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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1961)
15 A TUESDAY. APRIL 16, 1961 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON ' ' M " .,4 v r ' ' ' y nf " ' 1 i' - , I S fi i , I I , 1 ' -.Vr VTT J L " f Wt " - , . j Red Chinese Ties With Soviet Union Claimed Worsening Despite Communist concepts of peace- the Communist Chinese are in i makes them highly dependent lodern" 1 ful co-existence with the West, I dire financial -traits. This I upon Soviet aid. ,. 'INVASION DISCUSSED Cuban Ambas sador to-the UN Raul Roa, center, talks to Valerian Zorin, right,' of the Soviet Union 'at- the UN building In New York. Roa charged the invasion of Fidel Castro's is- - land stronghold was carried out by "mer cenaries" from Florida and Guatamela. Rao gave no details of the invasion, which re portedly started early Monday, but went immediately Into Cuba's ' case based ; on previous incidents which the Castro govern ment charged constituted agression by the U.S. A Russian interpreter is at left. , (UPI Telephoto) r X IT 'h- ft ; J r:fc ( . r f - ' - i - -- I 1 FOV SUCCESS-A Cuban lady openly weeps as she i a 1. ami, Fla., church for the success of the' Cuban l anny'i attempt to free Cuba from Fidel Castro's t. 1 (UPI Telephoto) visions t agreement among .on participants who i on the first five Great -ns discuasions came on oject of exchanges be- i the U.S. and other V ratic nations, v i K .ety-two per cent of ttiose who balloted recently dn the topic " Japan-Future of an Asian Ally ' said the U.S. should support greatly expanded political and cul tural exchanges- between Ja pan and. the U.S.,) and other dempcratlc nations. Forty four per cent of the Jackson county participants indicated they felt the same way. . , - Opinion ballots ' from 20 Oregon countries were tabu lated' -this week, by Oregon State.' college extension, service. . .-r . . Fuller Partnership..! -Nearly three-fourths of the state-wide voters said they felt-that fuller Japanese,part nership in free world affairs is desirable, r and the U.S. should foster it. But only half the voters called for fuller J a p a n e s e participation in Asian affairs, j.j , . Seventy per cent of the peo ple -voting in Oregon urged regulating the flow of low cost, highly' competitive Ja- asj VII .-'7 h APPEAL FOR FOOD Hong Kong-(UPt-The news paper South China Morning Post reported today that "one- fourth o'f thepeople of the world are now on the brink of starvation"- in Communist China. The paper published an appeal by 900 well-known Chinese in Hong Kong for food supplies for the famine stricken mainland. The ap peal said the' famine is the most disatrous in 100 years and may last three to six years. iiichanges T!:tk of Welfare I!:y8 Now Dead - Salem UPD The legislative ef.'ort to stop Gov. Mark Hat field from moving headquar ters of the State Welfare Commission is officially dead. ', The House Monday voted 31 17 to lay the preventive b-.l on the table. Hatfield vetoed it last Friday. Tbe bill would have stop ped the governor from bring ir the welfare commission to 5 itn from Portland. '4 panese Imports through vol untary Japanese export quo tas and negotiated' agreement The objective was to compro mise, for. mutual benefit, and 100 per.' 'cent , of : Jackson county voters agreed. Turning their attention to the other side of the world two-thirds of Oregon1 partici pants who voted encouraged expanding and strengthening NATO. They said western Eu rope's economic and military capacity to aeiend itself, on regional or cooperating na tional basis, should bo en couraged but within the framework of joint Allied grand strategy. Most of Jack son county voters agreed. Expand Opportunities Of those who balloted on the topic "UN in. Explosive Africa,'! 78 per cent said the U.S.. should offer greatly ex panded i educational opportu nities, in the U.S., for young Africans regardless of wheth er they are from colonial or free areas. In Jackson coun ty, 88 per cent of the voters indicated they feci the same way. Nearly as many voters throughout Oregon suggested the U.S. offer to participate in UN- or regional develop ment programs designed to speed economic ! growth in colonics and new ' nations. They also encouraged ex panded training of U.S. tech nical and foreign service per sonnel in Africa problems In balloting on U.S. policy toward the colonial question in Africa, 68 per cent of Ore gon voters said the U.S should