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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1963)
Weather rORLCAST: VatUhl. thrall Malay IU lfau.rH Dn. rs mainly ovtr Uit aMruulas. ParUy cloudy unijhl an Moa- -- mil waiy it. Low msm ). niitj Monday 15. Hislifat Y.aUrday . . "ii Lownt Y.kUrd.y Moriuni it To S p.m. Yesicrdijr j 58th Year 56 Pages Six Sections Unitad Praaa tntarna tion at full Luitd Wtro . , " Price 10 Cents RIBXJNE Unltaal )iw Intonutlonti Tui) Iaaa4 Win Subscribers ". To roport Improrxr or asst. dalivary ot tho il.ll TrtboM la Mcdlord phono 773-SU1; Ash land call at 418 Brldia at. or t$?nl'MU2: Vrofca, phono B42-3403. baloia 6:43 pjn. daily and 10:30 a m. Sunday. - If ref uiar delivery arrlvoa shortly if!-r yw c,n PUM notify offlco. ihu ollmlnaUm apodal mtaaanfar Samoa. AAEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY. JUNE 23, 1963 No. 80 Highlights From New Pope's First Speech to World Vatican City (UH) - Fol lowing are highlights from Pope Paul VI's Latin lang uage message to the world Saturday. SPIRITUAL INHERITANCE "... Our predecessors . . . have left us a sacred and glorious spiritual Inher itance . . . Pius XI with his i n d o m i t a ble spiritual strength, Pius XII who en lightened the church with the light of a teaching fil led with wisdom, and final ly; John XXIII, who has given the whole world the example of his singular goodness." ' ECUMENICAL ' COUNCIL "The preeminent part of our Pontificate will be con- cerned with the continua tion of the Ecumenical Council, Vatican II, on which the eyes of all men of good will are fixed. This will be the principal work for which we intend to spend all the energies that the Lord has granted us, so that the Catholic church, which shines in the world like a flag hoisted over all distant nations, may attract to itself ajl men ..." SOCIAL JUSTICE , "The unequivocal order . of love for others, a testing ground for the love of Cod, demands from all men a more equitable solution of social problems. It requires help and assistance to un derdeveloped countries . . . it imposes a conscientious study on a universal scale for the improvement of living conditions." WORLD PEACE "Our work, with the help of God, will also devote every effort toward the preservation of the great asset of peace among the nations - a peace which Is ..not only the ' absence of warlike rivalries or of armed blocs, but reflects a . . . constructive and ten acious will for understand-' ing and of brotherhood. . .." CHRISTIAN UNITY i "The common aspiration to restore the unity pain fully, broken in the past Macmillan Vows to Remain in Office London - 0JP1 - Prime Min ister Harold Macmillan said Saturday he will not be pan icked Into resigning over the Profumo sex and security scandal despite a flood of "disgusting" rumors that high er ups may be involved. But in a rare show of emo tion he took note of the na tional debate on his possible resignation later this year and said, "Any decision I have to take will be taken in the spirit in which I have tried to serve the country these years." Political observers saw this statement as his first admis sion he may resign in the fu ture. A group of hecklers,' most of them members of a "ban-the-bomb" group, were pum- meled by Macmillan's sup porters at a rally in suburban Bromley carried bodily to the door and thrown out of the door of the hall where he was speaking. He watched in silence. Macmillan said to resign at this moment would be to make his whole life "worth less and meaningless" and would be untrue to the con victions he has held through 40 years of political life. will find In us an echo of fervent will . . we are opening our arms to all those who take pride In the name of Christ. We are calling them by the sweet name of brother and letting them know that they will find in us constant under standing and benevolence. They will find in Rome the . father's home ..." CHURCH OF SILENCE "In particular, we want the brothers and children of those regions where the church is prevented from using its rights to feel close to us. They have been call ed to participate more closely in the cross of Christ, which will be fol lowed, we are sure, by the radiant dawn of resurrec tion. They will then be able to finally return to the full practice of their