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01 MOW end JACKSON COUNJI
MtOFORD, OREGON
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Section A
56 PAGES
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1960
No. 101
M
e-- Vl fmij f
"And Tell The U. N.
Aggressive Attitude Of
2 Russian Leaders
Released from Posts
Moscow -fllPD- Soviet Presi
dent Leonid Brezhnev and
Klimcnt Voroshllov, hit pred
ecessor os lllulnr head of
(lair, wcro disclosed 6nturduy
to linve been released from
key pouts on the Communist
party ccntnil committee.
T li o official government
newspaper Izvcstlu announced
Xlrcrhiu-v had given up his
post as secretary to tho cen
tral committee in order to de
voto more time to his prcsl-
Kennedy Promises
Active Campaign
Lo Angeles - (WD - Demo
cratic candidate John T. Ken
nedy served notice Snturday
that he intends to wane a very
vigorous presidential cam
paign against Richard M. Nix
on "within what I consider
tho rules of lad."
At his first news conference
aince winning his party' pres
idential nomination, ho also
pledged to fight harder than
President Elsenhower for ra
cial Integration and called on
Congress to pass three major
bills at Its bob-tailed August
session.
Kennedy's statement un
derscored what has become
Increasingly clear - the forth
coming election battlo could
bo one of tho roughest in re
cent history, Nixon already
has said ho would travel any
whero and do everything le
gitimately possible to capture
the White House.
Following up the attack he
Unloosed against Nixon in hla
acceptance speech last night,
Kennedy said he wanted to
make It clear that his cam
paign against the Republican
presidential candidate "is go
ing to be very vigorous."
' Rosoburg - lUPD - A 38-year-old
Oakrldge man died early
Saturday morning when his
car went off the road and roll
ed over an cmbnnkmcnt about
17 miles north of hero. State
police Identified tho victim
s Robert Thomas Cobb.
Photogenic
I'Vi
i
2. . .
t "These aisles must be
We Alio Proie.t Th
The Democratic Party"
dcntlal duties. Ho remained,
however, as a member of the
central committee's presidi
um. Tho newspaper said also
that Voroshilov, 80 -year -old
veteran of tho Communist
party, had been released from
tho presidium of the central
committee at his own request.
Considered Boutin
Moscow observers consid
ered tho shifts to be routine
and said they did not signify
any shake-up In tho govern
ment or Communist parly
hierarchy.
, Tho moves were approved
by central committee mem
ber In resolutions passed by
tho - wind-up session of the
committee's full committee
Saturday.
Voroshilov's release meant
virtual retirement of the vet
eran bolshevik from political
life. He had been ailing for
years, and was replaced in the
presidential post by Brezhnev
last May.
.The shift announced In
Iiveatla released Brezhnev
from the six-man secretariat
of the central committee. But
as president of the Supreme
Soviet and a member of the
presidium of the central com
mittee, ho remains one ot the
top leaders of tho Soviet
Union.
Anderson to Meet
With County Groups
Lloyd Anderson, planning
consultant with the bureau
of municipal research, will
meet with members of the
Jacks6h county court and
planning commission. Wed
nesday, July 27, at 8 p.m.
County Judgo Earl Miller
said the group will decide how
best to spend the $2,000 which
the county has allocated for
planning services In its cur
rent fiscal year budget. Tenta
tive plans call for Anderson
to meet with county officials
on planning three days a
month.
Anderson Is headquartered
with tho bureau of municipal
research at tho University of
Oregon In Eugene. '
7 t U 'i
kept clear."
j
Jack Says Adlai
To Be Foreign
Policy Adviser
But Kennedy Claims
He's Not Committed
Los Angeles - (UPD - Demo
cratic presidential nominee
John F. Kennedy Saturday
selected Adlui E. Stevenson to
be a key foreign policy
strategist In Uie campaign for
the While House.
The move stirred specula
tion Unit Stevenson might
emerge as secretary of state
In any Kennedy administra
tion although Kennedy said
he had no commitments to the
party's two - lime standard
bearer.
The Massachusetts Senator
also named Stevenson as one
of two udvUcrs who will re
ceive foreign policy briefings
from tho Elsenhower adminis
tration between now and tho
November election.
Bowles Mentioned
Tho other will- bo Rep.
Chester Bowles of Connecti
cut, Kennedy's pro-convention
foreign policy adviser who
also has figured In speculation
over the probable secretary of
state if the Democrats win.
Kennedy announced the
moves at a breakfast meeting
of party leaders ond contribu
tors. He termed foreign policy
the "key" to the coming cam
paign and said:
'wo hope that Gov. Steven
son will work with us - not
only to make speeches - but
also will associate himself in
timately with us In making
Judgments on the problems
which face us.
The 43 year old nominee
emphasized the absence of
any commitment to Stevenson
at a later news conference.
