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SHOUT AT POLICE Pro-Castro demon- ped strict security measures on New YorK
strators shout at police across the street from as Castro led a parade of anti-American
a hotel In New York, where the Cuban pre- foreign leaders into the metropolis,
tnier is staying while attending the UN
General Assembly meeting. Police have slap- (UP! Telephoto)
BERATES OFFICER Cuban Premier Fidel
Castro leans out of a window of his car to
deliver a few choice words to a security
officer. Castro was trying to greet some New
York well-wishers but police restrained him
for fear he would be harmed by somone
who was not pro-Castro. Seated behind Cas
tro is Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Rea.
(UPI Telephoto)
Campaign Quotes
By Unilad F:m International
i Sen. John F. Kennedy:
In reviewing the first IS days of his active campaigning:
"We have been telling people that the freedom of the
world is at stake and they have listened. I am encouraged,
but I think wa've got a long, hard fight. I think the race is
very close now." ,
On the subject of his Catholic religion: (there is "still a
great deal of concern" (over it).
At Raleigh, N.C., on Soviet Premier Khrushchev's U.N
visit: "If he (Khrushchev) requested to see Mr. Nixon and
myself, both of us, separately or whatever way ... I would
certainly be willing to attempt to meet him. I don't think
that either one of us should meet him unless we both do.
"This is really a matter for the President of the United
States. President Eisenhower has been entrusted with the
conduct of foreign policy in this country until the end of
his term, and, therefore, I think that this decision and the
reaction of the United Slates to Mr. Khrushchev's visit
should be guided by the good judgment of the President. So
I will stick with his opinion on that matter."
Vice President Richard M. Nixon:
At St. Paul:
"I think it is time that we be done with the practice of
cutting the pride and support of America by endlessly fore
casting doom and gloom.
My political opponents have apparently been looking
through different eyes.
"Where I have seen strength they seem to have feared
weakness. Where I have seen . idealism, character and ap
preciation of our nation's ideals, they seem uneasily to have
feared aimlcssness, even shiftlessness, and therefore a clear
need for management of our people from Washington, D.C.
"Let's stick to the facts, not fancy, in this campaign. And
let's have pride and faith in our country, our cause and our
future."
On the subject of dealing with the Communists: "They will
respect us if we negotiate with hard-headed realism, and
we will accomplish far more than by being naive as to how
their conduct would be."
MEDFORDt
Tribune
Kegional Edition
Page 2A
Market Awaiting
UN Developments
As List Backs Off
New York -IUPD- Stocks sold
off in the early trading today
as Wall Street awaited devel
opments in the United Na
tions. Technicians expect the mar
ket to pay more attention than
usual to foreign affairs this
week. The gathering of world
leaders at the U.N. is seen as
loaded with explosive possi
bilities.
The list backed away al
most from the opening with
the appearance of minus signs
Dredomlnatlng. Steels, autos,
some rails, electronics and
metals were among the heavy
losers. .
U. S. Steel led the steels
with a loss of more than 1
while others in this group
were mostly steady.
International Business Ma
chines fell more than 3 in the
electronics where Texas In
strumenU lost around 3, Sieg
ler a point and Beckman near-
A.
it
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Heat-bv-Wire
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(NOT FIRE)
ly 2. Polaroid fell more than
3 in the cameras. Reynolds
Metals more than 2 in the alu
minums and Addressograph
around 2 in the business machines.
American Shipbuilding add
ed more than 2 m its division
Former Nurenburg
Trial Judge Dies
Olympia, Wash. UPD Jus
tice Walter B. Bcals, 83, re
tired Washington State Su
preme Court jurist and a for
mer judge at the allied armies
war court trial at Nurenburg,
Germany, died Sunday.
A veteran of 24 yeais on
the state's highest tribunal,
Bcals was twice chief justice
of the court. He was appointed
to the body in 1028 and ran
successfully for reelection un
til his retirement in 1952.
B e a 1 s also was a retired
lieutenant colonel in the
Washington National Guard,
MULTIPLE LENSES
Of American eyeglass wear
ers, 81.2 per cent use single
lenses; 38.8 use biofocals or
trifocals.
Cheers, Catcalls
Greet Castro on
New York Arrival
New York - (UPB - Cuban
Premier Fidel Castro, greeted
with alternating cheers and
catcalls, relaxed in a heavily
guarded hotel suite today and
waited for his first face-to-face
meeting with Communist boss
Nikita Khrushchev.
Castro virtually isolated
himself in his third-floor quar
ters at the midtown Shelburne
Hotel, only a few blocks from
the United Nations where the
revolutionary leader speaks a
week from today.
Wearing his usual military
field uniform and smoking a
black cigar, the bearded Cas
tro arrived Sunday, the first
of nearly a score of anti-
American leaders due at the
historic United Nations Gen
eral Assembly meeting which
opens Tuesday.
"I want to salute the people
of the United States," Castro
said in a hoarse voice at the
airport. "All I have to say I
will say to the United Na
tions." Caul Traffic Jam
His arrival at Idlewlld Air
port touched off a wild
scramble among about 3,000
pro-Castro demonstrators who
cheered, tried to crawl over
a fence and then created a
huge traffic snarl when they
tried to form a motorcade to
follow their hero to his Man
hattan hotel.
