U. of 0. Library
augone, ursgon
. Corap ,
Nation; Mn
. . .. m
Residents
Digging Out
After Snovf
Cold Wave Sueeps &imss
3
REPRESENTING ROSEBURC TO ASTM ASTERS in a dis
trict speech contest in Eugene will be these men, John
Fleck, left and Wolter Fisher. They are winners of a local
speech contest which wound up Tuesday. (Picture by Paul
'Jenkins), . ,. - . .
STILL HOPEFUL
Legislators Confident
Of Early Session End
Despite Heavy Schedule
By PAUL W. HARVEY JR.
SALEM I Threatened with
the biggest deluge of bills in his
tory, Oregon's 41-day-old Legis
lature still is confident it can wind
up its work in another SO days.
Having made ?ood progress this
week with highway and liquor leg
islation, the lawmakers guarantee
a good show next week.
Here's the schedule for next
week, and it doesn't include un
expected subjects that might de-
velop:
Monday The Senate will vote
on the bill to divide Multnomah,
Marion and Lane Counties into
representative districts. It also
would have legislative candidates
run by numbered positions in dis
tricts where there are two or more
to be elected.
Tuesday The explosive Issue
of whether to keep on giving racing
receipts to the fairs gets its first
test in the House, which will rote
on a resolution for an interim com
mittee to make a two-year study
of the problem.
Wednesday The Senate Elec
tions Committee holds its first
hearing on the bill that would pre
vent U. S. Sen. Wayne L. Morse
from running as an Independent
for re-election in 1956. .
. Thursday The Welfare Sub
committee will hold a hearing on
the most controversial issue of ail
old age pensions. The bearing will
be on bills to make public, the
Mayor 'Shocked' While
Crowning Teen-Ager
LETHBR1DGE, Alta. HI Greet
ing Lethbridge "Teen Queen Don
na Clock at a 'teen-agers' dance
last Saturday night gave Mayor
A. W. Shackleford quite a jolt.
An electrical short circuit in a
microphone hook - up knocked the
mayor to the floor, he suffered
slightly burned hands but no ser
ious injury from the 50-volt Jolt
GIVEN PROBATION
Clifford L. Smith wai placed on
probation from a one-year peni
tentiary sentence Friday by Cir
cuit Judge Carl E. Wimberlv on
a charge of larceny over $75.
Smith, of 207V4 Rump Road, plead
ed guilty to the charge.
In The Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Mrs. Maria Jackson, widow of
the founder of the Oregon Journal,
announces the appointment of Wil
liam W. Knight (A Roseburg boy
and brother of our own Lotus
Knight Porter) as the Journal's
Subhsher to succeed her son Phil
ackson, who died in Portland last
Saturday evening.
.She adds:
"I want Portland, and all the
world to know that the Journal
has not been and IS NOT for sale.
We long ago provided that the
Journal will remain a home-owned
newspaper.';
That, I'm sure, will be good
news for the people of this, In so
many ways unusual, state. The
(Continued on page Four)
The Weather
Partly elftudv this afternoon, to
night end Sunday morning. Fog
Sunday. I
Highest temp, last 14 hours W
Lowest temp, last 14 hours II I
Highest tamp, tor any Feb 7t
Lowest tomp. for any Feb. I
Precip. last 14 hours trace
Pretij. from Feb. I ..- l.ft :
rrecip. mm sept. I .
Earns from Sept, 1 1.4
Sunset today, S:S1 p.m.
Sunrise tomorrow, 7:01 a.m.
names of welfare recipients, and in
measures to tighten the law which
requires relatives to support wel
fare recipients.
The Senate held its first fiatur.
day session, but the House will
bold its first one next Saturday.
In the 1951 session that ran 116
days, there were 1,214 bills intro
duced, an au-uraa record.
So far. there have been 975 hills
introduced, compared with 715 at
the same stage two years ago.
That means the committees have
a hard job.
The Legislature disposed of one
of its biggest Dills this week when
the Senate sent to the governor
the 32 million dollar highway con-
suutuua vuuu um.
Croft To Monitor
Panel Discussion
Mayor Percy Croft wiH monitor
a panel discussion of "future plan
ning for Roseburg" at the Cham
ber of Commerce forum luncheon
in the Umpqua Hotel Monday.
