cNamara Said Withholding Study Results on
Foreign Briefs
SUSPECTED SMALLPOX CASE QUARANTINES LINER
Venice, Italy-Wli-An Italian liner was held in quarantine
today after a luipected imallpox death.
A British passenger, Joan Millner, of Johannesburg died
at tea Oct. II of a impeded case of imallpox. Her body was
put ashore at Sues the following day.
NORTH KOREAN INVITED TO VISIT SOUTH KOREA
Panmunjom, Korea-HI'li-U. S. Mai. Gen. James R. Winn
today invited a North Korean Communist general to visit
South Korea and see for himself whether it was "hell."
Winn, chief United Nations command delegate to the
military armistice commission, iisued the invitation to North
Korean Mai. Gen. Chang Chung Hwan during the lS8th meet
ing of the military armistice commission at this tiny truce
village.
Chang had called South Korea a "living hell" and a "land
of darkness."
SOVIET UNION AIR TRAVEL INCREASING
Moscow-itPli-Airline travel in the Soviet Union Is increas
ing at a very rapid pace, Georgi Schelchikov. director of
civil aviation, said today. He predicted that in the "near
future" one-fourth of Russia's 220 million persons will be
traveling by air.
COMMON MARKET PARLIAMENT OKS PROJECTS
Strasbourg, France-dPli-The Common Market Parliament
Tuesday approved European Community of Atomic Energy
(EURATOM) projects, including the construction of atomic
reactors and nuclear installations.
The parliament, whose
Friday, is composed of delegates from the six common maricei
nations West Germany, France. Italy, Holland, Belgium
and Luxembourg.
Aerospace, Glamor
Stocks Rally But
Market Still Off
New York - IUPH - Stocks
cased again at the close today.
The strongest rallying at
tempts were made by aero
space and glamor stocks.
Brokers ascribed the selling
pressure to the economy's dis
appointing September per
formance, exemplified by un
changed industrial production
and personal income.
Alcoa weakened around a
point and some other metals
followed reflecting the threat
of a large government stock
pile sale of aluminum on the
open market. Drugs were soft.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
New York - IllPtl - Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 587.68, off
1 1.67; 20 railroads 117.60, off
0.63; 15 utilities 119.84, off
0.29, and 65 stocks 204.98,
off 0.66. Sales today were
about 3.24 million shares
compared with 2.86 million
shares Tuesday.
Tnrluv'H prices on selected storks:
Allied Chemical 37'i
Alum Co Am 32:
American Air Lines Hi's
American Can . 4l,14
American Motors IH'j
AT&T. 1M-,
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper 3fl'
Armco 4:1 1 j
Bencilx Corp
Bethlehem Steel 2H '
Boelns Air 311 'j
rirtin.wlrk til'.
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp
Coca Cola
C B S
Columhus Gas
, 32 i
Business Upturn
Stop Indicated
Washington-Wll - The Fed
eral Reserve Board indicated
Tuesday that the business up
turn stopped in September.
"Some measures of business
activity changed little last
month," the board said in Its
national summary of business
conditions.
Industrial activity held
steady at the high rate reach
ed in the previous two
months. The board's index of
factory, mine and utility out
put had been rising fairly
steadily since January.
For September the index
stood at 119. which meant in
dustrial activity last month
was 19 per cent above the
1 057 average, which is 100 on
the index.
A Personal Invitation
To Sec the All New
XEROX-914 Office Copier
Copies on ORDINARY paper
Seven copies a minute, automatically
Clear, preciie, dry copies
Will copy all colors
No wet chemicals to add
No exposure adjustments
Demonstration Will Be Held ft the
CRATER INN MOTEL
Room No. 27
OCTOBER 17th 4 1 8th
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
XEROX CORPORATION
five - day session here winds up
Continental Can 42'i
Crown Zcllerhach 42
Crucible Steel mi
CurtLss Wriaht
Dow Chemical
Du Pont
Kastman Kodak
Firestone
Ford
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors
Georgia Pacilic
Greyhound
Gulf Oil .
Homcstake
Idaho Power
IBM
Int Paper
Johns Manvllle
Kennecolt Copper
Martin -
Montana Power
Merck
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward
National Riscull
New York Central ...
Northern Pacilic
Santa K
... 17'.
.. 4!lJ,
..203i:
.. no j;
.. IT-,
.. 43
.. HIP,
.Ml1.
... 34 1 j
... 43' ,
... 211',
.3111 4
m
21
.30-'
2 '
27
12'
31'
22
Editor's note: Tlecaiise nt Irani
mission dimcuiues originating in
the east, the remainder ot the
wew xoik aloe list is not avail
able.
Clatsop Memorial
Becomes Reality
Washinglon - (UPII - Secre
tary of Interior Stewart L.
Udall today announced formal
establishment of the Fort
Clatsop National Memorial In
Clatsop county.
The establishment followed
acquisition of 125 acres of
land, the maximum authorized
by legislation, including im
nrovements nn limrlx awnri.
atod with the original fort.
the Fori Clatsop National
Memorial commemorates the
winter encampment nf the
Lewis and Clark expedition.
