumped into the contest
on the side of the students after
the government rejected the
student demands for lifting the
ban last Friday.
Other elements have taken ad
vantage of the dispute and Sun
day n i g h t 's riots centering
around the Palace of Culture
were dominated by ruffians and
zoot-suiters.
Talent Pair Found
After Night Search
A Talent man and his 10-year-old
son were found this morning
after an all night search by sher
iff's deputies and relatives of
the missing man.
George Cutburth, 56, Talent,
and his son, Hadley Cutburth,
were reported lost in the Imna
ha . Gap area about 20 miles
northeast of Butte Falls late Sun
day evening. The two were hunt
ing and were separated from two
other hunters, Delbert Johnson
and Danny Tuttle. The others
called Mrs. Johnson who report
ed the man and boy missing to
sheriff's officers.
The man and boy were re
ported to have wandered away
from their car and became con
fused as to directions. Once they
realized they were lost, Cut
burth told authorities, he built
a fire and spent the night in one
location. Early this morning a
daughter of the Cutburths drove
farther up the road from where
the Cutburths' was parked and
honked the car horn until until
the man and boy appeared.
Preparing to join in the search
after daylight were loggers and
U. S. Forest Service personnel
as well as Oregon stat police.
Last Nuclear Device
Exploded in Nevada
Angel's Peak, Nev. (IP) The
nuclear device "Morgan" blast
ed the "new day at 5 a.m. (pst),
today, bringing to a close in
flame and fury the nation's 1957
series of atomic tests.
The device, 24th exploded in
the spring and summer series,
was cradled under a plastic bal
loon tethered 500 feet above the
Yucca Flat test site, 75 miles
northwest of Las Vegas.
The blast ripped the morning
sky with a' force equivalent to
between 5,000 and 10,000 tons
of TNT and sent the familiar,
but still awesome, mushroom
cloud rising high into the sky.
Blinding white light of the
flash was seen hundreds of miles
away. The shocking force of the
wave swept across the desert
area, swirling up dust and sand.
tions" on world conditions to
illustrate how Mutual Security
responds to national needs.
1. Possession of H-bombs by
the United States and the ability
to deliver them do not by them
selves constitute a sufficient
military defense.
2. The United States, strong
though it is, is not capable of
living alone.
3. A large part of the world
today is embroiled in an. eco
nomic and social revolution
greater than has ever occurred
before.
Burdetfe Allows
Seven Scattered
Hits for Margin
Two Cheap Hits Beat
Yanks' Whitey Ford
Milwaukee (IP) Lew Bur
dette an ex-Yankee farmhand,
poured it on his former team
mates for the second time to
day, defeating them 1-0 in the
fifth game of the World Series
to put Milwaukee on top of New
York, three games to two.
The 30-year-old right-hander
whom the Yankees let go in
1951, outpitched Yankee clutch
ace Whitey Ford in one of the
classic pitching duels in series
history. .
Burdette, who had won the
second game of the series at
Yankee Stadium to get the
Braves even, put them ahead to
day as he mowed down the New
Yorkers, playing without Center
Fielder Mickey Mantle, on seven
hits.
For Ford, who had won the
opening game for the Yankees,
it was a heart-breaking defeat.
He yielded only six hits, and two
of them of cheap variety beat
him.
Play by play: .
Yankees first: Bauer singled. Kubek
sacrificed. McDougald lined out. Berra
rolled out. No runs, one hit no er
rors, one left.
Braves first: Schoendienst bounced
out. Logan popped out. Mathews walk
ed. Aaron lined out. No runs, no hits,
no errors, one left.
Yankees second: Slaughter singled.
Schoendienst was injured in attempt
ing to field the ball and was repiacea
by Mantilla. Simpson struck out.
Slaughter was out attenuating to steaL
Lumpe tapped out. Nc runs, one hit.
no errors, none leu.
Braves second: Ad cock grounded
out. Pafko singled. Covington lined
out. Crandall grounded out. No runs.
one hit, no errors, one leii.
Yankees third: Coleman grounded
out. Ford rolled out. Bauer singled.
Kubek forced Bauer. No runs, one
hit. no errors, one left.
