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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1962)
Tiger in the UN Adlai Stevenson, Zorin Clash in Dramatic Scene United Nations, N.Y. - IIW - U.S. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson and Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin clashed Thursday in one of the most dramatic exchang es in international diplomacy. Stevenson leaned across his arm on the great horseshoe desk of the Security Council He was red-faced and glared directly at Zorin. "I am prepared to wait for my answer until hell freezes over, if that is your decision," Stevenson snapped. Well, hell has not frozen over and Stevenson and the rest of the Security Council members have not got the an swer from Zorin. The question, as put point' blank by an enraged Steven son Thursday, was this: "Do you, Ambassador Zor in, deny that the USSR has placed and is placing medium and intermediate range mis siles and sites in Cuba? Yes or no don't wait for the translation yes or no." Avoided Question Three more times Steven son demanded the answer. Ambassador Daniel Schweit zer of Chile requested an answer. Everyone waited ex pectantly but the answer never came. Zorin spoke all around the question, refusing to give a direct reply. Stevenson, known about the United Nations as a calm, deliberate diplomat, had turn ed tiger. He strained across the desk almost as if he wanted to con front Zorin physically. At times he wagged his finger or pointed his pencil or set a paper on the desk in front of him with a decisive motion as he made his points. County Stockmen Elect Officers; Pass Resolutions New officers were elected and four resolutions passed during the annual fall metting of the Jackson County Stock men's association in the Cen tral Point Grange hall yes terday. Gordon Stanley, Eagle Point, was elected president, Fred Offenbacher, Applegale, vice president, and Richard Ireland, Ashland, was reelect ed treasurer. The Jackson county associ ation approved a resolution, recommended by the Apple gate Cattleman's association, requesting a state law on proper use and storage of dy namite. There seems to be no stale law pertaining to use and proper storage of dynamite, the resolution noted. There are no penalties or liability apply to misuse of dynamite, It noted. Should Include Damage The stockmen agreed that any legislation should Include damage incurred to livestock, wild game or properly be di rectly liable tu the person owning or storing dynamlle whether It be on private land or on a mining claim." Harlin Canlrall, Applegale rancher, lost 11 cows recently after they ate some dynamite found on grazing land, the as sociation said. Other resolutions r e c o in mended Joint operation of the Oregon Beef Council and Ore g o n Cattleman's association office, that the OCA office be moved from Princvllle to Portland, and that a commis sion be paid for securing new members for the slate associa tion. Dr. M. R. Woulfe, state vet erinarian, talked on the de velopment of leptospirosis and anaplasmosis as dairy and beef cattle diseases. Zorin, outwardly impassive, kept his eyes averted to the desk in front of him as he scribbled notes. The Security Council cham ber was jammed but there was hardly a rustle in the galler ies or among the diplomats standing round the walls. "This is kind of rough," said an awed newsman in n whisper as he watched from a booth overlooking the scene. Stevenson started off softly, then warmed the subject up and the tension grew. "We are here today and have been this week for one single reason because the Soviet Union secretly intro duced this menacing offensive military buildup into the is land of Cuba while assuring the world that nothing was further from their thoughts. "The argument, in its es sence, of the Soviet Union, is that It was not the Soviet Un ion which created this threat to peace by secretly installing these weapons in Cuba but that it was the United States which created this crisis by discovering and reporting these installations. "This is the first time, 1 confess, that I have ever heard it said that the crime is not the burglary but the discov ery of the burglary and that the threat is not the clan destine missiles In Cuba but their discovery and the limit ed measures to quarantine fur ther Infection." Build-up Not Denied Stevenson then noted that none of the Russian leaders had denied the existence of such a build-up. He said the United States had not objected to the intro duction of defense Soviet mis siles Into Cuba and had acted only after carefully verifying the new nature of the missile build-up. Later United Nations and U. S. aides brought a large easel