Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1962)
THURSDAY. Be iaull By JOSEPH W. GRIGG Paris -IUPII- When the last ballot boxes were emptied and the final voles counted Oct. 28 In France's constitutional referendum, President Charles DcGaulle returned to the lonely vigil he keeps'each day under threat of sudden death. This threat was a major rea son for the nationwide voting, and one of the isues in it. Dc Gaulle asked France to amend the constitution to provide for I 1 INSPECTS NAVY Recent excursion by Charles de Gaulle to inspect French Navy maneuvers gave cartoonist of Humanite, official organ of French Communist Party, this opportunity to lampoon the French Chief Executive. The By United Press International De Gaulle insisted that election of his successor! by direct popular vole of the whole nation was essential in order to give lhem the authority and prestige he himself enjoys anyhow as World War II Free French leader and as the man who saved France from civil war in May 1958. He argued thai the constant threat that he may be assassinated made this more urgent lhan ever. In a radio-television address to the nation Oct. 18 he warned "the assassination altmepts which have been per petrated and those which are being prepared make it clear that my disappearance would carry with it the risk of plunging France into its former confusion and, soon, into disaster." But some of France's most respected political leaders are violently against the plan. They charge De Gauile violated the constitution he gave France in 1958 by by passing Parliament when he appealed direct to the nation in a referendum vole. They also charged that he oponed the way to dictatorship. World War II Premier Paul Reynaud. 84, charged on Oct. 4 that De Gaulle "wanis to be bom George VI and (Winston) ChurchiJi" and sought to confor "absolute and uncontrolled power" on his successors. "The constitution has been violated, Parliamonl has been despoiled," he cried amid wild applause in the National Assembly. Gaston Monnervillo. president of the Senate for the past 15 years (and the man who automatically would have taken over temporarily from De Gaulle until a new president could have been elected), charged De Gaulle with "openly and deliberately violating the constitution" in appealing direct to the nation in a referendum vote. "It is the rcpub.ican form of government that was at tacked. What we were offered was not a republic. At best it is a sort of enlighcned bonaparlism," Monnerville said. ' Agricultural Research Work Helps Consumer Washington -HW - The Ari- cultural Research Service :ind ! the land-Brant school system complement each other in their work of bettering Ameri- . . ,. can agriculture. The state agrk-i.llunil ex- periment stations, whieh work with ARS in state-federal proi- ects. are located at liitKl-griinl colleges and universities, Considerjiblo pi'iuse wns ne corded both to the sUile ex periment stations iinri to AKS at the 44th ;mnu;tl convention of the lntcrniitioluil Crop !ni p r o v c in v n t AssoeiMion ;il llershey. Pa this week. Ilr HiMirv U I-'nvt miiiin as. , ., , Slslfint (llreelur of the imrii-ul- turul experiment .slilllnil ill Pcmi Slate university. Univer- sily Park, said agricultural re- i. j .. . search has resulted in ' great savings lo producers, coiisuin-' ers. and to other industry." ; 1 Fortmaun said agricultural 1 research is saving Amene-in consumers Silt lutlion a ye:ir - $238 per family over what i they would be paying if farm practices had undergone no changes in the last 211 years. Food costs, he said, now , claim only 20 per cent of too family income as compared 10 28 per cent In 11147. and cm even higher ratio in earlier years. Improved nutrition from in fancy to dcHth and a result im ' longer life span wore attnlr.i!. ed to research, Furtmann sai:l He added that for every dollar invested in hybrid coin, a $7 reltirn per year is being real ized. Fortmann said stale and fed eral agricultural rest arch costs an average of SI. 35 p-r capita, "yel research Is life, and evenutally produces bene fits for all people. rortmann appealed for con Islcnt, continued support of nth studies. Baton liouge, La.-TI't Loui. iana's annual sawtimher growth Is more than 2 Blili. "00.000 lb) hoard (cel. equally divided between pine and nardboard. NOVEMBER 8, 19B2 e Has a strong successor in case the assassins who haunt him should finally hit their target. He wanted the nation, and not an electoral college, to choose the successor. With ironic generosity, the terrorists who marked De Gaulle for death because of his Algeria policies decreed a two-week "reprieve" during the referendum campaign. The unsought respite expired after the elections. 