Featured on the panel are Earl
Wiley, H. E. Schmeer, Art Evans
and W. A. Gilchrist, reporto For
um Committee Chairman Gordon
Stewart.
Stewart states that the program
is designed to "bring to the people
of Roseburg some of the values
that will accrue from an objective
approach to the need for a solu
tion to our many problems. The
forum meeting is open to every
one in the city."
By subjects, Wiley will stress
the affect of future planning on
real estate values; Schmeer, a
banker, will emphasize effects on
permanent investments; Art Ev
ans, a mining engineer, will draw
the relation of planning to civil
engineering and City Manager Gil
christ will indicate the value of
$6,000 In engineering studies to fu
ture planning. . ...
High Winds Halt Jumps
By .Parachute Troopers
CAMP DRUM. N. Y. Wl-The
82nd Airhorn Division says , it
needs to give about 3,000 addition
al paratroopers a rehearsal jump
before the mass drops set for next
Tuesday.
High winds halted jumps Friday,
after 1,500 troopers had bailed out
over Snow Ridge, a ski resort
2814 air miles southeast of Camp
Drum.
Blind School
Is Shown In
By ESTHER OEDDES
Just how successful is the pro
gram of the Oregon State School
for the Blind in its effort at re
turning blind children to their
homes and communities as quick-
ly as possible? What is the result
when a blind child tries to com
pete with normal children?
One atriking answer to this ques
tion is the case of Gayle Sandeen.
who is now making quite a name
for herself as a high school stu
dent at Coos Bay. Two years ago
my daughter Gayle Geddes visit
ed the blind school and became
acquainted with Gayle Sandeen.
After spending a day with her
blind friend she reported to me
among other things "Mother,
she made me so ashamed of my
self. You should see her room at
the dormitory not a thing is out
of place. She puts everything away
and knows where everything is
and does things a lot better than I
do."
We were interested to note that
Gayle S. was a finalist in the an
nual spelling contest for Salem
pupils that year. This was some
thing at triumph tor blind stu
Established fS7S HOSE BURG, OREGON - ' '- SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1953 42-33
Soviet Indictment
Approval Forecast
River Mduth
Closure Is
Given Study
A report by Douglas County
raru supervisor cnanea a. coi-;
lins, regarding the closure of the i
mouth of the Umpqua River to:
commercial fishing, was discussed
by the Douglas County Parks
Board Friday at a meeting in
Drain.
The report was on a meeting
with the Oregon Fish Commission,
and the proposal had been brought
before the commission by the Port
of Umpqua and the Parks Depart
ment. Collins said it is "believed that
the commission will look favor
ably on the proposal." The meas
ure is designed to conserve the
supply of fish and as a companion
measure to the proposed Oregon
landing laws which would put fish
caught on the sea or outside Ore
gon in the jurisdiction of Oregon
laws if brought Into the state.
Consider Reauest
A reauest by the Edelweiss Ski
Club for flnincinl help In snow
removal on the Taft Mountain Ski
area was received. The board said
it could not consider the granting
of cash to other organizations, but
that help could be given for soe
ciip projects or specific narks.
, The boar promised to take the
matter under consideration.
The board requested the Dla-
(Continued on Page Two)
Most Wanted Criminal
Recognised By Clerk
,EL RENO, Okla. till A night
clerk in the Federal Bureau of In
vestigation office, whose chief duty
Is sending out wanted circulars,
Saturday caused the arrest of one
of the FBI's "ten most wanted
fugitives" after recognizing him
from a picture he had mailed to
hundreds of officers.
Theodore Richard Byrd Jr., 27,
termed one of the slickest hot
check artists in the country, was
arrested at 2 a.m. here at an all
night cafe, the FBI said.
Robert L. Harvey, who works
In the TBI office at Oklahoma City
but lives here, -called El Reno po
lice after he saw Byrd eating at
the cafe. Harvey is the son of EI
Reno Police Chief Lee Harvey.
D. A. Bryce, agent in charge of
the Oklahoma FBI office, said that
Byrd had passed more than $40,
000 worth of hot checks in the past
few months. He has gotten as
much as $0,300 a day posing as
a doctor or Naval officer and ask
ing banks to cash certified checks.
Raccoon Finds Mate.
Through News-Review Ad
Even raccoons can find "a mate
through Roseburg News-Review
want ads.
