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g TUESDAY.! JULY 30. 19t3 . " MEDFOM) MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGOW " ,: ' ' . " - Hunger Said Behind Many Basic Problems in Many Areas of World ; By DONALD JOHNSTON United Nations, N. Y. -flJPD-United Nations experts esti mate that 400 million persons in the world go to bed hungry every night-and the number is going up. The world's population, now 3 billion, is rising at a record 60 million a year and is expected to double by the end of the century. ' These facts were reported by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. To many diplomats here, economic problems in the world potentially are more dangerous than, and often the '. cause of, political squabbles. These diplomats say that wide divergencies in standards of living among various nations breed discontent and tension Secretary General Thanl said in a speech last year that differences between North and South ultimately may cause more trouble than dif ferences between East and West. This was a reference to the fact that most of the develop ed nations are north of the equator and most of the poor ; countries south ot it. Part of Campaign The World Food Congress Is part of the five-year FAO- organized . Freedom from Hunger campaign which has reached mid-point. The con gress is attracting 1,000 per sons seeking solutions to the problems of hunger and mal nutrition in the world. The FAO estimates that one billion persons - a third of the world's population suffers from malnutrition. Most of them are in the Far East, which has the largest concentration of people. The third World food sur vey prepared by the United Nations says food production could be increased substanti ally if proper remedial action Is taken soon. A major prob lem, however, is that the pop ulation is expected to increase fastest In the Far East where the food situation already is the poorest. Called Precarious FAO Director General B. R. Sen describes the food prob lem in the Asian region, in cluding India and Pakistan, as "precarious." It is estimated that available food must be increased four-fold in this re- . gion in coming years. A factor aggravating the situation is that medical pro gress enables more people to . live longer without having their basic living standards raise':. Translation of these econo mic problems into a political factor is best seen in the many Asian and African countries which recently have attained political independence'. These people are demanding a bet tei life, and much of the ten sion that prevails in their countries is due to social and economic pressures. The FAO rules out the Im port of food from , wealthy areas to the poorer regions as a permanent solution. Pro grams such as distribution of I), S. surpluses can be only temporary or supplemental help, FAO says. Musi Mobilise Resources The answer lies primarily with the hungry people them selves, the FAO survey con tends. Their governments, the survey says must be "willing and able to mobilize their own resources and make ef fective use of foreign aid." The World Food Congress aims at helping the world s needy make better use of their resources. The congress deals with such questions as the popula tion boom, the role of science in food output, national plan n I n g programs, Improved farming methods, education tor progress, functions and ' forms of foreign aid, and pro per diets. fnthmtn May Enroll At SOC on Wednesday Ashland Incoming fresh men planning to enter South ern Oregon college this fall term may pre-cnroll Wednes day, July 31, or Saturday, Aug. 3, In Britl ballroom at 8 p.m. ' Advising and sectioning of classes will take place from l to 4 p.m. In Britt lounge. Anyone wishing further infor mation on enrollment may contact student affairs office or the registrars office. fJ ' ' ' r VA V n : mi n - SKATING QUEEN Lily Hood, 17, of Bakerslleld, Calif., has been selected queen of the North American Roller Skat ing championships held at Portland. (UPI) Court Records JU8TICK COURT Gold II Ml Ul.trlcl Ralph Wendell Wier. furnishing liquor to minor, $200. Kenneth Ray Hendemon, lllefal powesiion of intoxicating liquor. mu, 30 aayi jail iupenaca upon payment of fine. Kuaene Geor.ce Jerolamon. furn ishing liquor to a minor, 1100, im pended 5o of tine. Pruned Junlur Wilton. Illesal Joiieailon of intoxicating liquor 100, 30-day Jail term suspended upon payment oi line. Robert Melvln Wilson, violation of haslc rule, S23. a Davne Wane. I Hall, truck Deed ing, Sift. Avery Tennyson Drake, violation of basic rule, S10. Bobby Quitman Putt, overwiam, ' Jerry Edward Hoover, violation of bHic rule, 13 HaiDh Ed ward uioom, ovenoaa, too. Mariene Anneue wauace, viom- linn nf ha aid rule. 110. John Lennon Conlan, disobeyed stop sign. 118. Honry ueriran aens, violation 01 buNic rule. lao. Paul Bcnjumtn uiannerocuia, truck mecdlnfl. Bid. Vernon Joseph Taylor, truck speeding. $30, Ira Daniel Chllden, disobeyed stop sign, io. Beverly Sarah Benjamin, viola tion of bantu rule. J8. Matvllle fluh Dutcher Jr.. viola tion of basic rule. 910. Dennis ice L.avasscur, no ngius. Gerald snarp, no operator s license, 93. ThfiniMN James William, dis obeyed stop sign. 910. I.nul Marahall Costley. dis obeyed stop sign. 910. uernaro eugene uarung, viu. tion of baste rule, 910. L. A. Fernald. burning without a permit, .93.. MKhPOKD MUNIUI'Al. COURT Hrim nnvimind Dallalre. dis obeyed traffic signal, $10. Jnrold Robert Povlos, violation of basic rule. 910 Robert William warnc, no opera tor's license In possession, 93 sus pended. Judy Ann Olson, no operator's license. 