5 Court Records MKIII OIMI Ml'MCII'M. COntT Paul Ik'ltiaitl Wilson, expired vehii'le license, t'2 Ml. Jesse Marlon (.'hniiL'ellor, Im proper lelt linn. Silt Vena Anna Kay. disobeyed Iraf lie .slen.il. Sll) Ciary Itny Dlllll-trum. disobeyed trndte sicnnl. Sin Jaek .Marion liny, violation n hasie rule. :tn. I.lnyd Lamar Marple. dmoheyed trallie signal. $10. Kohert Jatnet Lnckwood, oportii - - s lu-fuse in possesion, s.i i;;,l',;.','n,l7;,"'cl''u'n' vloln""" i ',1,.'v wViil-i-'i.nMarr. violation of t.nsu- mi.'. ::. Dennis KniK'ne I'lnkinn. violation ' , ,,. ruU. s2.-, VA'rtn.'fi" mo"T. vi!'"''' wm-ren Carh u- ' Bnyiiss. rliso- l.vi'"wM. v lolatlon ; Ol IHI : rule. $111. iiisiitn T cm it r I in Humble, overload. Silt IN ri' Kimciie Whitlnck. violation ol basic rule SIM Leo Hr.wml. no operator's license, I '' Unman Allied suantcr. viola- ' uon ot bBsic rule, s;n ! linden, bay Arnold, no vencle violation ot j i r ii.io V.iiiKliu. l).iiTl Ki.uik l'aimtnv violation i ,,f ,,. , !,. vni i ll"iner .laekson HMton, no untely j,",",'Vu!'':.l smith, no vehicle I license. ttonalil Jelin leniivac. no milety rinun v cut it 1 ' l.ee ulcer vs C.ei ald linger, dooice complaint Lhcv'll Do It Lvcrv Plv.-.10IV-It ' I.Msi-.N I I UsJN Mv-sLLt TO MIT IP SOV'S s.'l; 1UL VsE 1s5LAl S'sGt'Ja TO el L DJUsjs-l PJ'? A NulV FOR ,' r9 rV'.V ,U JTU., V "Mir lr MM tvh. "V 1 I P S '.. ? ftjiTOV.Jt, 1 " VHt I iLOcoLFiANs:-.. y i , AMsXNT SLll.'L CjIVINsJ . ' -" 5 M-8 ii m w i. i. IIpU A Returned to This is the story of the un derground campaign to kill De Gaulle-an offensive that is likely to result in constitution al history. A mimeographed letter re ceived in Paris newspaper of fices announced that the ter rorists would not try to kill De Gaulle during the cam paign. It purported to have been written by renegade ex Col. Antoine Argoud, boss for metropolitan France of the so- ml Oh f m j caption for the carioon, released from Pans, reuus; The sole master on board holds the tiller alone, keeps radio messages to himself, modifies the log book as he wants in short, runs the ship as he sees fit." (UPI photo) Technique Reveals Difference Between Human, Mouse Cells By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor New York - lliril - In at least one circumstance it is very difficult to tell people from ' jf&i'VSr"' mice. That is when Uoth man and mouse are down to their ' smallest work ing parts and those parts , arc living in i dishes. This part Is the iieius anuui cell. Human cells and mouse cells are cultivated in dishes of nutritional broth in the same laboratories around the world. Unhappily cell cul tures get contaminated by cells from another dish which may be nearby or ill another room. Contamination shouldn't happen but it does despite the most stringent precautions, and when it docs the results of months of scientific experi mentation with cultured cells become quest iotmblc. That's why the science of cytology (which is the study of the cell.) is newly attuned to Dr. S f'ecloroff, cytologist of the University of Saskatch ewan, Saskatoon, Canada. His better mouse-trap is an easy technique for telling the dif ference between man and mouse al the cellular level. Tedious Work Heretofore it took elaborate methods and tedious work. Now. by the f'eilorotf tech nique, it can lie done in a few minutes. 11 is based on the assumption that the serum of hlootl contains a chemical '-system" which is pnlSolloUS to cells of any species other ,;ln nu. .species from whieh ,, . , , mo mood came, -pins system. Kcdorotf rea soned, is antibody, antibody's chemical adjuncts and anti body's positive electric charges. To test this idea, he put four different strains of mouse cells into the same cul ture with six strains (if hu man cells. 