into the room and set It up behind Stevenson so Zor in and the rest of the council members could see it. Pictures about two-by-two feet were set up and as an aide' pointed Stevenson showed how an area norlh of the Cuban village of Candcl arl had been transformed from a peaceful countryside to a military tent area to a complex for medium - range missilcs-the latter change within a 24 hour period. Spectators and council mem bers craned to look t them, but Zorin hardly gave them a glance. Alter Stevenson whs fin ished, Zorin spoke briefly quoting a Soviet government statement carried by Tass that the Soviet Union docs not need oversells missile bases, pointing out Kennedy himself said Gromyko denied the pres ence of such offensive weap ons In Cuba and casting doubt on the authenticity of the photographs Stevenson show ed. Stevenson Immediately jumped In wllh this final re joinder: "I have not had a direct answer to my question. The representative of the So viet Union said that the offi cial answer of the Soviet Un- Rogue Valley Edition Page 2A MEDFORDWTRIBUNE MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1962 Dennis the Menace Hatfield Again Dares Hiring of Legal Aide Thornton To Prove Illegal Procedure "Hey, guard; We want QUTA&V Moderate Trading Levels Market After Early Drop New York - IliPIl - Stocks preserved a status quo until the final bell today after de clining moderately early in the day on light liquidation and some slight additional profit-taking. Volume fell more than a million shares off Thursday's moderately active pace, as in vestors apparently heeded the advice of most brokerage houses and held off pending further developments in the Cuban crisis. A good deal of the action was said to be pre-week end evening up by professional in terests who were extremely active in this week's rearing, plunging market. DOW JONESAVERAGES New York IUIMi Dow Jones final stock averages! 30 industrials 569.02, off 1.84: 20 rails 118.93, off 0.12, IS utilities 113.12, up 0.05: 65 stocks 198.98, off 0.38. Sales today were about 2.58 million shares ai com pared with 3.95 million shares Thursday. ion was the Tass statement that Hie U.S.S.R. does not need to locale missiles in Cuba. I agree: The U S S R, docs not need to do that. "But the question is not whether Ihe U.S.S.R. needs missiles In Cuba. The queslion is: Has Ihe U.S.S.R. missiles In Cuba? And thai question remains unanswered. I knew it would remain unanswered." He challenged Zorin to ask his "Cuban colleagues" to per mit United Nations verifica tion of the pictures If he doubled them. "We knuw the facts, Mr. Zmin, and so do you, and we are ready to talk about them. Our job here Is not to score debating points. Our job, Mr. Zorin, is to save the peace. If you are ready lo try, we are." It : I REPUBLICAN 1 Best Qualified . 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Southern Co 4a' Southern Pacilie . 24'j Sperry nand 1 1 ' Standard California .1.1 Standard Indiana 40 Standard N. J 30', Sun Minea ft' Texas Co . 31 ' j Texas Gulf Sulfur I I Texas Pac- Land Trust 114', Thlokol 2H' i Trans America 33', Trans World Air 7', Tn Continental 34, Union Carbide 00', Union Purine 21)', , United Airlines 2.V, : U. S. Plywood 4(P, U S. Rubber 36', West Bank Corp 2H'a ' Wcsdinghouse 2lv YounRstown flfl', ' By United Press International Gov. Mark Hatfield renew ed his dare to Atty. Gen. Roo ert Y. Thornton In Portland Thursday to let the courts de cide whether Hatfield was right in putting his own leyal aide on the governor's payroll. It was the second face to face meeting between the Re publican governor, his Demo cratic opponent, , and Inde pendent Robert Wampler during the campaign. Idea Workshop By Gold Hill Club; Another Announced Gold Hill - A workshop on ideas for Christmas was held at the home of Mrs. Ferd Jones when the Gold Hill Gar den club held its October meeting. Mrs. Amie Ross was co-hostess. Mrs. S. M. Christensen, president, conducted the bus iness session. It was decided that the workshop on the same project will be continued at the next meeting on Friday, November 16 at the home of Mrs. Lewis Loeffler, Blackwell hill. The workshop will be held at 10:30 a.m.' and the businc,s session at 1 p.m. on that date Plans were discussed for the club's participation in the an nual community party hon oring teachers and personnel on Tuesday, October 30 at 8 p.m. at the Gold Hill Grange hall. A committee from the Garden club will assist mem bers from the Health unit it, decorating the hall for tht Halloween party. The feud broke out at the first joint appearance between Hatfield and Thornton Tues day. Thornton said he consid ered it illegal for Hatfield to carry legal aide Loren Hicks Florida Keys Scene Of Armed Activity Key West, Fla. -tliPIl- Thf; storied Florida keys today were a bristling defense bul wark facing the Cuban coast 90 miles to the south. Portable radar and commu nications installations dotted the string of keys that ber.'