Another Major Obstacle In Path of Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Removed
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" LEGION PARADE The color guard oi the venllon at Miami Beach, Fla. The six-hour
American Legion's Chicago Post 118 march- parade was seen by a throng of officials
es past a Thor missile to start the 1960 con- and spectators. (UPI Telephoto)
United States Preparing
More Animals for Space
Cape Canaveral, Fla. - (UPD -
The United States is prepar
ing more animals for space
flights aboard rockets soon, a
scientist in charge of the Atlas
"space mice" shot indicated
Monday.
Dr. Hans Clamann, chief of
the Department of Space
Medicine for the Air Force
School of Medicine at Brooks
Air Force Base, Tex., said the
institution is "training a lot
of animals right now for space
assignments."
To Bid Discoverer
He said these Include rats,
mice, guinea pigs, monkeys,
cats, dogs and rabbits. One
of the monkeys is scheduled
to ride a Discoverer satellite
into an orbit around earth In
late November or early De
cember, An attempt will be
made to recover the capsule.
Clamann said the only
drawback to a full series of
animal shots presently is "a
shortage of rockets."
Clamann's school trained
and selected the three black
mice - Sally, Amy and Moc -who
rode an Atlas missile 650
miles into space and 6,000
miles over the Atlantic Ocean
last Thursday, and survived.
The mice were displayed to
newsmen at Latrick Air Force
Base, 19 miles south of here,
Monday. They were to be re
turned to their laboratory
"home" at Brooks AFB by
airplane today to begin an ex
tended scries of tests that may
last up to a year.
The 12-week-old animals
"stood up quite well" under
the rigors of soaring from
high - gravity forces into
weightlessness, through a
deadly band of radiation
around each, then back
through the atmosphere In a
blazing plunge Inside an
RVX2-A nose cone of the At
las. .. ,
Information from the test
will be valuable to plans to
put man himself into space,
Clamann indicated. He said
the data would be made avail
able to officials of the Fed
eral Space Agency's Project
Mercury to put a man into
space next year. :
Scattered Specials
Pace Decline in Market
New York The stock mar
ket moved irregularly lower
today with steel, chemical
and scattered specials pacing
the downturn.
Brokers feel . that many
traders will be reluctant to
extend their positions until it
can be determined how
strong resistance will be above
the 600 level In the industrial
stock average,:
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
. New York-IUPD-Dow-Jonti
final stock average!! 30 in
dustrials 593.34, off 3.14)
20 railroads 127.62, un
changed! IS utilities 94.19,
unchanged, and 65 stocks
197.76, off 0.60. Sales Mon
day were about 2.26 million
shares compared with 2.47
million shares Friday.
lelected
.... 40'
... 87'i
... as'l
.... 2 Hi
... 02 1.4
Monday's prices
stacks;
Allied Chomical
Alum Co. Am
American Cnn
Amoriciin Motors ,
A T A T 02
Anaconda Copper 43tf
Armco Sttol flllj
uennix i.orp u
Bellilaham Stool 4U
Roelng Air 3U
CAterptllnr Corp. (xd) 2BV
Chryiler Corp 43(1
Continental Cnn . 33
Crown Zellerbich 42H
i-urusn wriKiu it
Dnw Chemical 7411
Dn Pont 185 'I
Knslman Kodak lOtHi
I : You Have A '
Choice of Location
, , for our memorial service
lQonger'J)fComs
DOWNTOWN CHAPEL
WEST MAIN AT SIXTH
I ;:; lLLCBEST
MORTUARY CHAPEL
North Phoenix Road
Firestone 35
General Electric 74
General Foodi 63 Vi
General Motor 43 3$
Geo r sin Pacific 40
Graham Palga 2
Greyhound 20
Gulf Oil 2a!i
Homestaka Mining - 4lPi
Idaho Power sul
I. B. M 827 l
Int, Paper , 02
Johns Mnnvlllo 544
Kennecott Copper 733t
Lockheed Alrernft , 22
Montann Power 2Q3Z
Montgomery Ward
Nat'l Blacuit
New York Central
pbo Oai St Klao
27
rnu at Biisu (ltt'
Ponnev. J. C anai
Penn HR U!4
Radio Corporation S3a,i
Richfield Oil 8M4
Safeway 341',
Sean , n2
Shell Oil 38 ii
Socony Mobil Oil 40
Southern Co 45
Southern Pacific 30
Standard California 46
Standard Indiana 40
Standard N.J 40'i
Sun Mlnea et'i
Texas Co. 783$
Texas Gulf Sulfur Uii
Texas Pnc Land Trust ifti
Transamerica 24
Trans World Air 13 H
Trl-Contincntal 34 15
Union Carbide ; ....H4'i
Union Pacific , a.vifc
United Aircraft 3aJ
United Air Lines 32 '5
U. S. Rubber 4(1
U. S. Steel 757.
Yotingstown S V T rri.