1 ime N'ATiU TUIS T!"L"U JUsT COLLECTS I SH-LLS OUT r sS NOT.' i SLIRE. TE MCIs - HLH - MEM m, Jim. iUi: sOLVUSJT WED ,"cW .." '') ...t v tiiiir -- v. called National Resistance Council (CNR). The CNR took over the pledge to kill Dc Gaulle after the outlawed Se cret Army Organization (OAS) went out of business wnen Al geria became independent last July. Not that the end of the " prieve" makes any difference to De Gaulle's way of life. In Shadow He has walked too long in the shadow of the killer and had too many narrow brushes WTrirMi.,- When all one million of them were flouishing, indis tinguishable human from the mouse, he added a little hu man blood serum. After only one hour of incubation all the cells of all the mouse strains were dead but the cells of all six human strains kept right on flourishing. He experimented to find out what happened. He found what happened was that hu man serum containing the ''cytotoxic system" adhered to mouse cells from where it did its poisonous work but could not stick to human cells. Reason Unknown He went on to discover that human scrum was invariably poisonous to cells of a num ber of species other than mice. Confusingly, however, he found that human cells were not the only cells which were undisturbed by human serum. The reason why that is so he doesn't know yet. But in tissue culture labora tories everywhere the cells under cultivation are almost all either human or mouse. This means the human cul tures can be kept in an un contaminated state by the rou tine addition of a little human serum now and then. Kederoff warned that fresh ly drawn hunittn blood should lie used because antibody's chemical adjuncts are quick ly lost in storage. If one per son's blood doesn't work, the cytologist should draw blood from another person. The blood of some people may be too low in cytotoxic antibody to be effective, he said. Shipley's Bid for Rehearing Is Rejected S;ilrm ATI1 The Oivci'n Su pivmo Court h;-s re t used a rohri.riiiK in the Lurry West Shipley e;se. letting st.ind its decision that he must die in the Oregon pus ehnniher for the l!Mil slaying of a Hi-year-old Willaniina nirl, Linda lean Stevens. inunv llatlo thes?e3 womim5 wee.;, With TrJE PtiN'O Kt; 6GT KOW.ThE TRXl)3E IS WITH THE GUVS WHO .THIsjKTEV I LIKE THAT V " ... j SjOLV b M T J MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON Lonely with death to let it make any dent in his icy, Olympian aloofness. At least six times in a little more than a year De Gaulle who will be 72 on Nov. 22-has narrowly escaped assassina tion by bomb or machlnegun. Aides say he has no fear of death at all-only of the chaos and civil war into which his assassination might plunge France. The first spectacular at tempt to kill De Gaulle took place at 8:45 p.m., on the night of Sept. 8, 1961. The President was heading for his country home at Col ombey - Les - Deux - Eglises some 120 miles cast of Paris. His five -car motorcade, flanked by police motorcycle outriders, was traveling at a 90 mph clip. De Gaulle was in the second car, with his wife Yvonne and Lt. Col. Philippe Teisseire, one of his aides de camp. The first car carried three of his bodyguards or "gorillas," as they are com monly known. Explosives At a point hear Pont-Sur-Scine 70 miles east of Paris the would-be killers had con cealed 25 pounds of plastic ex plosive in a butane gas con tainer buried under a heap of sand by the roadside. At tached to the explosive was a jerrycan containing either gas oline or napalm. As the motorcade hurtled past, one of the terrorists rammed home the plunger of a detonator on a nearby hill. Flames 15 feet high shot from the jerrycan, scorching De Gaulle's car. By chance, the plastic failed to explode and the motorcade passed. It was only because Martial de Villcmandy, one of the gang, returned later to the scene that police quickly rounded up the terrorists. - V .f DRIBS IN . KnrnRit Vucu"nnlERl -til I v - FREC TOOL KIT tyryh.'fl you te 60 a pvri'iiiMjl rah- i 1 Pw P"" Frr. Rag. S' urnv SPECIAL SALE OF PRE-PASTED WALLPAPER Our molt vvont.d poH.rni in u Ih. WIZ 'l.n.H.Wl.M OO ' REGULAR 2.49 HAREM PILLOWS TO IvtfO comfy looting spoce with a tottoled tvweh. -inn fir A FULLER PAINTS WALLPAPe . MIRKOItl Vigil Under Threat of Villemandy and five ac complices were sentenced on Sept. 7 to jail terms ranging from 10 years to life. More Plots Two more abortive plots to kill De Gaulle were discov ered during presidential grass roots "meet-the-people" tours of the provinces early this summer. One was to have tak en place while he was touring southern central France in May. Another was timed for a throe-day tour of eastern France in June. In both cases police learned of the plots in advance and scores of terrorists were ar rested. The planned methods of killing De Gaulle were both elaborate and ingenious. One was that a sharpshoot er armed with a rifle and tele scopic sights should kill him from a window of a building facing the Elysee Palace as he left