.t west-southwestward from the mainland 165 miles to Key West. Large truck convoys arriv ed carrying rocket launchers, generators and other equip ment lashed under olive drab tarpaulins. Big trucks hustled up and down the overseas highway, some of them mark ed "explosives." Armed guards accompanied the trucks. In this island city, histori cally a Navy man's town, Army jeeps now were com monplace. Few of the Army. Navy and Marine troops jam ming into the keys were seen in town, but an occasional GI waited for a lift at a pickup station. Security restrictions were tight and authorities had noth ing to say about the nature of the buildup, particularly after the call from the White House Wednesday for volun tary cooperation by news media. Foreign Briefs on the 'governor's budget, since the state's legal staff should be hired through the attorney general's office. Hatfield challenged Thorn ton to let the courts decide. Thornton said Thursday a possible court test is under study by his office. Hatfield replied Thornton was backing down. "He has made a charge and he's not prepared to carry it out," Hat field said. "I predict this mailer will never go to court," Hatfield said. A third scheduled joint ap pearance between Hatfield and Thornton at the Portland City club at noon today was canceled when Hatfield ac cepted an invitation to attend briefings on the Cuban crisis in San Francisco. Others attending the brief ings were Democratic Reps. Edith Green and Al Ullman and GOP. Rep. Walter Nor blad. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) was due back in the state to night to resume his campaign, which was interrupted Tues day when the State Depart ment summoned him to Wash ington, D. C. for consultation on Cuba. A two-day, three-stale con ference on legislative reap portionment opened today in Portland. Attending were spokesmen from California and Washington, where ballot measures seek to base appor tionment more purely on pop ulation, and from Oregon, where the aim is just the op posite. Sen. Maurine Neuberger (D Ore.) went outside Oregon Thursday to do some cam- told a crowd of 200 President Kennedy's legislative program is the most far-reaching and energetic since the days of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Republican U.S. Senate can didate Sig Unander said at Eugene the President's Cuban declaration meant "that the door of one era had been slammed shut, and that of an other was flung open." "We can no longer dodge the fact that this country is committed to combat to pre serve its mortal rights," Unan der said. State Rep. Carl Fisher, the Republican nominee for Con gress in the fourth district, said the international crisis "points up the need lo tighten our belts on domestic spend ing." Blaine Whipple, Democrat ic nominee for Congress in the first district, told a Stayton audience the new trade law will mean benefits for Ore gon because of the state's growing export trade. He said Oregon exports bring more than $155 million into the state each year. 100 grain neutrat spirits 80 proof. International Distilleries Co., LA, iwiteijiieaeiil BU'JI.itWI If" l,H TZt" $m?i.. !a.'li'.i kivosmi : S& tjjgra uatem. ; VglBL 'fd ': rill! '4 1 ..jS OPTH&- Please lo have all in, family be our honorable guests for televisior premiere happy play 80 MINUTE? IN COLOR paigning for Sen. Joe Hickey ' (D-Wyo.) At Cheyenne she! TONIGHT ON NBC TV CHANNEL 10 8:30-1 0:00 P.M. KENNEDY CANCELS PLANNED VISIT TO BRAZIL i Rio de Janeiro-ilifT President Kennedy has advised Presi dent Joao Goulard he will be unable to make his scheduled Nirv. 12-14 visit to Brazil, authoritative sources said today. The sources said U.S. Ambassador Lincoln Gordon de livered a letter from Kennedy to Goulart, explaining reasons for the cancellation of the trip, which presumably are re lated to the Cuban crisis. MOUNTBATTEN CANCELS FAR EAST VISIT London-iW-Earl Mountbatten, admiral of the fleet and chief of the defense staff, has canceled an official visit to the Far East next month because of the Cuban crisis, the defense ministry said. NORSTAD GUEST AT FAREWELL DINNER Parls-lDPIi-Retiring Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, Gen. Lauris Nortad, was guest of honor at a farewell dinner given here Thursday night by the acting NATO Secretary General Prince Guido Colonna. '59CHEV. PARKWOOD WAGON 4 Door, Auto. Trans. 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