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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1963)
.United' Mions ' Caught in Squeeze of Financial Problems Most Members Think Expenses Out of Control UNITED NATIONS (UPI) , The United Nations, caught in the squeeze of rising costs, is worried about its growing budg - etary problems. The United States and most other members think expenses of the Ill-nation organization are getting out of control and need some belt-ugniening. This problem is separate from, though obviously closely connected to the financial crisis caused by high peace-keeping costs and the refusal of some members to share them. Speakers in the regular budget debate completed last week have complained about too many conferences, too mucn pa per work, too much staff e pense, too much guesswork in cost estimates, too little coordi nation of the myriad economic, social, political and legal pro' ects. Real Reason Skirted The budget debate skirted the real reason for the $140 million U.N. deficit the refusal of the Communist countries, France, South Africa, Portugal and some others to pay assessments for the expensive peace operations in the Congo and the Middle East. This Is a political prob lem that has been put on ice until next year. But nobody denies that the peace-keeping debt , caused the alarm that has led to the first concerted movement for a closer look at the U.N. books in all fields. Peace-keeping accounts are kept separate from the reg ular administrative budget used for stall salaries, travel, nuua ing upkeep, printing, special missions and the like. While there has been no trouble , collecting assessments for the regular budget, wide spread concern has developed because member states have just so much money for U.N. contributions peace-keeping or otherwise. So an economy drive is on. Thant's Dilemma - Secretary General Thant, who tunhnlrnllv In rpsnnnulhlft fnr Ihft hntnat flnnrAii Is i9imM in a fit. lemma. He is under pressure irom me new cuumnea ui mriua and Asia for more lid for devel opment, b'ic faces demands for economies because ot the aeu ell. The projected administrative budget for next year is approx imately $100 million. This com pares with $19.4 million in 1946 when there were 61 members, $60.8 million in 1959 when there were 82 members, and $93.9 mil lion and 111 members in 1963. Noon Edition Medford Page 2-A JTribune MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1963 Touring American Businessmen Meet With Adenauer Text of Hatfield's Address To Legislature BONN, Germany (UPI) -Twenty U.S. business leadcis, back from a talk with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, Initltoil Hr fhanrollnr Knn. rad Adenauer to lunch today. The 87-year old Adenauer, who turned over the chancellor ship to Ludwig Erhard last montn alter more tnan u years in office, was guest of honor at tho lnnnh in the Knenisshof Hotel, which is famous for .lay ing once turned away auou ini ler. Tho ffrnnn'fi next slnn is Brus sels, common market headquar ters. AHnnnnnr retains his S2at in Parliament and his interest in politics. He recently criticized the Kennedy administration lor what he considers sou aeannga with the Russians. One of the business 'caders, Keith Funston, president of the M,i, Vnrlr tnpir RYPhnnee. aitO found fault over the weekend with the Soviet idea ol wnai trade with the United States should be. He told newsmen Soviet lead ers in effect want U.S. manu facturers to invest in Russia. This "makes no sense at all, he said. Funston said he believes it is ii -inM (nr the United States to sell wheat or other consum er goods to tho Soviet union ior "xnth nn the harrelhead or nor mal short-term credit." But the Russians, he said, seem mainly interested in cap ital nnnU ciieh e chemical factories and chemical fertilizer plants, which they want 10 nuy on long-term loans with pay ment periods up to 25 years. Tnai would amouia iu American Investment in the So viet Union," he said. Cash sales, ne said, araw away funds the Russians other wise could use for strengthen ing their military macmno. The business leaders mot Er hrH Snnrlnv nisht at a dinner at tho res rlenee 01 u.o. Am bassador George McGhce Thev arrived Kunrl.1V from West Berlin, where they toured the Communist wall and the So viet sector. The srouo includes the presi dents or board chairmen of North American Aviation, Coca Cola, Eli Lilly, Minneapolis- Hji lywell, Seagram and sons, General Foods, P. I.orillard, Goodyear Rubber, Alcoa. J. P, Lewis Co., National Cash Reg ister Co., the Bank of America, Connecticut General Lite Insur ance Co., Rockwell