House Passes Bill To Admit
5,000 Refugees From Europe
De Gaulle Receives Royal Welcome
On First Visit To London Since War
London -(UFtt- French Presi
dent Charles de Gaulle
donned the old rank of his
wartime Free French com
mand and returned to his for
mer headquartera today with
a welcome fit for a king.
Back in this capital city 20
yean after ha first arrived
here as a little-known briga
dier general escaping from
Gaulle was given a pageantry
rich royal welcome. It was his
first visit since the war and
de Gaulle wore his former
rank.
The last time it had been
different. Then, he came un
known and unhailed.
This time he was met by
Queen Elizabeth, Prince
Philip, Princess Margaret and
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other members of the royal
family, as well as by Prime
Minister Harold MacMillan
and leaden of the govern
ment. The latest round of pre
summit consultations began
just two days after Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev
ended a similar stale visit to
France.
After Khrushchev's pointed
bids for Franco-Soviet accord,
Britain seemed especially in
tent on reminding de Gaulle
of the traditional "entente
Cordiale" allying London and
Paris.
The jet plane that carried
de Gaulle from Paris landed
at Gatwick airport and he
was brought to London by
train. There, the pomp and
ceremony that are almost sec
ond nature to the British took
over.
An 82 -gun salute boomed
out from batteries at the Tow
er of London and Hyde Park.
He inspected an honor guard
at Victoria Station, and then
was off on a spectacular trip
through the city in an open
landau.
Thousands of persons lined
the route to watch the all,
austere Frenchman ride in
triumph through the same
streets he had stalked during
the war trying to restore the
glory of war-s hattered
France.
MEDFORDtWTRIBUNE
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Motors, Chemicals
Dominate Market
New York-fllPD - The stock
market staged a late rally to
day with motors, chemicals,
and scattered steels, aircrafts
and drugs dominating the
play..
The list closed with a mod
est gain, as it did Monday,
marking the second rise in the
last eight sessions.
Autors scored the bulk of
their advance in the closing
hour just as the electronics
ran into some heavy selling.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York !UPD Dow
Jones final stock averages!
30 Industrials 622.19, up
3.65; 20 railroads 143.91, up
0.50; 15 utilities 88.52, up
0.06, and 65 stocks 205.48,
up 0.90. Sales today were
about 2.840.000 shares com
pared with 2,450,000 shares
Monday.
Today't prlcea on selected atocHa:
AUted Chemical 49
Alum Co. Am 93V4
American Motors 3B',-i
AT&T 8B
Anaconda Copper . - dO
Armco Erteel ou
Hendix Aviation ..
Bethlehem Steel
JJoeing Air
Caterpillar Corp.
Chrysler Corp
Continental Can .
Crown Zcllerhach
Curtiss Wrliht
"Satisfaction guaranteed
or your money back"
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MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER
Open Monday 6, Friday 'Til 9 p.m.
Phone SP 3-6661 Free Parking
lXw Chemical ......
Du Pont
Knstman Kodak
Firestone
General Electric
General Fooda
General Motor ......
Georgia Pacific ....
Graham Paige .
Greyhound
Cult Oil
llomeetake Mining
Idaho Power
I. D. M
Int. Paper
Johns Manvilte
Kaiser Ind. ...
Katy
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aim-lilt ..
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward -
Natl Biscuit
New York Central .
Pac Gai A Eire
Penney's. J. C
IVnn RK
Radio Corporation .
. 30
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Richfield Oil
Safeway .
Seara ......,....,.........,
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil OU
Southern Co ..,
Southern Pacific
Standard California
Standard Indiana
Standard N. J
Sun Mlnea
Texas Co
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Texas Pac Land Trust
Transamerica ....
Trans World Air
Tri-Continental
Union Carhlde
Union Pacific .
united Aircraft
United Air Lines
u. o. HuDDer
U. S. Steel
Youngstown S At T
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Senate Asked To
Liberalize Terms
Of Immigration
Washington-IUPD-The House
has passed a bill which would
admit about 5,000 refugees in
European camps to this
country during the next 27
months.
