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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1960)
O 0 0 ?3 G G3g:300G3 0 C3g:30gg3cc3 ouo 00 c-oo oCj c:o oooC30(-0 O q cdc:x: C::;;;r)SC3 C30(pe3 Q 0 00 O0G:-::c3 GSO O G3O0 08 G3C3 G:J2H3 o 00 ZD C o o ( ! o ( ) u-1 ;10 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. A Tfcri, M.T 11 ItM it : SkS ""MiHitT " 11 iJl. r 17 U -x I v . ."r.. PRESENTS POPPY Cathy Collins, daugh ter of Mr. iind Mrs. Waltor Collins, 204 Jeaneltc St., and "Miss Junior Poppy" for the Medford unit of the American Li'Klon auxiliary, is shown above presenting Med ford Mayor John W. Snider with the first American Legion poppy of liHiO. She pre sented poppies to the mayor and each of the citv councilmen at last week's council meeting. Regarding the Auxiliary Poppy days on May 13 and 14, Mayor Snider said, " I heartily endorse the sale of poppies on these days. This is an opportunity for the more fortunate to share with those who have lost the privilege of doing for themselves." Plane Incident May Have Aided Summit Chances ' Irflinr'. nnl Rfnr Iravlnc currtipondent Strwart Hrmffy dt-j r.utktd with oiiiaais mt p"i ble rffm of the 11 plane Imldent on the in nun It confrrrnre. Now in I'arU la rover the sumnitl meeting, he has upokrn with trench and Urttivh oflhUH on the kuhjert. The followtnc analiflk preienU his ob tervattona at thti fttace. Russian Spies fin Switzerland Ordered Expelled " Bern, Swilzerland-iUPH-Two ' Soviet diplomats caught spy ing on U.S. rocket bases in ' West Germany and Swiss ra : dar installations were ex . pellcd today in what the gov ernment called the gravest rase of Sovicl espionage here since World War II. While Switzerland tighten ed its security measures 1 against Communist diplomats, ' the two Russian spies board- ed a Czechoslovak plane with '; their families and look off from Zurich for Prnue. They carried flowers and waved gaily as they left. Caught in Zurich The two embassy secretaries , listed on the passenger list Z as "Modin" and "Frolov" were I, caught red-handed Tuesday in V Zurich while planning to meet r a Soviet agent here. The inci I rtcnl stunned a country l ; ready confused by and crill- cal of the U.S. "spy plane" t incident in Russia. V News that the Soviet Union f. was spying inside Switzer- land brought a swift change of mood and an outburst of J Indignation against the So- viets from Swiss newspapers. H Swiss security officers were tipped off by a confidential i source and had followed the f diplomats to a secret rendez S vnus near the central railway f station in Zuriek, Switzer j land's largest cily, where the pair hoped to receive Swiss military secrets and informa jtion on U.S. rocket bases in SWest Germany from a mys Xlerious "third man." Whereabouts Secret . The whereabouts of llie t "third man '-merely Identified Sin Wednesday's government announcement as a "Soviet Jgcnt"-were still a secret. g Police said he had not been arrested. There was specula- Stion in some Swiss newspapers filial he was either a Comma "nist turncoat or a Western counter-agent who lured the .Russians into a trap. Balloon Orbit Plan Postponed Cape Canaveral, Fla.-IUFD- Anierica s plans to send a 100- foot communications balloon into orbit around the earth were called off early today for the third time within a week. The Air Force said the post ponement came because of in dications of "technical prob lems" in the first stage of the fl2 fool-tall Thor-Dclta rocket scheduled to carry the satellite. No new launching date was scheduled immediately for the balloon, which was tightly packed In the nose .of the rocket's third stage. The balloon, taller than a 1 0-story building, was to have been placed into an orbit about 1,000 miles above earth to try out a new system of communications which could lead to instantaneous world wide television. The sphere,' coated with a thin sheet of highly reflective aluminum, was to be inflated in space. Once In orbit, the ballon would be bombarded with radio signals from ground stations around the world. It would glow at dawn and dusk with a brilliance seven times greater than that of the North Star and circle the earth once every two hours at a speed of 18,000 miles an hour. Eartha KM To Wed Los Angeles Realtor Los Angeles-IIIPII Eartha Kilt, sultry-voiced Negro singer, and white real estate man William McDonald, of Los Angeles, plan to marry June 9. Miss Kill and McDonald, both 30, took oul a marriage license Wednesday after a brief delay caused when they flew here from Ln.s Vegas and neglected to gel the necessary blood tests. They