St-indard Corp., Container Corp. of Amer ica, Pitney Bowes,,. intonation' al Business Machines, Avco and also the vice president of V.S. Steel. Electronics Pace Continued Rally NEW YORK (USD - Elec. tronics today paceu a continua tion of Friday s rally. IBM spearheaded the elec tronic gainers with a jump of about 4 followed by advances of 1 or more in Beckman, Cunco, Control Data, Fairchild Camera, Minneapolis Honeywell, Motor ola and Zenith. North American Aviation was up more than a point In its group. Chrysler moved up nearly 2 in a firm auto group. Du Pont tacked on a large fraction in the chemicals. McLouth and Youngstown Sheet featured (lie steels, each up around a point. American Crystal dipped close to a point in the sugars but South Puerto Rico advanced Sweeiland To Publish Pennsylvania Paper KLAMATH FALLS (UPI) -William B. Swectland, publish er of the Klamath Falls Herald and News, has been named pub lisher of the Delaware County Times of Chester, Pa. Sweetland, who has owned or managed newspapers in five slates, will assume his new po sition Dec. 1, according to an announcement made by the Cen tral States Publishing Co. of Chester. Montana. Man Held On Assault Charge BAKER (UPI) -Oregon State Police Saturday held a man idct1:i'.vd as the Missoula coun ty, Mont., clerk and recorder on a federal warrant charging him with second-degree assault with intent to commit rape. Police arrested Martin S. Bch ncr, 34, about 20 miles cast of here on U.S. 30 Friday. SALEM (UPI) - The full text of Gov. Mark Hatfield's special address to the Legislature: Mr. President, Mr. Speaker, members of the Assembly: This is a day set aside to hon or vetcrans.Many of them made the supreme sacrifice in behalf of the American dream. We do well to enter these deliberations in a spirit of sacrifice and serv ice which will win the approlia tion of those for whom our vet erans fought. We are met to respond to the expressed will of the people for whom our authority is derived, The revenue program passed by this bodv at its regular session which reached my desk a fort night after you had ;idjourned sine die. has been summaiily and decisively rejected under Oregon's unique processes of citizen participation in the law making procedures. The oroDosal which went be fore the people was the product of no individual. It was disiiMd for many reasons. It was op' nosed in referendum even by some of you who answered aye as the roll was called during the rccular session. It w backed in referendum with some reluctance by some of us who wanted no part ot it en route to enactment. But it is not for us here as sembled to dwell on the past. The fruits of your previous ef forts have been voided by those to whom we owe final responsi bility. The action of the voters has been subject to various and con flicting interpretations since the ballots were counted Oct. 15. To Wesfinghouse, Union Settle PITTSBURGH (UPI) - West inghouse Electric Corp. and the' United Electrical Workers of America (UE) have reached agreement on a contract cover ing 6,000 employes in six locations. The old contract ran out Oct. 14 but it was extended on a day-to-day basis as negotiations continued. A company spokesman said the agreement is similar to those signed earlier hv the Fed eration u' Westinghouse Inde pendent Sa'.iried Unions, the In ternational Union of Electrical Workers (1UE and the Interna tional Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The basic contract is for three years with a five-year agreement covering such bene fits as pensions, insurance and vacations. The UE represents Wesling house employes at Lester, Pa.; Derry, Pa.; Chicago, 111.; Em eryville, Calif.; Bridgeport, Conn., and Staunton, Va. Paying high finance charges on a new or late model used car? Read this . . . paying high finance charges is not necessary -- 1 Allstate! will finance your loan-and save you plenty! Here's all you'd pay at Allstate for financing a new car: Ameunt at loan Manlht ta pay Mantnly aarmantt $2400 36 75.82 $2000 36 $63.30 '1600 36 '50.77 At Allstate, you can arrange for a money-saving auto loan before you close the deal. You don't have to stand still for an auto loan that may cost you $100 . . . $200 . . . $300 more than the loan you can get from Allstate. If you've already made your deal, we'll pay off your old loan in full and arrange new financing at Allstate's low rates. So contact a representative for Allstate Econo-Rate Finance today. He's the same man who gives you low rates oh auto insurance, too. SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. BIDG., 501 East Jackson Street PHONEi 773-4722 