Mrs. Byron Hawkins of Rt. 3,
Box 765, advertised for a breeding
mate for her female pet 'coon
Wednesday. .She had made the
match before the next paper came
off the press.
The ad was a last resort after
she had even inquired about the
matter with veterinarians. "We've
received four calls since the ad,"
she says.
AIRMAN HELD
Dale S. Campbell, 18, of Shepard
Air Force Base. Texas, was ar
rested early today and held for
military authorities on an AWOL
charge, city police reported.
Effectiveness
Illustration
dents who write and read braille
become accustomed to abbrevia
tions and do not constantly have
the visual reminder of the print
ed word to bring its spelling to
mind. '
This year when we inquired
about Gayle Sandeen we found
that she hsd gone home to her
family and is attending high school
and making good grades, and per
haps more important she is mak
ing friends and living as a nor
mal high school girl should. Much
of that is the result of her years
at the Blind School. She was never
coddled or led or assisted with
anything she could possibly do.
There are no ramps or extra guide
rails to make the youngsters de
pend on them for support. This is
the new and effective way of tak
ing the curse off blindness and
making the blind realize that they
have much to contribute to and
much to gain from our world.
The lovely new school building
recently completed for the blind
is beautiful and there are only
two things I noticed that would
I (Continued ei rag Two)
Resolution
Considered
By Congress
WASHINGTON W - Quick con.
gressional approval was forecast
toaay lor president Eisenhower's
indictment of Russia's mass "sub
jugation of free peoples" through
perversion of World War II agree
ments. - A resolution, sponsored by Ei
senhower and awaited on Capitol
Hill since he promised it in his
Feb. 2 State of the Union mes
sage, was made public Friday
ay ui rresioeni.
It rejects the Soviet Union's in'
terpretation of the understandings
presumably those made at Yalta
as a license tor the subjugation
of free oeoDlis. It Disclaims a
hope for ultimate self-government
oenina ine iroa curtain in line
"with the pledge of the AUaUic
unaner.
ine resolution was not as strong
as some Republicans had wanted,
but few seemed inclined to chal
lenge the President on the issue.
Most Democrats were ready to
go a ong w.th it, too. it , . n
criticize the administration nf
Democrats Franklin D. Roosevelt
or iarry S. Truman, nor did it
repudiate agreements made at
Yalta or elsewhere during those
administrations.
The Republican President also
accepted the principles of the At
lantic Charter, authored by Roose
velt with British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill.
The Atlantic Charter, actually a
joint declaration of the two lead
ers, was composed of notes they
agreed upon aboard ship in the
Atlantic Ocean in August, 1941,
They recognized, among other
things, the rights of all peoples to
choose their own governments and
agreed on restoration -of self-government
for those who had lost it.
The charter was never drafted m
a formal document and had no
legal force, although it caught on
as a declaration of the west's
principles. .
Tuberculosis Victim
Acquitted Of Murder
NEW YORK GB-Vincent Pugh,
39-year-old tuberculosis victim
whose attorney says he has only
a year to live, was acquitted last
night of two murder charges in
the snooting of his wife and step
daughter July 17.
An all-male Bronx County Court
jury returned the verdict after de
liberating 3 hours and 15 minutes.
The defense had called 56 wit
nesses during the six-week trial to
prove that Pugh, a war veteran,
was temporarily insane at the
time of the shooting.
Pugh, a chauffeur, was held aft
er the fatal shooting of his wife,
Eleanor, 37, and her daughter,
Mrs. Jane Curley Whalen, 22, in
their Bronx apartment.
14 Pneumonia Cases
Reported At Hospitals
Fourteen cases of pneumonia
are reported from both Roseburg
Hospitals, equally divided between
adults and children.
Savon , am k-ina
at Community Hossital and all are
adults. Meanwhile at Mercy Hos-i The bill would also require wit
pital, seven children are listed nesses to stick to the subject un
with pneumonia. I der investigation.
