Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 29, 1963, Image 2

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    French President Rejects Moscow Nuclear Test Ian fact
Paris - IUPD - President
Charles de Gaulle today re
jected the Moscow partial lest
ban agreement and turned
down Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev's - non-aggression
pact proposal.
. De Gaulle announced he is
inviting the United States,
Britain and Russia to a con
ference this year to discuss
disarmament of vehicles for
carrying nuclear weapons.
Friendship For U.S.
. At the same time, he de
clared emphatically that re
lations between the United
States and France are based
on "friendship and alliance"
and went out of his way to
stress his friendship for the
United States in a gesture
seemingly designed to pave
the way for a reconciliation
meeting with President Ken
nedy in Washington early
next year.
De Gaulle made his posi
tion known at his first news
conference in more than six
months. It lasted one hour
and 20 minutes.
Continues Nuclear Plans
The French president said
his country will push ahead
with its own nuclear plans un
less the United States and
Soviet Union agree to destroy
and ban all nuclear weapons.
"We do not yet seem to
have reached that point," he
told the more than 900 news
men and officials crowded in
to the hall of the presidential
Regional Edition
Page 2A
MedfordSWribune
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1983
Elysee Palace for the rare
conference.
De Gaulle did not flatly
state he will not sign the Mos
cow agreement which will ban
nuclear weapons testing in the
atmosphere, outer space and
underwater.
But he made it clear that he
would take such a step only
as part of a broader general
nuclear disarmament treaty.
This is in line with the policy
he has consistently followed.
Plans Nuclear Conference
However, he did make it
clear he would not have any
part of a nonaggression pact
between the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization and the
Communist Warsaw Pact pow
ers which has been suggested
by Khrushchev. The United
States and Britain agreed in
the Moscow talks to consult
their allies on other moves to
ease the cold war, including
such a treaty.
De' Gaulle announced he
will invite the three other
nuclear powers the United
States, Britain and the Soviet
Union to a conference this
year to discuss nuclear prob
lems. As predicted, the French
president went out of his way
to stress the friendship and al
liance between the United
States and France despite ex
isting disagreements.
De Gaulle did not actually
propose a meeting with Ken
nedy. But French sources said
his remarks were designed to
open the way for talks be
tween the two governments,
leading perhaps to a De
Gaulle visit to Washington
early next year.
There were no major sur
prises in De Gaulle's remarks,
made in reply to prepared
questions given by newsmen.
De Gaulle usually prepares
the questions and answers in
advance of his rare meetings
with the press.
Four weeks of things to do and sights to see in
San Francisco, the eventful city.
TUCJtTDC ntf Honey" with Robert Weeds and
I n CA I If C Molly Picon concludes Its engagement at the
Geary Theatre August 3. August 6-24, "A Man for All Seasons",
excitedly received by London end New York eudlences, Is the
play at the Geary Theatre. "Beyond the Frlnje" opens A.ut 2
also at the Geary. "Zenda" starring Alfred Drake and Anne
Rogers will have its world premiere In San Francisco beginning
August 5 at the Curran. This fourth production of the Civic Light
Opera Season Is scheduled to open on Broadway In the Fall. Au
gust 22-25, Ballet Felklorice of Mexico, one of the world's lead
ing dance companies in Its first S. F. appearance. An S. Hurok
presentation It will be seen at
the Masonic Memorial Auditori
um. August 4, Summer Shake
speare Festival, Hall of Flowers,
Golden Gate Park; three popular
plays at 2, 5, and 8 PM. "The
Establishment," a new satirical
revue opens August 12 at the
hungry I. "Under the Yum-Yum
Tree" Is now In Its second year
at the On Broadway Theatre.
m3
i
I f r"v
1
MIICIP August 3, 7, U, 14
IIIUOIU andl7-TheS.F.Art
Commission presents
the final concerts in
the summer "Pops"
series with Arthur
Fiedler conducting
the S. F. Symphony;
outstanding, young
artists appear as solo
ists on each program.
Masonic Memorial Auditorium. Au
gust 9 Ray Charles and the Ree
lets at the Cow Palace. Midsum
mer Music Festival programs tor
August presented without charge
at Sigmund Stern Grove are "Ma
dame Butterfly" on August 11;
"Music Man" August 18, and the
S. F. Ballet Company on the 25th
(2 PM in the open air theatre).