make no hard-and-fast commitments, but should treat each case on its merits, Britain Shocked by Second Spy Case London - (UPI - Britain was shocked today by its second spy case of the year when 'a government official was charged with passing secret information "useful to . an enemy." . rne a c c u s e d : man was George Blake, 38. He was re manded in custody . for six days at a 30-minute closed hearing before Chief Magis trate Sir Robert Blundell at Bow Street Court. ' Details of the case' acainst him were not revealed. Nei ther was Blake's government POSt. :. , , Blake's arrest came in the midst of a reported massive spy hunt In Britain that in cluded a combing of all ranks and civilian employees in the country's air, land and sea forces and establishments. The spy hunt was intensi fied in the wake of the trial and conviction last month of five persons, including two Americans, for operating a spy ring with' direct radio links ' to Moscow. All were sentenced to , long prison terms. -' Editor'! not: K. Thaler, chief European diplomatic eorreipondent for United Press fnternational, was the first to disclose the rift last year between Moscow and pelplnf. In the foUowlna dispatch he re ports new deterioration In relations between the two Communist giants. By K. C. THALER : London - (UPD - Diplomatic sources report that Red Chi na's relations with the Soviet Union are worsening and the Chinese are becoming ideolog lean outcasts in the Commu nist world. Although the differences be tween the Communist Chi nese' and the Russians have not yet reached the breaking point, the compromise on the Soviet versus Chinese ideolo gy that was reached with the Communist manifesto of Mos cow last November has all but disappeared. Highly . placed Communist sources outside the Soviet Union told this correspondent that relations between the Communist parties of the So viet-led bloc and- Red China have "ground to a virtual standstill" with no visible at tempts at present for another compromise effort. DAR Hears Plea By Goldwater To Aid Insurgents Washington-IUPD-Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) said Mon day night the, United States should surround Cuba with a military blockade if necessary to enforce an economic embar go in' support of the insur gent forces. ! Goldwater, in a speech op ening the 70th Continental Congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution, called on the administration to aid anti-Castro Cubans and to officially declare that the Castro regime will be over thrown. His remaks were prepared before word was received of the rebel invasion of Cuba but he said they still stood. ' . . Welcomed By Kennedy In a welcoming message, President Kennedy told the estimated . 3,000 DAR dele gates that A "spirit of cooper ative achievement is neces sary to turn the tide of his tory toward liberty. . . Goldwater, in his speech, declared that the Castro re gime was "the most important Russian victory of the cold war." He said the United States had displayed "astounding ti midity and indecision" in. the Cuban situation, acting like a "paralyzed confused giant who is only vaguely aware of the danger confronting him." He said the United States should make It clear that Communist governments will not be tolerated in the West ern Hemisphere and that the Castro regime, being such a government, will be elimi nated." : However, both sides remain anxious to maintain political relations for their mutual ben efit. China Swings Back The sources said the Pel ping regime is nearly back to where it was at the height of the Sino-Russian differences last year and is again adher ing strictly to its brand of Marxist-Stalinist Communism, or what Russia and the mani festo denounced as inadmis sible doctrinism and dogma The Communist informants said it is difficult to pinpoint tne reasons for Red Chinas swing back to the old theories, except that all indications point to the Peiping regime's burning desire for Communist leadership. Red China's latest economic troubles appear to have made the Peiping leaders even more difficult to deal with, the sources said. Orders Press Ban ' i One - party of the Soviet bloc has become so angry with the Communist Chinese it has ordered mention of Red China to be kept out of its press, Other members of the so called "middle-of - the - road' Communist camp have been known to have cut their ref erences to Peiping to a mini mum. 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