Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 24, 1963, Image 1

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MEDFORDmJT
Section A 52 Pages
Soviets, Chinese
Make Attempts to
Patch Up Quarrel
Diplomats Feted
In Both Countries
Moscow - (UPB - The Soviet
Union and Communist China
made major friendship gest
ures Saturday in an apparent
effort to heal their quarrel be
fore it splits the Communist
bloc.
In Moscow Foreign Min
ister Andrei Gromyko played
host to Chinese Ambassador
Pan Tsu-Li for what was de
scribed as a "warm and
friendly" lunch meeting.
(Simultaneously in Peking,
Communist Chinese party
chief Mao Tse-Tung received
Soviet Ambassador S. V.
Shevervonenko for what
Peking radio described as a
"cordial talk.")
Both moves came in the
wake of a rocket-brandishing
speech by Soviet Defense
Minister Rodion Malinovski
which was interpreted here
as a sign that Moscow may be
swinging toward Peking's
"lough line" with the west in
an effort to better its rela
tions with Red China.
Bury Capitalism
Malinovsky, speaking Fri
day to an audience that in
cluded Premier Nikita S.
Khrushchev, claimed that any
American attack on Castro
Cuba would touch off a third
world war in which "the en
tire system of capitalism will
be buried once and for all."
The Soviet defense min
ister's warning was the most
sternly worded threat by the
Soviets since the Cuban crisis
last autumn and consituted
one of the strongest commit
ments of Soviet military sup
port to Cuba yet made.
Western diplomatic circles
in Moscow interpreted the
speech as a Soviet shift to
ward the Peking line and a
notice that the Kremlin no
longer considers itself at a
disadvantage because o its
rocket pullout from Cuba.
Western diplomats here
have speculated the Russian's
similarly unyielding line at
the disarmament talks now
being held in Geneva also
might be a sign of Moscow's
apparent effort to prove itself
as good at "fighting against
imperialism" as Red China.
No details were available
here either on Gromyko's
meeting with the Chinese
ambassador or on Mao Tse
Tung's talk with the Soviet
ambassador in Peking.
Youngster Injured
By Passing Truck
A six-year-old boy suffered
minor injuries when he was
struck by the side of a pass
ing pickup truck on Griffin
Creek rd. near Cordelia way
Saturday morning.
Trealed at Rogue Valley
hospital was Duane Michael
Bagby of 2433 South Stage
rd. A medical examination re
vealed that his only injury
was a laceration on the right
shoulder blade. He was re
leased after treatment.
The driver of the pickup
truck did not stop after the
accident occurred, but Sher
iff's officers theorized that
the driver may not have real
ized what happened.
Bagby was playing near
Griffin Creek rd. with a 10-
year-old boy at about 11:45
a m., when he was pushed on
to the road and into the side
of the truck, the sheriffs of
fice reported.
NEWStf$BRIEFS
ITEMS WOM D N 91011
PAKISTAN WARNED AGAINST CHINESE PACT
Washington - IW - Th Unild Siale Saturday
warned Pakitlan its plan jo sign a border agistment
with Red China naxi week might tndang dtlicat n
gotialions with India on the xploWa Kashmir issue.
WILSON WOULD UP TRADE WITH REDS
Cardiff, Waits - iUH - Ntw Labor party leader
Harold Wilson, brimful of confidnc h will b Britain's
prim minuitr within yr, said Saturday h would
work for incratd trad with th Communist bloc.
U.S., BRITAIN AGREE ON
Washington - 1PI - Th
reached ientativ agreement
torn of their nuclear forces
nd forwarded th plan to lh
SPAAK ATTACKS DE GAULLE AT MEET
Brussels - n - Belgian Forign Minister Paul
Henri Spsik Saturday delivered a bliitering attack on
French President Charles d Geulle at lecrecy- shroud
d melting of tro Europeea socialist ldri, inform
ed sources said.
f i
4 ffr;Siifg; 1 . a s,' till
A-; f ti "-5
SLIDES DOWN THE WAYS - The Wood
row Wilson slides down the ways in Val
lejo, Calif., Saturday to become the Navy's
newest nuclear - powered submarine. The
granddaughter of President Woodrow
Wilson, Miss Eleanor Axson Sayre, Cam
Jackson Slates His
Ski Resort
As Trust for SOC
Ashland Friday after
noon, Gien L. Jackson, Med-
ford industrialist and develop-1
er, pledged $70,000 of stock
in the Mt. Ashland Ski Resort
Corporation as a living trust
for the benefit of Southern j
Oregon college in Ashland. !
