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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1957)
fOOB MEDFORD (OREGON) UNE Bveryon tn Soutr.ern Oregon fleatta Tn Maii Trtbunt" Kiiiitefi Daily Except Saturday by JE&DFORD PRINTING CO 7-ga North Fir St Phone 2-6141 BOBRHT W RlTHi. Editor ; TFUB tVAE? Advrtliing Manager ynjLk.a LATHAM Busineu Manager rRZC Ai-i-ZN JS Mana-jin Editor (A&i- & ADAMS City Editor iAER? CHPMAN Telegraph Editor ifCUAAO JEWETt Sports Editor lf VS STActCKEB Society Editor j A4-S gUCKSON Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newtpaper .Entered a second cias matter at BfedfOrd Oregon uirler Act oi MareH 3. 1&97 SUBSCRIPTION RATES y Mali Io Advance: Per Copy 10c Xfcu.jr and Sunday One year 113-00 Ecaxy and Sunday Six months B OO Daily and Sunday Three mot 4.25 Quo ax v Ocjy On year H 20 B? Carrier la Advance Med ford Autoload Centra) Point Eaffl Point. Jacinoovllle Gold HtU phoenix. Savor Cove Rcxrue River. Talent end on mcAr routes' paoiy and Sunday One year 918 00 ZkaJy and Sunday One month IJS0 Carrier and Dealers 10c per copy All Tar ana Caen tn Advance 6Htal Paaer of the City of Medford tftirlalP spar oi Jackson Coonty Onited Press EuH Leased Wire ftOtaUffSR OF A UDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATION Xcflerfliim? FfeDresentatlve VfE ST- HOLJD A Y COMPANY INC Offices tn Haw York Chicago, de Worn San Francisco. Los Angeles ?le Portland St Louis Atlanta ancouver B C National editoiia.. I ASSOCfA'ieN MEWSPAPEt B L I S H 1 1 1 ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time tfedford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, SO and 40 years ago. 1 YEA fit AGO Jwne It. H4T (Monday) Members of Rogue Valley Ra dio club return to Medford fol lowing 11th ARRL field day at Prescott park on Roxy Ann. From Ar t h u r Perry's Ye Smud Pot column: "1941 Ply pnouth, 5-passenger coupe, for sale" (Exchange) An antique usd bv Columbus. n rtAKS AGO Jtwo IS. 18ST (Vedawday) If Medford's million dollar In vestment la paved streets is to fct saved, repairs must be made Without further delay, accord ing to Fred W. Scheffel, city juprintendent. Plana for .'Sponsoring a junior Mjnonphon? in this area are made 'bf Zontians at meeting held at studio of Mrs. Iffie Kurtz. M TEAKS AGO Jtae IS. HzT (Thursday) Pars ia the Rogue valley will pfrovido a ood crop this year though not as food as last year's, according to W. H. Gore, Med tcfi bankr. The new nine holes at the Medford o!f club officially opens with tournament. 40 YE AX AGO June 1. Iti7 (Satuiday) Local Red Cross organizes so licitation teams that will can vass Jackson county to fill chap ter's quota foi "war funds." From Local and Personal col umn: David Watt and D. D. Good report a rich strike is made In the high grade mine located on Hungry creek. at's Your LQ.? Nln er tn corrrtt In n1or; rvrn or Uht U cillet: Uvm or tlx Is good. 1. Did the Ancients, to whom the earth was a disk, believe there was land beyond the At lantic? 2. Who was Vice - President during Franklin D. Roosevelt's first term as President? 3. Bible: "The Lord our God shall deliver us out of the of" was it Assyria, Persia, or Greece? 4. The Republic of the Philip pines gained its independence on January 1, 1946: July 4, 1946 or January 1, 1947? 5. There were three U. S. Pres idents who wer born in Febru ary; name them. 6 February 2 is associated with a weather legend concern ing what animal? 7. Hypnosis is a disease of the hip; true or false? 8. Does human hair graw from the roots or from the ends? 9. How do you pronounce "ex emplar"? 1(1 "Arrestment, sudden real ly as a bolt out of the blue has hit strange victims." Carlyle, "The French Revolution": To what substance was he referring? Answers: 1. Yes. The kingdom of the dead. 2. John Nance Gar ner. 3. Assyria 4 July 4, 194S 5 George Washington, (February 22, 1732); William Henry Harri son, (February 9. 1793); Abra ham. Lincoln, (February 12. 1809) 6. Ground hog or wood chuck (who is said io emerge from his burrow to see whether the weather is good; if he sees his shadow, he will retire for six weeks more cf winter sleep). 7. False: it is a state resembling normal sleep. 8. From the roots. 9. Eg lem-pler or eg-iem-plahr. 