pastorial ministry which, by its in stitution, Is meant to bene fit not only individual souls but also the. nations in which it is exercised." FAITH AND LOVE "May a great flame of faith and love, igniting all men of good will, pass over the whole world. May it il luminate the road of recip-' rocal collaboration. And may It draw down on man kind, now and ever, the abundance of divine gifts, the strength -itself of God, without whose help nothing is valid, nothing is sanctified." J I I fiL INAUGURAL SPEECH - Pope Paul VI delivers the inaugu ral speech of his reign in the Slstine Chapel in Vatican City Saturday. Behind him is Monsignor Salvatore Capoferri, an official of papal ceremonies. The Pope said that his pontifi cate would be dedicated to a continuation of tthe unifying ideals of the Ecumenical Council and a peaceful preservation of world order. (UPI) , 1 ;, Pope Paul Pledges To Continue the Ecumenical Design Local Red Cross Chapter Named as Semi-finalist . The Jackson county chap ter of the American Red Cross has been named a semi-finalist - In consideration for the 1962 Lane Bryant annual awards for volunteers engaged in project for the benefit of the community. A citation has been sent to the chapter signifying that it is now in the running for the top awards. Established in 1948, the awards of $1,000 are present ed annuclly to an individual and to a group in an effort to encourage voluntary par ticipation in projects that ben efit American home and com munity life. As its entry, the Jackson county chapter of the Ameri can Red Cross submitted a report, including photographs. on its service to the blind program. According to Jerome E. Klein, awards staff director. semi-finalists were selected by the Bureau of Applied So cial Research at Columbia university in New York, at which time all nominations were subjected to "rigid stand ards criteria of exclusion." "Citations are presented to approximately ten per cent of the nominees meeting these criterir. and surviving this preliminary screening," Klein said. . - - The final selection for the awards will be made by a committee composed of Chris tian A. Herter, former secre- tary of state; writer Marianne Moore; David Sarnoff, RCA chairman of the board: Sen ator John J. Sparkman-of Alabama, and John Hay Whit ney, publisher of the New York Herald Tribune. Vatican City - HIPD - Pope Paul VI pledged Saturday to continue the Ecumenical de sign of Pope John XXIII for Christian unity and world peace. He prayed that a "great flame of faith and love" would envelop the world. -. The 65 - year - Old pontiff quickly assured the world there would ,be no interrupt tion of the work of his prede- cessor which had won the praise of men of all faiths. ' .It was,, so to speak, bis keynote address. Pope Paul spoke in firm, measured tones in Latin in the Sistine chapel before the 79' Cardinals who chose him Friday to lead the world's 500 million Roman Catholics. It seemed likely Saturday that President Kennedy will be the first foreign chief of stale to have an audience with tlEVSC)BRIEFS ITEMS rtOM -D M0W THI WW , TERRORISTS BLOW UP PIPELINE r u ami Torroruli believed to b Communists Saturday blew up a piptlint of !h American owntd Ventiutlan Transmission Corp.. cutting off service ' to sections of the capital. ADENAUER LOOKS TO U.S. LEADERSHIP Bonn - W - Chancellor Konrad Adtnautr said Saiur day night on in. ova ol President Kennedy's arrival that West Germany and th. fr.t world ca.n i be protected from anslavamtnt only und.r the leadership of lh. United Statts. DE GAULLE COLD SHOULDERS OFFER Paris - W - Preiidont Charlas Da Gaullt cold shoulder td an oiler by President Konntdy to matt him during his European tour, reliable diplomatic sources said Saturday. The sources said tha offer was mada through diplomatic ehannils and that It was mora of hint or a suggestion than a formal olitr. California Solons Pass Housing Bill Sacramento, Calif. - IUPD - The California legislature used its final hour Friday night to pass an angrily de bated Fair Housing bill that will cover an estimated 60 to 70 per cent of all dwellings in the state.' . The measure, which could send a racially - prejudiced home or apartment owner to jail, cleared the Senate and Assembly only seven minutes before their mandatory ad journment