Jackson made the an-:
nouncement during a special j
Friday afternoon meeting of j
the board of directors of the
Mt. Ashland corporation.
The directors said this as
sures adequate financing of
the proposed Mt. Ashland re
sort. To date, approximately
$125,000 in stock has been
pledged. The directors estim
ate $138,000 will be required
for construction of the lodge,
one ski lift and a sewer and
water system. After the bona
fide sales of $138,000 is
reached, issuance of further
stock will be suspended, the
board voted Friday. Jackson
explained this is necessary for
him to retain majority con
trol of the stock for tax pur
poses. Reisin Control
Ail profits on the stock in
the Jackson trust fund will
go to the college to finance
scholarships. During his life
time, Jackson will retain con
trol of the stock and vote his
shares. Upon his death the
stock will go to the college,
probably through the South
em Oregon College Founds-
NUCLEAR ASSIGNMENT
United Slates and Britain
Saturday on how to assign
to NATO i en eerly dele
North Allintic Council.
bridge, Mass., christened the sub named
in honor o the 28th president. The Polaris
firing sub becomes the 18th fleet ballistic
missile submarine to be launched by the
Navy. UPI) ;
Stock
tion, one of the directors ex
plained. The Mt. Ashland corpora
tion authorized Robert Bos
worth, Medford architect, to
prepare preliminary plans
for the lodge to be built this
summer, providing the corp
oration receives the conces
sion contract when bids are
opened by the Forest Service
m April.
During other action the
corporation elected Lloyd
Selby, Ashland, board chair
man; Jackson, vice-chairman;
Richard Cottle, Ashland, secretary-treasurer;
and board
members: Selby, Jackson,
James Busch, Ashland; Edd
Rountree, Ashland,' William
Dawkins, Ashland, Dr. Elmo
Stevenson, Ashland and Wil
liam Williams, Medford.
Designed Road !
The forest service has sur
veyed and designed a two
lane, paved, all-weather road
from the summit of the Sis
kiyous on Highway 89 to the
ski area on the north slopes
of Mt. Ashland.
The Oregon and California
County association has ap
propriated S463.000 from 'rec
reation road funds to con
struct this road next summer.
An additional $224,000 has
been appropriated for paving
in the summer of 1964. Prob
lems of snow removal have
been worked out jointly by
several government agencies.
The state highway depart
ment will include adequate
access to this road at the sum
mit of the Siskiyous in its
plans for Interstate 5.
First phase of the project
to be completed by autumn
1963 calls for expenditure of
$171,500. It includes con
struction of a lodge to house
warming facilities, food fa
cilities. ski patrol headquart
ers, restrooms, ticket booths,
first aid station and ski shop.
Airplane Damaged in
Landing; Pilot Okay
A Rosenbalm Aviation com
pany plane was damaged Fri
day evening when the nose
wheel failed to come down as
it was landing. The pilot.
j Gene Powers, was not hurt.
! Medford firemen rcDorted
'that there was damage to thej
i nose and propellors of the j
! plane, a twin-engine convert-'
ed 8-28. Powers said the iiion of Army ana Air nation
wheel's indicating light mii-l Guard troops at the Lloyd
functioned. fCenter.
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY
Pearson Promises
Nuclear Weapons
For Canada Troops
Montreal -ilW- More than
1.500 party supporters from
the key province of Quebec
Saturday cheered liberal lead
er Lester B. Pearson's prom
ice to acquire nuclear weap
ons for Canada's armed forces
it his party is named to form
the next government.
Pearson, opening bis cross
country election campaign,
struck out hard 9t the issue
that split Canadian-American
relations, sparked the defeat
of Prime Minister John Dicf
enbakcr's conservative gov
ernment, and brought on an
April 8 genera! election.