. 1QT The Legion of Honor's principal exhibition for August (thru the 21st) Is
, nil I Old Master Drawings from Chatiworth, a selection of 114 master draw
ings from the collection of the Duke of Devonshire. The exhibit is being shown
In only six museums In the United States. Opening August 29 at the deYoung
Museum, Gold of the Andes, Treasure of Parui over 500 magnilicent Peruvian gold
objects dating from 200 B.C. to the 16th Century. Included are idols, ceremonial
vessels, crowns, Jewelry and weapons. The S. F. Museum of Art features the 1963
Wescon Industrial Design Awards thru the 15th; Pottery by Oartrud and Otto
Nattier thru the 16th. Opening on August 10 Recent Painting USA: The Figure.
CDnDTC August 25 s. f.
OrUniO daera play Cleve
land Browns In a pre-season game
at Kerar Stadium. The S. F, Giants
meet Milwaukee August 20, 21 and
22; Cincinnati on August 23, 24 and
25; St. Louis on August 26, 27 and
28 at Candlestick Park. The 61st An
nual S. F. City Tennis Tournament
on three weekends August 10, 11,
17 end 18, 24 and 25, at Golden Gate
Park Courts. Oaelle Football is
played at Balboa Sta
dium, Ocean and San
Jose Avenues on Sun
days at 1 PM except
on August 4. Polo
matches continue at
Golden Gate Park Sta
dium, Sundays, 1 PM.
Cow Palace leatures
Wrestling August 10,
RollerDerby August 11.
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS
San Francisco Flower Show, Hall of Flowers,
Golden Gate Park, August 22-25, offers a
once-a-year opportunity to see outstanding
blooms of flowers most associated with San
Francisco: fuchsias, dahlias, tuborous be
gonias, roses. Outdoor garden displays,
floral arrangements, and the bonrai exhibit
are included in this spectacle. The Ice Fol
lies can be seen daily except Monday at
Winterland. August 3 and 4 the All Arabian Horse Shew at the
Cow Palace; arena performances Saturday and Sunday at 1 PM
and Saturday night at 7:30 PM. Aucust 30, 31, and Sept. 1
Ringling Bros, and Barnum and Bailey Circus, Cow Palace. The
Venetian Room of the Fairmont Hotel presents Pater Llnd Hayes
and Mary Haaly thru August 7; Keely Smith opens on the 8th
and the Mills Bros, on the 29th. The Four Freshmen appear at
the Off Broadway August 919; The Stan Kenton Orchestra
begins Its engagement on August 30. "Parade" is the new
musical revue at the Purple Onion. Bimbo's 365 Club offers a
Continental Revue thru the 21st; Dave Barry, comedian and
The Dusty Rhodes are featured entertainers sterling the 22nd.
Arrangements for group activities made without charge. Write: )
SAN FRANCISCO VISITORS BUREAU W
1375 Market Street, San Francisco 3, California
Two Accidents Are
Checked by Police
Mcdford police investigated
two non-injury vehicle acci
dents in the city Saturday.
There were no accidents Sun
day, according to police re
ports. Kenneth Robert Urgan, 24,
of 636 Garfield st was cited
for violation cf basic rule
after his vehicle collided
about 5:19 p.m. with a car
driven by John Ruben Phil
lips, 86, of 703 Beatty st. The
mishap occurred on Riverside
ave. near Fourth at.
Police also reported that a
vehicle operated by Ruth Cle
ment Clogston, SO, of 2138
West Main st., struck a park
ed car registered to Effener
A. and Isabel L. Anderson,
3041 Delta Waters rd., about
4:26 p.m. while it was parked
on Eighth st. No citation was
issued.
Sen. Morse Heads U.S.
Delegation to Peru
Lima, Peru-IUPD-Scn. Wayne
Morse (D-Ore.) headed the
U.S. delegation as Fernado
Belaunde Terry assumed the
presidency of Peru in a cere
mony here Sunday.
Morse presented Belaunde
a personal letter from Presi
dent Kennedy.
MOVIE CZAR CRITICAL
Washington - IUPII - Eric
Johnston, president of the Mo
tion Picture Association of
America, was reported today
In "quite critical condition"
from a stroke he suffered
June 17. Johnston, 66, was
hospitalized last month after
suffering a cerebral thrombosis.
Hike in National
Debt Not Needed,
Dillon Declares
Washington - IUPD - Treas
ury Secretary Douglas Dillon
told Congress today it will not
have to raise the national debt
limit to another record high
this summer after all.