The measure was passed
Monday by voice vote and
now goes to the Senate.
Chairman Francis E, Walter
(D-Pa.) of the House Immigra.
tion Subcommittee predicted
relatively few of those eli
gible actually would enter the
United States.
Legislation Asked
President Eisenhower has
asked for legislation doubling
present quotas, which limit
the entry of immigrants to
about 150,000 a year. He also
called for special legislation
to admit refugees from other
parts of the world, not just
Europe, as the U. S. contnbu
tion to "World Refugee Year,"
which ends June 30.
The bill had been in the
House Immigration Subcom
mittee for nearly a year. It
was revived by Walter, its
sponsor, after the President
sent his message to Congress.
Called First Step
Spokesmen for the United
States Committee for Refu
gees said in a statement the
House-passed bill was an in
dispensable first step" toward
the refugee legislation that is
needed and called on the Sen
ate to liberalize its terms.
Walter has predicted, how
ever, that Congress would not
pass other immigation legisla
tion this year. His conservative-dominated
House Rules
committee could block any at
tempt by the Senate to libera
lize the bill.
Soldier Who Turned
Criminal Believed
Cured by Surgery
VacavlUe, Calif.- U?I) -'For.
mer Army Maj. Victor Hun-
gerford, 39, has been released
from the state prison-hospital
here, presumably a cured
man after undergoing a deli
cate brain operation to re
move a tumor.
Hungerford, a war hero
who rose from private to
major during World War II
and was awarded Bronze and
Silver stars and a Purple
Heart In Korea, was released
on parole after serving a
year's sentence for passing
bad checks.
Knocked to Ground
Doctors believe Hunger
ford's troubles began when he
was knocked to the ground
by a shell explosion in 1950.
He was checked, pronounced
all right, and returned to his
company.
But Hungerford soon be
came a changed man. He de
veloped headaches, felt
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NOTICE
To Those Who Will Travel Great Distances
For FREE Coffee-
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO
ATTEND AN OPEN HOUSE AT
TROWBRIDGE & FLYNN (214 West Main)
Between the Hours of 2 and 4
SUNDAY. APRIL 10, I960.
The Event? Your chance to deride, jeer,
perhaps enjoy our newly completed Fixture
display.
No Door Prize Will Be Awarded.
Donuts probably will be available with
your coffee
imBttBramnairar
i..!,ii. m..i..n.L 'tnii.iti inn muti
iilitWa.mHhiitiniiiiiiniiiliihlatBMtinyiaiiiiiiiiil
strange and occasionally suf
fered amnesia.
Transferred to his home
state of Washington, the ma
jor commenced to drink, went
on sprees, was AWOL and
had more amnesia. In 19S4
he was dishonorably dis
charged from the Army after
18 years service and sen
tenced to a year in military
prison for desertion and lar
ceny.
Last year he was sentenced
in California for passing bad
checks.
Physicians became interest
ed and Dr. Hal Holland, a
neurosurgeon at the division
of medicine and surgery at
Vacaville, finally determined
that Hungerford had a cyst
on the left frontal lobe of
his brain. It probably was
started by the shell concus
sion, he believed.
Condition Changed
The cyst was removed and
the former war hero's per
sonality and physical condi
tion underwent a dramatic
change, said Dr. David
Owens, chief of the division.
Headaches d I s a p p eared,
Hungerford became much
more relaxed and his crim
inal symptoms vanished.
The hospital la sending a
complete record of the unus
ual circumstances to Wash
ington, D.C., suggesting Hun-
gerford's case be reopened
with a view toward changing
the discharge to honorable,
thus restoring his civil rights.
Band Boosters
Select King, Queen
Ashland The Ashland
Band Boosters' "king and
mtrcn" were to be chosen at
3:30 p.m. today, with mem
bers of the Medford High
School student body council
as judges.
Winning candidates will be
announced at a Smorgasbord
dinner In the Lincoln school,
from 5 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday,
after all appear and are in
troduced. The crowning will
take place after the announce
ment, and the "king and
queen" will become the Band
Boosters candidates for king
and queen if the Modford
Pear Blossom r'citival the
week end of April 23.
