Lumber Issue
May B
e Harmful To Relations
Johnson Holds Important' Talks
On Aid With President of Turkey
Ankara -IUPH- Vice Presi
dent Lyndon B. Johnson held
"most important and quite
helpful" talks on U.S. econ
omic aid today with Turkey'
President Cemat Gurscl and
Prime Minister lsmet Inonu.
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"In surveying our relations
in terms of both policy and
economic assistance we have
had many subjects to discuss
today,'- Johnson told news
men on leaving the prime
minister's office after talk
ing to Inonu.
Earlier Johnson spent about
75 minutes with Gursel at
the presidential palace.
Johnson, on a two - week
tour of vital Mideast and
Mediterranean nations, ar
rived Sunday to the cheers
of hundreds of thousands of
Turks.
The vice president called
the talks "mutually benefi
cial." He said Turkey and the
United Slates have 'always
been close and friendly, par
ticularly in the last IS years
since the announcement of
the Truman doctrine which I
enthusiastically supported as
a young member of Con'
gress."
In these years, Johnson
said, "we have not only found
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identity in our policy for the public
defense of the Free World,
but also very extensive and
important relations in the
military and economic field."
Before the meeting with
Gursel and Inonu, Johnson
laid a wreath at the tomb of teachers
Mustafa Kama! Ataturk, the expected
founder of the Turkish re-1 month.
He also signed the
official visitor's registry at
the presidential palace and
signed an agreement with
Turkey for first Peace Corps
contingent of 40 English
and
to
farm experts
arrive next
Lack of Interest In Education Rapped
Columbus, Ohio -IUPII - U. S.
Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore.)
Sunday criticized the appar
ent lack of interest in educa
tion in the United States.
She told a meeting of the
National Student Association
at Ohio Stale University she
was "not sure we live in a na
tion where there is a real com
mitment to education."
"Congress will pass a $45
million defense appropriation
bill without any real objec
tions to its staggering costs,
she said, "yet education bills,
even those on a modest scale,
always face an uphill strug
gle."
Rep. Green, chairman of the
House Subcommittee on Edu
cation, said "in a given year
this country spends more on
tobacco and liquor than it is
apparently willing to spend
on education."
Foreign Briefs
RADIO PEIPING ACCUSES INDIAN TROOPS
Tokyo-lUPII-Radio Paiping charged Sunday that Indian
troops had fired on Communist Chinas soldiers on the Sino
Indian bordar three times during the past five days. The re
port made no mention of casualties.
CHURCH HEAD ENDS VISIT TO GLASGOW
London-1 1'li-Preiident David McKay of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Lattar-Day Saints (Morman) left for home
today after a three-day visit to the land of his ancestors
which he said gave him "one of the greatest moments of my
life."
McKay referred to the establishment of the first "stake"
in Glasgow, which he formally opened before 3,500 persons.
LONDON DOCK WORKERS GO ON STRIKE
London-WIMUFive thousand lighter and tug men began a
strike in the Port of London today.
at
THE
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317 E. Main
772-5880
BRAZILIAN PARTY SCHEDULES CAMPAIGN
Rio de Janeiro- IIIMi-Leaders of the opposition National
Democratic Parly (UDEN) said they will begin a campaign
Sept. 8 attacking what they describe as "the collaboration
of the federal government, including its military elements,
with Communist movements."
Regional Edition
t
; MEDF0RD
Page 2-A
Tribune
MEDFORD. OREGON. MONDAY. AUGUST 27. 1962
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Negotiations
Will Begin in
Ottawa Tuesday
Washington - Wll - The Ca
nadian American Committee
of the National Planning As
sociation said today any at
tempt by the United States
to limit lumber imports from
Canada could hurt U.S. rela
tions with Canada and other
countries.
Negotiations on the issue
begin Tuesday in Ottawa.
The committee, composed
of 37 business, agricultural,
labor and professional lead
ers from both countries, said
limiting Canadian imports
when Canada is in the throes
of a balance of payments cris
is could "significantly" im
pair U.S.-Canadian friend
ship. But it said "disillusionment
with U.S. policy would hard
ly be confined lo Canada."
"For the United States lo
take action which would in
jure Canada's trading posi
tion in these circumptanccs
would be to run the risk of
Doing accused of taking un
fair' measures against its
closest partner," the commit
tee said.
Vast Import Surplus
The committee noted that
Canada has a "vast" import
surplus from the United
Stales. In 1061. Canada
bought $3.6 billion vortli of
goods from the United Slates
and sold $3.3 billion in re
turn. The group said the United
States should aid the ailing
Pacific Northwest lumber in
dustry by domestic means,
not import controls.
If the United States tried
to cut Canadian lumber sales.
it said, "a generally hostile
reaction would undoubtedly
arise throughout Canada - a
reaction which could readily
lead to retaliatory counterac
tion by Canada. . .
"Even nontrade aspects of
Canadian-American relations
could be brought under strain
in such a situation," it said.
The committee said lum
ber import restrictions also
would reinforce skepticism
over the seriousness of Pres
ident, Kennedy's drive for in
creased international trade.
Boeing, Commiffee
Resume Meetings
Seattle - IUN) - A negotiat
ing commillee, granted strike
authority Saturday, was lo
resume negotiations today
wilh Boeing Co.
About 10.000 members of
the Aero Mechanics Union
voted Saturday to reject Boe
ing's latest contract offer and
to strike if necessary.