10. Lightning. MAIL TRIBUNE Editorial Correspondence Boston, Mass., June 13th: Have been travelling too much to keep up our "home work." Drove Monday to catch the 10 o'clock bus from Saranac Lake to Plattsburg, N.Y. Never visited Plattsburg before, but had several friends who took officer's training at Plattsburg just before the U.S.A. de clared war on Germany in 1916. It is on Lake Champlain and now the site of a U.S. jet-plane base. It is about the size of Med ford, but as of today has more empty buildings and "For Rent" signs. Like Malone, Potsdam and all other towns in Upper New York we have visited, the business districts are shabby but the residence districts are not. In fact the residence districts are uni formly attractive with a deep nostalgic flavor large "Gay Ninety" mansions with cupalos. bay-windows, many fringed with colored glass, porte-cocheres, large stables turned rather un happily into garages. The residence streets are wide, elms and maples forming an arch of Gothic greenery a general atmos phere of homey security and substantial rather than sensational prosperity. Did you ever hear of Count Charles D. Fredenbrugh? Neither had we, but it seems he built one of the most attractive red brick residences in Plattsburg, where he died in 1787. The Count must have turned in his grave many times since then for his "mansion" is today little better than an abbatoir for it is occupied by Armour 4 Company. Another very attractive building near the scene of the battle of Ticonderoga is a colonial frame building which was British headquarters in the war of 1812. We have always been a bit skeptical of American histories of this war and- one of these days intend to read some British ones. We suspect that England gained many victorias on land and sea American historians have as a whole ignored and that political conditions in Europe played a larger role in the final victory than anything else. . Before leaving on the Deleware and Hudson for Montreal we were treated to somethihg new, a blizzard of dandelion seeds. We might have suspected snow had it not been so hot and nun-id. They covered the grass around the Ticonderga monument a miniature replica of Bunker Hill and formed a dirty white scum on the lake inlet. Apparently the fish were not fooled. At least we observed no activity in that direction. The one resident of Plattsburg taking a sunbath on a stone curbing said he had never seen anything like it before and he had been working in Plattsburg for around ten years. Montreal is the reverse of northern New York state. Its business section is most impressive but the residence sections we have seen were not. In fact, we would say that Canadian residences as a whole are most uninteresting and commonplace. (We fear Canadians will be greatly shocked and disturbed when they read this!) Came here via the CPR and Boston Maine, seeing so many pulp mills and the rich pulp-wood along the Connecticut river with apparent normal life going on, that we wondered if the talk about noxious odors was all a myth, or do Connecticut Yankees suffer from olfactory insensitiveness. Coming through Vermont the train passed close to a village named "Glenn Jackson." (If anyone doubts this let them look up a railroad map.) Much to our disappointment we did not stop. Perhaps the B&M will have better sense on the way back. We would like to at least open the window and get an electric shockl R.W.R. A Little Something for Father IF THE NATION as a whole is less stirred emotional- ly by Father's Day on Sunday than it had been by Mother's Day five weeks before, that wouldn't mean that Americans follow more closely in the case of Mom than of Pop the Biblical injunction to honor our parents. It means only that we let ourselves get more emotional about Mother. The chances are almost 50-50 that the Father hon ored on June 16 is a war veteran. He is much more likely to have worn the uniform in World War II than in World War I. Only about one-fourth as many Americans served in 1917-19 as in 1939-45. WHEN the draft act became law in September, 1940, 15 months before the Japanese and Ger man declarations of war on the United States, all men with dependents were deferred. That barred practic ally all fathers of draft age. It was not until October, 1943, when the pool of non-fathers had become ex hausted, that Fathers became subject to induction. And in the point system of discharge after V-E Day, the discharge of Fathers was speeded up in Wash ington, expedited by allowing 12 points for each de pendent child up to and through three. The typical father of today presides over a smal ler household than did the typical father of 45 years ago. In 1956 the average population per household was 3-13 persons; in 1910 it was more than 4'2- And Pop probably married earlier than Grandpa had. To day more than one-half of all males of 23 are married ; in 1910, it was less