93 suspended. liary cugene neri, rswuivc noise, 97.30. Calvin Lester Smith, detective equipment. 910 suspended. Calvin tee Granger, violation or basic rule. 913. F.d th Mable ruber, failure to yield right or way, 910. Marv Linda Wasner. violation of battle rule, 910. IJunaiO Koy necner. no niwra tor's license in possesion. 93. Roy Gilbert Halaas, Improper left turn. to. Ralph Wendell Weir, disobeyed trafltc signal. 910. Joseph Alexander DeLorme, violation of basic rule, 910. Hot iv Blossom Thompson, viola tion of bade rule. 9'J.V Robert (if tie Realty, violation of baslr rule. 9'J3. Esther Margaret waiKer, no operator's Ht'eone In ponsofislon. 93. Fred Paul Wilson, violation or basic rule, 910. Hans William Olson, violatlonn of basic rule, $'J5 suspended (or Driver Improvement School. Ruth Gustlne Messal. violation of basic rule. 910 impended iDISi Richard Duane Rarnhart, viola tion of basic rule, 913 suspended IDISi. Betty Lou Plankenhorn. viola tion of basic rule. 923 suspended tDUSt. Janice Ellen Bogart. violation of battle rule. $10 suspended (DIS.. Robert Wayne td wards, dis obeyed stop sign, 910 suspended tDlfei. Brian Let Whllham, violation of basic rule. 923 suspended iO!8. Bcrthel (iene Davis, violation of oaftic rule. lis. Pauline Theresa Johnson, no on erator's license In possession. S3 suspennea, ana expired venicia n cennp. 93. - Elisabeth Margureta Ware, vto ..ion of nasic rule, iin. Anna Margaretta Dunham, vlo latlonof bailc rule tin George Albert Holt, violation of basic rule. $33. Von Melvln Chcsnut, violation of basic rule. 923. Winfleld William Reynolds, vio lation of basic rule. $13. Ralph Dwayne Johnson, impro per right turn, 910 suspended. IMKTItlCT COUHT Everett Wesley Cushman, Insuffi cient brakes, $5. Robert Dale Wei nor. overload, 97a. Alvlrt George Eacon, violation of basic rule, $20. Dnnlel Gregory. Dixon, Improper mufller. 93. Richard James Stumbo. failure to yield right of way, 913. Earl Morgan Swift Jr., disobeyed stop sign, $13. Douglas Dean Anderson, viola tion of basic rule. 923. Joan Christine Kraser. violation of basic rule, $10. James Ellis Henderson, violation of basic rule, 910. Earl Muses Manley. operating more than two vehicles, 913. Dennis Doyle Murphy, violation of haslc rule, 910. Atvln LeRoy Simmons, no wheel covers. 910. Free Lee Walters, no operator's license. Thomas Wttliam Merrlman, over width. 913. Stiles Mattle Perkett, parked In oublic area. 92. Curtis Jones Mento, truck speeding, $.v Robert William Varney, over load, $24. Georse Beck. - nverwldth. 9.1. Walter Troy Midriff, leaving fish ron unaticnaca, ant. Ruby Anne Hall, Insufficient brakes, 93. Woodrow Wilson, overload. 923. William Malcom McCarty, no trailer license, $3. Kenneth Wells Sherwood, viola tion of basic rule, 910. William Neel Newland. no ooera- tor's license, 93. Jnmcfl duub ii Whltelv. over load, $28. Harold Francis Cool, disobeyed stop sign, $13. ma nun raincia mnuiton, viola tion of basic rule,, 910. Darrell Marvin Griffin, viola tion nl basic rule. 933. Mark Wtl am Hpefft. no wheel covers, 910. Roucr Edward uarr aan. cen tral Point, drunk on public high way, 9100. CIRCUIT COURT Dorothv Elizabeth Paul vs. War ren 1. Paul, divorce complaint. Leslie Beckner Tot ten vs. Pa tricia Louise Totten. divorce com plaint. Joaephine J. Joyce vs, Vincent W. Joyce, divorce complaint. MARIM AtiK LICENSE APPLICATION'S Claude Theodore Rlggs. 91(1 tt Hiah st.. Klamath Falls, and Jac queline Jeanne Funscth, ((71 Siski you blvd., Ashland. Wayne Waddoups. Brookings. Ore., and Marjorte Lynn West. 328 North Central ave.. Medfnrd. Lloyd Ed mus Dyer, 13 Vashtl Way, Medfnrd, and Jo Ann Cooper, box 273. Shady Cove. Railroad Dispute Said Not Hopeless WBshinKtim - aiPIl - A rail union spokesman said Monday that the railroad dispute is no! nearly as hopeless as the public has been led to believe. Roy G. Davidson, head of the Brotherhood of Locomo tive Engineer urged Con gress to allow union and man agement to proceed with col lective bargaining and to re ject President Kennedy's pro nosnl for solving the contro versy. Davidson insisted that col lective bargaining had been "virtually unused" during liie four-year-old dispute. Martin Luther King Defends Movement Against Charges By AU. KUETTNER UPI Cerrcipondeni Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. currently is. having a rash of difficulties defending his non violent integration movement against accusations that it is being infiltrated by workers for world communism. King calls this a smoke screen by '.'segregationists and race baiters'', to obscure and deflect the national move by Negroes for :civil rights. . The latest incident on this score involves a rather mys terious figure known various ly by four names but most often as Jack O'Dell. Two con gressional committees have labeled him as part of the Communist setup in the Uni ted States. He