I m . mmmmmmmmmwfymm r,-"V-Y?:-':-?r-'3
SCOUT INVESTITURE Larry Berg and Kurt Norlin, standing next to Scoutmaster
Floyd Wilson, were invested into the Roseburg L:ons Club sponsored Boy Svout Troop of
Rose High School Thursday Night ot on impressive candlelight ceremony. The $cout$
were guests of the Lions at dinner an annual occasion. Patrol leader bars were present
ed to Albert Klang and Joe Brady by Tom Prkey and Larry Rutter, respectively. A fire
making demonstration wos held. Tioop Chairman George Foster orranged hg program,
(Staff Picture.) -
Indo-Chinese
War Critical
Issue Topic
Possible West German
Tieup Also Slated
For US-British Talks
LONDON W The critical Ind-
Chinese war and a possible West.
uerman ueup wnn tne Atlantic
alliance if the European army plan
fails will be among top-priority
items at forthcoming British-Amer
ican talks in Washington, British
government sources say.
' These topics were reported last
night as another hlanly-olaced
Briton expressed mounting anxiety
over a possible struggle for power
within Russia if Stalin dies or quits.
Such an internal battle, he de
clared, would represent one of the
biggest threats to world peace, t
This Briton said the West could
be fairly confident as long as
Stalin was in full command but
in the event of an all-out struggle
for dictatorship between ambitious
rivals, "There is no telling what
their rashness may plunge us in-
The Indochinese and German
questions will be among the prob
lems hashed over when Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden sched
uled to sail next Tuesday for the
United States meet President
Eisenhower and Secretary of State
Dulles, the informants said.
The British and American chiefs,
it was indicated, will talk over
confronting France with solid Anglo-American
support for West
Germany's participation in the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
if the six-nation army project
founders.
Jelke Willing
To Take Stand
NEW YORK - Minot r.
(Mickey) Jelke says He is ready
to testify at his trial on vice
diarges, but tne margarine he.r u
attorneys say they have not de
cided whether to call him.
Newsmen asked Jelke If he
would take the stand. The 23-year-old
scion of a socially registered
family replied:
"It wouldn't be like going to i
New Year's party. But if it's nec
essary, I'll do it."
The state rested its case against
Jelke Friday with the testimony
of blonde Pat Thompson, one of
the three young women whom
Jelke allegedly induced into pros
titution. General Sessions Court Judge
Francis L. Valente, who closed the
prosecution's presentation to the
public and press, adjourned the
trial until Tuesday.
Morse Says
Entitled To
Witnesses
Counsel
WASHINGTON W-Sen. Morse
(Ind-Ore) says witnesses in Senate
investigations should have a legal
right to counsel, who could object
to questions and cross-examine
any other witness making accusa
tions. In Introducing a witnesses'
"bill of rights" measure, Morse
yesterday said persons accused
of disloyalty, subversion or Com
munist tactics should have "ade
quate assurance by law" of a
chance to defend themselves.
i. e- . V.. I 1 - ' X
New Pro
Agency
WASHINGTON U The U. S.
Advisory Commission on Informa
tion recommended Saturday that
the Voice of America and all other
psychological w.irtare and over
seas information programs be
placed in new federal agency of
cabinet level.
The advisory committee Is a
group of five uistinguUhed citizens
under the chairmanship of Mark
A. May, director of the Yale Uni
versity Institute of Human Rela
tions. The proposal for removing the
Voice and related activities from
the State Department was one of
seven recommendations which the
commission placed before Con
gress in a report released through
the department.
It coincided with mounting criti
cism of the handling of Voice op
erations. The program is now be
ing investigated by a Senate com
mittee headed by Sen. McCarthy
(K-W1S). .
The commission's recommends'
tion may have an influential effect
on decisions yet to be made by
White Family
Pours Water
CANVEY ISLAND. England Ul
The White family came home this
week and papa poured tne sea
water out of the television set
This was the report of sandy-
haired Robert White, age 11. one
of the thousands of refugees who
Armored Shorts
Save Soldiers
WESTERN FRONT; Korea Wl -Two
U., S. soldiers wearing the
Army's new armored shorts were
hit Friday night by shell fragments
that would have caused serious
wounds If the "diaper" bad not
stoooed them. . .
It waa the first reported combat
test of the new armored snorts.
They are designed to give the
lower torso the same protection
the vest gives the upper torso.
Armored vesta have beta in gen
eral combat use for several
months, U. S. Marines have been
using them for more than a year.
Names of the two men were not
released because they received oth
er wounds and were evacuated to
a hospital.
