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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1962)
letter Program MM Buy EHjoose Committee WARNING GIVEN The Senate Judiciary commlltce has opened hearings on a criej of resolutions and amendments designed to invalidate the Supreme Court's decision on school prayers. Shown talking with newsmen in Washington after testifying are Sens. John C. Stcnnis (D-Miss.), left, and A. Willis Robertson (D-Va.). They warned that the Court decision opened a pandora's box which could lead to an ever-increasing erosion of spiritual life In the United Slates. (UPI) Clothing, Shoes Will Be Rationed, Castro Announces Santiago, Cuba -tllPB- Pre mier Fidel Castro Thursday coupled new charges that the United Stales is planning to attack Cuba with an announce ment that his shortage-plagued regime is going In have to ration clothing and shoes as well as food. In a 3'i-hour speech on the ninth anniversary of his abor tive attack on Santiago's Moncada barracks, Castro charged that "Mr. President Kennedy is set on launching an attack against our count ry." Crowd Warned He addressed restless crowd of about 100,000 per sons jammed Into a stadium here In scorching tropical heal. The noise of the crowd angered the bearded premier, and at one point he warned that he would not continue his speech unless the crowd quieted down. A number of women fainted In 95-degrce heat. Castro said the United States had refused to give his government any assurances kvA--ur iiinimii LAWN-BOY Hobby Gardener i L nnirlf. "J--" IjMI Vl ; k change r attachments Tftur different tool screw on and oM in seconds (no tools needed) to handle a multitude of garden chores. Prepares toil, weeds, culti vates around hush and plantings. Makes Hardening easier and more fun. Easy 1 pull starling 3 position aduttablt handle Light and eaty In handlt weight only 42 lot. Only . . . $OQ95 W. v,ll ,. a t 00. J'V Gal. Gil Can ith ttry ent eld bttara 3.10 Saturday, July 28th. FLOYD HIBBARD'S HARDWARE 310 Main St. Phona 772-JH3 1 Oiffl "with respect to plans that concern our country." "Direct Yankee invasion Is the only danger that faces our country," he said. "They know (hat another mercenary In vasion (by Cuban refugees) will be wiped nut by our pow erful weapons." Castro , denounced Cubans who protest against food short ages as "worms" and "fifth columnists" who must he punished. He gave no details of Ihe government's plan to ration clothing and shoes except In say that "those who work" will have priority in obtain ing the scarce items. Food has been rationed in Cuba for some time. Buying of Auto Stocks Boosts Market at Close New York IIIPII - An added buying spurt near the close, concentrated on auto stocks, handed the market a fair-sized gain today. The Initial rallying impetus was provided at midses.ilon by savings and loan holding com panies which Jumped from 1 to 8 points before easing slightly on news the Senate Finanre committee decided to ease tax boosts on thrift Insti tutions. Additional blue chips began In show point or better gains near the close -among them Alcoa and Procter and Gam ble. General Electric went ahead fractionally after slumping earlier on news It would pay out more than $7 million to settle 11 pending price fixing suits. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York-HH'tuDow Jones final stock areraget: 30 in dustrials 585.00. up S.39; 30 railroads 121.83, olf 0.03: 15 utilities 115.61. up 0.44: and 65 slocks 204.13 up 1.23. Sales today were about 3.B9 million aha ret compared with 3.79 million shares Thurtday. Today t prtrei on irl fried a1nck: Alum in aid American Air 1.1 dm . American (.'an American Motnrt . - AT&T American Trtlmcco Anac'omla Copper . Anni-rt Rfiulix Cmp Hrthlrhtvn Slrrl , Boeing Air Riunnwlik ' Cmeipillar Carp ! Chr viler I'oi p j OKI Col j r r s. I I'nlumhia Gm j Continental ('an Crown 7,e1lerharh ! Crm iMr Slevl Cnrllu Wright . Dow Chemical Di Pnnl KaMnmn KnHah fire.iine rniri General r.lertric ., General roodn General Molori . Georgia I'ai'thc . . Grevhimnd cult on Idaho Power ., 1 BM I til Paoer Inhm Manvllle Kennecotl Cupper l.orkheeri Atrcral! . Martm Co. Merck Montana Power Mmtomerv Watri National Riictill New York Ontial Vnrlhern Paclfir Par Gai Fler Pennev .1 C Penrt flft Pemia Cement Phttlipi Procter K (.amMe . n artio Cor per a Hon nirhdelrl Oil Salewax Santa f Seat Shell OH Soconv Mohll Oil Southern Co Southern Pariltc , Snerrv Rand Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N J Stickel v Van Camp Sun Mine i Texai Co It 14 in ; Tesai Gtitf Sulphur Tea Par Land Trm Thiol, nl Tran America Tranj Wmld .tr . Tn Continental 1 I'mfifi Cai hid Construction in Public Buildings Dealt Flat Ban Washington - nipt - The House Appropriations Com mittee today dropped a block buster on President Kennedy's fallout shelter program. It not only denied the $568 million he asked for mass shelter con struction, but also recom mended withdrawal of limited funds previously allowed for this purpose. At the same time, it wrote into an $11. 