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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1960)
zzT3 GEtn3C?s::3 633 O c?3 C3S30C:D CCXD C33 O O Oc::D C30 OC:::33E::3G3C2i;:Hs;is:ffi O O O O O o 0 n 0LC''oO CjO oc3" "OO o"6 o'o" 0 o O" o o o O O Co o ' ,, '' (.C' ummit Talks Doomed by Plane Incident irushciiov S Kt ays I Bill Sians Foi 1 1c Carrying Sbp all: UAR, Castro Washington - I'Pf - President Eisenhower has signed into law a S4.U8fi..'!un.()(M) forcimi aid authorization curryins congress iunal slap ul Hie United Arab Republic and llie .... Fidel Castro regime in Ciil.u. ; IJ,-;yr5f Art 1lfK t. V4 I V4 . W s I II s i Arab lif- Cuiml by the U public 'J lie Pn-Mdrnt said lit- hnpid C'nnjTPss now would volt llie lull iiinount.s of arlual money V TT MEDFORDSi Regional Edition The White House said Ki enhower sinned the bill Satur dav before lie left lor tl Summit Conference in I'iiris. Ike't Slaloment It issued this .slaleeunl hy the President today: "1 am highly gratified by the action of the Con.;i e.-s on this measure. . "The act embociii ; tinllv all the retiuesis I put forward as necessary tor 1 assuring th ni a si! 10(1 dehl to the successful continuation f j ttit party would he paid this the mutual security prom am j car. and. With one regrettable ex- j (- (;ir.ir, D ividson .-aid lie ception, the (.enures lias n- i H, ,nc obtained all" lickeis uthori?'d for economic pro- e.ranis, the development loan fund and the mililary assls- j ' tance pruyrain. The bill authorizes an ap- j I prnpriation of all but SHfi.- i 1 7HU.IIII0 of the S4.175,000,()ilO ! which the President said he : : needs to bol.-ter the armed ; forces a n d economies of friendly nations in the 12 I months starling July 1 . , ; UAR Might Lose Aid Congress wrote into the law over the State Department objefiions a sllltieslion that the President sin ' off further help for the United Arab Re public if the UAR persists in to the sports arena by barring Israeli ships from the Powers Said Ordered To Confess Espionage .Tribune! United Stales Said Violating Charier of UN Page 2 NEWSMEN STILL BANNED Tokyo Oil Communist China said today no Ameri-; can newsmen would De al lowed to enter Red China un-! less the United States allows Red China's newsmen to en- j ter the U.S. i i'c Convention Point I.o.s Anrles - 'I'I'I' - The Di m mct a! ic national i.'uinnut- ' b'cnian from Oregon said Sat . nrday ho had persuaded coit 1 i volition planners W swiWh liis I .stale's delegation to a hmd I Ho., sisted llie addition of amend merits which would adversely affect our foreign relations or impair the administration of the program.'' Suae Canal Shipping lsue A White Jlouse .spokesman said the exception referred to Wfls the so-called "freedom of navigation amendment'1 aim ed at discrimination against Israeli shipping in llie Suez lor the aeceptance speech by the nomine .selected at the July session, in the luO.OUO seal coliseum for his state. lie said the Oregon delega tion, H4 delegates and Hi al ternates, would bo housed in the Mil) fair hotel, just 10 minutes drive from the sports arena, instead of il a Pasa dena hotel as originally planned. Sue. Canal. It also ordered a halt to the remaining trickle of economic ha id In Castro's Cuba unless the President himself finds this should be 'ontbiucd. Military a' i to Cuba already has been ended. SIGN PETITION New York - lU'l) - The New York Adlai Stevenson for President committee has an nounced more than 22,0 U 0 persons sijmed petitions dur ing the week end lo draft Ste venson for the Democratic presidential nomination. Wash ington-'l I'll-An Amer ican official says that U.S.! spy plane pilot Francis G.i Powers was under orders to' admit his espionage mission if captured by the nuiana. ; George V. Allen, director of : the US. information agency, said Sunday he understood Powers' admission of his in-j telligence role to his Soviet captors was in line with in-j slruclions irom his superiors.' Allen later told United Press International that the pistol and hypodermic needle carried by Powers were for use in taking his life only if he were in danger of bein ' tortured. j The information agency; chief belittled speculation that j Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev might try to 1 stage a propaganda coup by turning powers over to U.S. authorities during the summit conference. Allen predicted that Khru shchev would hold Powers "close to his chest for a while." lie satd about all this country could do would be to try lo see that Powers yets a fair trial. Rockefeller Lilts Remaining Doubts Washington - 'L'PIj Gov. Nel son A. Rockefeller removed any lingering doubts about his availability for the Re publican Vice Presidential nomination Saturday by refus ing two prominent National GOP convention posts and an nouncing he would not even attend the convention. Mis statement was inter preted here to mean that he is keenly interested in first place in l!)f4. in case Nixon fails to win the White House this, year. Rockefeller's strong disa vowal of any convention robe and his emphatic refusal to serve as a running mate with Nixon also left him free 1o criticize the latter if Nixon wins the White House. E'' 4-t j t , ?.