ALLSTATE' ECONO-RATE FINANCE rauNDio ar mil division or AUSTMl INTtft'MSIS. INC. some it has seemed an open In vitation to a sales tax. To some it has been viewed as a vindica tion of those of us who urged cigarette tax. To some it is the result of a mounting tide of resentment about the expan sion of government and the weight of taxes at every level federal, state and local. You and I know that, prior to your convening last January, I had pruned agency appropria tion requests by 190 million. The expected hue and cry for increases was heard, but you withstood the pressures. You and I know that you rejected my lax recommendations and de Eisenhower Sees Nixon Choice in Parley Deadlock Augusta, r.a rirpnFm-. mer President Dwioht n Rison. howcr thinks a deadlock in the Republican presidential nomi nating convention next year would make Richard M. Nixon a likely compromise to be "ex amined and approached." "He Is. aftpr all a vorv knowledgeable and very cour ageous type oi ienow, Eisen hower said Sunday of his for mer vice president. The former President also agreed with Gnv. Nnlsnn A Rockefeller's proposal for met ingful debates between finnl runners for the top GOP nomi nation. "I think finvernni- Rvknrnllat. is n'eht." Kispnhnwnr said Vi have to think of the great mass of the American people who say, we want something that is done that Conforms tn rnmmnn sense, and to find what that so lution is, they can be told only by prospective candidates tell ing them exactly what thnv am going to do." People Don't Know Eisenhower Goldwater, R-Ariz., "right now is a very popular figure and a popula- name and people say that they are for him because he is cnnsprvalivo Rut H,A don't really know, I think, ex- amy wnai mai means. ne said the country, faced with the knotty problems of neuicare rine need is there"), depressed areas, ur- Dan renewal ana trie farm prob lem, was Mnhannv with what is happening." "But the nnlv wav thnv haim 10 express it is to say, well, I am for Senator Gnlrtwai or nr senator somebody else," the for mer President suggested. "And I do believe that they are more concerned now about halting the trend toward Hninrr nvnrvihinn- from Washington, and that trend, if that is true, if I am correct on that, then I would SflV that is What thnv hnlinira by going more conservative." ucmcs vootness Kisnnhnwpr Hpnind anv rw,'. sonal "coolness" toward Nixon. "Strangely enough," he said, "that impression has just per sisted throughout these years ana i nave never Known why. He said he liked his former vice president and Nixon's fam ily, too, and that in 1962, al though he felt "free from the obligation of going into political activity all over the country, the one man I was worried about was Dick Nixon out in California." Eisenhower said that refer ences to Mr. Nixon or Vice President Nixon" in his own re cent memoirs. "Mandate' for Change," stemmed not from coolness but "respect for his position." clined to direct to the people an election opportunity in mid session so that their reactions might be known. You and I know that two thirds of our $1.3 billion dollar budget is earmarked, removed from significant executive fis cal control. You and I know that, of the $404.3 million dol lar general fund budget, $133.1 million is for basic school sup port and is not subject to execu tive adjustment. With the expression by the people, then, and in accord with the constitution and statutes re quiring that the budget be bal anced, I immediately imple mented stringent allotment ad justments. There was no alter native. My recommendations to you, in these circumstances, are: (D To authorize the execu tive department to ' modify basic school support allotments as conditions warrant and in accord with requirements for other budgets. It may be your preference to modify the allow ance per student as well in rec ognition of the fact that further adjustment could be required in 1965-67. (2) To, place a moratorium on yet unlet capital construc tion contracts, except to meet the requirements imposed by court commitments of wards to our correctional institutions. (3) To authorize a speed-up of the payment to the state of income taxes withheld by em ployers. (4) To undertake no subjects al this session which are not directly related to our fiscal pic ture. (5) To be' aware the vast majority of the people expect no new taxes from this extra ordinary session. To interpret last month s election results as a demand for a new tax is to misread the intentions of those we serve. Unify Film To Be Shown Nov. 13 "Around the World in Search of Faith," a movie in color, will be shown