hurried to a medical facility near the Hall of Records, had the tests taken and then received the license. It will be the first marriage for both. Mrs. Neuberger Sees Tough Fight With Elmo Smith Portland -IUP1)- Mrs. Maur ine Neuberger says she ex pects a tough race with ex Gov. Elmo Smith for the U.S. Senate if both should be nom inated in the May 20 Oregon primary. Mrs. Neuberger told a news conference at her home Wednesday that "I consider Elmo Smith decidedly com petitive. He has been gover nor of our state. I've never run for statewide office. Also, I'm a woman, which is a disadvantage." Smith seeks the Republican nomination while Mrs. Neu berger seeks the Democratic nomination to succeed her late husband. Sen. Richard L. Neuberger. Sees Knndy Victory Mrs. Neuberger, who turned from Washington, DC, Wednesday, said she believed Sen. John F. Kennedy would defeat Sen. Wayne Morse in the state's presidential 'pri mary. She said she did not consider Morse a "serious candidate" for President. Ad- lai Stevenson still would be her top choice. Opponsnt Criticizes Her On other matters, Mrs. Neu berger said she would like to see the proposed Seashore park on the coast named after her late husband "more than anything." Wednesday night, Mrs. Neu berger spoke to the Oregon Federated Women's clubs and today was participating in the Conference on World Peace here. Sen. Morse's wife also is taking part in the conference. One of Mrs. Neuberger s primary opponcts criticized her in a television appearance Wednesday night. Hand-Pickcd Candidal Judge Harry C. Fowler of Prlneville, who also seeks the Democratic nomination, said Mrs. Neuberger was the hand- picked candidate of the par ty's "political king-makers. He said he believed she was By STEWART HENSLEY Paris -CPU-The incident of the U.S. spy plane in Russia may have improved rather than hurt prospects for prog ress at the Big Four summit conference beginning hen Monday. A "stalemate of terror," stemming from the knowledge on both sides of the Iron Cur tain that no one can win an all-out nuclear war, has dem onstrated its power to pre serve peace. The frank U.S. admission of intelligence flights over the Soviet Union, embarrassing as it might have been, has em phasized some of the stark facts of international life in the latter half of the 20th cen tury, Relations Survive Shock A new note of realism has been injected publicly into East - West relations, which have proven capable of sur viving a shock which might have touched off a war not too long ago. Ten years ago, during the era of Josef Stalin, a disclos ure of this nature would have sent jittery Europeans scurry ing for bomb shelters. It would have produced war scare headlines around the world. Now, less than a week after Soviet Premier Nikila S. Khrushchev's sensational dis closure, the discussion in Eu rope centers on the political rather than Ihe military im plications of the incident. Much of the debate here revolves around the wisdom of Ihe United States in mak ing such a frank confession of its espionage. , Admission Too Complete? Some French politicians be lieve the admission need not have been quite so complete. President Eisenhower's new? conference declaration Wed nesday that he again would propose to Khrushchev at Paris his "open skies' plan was more than a counter- move by an embarrassed Chief Executive. It has broad implications which the world's politicians and statesmen are going to have to deal with sooner than many of them think. Simply put, the question boils down to the old gag, "How high is up?" Khrushchev bitterly pro tests a picture-taking plane flying over Russia at a height of 10 miles. But he has not protested le fact that the American "Tiros I" satellite crosses Rus sia day after day at a height of 400 miles taking pictures which may be as good as those the plane gets. Beverly, Mother Appear in Court Los Angeles -LPIi- The Ad Iands, Beverly, 17, and her mother, appear in separate courts today to face charges which cuuld remove them from society for several years Beverly, the playmate of the late Errol Flynn, was or dered to appear today before Superior Judge Allen Miller to find out whether she will be declared a sex delinquent diiti cuiiliiieU to a wayward girls' home. Mrs. Florence Adland, 53. was scheduled to go on trial on five counts of contributing to B e v e r 1 y's delinquency. Each count carries a maxi mum sentence of $1,000 fine and one year in jail. Beverly, in Juvenile Hall since April 9, could be held as a ward of the Juvenile Court until her 21st birthday, In the Day's News y HANK