Air Force Says
Plane Not Spying
Washlnglon-WPD An Air
Force spokesmen said Satur
day that reports an American
reconnaissance plane sent
back Information on three
sccrot Russian rocket bases be-
foro it was shot down are
"absolutely untrue."
The denial came after the
London Sunday Dispatch re
ported tho downed RB-47 un
covered the bases on its flight
north of tho Arctic Circle
July 1.
The Air Force said earlier
this month that the plane was
on a routine electromagnetic
research flight, studying ra
dio communications and navi
gation. It said such flights
have been going on for 10
years.
However, Russia charged
the plane was on an espionage
mission over Soviet territory
and demanded a United Na
tions Security council session
to consider threats to the
peace from such flights.
WEATHER
FOHKCAST: Clear, lint and dry
through Monday. II I eh today
103. Low tonlcht 63, High Mon
day 100.
Temp.
IHgheit Yeilrrday iwi
Lowest 62
Precipitation none.
Our Skies Tonight
Run set today T:IS p.m.
Siinrlttr tomorrow 4:50 a.m.
Moonrlse tomorrow 1:14 a.m.
Jupiter now rliei well before
iniitet and for the next few
week thli planet will be the
brlghteit itarltke object In the
iky until well after midnight.
Aspects Of
m ; .""""w''-' aMsjsssjsjsjsavjsjsjSjasana rv.' ..-;vi-..v-;vvi)
"Hope they keen those TV cameras on my i.j.nti n
it ,
U.S. Missionaries
Tell of Beatings
By Congo Troops
Accra, Ghana-IUPD-Amcric-
an missionaries reaching safe
ty here from the turbulent
Congo reported Saturday that
Congolese troops forced them
to lie on the ground, beat
them with rifle butts and
tramped on them in an attack
on one mission station.
A group of 73 U.S. mission
aries and their families ar
rived here at midnight Friday
after they were rescued by
helicopter from their posts in
the Congo.
A second group of 49 Amer
ican refugees, most of them
women and children, arrived
Saturday. They Included a
missionary, the Rev. Gordon
Bottemlller, of Phoenix, Ariz.,
who had a forehead injury in-
Woman, Girl
Trail 'Murder'
Car in Medford
Mrs. Bcreth P. Hopkins,
Old Military rd., and her 13-year-old
granddaughter turn
ed detectives Friday night as
they trailed a "murder" car
down Medford streets and al
leys.
Mrs. Hopkins, former Jack
son county clerk, told Med
ford police Friday night that
she and her granddaughter
were returning home from
tho Jackson county Republi
can party luau at tho Nation
al Guard armory when they
pulled their car up behind one
with an Idaho license on RIv
ersido Ave.
' Suddenly they noticed an
arm dangling from under, the
Idaho car's trunk lid. Curious.
they followed, the car. Then
they noticed a red substance,
like blood, dripping from the
arm to the street.
The body seemed gripped In
death agonies as it flipped
around in the trunk, half
raising the lid. The red sub
stance continued to drip to
the street.
Grimly Mrs. Hopkins fol
lowed as tho Idaho car ran a
red light, then turned and
twisted through an alley, then
down another street.
Mrs. Hopkins rushed Into
the Medford police station
with her granddaughter and
swiftly and efficiently de
scribed the Idaho car and its
direction. Then the pair re
turned home as a patrol car
searched Medford streets and
alleys.
They came across the car,
driven by Robert K. Jolley,
19, of Burley, Ida. Two Med
ford area juveniles were with
him.
The "blood" was catsup and
the "body" was that of live
boy, pouring the red sub
stance out of tho trunk.
Jolley said he would re
turn at once to his job at
Horse Creek, Calif., and the
Medford boys were warned
against such pranks and re
leased. Bend - IllPll-Scn. Hugh Scott
(R-Pa.) has predicted a Repub
lican victory in November.
Scott made his prediction
while addressing a meeting of
Bend Republicans at noon Sat
urday. ... nnu
1
fllctcd by rioting Congolese at
his mission near Leopoldville.
He said he would return
to the Congo as soon as the
situation was normal again.
(Fifty more American refu
gees arrived at Wheelus Air
Force Base, Libya, the U. S.
Air Force announced. They
were among the 238 refugees
taken from the Congo on the
return runs of food and troop
airlift planes, tho Air Force
said. They will bo flown to
Brussels from Wheelus.)
A member of the first group,
Presbyterian Glen Murray of
San Antonio, Tex., said it had
been decided to pull out the
American missionaries "In
order not to embarrass Afric
an Christians."
(U. S. authorities said Fri
day night they had ordered
all 1,700 American mission
aries in the Congo to leave
for their own safety).
Missionaries arriving here
said tho beatings occurred at
the mission station of Sonu
Mpangu, 160 miles from Leo
poldville, Tuesday, when
three American missionary
families were attacked by a
group of 13 African Congolese
soldiers.