Wednesday, Nov. 12, at the Unity Church, Holly and Haven Sts., at 8 p.m. The movie stars Rosemary Fillmore Grace, star of the Daily Word television program She is the granddaughter of Charles Fillmore, founder of the Unity movement. She made a press tour around the world to observe faith conditions in the world and record them on film. With a complete film crew, she visited such places in the news as Vict Nam, India, Mos cow and Berlin. She talked with such world leaders as Nehru of India and the King of Thailand. "Around the World in Search of Faith" was produced by Unity School of Christianity, Lee's Summit, Mo., and filmed by Horizon Productions. Concluding the program a cof fee will be served, with Mrs. Wilbur E. Howell, chairman. She will be . assisted by Mrs. Glen C. Rodemayer. Anyone interested is invited to attend. Portland Produce PORTLAND (UFIl Dairy mar ket: Esgs To retailers: AA extra large 4fl-.VJc: AA larce 48-490: A large 43-46C; AA medium 40-44c. A small 23-30u; cartons 1 cent hishcr. Butter To retailers: AA and A prints fi7c; cartons 3c higher; B prints fitic. Cheese l medium cured) To re tailers IS-lOc; processed Ameri can S-tO Ih. loaf. 43-48C Foreign Briefs SOUTH VIET NAM PALACE GUARD JOINS NEW REGIME SAIGON. South Vict Nam (UPI) South Viol Nam's press agency rrporled Sunday that the 8.000-man Special Forces, once considered the palace guard o( slain President Ngo Dinh Diem, "have rallied to the new government." Special Forces Com mander Col. Lc Quang Tung was executed after his capture by the Junta leaders who overthrow Diem, reliable military sources said. (6) To recognize that there will remain the uncompleted task of tax reform which must be' faced squarely by the 1965 regular session. As we discharge our respect ive responsibilities may we have the wisdom to recognize the functions for which there is greatest need. Ways must be found to assure that the suste nance of life be provided those unable to care for themselves. Opportunities for an education to the capacity of one's mind and inclination should forever, be a goal in our society. Let us resolve here together that we will so meet the chal lenge which is ours that we will deserve the confidence of the people of Oregon. They have spoken. There is only one re sponse and that is "so be it." Let us be about our task. if Heatar & Furnace Repair ' ir Sales & Service JACK HALL 772-6181 482-3950 HALL SCHEDULES TALKS WITH BK1TIS1I LEADERS LONDON (UPI1 United Slates Undersecretary of Stale George Ball will arrive In London Nov. 13 (nr two days of talks with British leaders, officials said today. Thry said Ball was expected to see new Foreign Secretary R. A. Butler. POPE SENDS CONDOLENCES TO JAPANESE FAMILIES VATICAN CITY UPI Pope Paul VI. "profoundly grieved" by the rail and mine disasters in Japan, has sent his ronilnlrncrs to families of the victims, the Vatican announced today. The an nouncement said the Pope also has sent a "conspicious sum" for Immediate relief purposes. 000000 o o ESUMSHEO !896 I GREEN (STAMPS o O i DiCJQly wiggly OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Lea II kjr LKIIiaSI m3 iflSS fpr GELATIN 3 Oz. Pkg I' Pkg. o o ESTABLISHED IS96 GREEN i. STAMPS o o KLEENEX-Giant 600 Count Box Facial Tissue 29 BAKER'S-6 oz. Pkg. -Limit Please Chocolate Chips i ZEE BATHROOM TISSUE Reg. 39c 4 Roll Pkg O O ESTABLISHED IS I GREEN iSTAM NESCAFE-Giant 10 oz. Jar Instant Cotfee 89 o O Vs) PENN CHAMP-Permanent Type-Full Strength Anli-Freeze rsr- I39 JOHN B1HCH SOCIETY Sit titil'llEB HOLE TENDENCY' COVENTRY. England (CIMi-The Itcv. Krancls B. Sayre. dean ot Washington Cathedral, said in a sermon here Sunday "the John Birch Society in the United Stairs Is but one Illustra tion of the gopher-hole tendency of modern life." He said man "is easily lumped Into great masses because he larks principle for the Individual by which to preserve his unboned Integrity. Again he Is all too prone to run lor cover, to escape into all kinds of little ostrich sandboxes." Fresh Sliced Dubuque Canned PORK LIVER PICNICS 281 3 a99 Robertson T a moles . 4 for 89 POItTL'til'ESE POLICE CAPTl'BE RED AGENTS LISBON. Portugal (I'PI) Portuguese police Sunday an- itounrrd rapture of three allrgrd Moscow-trained Communist! agents smuggled Into the country to rrorganlte underground i cells smashed nv police action. 8. NtSUfHiHtu lt I GREEN iSTAM PS, o 9 AVOCaCOS large Thin Skin MCh JO Sweet Corn u 8. w.h km l 6 , 39 COUllflOWCr Urge Snow While Heads each 25 YamS Swsel Yallow Mealed Puerto Rican lb. 10 Lemons m of j. - sunki.t Don 29 Stewart & King Prices Efloctivo Mon., Tuos., and Wed., Nov. 11, 12 ind 13 4