He told a Quebec Liberal
Federation luncheon it was
"illogical and worse" for Can
ada to remain a member of
the nuclear-committed NATO
alliance and refuse to equip
its own weapons at home and
in Europe with nuclear war
heads.
"As long as Canada has this
nuclear equipment ... as
long as they are not aban
doned as obsolete, I believe
we must accept the ammuni
tion which alone makes them
effective, and that's nuclear
warheads," he said.
This and one other direct
reference to the need far nu
clear arms brought a solid
burst of applause from the
Liberal workers who jammed
the Queen Elizabeth hotel ban
quet room. They interrupted
his 35-minute speech 40 times
with applause and gave him
standing ovations, with we
want Mike" chants, at the be
ginning and the end.
Among those who joined in
the applause was Quebec Pre
mier Jean Lesage, the leading
Liberal light In French-Can-
: ada and a man whose support
at least by inference Fed
eral Liberals consider crucial
While he did not speak at the
luncheon, Lesage stood at
Pearson's side during the ova
tions and chatted with him
hand-in-hand while battery
of photographers had a field
day.
Pearson's aides said they
were "very pleased" with the
reception given the redcral
leader nd. In particular, his
defense policy.
Portland -t?!- Gov. Mark
Hatfield received a l-gun
salute Saturday l an inspec-
Wagner Suggests
Terms for Ending
Newspaper Strike
Mayor Agrees to
Adopt JFK Formula
New York -fOT - Mayor
Robert F. Wagner agreed Sat
urday to adopt President Ken
nedy's formula and suggest
terms for settling the 11-
week-old New York News
paper strike if he is unable
to bring publishers and strik
ing printers to agreement in
further mediation efforts.
Wagner asked both sides io
meet with him at City Hall
this afternoon for another at
tempt at settling the dispute
through collective bargain
ing.
The mayor stressed that if
he did take on the third party
roie suggested by Kennedy,
he would not consider it ar
bitration because any recom
mended settlement he might
make would not be final and
binding on either side.
Publishers promptly agreed
Thursday to Kennedy's pro
posal of "independent determ
ination for ending the dis-
pute, now entering its 12ttt e ornnn senor oi west er
week. Printers said that any Jm, as She Russians had said
farm at arbitration was for-
bidden by their constitution.
Exienitv Knowledge
Three non-striking unions
urged Wagner to assume the
roie suggested by Kennedy j
because of his already exten- memorial. Western sources
sive knowledge about the dis- said the Russians sent the
pute. The mayor intervened other four buses to Check
in the strike one month ago point Charlie as a challenge
yesterday and conducted 37 to the allies. They said it was
days of nearly continuous ne- passible the challenge was in-
goliations before the talks
stalled.
In a statement issued
through his office, Wagner
said:
"I have today advised the
publishers and the printers
union thai I am prepared to
suggest to them the terms of
a settlement I believe reason
able and fair to both sides.
This would not be an ar
bitration. It would not be
final and binding. It could, be
rejected in whoie or in part
by either side although, I
wouio nope, oj course, si
would form the basis for a
complete settlement of issues
in the dispute.
Flu Shots Urged
On ill Persons
Flu vaccine shots arc es
pecially important far adults
and children suffering frm a
chronic condition such as
chronic bronchitis, heart di
sease, kidney trouble, Dr. A.
Erin Merkel, Jackson county
public heaith officer stated
Saturday,
The public health officer
said his office has received a
number of telephone calls
from people inquiring wheth
er they should give their fam
ily the vaccine.
Pre-schooi and school age
children especiaiiy shouid re
ceive the vaccine, the pubiic
health officer said. However,
the family physician must
give the vaccine and advisa
bility of taking the shots in
each individual case must be
decided by the physician.
The U.S. public healih
service is recommending the
vaccine. Dr. Merkel said.
Sports Bulletins
Grants Past emerged
winner of th Diitriet 8 A-l
wrestling iourntmtnl at
Medford last nigh! for the
second yr in a row.
Grants Pass had IBS points,
falla-ved by Klemetb F!i
with 13, Medford with IK,
Athlsnd with 23 and Crater
with IS. Th trophy tor the
most pint wc awarded "to
Grants Pi. whoie wreiti-
ri scored 1 1 pins. Klamath
Fails was runnnup with
30.
