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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1963)
8 The BuHeHn, Wednesday, August 21, 1963; WQr(J fQ Buffs SeC07c flighesf ever made for libel Its Kennedys word egainst that of Teller on 1961 tests WASHINGTON (UH) - It was ' He said tltese Included keeping Dr. Edward Teller's word against that of President Kennedy and his scientific advisers today on the is sue of whether the United States cut short its 1961 nuclear tests for political reasons. Teller, "father of the H-homb" and chief opponent of the limited nuclear test ban treaty, urged that he and opposing experts be heard in detail behind closed Sen ate eommittee doors. Kennedy said Teller's charge was not "valid." He told his news conference Tuesday the United States conducted the "ma jor tests" but that "it would be very difficult to satisfy Dr. Teller in this regard." But Teller, testifying at a Sen ate hearing, replied: "We could hare and should have carried out more tests in the atmosphere." He said the administration did not want more tests. Assures Senate The President also gave the Senate assurances that its de mand for "safeguards" on future testing was being carried out :FREE-deiirious: KRAUT tront nECII'ES Dept. B f.O,Bcf 2S8a,PorHnd3,0rt u s. lanoratones activated: pre paring standby nuclear tost ex periments, including improw mcntn at Johnston Island in the Pacific; continuing "quite vigor ous" underground tests, and im proving U.S. facilities to detect tests by other countriea. Three nuclear expert were called to testily today by the Sen ate foreign relations, armed serv ices and atomic energy commit tees which jointly are considi ing the test ban treaty. They were Dr. Harold Brown. Pentagon director of defense re search and engineering: John S. Foster, director of the Livermore Radiation Laboratory, University of California, and Norris E. Brad bury. Director of the Ios Alamos Laboratories in New Mexico. Testifies For Hours Toller was on the witness stand for 6'j hours Tuesday, warning that if the Russians client ed sue- j cessfully on the test ban ' they ' will have won the world." He said he was concerned about j U.S. development of an anti-mis- j sile system without atmospheric j testing, restrictions on nuclear ; aid to Allies and on development of peaceful uses of nuclear explo sives. Teller conceded he had i "changed his mind" from sever-1 al years ago when he favored halting atmospheric tests. ATLANTA U TP - alUv Butts, the round little nun of football whose teams at the Uni versity of Georgia earned him fame for a years, held a new one for the record books today a S3.060.0UO libel suit judgnv.it against the Sat unity Evening Post It was the second highest award ever made in a libel suit and the highest ever imolwiv a Cso Classification your next car. 100 to find Questions due in heiress case PORTLAND (UPI) Portland Police detective William Taylor was in Fremont. Neb., today to question the man believed to be the last person seen in tne com pany of Idaho cattle heiress Irene Davis, who was found dead in the Hilton Hotel here Aug. 6. Robert Joseph Evans, 27, was ! arrested in Fremont Monday on ! a charge of larceny by bailee. Taylor arrived late Monday night to question him. Evans, also sought in Honolulu for violation of probation, was one of three men last seen with Miss Davis, of Payette. Idaho. She was later found in the bath tub of her room with a stocking knotted around her neck. The Multnomah County coroner ruled her death "homicide until proven otherwise." Evans was picked up on a Clackamas County warrant charging him with the removal of an auto from a Mil waukie firm where he had been employed S7 oo TRADE4N On Your Old Refrigerator In Operating Condition On Our Lowest Priced FRIGIMIRE 2-DOOR FRIGIDAIRE ...THE FAMILY REFRIGERATOR sport personality. Butts, sometimes called "Weep ing Vally" in football coaching curies, wept openly when the jury brought in its decision Tues day in federal court. It came alter seven hours and 18 minutes of deliberation and climaxed a suit that had run into its third wvek in testimony from more than 50 witnesses. But Butts uas chiper at a news conference an hour later. "I feel liko a champ." the former coach and then athletic director said. Other Developments There were these immediate developments: The Saturday Evening Post said it will appeal the award by the jury of 12 businessmen. It has 30 days in which to file brief s. Georgia defensive line coach John Gregory, the only member i of the Georgia athletic staff to ; testify for Butts, was fired from his job by Georgia coach Johnny Griff Ith. Gregory immediately charged the firing came because of his stand in the controversy. Curtis Publishing Co.. pub lisher of the Saturday Evening Post, said in New York that it has slashed its losses for the sec ond quarter to $1,099,000 from a loss of $14,727,000 for the same period last year. Southeastern Conference Com- i missioner Bernie Moore said the 1 verdict should help lift "the dark j cloud" hanging over intercol-1 legiate football and the South-1 eastern Conference. An Internal Revenue Service spokesman in Washington indicat , ed that federal taxes may take a big chunk of any final settle ment. The spokesman cited a Su preme Court decision holding that punitive damages paid to a per 1 son in a libel suit are taxable. lie said aisu that compensatory ; damages also may Ik' taxable, if the injury for which they were ' pau! causes no loss of income. Second Largest I The W.0W.IKH) award SiiO.000 (or actual damages and S3 million in punitive damages was sec ond only to the $3.5 million won by New York radio commentator John Henry Faulk against a pub lication. Aware, Inc. Faulk contended an article in Aware connected him with r pro Communist group and led to his dimissal bv the Columbia Brond- I casting System and to a subse quent blacklist In the broadcast in dustry. Butts claimed that his charac ter was smeared and his career runied by an article, "The Story of a College Football Fix," ap pearing in the March 23 issue of the Post. The Post, in the magazine arti cle, reported that Butts, in an overheard telephone conversation, .had given valuable secrets about the University of Georgia football team to Alabama coach Paul (Bear) Bryant Prior to last fall's game between the two schools. Alabama won, 35-0. Bryant also sued for $10 mil lion and that suit is still pending in the federal court at Birming ham. The Post has asked for a change of venue. ir ir ... If you have to say it, it's loo late to do anything about it. The time to protect your future in come against the expense of ac cident or sickness is before it happens. 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