Donald Ellis, of Indiana
polis, said the Congolese
forced him and fellow mis
sionaries Bottemlller and
Charles Stuart of Massachus
etts to lie face down on the
ground. .
He added that Mrs. Ellis
and a woman missionary. Miss
Rhoda Nielsen, were struck
by soldiers during the inci
dent. -i
Morton Welcomes
Rockefeller Bid
Chlcago-fljPD - Republican
National Chairman Thruston
B. Morton said Saturday he
was certain Richard M. Nix
on would be the GOP presi
dential candidate but "wel
comed" Nelson A. Rockefel
ler to make a fight for it.
Commenting on the state
ment, a spokesman in Rocke
fellers office in Albany, N.Y.,
said: "He is not seeking the
nomination. He has said he
would accept a draft. His posi
tion Is unchanged." - -
Morton, a senator from
Kentucky and former state
department official, said his
personal surveys had indicat
ed 67 per cent of party lead
ers throughout the country
favored the vice president for
the top spot, but that he,
Morton, was determined to
conduct a "free and open con
vention" opening July 25.
"We will have a free and
open convention," Morton
told a news conference on his
arrival in Chicago. "I do not
know what Gov, Rockefeller
intends to do but as of this
time I believe Vice President
Nixon is sure of the nomina
tion." Ukiah, Calif -WPD- Deputy
Sheriff Wesley L. Crispin,
36, shot and killed his wife,
Lorraine, 27, early Saturday
in the presence of their two
children and then fired a fatal
bullet into his head, accord
ing to Mendocino County
Sheriff Reno Bartolomle.
A AAcajor Political
it n in ciccica,
promise...
u.s. mm
'D.SQE.1
OAS Moves to
Block Russia's
Designs on Cuba
Washington - (t!PD - Ameri
can hemisphere nations, in
emergency session, launched
a move Saturday to block
Russian designs on Cuba and
the rest of Latin America.
At a special meeting of the
council of the Organization of
American States, Peru called
for a meeting of the hemis
phere's foreign ministers to
deal with growing Soviet ties
with Cuba.
The United States, Ecuador,
Uruguay, Brazil, Chile, Co
lombia and Argentina imme
diately backed Peru's re
quest. But a council vote was
postponed until Monday to al
low other delegates to receive
instructions from their gov
ernments. Peruvian delegate Juan
Bautlsta de Lavalle called for
"a coordination of will to re
ject the interference of any
extra-continental power or of
any totalitarian ideology.
De Lavalle was reported
preparing to ask on Monday
for the American states to
jointly warn Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev to stay out
of their affairs.
Diplomats said Peru also
was consulting with other del
egations on a plan to Include
in' the foreign ministers'
agenda an explicit appeal for
the United States and Cuba to
settle their differences.
1 At the urging ot Latin
I American delegations both the
United States and Cuba tem
pered, their statements at today's-
meeting and ' avoided
what might have been a blis
tering row. .
County Court Sets
2 Public Hearings
The Jackson county court
has scheduled two public
hearings for Friday morning,
July 22, according to County
Judge Earl Miller.
A hearing will be held at
10 o'clock for vacating IS
feet on the Foothills rd. south
of Hillcrest rd. in the country
club addition. This is for ex
tension of the Rogue Valley
Country club golf course.
The second hearing is at 11
o'clock on a request for a
wine carry-out license for
Hunter's Tavern on Crater
Lake ave.
Ore. Congressmen
Poor, Says Scott
Klamath Falls -WPD- Sen.
Hugh Scott criticized Oregon's
Democratic representatives in
the Senate and Congress here
Saturday.
Scott said "Oregon, with
the exception of Republican
Congressman Walter Norblad,
is the most shamefully repre
sented state in the union."
Scott attacked Democratic
Congressman Charles O. Por
ter as being the most damag
ing person to the U. S. foreign
policy in his memory.
"Yikes, must
Mimimr law
LEI FOR THE SENATOR Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) was
draped with a lei shortly after his arrival at the Medford
airport Friday afternoon for the Jackson county Republican
fund raising Hawaiian feast in the National Guard armory
Friday night. Presenting him with the lei is Mrs. Joe Walsh,
wife of the sheriff who is head of the Jackson County Re
publican Central committee. Scott was main speaker at the
dinner. (Knackstedt photo)
Senator Addresses
GOP Luau
' The Jackson county Repub
licans turned loose a stream
of oratory Friday night de
signed to stimulate and In
spire party members as they
kicked off the campaign for
November's general election
With a fund-raising Hawaiian
feast in the Medford National
Guard armory. Sen.' Hugh
Scott (R-Pa.) was featured
speaker.