has worked twice for King's Southern Christian Leadership Confer ence, mostly as a money, raiser. . Following published '-re- The Family Council ttdltnr'f nnte: The Pimtlr Council eunslsts of a Judge, a pHy.rhlatrUt, Mtree clergymen, three edllorg ana a women'i editnr. r.aeh artlele 1 a sumirary uf a family diiaareement presented to the r.nuncll The Cuunei! d?alt with problems, major and minor, 'tir.ounttMtf bv guidance counselors and social workers. Edited by Mrs. A:ma Denny. (Copyright by General Features Corp.) . . Diana 8. I want to have it out with my boss. Rosa P. She's foolish. She has a good job. Diana S. How much guff should I take while I await that promotion my boss keeps waving In my face? Working for another woman has built in hurdles anyway, but the one I'm coddling along adds Impossible ones that only a schmoe like me tolerates: I mjst "be a dear" and skip lunch hours' so she can get' her hair ' done. - I must get her husbapd's watch fixed over tne week end. 1 like the firm but I. want. respect. Rosa P. 'I'm trying to keep Diana from' making a big mis take. She's secretary to a gift ed radio producer who's slat ed to move along to television Diana's being groomed to fill the radio .post. She should stop being so "hurt." She's on her way to something good' and you don't get there on balloon tilts. I work for a man and he piles on plenty of "extras", too. She'll find it the same in any good job. Th Council: "How to Suc ceed in Business," etc., Diana must remember, belongs right up there alongside "Peter Pan" - in Never-Never Land. The underling who rises is usually the one who under stands and undertakes to lighten, the pressures of The Big Shot.' If you're with your boss, Diana,- that is, on her side, then you see her in the round as a whole person and you don't quibble over queer assignments. At the same time you feci close .epough -to, her. to 'kick when ?ydur cause 'is just. But you don't sound as though you're with your lady at all. And before you quit or get fired-be honest. How much of your "put-upon" feel ing stems from envy? And, in fairness, do you also envy your boss her heavy responsi bilities, her worries? ' Rose is a true friend to alert you to the importance of clarifying things in your own mind be fore showdown day. If you have a list of specific griev ances, present it for redress, along with constructive sug gestions to help your employ er. However, if this is just a grudge fight, turn to a thera pist. That'll do you more good than to turn to the want ads. ports last week that O'Dell Karl Marx in an effort to still ran the New York office of SCLC, King summoned re porters to Insist that O'Dell had left the employment of his organization "by mutual consent" in June. This came despite a con flicting acknowledgement the same day from King's New York office thai. OUJell still worked there as administra tor. King said the discrepancy obviously was from confusion and not fact. Drops Into Office A spokesman for King later explained that O'Dell had dropped by the SCLC office on the day of inquiry but was not working there. King credits the flurry of Communist charged to two Southern governors - Ross Barnett of Mississippi and George Wallace of Alabama who testified before the Sen ate Commerce Committee against the proposed new civ il rights bill. Both held aloft a . large newspaper photo graph which they identified as a picture of King attending a meeting at the Highlander Folk School in -Tennessee. They said this was a place frequented . by ' Communist sympathizers. King also de fended. ,the. school, nqw" de funct because of a revoked charter, saying he had noth ing to be ashamed of for be ing there the one time he paid a visit. ' But ' the problem still chases' the nation's number one Negro civil rights chief tain. Currently, Georgia Atty. Gen. Eugene Cook has "in vited" King to tell him all he knows. , ,i King has been defending himself . and his movement against communism since his early days as a .leader of the Montgomery, . Ala., bus boy cott. In his book on that epi sode, "Stride Toward Free dom," he relates how in 1949 he studied the Communist manifesto and the writings of "try to understand the appeal of Communism for many peo ple." Rejects Historical Aspect "I drew certain conclusions which have remained with me," King wrote. "I rejected their materialistic interpreta tion of history. Communism, avowedly secularistic and ma terialistic, has no place for God ; . . since for the Com munist there is no divine gov-1 on the same line last week as ernment, no absolute moral order, there are no fixed, im mutable principles. Conse quently almost anything -force, violence, murder, lying - is a justifiable means to the end. This was abhorrent, to me: Constructive ends can never give" absolute moral jus t i f i c a t ioa to destructive means." . King still was going strong he told newsmen: "The SCLC is so firmly es tablished as a Christian non violent movement that it would be impossible to be in fluenced in any way by the method of philosophy of Com munism . . . Communism breeds violent revolution . . Communism is based on a de nial of human freedom which we could never accept." 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