than one-third. To Regulate Welfare Funds Legislation on union welfare funds is probable from this session of Congress, now that the Admini stration has abandoned its bill on the subject that Sen. Douglas (D-Ill.) called toothless. Secretary of Labor fames P. Mitchell has told the Senate Labor commit tee that he endorses in general the Douglas bill to con trol the funds. Tho nnp Hirpct federal control over them at pres ent is a vague section of the only to the relatively lew iuncis jointly administered by Labor and Management. And of these it requires Hit., nature unsDecified. with no aerency specified to receive it, and with penalties for failure to file also unspecified. The Douglas bill applies to all labor welfare and pension funds, however administered, covering more than 25 employees. The administrators would have to register the funds with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and file with it a periodic statement, in prescribed detail and audited by a C.P.A., on receipts, expenditures, holdings, fees and commissions paid, financial situation of the administrators. The S.E.C. would have investigatory and subpoena powers. The statements would be available to the public, with summaries sent to the beneficiaries. Falsification would be a penal offense, as would embezzlement. The chief change that Secretary Mitchell would make in the bill would be to have .the Labor Department the supervisory agency instead of the S.E.C. E.R.R. Sunday. June 18, 1957 Taft-Hartley act applying ' I DOM'T KNOW THE NAME, 6UT rr SMELLS AWfUt! Matter of Fact By stewa aiSoP IN THE NUCLEAR FOG Washington Now that the scientists have had their say about the radiation effects of nuclear weap ons tests, the c o n f usion is worse than it ever was Some people have been led to believe that the tests will give every body bone' cancer, or that Stewzit Alsop ine next generation will con sist largely of monsters. Others have been led to believe that anyone who talks about the dan gers of nuclear radiation is Communist propaganda. One reason why the confusion is worse than ever is the simple fact that the scientists them selves do not really know what the ultimate effects of the mon strous weapons they have cre ated may be. As last week's Sen ate hearings proceeded, that be came rather frighteningly clear "We do not yet understand," a scientist would say, or "it is not now possible to reach a firm conclusion," or "the data are in sufficient." The scientists. In short, are groping in a great nuclear fog, like all the rest of us, and they see different shapes in the fog. But there were at least three basic facts on which all, or al most all, the scientists seem to agree, though they put very different interpretations on the meaning of these facts. The three areas of agreement may be summarized about as follows THIRST, if anyone is worrying about how controlled, peace time testing of nuclear weapon"! may affect his own health, he can stop worrying. As a statis tical matter, there is hardly more chance that the reader of this report, or any living indi vidual, will be hurt by peace time testing than that he will be, say, bitten by a camel or clubbed to death in a gondola Some scientists, to be sure, do believe that the increase in global radiation resulting from the tests may increase the total number of people in the world who will die of bone cancer or leukemia. But even the most alarmist scientists agree that the number who may be so affected, as a proportion of the total glo bal population, is tiny so tiny as to be negligible, in statistical, if not in human, terms. Second, all the scientists agree even the most conservative, like Dr. Willard Libby of the Atomic Energy commission that there is some danger that some mutations in the genes will result from the increase in the global radiation level This means that some babies of the .future will be still-born, or born disfigured. HOW great is this danger? Here the nuclear fog settles thickly In. But the answer again depends in part on whether you consider the danger in statistical or human terms. One reputable scientist, a Nobel Prize winner, warned that "hundreds of thou sands, or millions" of future lives will be lost or impaired as a result of the nuclear tests al ready held. Others maintained that this danger, too, was "negligible." In statistical terms, it is negli gible, since even "hundreds of thousands" of babies-to-be make up a negligible fraction of the tens of millions yet unborn There is only a very tiny risk that any one individual's de scendants