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52 Pages Six Sections
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JUNE 30, 1963
No. 86
f!
(1
F i
Romney Leads
'Freedom March'
n
Negroes Arrested
In Mississippi
Jackson, Miss. - t'PO - Police
arrested 10 Negroes in Mis
sissippi when they refused to
leave a white park Saturday,
and in Michigan, a potential
candidate or the presidency
led a "freedom march."
Michigan Gov. George Rom
ney pulled off his coat, hum
med a brisk tune and led
about 430 demonstrators
through the fashionable De
troit suburb of Grosse Pointe
to protest alleged racial dis
crimination. The Republican presiden
tial possibility drew criticism
from Detroit Negroes for fail
ing to attend a big racial dem
onstration last Sunday.
He said Saturday civil rights
is "the most critical and ur
gent domestic problem in the
United States."
California March
Demonstrations spread to
the far West, where about 1,
500 orderly, hymn - singing
Negroes marched through an
all - white housing tract at
Torrance, Calif. There were
no reports of violence, but IS
youngsters were handcuffed
and taken away by police aft
er they shouted and jeered
the demonstrators.
In the South, Greenville,
Miss., city police arrested 10
Negroes, eight of them juve
niles, who refused to leave a
segregated park. It was the
first such incident in Green
ville since a picket was arrest
ed there two years ago.
In Chapel Hill, N. C, about
200 white and Negro students
from high schools and the
University of North Carolina
paraded down a main street
demanding desegregation of
business establishments.
J
Prospect Man
In Fair Condition
A Prospect man, Paul Jo
seph Pearson, was reported
in fair condition in Sacred
Heart hospital Saturday night
after he was involved in a
two-car collision about 1:45
p.m. on Biddle rd. near the
freeway interchange.
Driver of the other car,
Maynard Walter Haller, Ter
rebonne, Ore., was cited for
failure to yield right of way.
Haller's wife, Donna M. Hal
ler, was treated as an out-pa-
i tient at Rogue Valley hospital
following the collision,
j Ashland city police report
ed that a vehicle operated by
Hugh Raymond Engstrom
3 Jr., 62S Elkadcr St., struck a
parked vehicle registered to
Roy Rawe, 520 South Moun
Main ave., about 1:07 p.m. Sat
urday on Ashland st. near
'Mountain ave. Officers said
rio injuries were reported and
no citations were issued.
Young Republicans
Pick Gofcvvafer Man
San Francisco - fUPD - The
National Young Republicans
Saturday had a chairman who
supports Barry Goldwater for
president, agrees with the ob
jectives of the Liberty
Amendment to abolish the
federal income tax, and be
lieves that the United States
should put out of the United
Nations.
Donald E. Buzz Lukens, 32
Washington, D. C, Friday
edged another conservative.
Charles McDevitt, 31, Boise,
Idaho, after a wild three-hour
convention battle that ended
with a 318-305 vote for the
winner on the second ballot
, r .... 7
EAST BERLIN MEETING-Sovict Premier
Nikita Khrushchev and East German Com
munist chief Walter Ulbricht, right, wave
to crowd in East Berlin as their motorcade
proceeded from the airport to the city Fri
day. While Khurshchev was in town, there
were hints that he is facing new crises
within the Communist block. (UPI)
Hospitals Present
Court With Bills
Totaling $47,000
Jackson county's three hos
pitals presented unpaid bills
to the county court Friday
afternoon totalling $47,000.
The county court promised
to review the bills, but took
no action Friday. The money
will come from the 580,000
county relief fund if an allo
cation is authorized.
Rogue Valley hospital pre
sented total bills of $25,000,
Ashland Community hospital
$5,000 and Sacrod Heart, $17,-
000. The indigent patient
bills are presented each year
to the county court in Oc
tober, March and June.
S3 A Day
The three hospital adminis
trators and business mana
gers, Jack Sturmbcrg, Sac
red Heart; William Huntley,
Ashland; and Charles Gustaf
son, Rogue Valley, said each
hospital expends the equival
ent of $3 a day in charity.
The Rogue Valley repre
sentative estimated that of
the hospital's $l'i million an
nual income it should re
ceive, 10 per cent represents
unpaid bills.
Transients make up a large
portion of the bills, the three
representatives agreed. Quite
a few come from elderly resi
dents. The state welfare com
mission's new extension of
the medical aid to the ag-d
program will help, they said.
Lot Somt Incomt
However, they also esti
mated the three hospitals are
losing 40 per cent income on
welfare patients due to the
welfare commission's system
of pro-rating hospital bills.
