S MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or., ThurxJjy, November , 1938
Quotes From the News
By United Press International
Little Rock, Ark.-Dr. Dale Alford, strong segregationist,
on his write-in election victory over Rep. Brooks Hays, a
moderate segregationist:
"It is an expression from the heart of the people for the
preservation of our American traditions and ideals, the
maintenance of state's rights and the sincere desire through
legislative processes to curtail the illegal powers assumed
by the U. S. Supreme Court."
Houston, Tex.-Mrs. Charles E. White, on beating two
white opponents for a post on the school board, thus becom
ing the first Negro to be elected to a public office in Houston:
"Got. (Orval) Faubus and Little Rock have shown the
people of Houston that violence and strife are not the means
of working out this integration problem."
Eoston-James Michael Curley, oldtime political boss, on
being informed of the Democratic sweep after undergoing
serious surgery:
"What do you know? That's great."
I Miami Beach-Sen. A. S. Mike Monroney (D-Okla.), on
American aviation:
"It should be set aside from the ordinary political game
of revolving musical chairs."
New York-Oscar Levant, on a TV show discussing the
difference between Republicans and Democrats:
"The Democrats give the poor a chance to become corrupt."
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Rep. Brooks Hays
Concedes Defeat
To Write-In Foe
Little Rock, Ark.-flMt-B.ep
Brooks Haysf (D-Ark.), a vet
eral of eight terms in Wash
ington, conceded defeat
Wednesday to Dr. Dale Al
ford, an ardent segregationist
who conducted a last-minute
write-in campaign in Arkan
sas Fifth District.
Hays, president of the
Southern Baptist Convention,
is also a segregationist, but a
moderate.
No Further Ambitions
The congressman said he
does not have "any further
political ambitions" and plans
to devote his full time after
Jan. 1 with the Southern Bap
tists. Alford confined his cam
paign to two or three televis
ion speeches in which he at
tacked Hays as a "mild, non-
aggressive congressman."
Gov. Orval Faubus, himself
reelected to a third term by a
5-1 margin in Tuesday's gen
eral election, called the Al
ford victory "remarkable"
i because Alford's name was
not on the ballot, he was not
the Democratic Party's non
inee, he did not have Negro
support and he lost well-or
ganized counties.
Democrat Alford is an ear,
nose and throat specialist and
a member of the Little Rock
School Board.
Hays, also a Democrat, said
he was "hurt" that Alford de
cided to run at the last min
ute. He said a write-in cam
paign is justified only if the
party nominee changes his
views on the issues that got
him his party's nomination.
Hays said he had not
changed his views since win
ning the Democratic nomina
tion in July.
Art Education Group
To Meet at College
DISCUSS EXCHANGE
Cairo -flJPD- The United
States and the United Arab
Republic may resume 'an ex
change of students and pro
fessors, informed sources said
Wednesday night.
Ashland Oregon Art, Edu
cation association members
will convene Nov. 7-8 on the
Southern Oregon college cam
pus for the annual fall confer
ence with registration slated
to begin Friday at 1 p.m. in
the Britt Student center.
B. Stephen Bayless, general
chairman and SOC assistant
professor of art, announced
that two exhibits will be held
during the conference, one in-
iC
STEPHEN BAYLESS
Chairman of Meeting
eluding professional work by
the art staff of ..Washington
State college; the other fea
turing student work from var
ious elementary, junior high,
and high schools in Oregon.
Following registration,
workshops will be conducted.
Other activities include a no-
host dinner at Omar's restau
rant, previews of new art
films, a coffee break, and a
preview of films.
Saturday's Agenda
Saturday's agenda includes
registration, welcoming ad
dress by Dr. Elmo N. Steven
son, SOC president; and "Art
in the Portland Schools," an
address by Ruth Elise Halvor
sen, supervisor of art in the
Portland public schools.
Don Darneille, dean of
hoys, McLoughlin Junior High
school, Medford, will discuss
"Evidences of Creative Abil
ities in Ninth Grade Stu
dents," and Arnold Gralapp,
superintendent of Klamath
Falls public schols, will ad
dress the group.
A panel discussion will be
moderated by Dr. Richard H.