(" .wtVi.. . ;:?: L. . ft CI'.. i " a- 1 f;r.- i . ; t ! x,; -y i3 .'ftf''. ... . ,. i! - v i it,,. , TT x ffi V V ! ? J ex ennc America needs an experienced leader as President. That leader lis Vice-President Dick Nixon. He knows our government. He knows firsthand the world's problems. o VOTE FOR PROVEN LEADERSHIP... VOTE FOR DICK NIXON, MAY 20 paid PomiCAi adv. Oregon for nixon committee 414 S. W, Moiriion, Poitland, Oregon Wndll Wyall, Chairman o (Continued from Pgt 1) Khrushchev said American statements on the spy plane w re those normally made only by a nation in a state of war and that they doomed the semmit in advance. He said the United State was "crude ly fkmting" International law and had violated the United Nations Charter. Eisenhower's statement showed he was in no mood to accept Khrushchev's apology ultimatum. Eisenhower took note of Khrushchev's 40-minute tirade this morning and said Khru. shchev was under "an evident misapprehension" when he I charged that the United States had threatened to continue flight over Soviet territory. "The United States has made no such threat," Eisen hower said. "Neither I nor my govern ment has intended any." Says Flights Suspended Eisenhower said the U. S. government state ments on which Khrushchev based this charge did not, in fact, go fur ther than to say that the United States will not shirk its responsibility to s a f e guard against surprise at tack." "In point of fact," Eisen hower added, "these flights were suspended after the re cent incident and are not to be resumed. Accordingly this cannot be the issue." Eisenhower then announced that if the Soviet attitude made it possible to come to grips in Paris with the plane incident, he was planning in the near future to submit to the United Nations a proposal for creation of a U.N. aerial surveillance to detect prepar ations for attack. Appeals for Moderation He said he had intended to hand this plan to the Paris conference. He explained that the surveillance system would operate in the territories of all nations prepared to accept such inspection. Macmillan and President Charles de Gaulle of France then pitched in with appeals to Khrushchev for moder ation. But Khrushchev was im pervious to the appeals of the British and French peace makers. He said the spy flights are a matter which deeply involves Russia's in ternal policies and that they could n-t be tolerated. The three - hour session broke up without any agree ment whether there would be a next meeting. The fate of the Summit conference be came a gigantic question mark. Stocks Higher in Early Dealings New York -(UPD- Chemicals, electronics and some steels led stocks higher in the early dealings today. Du Pont and Union Carbide led the blue chips with gains of more than a point, and Gen eral Electric with a rise of nearly 2. Chrisler, which reported sales in the first third of May were up sharply from a year ago, jumped nearly a point. Ford firmed, General Motors and American eased. In the electronics, Magna- vox added around 2 and IBM, Litton, Texas Instruments and Raytheon more than 1. Pola roid jumped nearly 3 in the cameras and Universal Match around 1 in the vending ma chine stocks. Spring Festival Set At Howard School Featuring the music and art departments, the Howard school annual spring festival and art exhibit will be held May 17 in the school gym nasium at t p.m. Doors will open at 7:20 p.m. Harold Boner, principal, has announced that the pro gram would include the fourth grade chorus, under the direction of Mrs. Elva Edler: the department chorus, directed by Mrs. Nlta Birds eye; the beginning orchestra, directed by Mrs. Audrey Bart lett; and the school band. E. Don Rice, director. Two orchestra groups from Lincoln grade school is also to participate. Boner stressed that admis sion is free, and the public is invited. n Berlin-ilTll-Twelve persons were killed and 60 injured when two crowded passenger I trains collided Sunday night I outside Leipzig. East Ger- many, the East German News agency reported today. ' Aikin-McCullcug!. Insurarice, inc. 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