3 billion appro priation for assorted govern ment functions a flat ban on federal shelter construction in public buildings or elsewhere "unless Ihe specific projects have been authorized" by ap propriale committees of Con gress. The action apparently dealt the coup de grace to a shelter program which Kennedy, in the aftermath of last year's Berlin crisis, said was urgent but which Congress has not liked much from the start. "The committee believes that before the nation em barks on an extensive fallout shelter construction program involving billions of dollars, more study and research should be applied to the vast and complex problems in volved." the committee ad vised the House in a report written by Rep. Albert Thom as (D-Tex.) chairman of a sub committee that considered the civil defense request. In line with this suggestion the committee allowed $10 million for "further research" in the shelter field. It also approved $85 million of the $126 million requested by Ihe Office of Civil Defense for its nonsheltcr functions, includ ing warning, stockpile, com munications, training and oth er work. The shelter turndown high lighted the committee's ac tions in recommending funds In run 26 gov. nment agen cies, including the growing Nalional Aeronautics and Space Administration In the 12 months that began July . A whopping HD billion was recommended for NASA. This was a cut of only $143. 161,000 from the sum re quested. The I'ommillee approved $155 million for 33 new pub lic building projects and 12 alterations In 45 cities, a cut of 7 per cent from the money requested, reflecting in part the ban on inclusion of shel ters. The big Housing and Home Finance Agency, and its as sortment of offspring, got $634 million of the $696 mil lion it wanted for such things as urban renewal, public hous ing, mass transportation, and housing for the elderly. The Veterans Administration, a regular big budget item, gnl every cent of the $5.2 billion it asked. Other agencies most ly got cut to one extent or another. The committee claimed a total saving of $1,050,507,300 below the President's budget requests. The bulk nf this saving re flected the eliminaiinn of shelter money. Culled Aircraft . Cniied Airline . I'. S. Plywood U. S Runner U S. Steel We I Hank Corp . Weallnshntiar Smokey Says: BE CAREFUL WITH FIRE'I H5U CAN'T BUY BACK f i -lt ultra niatt rari In aroie ! hark! n:j. Cooiiv 47', 1 f J Tff 1 Elegaiil;, & 'k ti MASK V Al IO AtR CPN.I 1 !ONl6 Rogue Valley Edition MEDFORDtliTRIBUNE MEDFORD. OREGON, Foreign Briefs RUNWAY OPENED AT SAIGON AIRPORT Saigon-WD-Pretident Ngo Dinh Diem of South Viet Nam officiated Thurtday at the opening of a $4.8 million runway at Saigon's Tan Son Nhut airport. Ha called it the longest in Southeatt Alia and asked U.S. Amonsiiaoi ritoflricK nailing gratiiuda lo the United Stales. per cent of the runway t cost, with South Viet Nam paying the balance. HEAVIER SPACE SHIPS PREDICTED Motcow-(UPi-Tht weight of tpaca thipt will incrtata 10 timet in tha next 10 yean, according to Soviet Scientitt G. Pttrorich. He made the prediction in the Communitt magaxina Aviation and Cotmonautict, which appeared Thurtday. Pelrovich taid Soviet Sputniki orbited at tha beginning of 1961 weighed 14.300 pounds. TALKS ON FEDERATION TO BE EXTENDED London-iUPIi-lnformal lalkt here on a future federation between the Britith Colony of Aden and 11 neighboring emiratet probably will be extended into next week, accord ing to diplomatic tourcet here. ITALIAN PRINTERS STRIKE AGAIN Rome-IDPIl-Ilalian printers Thursday staged the latest in a teriai of ttriket for higher waget and no nawtpapert were published throughout tha nation. Tha union, which atkt a 35 par cent wage increase, laid today't edition! will be put out. EAST GERMAN POPULATION DECREASES Btrlin lirii-The Information Bureau Welt, a private Well Berlin intelligence agency, taid refuge flights cauied Com munitt Eatt Germany'i population to decrtatt by 109.182 lait year, even though thar were 79,072 more birthi than deatht. UAR TO PURCHASE NUCLEAR REACTOR Tel Avivd, liraei-IUPII-Tha liraeli newipaper Maariv re ported Thurtday that tha United Arab Republic will buy a nuclear reactor to produce atomic exploiivei. It taid the UAR ii trying to diiguiia the project by letting up a large ttaff of foreign icientiitt in a nuclear phyiict and chemistry workt. Reorganization of General Extension Division Announced Portland IIIPII- Reorganisa tion of tne General Extension Division of the Stale System of Higher