The talks affect more than
40,001) hourly paid Boeing
production workers, 35.000 of
them in the Seattle Ronton
area. Under union rules, any
final offer from Boeing musl
be submitted to a member
ship vole before the contract
expires on Sept. IS.
Virus Said Grown
Outside Living Ceil
Corvallis - HOT - An infec
tive virus has been grown out
side a living cell for the first
time, a Utah State university
biologist announced here to
day. Dr. George W. Cochran said
making the virus from inert
chemicals in a test tube
"represents a major break
th rough in understanding
viruses."
Cochran spoke as several
thousand scientists gathered
for the 1902 convention of the
American Institute of Biologi
cal Science, the largest
science meeting ever held in
the Pacific Northwest.
Cochran said scientists'
ability to study viruses out
side a living cell may lead to
control of cancer, certain
forms of which are believed
to be induced by viruses.
The breakthrough also
should contribute to control
of other virus diseases in
plants and animals, he said.
From Tobacco Leaves
Cochran reported his tech
nique for isolating the virus
forming mechanism from to
bacco leaves to scientists at
tending the American Phy
taopathological Society meet
ing, one of 37 societies gath
ered here.
Dr. F. Malekzadch of Loui
siana Stale university de
scribed a powerful antibac
terial substance which has
been found in extract of cauli
flower seed. The extract is
most effective against the rod
shaped, flagellated bacteria
known as Xanth o m o n a s.
which arc responsible for
many serious plant diseases.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Alice J.
Watson of the Department of
Agriculture Plant Industry
Station at Beltsville, Md., told
the Mycological Society of
America that fungus organ
isms of high potential destruc
tiveness may lurk in other
parts of the world.
Mrs. Watson said only the
vigilance of federal plant in
spectors has kept American
Little Activity
In Stock Market
New York - lUPN - Slocks
were mixed loday.
Few key issues moved
more than a fraction in cither
direction. Motors and slecls
except for Youngstown down
a poinl - were nearly static,
and so were the leading oils,
rails and chemicals.
Electronics were dull and
steady but the aircraft section
firmed. Polaroid was a growth
section feature, climbing near
ly 2 on reports its color film
for Land cameras will be put
on the market in time for
Christmas.
Home Products ran ahead
2's in the drugs where many
other issues including Scher
ing and Richardson - Mcrrell
were down a point. Reynolds
in the tobaccos and Public
Service Electric in the utilities
were independently strong.
Houston Lighting dipped ls
and Southern Cal Edison was
off '..
House Plans Quick
Vote on Two Issues
M6M 10 1995
Use Your Charge Account
Main and Bartlett - Phone 772-6428
hoe alon
Washington - tlTIi - House
leaders lodwy scheduled ab
breviated debate and quick
votes on two key items of
President Kennedy's program
that tied up t he Senate for
weeks before passage.
The measures were a con
stitutional amendment to out
law poll taxes and a bill to
establish a communications
sa.cllite system. They were
j brminht up under a hurry-up
procedure limit. nc debate to
40 minutes, barring change
and requiring a two-thirds ma
jority (or passage.
Thi! '".suspension of the
rules" procedure is not often
used to handle controversial
legislation, but House lead
ers apparently felt sure they
had the voles.
They were particularly con
fident on the satellite hi5!
which passed the House ;.4-9
last May ... An almost iden
tical bill set off a long lib
eral filibuster and a vote lo
limit debate for the firl tune
in years before it passed
the Senate tfti-1 1 Aug 17 All
the House had to do to send
the bill to the White House
today was accept minor Sen
air changes.
The ;oll tax amendment
also got tangled in a Senate
talkathon last March before
passing 77-lfi It has not been
put to a House lest in this
seion, but the leaders had
nothing to loe in sending it
to the firing line. Two-thirds
approva I of both houses i
lequued for every proposed
constitutional amend nirnt
before it can be tuhinittrd
f n r ratification of three
fourths of the AO stair lrg-sla-
tlMfS
The satellite bill would set
up a privately owned, govern
ment supervised system of
orbiting lelslar-typc satellites
and ground stations lo relay
television and other commu
nications worldwide.
Admitted Killer
Slated for Hearing
Auburn, Calif. i TP A pre
liminary hearing has been re
scheduled for Sept. 4 for a
former P o r t 1 a nd youth
chained with the filial shoot
ing of a leen-aae bow
Bemsr held hrrr is l.cRny
Andnwzi. 20. A p p 1 e g a t e,
Calif. He is accused nf shoot
ing Robert Vesci, Sacra-'
mentu. Calif., last week near
Lake Theodore.
Police said Andrcoz.-i ad
milted the shooting and told
llieni he drove to Portland in
the victim's nrw i-.ir. lie sur
rendered last Tuesday and led
poltce to the body.
Police s.iid thr ouih said
he did not know liy he shot
the boy. 'the preliminary hear
ing had been Si'hodulcd for to
rt j
Don't Neglect Slipping
FALSE TEETH
rv f ! -e (irop or Ml
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1 t sniiinrri r ; , rr
!' l-.,:..li. u t S1 i f 111 .
llk.ilHtr iVM,,1rr Msp-r!-
crops and forests free of dev
astating plant diseases.
As examples, she cited ac
tion to prevent a citrus fruit
fungus, a lentil rust and a
smut which destroys potato
tubers from entering the
United States from Latin
America.
Crater Lions' Auxiliary
Rummage Sale!
The CRATER LIONS' AUXILIARY will have their
Annual RUMMAGE SALE TUESDAY, AUG. 28,
at the FEHL BUILDING.
Hours are 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. Proceeds used for
Auxiliary's Community
projects!
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