Jackson county people are
apparently healthier and few
er are unemployed compared
to other counties which has
resulted in fewer charity pa
tients in Jackson county hos
pitals than in other counties,
the three men agreed.
The county pays about one
third of the overall unpaid
bills from the three hospitals,
it was estimated. About 20
per cent of the local hospital
admissions are from out of
county.
Hole Blasted in
Berlin Wall; 'K'
Facing New Crises
Berlin - OJPU - Anti-Com
munists blasted a hole in the
Berlin wall Saturday in de
fiance of the East Berlin visit
of Premier Nikita S. Khrush
chev, and signs multiplied
that Khrushchev was running
into some fresh new political
crises. .
The anti-Reds blew a two
by seven foot chunk of cinder
blocks out of the six-foot high
wall. The wall waj not pierced
and the concrete slab on the
top was not disturbed. The
explosion, the 17th since the
wall went up Aug. 13, 1961,
was about 250 yards from the
Fricdrichstrasse crossing point
known as Checkpoint Char
ley. At New Low
Relations between the So
viet Union and Communist
China plunged to an all time
low Saturday and Western
diplomats were speculating
openly that Romanian leaders
might be snubbing Khrush
chev, perhaps to line up with
Albania on the side of Red
China.
Communist sources said
Saturday night Khrushchev
was planning to open a Red
summit meeting in Berlin to
day - a day ahead of previous
plans. Leaders from Hungary,
Czechoslovakia, Poland and
Bulgaria either were here or
expected by this morning.
French Communist politburo
raS(Q)BRIEFS
MISS X' TESTIFIES IN VICE HEARING
' London -'t fl - A 19-ytir-old girl identified in court ai
"Mm X" testified Saturday at the pro-trial rice hearing
Of locieiy osteopath Dr. Stephan Ward that ha triad to
flat her to parform in a bedroom equipped with a peek
through mirror.
CHINESE COMMANDO GROUPS SAID SMASHED
Tokyo 1TP Communist China "smashed" aix National
ist Chinas commando groups in south mainland coastal
areas in June, Communist Naw China naws agency re
port said Saturday.
TENSION MOUNTS IN ARGENTINE CAMPAIGN
Buanos Aires - itn - Military-Poronist tension mountad
Saturday at campaigning for tha July 7 presidential elec
tion moved into tha homestretch beneath a cloud of
cynicism concerning military intentions.
HENNI DOUBTS WORTH OF JFK VISIT
- Roma - 'tit - Socialist leader Pietro Nenni said Satur
day President Kennedy will accomplish little on hit visit
to Italy bacausa of tha "political void" that exists her.
Court Approves
Change In Curve
The county court Friday
agreed that the curve angle
near the intersection of Table
Rock and Modoc rds. should
be changed, but did not say
when the work would be
scheduled.
Lawrence Dclos Hull, 46,
a long time orchardist in the
Table Rock district, was kill
ed Wednesday morning in
front of his home near the in
tersection when the brake
reach broke on a logging
truck and the out-of-control
loaded trailer hit Hull.
County Commissioner Ed
win Taylor, who lives in the
area said Friday he had sign
ed a petition to be presented
the county court for straight
ening the curve.
A request earlier that
speed limits be set on the
road was rejected by the state
speed control board, County
Judge Earl M. Miller noted.
The county court had ap
proved the request made in
two petitions presented by
the Table Rock Ladies' club.
County Engineer Robert J.
Carstensen said the curve
could not be blamed for
Wednesday's fatality.
member Etienne Fajon also
arrived Saturday.
But there "wis still no an
nouncemen(that Romanian
party leader Gbeorghe Gheor-ghiu-Dej
was coming, and no
sign that he had arrived. Dip
lomats said they wondered
whether Romania had decid
ed to boycott the expected
conference, but some sources
said he had been ailing.
It was noteworthy that Ro
mania alone of the East Euro
pean satellites published
June 14 attack by Communist
China on Khrushchev's poli
cies of "peaceful coexistence,"
Publication of the attack was
banned in the Soviet.
Sino-Soviet relations chill
ed further Saturday with the
Peking charge that Russia has
demanded the recall of five
Chinese nationals, three of
them embassy employee
from the Soviet Union for dis
tributing pamphlets contain
ing the attack on Khrushche.
The Peking move came In
the wake of Khrushchev's
charge, also published Satur
day, that China had pushed
relations between the two
countries "to the limit."
