8 A.
GAVEL CHANGES HANDS -The outgoing and incoming
presidents of the American Medical Association are shown
together during the A.M. A. convention at Miami Beach,
Fla. They are Dr. Louis M. Orr, left, of Orlando, Fla., out
going president, and Dr. E. V. Askcy of Los Angeles, the new
president. (UP1 Telephoto)
4-H NEWS
Marry Mixers
The June meeting of the
Merry Mixers 4-H Cooking
club was held at Elin Living
ston's home.
At the meeting, Sqe Cou
nctt gave a demonstration of
how to set a table.
Our new member was ini
tiated. Her name is Christine
Evans.
Before the meeting, we had
a wiener roast.
Elin Livingston,
Reporter
Antelope Food Club
The Antelope 4-H Food
Preservation club met June
11 at Paulette Anderson's
home.
There was a film shown on
tlie different types of con
tainers and methods of freez
ing The film was discussed
during the meeting.
The club attended church
at Eagle Point Community
church and had a picnic June
Q at Woolfolk's home.
Florence Woolfolk,
Reporter
Antelope Clothing and
Cooking
A meeting of the Antelope
4-H Clothing and Cooking
club was held June 11 at Paul
ette Anderson's home.
The girls planned their annual-pre-fair
and overnight
camping trip.
Tlie pre-fair, scheduled for
June 29, will be a day of con
tests and demonstrations at
the Eagle Point High school
home economics room.
The meeting will begin at
9 a.m. with a sack lunch at
noon and refreshments later.
Mothers of the club mem
bers are invited to attend.
July 13 and 14, the annual
4-H Overnight Campout will
be held at the Whiskey
Springs camp. Swimming is
scheduled at the Willow lake
resort.
Mrs. Don Anderson Instruct
ed the group in sewing.
Next meeting will be July
13 at the Whiskey Springs
camp,
Judy Hill,
Reporter
Boy Scouts
Explorer Post 10
Friday, June 10, through
Sunday, June 12, Explorers
from Post 10, Mcdford, and
Adviser George Barber hiked
Into the Blue Canyon area
northeast of Mt. McLoughlin.
Because of the area's high al
titude, there were still some
drifts of snow as high as five
leel.
The group camped at Blue
Lake where there was ground
free of snow.
E x p 1 o r e rs participating
were Greg Elliott, Ron Aus
tin, Rob Hicght, Ronlie In
gram, Gary Barber, Garry Ot
toman, and Advisor George
Barber.
PUZZLE INVENTOR DIES
Pawling, N.Y.-IUPIl-Prosper
Buranelli, 68, credited with
starting the nations cross
word puzzle rage, died Sun
day of a heart a'tack. A top
feature writer, he started
dreaming up crossword puz
zles with two friends, and pub
lished a book of the puzzles.
Stayton -IUPD- Jefferson Jus
tice Court Judge Max Schultz,
Si), was in critical condition
today following a one-car ac
cident on Highway 22 west
of Mchama.
Summer
Beginning July 5
1 and 2 Year Courses Day er Evening Clones
QOZJRTSOa SCHOOL of
I Ne. Riveriiefe,
Medferd
if - '
Gun, Checks Taken
From Corvallis Office
Corvallis - IUPII - Burglars
broke into the Railway Ex
press Agency office here early
Sunday and escaped with a
revolver and $1,390 in travel
ers checks after blowing two
safes.
18 Die as Earth
Slides in Chile
Valdivia, Chile -IUPII- Earth
loosened by a howling wind-and-rain
storm in quake-devastated
southern Chile thun
dered down the slopes over
looking Lake Paguipulli Sun
day, carrying 18 persons to
their deaths.
Reports from the scene, in
the mountains 80-odd miles
cast of here, said the land
slide carried a house into tlie
lake and killed all of its oc
cupants.
A few hours later, the
worst earthquake of the
month rocked Chile's disaster
zone. The new quake caused
widespread panic and com
plctcd the destruction of
many buildings damaged by
last month's violent temblors,
but no new casualties were
reported.
The quake was fell with
varying intensity over an
area ranging from Santiago
south to Puerto Montt.
Khrushchev Attends
Romania Congress
Bucharest, Romania - IUPII -Romania's
third Communist
party congress opened Mon
day under the watchful eye of
Nikita Khrushchev, who was
using the opportunity to con
fer with Red Chinese and
satellite representatives.
The Soviet premier - fresh
from a two week vacation at
the Black Sea - kept mainly
in the background. Sunday he
said he never would have
suffered the "embarrassment"
which befell President Eisen
hower in the cancellation of
his Japanese visit.
It was understood Khrush
chev would address the con
gress, whose agenda is de
voted entirely to Romania's
Internal affairs.
Mali Federation
Gets Independence
Dakar, Senegal -WPD- The
Mali Federation of West Afri
ca was born Monday, bestow
ing Independence on six mil
lion more Africans.
At one minute after mid
night the roar of cannon pro
claimed the union of the two
former French colonics of
Sudan and Senegal.
It marked the bcuinninu of
the evolution of the French
empire into a grouping of free
nations. The Mali Federation
Is the first African member
of tlie French community of
nations to achieve full inde
pendence. This fall the federation will
apply for full membership In
the United Nations General
Assembly and France will be
its sponsor.
NAMED DAIRY PRINCESS
Barre, Va. - IUPII - Carol
Jacques, 19-yenr-old Univer
sity of Vermont sophomore
majoring In psychology, is the
1060 Vermont Dairy Princess.
TRAINING-QUICKER!
A Better Job Sooner!
YOU CAN HAVE BOTH!
