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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1960)
o C ) THURSDAY. JUNE 30, I960 MEDFOUD HIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. B 7 Three Persons Are Injured in Two Accidents in Area Cherol Lou Sprinkle, 3, of 20 Oak drive, Central Point, was reported in fair condition in the Crater Osteopathic hos pital, Central Point, following an automobile accident Tues day afternoon. The girl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wesley Sprinkle, was struck by a car when she went into the road at the Oak dr. and Table Rock rd. intersection. She suffered a broken left leg and head injuries, hospital at tendants said. The driver, Charles Neff Culmer, 27, of 621 Altamount St., Ashland, told state police he saw the girl, applied his brakes and swerved, but was unable to avoid hitting her. State police said no citations were issued. Boyi Injured Two 12-year-old boys were injured in a two-car accident ' Tuesday night, state police (aid. Passengers Robert Denny Dames, 33 North Barneburg rd., Medford, and Robbie Dean Kinney," 211 Berkeley way, Medford, both 12, were treated for cuts and released from Rogue Valley hospital, Itate police said. The accident occurred south of Medford on Highway 99 Cars driven by Fred Smith, 72, of 1701 Crown ave., Med ford, and Wray Thomas Stan- bery, 72 North Main st., Ash land, collided when the Smith car, in which the two boys were riding turned into drive. State police said Smith has been charged with failure to drive on the right side of the highway. Former Policeman Can't Leave Job Florence, S.C. - Policeman Vandroth Backus, 34, turned in his gun and badge after nine years on the force to begin a new life in the min istry. But the call of his old profession proved strong. On his way home from the police station, Backus spotted a known burglary suspect car rying clothes from one car to another. Hailed by the ex-officer, the man fled. But Backus summoned a policeman and apprehended the man, along with other stolen goods. HEALTH DIRECTOR DIES .New York (UPD Manfred Bowditch, 69, director of health and safety of the Lead industries Assn. since 1948, died Wednesday. this correspondent: "Sov ereignty is too new a bless ing to African countries for them to give it up again in a hurry." A most positive, but also cautious line was taken by Emperor Haile Selassie of (that it should bruin with eco Ethiopia In an interview he nomic cooperation, go mi to gave earlier this year to Ul'I Vice President 1 nomas K. Currnn. The emperor favored uni ty in principle. But he advised BLACK RULE , GOING BLACK WHITE RULE AFRICAN CONTROL AFRICAN CONTROL CHANGING - shad- of Africa shows how control is changtng ings on the above map of the major portion or about to change-from White to Black. (UPI Telephoto) Strong Feeling Said To Exist In Africa To Create One Nation Editor's note: This Is the last of three dispatches on the emergence of nine African territories as Inde pendent states, with probable In dependence for five more before the end of the year. This dispatch asssses the effect of Independence an other rerent developments on and other recent developments on Africa. By HUGH WATERFIELD London (UPD There is no common language in Africa. The Africans themselves speak hundreds of languages. African governments are conducted In Arabic, French, English, Spanish, Portuguese and Afrikaans. Of these, only Arabic is the mother tongue of the majority of the peo ple in the country where it is used. The "Dark Continent" Is vast and communications over most of it are primitive. But in spite of wide differ ences of origin, culture, race, tribe and religion, there are strong . feelings over almost the entire African continent for the welding of all its peo ple Into one nation. Obstacles Are Many The strongest proponents of this ideal also have found, to their disappointment - and in some cases to their surprise -that there are even stronger realities which make it some what remote. D r . Kwame Nkrumah, prime minister of Ghana, has emerged as the leading spokesman for the eventual creation of a United States of Africa. He and other Ghana leaders and organizations, with their supporters in other African territories, spear head the Pan-American move ment. Nkrumah's critics believe his main motive is an ambi tion to achieve immortality as the liberator of Africa. But the African leader says he believes the liberation of his continent will be surer, swifter and probably more peaceful if it is led by a unit ed movement in which inde pendent African states com bine with nationalist organi zations in still colonial coun tries. All Could Benefit He strongly feels that Af rica's ultimate freedom will be more secure and its vast resources can be more easily and rapidly used for the im provement of the condition of its peoples if it is combined into one huge united or fed- Z;'ii!!ik ' I V 1 1 nijfc . f9i i nun mi h i i mmm m LJZ 7 I1 7 SKY- HIGH REFRESHMENT Tropic-fruit salute to our 50 th state! Rocket-red Hawaiian Punch and new Hawaiian Golden Punch. At patriotic grocers everywhere, in big 46-ounce cans and fresh-frozen. ItM HAWAIIAN fUNCH-HILO. HAWAII . eral state after total libera tion. Nkrumah was encouraged to believe in the almost immi nent possibility of this by the enormous impact which the liberation of Ghana had on African nationalist m o v e ments all over the continent. Ghana was the first Afri c a n colonial territory to achieve freedom. To millions of Africans this looked like the beginning of a new life. But to thousands of white set tlers and white rulers to the south and east, it looked like the beginning of the end. However, many African na tionalist leaders do not share Nkrumah's urge for rapid po litical unity. Last month, Chief Samuel Akintola, pre mier of Western Nigeria, told Four Bound Oyer To Grand Jury Two men were bound over to the grand jury Tuesday af ternoon in district court fol lowing preliminary hearings. . Wayne Ivan Shultz, 18, of 2034 West Main st., is charged with takinc nwnpri hv I Charles Duell Batten and Cynthia Irene Batten from the Ninety-Nine Motel, Medford. Allan Leroy Huff, 21, of 634 i Pennsylvania st., is charged with receiving stolen property involving an electric lawnmower. James Jesse Roberts Jr., 27, of Independence, Ore., was bound over to the grand jury earlier this week on charges of uttering and publishing a false check. Lester Delbert Schall, 22, of Fort Lewis, Wash., was bound over to the grand jury on charges of grand larceny. Roberts is charged with is suing a false check in Rogue River, and Schall is charged with taking a car from a Med ford company. specific political agreement with neighboring terrilories and then to closer association, first on a regional basis. However, the struggle for final liberation of the conti nent from colonialism and ra c I a 1 discrimination unites some emergent African states but divides them from others. Above all, the newly inde- jiiiiii. ii-tmvmmtmBBMtma pendent African governments have all they can handle in tackling the problems of back wardness, ignorance, poverty and disease, which hold back the advance of Africa. Public Relations Business Thrives New York-The post-World War II years have brought many "revolutions" in Amer ican business and one of the most spectacular has been in dustry's attitude toward the public, according to Mrs. Denny Griswold, publisher of Public Relations News. "Where industry once felt its activities were nobody else's business," Mrs. Gris wold said, "now every alert company keeps the public in formed either through an in ternal or counselling public relations service." Mrs. Griswold, whose week ly publication reaches sub scribers In 58 nations, said that when the publication was founded 15 years ago there were only 100 public relations counsellors serving American Industry. "Now there are thousands." MILLIONS FOR CHILE Washington -fflPD- President Eisenhower expressed deep gratification Wednesday over the outpouring of voluntary contributions from the Ameri can people to help earth- j quake-stricKen iniie. ine to tal value nf cash and suDnlies million. LIGHT QUEMOY BARRAGE Taipei, Formosa -CPD- Com munist Chinese guns Wednes day bombarded the National ist offshore island of Quemoy I with the lightest barrage ever recorded in the straits hos tilities. Only five shells were fired at the island from the OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. 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