Other Speculation
In Moscow and other Euro
pean t-pitals there was spec
ulation, too, that a July 5
meeting in the Soviet capital
designed to heal the rift be
tween the two Communist gi
ants might even be canceled
or, If held, almost certainly
would fail.
In Moscow Saturday dele
gates to an international wom
en's congress ended a week
long meeting by howling
down the Chinese delegation
for attacking, then voting
against a congress resolution
in fs.vor of general disarma
ment and peaceful coexist
ence.
Congress Chairwoman Ma
ria Rossi of Italy even threat
ened to rule Chinese delegate
Madame Yung Yun-Yu out of
order for lack of respect to
ward the congress at a final
tempestuous session.
Kennedy,
To Tress
80,000 Irishmen
Give President
Roaring Sendoff
Kennedy Concludes
Nostalgic Visit
Galway, Ireland - fUPD -Eighty
thousand Irishmen in
full throat gave President
Kennedy a roaring sendoff
Saturday from a wild and
nostalgic three day visit to
the land of his forefathers.
Four times the normal 21,.
000 population Jammed into
this beautiful town on Gal
way Bay and gave the youth
ful U.S. President a cheer
that sounded like a rebel yell
when he received the freedom
of the city.
Lord Mayor Patrick Ryan,
peaking in Gaelic, told the
President he had honored this
section of western Ireland
which is the home territory
of the Fitzgeralds, Kennedy's
family on his mother's side.
We have granted this free
dom from our hearts," Ryan
said.
And the throng thundered
Its approval.
As Kennedy entered Eyre
square, where the ceremony
was held, he faced a forest of
outstretched hands. Ignoring
pleas from his anxious secur
ity guards, he shook as many
as possible before going to
the dais.
Out in Galway Bay a fleet
of fishing trawlers ran up
white semaphores spelling out
"Kennedy."
As his helicopter approach
ed Galway from Dublin, Ken
nedy could see below him the
Irish national flag formed by
320 children from the convent
of Mercy School dressed In
green, white and gold.
The weather was chilly and
damp, but not the enthusiasm.
From early morning Irish
men poured into Galway by
bus, car, pony cart, bicycle,
train and foot.
"Galway loves you.
shrieked a young girl as Ken
nedy passed in a car.
acmillai.
HanF For
Test Um
CONGO CELEBRATING
Lcopoldville. Congo -CTl-
The Congo celebrates the
third anniversary of its in
dependence today in an at
mosphere electric with new
threats of violence in seces
sion torn Katanga province,
a
Star Station Crew
Fighting Utah Fire
A 25-man inter-regional fire
suppression crew from Star
Ranger station left the Med
ford airport Saturday after
noon to help fight a 1,000-
sere fire In Utah.
ine specialized crew was
dispatched to the Splatter
Creek fire on Fish Lake Na
tional forest near Richfield
Utah, about 100 miles south
of Salt Lake City.
The crew, composed chiefly
of college students, had been
training up until the time it
was dispatched to its first fire
yesterday. Rogue River Na
tional forest officials said. The
crew was flown in a corest
service C-46 plane based at
Redding, Calif.
Such crews are strategical
ly located throughout the
country to be dispatched
wherever needed This is the
second year an inter-regional
crew has beep. bsed at Sla
Ranger station.
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REPLIES TO SPEECH-Hair rumpled by
the wind, President Kennedy replies to a
welcoming speech by British Premier Har
old Macmillao (right) at the airport in
Gatwick, England, Saturday. The U. S.
chief executive arrived for week end talks
with Macmillan after a triumphant three
day tour of Ireland, (UPI)
MacAdoo Is Winner
Of Rooster Crow;
Over 2,000 Watch
Rogue River-The roosters , Sam,, In a Chinese Pagoda and
Trieste Finds
Huge Crater
On Ocean Floor
'Mr. Zip' Will
Appear Monday
A life-sized "Mr. Zip" sales
man designed to sell the U.S.
Post Office department's new
zone improvement plan, will
be stationed in the lobby of
the Medford post office Mon
day morning to remind the
public that July 1 is the day
for adoption of Zip codes.
Postal cards will go into
the mail the same day, ad
dressed to all post office pa
trons, Informing them, offi
cially, of their Zip code num
bers, Al Bradford, acting post
master, said.
The Zip code numbers, an
nounced Wednesday, will re
main as reported, Bradford
said. He was informed that
there would be no change in
the White City number, al
though the post office be
comes a Medford branch Monday.