Byrns, SOC associate profes
sor of English. Panel mem
bers are Francis J. Kelly, SOC
instructor in psychology and
education; Ruth Elise Halvor
sen, supervisor of art, Port
land public schools; Thomas
O. Ballinger, head of the art
education department, Uni
versity of Oregon; and Sidney
White, art education depart
ment, Oregon State college.
"Creativity" is the panel topic.
Luncheon and a business
meeting at the Plaza cafe,
Ashland, will conclude the
conference, Bayless said.
Lifer Refuses
Offer of Freedom
San Quentin Prison, Calif.
-(UPD-San Quentin lifer Anton
io di Tardo appeared before
the California Adult Author
ity Wednesday to pick up a
couple of black Italian cigars
and turn down another
chance to walk out of prison
a free man. ,
Di Tardo, 84, has served 37
years in the state prison for
shooting his wife to death on
a ranch in Santa Clara coun
ty. Each year, Antonio appears
before the Authority and is
offered a parole and each
year he refuses it.
"I'm an old man," he ex
plained. "Too old to start life
again on the outside."
Board member and former
Warden Clinton Duffy handed
Antonio a couple of Italian
cigars, and the Board voted
again to allow him to remain
in San Quentin.
Waterton Lakes National
Park in southeast Alberta has
an area of 220 square miles.
Friday and Saturday
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Assault Troops
Moving Inland
In Maneuvers
San Simeon, Calif. (DPD
More than 13,000 troops began
moving into the hills of Hun
ter Liggett Military Reserva
tion and Camp Roberts today
as the largest Army-Navy
maneuvers since 1950 went
into its second day.
The assault troops, most of
whom are from the Army's
fourth Infantry Division, Fort
Lewis,- Wash., landed by boat
and helicopter Wednesday
morning in the simulated
atomic battle of exercise
Rocky Shoals. The landing,
although delayed two hours
to permit a thick fog to lift,
went off without a hitch as
the troops poured ashore from
a 40-ship task force manned
by 12,000 sailors.
Clouds of Smoke
Simulated atomic blasts
sent clouds of smoke mush
rooming over the maneuver
area as amphibious tracked
vehicles led the assault, fol
lowed by other landing craft
with troops and vehicles.
Fleets of troop - carrying
helicopters from the world's
first helicopter assault carrier,
the Thetis Bay, lifted more
assault troops overhead in a
test of the "vertical envelope
ment" theory of battle. Under
this new concept of warfare,
troops borne by 'copters sur
round enemy units and knock
them out with low yield
atomic weapons.
To End Nov. 10
Maneuvers will continue
ashore until Nov. 10, when
re-embarkation begins. High
ranking umpires will evaluate
the efficiency of the exercise
in critiques which may rfesult
in the rewriting the Army
textbooks.
Over 500 American and for
eign military observers,- in
cluding Rep. Fleet Adm. Ches
ter W. Nimitz, watched
Wednesday's landing, planned
since last February.
Pasternak Tells
Of Prize Refusal
Moscow-(UPD-Soviet author
Boris Pasternak said today in
the Communist newspaper
Pravda that he ' voluntarily
turned down the Nobel Prize
for literature because the
award was "a political' meas
ure."
He said in a letter to the
editor that he first "rejoiced"
on learning he had been nom
inated for the prize and ac
cepted the honor as a literary
distinction. v
"But I was wrong," he said.
Pasternak added that he knew
five years ago he had been
mentioned as a possible Nobel
winner for his literary
achievements, before his con
troversial novel "Dr. Zhiva
go" was published.
He said publication of the
novel,- which other Soviet
writers have charged contains
"hypocritical" references to
the October revolution, made
him . change his mind about
the award.
Election Brings New Crop of
Demo Presidential Prospects
Washington - (UPD - A re- of whom won smashing vic
freshed crop of Democratic tories on Tuesday. It includes
presidential prospects came
out of Tuesday's elections, and
their chances may be determ
ined by the record of the 86th
Congress.
One of their number, Sen
ate Democratic Leader Lyn
don B. Johnson of Texas, will
be a key figure in shaping the
political destinies of all - as
well asthe record on which
they must stand in 1960.