at midnight. Gov. Edmund G. Brown who made the bill his key civil rights proposal of the six-month session, immediate ly called the passage "an his torical step towards giving every Californian the right to live where he pleases. It was Brown who esti mated the bill would cover 70 per cent of dwellings. Negro Assemblyman W. Byron Rum ford, the Berkeley Democrat who Introduced it, was more conservative at 64 per cent the. new pope. Kennedy, also a Roman Catholic, is due to arrive in Rome June 30, the day of the coronation. U.S. officiala said the Pres ident's arrival probably would be delayed until after the ceremony so as not to clash wim n. : Pope Paul, who has work ed closely, with the Vatican and his three previous prede cessors for half his life, chart ed his own pontificate j with a 2,000 word address that showed the cool mind of an intellectual. ' ' Round of Calls ' ' ', Characteristically, the' new pontiff devoted part of his first day oh missions of mer cy. After praying Saturday evening at the tombs of his predecessors in the Vatican grottoes, he began a round of sick calls both in and outside the Vatican. 1 One person on his list was Enrique Cardinal Pla Y Den icl, 86-year-old archbishop of Toledo, Spain, who was taken to the Spanish Pontifical col lege in downtown Rome after the conclave Friday. He has influenza. ' Another was Bishop Josef Slipyi, Ukrainian Roman Catholic, who was released this year from 18 years in Soviet prisons and detentions. A third was Bishop Angclo Botta. 90, who once taught the pope when he was a priest in Lombardy. Rotta is seri ously ill in an apartment in side the Vatican. Runaway County Prisoner Retaken A prisoner serving time on ica's awesome undcrscas wean- Navy Launches Four Nuclear Submarines Groton, Conn. - HJPD - The United States made naval his tory Saturday by launching four nuclear submarines in simultaneous ceremonies. The subs' combined arma ments are capable of destroy ing any belligerent nation in the world. ' i The occasion also marked the first simultaneous chris tening in the 66-year history of submarine construction. The super-Polaris sub Tecum sen and the attack sub Flash er - one of each type of Amer- Inlegralionisls Promise to Back Kennedy Program No Pledge Given On Demonstrations Washington - (ITU - Key integrationist leaders prom ised President Kennedy full scale support of his civil rights legislation : Saturday but declined to pledge an end t o protest demonstrations which he fears might antag onize bongress against the program. Immediately after meeting with the white and Negro ra cial spokesmen at the White House, the President took two major civil rights actions: - He issued an executive order enabling all govern ment agencies to cut off funds from any federally-assisted construction project where discrimination against Ne groes is practiced. The author ity extends to such state and local projects as highway, hospital, school and other construction. Report Viaws He sent to Defense Secre tary Robert S. McNamara a recommendation by a White House committee that the armed services consider shut ting down military installa tions near cities or localities where race discrimination is widespread. Mr. Kennedy ask ed McNamara to report his views on this and other rec ommendations within 30 days. Senate Democratic -leader Mike Mansfield declared meantime that he would vote to kill the expected Senate Southern filibuster against the civil rights package. Sen ate Republican leader Ever ett M. . Dirksen still has not yet committed himself on the question. Mr. Kennedy made no di rect request to the civil rights leaders for a "no demonstra tion" pledge, but he was hopeful of persuading them to temper their activities, He spoke out forcefully, on the dangers of violence that un disciplined demonstrators can generate, particularly while the sectionally-divlded House and Senate debate his far- reaching program. After the White House meeting, Dr. Martin Luther King, one of approximately 30 white and Negro leaders who- attended, said: "1 made it very clear we. could not in all good conscience call off any massive demonstra tions until the problems that brought these demonstrations into being are solved." Suspect Nabbed in Murder of Leader Washington - OJPll - The Federal Bureau of Investiga tion announced early today the arrest in Greenwood, Miss., of a man being held for the slaying of Negro Integra tion leader Medgar Evers In Jackson, Miss., June 12. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover identified the white man as Byron De La Beck- with, 42. He said Bcckwith was ar rested early today In Green wood, and would be arraign ed as soon as possible. An FBI spokesman said the ar raignment probably would take place in Jackson. Hoover said Bcckworth would be turned over to Jack son authorities - as soon as possible for questioning and filing. of murder charges. J FCC leaves for Visit M Four European Republicans Pick San Francisco as Convention Site Chicago Loses Bid In Committee Action Denver - ll'PO - Republican leaders agreed Saturday to nominate the GOP's 1964 pres idential candidate at a San Francisco convention in the Cow Palace, the setting for Dwight D. Eisenhower's re- nomination in 1956. The action was taken at the final session of a Republican National committee meeting at which a resolution also was adopted indicting the Kenne dy administration on 20 counts, including a "failure to deal effectively with the prob lems of civil rights. Outside of the conference rooms, this three-day assem bly of GOP leaders from throughout the country was loaded with presidential poli tics. Soundings were taken by partisans of Sen: Barry Gold water of Arizona, the current front-runner, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, who has fallen behind, and by un committed party leaders try ing to test the political winds. Spika Talk George L. Hinman of New York, a Rockefeller lieuten ant, invited ndwsmen to his suite Saturday morning to tell them that his findings Indi cated that competition for th presidential nomination "is wide open." Ho said he also wanted to spike "Irresponsible talk here" that Rockefeller might withdraw. - ; After a very feeble protest from Illinois Republicans urg ing a Chicago convention, the national committee approved the recommendation of its site selection committee to go to ( San Francisco for a -j- 8S"a"aaaB.o CHAMPION MARKET LAMB - A Suffolk lamb raised by riamy apcll, lB-ycar-old member of the Talent Bummers 4-H sheep club was Judged grand champion market lamb ot the 110 entered in the first annual 4-H lamb and wool show at the Jackson county fair grounds Friday night. The lamb was bred on the R. 5. Zapcll farm in Talent. Talent Girl Wins Tpp Prize in; 4-H Lamb, Wool Show Tall, blond, 16-year-old kathy Zapell, of Talent, re ceived the grand champion market . lamb - rosette Friday night as a climax to the first day of the two-day first an nual 4-H lamb and wool show conven-1 and sale at the Jackson county President Slated For Audience with Pope During Trip Five Major talks Have Been Planned Washington (UPD PresU dent Kennedy left Saturday night for a 12-day visit to Europe where he will deliver five major addresses and con fer with the leaders of West , Germany, Ireland, Britain . and Italy. ; He also will have an audi ence with Pope Paul VI just before returning home on July 3. This, a visit to the land of his Irish ancestors, and a tour of the Berlin wall will highlight a venture in personal diplomacy that comes at a time ot differing shades ot political trouble In the coutrles he will visit, plus racial unrest In the United States. The President departed alt er a day he spent conferring; with various civil rights fig ures and then saying farewell to his family at Camp David, Long Plannad : . Mr. Kennedy's trip - tha longest foreign tour he has made since entering the White House and his second to Eur ope was planned long be tore- domestic difficulties swirled up In tha 'countries i he wilt visit and in the United : States-as well. i ., - Critics, have said Vie should stay, at home to deal with tha - rampant civil rights crisis, and that this would be just as well because the state ot turmoil in Europe is . such, that little can be accomplish ed anyway. . , , , But the President was said by high V. S. officials to feel that this time of political un- tion opening Monday, July 13, 1964. Speaking for the site com mittee, Jean K. Tool of Colo rado rcnorted that hotel or convention hall problems had been found in Chicago and the other five cities which originally bid for the conven tion. To get the convention, San Francisco pledged S400, 000 In public money from Its convention fund, plus $290, 000 to be raised by a citizens committee. a disorderly conduct charge walked off a work detail Sat urday, ' but was recaptured about two hours after his es cape was discovered. Sheriff's deputies appre hended Alva Allen Doty, 28, at his home at 218 Snowy Butte In., Central Point, at about 6 p.m. He had been out on a work party at the Hanley ranch during the day. When mem bers of the party were round ed up for the trip back to the jail shortly before 4 p.m., Doty was found to be mifiing. onry.