The same or similar at
tention getters" will be dis
played in all post offices of
the area and postal cards will
be mailed from all post offices.
Medford is the sectional
center for ,'ackson and Jose
phine counties for the new
project for expediting the
mail throughout the nation
UN DISCUSSION SET
Geneva - 4IPU - United Na
lions Secretary General U
Thant and International La
bor Organization (ILO) chief
David A. Morse will meet
July 8 to discuss expelling
South Africa from the U.N.,
it was announced Saturday.
Spcrts Bulletins
Buffalo, N. Y. - art -Southern
California's Bill
Nelson hurled two second
half touchdown passes io
Washington State's Hugh
Campbell Saturday night to
power the Wast to a 22 21
victory over tha favored
East in the third annual
All America football gam.
failed to establish a record
at the 11th annual Rogue
River Roostor Crowing con
test Saturday afternoon, but
the people did, with well over
2,000 attending, according to
contest officials.
MacAdoo, a beautiful Gold
en Sealwright rooster owned
by 16-year-old Don Reld,
Grants Pass, crowed 00 times
in 30 minutes. This was 19
crows less than the mark set
by all-time champion Beetle-
baum, a Rogue River bird, In
1953, but It was enough to
win its young owner a sack
of 130 silver dollars, a small
golden rooster trophy and
rooster's name on a plaque.
40 Is Average
Most of the crow totals
Saturday afternoon were
around 40 with the birds
opening wide their beaks and
throwing out their feathered
chests in the last few minutes
of the contest. The sun burst
ing through the dark clouds
which hung low over most of
the valley may have helped.
Other winners and their
owners were: Jose, owned by
Mrs. C. P. McCown, Grants
Pass, 80 crows; Willie Win,
owned by Susan and Kelly
Simmons, Rogue River, third
with 67 crows; tied with Billy
The Rooster, owned by Ricky
Lopez, 15, Evans Valley, also
67 crows; and Geronimo,
owned by Carl Sandccn,
Rogue River, 65 crows, fifth.
Geronimo was first last
year with 63 crows.
Visitors From. Afar
Visitors to the contest this
year came from as far away
as Corpus Christi, Tex.; St.
Paul, Ark.; Manhattan, Kans.,
and Washington, D. C.
The rooster, George, in a
covered wagon, owned by
Robert Miller, Rogue River,
was rated as having the most
spectacular cage; and Silent
National League
St. Louis 2 Houston 1
Pittsburgh 4 Naw York 3
Steelworkers Union,
Producers Sign Pact
Pittsburgh - fUPD - The
United Steelworkers Union
and the nation's "Big 11" steel
producers climaxed one of the
most successful collective bar
gaining ventures in labor his
tory Saturday by signing 21
month contrac'.j.
Achieved after 5' j months
of informal bargaining within
the union-management human
relations committee, the con
tract becomes effective Aug.
1, and is highlighted by a 13
week vacation every five
years for top seniority em
ployces.
"Let's hope for good pros
perity and steady employ
ment," said USW President
David J- McDonald, the un
ion's principal signatory.
owned- by .Rusty Randall
Grants Pass, as having the
most outstanding cage.
Lyne Milton
Rogue River girl was, crown
ed queen of the contest In
ceremonies earlier In the day
which also included a fashion
show, talent show, various
races and games. No parade
was held this year,
Howard Norwood, former
10-year resident of Rogue
River, civic leader and one
of the prime backers of the
crowing contest, was master
of ceremonies. He is now
manager of the Mid-Town
motel In Portland.
The bird from farthest
sway was Captain Jack, en
tered by Peggy Combs, Ven
tura, Calif., granddaughter of
Shade Combs, Grants Pass,
originator of the contest.
A greased pig scramble
followed the afternoon rooster
crow, and a dance was held
In the school gymnasium ad
jacent to the school grounds
on which the rapidly growing
Rooster Crow is held.
Aboard the USS Fort Sncl-
ling at sea - 0IPD The Navy
deep diving bathyscaph Tri
este- auiurutiy reooriea me
discovery of a huge, crater on ,e
1 R .nr. I
u. vrn,. the ocean floor near where camP
Leaders Hammer
Out Strategy For
Moscow Meeting
Lengthy Talks Held
After JFK Arrival
Chelwoart Gate, England -
01P& President Kennedy and
Prime Minister Harold Mae
millan agreed in lengthy talks
Saturday night to press hard
for a nuclear test ban treaty
with Russia as the major issue)
in the American leader's
strategy for peace."