Braves third: Burdette and Man
tilla grounded out. Logan flied out.
No- runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
Yankees fourth: McDougald lined
out. Berra was safe on Adcock's error.
Slaughter singled. Simpson hit into
a double play. No runs, one hit, one
error, one left.
Braves fourth: Mathews struck out.
Aaron singled. Adcock hit into a dou
ble play. No runs, one hit, no errors,
none Jeft.
Yankees fifth: Lumpe and Coleman
grounded out. Ford struck out. No
runs, no hits, no errors, none left.
Braves fifth: Paiko singled. Cole
man sacrificed. Crandall and Burdette
flied out. No runs, one hit, no errors,
one left.
Yankees sixth: Bauer grounded out.
Kubek rolled out. McDougald ground
ed out. No runs, no hits, no errors,
none left.
Braves sixth: Mantilla grounded out.
Logan flied out Mathews and Aaron
singled. Adcock singled, scoring Math
ews, Pafko forced Adcock. One run,
three hits, no errors, two left.
Yankees seventh: Berra singled.
Slaughter hit into a double play. Simp- ,
son grounded out. No runs, one hit,
no errors, none left.
Braves seventh: Covington flied out.
Logan bounced out. Burdette struck
out. No runs, no hits, no errors, none
left.
Yankees eighth: Torre replaced Ad
cock at first base for tne Braves.
Lumpe grounded out. Coleman sin
gled. ManUe ran for Coleman. How
ard hatted lor ford and struck out.
Mantle was out stealing. No runs, one
hit, no errors, none left.
Braves eighth: Richardson replaced
Coleman and Bob Xuriey relieved
Ford for the Yankees. Mantilla flied
out. Logan and Mathews struck out.
No runs, no hits, no erors, none left.
Y'ankees ninth: Bauer and Kubek
struck out. McDougald singled. Berra
popped out. No runs, one hit, no
errors, one left.
New York AB R H O A
Bauer, rf 4 0 2 0 0
Kubek. cf 3 0 0 4 0
McDougald, ss 4 0 1 1 7
Berra. c 4 0 1 4 1
Slaughter. If 3 0 2 3 0
Simpson, lb 3 0 0 8 0
Lumpe, 3b 3 ' 0 0 0 2
Coleman. 2b 3 0 1 4 I
A-ManUe 0 0 0 0 0
Turley, p 0 0 0 0 0
Ford, p 2 0 0 0 0
B-Howard 1 0 0 0 0
Richardson, 2b 0 0 0 0 0
Totals- : 30
7 24 11
Milwaukee
AB R H 0 A
Schoendienst, 2b .. 1
0
Mantilla, 2b 3
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Logan, ss 4
Mathews, 3b
Aaron, cf ...
Adcock, lb
Torre, lb .
13 O
0
0
Pafko. rf
Covington, If
Crandall. c ...
0
3
2
Burdette, p .
Totals 28 1 6 27 17
A-Ran for Coleman in 8th.
B-Struck out for Ford in 8th.
New York 000 000 000 0
Milwaukee 000 001 OOx 1
E-Adcock. RBI Adcock. S Kubek.
Covington. DP Crandall-Logan: Math
ews - Mantilla - Adcock; McDougaJd-Coleman-Simpson;
Logan-Adcock. LOB
New York 4, Milwaukee 5. BB
Ford 1. SO Burdette 5, Ford 2. Tur
ley 2. HO Ford 6-7. Turley 0-1. R &
ER Ford 1-1. W Burdette. L Ford.
U Paparella (A), plate: Conlan (Ni.
lb; McKinley (Ai. 2b: Donatelli (Ni.
3b; Secory (NI, Chylak (A), foul lines.
T 2:00. A 45.819.
ine real Dauiegrotnd m
years ahead is, located on one
third or more of the- "world
which has so far not chosen
either the Communist bloc or
the group of nations allied with
the United States.
Neuberger said foreign aid
had been criticized on grounds
that some of it goes to undemo
cratic countries. "But in each
case where aid is going to dicta
tors, it is in our own self-interest
to do so," he said. He
cited bomber bases in Spain and
help to Yugoslavia as examples.
3
2
3