will be hurt by con trolled peace time testing. But again, in human terms, even a few thousand babies let alone "millions," is undoubtedly a lot of babies. Third, virtually all the scien tists agreed that there must be some annual limit on the global rate of testing nuclear weapons otherwise, even in statistical terms, the dangers might be by no means negligible. Some sci entists put this limit as low as two megatons. But most put the limit at around ten megatons of fission products. This is the equivalent of a single medium power hydrogen bomb. The I United States has already test- ed a device with a power of about forty megatons, and the Soviet tests have reached at least twenty megatons. rpHIS, then to summarize, is what the confusing uproar about nuclear testing is all about: there is a small danger to living persons inherent in the testing, but if the testing is kept at a certain level, the danger is so small it can be virtually dis regarded. There is also a danger, small in statistical terms but perhaps affecting very large to tal numbers, to the yet unborn. The position of the American government is that the require ments of national security make it necessary to accept these risks. The official position raises pro found moral questions, and it is silly to say that any who dispute it are pro-Communists or fools. But it is probably the right posi tion, since freedom depends on our maintaining nuclear parity with the Soviets, and freedom is worth a risk. Yet the facts outlined above insistently suggest other ques tions. If nuclear testing must, in the interests of global safety, be limited to ten megatons a year, what happens to the world when. say, 5,000 megatons are exploded in an all-out nuclear war? Can the high yield nuclear weapons really be used in decisive quan tities in wartime, save as a final despairing, suicidal gesture? Is then, the United States justified in relying so heavily in nuclear weapons as the central instru ment of national power? There are the questions, far more than the assentially peripheral ques tion of controlled testing, which must be examined, through the nuclear fog, most coolly and carefully. (c) 1957 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Missing Ft. Lewis Boys Found Saturday Tillamook (IP) Forest service ground searchers Saturday found two missing Ft. Lewis, Wash., youths in good condition after they had spent a rain-soaked night in a wooded area near Cape Lookout. The forest service said the boys were found shortly after 1 p.m. and that it would take about two hours to bring them down the mountain trail where they became lost Friday eve ning. The missing youths were Craig Hadley, 15, and Kirk Hadley, 13, sons of Lt. Col. and Mrs. Cleo V. Hadley. Their father is deputy chief of staff at Ft. Lewis. They apparently became lost during a cloudburst while walk ing along the mountain trail in densely wooded country near the seaside resort of Cape Lookout. Board of Education Accepts Grants Portland TO The State Board of Higher Education Saturday received grants totaling nearly S190.000 for 46 research proj ects on its seven campuses. The research totals were only a part of the S280.000 in gifts and grants to be placed before the Board for acceptance at its meeting here Wednesday. Largest single offer was for S19.550 for the University of Oregon Medical School for the study of certain skin responses. The grant is from the federal Public Health Service. Oregon State College will re ceive 25 research grants totalling S82.000. University of Oregon will get five grants for $28,000; University of Oregon dental school, 6 grants for S22.400. DOESN'T WANT HORSE Pasadena, Calif. (IP) Mrs. Mildred Peime, a favorite high school English teacher, received a 50 spider monkey from her graduating class this week as a present. "The students say I al ways tell them to stop the mon key business and that I call them a bunch of monkeys,'' she said. "I know one thing that I'll never tell any class to stop hors ing around." Byrd May Let Chips Fall Where They May In Financial Probe Washington (CQ) The rec ord of Sen. Harry FlOQd Byrd (D-Va.) indicates he will conduct a "let the chips fall where they may" investigation of the Na tion's financial system. Byrd heads the Senate Fin ance committee which has voted to put public and private reven ue, debt, interest rates and cred it under a microscope. The com mittee then expects to make rec ommendations to Congress early next year. Byrd said he hopes to begin the hearings within the next few weeks. The probe will be far