They met for 00 minutes
alone, then called in their top
advisers to hammer out strat
egy instructions for the Brit
ish and American negotiators
who will meet with the Rus
sians on -the critical nuclear
issue in Moscow July 15.
Concentrate Effort '
Macmillan's spokesman.
Harold Evans, said the two
leaders last night were con
ccntrating entirely on the nu
clear test ban Issue because
they wanted to coordinate spe
cif ic and effective Instructions
in an effort to persuade tha
Soviets to move forward a
meaningful agreement" to
halt the perilous nuclear arms
race.
Kennedy arrived from his
sentimental journey to Ireland
Saturday and immediately
plunged mto .major discus
slons on world affairs with
Macmillan. Their talks are ex
pected to take in the new crl
hitting the Communist
the submarine Thresher was
believed to have gone down
April 10.
. The Navy snid the Trieste,
which completed its fourth
dive Saturday,- was cruising
along the bottom about a mile
and a half below the surface
of the North Atlantic when it
came upon the huge liolo.
The crater was said to be
about 40 feet deep and 200
feet wide.
Although officials caution
ed that the hole inijjht be part
of the natural topography of
the ocean floor, it had not
been noted in any of the prev
ious dives or In nny of the
underwater photographs
taken.
The hole was said to be
"quite near" the spot where a
3.000 . pound compressed air
tank, or "bottle" similar to
those used on nuclear sub
marines, was photographed
earlier this month.
Evans said the two men
discussed the nuclear test ban
within "the general context of '
East-West relations." This wag
an obvious reference to Ken
nedy's hope to take advantage
of the ferment in the Commu
nist world to persuade Pre
micr Nikita S. Khrushchev to
accept tension-easing agree
ments. '
Give Instructions
Evans said the- President
and Macmillan Intended to
finish last night the Instruc
tions to their two negotiators
at the Moscow nuclesr talks.
These will be U. S. Undersec
retary of State' W. Averell
Harriman and British Minis
ter of Science Lord Hallsham.
Their meeting coincided
with Khrushchev's sctlon la
calling his Communist satel
lite leaders to East Berlin for
a Red summit meeting on
Monday.
Pope Paul VI To Be Crowned
In St. Peter's Square Tonight
Vatican City -lUrll- Amid
the splendors of St. Peter's
square, set off by brilliant
floodlights and glowing torch
es, Pope Paul VI will be
crowned tonight In St. Peter's
square as the 263rd ruler of
the Roman Catholic church.
Princes, presidents, prime
ministers and ordinary citi
zens of Rome and all the
world will be witnesses to the
stirring ceremony which will
begin at 6 p.m. and end some
three hours later.
The color and pageantry of
the papal coronation, almost
unsurpassed by any other cer
emony In the modern world,
are expected to draw 300,000
persons to the square itscll
and millions of others through
out Europe to their television
sets for the live transmission.
It will begin with a long
procession of cardinals,
prirsta, Swiss guards end the
Pope himself serous the great
square that has so often down
through the centuries been the
scene of historic events.
Then the Pope will sing s
mass, joined by the crowd In
perhaps the greatest choir In
church history.
Finally, Alfredo Cardinal
Ottavianl, senbr i irdinal dea
con, will place the three-tiered
jcwcl-encrusted papal crown
on the head and intone in
Latin the ritual words that
mean:
"Receive the tiara adorned
with three crowns snd know
that thou art father of princes
and kings, guide of the world
and vicar of Jesus Christ our
Lord to whom be honor and
glory without end."
Pope Paul, a 65-year-old
north Italian Intellectual, was
elected June 21 on the third
day of a secret Vatican con
clave. Until then he had been
Giovanni Battista Cardinal
Montini, archbishop of Milan,
a man close to both Popes
Plus XII and John XXIII and
a leader of liberal thought in
the Catholic church.
His election came 18 days
after the death of Pope John.
For the first time In mora
than 100 years, Paul decided
to have the coronation in St.
Peter's square, rather than
inside St. Peter's basilica, to
allow as many persons as pos
sible to see It. He scheduled
It near sundown to spare both
himself and the crowd as
much as possible the Intense
summer heat of Rome.
I sfr . .--pi
CORONATION TONIGHT-Aj last minute preparations for
his coronation were being completed, Pope Paul VI waved
to crowds outside the Church of St. Charles In Rome Sat
urday. The pontiff celebrated Mass at the church for pit
(rims from Milan, where he was Archbishop before his
elevstion to the Papacy. (UPI)