Dillon made the announce
ment at a session of the House
Ways and Means committee.
Dillon has decided that the
Treasury can handle foresee
able red-ink spending at least
until November if Congress
merely extends the existing
debt limit of $309 billion, he
said.
Expires Sept. 1
The present ceiling expires
Sept. 1. It had been expected
that Dillon might ask that the
limit be set at, or slightly less
than, $315 billion to accom
modate deficit spending for
the fiscal year ending next
June 30.
A simple extension of the
$309 billion ceiling could re
duce the battle that adminis
tration forces had anticipated
over the debt limit legislation.
However, even if the sim
ple extension is voted. Con
gress presumably would have
to act again in the fall to
provide a higher ceiling for
the remainder of the fiscal
year.
Two Escape Injury
As Plane Hits Wire
Battle Ground, Wash.-IUPD-Two
Vancouver, Wash., men
escaped Injury when their
light plane struck a power
line while landing at a priv
ate airstrip seven miles north
east of here Sunday.
They were William Hoppa,
41, the pilot, and Don Gor
man, 25. The landing gear of
the single-engine Cessna air
craft snagged the line and it
flipped over. The plane was
demolished.
Softer Patrolman
Raps City Support
Baker-flJPU-Patrolman Don
ald M. Dima has resigned
from the city police force ef
fective Aug. 1 with a state
ment that the city administra
tion has failed to support the
department.
Dima, 24, is the third police
man to resign in the past
month. The .others said they
were leaving to take higher
paying jobs. Dima said he
will seek a job in Ketchikan,
Alaska.
Foreign Briefs
MINE WORKERS ON STRIKE IN SPAIN
Oviedo, Spain - (I'PD - An stimated 8,000 mint workers
remained on strike today despite dismissal notices sent by
mine management to all strikers. The miners walked out
July 19 to protest a fin assessed a miner and to demand
bonus pay they said was withheld.
IVAN THE TERRIBLE MODEL BEING BUILT
Moscow - IUPII - A Russian anthropologist today was at
work constructing a plastic replica of Ivan the Terrible to
show moderns how the Csar looked in real Ufa. Prof. Mik
hail Gerasimov Is making his model from a study of Ivan's
skeleton in a Kremlin church tomb.
CAPTIVE TRAINING BALLOON EXPLODES
Abingdon, England - IUPD - A captive Royal Air Fore
training balloon exploded Sunday and smashed windows of
nearby homes. No Injuries were reported.
BRITISH DEFENSE MINISTRY HEAD HINTED
London - IUPII - The Sunday Express speculated Sunday
that Aviation Minister Julian Amery may take over Britain's
reslyled Detenie Ministry. Amery is Prime Minister Harold
Macmlllan's son-in-law.
STAY AND PLAY
ANOTHER DAY!
The people of Oregon and the Rogue Rivjr valley have the welcoma
mat out for YOU and all who visit this state this summer. If YOU are
an Oregonian, become a good host and sea that your own guests and
tourists, toe, see Crater lake, the museum and historic points In Jackson
ville, llfhia Park, Diamond lake, lake of the Woods and Howard Prj'.rie
lake, the Oregon Caves and ether fine attractiont herel
MEDFORDtJTRIBUNE
"-frva:L-.-.-:
yet -'ri -- .-
U.S. Proposal To Solve
Portugal Problem Opposed
United Nations, N. Y. -(UPD-A
U. S. proposal for negotiat
ed independence for Portu
guese Africa encountered op
position from both Portugal
and the Africans today.
U. S. and British rejection
of a resolution backed by all
the Africans countries - ex
cept boycotted South Africa
brought resentment among the
African leaders, but moves
were under way to seekla com
promise that would meet
Western approval.
The United States and Bri
tain both held that the reso
lution, sponsored by Ghana,
Morocco and the Philippines,
was couched in terms of or
ders the council is empowered
to issue against threats to the
peace' or aggression.
Foreign Minister John
Karefa-Smart of Sierra Leone
planned to deal with that con
tention when he addresses
the council today.
Karefa-Smart told th coun
cil Friday he would present
"irrefutable evidence of pres
ent and continuing acts of
war which are being perpe
trated in the Portuguese colo
n i e s , including wholesale
bombings of defenseless vil
lages with planes which,
since Portugal does not make
planes, we can only assume
are gifts of her NATO
friends."