Capt. Mack Strauss of South
Bend, Ind., armor observer, said
one of the shell fragments pen
etrated to the last of the 12 layers
of basket weave nylon squares.
Cost
Like
At Alcatraz
Waldorf Astoria
WASHINGTON W-Senate de
baters reached bipartisan agree
ment yesterday that stern Alca
traz Prison costs more to house a
prisoner than would a plush, big-
city notei.
Sen, Langer (R-ND), saying It
now costs twice as much to feed
and house a prisoner at the Island
prison in San Francisco Bay as at
any other federal prison, figured
the . government cooio noara in
mates "in the Waldorf Astoria
cheaper,"
. CAR FIRE REPORTED
City firemen were called to
Douglas and Kane Streets Friday
about 2:15 p.m. by a car fire in a
car owned by L, Lamer-ton, of
1905 Fairmont St. Damage was
minor.
paganda
President Eisenhower and Secra
tary of State Dulles about 'he or
ganization of the government'a in
formation and psychological war
fare programs.,
The report came out as senators
Investigating 1h Voice kept State
Department officials on the carpet
with demands ' for guarantees
against any policies hampering the
probe. -
One clash between the Republican-led
committee and the new
Republican administration of the
State Department apparently end
ed yesterday in a senatorial vic
tory. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith,
new under secretary of state,
promised "full co-operation."
Sen. McCarthy (R-Wls) and his
senate investigations subcommit
tee today went after a similar
pledge from Donald B. Lourie, new
under secretary of state for admin
istration. They summoned him to
a closed door conference, demand
ing that there will be "no further
giving information to the subcom
mittee. ... ,i . .
Conies Home;
Out Of TV Set
have returned to what Britain
caUed the "Isle of Death.' -
Canvey Island, in the Thames
estuary, was the home of 12,000
ieopie wnen aurricane driven
idea struck it at 2 a.m. Sunday.
Feb. 1. Angry waters surged over
the 8,000-acre island, drowning at
least 62 persons along with 245
more eisewnere on Kniland'a east
ern coast.
Ten thousand inhabitants of Can,
vey fled, leaving behind t shoat
community Isolated in a lake of
murny, swirling' waters.
Holding his ,cat, Susan, little
Kooert White cried when he got
his first look at h i one trim
ihunaalow home:
'Tne three (eat of water in the
living room was nearly gone." he
said, "but oh, tvhat a mess was
left. The furniture Waa ruined and
naa floated everywhere. The whole
place was stinky and aloshy.
"Mom had lust finished paying
for the television set too and the
first thing papa did was to empty
the sea water out of 1L But it waa
wrecked. .
"There was a dead flsfa In the
bath tub."
The 4,000 people who so far have
plodded back over the old iron
bridge from the mainland, past
the water-soaked sign. "Welcome
to Canvey Island," have found
their homes in about the same
shape.
For the l.OOfl OlH air tun. Inn.
living out their days on the island.
meant iiieume possessions were
swept away. .
Post Office To Close
Washington's Birthday
The Roseburg Port Office will
be closed all day Monday, Febru
ary 23rd In observance of Washing
ton's birthday, reports Acting
Postmaster Clyde Carstens.
There will be no delivery of mall
by city delivery, rural routes or
star route carriers. Mall will be
distlbuted to Post Office boxes.
Dispatches ot mail will be made
as usual. All service windows will
be closed.
LODGED IN JAIL
Arthur Edward Kroening, 88,
was lodged in the county jail on
a charge of operating a motorcycle
while intoxicated, the sheriff's
office reported.
Bail was set by Reedirport Jus
tice Fred Wright at fl.OOO.
Mustard Gas
To Eliminate
WASHINGTON Mustard gas
the poison of World War I looks
to some Army medical men like a
promising prospect to eliminate a
disease hazard involved in the use
of blood plasma.
An Army reioarcher said today
that recent tests, aided by volun
teers among prisoners In ievcral
federal penitentiaries, point to this
possibility:
That the poison war gas may be
used to sterilize blood plasma of
the virus responsible for a disesse
known as "serum hepatitis" 1
liver ailment usually marked by
Jaundice.
This serum jaundice it both 1
military and a civilian problem.
A whole batch of blood plasma
can be Infected It any of it is
made from the blood of an unsus
pected carrier of the virus.