Ashland Medford High,
with Jim Hill scoring 23
points, rambled over Ash
land SS to 44 in a Southern
Oregon Conference betket
bjll gam her lait night.
Fin! quarter icor waa lied
It-all. but Medford pulled
io 1 !eJ of 3B So 27 by bsif
!ims, and after ihi quart
ers was ahead ti io 3?. Jim
Lamb was top Ashland
scorer with 13 points.
Central Point Crater
high's Comets whipped Klam
ath Falls 78 to &0 her latt
night in Southern Orgo con-
feienc basketball with Louis
ANsrei scoring 28 points.
Klamath led 17 to II at Sha
quarter. Hsiilim count was
37-ail and Crater beaded 54
io 51 alias three periods, Frad
Keller ot Klamath and How-
ard Tomlinsos ot Crater ca
had U points.
24, 1963
ed Negotiator!
n Disarmament
U.S. Guards Stop
Red Soldiers at
Berlin Checkpoint
Attempt to Provoke
incident Suspected
Berlin -TO- U. S. Military
police Saturday held up four
busloads of Russian soldiers
for 48 minutes at Checkpoint
Charlie, the American sector
crossing point, and then forc
ed them to return to East
Berlin.
U. S. officers fold the So
viet convoy commander io
use the more direct Sandkrug
bridge crossing point to reacn
the Foviet war memorial in
tncy wouid.
Seven other buses of Soviet
troops and four cars carrying
officers and officials did use
the Sandkrsig bridge, which
is oniy half b mile from the
tended to create an incident
that would support Soviet
moves to Eel Berlin talks go
ing again.
Talked Excitedly
But although witnesses re
ported five or six Soviet offi- j
cers got out of the blocked i
buses and talked excitedly
with the Americans, they fi
nally turned back without
trouble.
The Russians attempted no
immediate retaliation. Two
U. S. Armv tourist buse. were
not deJaverf when thev enter.
ea East Berlin shortly after
the incident.
The two Soviet convoys car
ried wreaflis for the war me
morial on the 45!h anniver
sary of the founding of the
Red army. A military band
rode in the larger convoy.
British authorities said the
Russians had agreed io use
the Sandkrug bridge entrance
to West Berlin. They asked
the United States io stop the
Russians from using Check
point Chariie, which would
have meant a two-mile drive
through West Berlin by the
Russian buses.
McKay Purchases
GP Supermarkets
Grants Pass Dean E. Mc
Kay o Junction City, who
along with two partners
bought the Groceteria Super
Food Market in Medford last
December, announced Satur
day he has purchased two
Grants Pass supermarkets.
McKay has purchased the
two Byrd's markets, one lo
cated downtown, the other
south of the Rogue River,
from Robert C. Byrd.
McKay, who owns a num
ber of markets In Oregon in
addition to the Groceteria,
announced he plans to retain
the same name and personnel
at each of the Byrd's markets.
Byrd has owned the down
town market since 3848. He
buiit ibe second market s
few years ago.
Basketball Scores
Saturday College Scores
USC 67, Oregon St. 58
Portland 73, Idaho St. S?
EOC 64, Portland St. 82
Cincinnati 55, Tulsa 54
OTl 87, OCE 82
Loyola H. 82, Houston 58
Bradley f, Wichita 83
Duke 108, N. Carolina 93
Illinois BS, Wisconsin 7T
Michigan 71. Purdue 53
Navy 55, Army 48
Arizona St. 78, New Mex
ico 82
Arizona 84. Wyoming 83
Utah 108, Brigham Young
100
Yale 81, Cornell 80 1
Princeton 74, Harvard 80
Northwestern 71, Minne
sota 66
! Saturday Prep Scores
EBgie Point 78, Sacred
Heart 4$
i liiinois Valley 57, St.