Capl. Meriwether Lewis nam
ed the fort after the friendly
Clatsop Indians.
Construction of facilities at
the memorial hrcan Khnrllv
after congress authorized it
in Mav. lnss in ih rin.,i
stages of completion are a
visitor center, residences, an
entrance road, parking areas,
and trails to landmark uiih.
in the area.
PREACHER OVERPAID
Georgetown, Tex. - WPD -The
Hcv. Lively Brown said
last week the community's
dry weather might be the le
sult of church members not
"paying the preacher,' and
uiged them to drop more In
the collection plate. The next
Tuesday It rained. It also rain
ed Wednesday and Thursday.
On Friday lightning struck
Ihr church steeple.
Congressman
Sees Political
Cause for Delay
Washington-lUPIl - Defense
Secretary Robert S. McNa
mara has withheld from Con
gress since July the results
of a critical study of the con
troversial 2,000-mile-an hour
RS70 warplane, according to
Rep. Leslie C. Arends, (R-Ill.).
Arends the top - ranking
i Republican on the House
Armed Services Committee,
which unanimously voted
early this year to "direct"
McNamara to speed develop
ment of the plane, but then
settled for a compromise call
ing for a new study.
Arends says McNamara
now apparently intends to
"study" the plane to death.
Caustic Statement
The congressman issued a
caustic statement through his
office here Tuesday noting
that "the distinguished secre
tary of defense has gained a
reputation for making 'fast
and firm decisions'.
"The delaying tactics with
respect to the RS70 have bad
ly tarnished that reputation,
Arends said. Maybe, he said,
McNamara made too fast a
decision in the first place and
now intends to stand firm
against speeding up the plane
regardless of military and con
gressional opinion.
"There is no reason, except
possibly political, why the
secretary of defense could not
have advised Congress In July
as to the findings and recom
mendations of the Air force
after the new study of the
plane was made, Arends con
tended. He said now that Con
gress has adjourned "nothing
can be done" about the RS70
program.
Funds Requested
President Kennedy asked
Congress last winter for $171
million to continue a program
calling for three of the planes,
then called B70 and envision
ed as bombers. Total cost of
the program over a period of
years will be $1.3 billion.
After listening to McNa-
mara's and the Air Force's
testimony on the plane's po
tcntialitics, the House Armed
Services Committee sided 100
per cent with the Air Force
and voted to order McNamara
to expand and hasten the de
velopment program.
The committee aim was to
build six experimental planes.
and more importantly to get
set for full production of the
plane in a supersonic recon
naissance strike version.
Vote Forestalled
Kennedy intervened with
the powerful committee chair
man, Carl Vinson (D-Ga..) and
forestalled a House vole on
'ordering" McNamara to ex
pand the RS70 program. The
Pentagon promised a new
study of the complicated elec
tronics equipment the plane
would need, which McNamara
claimed was too advanced for
American technology nt pres
ent and which the Air Force
claimed could be made.
Congress, meanwhile, ap
propriated $191.6 million
more than Kennedy asked for
the plane.
Mayor Snider Is
Named Director
M.'Hf.irH Mui',.,. Il,n C.,;.-
has been elected director of
tne Oregon Historical Society,
President Chandler Brown,
Salem, announced recently.
mayor Binder will serve a
four-year term on the board
for the state society which has
2. SOD members.
"Mayoi Snider was honored
lor his crucial leadership dur-
itit tlio lll.'ttl ctiita iiitminiul
coniiiii-mui anon ann nis con
tinued interest and support of
regional history and related
opportunities," Chandler said
Snirier's election was an
nounced during the Both an
nual dinner meeting of the so
ciety Friday. Due to the storm
the mayor did not attend. Ap
proximately 23 people did at
tend, however, and ate In the
dark, the mayor said.
Librarian Attends
Workshop In Area
Ashland Kleanor Everett,
librarian of children's litera
ture at Southern Oregon col
lege, attended workshops on
building and maintaining a
library collection, sponsored
by the Oregon State Library,
Oregon state department of
education, and the Oregon Li
brary association in Hoseburg
recently
F.ai'1 Sykes, Douglas coun
ty library trustee, spoke on
"What Is a Library," and.1
"What Is a Library Collet-1
lion," was discussed by Wilma J
Gore, Myrtle Creek High ;
school and public librarian. I
A symposium on book se-:-
lection, and group discu.ions
and reports also were onUhc
agenda. Mrs. Kverett said.
Monaco Showered With Leaflets
Inviting Workers
Monte Carlo, Monaco -'UPD
Pink leaflets gently showered
Monaco today inviting work
ers to a meeting on the Fran-co-Monegasque
tax war.
A Communist union leader
indicated the "chorus" in this
comic-opera battle wants to
have its say as well as the
"stars" - Princess Grace,
Prince Rainier and French
President Charles de Gaulle.
"Monaco is not just a pretty
area with a garden, talent and
Canadian, U.S.