Not sll plasma Is so Infected, of I
course, ana thousands of persons
have received plasma without get
ting serum jaundice. The disease
usually develops only among those
who receive repeated transfusions.
A major difficulty Is that there
is no known way of telling whether
a supply of plasma is Infected.
So scientists have been seeking a
way to sterilize the blood deriva
Formidable Drifts
! Stall Traffic Close
Stores And Schools .
' By The Associated Frets "
Numbing cold descended today
upon a vast section of the nation's
northern midlands in the wake of
the winter's worst snowstorm. .
Temperatures of zero or U below
wore forecast for tonight In at least
six of the 11 states -which have
felt in varying degrees the fury
of the four-day blizzard.
Diminishing winds permitted res
idents of the storm area, particu
larly In deeply snow-blanketed
portions of South Dakota, Nebras
ka, and Minnesota, to dig out of
drifts that stalled highway and
plane travel and In many commu
nities farced the closing ot schools
and businesses. . -
But the wlnda trailing the re.
redlni storm, now moving into
Canada at the fiend of Lake 8u
nenor. were still so miles aa hour
or more rmn enough to inten
slfv the flidrionly fallen tempera-
rures.-Tne weatner Bureau re
norted euest of 57 m'lea an hour
vn recorded dnrlne'the height ot
he storm over Nebraska.1 Iowa.
'""h T"nt and Minnesota.
The wind scoured the new falll
of snow. Murln xm to 15 lnchea
at Huron. S. I):.' ami 12 at Rt.
f iwd. Minn;. Into formidable
drifts that keqt school children
om. forced businesses to close
fn? lack nf customers, and even
burled Mehwavs w that snowplow
cr-ws cotunn i rna tnem.
Similar discomforts were felt In
Wyoming and Colorado ,'a day
earlier, where the storm - began
developing Wednesday. It wai la
those states the only storm deaths
nine were reported. Five were
the reslt of traffic accident and
four... an n Denverattributed to
over-erertlnn In the snow.
In I the Deep South, tornadoes
lashed three states leaving one
person dead. 10 Injured,' and a
mounting list of homeless. ... ...
Allied Phr.cs
Blast Center
On Yalu River
' ty FORREST EDWARD! -
, SEOUL . ul) , Allied , fighter
bombers' blasted a Communist
communications center near the
south bank of the Yalu River boun
dary of Manchuria Saturday and
screaming U. 9. Sabre Jets downed
two MIG-15S.
The U. S. Fifth Air Fore re
ported that three other MIGs prob
ably were destroyed and two dam
aged. The raid on the Red communi
cations - center at Manpojin wat
6no of two heavy strikes during
the day . protected by the ileek,
swept-wing Sabres. Fighter-bombers
earlier pounded a big Red sup
ply area north of Pyongyang, apex
of the old "Iron Triangle" oa the
Korean Central front.
The Air Force aaid 42 Sabres
and 50 MIGs were involved ia the
air battles.
Thirty two F-84 Thunderjets
hit the communications center. Pi
lots reported destroying 18 build
ings and damaging eight Num
erous fires erupted and secondary
(Continued on Page Two)
Not So Young, Athlete
Learns To His Sorrow
Robert B. Thomas, Sulherlln,
la In Community Hospital, pee
slbly thinklne he's net aa yeune
as he used to be.
Hospital attendants saw he
wa shewing his yevrn daueh
. tr, about 5, how he . ceuM
aland en hie head.
He fell end broke Me cellar
bone. , -.,...-.
DRUNK DRIVINO COUNT
John V. Ruegg, Oakridge, wai
lodged in the county Jail on a
drunk driving charge, state police
report. - -
May Be Used
Plasma Virus
tive, widely used to treat shock,
against any contamination by the
virus. '
Col. John R. Wood, the Army'
chief medical research administra
tor, said In an Interview the Army
It Interested even though there is
a possibility a sugar substance
called dextran may eventually re
place plasma for certain impor
tant uses.
Dextran la known to be free ot
the jaundice hazard. Wood said,
however, that the Army would still
need plasma for some uses even If
dextran should replace it for
other'..
Levity Fact Rant
B L. P. Relzensteln
The 'Multnomah hag which
used to be political figure
t speech on part of the rest
of Oregon, It again In the
news, but this lima realistic
ally. It's under federal quarantine.