ixon Silent Amid Stonn Caused by Alger
Hiss TV Program
ovement Among Blue Chips
Fractional; Chemicals Up
New York -IUPII- Buyers and
sellers fought each other to
a standoff today as the stock
market churned nervously
around Its summer high.
Two Coos Jail
Escapees Caught
St. Helens - IUP1I - Two Coos
county jail escapees were cor
nered and captured here late
Monday, but a third dashed
away and eluded police.
Officers pressed a search
for Orvillc Laverne Stewart,
29, of Woodland, Wash.
Caught were Charles A. Lo
gan, 27, and Paul R. Muns, 26,
of North Bend. Mun's wife
also was booked on a charge
of aiding the men.
The capture of Logan and
Mun's came after the trio was
spotted at Scappoose, and
shortly afterwards, entering
St. Helens. Police gave chase,
pursuing the men into an al
ley. Logan was caught under
a car. Muns and Stewart made
a break for it, splitting apart.
Soon afterwards Muns was
caught. Stewart disappeared.
The men fled the jail at Co
quille Sunday after overpow
ering a matron, locking her in
the jail, taking her keys, and
ripping a telephone from the
wall.
Movements among the blue
chips were mostly fractional
but chemicals showed selec
tive strength with Kodak up
a point and Du Pont ahead 2
at its high. Chrysler and Unit
ed Aircraft were down nearly
1 apiece.
Steels, most autos and the in
ternational oils were trendless
along with utilities, foods,
stores, drugs, finance shares,
and tobaccos. Among the met-
Sen. Morse Awarded
Trophy by Veterans
Albany - IUPD - Sen. Wayne
Morse (D-Ore.) was awarded a
trophy here Monday night at
the Veterans day banquet
which climaxed a three -day
celebration.
The trophy was presented
to Morse by the Linn County
Veterans council.
POOH EXCUSE
Lancaster, Pa. fUPD Lancas
ter County Judge Joseph B.
Wissler fined Quentin Zwally,
64, $25 Monday and ordered
him jailed for four days be
cause he failed to answer a
jury summons. Zwally told
the judge he did not show up
because he had not given his
consent for his name to be
drawn as a venireman.
Dodge picked up over a point.
Boeing faded a point in the
aircrafts as did B&O among
the rails.
Electronics In most cases
held to a fractional range.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
New York-ttPli-Dow Jones
final stock averages: 30 in
dustrial! 624.41, up 8.28; 20
railroads 128.16. up 2. Ill IS
utilities 121.21, up 1.15; and
65 stocks 216.28, up 2.82.
Salas Monday war about
S.OS million shares com
pared with 4.34 million
shares Friday.
Regional Edition
Page 2A
MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1962
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Present Reply
New York - IUPD - Richard
M. Nixon remained silent to
day amid the storm of protest
caused when Alger Hiss was
among those selected to com
ment on the former vice presi
dent's political career.
The American Broadcasting
Co. said Nixon could have
equal time, if he asks for it,
to reply to statements made
by Hiss and others on the pro
gram "The Political Obituary
of Richard Nixon," beamed to
a nation-wide television audi
ence Sunday night.
Messages of Protest
ABC and many of its affili
ates were deluged with mes
sages of protest both before
and after the telecast. Hiss,
convicted of perjury 12 years
ago after a relentless con
gressional Investigation head
ed by Nixon, said on the pro
gram he felt Nixon's part in
the probe was politically moti
vated. "We gave both sides a fair
presentation on this show," an
ABC spokesman said here.
Herbert G. Klein, Nixon's
former press secretary, re
plied from Los Angeles that
the program reached "a new
low in undistinguished report
ing." He said the show "set
out to kick Richard Nixon
and accomplished its goal by
subs tituting innuendo for
fact."
Investigation Urged
Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D
Conn.) urged the Federal
Communications C o mmission
to investigate the ' network
"because of my own feeling
of personal disgust, and be
cause of the countless objec
tions made to me by Connecti
cut citizens ..."
Hiss' conviction in 1950
came after he denied any con
nection with a 1938 Soviet spy
ring. Nixon, then a congress
man from California, spent
two years as chief investiga
tor of Hiss' activities.
Klein said Nixon would
not comment on the program,
although James C. Hagerty,
ABC vice president in charge
of news, said the recently de
feated California gubernato
rial candidate could have
equal time "any time, of
course."
Atrocious Gesture
Robert H. Finch, Nixon's
I960 presidential campaign
manager, said in Los Angeles
the equal time offer was an
"atrocious, pathetic gesture."
