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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1955)
o o o o V o TWELVE MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Thursday. August 11, 1955 o o O O O Scientists Scan Pacific Ocean Seeking To Solve Mysteries of Sea La Jolla, Calif. CU.R) While some scientists are turning their (eyes upward for man's first at (tempt to reach into space, an other international group is look Q ing the other way probing the mysterious depths of the Pacific O c Ocean. A fleet of nearly 100 vessels is P. roving the Northern Pacific in '"the first attempt in history to O chart in a single month the area's currents, tides, winds, depths and G depth temperatures, and other phenomena. The vast exploration is called "ODeration Norpac' 'and involves vessels, scientists and crewmen from the United States, Canada and Japan. The benefits that will G result are varied. o Scientists hope to develop new O navigational aids and weather foretasting techniques. They Ghope to discover new fishing erounds and learn more about G the" migratory habits of fish. O Thev mav discover new sub- emerged oil reserves. G Long Trip 0? And they figure out exactly Gwhy an empty whiskey bottle Cdropped in the California tide r?three years ago washed up on the shores of Saipan last Febru- ,J Commander of the American 2 fleet involved is Joseph L. Reid .-Jr., 32, of the University of Cali fornia's Scripps Institution of "Oceanography. A native of Bay town, Tex., he volunteered for cavy duty in World War II and vSas commissioned an ensign in -1943. O Reid is aboard the flagship Spencer F. Baird which is rang ing at 10 knots off the California coast as far south as , Acapulco, rilexico, and northward to Se attle. . This is the southeast sec tor of Norpac. Another American contingent, Prizes Scheduled lor 4-H Winners Corvallis An outstanding heifer calf of the same breed shown tby 4-H dairy club ex Oliibitors during the 1955 state fair will be awarded as a top " , prize for 4-H Club members, according to' Cal Monroe, 4-H Estate extension agent at Oregon State college. L. L. Rumgay, Oregon City, s will award this year's purebred Guernsey heifer calf in behalf 3f the Oregon Guernsey Cattle iflub to the highest scoring 4-H exhibitor of the breed. Edwin and Priscilla Barber, GNehalem, will present a holstein calf for the Oregon Holstein Breeders' association and Chris Jorgenson and Sons, Jefferson, &will provide the registered milk ing shorthorn calf to be awarded Gby the Oregon Milking Short Ghorn Breeders' association. 3 The Oregon and Columbia Val- tley Ayrshire association will :...-J a naif nt ivntiira krau rto the outstanding club exhibitor. The 4-H Jersey calf will be pre sented on Jersey day at the fair .cbut does not require that the -dinner show an animal, as the based at Honolulu, is covering the central section. The Canadians, and a crew from the University of Washing ton, are tracking the winds and current' west of Canada and Alaska. The Japanese have nine ships following the Japanese Current north from Hong Kong to above the Aleutian Islands. The ships are measuring any thing that might be pertinent to a better understanding of the mysterious sea. The scientists also are collecting floating plants and unusual fish. ' Japan Profits Economically, Norpac prob- ably will be most important to the Japanese because it may lead to development of new fishing grounds. "The sea is Japan's greatest resource," Dr. Kanji Suda, head of the Japanese Coast Guard, told a Tokyo correspondent of United Press. "Japan doesn't have the land resources of other countries. No other country de pends so completely on the sea." Suda isn't content with Norpac alone. He wants to get Filipinos and Australians interested, along i with the Americans, in a similar survey of the South Pacific's be havior. "This project is a good start," he said, 'but we must extend our activities south of the 20th paral lel to cover equatorial waters. It is in equatorial waters that Jap anese fishermen obtain most of their tuna." Reid, however, is primarily an oceanographer and appears more interested in the scientific as pects of the Pacific Current than in any economic implications. "The information of greatest scientific interest will be on ocean currents," he says. "Nor pac is not designed to solve a particular problem but to gain information on a large number of problems, the chief of them currents." McKay's Tongue Slips at Newberg Newberg, Ore. (U.P.) Secre tary of Interior Douglas McKay, a staunch Republican, made a humorous slip of the only par tisan note at former President Herbert Hoover's 81st birthday anniversary here. McKay, introducing the for mer President, began to touch on Hoover's achievements "since the boy of 15 left Newberg-er." As the crowd broke into laugh ter McKay realized his inad vertent reference to one of his strongest political foes, Demo cratic Sen. Richard L. Neuberg er, and ad-libbed that he wouldn't blame him (Hoover) for leaving him (Neuberger)." ESCORTED BY OFFICERS and unidentified F.B.I, agent, Jocelyn Pilapil, 16, Honolulu, leaves Canadian destroyer Ath abasca at Long Beach, Cal., on which she had stowed away in Hawaii to be near seaman she met in islands. (International) BOLIVIANS DHOWW La Paz, Bolivia flJ.R) At least 30 men, women and chil dren were believed drowned on Wednesday when a launch cap sized on an artificial lake behind the Lupi dam. Most of the vic tims were tin miners and their families going to a religious ceremony tt Catavi, center e Bolivia's tin-mining area. FREE SALE SHOTS Tokyo (U.R) Children of American military personnel serving in the Tar East will re ceive free Salk polio vaccine within the next two months, the U. S. Army announced today. DR. CORNELL SABO ANNOUNCES His Return from Military Service and the RE-OPENING OF HIS OFFICE for the practice of DENTISTRY 305 Medical Center Bldg Phone 9-3994 award is based entirely upon records. Bulgaria Offers Compensation for American Deaths Washington i(U.R) Bulgaria has apologized to the United States and offered to pay com pensation for the death of 12 Americans killed last month aboard an Israeli airliner shot down by Bulgarian fighter planes. A State Department spokes man said today the offer was carried in a reply to a stiff U. S. protest dispatched shortly after the incident. The protest and reply were channeled through Switzerland because the United States and Bulgaria do not have diplomatic relations. Ficrhlers Responsible The airliner, bound from Lon don to Tel Aviv, was shot down July 27, killing all 58 aboard. Bulgaria claimed the plane had strayed off its normal course across Yugoslavia. The Bulgarians originally said the airliner was downed by anti aircraft fire but later admitted that fiffhter rtlanes were respon sible. It said the fighters had been "too hasty," and promised punishment for those respon sible. The State Department said the formal reply to the United States followed the same general line It said the Bulgarians apolo gized for the incident, promised to punish the offenders and offer ed compensation to the families of Americans killed aboard the airliner. The United States had demanded all of these. Use Tribune Want Arts M.C.P. (COfR. 1953 FIOM THE FAMOUS KITCHEN LABORATORY mutual citrus mooucts. co. ANAHIIM. CALIF. 0 o 0;:" Q 0 O o THEY'RE FINER FLAVORED, EASIER TO MAKE... AND YOU GET MORE! 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