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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON U.S. Said Prepared To Aid Any Latin American Nation Facing Communist Overthrow Threat that any government which i to give it." I In its recommendations, the I ionization of American stn.o I ka nn kQ . Tf i C.l. r . " Will (JUSIUUI1 is mat , rH n ento",t'lalhas an' government which asks Sd c,ConSres tiiat the . for help in this matter will united Slates is prepared to receive help," assistant Secre Eive military help to anyitary of Stale Edwin M. Mar i.atin American nation re-: tin told the subcommittee, questing aid to avert a Com-1 "We are prepared militarily vv.c rthrow. it was dis- in anticipation of a political that some freely-elected gov be no bar to unilateral U. S. action where a Ihroal in the ernment in Latin America is overthrown as a result of Communist infiltration and subversion, and this freely elected government requests the United Slates to move in and help them, are we pre pared to do so or has any pol icy decision been made along that line?" Martin replied: "I do think it is difficult to anticipate all the circumstances in which asks us lor help in this mat ter will receive help. We are prepared militarily in antici pation of a political decision Selden called Martin's re sponse "a very direct answer" and said: "I am extremely happy to have it." States seek the "pomnleta rfin- House suhrnmmitf pf nlsn cntH toward the curbing of Com munist subversion activities and traffic in liie hemisphere. But it made clear there should lomatic and economic quaran tine of Communist Cuba by other nations of the hemi. sphere." every effort must be made by the United States to assure collective action by the Or national security exists. The subcommittee also rec ommended that the United decision to give it." The disclosure was maHo d-. r GIANT SAVINGS PLUS 50 FREE RECORDS by, thc House Foreisn Affairs Significantly, the House suocommittee on Latin Amer-j group's main recommendation lea winch recently concluded was that the United States three weeks of investigation should be prepared to use into the spread of Castro-Corn-! military force, if needed, in munist subversion in Latin , resDonse to anv reouest for military force may or may not be used, military force being America help by any hemispheric na what it is and having chain re' A censored copy of the pre viously - secret testimony was made public Thursday by chairman Armistead Selden (D-Ala.). Selden's subcommit tee issued its finding at the same time. tion in danger of being over thrown by Castro-Comriun-ist subversion. Sclden asked Martin during the hearings: "In the event Communist subversion reaches the point actions. Nevertheless, the dec laration of Punta Del Este contemplates bilateral assist ance on request in dealing with Communist subversion. 'Direct Answer' "And our basic position is Presented - A Solution Where To Erect the Statues Cause Of Grim Tug-of-War in Washington By DICK WEST Washington - iliPli - Crises come and crises go, but monu ments are always with us. rear in, year w;V out, I suppose lA menls are the Kir 1 f,?A larSest single t St - ;VJ rUSP nf trin. tion in the capital, give or take cock t a i 1 parties. Right now we West are witness ing a grim lug-of-war over the statue of Gen. John A. Rawlins, who spent a glorious term as secretary of war dur ing the Grant administration. One group has started a campaign to move the statue to Wyoming, where Rawlins once sojourned. This has stim ulated a rival campaign to move it to Illinois, where he was born. Anyone who has ever seen the statue might be" pardoned for suspecting that the caih- DON'T BE I niiimw mm If fklnny. 1 Inw rMlitafiM. a)tf-nl. rendition If ondrrwi- ' r doctor aouut the vi of poor up-' its tBki'Wato-On. U'snch in wo i j hi huti'tin? e.iloncf plus vitjmnij'.mini'raia and l oriv imiimriR nuirirnu, Hot wciKlitof lOtfUOpoimdi flrenortt'd No ovi-rx-uting. S3, farmvchei-kf (ill out , help atiRuu all over b.xiyth, i due to umlt-r llciil Katiifartiort from (hi. K purehued for refund. At drunptU verywnur, Wate-On Emulsion, pint . . ,$3.00 Wate-On Tabits,(96) . . . 3.00 Naw Supar Wate-On, 16 or. . 3.98 paign to move it to Wyoming was instigated by Illinois, and vice versa. But no. The pro posal to move it to Illinois originated in Indiana. Without getting any more deeply involved in that, let us move on to the conilici between the proposed me morial to President Mad ison and the projected an nex to the Library of Congress, One group wants to build the annex on a plot of land that Congress recently ac quired across the street from the library. Another group wants to use that space for the Madison Memorial. Rep. William B. Widnall (R-N.J.), an annex man him self, had reprinted in the Congressional Record this week a compromise solution put forth by one of my col leagues, John McKelway of the Washington Evening Star. Under the McKelway plan, a big hole would be dug at the disputed site and in it would be placed the contro versial $10 million aquarium thc Congress approved last year. Above the aquarium would be erected the li brary annex. McKelway recommends that the annex have glass floors, "so that bored librarians could watch the fish." Over the annex would be placed the proposed new FBI building, which also has cre ated a dispute, and above that would stand the old sand stone columns removed from the cast front of the Capitol. The columns, a source of still another controversy, would support a parking lot PRESCRIPTIONS! DIAL 772-2330 Dick Glan Call Anytime -DAY or NIGHT! Free Delivery Anywhere in Jackson County! Store Hours: 9:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M r Your Headquarters for Greeting Cards Cosmetics' Party & Wedding Supplies Gifts Veterinarian Supplies Your Charge Account Invited At West Main your prescrip tion is tilled "UP to standard NOT down to a price." West fain Pharmacy 135 W. Main Rciall Store at Grape -Ph. 772-2330 for the Supreme Court. And rising from it would be the Madison Memorial. The entire structure would then be crowned by the con troversial Franklin Roosevelt Memorial. McKelway suggested that such an edifice might even top the Washington Monu ment as a tourist attraction. In that, I concur. I also agree with Widnall, who said it "may be the ans wer we have all been looking forward to that is, everyone but the marble salesmen." Two SOC Faculty Members Attend Chicago Meeting Ashland-Dr. Bill Sampson, chairman of the education di vision, and Dr. Alva W. Gra ham, professor of education and social science at South ern Oregon college, represent ed the college at the Eigh teenth National Conference on Higher Education recently in nicago. "Critical Decisions in High er Education" was the theme of the conference. Professors and college ad ministrators, which number ea over i.vuu, stressed new technological teaching devices on one hand and concern for how students can acquire on during attitudes and knowl. edge to deal with the revolu tionary changes ahead on the other. The American college was characterized as a place ot loneliness and confusion. Question Raised The questions, "How can we get indifferent teachers to accept the responsibilities that go with teaching?" and "How can we lead the student to the profound experiences that lie below the surface?" were raised. It was also stated that "teachers are too much con cerned with facts and too little with showing wisdoms," and emphasis was placed on teaching and learning in the old tradition of personal re lationships. Glenn T. Seaborg, chairman of the Atomic Energy Com mission, told conference mem bers that "man's power to mold the world to his liking is almost unlimited," but he added, "it is not too soon to think of the tremendous so cial problems this power would create." Dr. Fred Harrington, presi dent of the University of Wis consin, in a discussion of the federal government and the future of higher education, stated that increasing support of higher education is inevit able and desirable. 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