- went off the ways to gether here at the Elictric Boat shipyards of General Dy namics Corp. The super-Polaris Daniel Boone was launched at Mare Island, Calif., and the super- Polaris John C. Calhoun hit the waves at the Newport News, Vs., Shipbuilding Co. Flasher is a sistership of the ill-fated Thresher, which sank In the Atlantic April 10 with 129 men aboard. Thresh er was the lead boat of the class. FOUNDER DIES Beverly Hills. Calif. - (UH -J. C. Garrett, president and founder of the Garrett Corp., died Saturday of a heart at tack. He was 55. 5 FILES LIEN Portland - lUPB - Andersen WestfaM Construction Co of Portland has filed a SI. 307, 211 mechanics lien against the Hilton hotel end the Metro politan Hotel Corp. Cuban Exile Leader Resigns in Anger Miami - 1TI) - Dr. Antonio Ma ceo resigned as president of the Cuban revolutionary council Saturday with an an gry blast at other council members for talking too free ly about the landing of exile commandos in Cuba. He said the talk about this week's landings jeopardized underground security and "those risking their lives in the fight." Maceo, who took over as president of the dissention racked council less than two months ago, said he had re peatedly cautioned council members of the "need for discretion" in discussing t h e landings. Since the council chose to ignore his warnings and be cause of the lack of "coordi nation" under his leadership, he said he was resigning as president and member of the exile organization. Portland Leaders Tell Disaster Plans Portland - IUPU - Portland apparently was back in the good graces of the federal government Saturday after disclosing its plans to have some kind of disaster relief program. The City Council voted 4-1 last month to Junk Its Civil Defense program. The disclosure was made here Friday afternoon at a 90-minute meeting between city and Multnomah County officials and S. L. Pittman, assistant U. S. Secretary of Defense who is In charge of the nation's Civil Defense. Pittman pledged support of the government In matching funds for a local city-county disaster relief program If the officials would Include public shelters In their program. They said they would. No amount of federal aid was specified by the assistant secretary. He was insistent on the need for a full-time civil defense coordinator for the Portland area. This brought no adverse comment. I fairgrounds, Thirteen-year -old Balog, of the Sis-Q 4-H sheep club in Ashland, received the reserve market lamb cham pionship. Miss Zapcll, a member of the Talent Bummers 4-H sheep club, exhibited a black-faced Suffolk which was bred at the R. S. Zapell ranch in Tal ent. This is her seventh year of 4-H work. She estimated she had about $15 invented in her lamb. Miss Balog bred her South down cross on her father s ranch on -Emigrant rd. She had been In 4-H club activi ties two years. ' i The two girls were among 110 4-H members plus a few Future Farmers of America members who had one lamb each in the show. This is the first year the lamb and wool events have been grouped in a show sep arate from the regular Jack son county 4-H and FFA fair scheduled this year for Aug. 10-17 at the fairgrounds south of Mcdford. Livestock Auction Veteran Eagle Point 4-H leader and fair board mem ber William Bigham said the new arrangement will save a day of fair time. It will alsd shorten the usually lengthy livestock auction at the end of the week-long event, other leaders said.'