He said it "has the effect of
placing'Alger Hiss, a convicted
perjurer who appeared on
this show, on the same foot
ing as a former vice presi
dent of the United States."
Howard K, Smith, who
served as moderator for the
program, said he thought it
was "a little over-balanced in
favor of Nixon."
Television stations in Co
lumbus and Cincinnati, Ohio,
and New Haven, Conn., and
Philadelphia did not carry
the show.
State Republican
Chairman Attacks
Hiss Appearance
Salem -lOTH- Oregon Repub
lican Chairman Phillip J.
Roth, Portland, today called
last week's ABC-TV show "Po
litical Obituary of Rich a r d
Nixon" a "brutal hatchet job"
on the former vice president.
Roth objected strongly to
the appearance of Alger Hiss,
ex-State department official,
on the program, moderated by
Howard K. Smith.
"Using Alger Hiss to give
an opinion on Nixon's politi
cal tactics would be like using
Lucky Luciano after Tom
Dewey's defeat whether Dew
ey's prosecution of him and
other racketeers was political
ly motivated," Roth said.
Roth, an attorney, said that
"in using a convicted purjurer
like Alger Hiss, a man whose
influence and advice under
mined the position of the
Western world at the Yalta
and Potsdam conferences, is
to seek to do a brutal hatrhrt
Job on Nixon, instead of an
objective analysis of his en
tire political career."
The program was in connec
tion with Nixon's defeat tor
the governorship of Califor
nia. tva beVenuesTrTse
Knoxville, Trim. ilW- The
Tennessee Valley Authority
Monday reported a record
$60.7 million in electric power
revenues for the three-month
period ending Sept. 30. The
agency attributed the rise,
which was $2 million above
the same period last year, to
warmer weather which con
tributed to Increased energy
use and decreased hydro pow
er generating.
1
Alger Hiss's Remarks About Richard Nixon Via
Television Program Result in Storm of Protests
New York -IUPII- The Ameri
can Broadcasting Co. received
hundreds of protests Sunday
night for allowing Alger Hiss
to give his views on Richard
M. Nixon to a nationwide
television audience.
Hiss, former State Depart
ment official convicted of per
jury In 1950 after a relentless
congressional investig a t i o n
led by Nixon, appeared on a
half-hour filmed show called
the "Political Obituary of
Richard Nixon."
ABC was deluged with tele
phone calls and telegrams,
most of them against the net
work for interviewing Hiss on
his feelings toward the former
vice president.
Hiss said he believed his
prosecution by Nixon, then a
congressman from California,
was politically motivated.
"I think that he was po
litically carried along," Hiss
declared. "Whether the initial
motivation was political, I
certainly don't think that he
was unaware of the political
boost, the political soaring up
into outer space that the hear
ings and subsequent trial pro
vided for him."
Friends on Program
Also appearing on the pro
gram were Jerry Voorhis,
five - term congressman from
California defeated by Nixon
in 1946; Los Angeles attorney
Murray Chotiner, who man
aged Nixon's first campaign;
and Rep. Gerald Ford (R
Mich.), a longtime friend of
Nixon.
The ABC vice president in
charge of news, James C.
Hagerty, said most of the pro
tests came from California
and the New York City area.
He handled a number of calls
and said he told those object
ing: "Won't you please do me
the favor of reserving your
criticism until after you've
seen the program?"
Hagerty said the network
at no time considered can
celling the program.
"The American people owe
a great deal to Dick Nixon
for his dedication to finding
out all of the possible facts
that the committee could find
out about the Alger Hiss case
and its ramifications," Ford
said after Hiss spoke.
Walter H. Annenberg, presi
dent of Triangle Publications,
Inc., ordered his organiza
tion's two ABC affiliations in
New Haven, Conn., and Phila
delphia not to carry the pro
gram. He said he did not feel
a convicted man should "com
nent about a distinguished
American."
Pickets in Los Angeles '
About a half dozen pickets
paraded Sunday in front of
ABC's Los Angeles outlet. A
Foreign Slews
SHIPPING CHAMBER REJECTS BOYCOTT CALL
London-IUPD-The International Chamber of Shipping Mon
day night rejected a U.S. proposal calling for a volunlaty
boycott of trade with Cuba by all non-Communist nation
shippers.
The proposal was made by the U.S. Merchant Marine
Institute and seconded by the Union of Greek Shipowners.