JENKINS What of this spying busi ness? Well, spying is as old as war and statecraft. Always it has gnnp nn. It is probable that it always will go on. This mueh we can say with conviction: With as many spies as the Soviet Union has in the United Stales land in all oilier countries) it ill becomes the Kremlin to kirk up such a fuss over one lone American intelligence plane flying over Russian territory to see what it can see. ence coming up in the imme diate future. He may feel that he doesn't dare to get into a summit con ference in which he isn't feared. iy HAT'S Mr. K up to? Here's a guess: He has been DROPPING OUT OF THE LIMELIGHT in recent months. It isn't unrea sonable to suppose that he wants to get back in. Espe cially with a summit confer- ANOTHER question: Just what DID happen? There's considerable doubt. On the face of Russian allega tions, we flew a spy plane over Russian territory to snoop on what the Russians may be doing. So, Mr. K says, he ordered it SHOT DOWN. He claims that under his or ders his men aimed a Russian HOMING rocket at the intrud ing plane, and BANG! Down it came. Just like shooting fish. That version feeds the as sertion of Russian invincibil ity. It is intended to scare the daylights out of m and our allies. VL'E DON'T wholly deny it. II In fact, our secretary of state, Mr. Herter, admits that we might have been doing just that. He says in a formal statement this morning: "The U.S. has conducted ex tensive aerial surveillance of tne Soviet Union, iiuiiitully along its borders, but ON OC CASION by FLNtiKAiiun. He adds: "The government of the U.S. would be derelict to its responsibility, not only to the American peopie but to free peoples everywhere if it did not, in the absence of Russian cooperation, take such meas ures as are possible unilater ally (meaning on our own) to lessen and uj overcome the danger of surprise attack." MIGHT HAVE MEN NO ! PEARL HARBOR. : llE MUST k-p this 'n mind: " In the final wind-up. th onlv thing that will restrain the Kremlin (whose present , boss is Mr. K) from tackling us for blood will be the con viction that we re too tough and too strong to be safely j tackled. More than 1.000 companies manUlHClUIC Jliailiini-."".no in the United States. rpiMELY reminder: 1 IF WE HAD TAKEN SIM ILAR PRECAUTIONS IN THE CASE OF JAPAN, THERE Central Market 437 So. Central 3g Hill Bros. COFFEE 2-lbs. $1.49 60S HIGHLAND DR. MEDFORD has one CREMATORY (Another Siikiyeu Funeral Service) in SISKIYOU MEMORIAL PARK Modern car Cemetery Available to All Families in This Aria Regardless of the Choice of Funeral Director Far Information Call Sf 2 S48I OK SP 2-2344 Cuban Parade Knots Traffic Havana - (UN) - Anti-Ameri can demonstrators carrying banners with such slogans as 'Down with Yankee Imperial ism!" or "Death to the U. S. Senate!" tied up traffic in downtown Havana for two hours Wednesday night. About 2,000 persons massed at the corner of San Rafael and Galiano sis. to cheer anti American speeches by Jesus Soto, radical leftist boss of the CTC Union Federation, and other union leaders. Smaller demonstrations, ap parently organized by CTC ! locals, were reported else- where in the city. I Police guards armed with i rifles were posted at the U. S. Embassy as an apparent pre caution against mob attack. but there was no report of violence or casualties. The demonstrations were inspired by a statement, is sued by the University Stu dent's Federation and pub lished by the ."ebel organ Re volucion. charging that the United Stales is planning to altack Cuba. Osteopathic Hospifal Staff Chief Selected Portland UTH Dr. Dale R. Browning. 30. once high school student body president at The Dalles, today was named chief of staff of the Portland Osteopathic hospital, lie is a graduate of Kirksville College of Osteopathy in Missouri. running as a symbol of her late husband instead of cam paigning on her own ability. Fowler also charged Mrs. Neuberger of not running in "good faith." She said she has remained silent on campaign issues while he slumped the state explaining his position and pointing out "the abort comings of Ihe Eisenhower Mixon administration." Over 30 worth of FROZEN FOOD included with any TRU-COLD 2-door refrigerator-freezer -... vOj rirara i V 14.4cu.ft.rr RU'COLD refrigerator with 172-lb. freezer JLVf 14. V TT 44 m0B,fc 366 LOW CASH PRICE $ WITH FOOD Automatic defrost refrigerator 2 adjustable, glide-out shelves Deep storage space in both doers Reverse design, with the giant freezer below, puts refrigerator at ideal reach in height. 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