Education was an nounced Thursday by Dean James W. Sherburne. He said the changes will help the extension division meet the growing demand for higher education for ariults. For the first lime, all Ihe I extension centers in the slate I will be placed in a single de partment. Dr. Paul t.. Wat son, former associate director of the Portland Center, will head this new Department of Continuation Centers. Other new departments are an Office of Development and Evaluation, headed by Dr. Daniel W. Fullmer, former director of the Portland Cen- ler, and a Department oi ! Statewide Services, directed jby Dr. Viron Moore. The for I nier will guide future exten sion projects and the latter will coordinate management services of the division, .sncr burne said. Dworshak Buried j In Soldier's Grave i Washington UIHI Sen. Henry C. Dworshnk. n"7, was buried ; Thursday In a soldier's grave ! at Arlington National Ceme tery. ! 'Ihe gray and silver casket i bearing the body of the Idaho Republican was lowered into a hillside grave after brief services at graveside and at ! nearby Kl Meyer Chapel. ! The Senate met an hour ' earlier than usual so its mem bers could attend the funeral in midallernoon. The Hew Frederick Ttrown Harris, chaplain of the Senate, offici ated at the simple military ceremony. Dworshak was a machine gun battalion ser geant in World War I. He died Monday night at his home in Washington of a heart attack. MONITOR. IY MaRK IV Ti ultinit m aulo ar ( rmdihenmfl R-rit e. ienf, untu tHrri - ' w"fi ftut. nof, Ar r t u"'lle.J, unwnrv I led-- Monitor rlfHumtd ite. . well us cool, rt t Otir cjit. fcn ov the new Oimlmr vs ---dejiQnfd tn harmonire with our i.r interior. AMfRlCAS TOP SELL ING CUSTOM INST Al I . iO AUTO AIR CONDI TION R. Nilioni,j ,ernf and 12 -month or I ? 000-m-la wvr.,ntv with Monitor K Mark IV, , . Dick Knight Co. Jtth al RtvtMiHt Page 2-A FRIDAY. JULY 27. 1062 ji. lu xpim nil eguuuf The United Statet paid 80 The Department of Educa tional Media, directed by Ralph Steclle, will continue lo have charge of state-owned radio and television stations and audiovisual services. j Dr. Leroy Pierson, former ly head of student personnel I services, was named director ' of the Portland Center, Ferry Purchased For Use on Columbia Olympia, Wash. IUPD The Oregon State Highway Com mission here Thursday pur chased Ihe 37-year-old Wash ington State ferry M.V. Kit sap for $27,500. It will be used on the Columbia river between Astoria and Megler, Wash. LEGIONNAIRE WINS Portland IUPII -The Oregon Legionnaire has won the American Legion's first place award for journalistic excel lence for the second consecu tive year. What the English possibly mean by "Gordon and splash?" 'St 'plash" is the English ater." Mixing it a popular pastime on Atlantic. Most Americans p ice'' as a mixer. But on the choice ol gin complete ac cord. Cordon's. Its distinc tive diyncss and flavour seem to tip the balance. You'll find these qualities wherever you call for Cordon's by name; for every bottle is still based on Alexander Gordon's orig inal ITo0 forniu'a. Could this be why Gordon's is the bigscst-selling gin in Eng land, America, the world? V u '- v' H'nit'. !' n lu'H J - 1, l .' I V I Russia Buying Advertisements in U.S. Papers for Khrushchev's Speech Washington - IUPD - Russia has begun purchasing huge advertisements in American newspapers to print the text of Premier Nikita Khrush chev's 13.000-word speech be fore the Communist - organ ized World Peace Congress in Moscow earlier this month. And high U.S. officials have Meeting of Regional Planning Group To Be Scheduled Soon A meeting of the regional planning coordinating com mittee will be called in the near future, County Judge Earl M. Miller said today. A representative of area in dustry will be appointed to the committee before the meeting, he said. Miller said ne received copies of the working agra ment yesterday under the fed eral 701 project which covers the first phase of the Bear creek urban region planning program. Miller emphasized this is a planning program, and not one to establish zon ing. Jackson county contributes $11,000, Medford $4,700, and the federal government match es each local dollar contribut ed with two dollars, he said. Emphasii on Project "The project will emphasize the relationship between cities and between development within each city and the sur rounding territory outside the cities," according to the plan ning assistance prospectus. "The project will supple ment and coordinate rather than replace planning work which has occurred in the two major cities of ;he study area. The project is designed to be a portion of the planning phase of a cooperative urban planning and transportation study to be conducted with the cooperation and assist ance of the state