Along the route to the hotel,
Castro was greeted by boos
and catcalls as well as more
cheers. One man shouted in
the lobby: "You ought to drop
dead, you bum." Castro lg
nored the taunts and went
straight to his room.
At least two anti - Castro
demonstrators were arrested
by police. More than 200
officers were assigned around,
within and on the roof of the
hotel and adjoining buildings.
Castro's mixed reception
was in marked contrast to his
visit in April, 1959, when he
received a rousing welcome
from Cuba's New York colony
of about 100,000 persons. This
time he is restricted to Man
hattan Island, a move which
prompted the Cuban govern
ment to impose travel restric
tions on American Ambassa
dor Philip Bonsai in Havana.
Castro has never met Khru
shchev face to face although
the Cuban leader has openly
courted the Russians and wel
comed their aid in violent
anti-American tirades.
The first violence occurred
when an automobile carrying
anti - Castro demonstrators
rounded a corner by the hotel
and shouted insults at the
Cuban premier's supporters
on the sidewalks. The pro
Castro crowd attacked the
car. One member used a
wrench to smash its windows.
Police clubbed the man, iden
tified as John Cocho, 40, and
led him away bleeding. An
other man was arrested for
standing in the way.
At Least 6 Killed in Oregon Traffic
pte1 w - . t--r
THREE ESCAPE INJUHY Three elderly school a block away. The explosion was
women, one of them blind, escaped without thought to have been caused by an accumu-
injury when a gas explosion damaged their lation of gas in the attic over the garage,
home at Beaverton. Force of the blast was
enough to blow out windows of a church (UPI Telephoto)
Mrs. Neuberger Calls for
Bonneville Act Revision
By United Prn International
Mrs. Maurice Neuberger, on
a campaign tour of eastern
Oregon with other Democratic
candidates, today called for
revision of the Bonneville act
of 1937 to bring it "up to pro
ductive needs of the Columbia
basin for the 1960s"." . i .
She said Bonneville Power
administration should be giv
en authority for lelf-financlng
of new electric facilities out
of power revenues and a
"public utility responsibility"
to supply the power needs of
distributors, whether their
customers receive service
through publicly - owned or
privately-owned systems.
Mrs. Neuberger, Democratic
nominee for the U.S. Senate,
was traveling in eastern Ore
gon on a chartered bus with
other candidates Include At
torney General Robert Y.
Thornton: Ward Cook, state
treasurer candidate; Monroe
Sweettand, secretary of state
candidate, and Rep. Al UU-man.
Elmo Smith, Mrs. Ncubcr-
ger's Republican rival for the
Senate, made an airplane cam
paign swing through eastern
Oregon during the week end.
Smith told a Burns audi
ence on Saturday night that
"Oregon forests can produce
more jobs for Oregonians."
He said his program for build
ing up the state's forest indus
try would include better rec
reation, a re-inventory of fed
eral forest lands, better access
roads, better salvage practices
and increased federal research
In forest projects.
In Baker earlier Smith said
Oregon's cattle market should
be protected from the "in
roads of low grade imported
beef."
Oregon's proposed space
age industrial park, given
boost last Tuesday by Vice
President Richard Nixon, got
mention from Mrs. Neuberger
at Condon Sunday, She said
she was advised by Dan Kim
ball, president of Aerojet Gen
eral Corp. that the lite was
receiving "close attention" for
location of a rocket -engine
manufacturing plant.
HOME ACCIDENTS
Falls account for one-half
all persons killed annually In
home accidents.
Did you
Know you can
buy a
m m
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Standard
band instrument
ftderal tax includtd
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By United Press International
Two persons died Sunday
as a result of Saturday traffic
accidents to bring Oregon's
traffic deaths since Friday af
ternoon to at least six.
Walter Wyatt Morris, 60,
Portland, and Thomas Bryant,
21, Myrtle Point, died Sunday
from injuries received in sep
arate accidents Saturday.
Morris died in a hospital af
ter being struck by a car Sat
urday night. He became Port
land's 39th traffic fatality of
the year.
Bryant, who was stationed
at Ft. Lewis, Wash., died Sun
day from injuries received in
a one-car accident Saturday
five miles west of Myrtle
Point on Highway 42.
Bryant was the third person
Police Chief Dies
Kirkland, Wash. -fllPD- Me
dina, Wash., police chief John
Booth, 34, and a companion,
Lee Thalman, 42, Seattle,
were killed when a light plane
in which they were flying
crashed near here Sunday.
Civil aeronautics authori
ties and the Washington State
Patrol said the men had rent
ed the plane at a Bellevue air
field and that the left wing of
the craft buckled after take
off, causing the craft to drop
500 feet into a grove of trees.
to die in the accident. John
H. Fish, 21, and Robert M.
Van Horn Jr., 18, both of Myr
tle Point, died instantly.
State police said the car in
which the men were rid
ing, failed to negotiate a turn
and careened off a 65-foot
cliff.
Bernard Raymond Masters,
68, and his daughter, Hc'en
Catherine Bixcl, 36, both of
Santa Ana, Calif., were killed
Friday near Gold Hill when
their car collided with a log
truck.
Another Oregonian, Robert
Gillette, 71, Cascade Locks,
was killed Friday night near
Emigrant Gap, Calif., when
struck by a car.
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