for the provinces. Another plan was to run a car loaded with explosives across a grade crossing just 4-11 News Medford Livestock Club The first meeting of the Medford Livestock 4-H club was held at the home of the leader, Mrs. r Jones. Officers elected were Karen Perkins, president; Jerry Jones, vice president; Larry Duysen, sec retary; Kent Duysen, treas urer; Patricia Jones, reporter, and Hubert Cowan, recrea tion director. Mrs. Jones distributed ma terials needed for the follow ing year. She asked Larry Duysen to give a talk on mucoid enterities as bloat, a disease most common in fry ers. Patricia Jones, Reporter Gat new exciting color, new beauty with a totally new paint from FULLER . . WALL FASHION I It's a fast drying, washable latex paint that rolls on so easily that you can paint an entire room in a relatively short period of time. Your room's dry -end ready lo use in as little as 20 minutes after painting. Simple soap and water cleanup. ONLY 2Q MINUTES! For a limited time only you get a matching semi-gloss absolutely tree with each gahon of WALL FASHION INTERIOR LATEX PAINT, Quantities are limited ... so hurry I MW"iMieiiuuewiLiwi m sA 1 tl HIGH FIDELITY DECORATOR MIRRORS Bring a room to lift with a FULLER mirror. -895 NATURAL W PONDEROSA CLEAR 1 Jt:;;::;::Pr: PINE STUDENT DESK Ready te fmi,h, 1 O Q 34114x39 in. HigS Rg.t993 88 lite LtfeVMlMNlMal before the arrival of De Gaulle's motorcade. A third idea was send dogs booby-trapped with explo sives into the crowds sur rounding De Gaulle. Next Known Plot The next known plot to kill De Gaulle was on Aug. 8 when he returned from vaca tion at Colombey to Paris to entertain former president Dwight D. Eisenhower at lunch. Members of the killer squad later told police they had to abandon the plan because De Gaulle was too heavily guarded. Still another attempt was planned for the morning of Aug. 22 when De Gaulle flew from an airfield near Colom bey to preside over a cabinet meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris. But the president's motorcade was ahead of schedule and the attack was abandoned. That evening, a dozen kill ers ambushed his speeding, lightly guarded motorcade in the deepening dusk at sub urban Petit -Clamart, about two miles short of Villacou blay. The assassins machine gunncd the president's con voy. Two shots pierced the rear window of De Gaulle's car and came within inches of killing him and his wife. Two tires were punctured. Unscathed But again the president was unscathed. One of the motor cycle police escorts and the driver of a passing car were slightly wounded. De Gaulle's comment on alighting at Villacoublay was "bad shooting." Mrs. De Gaulle was pale and shaken; De Gaulle imperturbable, as always. Eight of the commando members of that latest ambush were captured and are await Mi. iu iiih i iMniuMnmn eii hi mi ii i i iniii.iiiiii. mi.iimni iiwM.m.j. ,,mlmm, hh.iui.mii S.-L.t. do it beautifully tvttli... ' WALL FASHION CAllON quart of FULLER -Vi-! - 'M mm id' !i?)ml -4-4 1 M USEFUL , ... ...,,...1 mi, 11 m mm - m AND DECORATIVE STORAGE HASSOCKS Tht mott Kandtome you've setn at the tewett price ever. U Jin I IP m.l II W. P. FULLER & CO. 4th and FRONT Phone 772-7107 Use Our Convenient Free Parking Lot Next Doorl ing trial. One committed sui cide. A half-dozen other known and identified suspects still are hunted. De Gaulle is convinced there will be other attempts Clears Automatically . . . yet makes air-tigh' seal! mdi Seal-o-Matic DOOR BOTTOM Sturdy, compact aluminum with durable, flexible vinyl bottom. Won't drag over your carpets. Yet keeps out drafts, dust, dirt and noises when door is closed. Comes in Anodized Satin or Albras finishes. Fits doors 23" to 48" wide. WORKS LIKE MAGIC to make your heating and air conditioning more effec tive . . , less expensive I See Us Today! 773 Corner 6rh and Fir St. 5333 MMMWMtsssMeMMMMBMillll IMIHI KiWAUr j r 1 .!(.' ;.:',: X-l, DECORATIVE room DIVIDERS PANILAIRE, the orno- you can finish n88 yowr.H. CHOW TABLES VERY PRICED eautiful. be vied all k83 III 11 11. n!M ipi.n u, 11,1, Death on his life. He takes the fatal istic view that one might suc ceed, and that is why he is so anxious to leave France with a "strong man" president to replace him. automatically to cltar I rug of door opini tOWESS automatically to iol opening whin door cloiti " 'J' tohnm Sen 4 tl SPECIALLY FOR THE HOLIDAYS decerativ todIm can A A Q throughout the house. Ir 0( It vi ii ic i lc !l In b in 31 ai ,n cc d g it