more than a clinical study of nation al finance. Democrats see it as loaded with political capital. They will try to show that the Press Corps Likes Ike's Limited Use Of 'No Comment' By A. ROBERT SMITH Mail Tribune Correspondent Washington One thing mem bers of the press corps here ap preciate about President Eisen hower is that i n answering questions at his news conferences he seldom reverts to that famil iar dodge, "no comment." Quite the W$gtiM& opposite, the A. Robt smitb president sometimes gets wound up and spins out quite an answer. Often he is -extremely lucid and in formative. But sometimes he uses many words to say very little, in the manner of the prac ticed politician. One source of constant amuse ment to those who watch his words carefully is the way he frequently gets tangled up in his grammar and word selection, sprinkling comas instead of pe riods between his thoughts. After habit for over four years, one of the talented members of the press corps has figured out how Eisenhower would have written and delivered the famous Gettys burg address of President Lin coln, memorized by most every school boy for generations. This good-natured version follows: Certain Eastern Areas "I haven't checked these fig ures, but 87 years ago, I think it was, a number of individuals organized a governmental setup here in this country, I believe it covered certain eastern areas, with this idea they were follow ing up, based on a sort of na tional independence arrange ment and the program that every individual is just as good as every other individual. "Well, now of course we are dealing with this big difference of opinion, civil disturbance you might say, although I don't like to appear to take sides or name any individuals, and the point is naturally to check up, by ac tual experience in the field see whether any government setup with a basis like the one I was mentioning has any validity whether that dedication, you might say, by those early indi viduals has any lasting values. "Well, here we are, you might put it that way, all together at the scene where one of those dis turbances between different sides got going. We want to pay our tribute to those loved ones, those departed individuals who made the supreme sacrifice here on the basis of their opinions about how this setup ought to be handled. It is absolutely in order and 100 per cent OK to do this. "But if you look at the overall picture of this, we can't pay any tribute we can't sanctify this area we can't hallow, accord ing to whatever individual creeds or faiths or sort of re ligious outlooks are involved, like I said about this particular area. It was those individuals themselves, including the enlist ed men very brave individuals who have given this religious character to the area. The way I see it. the rest of the world will not remember any state ments issued here, but it will never forget how these men put their shoulders to the wheel and carried this idea down the fair way. "Our joy, the living individ uals' job here is to pick up the burden and sink the putt they made these big efforts here for. t mir ioh to eet on with the assignment and from these de ceased fine individuals to iac vtra insniration VOU could call it, for the same theories about which they did such a lot. "We have to make up our mmJc i-iaht hprp and now. as I see it. they didn't put out all that blood, perspiration and well, that they didn't just make a dry run here, that all of us, under God, that is, the God of our choice, shall beef up this idea about freedom and liberty and those kind of arguments, and that government of all in dividuals, by all individuals and for the individuals shall not pass out of the world picture." L3h Eisenhower Administration's fis cal policy has enriched bank ers but hurt the "little man" try ing to buy a house or expand a small business. Politically Explosiva Other politically explosive top ics in prospect include: who is benefiting from current tax pol icies how the Administration is financing the public debt and the wisdom of the Federal Re serve Board in raising interest rates on its money. As Chairman, Byrd will have the most to say about the direc tion the investigation takes and its duration. He calls the hear ings, decides who shall testify and for how long, hires the coun sel, asks the questions and di rects the majority's conclusions in the final report. An attempt by Rep. Wright Patman (D-Tex.), a strong critic of Administration fiscal policy, and the House Democratic lead ership to have Patman conduct a money policy