Special Session,
Enters 4th Week
In California
Sacramento - IUPD - The leg
islature went back to work to
day after a long week end re
cess designed primarily to let
tempers cool.
It was the fourth week of a
special session called by Gov.
Edmund G. Brown July 8 to
bolster state finances and
spending after the regular ses
sion ended June 21
The six-month general ses
sion adjourned with what
Brown called a "skeleton"
budget totaling $3.14 billion
and without adopting a series
of tax reforms suggested by
the Democratic governor.
But the special session
unlimited in the length of
time it can take has ap
proved Brown's $149.8 mil
lion tax program which con
sists mainly of accelerating
collection of taxes from busi
ness and the individual tax
payer. Fight Develops
A Senate-Assembly fight
has developed over ways to
spend the extra money
totaling nearly a quarter bil
lion dollars during the next
two years.
A six-man joint conference
committee three from the
Senate and three from the
Assembly met Friday and
reported some progress in
budget negotiations.
Chairman Stephen P. Teale
(D-Westpoint) of the Senate
Finance committee, told news
men a compromise could be
reached and the special ses
sion could finish its work by
Wednesday.
Stocks Inch Ahead;
Steel Prices Firm
New York - (VPl! - Stocks
inched ahead fractions today.
Steels were firm with Beth
lehem and Republic unchang
ed while U. S. Stetl tacked
on a fraction. Chrysler was
up Vi in the motors and Gen
eral Motors picked up '
Eastman Kodak and Virginia-Carolina
Chemical were up
more than 1 in an otherwise
narrow chemicals group. In
ternational oils were mixed.
U. S. Smelting and General
Bronze posted modest gains
in the metals. Electronics
were mixed with most move
ments fractional. However,
IBM added a point and Elec
tronic Associates and Minneapolis-Honeywell
lost around
1.
Subscribers
To report Improper or ixm
deltvtry of th Mail Tribune) in
Medford, phon 771-SU1; Ash
land call at 416 Bride ft . or
phon 4S2-3Va: Yreka. phon
Victory 3-29 before 8 p m.
daily and 10 30 am. Sunday.
If regular delivery arrtvet
hortly afir you rail pit
notify offlr. thus eliminating
peclal mtnfr aervtc.
How To Hole
FALSE TEETH
Mort Firmly in Place
Dorour fuae ieth annoy md m
barraja br kllpplni. dropping or woo
bltne whan you at. laush or talk f
Jun sprinkle a mil PASTKKTH on
your plataa Thu alkaline mon-arld,
powdar holda Cilat taaih mora firmly
and mora oomfortabty. No pimmT
p'J F"J'w or imuu.Doti not
our. Charkj 'Walaodor1 idanlura
U. S. Ambassador Adlai
Stevenson suggested that in
stead of demanding immedi
ate independence for Portu
gal's African- territories, the
Security Council should ap
point a diplomat to conduct
negotiations for freeing the
areas.'
Initial reaction of diplomats
acquainted with Portuguese
thinking was negative.
The Lisbon government
holds that its African terri
tories are an integral part of
its country. It is not ready to
accept Security Council inter
vention in their affairs.
SNOWBALLS IK
AUGUST?
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Diaalv
wiggly.
GREEN I
STAMPS J
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OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to
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-rrwc
9 P.M.
- .
Swiftning r TV q
Shortening A LU
3-LB. TIN
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I BMtiSHiO 1896
FISHER'S-Large 40-Oz. Pkg.
Biscuit Mix
25
BONDWARE-80 Count
1 fill i
o paper wares
Reg. $1.19..
79
Carnation
Butter
MB. PKG.
KLEENEX-Gianr 600 Count Box
Facial Tissue 29
fSTABlISHEO 1896
o
o
STEINFELD'S HOME STYLE SWEET
Cucumber Chips Ml 49e
Spare Ribs
3fs
Swift'i layer
Sliced Bacon
3 Pkbg E
00
SLICED HAM
ib.
98c
o
o
I CREEN I
STAMPSJ
o
o
A
Cantaloupe v.n. rip. ib. 70c
Burmosa Plums
local Grown 2 lbs.
29c
Green Beans
Crisp, Fresh 2 lbs.
29c
XUCChini SCUaSh Fresh local grown Ib. 70C
Tomatoes s.i.d se, vme Rip. ib J9c
Stewart & King
Prices Effective Mon., Tues., and
Wed., July 29, 30 and 31