highway department," according to the prospectus. A pattern for future com munity development will be set to guide various govern- Chinchilla Ranchers Will Meel Sunday Members of the Rogue Val ' ley chapter. Gold Seal Chin ' chilla association, will meet at 1:30 p.m. Sunday, July 28, al Ihe Gold Hill Grange hall. G. E. Streets, Boise, Idaho, president of the association, will speak al the meeting which will also honor Bern Schaap. El Monte, Calif., a long time chinchilla rancher who recently joined the as sociation staff. Harry O'Brien, Ashland, lo cal chapter president, said that Ihe latest information on the association and the House of F.stel will be given. could Si i way of saying "soda with Cordon's Gin is the other side of the !""!' JtnitJ ripy -,u wino 'tf! - -V V V I I. r-tcr ton'c ,nn Jvf JL r Gordons X! i Distilled V t i London Dry i I cin f ftv ! ) 1:: - j ;? I I - t r 1 some interesting ideas about what's behind this campaign. They believe the Soviet government is trying: -To justify in the eyes of the American public a new round of atmospheric nuclear tests, which Khrushchev has announced will begin soon. -To counter the effect of re- mental agencies In preventing conditions leading to urban blight and in programming fa cility expansion. The project will include preparation of base maps, study of population and eco nomic potentials, assembly and organization of land use data to provide land use in formation, study of industrial land needs based on economic growth prospects, preparation of a preliminary land use plan, and a review of existing regu latory measures in effect in the area, including zoning and subdivision regulations. Bread Pan Regulations Will be Enforced Salem-lUPP-The Oregon Ag riculture Department said to day it will "actively enforce" regulations relating to bread pan sizes beginning next Fri day. This forbids baking the so called "balloon loaf" of bread in Oregon, a onepound loaf baked in a one anw a half pound pan. your Cfieiwkt Dealer has Ms of new Srf ihr nfir Cherr!(i. Chnylf rJjirtjnr loral authorized Chevrnlrl dtaler't COURTESY CHEVROLET 9TH & BARTUTT MEDFORO PHONE 772-6113 cent speeches by U. S. De fense Secretary Robert Mc Namara which are regarded here and abroad as having se verely damaged the Russian image of military invinci bility. Three U. S. newspapers so far have carried two-page ads containing Khrushchev's July 10 speech tn which he boast ed of a new anti-missile mis sile, blamed the United States for the nuclear test spiral, and depicted Russia as the foremost advocate of world peace. Washington Counter-Offer The San Francisco News Call Bulletin carried the ad vertisement Thursday. The New York Herald Tribune and tne Kansas City Star pub lished it last Sunday. In each of the three newspapers the advertisement appeared on pages 20 and 21. Soviet efforts to purchase space in Washington ran into a counter-offer which the Russian Embassy has failed lo accept. The Washington Post, when offered the advertisement, wrote the Soviet Embassy that it would publish the Khrushchev text in its col umns if one of the official Rusian newspapers, Pravda or Izvestia, would do the same with the text of President Kennedy's disarmament speech before the United Na tions General Assembly last September. Post President Philip Graham, in his July 18 letter lo the embassy, said he thought it would be a good idea if both the Soviet and American publics understood fully the thinking of both Kennedy and Khrushchev on disarmament. So far Graham has received no reply. huitlicyiv going fast so heller get yours hejore they're all gone! B9 c -rl An executive of one of tha newspapers which accepted the advertisement said he un derstood the Russians intend ed to purchase more spaca in the future for other Khrushchev speeches. The reporting of the speech hit most front pages, but did not get as much prominence as it might have because it came at the same time as the first experimental Telstar transmission from tht United States to Europe. Reasons Discounted U.S. officials, however, discount technical reasons and believe that Soviet offi cials really think they can make some impact on Ameri can opinion and undercut Kennedy s military program and disarmament position. The McNamara speeches are those in which he has made it clear the United States knows it has consider able military suteriority over the Soviet Union and - what is very important in interna tional power politics - is aware that Russia knows this. U. S. officials also noted with interest the clumsy handling of the Friday, July 13. Khrushchev interview with 14 American newsmen, 12 of Ihcm editors. SHIP IT USHE to or from Oakland, San Fran cisco, Los Angeles and other California poind. Fitzgerald 773-7761 f 3 carhuys for July Call