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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1957)
SIX MKDTORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Wednesday, February 20, 1957 Quotes From the News York By UNITED PRESS Abba Eban, Israeli ambassador to the United G fitataa. on ki country's refusal to withdraw troops from Egyptian territory: 0" "Iarael ii seeking not to annex an inch of anybody's territory, but oaly seeking to strengthen her own security." di 'Wwaiaftoa Senala Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson g to I tfca laaase the revised version of President Eisenhower's Mids)ia East slactrine: f "- . . aeeres notice to the Communist world thai they are op poses) set it by one man or just one branch of government." " 3 3 Nbsf York N,ew York Yankee General Manager George Weiss, on acquiring pitcher Art Dltmar from the Kansas City Athletics In a 11-man trade: 'Ha hta looked good for two or three inning. Our big park should: help him, too, after pitching in a band box." 't Si P Jaaerie An office worker commenting on the collapse e rot lllef office building into a heap of rubble in which at least IS geieea were injured and several others feared dead or O saissioa: "aV'traa fae werst thing I've seen in my life. Nothing in the Btm aeala eeaipare with it." 'ishingtan Mrs. Eisenhower on returning to Washington in the miast of a drizzling rain with the President from their Thom Osville, Ge., vacation: "It doesn't look much like the Sunny South." e Vshinton Maj. Gen. Roy A. Green, commander of the 49th ational Guard division, endorsing the Army's order requiring si months active duly for all Guard recruits: "The day is gone when any lunkhead can have a rifle shoved into his hand aed some officer can march out in front, wave a saber and sae 'charge'." Negro Orderly o cPoses as Doctor Jersey City, N. J. (U.PJ A young Negro hospital orderly admitted to poliae Tuesday night that he had treated his neigh bors for more than a year while posing as a doctor. Clarence K. Garland, 26, a $175-a-month orderly at New York's Flower Fifth Avenue hos pital, was arrested on a tip from a pharmacist. Garland, a native of Ports mouth, Va., said he always had wanted to be a doctor, but he didn't have the money to go to college. Jfe told police he learned tsje rudiments of medicine by watching doctors in various hos pitals where he had worked dur ing the past several years.. He said he had treated neigh bors for colds, cuts and bruises, O dog bites, arthritis and venereal 1 disease, but never accepted a 2 fee. Garland also said he never performed any major operations. Mrs. Audrey Garland, 18, whorrPhe married last October, expressed disbelief at her hus band's arrest. She said she (aousht he was a doctor O CapY Mark Fallon said he loun instruments and medi cines in a physician's black bag when he arrested Garland at his home. Garland said he had stolen the instruments and medicines '-from hospitals. o- Baltimore Delays Dock Settlement New York (U.R) Opposition of Baltimore shipping employ ers to a coastwide longshore con tract resulted in a continuation today of an East Coast strike of 45,000 dockworkers. Negotiators and mediators tried again today to settle the Baltimore dispute, involving 7,400 longshoremen, but the president of the Baltimore Steamship Trade Assn. described the. outlook as "bleak." ILA President William Brad ley warned that the Baltimore shippers "can hold out all week if they want to, but not a ship will move on the North Atlantic coast until they settle." Long shoremen in other ports will begin voting Thursday on ratifi cation of new three-year con tracts. But ILA leaders pledged to continue their strike from Portland, Me., to Hampton Roads, Va., until the Baltimore dispute is settled. ' The Baltimore employer group, along with shippers in Philadelphia and Norfolk, Va., opposed the coastwide "master contract" negotiated in New York Sunday covering wages, hours and employer contribu tions for. pension and welfare benefits. But Philadelphia em ployers accepted the contract early Tuesday and Norfolk ship pers fell in line Tuesday night. Prevention of Termination of Control Over Indians Important Prevention of undue haste in terminating federal control over the Klamath Indians is the most important problem before Ore gonians today according to Con gresswoman Edith Green who was in Medford Monday. Termination of federal con trols before the Indians are properly prepared will not only disrupt the lives of more than 2,000 individuals, she stressed, but will endanger the proper disposal of one of the most valu able timber stands left in the United States. Mrs. Green has introduced several bills in connection with the problem, and issued a state ment yesterday concerning var ious phases of the matter. In her statement in support of her bills to amend the Klamath Indian termination act to the house committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, Congresswoman Green stated: "The objectives of these bills have been approved by the ex ecutive committee of the Klam ath tribe. They have the sup port and approval of the tribal attorneys . . . The purpose of these bills is simple and the need is obvious. One of tbem transfers to the federal government a responsi bility that properly belongs there it provides that the cost of termination should be paid by the government. The other is intended to correct a defect in the present law in order to be sure that a wise and beneficial termination plan is not render ed impossible by a premature liquidation of assets to meet the claims of individual members of the tribe electing to receive their individual interests in cash. "The values, human and eco nomic, involved in this matter are so great that no legislative precaution should be neglected to insure that the basic purposes of termination are successfully carried out. "The Klamath tribe has ap proximately 2,100 enrolled mem bers. Its assets have a value esti mated at $80 million to SI 00 million. Ninety per cent of this value is in one of the finest pine forests left in the United States. "The interests of the tribe and its individual members, of the local community and of all the people of the United States, require that this forest be pro tected. If it is to be preserved on a sustained yield basis, the time provided by these bills is necessary to arrange sound dis position of the forest. "Time is equally needed to insure that the financial interest of each member of the tribe is similarly protected . : . if, fol lowing the appraisal (by the management specialists) there is to be sufficient time for the management specialists to con duct a deliberate and beneficial disDosition of tribal assets. forced liquidation in order to j pay individual claims must be avoided. "As one of the management specialists testified concerning the present law before a senate committee: If this bill Is car ried out as written and strictly followed, one of the finest stands of timber in the United States will be destroyed'." Secretary of Interior Fred Seaton said he will ask congress to postpone sale of the tribal timber lands, according to re leases from Washington. Med ford residents interested in the matter have urged voters write or wire their congressmen. Solutions offered included a proposal that the federal govern ment buy the timberland itself to prevent its being sold piece meal to persons who may har vest the timber in a wasteful fashion; that Oregon revise it self conservation laws in a man ner to cover the emergency, or that the Indians be allowed to form a corporation to control the sale of the timber. C O H AVE A LOOK! OUQ UEW ECONOMY SHOP IS AT YOUR SERVICE EIAID CUTTING $100 private booths 9 SHAUP00 Style $150 expert operators SffPHJinEUTS F $595 GUARANTEED WORK GOOD REASONS FOR HAVING YOUR PERMANENT WITH US NOW o t Famous Brands for Your Permanent ir Courtesy Hair Cut o "ir Creme Shampoo k Creme Rinse Styled Setting CRATERIAN'S FROM ONLY SO 5 COMPLETE o o o o o o o Wm PHONE or Just DROP IN Phone 2-4830 ! 1 1 fLi 1! 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