Johnson has been a consist
ent advocate of "constructive,
responsible, moderate" Demo
cratic action. But he has
shown he can interpret that
philosophy to include make
work spending like that of his
New Deal days as well as middle-ground
compromising on
such issues as civil rights.
Friends concede Johnson
may have more trouble keep
ing party harmony in a Sen
ate which has 62 Democrats
instead of 49. But he is re
ported ready to come up with
a strong program of legisla
tive action covering most of
the points liberal Democratic
colleagues will be demanding.
'Compromise' Candidate .
Because of the Democrats'
split on civil rights Johnson's
chances of getting his party s
presidential nomination as
suming he wants it are tied
to his appeal as a "compro
mise" candidate plus his rec
ord as a "can do" leader in
Congress.
But the presidential aspira
tions of others will come a
lot closer to the surface in
the Senate and in various
state capitals in the next two
years.
High on the list are Demo
cratic Sens. John F. Kennedy
of Massachusetts and Stuart
Symington of Missouri, both
Democratic Sens. Hubert H.
Humphrey of Minnesota, and
Albert Gore and Estes Ke-
fauver, . both of, Tennessee.
Democratic Sen.-elect Edmund
S, Muskie of Maine, a new
comer, also must be counted
as a potential candidate for
the future.
California's governor-elect
Democrat Edmund G. Brown,
brings a new prospect into
the presidential arena. Brown,
like Michigan's Gov. G. Men
nen Williams, who won his
sixth term this week, may find
his political horoscope altered
by what' Johnson and House
Speaker Sam Rayburn get
through the new Congress.
Meyner Strong Possibility-
New Jersey's Gov. Robert
G. Meyner, a strong presiden
tial possibility in a state which
grabbed a Senate seat from
the GOP on Tuesday, is an
other in the same boat. . " .,
Republican presidential con
tenders "must run " against,
rather than on, any Demo
cratic legislative program.
This may present a problem
in itself. On many proposals
there is little real difference
between what President Eisen
hower has asked and what
the Democratic 85th Congress
gave him.
This problem has bothered
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, still the GOP front-
runner for the presidency in
1960 despite the challenge
raised by millionaire Nelson
A. Rockefeller's gubernatorial
victory in New York. Nixon
has demonstrated he intends
to take over more Republican
Party control in the next two j
years. '
Historically presi dential
nominees are more likelv to
come from a governor's man
sion than the U. S. Senate.
That's a plus for Rockefeller
along with his big 1958 elec
tion triumph. But he has to
make his own record in office
-and one to be compared with
that of the Democrats.
3f225iE2
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PIPE MAKER DIES
New York (UPD Isi Zins,
96, a retired tobacconist and
pipe- maker who for many
years plied his trade in the
open window of a shop near
the corner of 42nd st. and
Third ave., died at a nursing
home Wednesday.
Cortisone, which was de
veloped in 1948 as a durg for
the treatment of rheumatoid
arthritis, has been analyzed
into more than 20 fractions.
Garden Furnace
Produces Steel
Tokyo -rflJPD- Madame Sun
Yat-Sen, the most powerful
woman in Communist China,
is doing her bit for Peiping's
industrial "great leap for
ward" program by turning
out steel in her garden in
Shanghai.
Radio Peiping said Mme.
Sun, known as Soong Ching
Ling, set up a blast furnace in
her garden with the aid of
her secretary and household
staff in only three hours.
"Making steel also tempers
people," she was quoted.
"When steel is turned out,
people are tempered."
Radio Peiping said the gar
den blast furnace has turned
out as much as 341 pounds of
good-quality steel in a single
day.
Mme. Sun is vice-chairman
of the Standing Committee of
the National People's Congress.
Singer Has No
Marriage Plans
New York - (UPD Singer
Anna Maria Alberghetti, who
recently announced she would
marry musician Buddy Breg
man, said Wednesday it was
all a misunderstanding.
Miss Alberghetti, 22, said
she was in love with Breg
man but added "I'm not mar
rying anyone."
The singer's mother had ob
jected to the marriage be
cause Bregman was divorced
and is not of Anna Maria's
faith.
She is a Roman Catholic,
Bregman is Jewish.
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