Officials Resume
Talks on Lumber
Ottawa - IUPII - Canadian
and U.S. officials Tuesday met
for a second round of talks
on President Kennedy's sui;
gestion for voluntary import
quotas on Canadian softwood
lumber exports to the United
States.
Three U.S. officials flew to
the capital with representa
tives of West Coast lumber
producers for the two - day
meeting.
Heading the U.S. team are
three assistant underscore
retaries, Griffith Johnson of
the State Department, John
A. Carver from the Interior
Department, and Jack Behr
man from the Commerce De
partment. The Canadian team is led
by J. H. Warren, assistant
deputy minister of traje and
commerce.
Noncommittal Communique j
A first meeting here in
August produced only a non
committal communique which
said both countries would con
suit their home industries be
fore meeting again.
There was no indication
that Canada was prepared to
budge an inch in Its determi
nation to keep Its $250 million
a year business in the U.S. in
tact. Instead nf concessions, indi
cations were the United States
could expect only Canadian
agreement to continuing con
sultations about the softwood
lumber problem.
Winnie Ruth Judd
Remains At Large
Phoenix - IUPH - Police con
tinued to search today for
escaped trunk murderess Win
nie Ruth Judd, 57.
Officers said the discovery
Tuesday of clothing worn by
Ihe former "tiger woman" had
failed to provide any new lead
to her whereabouts.
Mrs. Judd made her seventh
escape from the Arizona State
Mental Hospital 10 days ago.
She was committed to the
hospital in 19112 following a
first degree murder convic
tion in the slaying of her
roommates, Hcdvig Samuel
son and Ann LeRoi.
The jht brown bread
with natural whole
grain goodness!
1
ROMAN MEL MAKES
1
SANDWICHES BETTER
PIKED 8
PI IIWDTD'C
I kWillll.ll
I 1
iMii
bcautitul princess," said Jules
Soccal, head of the Union of
Monaco Trade Unions. "The
meeting is called so the work
ers will be informed of what
the crisis means to them."
Soccal, a short fellow with
a mustache but no necktie,
will do all the informing at
the meeting in the town's la
bor hall near the harbor filled
with sleek yachts from many
nations.
Soccal is a Communist par
ty member.
Rogue Valley Edition Page 2A
MedfordWTribune
MEDFOhD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17, 1962
But he said his meeting Is
not for or against communism,
Prince Rainier, France, the
Soviet Union or anything else.
"We are for ourselves," he
said. "We are interested in
beefsteaks, housing and our
lives."
He estimated pea-sized Mo
naco has a laboring class of
16,500. All were invited to the
meeting.
This number includes ap
proximately 3,000 actual resi
dents of Monaco, 4,000 Italians
We want you to know how much we
appreciate your patience with us while
we've been digging our way out of the
biggest and most difficult electric service
problem ever experienced in the West!
The total damage done by the hurricane-force winds that hit last Friday
can never be assessed in dollars alone.
Anxieties for family safety, the anguish of watching a home battered
and broken, the emptiness of the sky above a fallen landmark tree -all
such things are beyond measure except in terms of deep human emotion.
Almost every one of the 200,000 customers we serve in the 300-mile
strip from northern California to the Columbia River, was personally af
fected by this unprecedented storm. We particularly regret the discom
fort, inconvenience and distress resulting from storm - caused electric
service disruptions.
We arc grateful for your patience and understanding of our problems,
in the face of your own personal difficulties. We are also full of gratitude
for the extraordinary efforts of our P.P. & L. team members, who have
worked day and night to restore service as fast as humanly possible.
Our thanks, too, to the good-neighbor utility systems and electrical
contractors in the western half of the country, who sent crews as much as
1,000 miles to give us a helping hand.
We hope that soon even the most heavily damaged and most remote
areas will have all electric customers back in service, even though it will
take weeks to complete all permanent repairs and replacements.
Thank you again for your forbearance in a time of great trouble.
Pacific Power & Light Company
To Meeting
and 9,500 French who travel
across the border to work
every day.
The union leader said the
workers fear their employers
would use the crisis as an ex
cuse for refusing wage in
creases. Although the employ
ers pay hardly any taxes to
the state, the workers receive i
less here than in France, he
complained.
"But I do not think the for-.
cign businesses will close if
they have to pay taxes," he
said. "I am optimistic."
All was calm at the palace ;
today. A high government of- i
ficial said Monaco still was
waiting for France to resume '
negotiations. !
So far, little Monaco's big '
neighbor has not unveiled any j
new harassing tactics in the 1
tense "clash" over taxes.
Wednesday France will
treat Monaco as a foreign
country when it comes to buy
ing postage stamps, doubling
the price of mailing a letter
between the two nations.
VOTE
(X) Al Bradford
Democrat for
STATE "
REPRESENTATIVE
Serving His Sixth Year as
Medford City Councilman
Bradford for Representative
Committee
Rusbcil DeForcst, Chairman,
Franklin Bldg., Medford, Ore.
For Fast,
Efficient Service
u'w to er from
r 4 i -
j 4 All
Oakland, San
Francisco, Lot Angelei
and Other California
Pointt
Call
Jack Fitxgerald
773-7761