Mary's 48
Sutherlin 59, Rogue River
58
Phoenix JV 48, Prospect 42
,-ZPT--1 - fVl fW?--'-"5... o
LEADS SMALL CrtlLD - A mother, her belongings Sashed! The Soviet SrB-ufoiesbfwtrr
Jo her back, leads a small child by the hand as they Reclined is make- anv com
wander through a rubble-fttlcd street in Bssrce, Libya, Sat- meni before ill, a-friinr-r kit
urn-ay, m search of shelter. An earthquake Jsie Thursday for Moscow via Paris 5r
has ieft some 50& dead with as many mare Injured. 13P1) than 2 hours before
U.S., British Aid
Homeless
Of Libya
Barce, Lybte. -
13.S.
and British . military
Saturday worked in ratn and
tnud to bring relief to this
earthqueke-shatteced town aaUorld "War 11 battles Wween Z 11 n
the first reports by American the AUiJ "nd the S f JTTl
witnesses disclosed ih fS! Aft. -,- tJ, TiiJu . vasto? -e UisiSd
extent of the devastation
whfeh hundreds died.
Stars and Stripes, the wit-
Besses Sold how ifce eariii-
quake, worst in Libya's Jiisi-
town, wiped out families as
tfie-y sat down to their Thurs
day evening meal, and
brought a desfh ioii ibai may
go beyond 5CS.
Authorities on the acene
agreed with the death estim
ate and said there were an
other 500 injured and thou-i
sands left homeless. :
Saturday, as She military :
teams brought out more i
bodies from under the rubbie i
of Barce's mud huts and can- j
crete buildings, a shuttle at j
U.S. Air Farce planes andj
brttish army trucks supplied
the survivors, with food.
Neuberger Miffed Over Her
Two Committee Assignments
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Msii Tribuna
Washington Comspondant
Washington -iSpcciai)- Has
Sen. Maurine Neuberger been
the victim of discrimination
by "the Senate establish
ment?" Sen. Joseph Clark !D-Pa.l
ciaims she has been, with the
result that Mrs, Neuberger
has been obliged to serve
against her wish on a "Little
Orphan Annie committee."
The lady senator at least
concedes she was snubbed by
her conservative elder when
new committee pasts were as
signed last week.
As a new senator two years
ago, Sen. Neuberger was as
aigned to the Ranking and
Currency committee and the
Agriculture committee, prob
ably the two least desired
committees. When CanRrcw
convened this year, she hoped
her seniority over Incoming
freshmen senators would gain
her a better assignment or
two.
Mm. Neuberger most of ai!
wanted to be shifted from
Banking to She InSersSaSe
; Commerce eommlSSee, whicit
ideals with regulaSory agen
cies watching out for consum
ers and which handles trans
portation issues such as She
Jonet act, which She Jumfoer-
men want rejea!cd. But Swoflo gain seats on ucn choice itance o obtaining control
more aenfor senators were giv committee. the committee jy,
en Shose vacancies. Mrs. Neuberger admiSs Jo I Senate for 'S
Duns Bill being annoyed ai being pass-! frw I .ents a
The Oregon lady conse-(i over by tbe very senaSors Smtlt ide of x i(ie."
ijuefvSSy ashed for a vacancy i wbo normaljy int ?n Z-n: Jisubergsr has M-rsory-
on She IbSerior committea, j privileges of stsiiority ruJsfor ?aj weii as ideologicai rta
which handle most western ; tbemseivei. She- object iosob io bope Ciaril is ligbS.
ti
Six.
5
Survivors
Tremblor
iWEter, blankets, and medical
teanwUunpltes.
British RAir ottlcers saldfeasis is there- for SoptSmtera
i the-
t&wn-i scene of
cuaay
3n I featf feffrfd
The American .ewffeaJ..,t?,iMa .n t!e ,
iograpfoer. Red Grandy. W
the U.S. press aiiaene to
j Benjthai:!, iibya, who was not
GrartiSy said that 15 seconds
after the first tremor Tfcurs-
day siigbi, "70 per cent of She
city Jay in ruins."
"Stone sod mud houses col
lapsed completely. Concrete
structures were left twisted.
Some survivors saw- their
homes and Jfce-fr families- de
stroyed in seconds.
"Most inhabitants of the
city, located in a fcrtiie vai-i
ley in Eastern Libya, were j
sitting dawn ta their evening j
meals after a day o tradt-1
tfonal fasting required during
the Moslem month of flams-i
dan. 1
resource legislation, such as i
her Dunes park bill. She also I
asked for a third minor com
mittee, Rules, which would i
handle her proposal for feder
al financing o election costs.