TEACHER PRACTICES WHAT HE PREACHES
Budapesi-flJPII-For years Josef Szakal, a teacher in a Hun
garian woodworkers' school, had lold his students that the
only way to get rid of wood fungus was to burn the build
ing down.
Monday Zakal practiced what he had preached. When the
wood fungus showed up on his own home, he burned the
whole place down.
SOVIET SHIP SIGHTED OFF NEW BRUNSWICK
Saint John, N.B.-IUPII-Large Soviet fishing vessels today
were reported operating in Bay of Fundy waters.
Captain Roy Connolly of the Canadian Pacific Ferry Prin
cess Helene said that he sighted a Russian factory ship and
four trawlers in the Bay. outside the fishing limit.
Connolly said it was the first lime he had seen a Russian
factory ship in the Bay. It was sighted as the ferry made Us
afternoon run Monday from Digby, N.S., to Saint John.
QUEEN'S FORMER HOME HOUSES CASINO
London (UPI' The Curion House Club gambling casino
opens tonight in the former home of Queen Elisabeth, the
queen mother.
spokesman said "the switch
board has been going rather
well, both pro and con. I have
no idea how many calls." The
show was aired on Hiss' 58th
birthday.
Hiss, now a New York sales
man, was convicted and jailed
on perjury charges in con
nection with his association
Four Persons Are
Hurt in Accidents
Four area residents were
slightly injured in vehicle ac
cidents in Medford yesterday
and today, according to city
police reports.
A two-car collision occur
red about 12:33 o'clock
this morning at the Sixth st.
railroad crossing. Drivers in
volved were Edward Franklin
Bennett Jr., 22, or 204 North
Ivy St., and Donald Bruce
Dugger, 39, of 537 Fremont
ave. No citations were issued.
A passenger in the Bennett
car, Gerald Eldon Chriss, 21,
Phoenix, and a passenger in
the Dugger vehicle, Joe Brit
ton Berriman, 46, of 263 Mace
rd., were injured slightly, po
lice said, but did not require
hospitalization.
Both drivers' suffered slight
injuries, police said, in a two
car accident about 8:28 a.m.
Monday at Eighth and Lincoln
sts.
One driver, Mrs. Lois Eliza
beth Barnard, 47, of 1375
Orchard Home dr., was
thrown from her car by the
impact of the collision. She
was treated at Rogue Valley
hospital and released.
The other driver, Benjamin
Lewis Long, 18, Jacksonville,
also was slightly injured, but
did not require hospitaliza
tion, police said. Mrs. Bar
nard was cited for disobeying
a stop sign.
EX-SENATOR IMPROVES
Springfield, Vt. -(UPI)- For
mer Republican Sen. Ralph E.
Flanders, 82, who suffered a
mild heart attack at his home
Sunday, was reported in sat
isfactory condition today at
Springfield Hospital.
New York-IUPll-Former Am
bassador to Cuba Earl T.
Smith was elected chairman of
the finance committee of Li
onel Corp., it was announced
Monday. Harry Winberg, who
controls trans-it systems in
Honolulu, Dallas and Scran
ton, Pa., and Richard Schil
ling, a New York lawyer,
were added to Lionel's board
of directors.
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with the late Whittaker Cham
bers, who at one time was a
Soviet spy courrier. Hiss has
said since the charges were
first lodged that he is inno
cent. He said his "impression of
him (Nixon) as an investigator
was that he was less interest
ed in developing the facts ob
jectively than in seeking ways
of making a preconceived plan
appear plausible. Hiss said
he had neither feelings of
"hostility" nor "any feelings
of great personal warmth or
affection" toward Nixon to
day. !
Chotiner said Nixon, who j
lost his bid for the California j
governorship last week to
Gov. Edward G. Brown, was
"a man who has been dedi
cated to serving the public
and doing a real job for the
country."
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A NEW WORLD FOR
EDIE ADAMS
In the past year, she has been widowed, waged a
bitter custody battle, resumed a career, fought self
doubts, and now actress-comedienne Edie Adam3
sees life "leveling off" again. This intimate insight
by Jack Ryan tells the story of Miss Adams awaken
ing one morning as the widow of genius showman
Ernie Kovacs, I icing $2 millions of debts, fighting
to keep her family together and her successful bid
for a "second career" and a new life.
Be sure to read this triumph over tragedy in the
NOVEMBER 18TH ISSUE
JEajtiilyr TVeelcly
A Weekend Featurt of Your
Medford Mail Tribune