Privileges for
Staff of Control
Group Described
Geneva-flJPD-Western diplo
mats said today an agreement
reached by the United States,
Britain and the Soviet Union
has removed another major
hurdle standing in the way
of a nuclear test ban treaty.
Delegates to the 23-month-
old nuclear test ban talks
Monday formally adopted a
second annex to a proposed
treaty. The annex concerns
privileges and immunities
which would be accorded the
staff of the control organiza
tion policing a test ban.
U.S. delegates Charles C.
Stelle, who presented the final
content of the annex and the
suggested treaty language,
said its adoption was "a land
mark of sorts."
Stelle said the U.S. govern
ment "hopes most sincerely
this landmark will be the be
ginning of further agree
ments, culminating in the
agreement on a treaty. This
is a cause for satisfaction and
the need for redoubled ef
forts."
The Soviet Union's chief
delegate, Samyon K. Tsaorap-
kin, said the annex marked
"rather big" progress and
said the outlook for an agree
ment on a treaty "was hope
ful." British delegate Sir Mi
chael Wright placed his arm
around Tsarapkin's shoulder
after the meeting and grinned:
"Three-hundred international
lawyers are out of a Job. We
have agreed on an annex.
Migrant Children
Law on Truants
Felt Adequate
But Not Enforced
(Continued from page 1)
The report by Ronald Pet-
rie of Salem, administrator of
the program, noted that there
were 1,937 children of migrant
workers in Oregon public
schools in 1958-59, of which
668 were Spanish - speaking
and 1,269 Anglo. But in the
same period, there were 4,000
to 9,000 migrants of school
age eligible for school,
Despite this truancy, Petrie
said It appears present Ore
gon law on truants is ade
quate but that it is not being
enforced.
Marion Has Most
Fourteen counties had an
influx of migrant children in
the 1958-59 school year with
Marlon county having the
most migrant students, 357.
Malheur county was next
highest with 347.
The report said most
schools "do not provide an
adequate educational pro
gram" for migrant children
and "the migrant child soon
feels that the school would
rather not have him because
of the problems he presents."
Usually Behind
The migrant child is usu
ally behind his classmates and
the report says this all the
more shows the need for the
special education program.
Petrie concludes that the
migrant youngsters must be
integrated into the regular
public schools. The migrant
child "needs to feel that he
is it part of our society. This
cannot be accomplished in a
totally segregated school situation."
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COMFORTS DAUGHTER-Affs. Lee Newhouse comforU her
daughter, Wendy, 2, the only one of. the five Newhouse
children who awakened when an unidentified assailant shot
gunned her father, Donald Newhouse, production manager
of the Orcgonian, Sunday night as he worked In .his base
maul workshop. (UPI Telephoto)
Mmbr Nlllonil Selected Morticians by Invitation
Stay Out of Cuba, American Adventurers Warned
Washlngton-WPD-The State
Department has issued a new
warning for American adven
turers to stay out of Cuba.
It said Monday that their
Intervention in Cuban affairs
could have serious consequen
ces for the United States as
well as cost them their lives
before a firing squad.
The department previously
had urged Americans not to
travel to Cuba unless they had
"compelling reasons" to go
there. No ban has been im
posed on travel to Cuba, how
ever.
The new statement de
nounced as "drumhead Jus
tice" the execution by the
Castro regime of two Amer
icans accused of taking part
in an invasion of Cuba on
Oct. 5.
The charge was based on
the fact that appeals by the
two Americans Robert Otis
Fuller, 25, Miami, and Allen
Dale Thompson, 36, of Queen
City, Tex., and Mooringsport,
La. were decided against
them in five minutes.
MEDFORDt
Regional Edition
Tribune
Page 2A
But the department made
it clear that it does not con
done the actions of Americans
who join in international ad
ventures such as plots to over
throw Cuban Premier Fidel
Castro.
Department Spokesman Jos
eph Reap said the U. S. gov-
CAR PURCHASES
Detroit-More than 135 mil
lion motor vehicles have been
produced in the U.S. since
1900 providing one of the
major industries.
MOTOR FLEETS
Detroit There are approxi
mately 100 million cars,
trucks and buses in the world,
one for every 30 persons.
ernment "looks seriously on
the involvement of individual
Americans in the Internal af
fairs and disputes of other
countries."
Not only do the recent ex-
euctions point up the potential ,
consequences to Individuals,
he said, but such expeditions
also could have "potentially .
very serious" political i cor- ;
sequences to this country,'
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