School
619 S.E. Can,
Roteburg
Morse Faced With Delicate Problem in UN Nomination
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Mail Tribune Washington
Correspondent
Washington - President Eis
enhower's nomination of Sen.
Wayne Morse as a delegate to
the United Na
tions presents
the Oregon
senator with a
delicate prob
lem as well as
an unparallel
ed opportuni
ty. The prob
lem is that as
one of the five
A. KoM Smith
members of the United States
delegation to the General As
sembly session this fall. Sena
tor Morse will not be privi
leged to state his own person
views during UN debates if he
personally disagrees with the
official policy of the Ameri
can government.
While the issues that may
come before the Assembly are
not now predictable, the poli
cies the delegation must de
fend will be those of the out
going Eisenhower administra
tion. Morse has been highly
critical of the administration's
foreign policy in general.
Most Recent Speech
"The sad fact is our govern
ment is following a foreign
policy that is bound inevitably
to end in a nuclear war, un
less the American people
make it very clear to the lead
ership of the country that they
want that policy changed,"
Morse said in his most recent
foreign policy speech in the
Senate, May 23.
He added that he was proud
tnot ftis "descendants would
read my record of dissent
with this president in regard
lo lorcign policy."
If the U-2 spy plane inci
dent is raised in the Assem
bly, the U. S. delegation will
probably have lo rely upon
another member-Ambassador
Henry Cabot Lodge or Sen.
George D. Aiken (R-Vt.)-lo
defend the administration. For
Morse has termed this flight
over Russia "a form of con
structive aggression."
Can Alibi It
"We can alibi it and ration
alize it ail we want to, and we
can wave the American flag
into tatters over it, but the
fact remains that our friends
and enemies alike around the
world are going to decree
that we cannot justify our
course of action in the spy
plane incident under interna
tional comity well recognized
in the field of espionage,"
Morse said in that Senate
speech.
Ironically, the burden of
Morse's criticism of recent
foreign policy has been that
the administration has made
loo little use of the UN. Con
sequently, Morse's opportuni
ty in serving as a delegate this
fall will be to view the ma
chinery of this world assem
bly from the inside, to evalu
ate its flaws and strengths as
international agency for
easing world tensions and set
tling disputes, and to speak in
the future with the added au
thority of UN experience.
Morse's theme has been
that the U. S. should "take to
Khrushchev a peace offensive
within and through the Unit
ed Nations." Generally, he
suggested this be done by the
U. S. referring many more dis
putes lo the UN General As
sembly and the Court of In
ternational Justice, calling for
extraordinary sessions of the
UN, conducting any summit
meetings under UN auspices
with Secretary-General Dag
llammarskjold as chairman
Will Not Win Peace
An arms race, maintained
Morse, will not win the peace.
It will lead only to war, cither
by design or miscalculation.
Such a war would not mean
the end of civilization, simply
tlie end of western and of Rus
sion civilization-with Asian,
Waiting Periods in
Supreme Court Cut
Salem - IUPII - The waiting
period for a case in the Ore
gon Supreme Court has been
trimmed lo eight months, ac
cording to Chief Justice Wil
liam McAllister.
Last year the waiting per
iod was as much as 23 months.
McAllister said that as of
Friday there were 93 cases
at issue ready for argument, a
reduction since Jan. 1, of 1959
of 129 cases.
BUSINESS
411 Main,
Klamath Falls
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE.
African and Latin American
civilizations remaining.
The time has long passed
when the U. S. should serve
notice to the world that it is
going to stop Its end runs
around the UN and start lay
ing all cases on their merits
before the UN for open world
surveillance, said Morse. The
object is to lead the family of
nations toward a reliance up
on international Justice
through world law.
To pave the way for this,
Morse argued that an expan
sion of the existing body of in
ternational law must be built
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m( in tf &
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New Kellogg's AllStars
star-shaped, sparkling with
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traditional breakfast of ro
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Reach for new Kellogg's
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shelf now.
up-through the cumulative
settlement of more disputes In
this manner-so that ai threats
to peace arise, a greater set of
principles will exist upon
which to adjudicate peaceful
settlements.
The only disputes that get
referred to the international
court, Morse said, are minor
matters involving fishing ves
sels or harbor damages.
Wave Flag
"But when there is a major
issue, such as that over the
Formosa Straits or that in re
gard to the Middle East or a
good many issues which have
I 1 ) -:-:m
I ill mMi:mmMf? i
arisen In connection with our
mutual security program, we
limply lean back and proclaim
our sovereign rights, wave the
flag, and say we are going to
decide this for ourselves," de
clared Morse. "But whenever
we do that, we lose more and
more prestige around the
world."
Morse said working through
the UN would be no short cut
to peace, that it would take
several decades. He proposed
starting with an extraordinary
session to which every nation
would be invited. After the
heads of state had returned
ft W
home, their deputies would
remain to work out a peace
program so that "we shall
have an unwritten moratori
um on war."
This, he contended, is the
alternative to "saber rattling"
by the big powers through in
ternational power politics,
which he said never precedes
peace, only intervals between
wars, In which the non-participating
nations resent the ef
fort of the big powers to de
cide the fate of the world.
"I think the world is up
against it," concluded Morse,
"and the world has no choice
' .VC I"'"
5
. vie
rf liv -
,Stor8
but either to go to war in our
generation, or to give the
Attend D.V.B.S. At
The Salvation Army
4th and Bartlett Sr.
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Daily
June 20-June 24
Interdenominational Clan for All Ages!
:ra V I"-
.tRV
V
hog" '
mil'
TUESDAY. JUNE 21. 1960
world a system of permanent
peace which can be attained
only by bringing to an end
this immoral nuclear arma
ments race."
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