Scott set the theme for the
national GOP convention in
Chicago July 25 with an all-
out attack on Democratic par
ty leaders before the estimat
ed 500 plus crowd attending
the Republican Luau.
During a lengthy running
commentary on last week's
national Democratic conven
tion in Los Angeles, Senator
Scott remarked, "Los Angeles
has been known as the city of
Angels but it will have a hard
time regaining its title now,"
and "The Kennedy ticket is
the wrong-end-to ticket, with
the heaviest candidate at the
bottom. Perhaps the Demo
crats plan to back into the
presidency." ;
Jack be nimble. Jack be
quick. Jack jump over Reu
ther's stick," the senator
quipped. He was hitting at
Kennedy support from Walter
P. Reuther, head of the Unit
ed Auto Workers union.
Continuing a breezy com
mentary on the convention,
the senator sharply criticized
Kennedy's campaigning ab
sences from the senate, Sen.
Frank Church's (D-Ida.) "com
mencement address' given as
the convention s keynote
speech, and pointed out what
he called the new Democratic
party war hero, "General
Statement."
The Pennsylvania senator.
who is serving on several for
eign affairs committees, ac
we poll that delegation "Will the spectators in the balcony stop
sts mw.
at Armory
cused the Democrats of back
ing down from previous de
mands to give Red China dip
lomatic recognition. The Dem
ocratic party line now is, "we
should improve commumca-
Hops with. Red China."vthesaUon for seized property.
matiy cabinet position I think
it's not fair not to promise the
secretary of Interior position
to the people out west," Scott
remarked.
Recognition of Red China
would put the Chinese Com
munists in the United Nations
and the U.N. Security Coun
cil, Scott charged.
Narrowing his attack, Sen
ator Scott shot a stream of
charges at Rep. Charles Por
ter, Democratic candidate for
re-election from the fourth
Congressional district In Ore
gon. (Opposing him is State
Sen. Edwin R. Durno, Med
ford physician and Republi
can, who introduced Scott Fri
day night.)
Scott charged that Porter
traveled around the world
wrecking U. S. foreign policy
for the sake of headlines.
Saying that Cuban Tevolu-
tionary leader Fidel Castro is
good for Cuba is like saying
Hitler was good for Germany,
and many people did say that
during the early days of the
German dictator s rise to pow
er, the senator declared.
J. P. MARQUAND DIES -
Newbury, Mass. - IBPD-Pulit-
zer prize winning novelist
John P. Marquand died in his
sleep during the night and his
doctor said death was "prob
ably due to a heart attack."
The 66-year-old writer with
about 30 titles to his credit
and a life membership on the
best seller list, had been in
good health through 'the last
day.
Convention
Photos,. Text
throwing campaign
Formal Protest
Raps Fidel for
Seizing Properly
Russian Oil Delivered
To Seized Refineries
Havana - (CPD - The United
States Saturday formally pro
tested against Cuba's "arbi
trary and discriminatory" law
permitting . Fidel Castro to
seize American -owned prop
erty. The protest, delivered by
U.S. Ambassador Philip Bon
sal to Acting Foreign Minis
ter Carlos Olivares was cer
tain to be rejected by the gov
ernment which, even as Bon
sal delivered the protest, was
bringing in three shiploads
of Russian crude oil to be re
fined at seized Esso, Texaco
and Shell refineries.
The United States called the
Cuban "nationalization" law
"arbitrary" because it admit
tedly was enacted in retalia
tion for the United States de
cision to end the preferential
Cuban sugar quota.
The note, apparently refer
ring to stepped up trade be
tween Cuba and the Commu
nist bloc, said the Castro gov
ernment was trying to "alter
radically the traditional pat-
lern ot trade with the United
states.
The United States charged
that the Cuban expropriation
law failed to provide for
1 Dromnt." adeduote mrr nan.
note was a "most serious and
solemn protest against . this
hostile measure." . ; :s
Should Cuba use It. he said.
the United States would taks
it as further proof of "nolitieal
aggression" by Cuba.
Bonsai delivered a second
protest against the detention
last week of two American
newsmen, Bill Moeser of the
Miami News and Judson
Gooding of Rochester, Minn.,
Time-Life correspondent.
The United States protested
the expropriation laws which
it charged were aimed solely
at American holdings.
White House Hopeful '
Offers Services Free
Los Angeles - UPD - Presi
dential press conferences
come io an end when a
newsman says "Thank youA
Mr. President."
But presidential nomine
John F. Kennedy ended his
Saturday when a woman
broke into his question-and-
answer period with the
proclamation "No salary, no
salary."
Kennedy hurriedly ad-
Jo u r n e d the conference
when the woman began
walking down the aisle to
ward him.
She later identified her
self to newsmen as Rota
Croce of Los Angeles. She
said she wanted to be Presi
dent for t year without pay.
by Carl Luidii, Medford
buttons down here. '
)
IT