- ' About 80 lambs were sched uled to go into the auction ring in the main barn Satur day night following the an- certainty in Eurone makes it nual Jamb barbecue presided doubly Important for' him to over oy jTancis Ji rouse, ad-I go there and' restate the ba- Iplegate 4-H leader, -and-long- uanene tim. flr bnarl mmhr The livestock judging con test and sheep showmanship contests were held Saturday. The wool and sheep shearing contests preceded on Friday. Crater FFA chaplcr from Central Point almost made a clean sweep of the sheep shearing contest . with Clint Gibson, Crater FFA and Steve Clark, Crater FFA, taking first and second places re spectively. Mike Elmore, Ap plegate 4-H club member, came in third,. Local 4-H club officials and fair board members seemed well pleased with this year's lamb entries. Bigham noted that there were only 15 feed ers so classed In this year's show compared to 25 in last year's fair. Mrs. Harlan Can trail, Applegate 4-H club lead er, noted that there were many more lambs graded choice this year than ever before. This is remarkable since this year's lamb events were being run off much ear lier. The young owners of the lambs had two months less to bring their animals up to peak condition. A chill wind kept the show audience to a scattered few in the stands at the main barn both Friday and Saturday sic principles ot'V. S. foreign policy. He will be able to do' so in five major speeches as well as -in individual talks and a news conference.' The' President's first visit to Europe since his confronta tion with Soviet Premier Nl kita S. Khrushchev in Vienna . two years ago has two aims: to tighten the bonds of friend ship with the United States' allies, and to show the Com munlsts that his strategy ot peace means a continued American presence in Europe. Kennedy will stress that presence Wednesday whon he visits U. S. soldiers stationed a few feet from Communist territory at Checkpoint Char lie on the Berlin wall. He will be the first western Allied chief of government to visit Berlin since 1945. ' . The President's European trip will begin with: talks with West Gorman leaders, then swing to Berlin.- Sports Bulletin Saturday Night Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Ntw York 3 Boston 2 (2nd game) Detroit 3 Kansas City I PACIFIC COAST LEAOUB Portland 10 Salt Lake 2 San Diego 10 Spokane t 8saltle 3 Tacoma 0 Brezhnev Seen as K's Successor Medford Woman Hurt In 2-Car Crash Betty J. Bullock of 1507 Ridgeway dr. was reported in sood condition at Rogue Val ley hospital Saturday night following a two-car collision on Hillcrest rd. at about 6 p.m. Mrs. fiullock, driver of one of the cars, suffered a frac tured right arm. A passenger in her car, who was not Im mediately identified, and the driver of the other car. Bar he Write, of South Pacific highway, were both trra.ed at the hospital and released. Moscow - Him - Soviet Pres ident Leonid Ilylch Brezhnev, considered one of .Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's strong est supporters and closest friends emerged Saturday as a leading candidate to suc ceed the 69-year-old Commu nist leader when he steps down from oflice. At Friday's closing session of the Communist Central committee meeting here, Brezhnev and presidium Po litburo member Nikolai Pod- aorny were elected commit tee secretaries. Western observers viewed the move as a possible tirst step toward making the ener getic, bushy browed Soviet president the Communist par ty's "crown prince." As such he would succeed deputy par ty leader and central commit tee secretary Frol Kozlov. Kozlov, long considered the No. 1 candidate to step Into LEONID BREZHNEV Leading Candidate Khrushchev's shoes, suffered a stroke and partial paralysis ' recently. It is uncertsln whe ther he will ever be able to resume his duties. Thus Brchnev, 58. appear ed to be emerging as a possi ble successor to Kozlov. There has been some specu lation among foreigners hers that Khrushchev might be get ting ready to give un some , of his powers because of his age. But there has been noth ing even resembling an offi cial announcement. In another development, the central committee threw Its unanimous support to Khru shchev in his ideological bat tie against Red China. The committee is the highest po litical body in Russia. The committee, in a state' nient published in Saturday's issue of the Communist party newspaper Pravda, termed "groundless Bnd slanderous' China's continuing attacks on Russia's line of "peaceful co existence" with the West.