Band Booster members said
$773 still remains to be raised
to make the $1,800 it will
take to sponsor an Ashland
High School band float in the
Portland Rose Festival June
11. Proceeds from the Smor
gasbord Thursday evening
will go for that purpose. A
nominal charge will be made
for admission, and two service
tables will be in operation to
speed nerving.
Hearing Held on
Discrimination
In Sale of House
Portland-OJPO-A hearing be
fore the state labor commis
sioner involving a charge of
discrimination in sale of a
house continued here today.
The action was brougnt by
Mark A. Smith, administrator
of civil rights division of the
State Bureau of Labor, on be
half of Mr. and Mrs. Rowan
Wiley,, a Negro couple.
It was brought aguinst a
group of real estate, builders
and mortgage firms, whose at
torneys Monday denied any
discrimination.
Mrs. Wiley testified she and
her husband sought to buy a
home In the old Troh airport
area in southeast Portland.
She said she went to the site
and paid $500 earnest money
on a house. Later, she said, she
decided on another house and
the sale was arranged. Ulti
mately, she said, the loan was
not approved by the mortgage
company and the deal was off.
Cash Said Offered
She also said that at one
time they offered to pay cash
but that in the end no deal
wnj made although she and
her husband wanted the
house.
Under cross-examination
she said no one in her deal
ings with the sales firm
showed any discrimination
against her personally. Her
husband was to appear today.
Appearing for those named
in the complaint were Paul
O'Halloran, attorney for
Homemaster Sales Inc.; Ed
ward B. Twining, attorney for
Brice Mortgage Co. and Re
tirement Inc.; and Floyd Ham
ilton, attorney for Curt-Craft,
Inc., and Roach Homes, Inc.
Twining testified that the
Wlleys did not qualify for the
loan in their application.
London -IUPD- Maj. Leonard
Speight, chief of seven judges
sipping 4.000 bottles of soft
drink to find Britain's tastiest
soda pop, said Monday "when
this is over, I'll be ready lor
a good pint of beer."
Boardman Site Could Be
Expanded, Hatfield Says
Salem-flJM-Gov.' Mark Hat
field said Monday that if nec
essary the proposed Board
man Industrial development
site in eastern Oregon could
be expanded to 180,000 acres.
The state is negotiating
with the federal government
for exchange of land at the
Boardman bombing range so
the state might develop it for
private industry.
The Boardman land is 96,
000 acres In Morrow county.
Hatfield indicated adjoining
lands could be bargained for
if the need arose.
Hatfield, In answer to ques
tions put by a panel of news
men at a Salem Chamber of
Commerce luncheon, said he
is certain the area will be put
to use by one firm or another.
Hatfield indicated his oppo
sition to a suggestion that part
of the Oregon Cascades be
made into a national park.
The Sierra Club of California
is behind the plan. He said
multiple-use of this area is
best.
The panel, moderated by
Capital Journal Publisher' E.
A. Brown, included James
Welch, Capital Journal man
aging editor; Herb Lundy, edi
tor of the Oregonian editorial
page; Wendell Webb, manag
ing editor of the Oregon
Statesman, and A. L. Lind
beck, former Salem bureau
chief of the Oregon Journal,
Man Vents Temper
On Wife's Automobile
San Mateo, Calif.-fUPD-Jack
E. Jensen, 29, in a fit of anger
after an argument with his
wife, got into his car and
drove headon into his wife's
from a distance of 200 feet.
Then he backed across a
neighbor's lawn and attacked
again, this time sideswiping
the parked car and nearly
peeling off one side. He com
pleted the demolition with
final attack from a distance of
half a block.
When police arrived he said
contentedly: "I was mad, and
now I feel better."
New York - The lack ol
satisfactory inking device
caused the first cylinder print
ing press to be regarded ai a
failure.
Brigl.t and gay a Springtimil
aKI
Noiaoss
GlAcU
n:nii: wiiiu iniiiiiTa
Consider
first, a cemetery high above
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