The Democratic Steering j
committee gave ber neither.
She was passed over in favor !
of s freshman, GsylortS Nel
son (Wis. for the Interior
post and lost out to two senior
senators for the Rules com-! leader Everett Dsrksen, and
mittee. ! many Southern Democratic
Sen. Clark, an outspoken committee chairmen who are
liberal, pointed out that She hostile to Preside Kcnnc-15-raao
Steering commlSSee, I dy' domestic legislature pro
o which he is a member, is! gram. By Clark's reckoning
controlled: by nine conserva- they control such key commit,
lives. He thinks those- who tec as Approoriatioas, Arm
got their first choices of new Services, Foreign Relations
committees were largely Snose Finance, which this yeae
i senators who sided wish eon- is especially critical haui
ervaiive in the recent scran 1 hoodies tax legislation and
over She anSi-fsiibusSer cioSure i medicare,
rule, whiie those who were ! Libera! sirmgih h srown
given short shrift were among in recent years it "toe S!n
Sbe Siberais who tried in vain tion on the esiabiishirwni bi
So tigbSen filibuster controis. j been very substantia! indcrd, '
Mrs. Neuherger and Sen, C!ark says, sontrndiog tbiit
Wayne Morse were both in sine 1858 the establishment
:Ute latter group, but Morse control of six iossv-
was not vulnerable this year tnittces,
: because he didn't apply (or "Tncrefore time is oa auf
:ncw committee posts. He re-j aide," added Clark. "Utile?
imatni on Foreign Relations, I catastrophe overtakes the lih.
: Labor and the District of Co-ierals E both parties in tli
iiumbla committee. He- still Selection o 5984, 1 predict that
ibeari aears from past fight i we are within sirtking ti-
No. 2?G
Kuznelsov Leaves
As UeS, Debpfs
Readies !o Mum
Conference Cotfght
Unawares by Move
Geneva Tfw Soviet
negotiator VassiSi V. Ksur.ei-
sov ieft the Geneva rft.in.j-
njent conference SaSnrtfoy, ,-;
parently for gooci, i Sfce 's
the rcisim from Washing
tan of the U. S. delegation
chief, William C. Foster.
Diplomats said tiie depsr-
itrft tnr rur nf 5.',,
sav, first clcnutv Sas-ict foe.
eiga minister, dimmed hupp
I frtr Tztrv rtrntrrticc fit -i mr.
clear test ban treaiv.
Kuznetsav's departure nftt-i-oasiy
catnght atiwr (tciPejUonis
unaware. There had-hem tii
sign She tJ. S. r Bntn dele
gations had been told ri his
Bin hv ihr JFVviflx .
scheduled return of Fswicr,
who had been reporissis; io
President Kennedy isi Wash
ington, on ttse Sayiet-stattc-i
neB,otia:ttGtts here.
Bat Xaznetsov's successor
at the bargainfoe tahie, Sowt-i
Envoy j&envyori' Tsarspkis,
via, ,amVmlcttr mm, , 1 , a
V mifm, nf-w nntnr-a
isaraofctn. told -What
-when -we are faced with ih
fues.
llVt did ,not SBt
rraTOCTr,crat
"Tsarapkin has rrtitch
Jrani mjssafforif rar!t
? f "y , &f ?bses"" f
Bestirs! delegates," iiie spokes-
man sssri.
Diplomats had cxfWffci
hope the return oi Foster,
director of the If. S. arm
control and disarmament
agency, might set o a sttc
cessfiil drive So get the tesi
ban talks roiling.
CANCELS TOtfR
Portland- fP6 -Sen. Wayna
Morse (D-Ore canceled a per-
lion of hit Oregon tour it
return to Washington, his office-
here- said Saturday.
serving anotber two years on
the Banking and Comnsre
committee headed by WiiEi
Robertson (D-Vs.), a crosiy
member at the "establish
ment."
ConfroJ C&mraiffeet
The Senate esiao!isrmerv,
according to Ciark, is a bipar
tisan group of dv'tendrrs of
the status quo, including rr
ing Eepublirsns Jiko GOF
Setftortt