investigation was defeated. Also shelved, though it has not come to the floor in either chamber, is President Ei senhower's proposal for a citi zens' commission to study U.S. money policy. Unanimous Agreement Byrd, meanwhile, got the Sen ate Finance committee's seven Democratic and seven Republi can members to agree unani mously on the investigation. He avoided having to receive Sen ate approval by specifying the probe would be paid for out of the Committee s regular funds. The committee's unanimity in taking on the investigation and having it headed by Byrd indi cates both Democrats and Re publicans believe the probe will benefit their cause. Byrd's views and his past performance pro vide enough surface evidence to build a case for either Demo cratic or Republican partisans. Byrd told Congressional Quar terly he would make no effort to restrict the depth or breadth of the investigation. Although he said his own attitude during the investigation would be non-po litical, he added: "There is just no way you can avoid political issues coming out of it. In support of the Republicans' feeling about Byrd as their best bet to handle the investigation are his political independence and fiscal conservatism. He step ped way across party lines m 1952, for example, to support General Eisenhower for Presi dent. And he long has been urg ing Federal economies and mini mum Government interference with business. Byrd's philosophy of business and government was spelled out as early as March 19, 1935, when he told the Senate: "Individuals should be allowed to develop a business without fear of compe tition bv the Federal Govern ment or undue interference with the reasonable control of their business so long as they act with a decent regard for the rights of others." Byrd's votes over the years further indicate what to expect from the man whose investiga tion may spawn the major issues for the 1958 Congressional cam paigns. Byrd's votes add up to the conclusion that he cannot be counted on to follow the lead of his own party nor the Republi cans; also that he cannot be la beled accurately as a conserva tive or liberal, or as a friend or foe of big business. Supported NRA For example, in 1933 he voted for the National Industrial Re covery Act, President Roosevelt's New Deal blueprint. He also vot ed to let Roosevelt revalue the dollar and to authorize Federal development of the Tennessee Valley (TWA). But other New Deal era votes show Byrd against the 1935 Util ity Holding Company Act which broke up utility empires. Byrd also was one of six Democrats who opposed spending $4 billion on work relief. In 1940, Byrd voted to draft industries which could not reach an operating agreement with the Government. He also voted in favor of taxing income on pub lic securities and the excess prof its of corporations. He has repeatedly opposed Federal development of tideland oil fields and such Federal aid programs as money to help build public schools or to ease unemployment in economically depressed areas. Atomic Power Program He voted in 1956 for a bill to launch the Federal Government on an atomic power program, voted against the bill to free natural gas producers from pub lic utility regulation. Asked how he would define his own political philosophy, Byrd said, 'Tin a liberal based on fis cal conservatism." He said the term conservative one usually applied to him was the "most misunderstood term in the coun try. A conservative," he said, 'is a man who conserves the re sources of the country." Labels aside, Byrd a 69-year-old apple grower who pilots one of the biggest political machines left in the country in his state can be counted on to allow his financial probe to be a wide open one. (Copyright 1957, Congressional Quarterly Nawsfeatures) POTLUCK (By M-T Staff and Contributors) The annual National Rooster Crowing contest was held yester day in Rogue River. A Mail Trib une reporter, covering the event, noted: "With about 20 minutes of crowing time gone, a three-dies-el Southern Pacific freight rumbled through on the tracks closeby and issued a few In eligible blasts." That lama reporter brought back a souvenir toy rooster, which, whan a handle is turn ed, crows. During th after noon, when the ofiica was itill (which isn't too often) ha got a notion io liven things up. He took the rooster, con cealed in a magazine, to a spot behind our city editor, who, like other members of lb staff, was busy at the tima. The crow echoed off the of fice walls, and evan into tha "back shop" over tha inter com. All but ona staff mem ber was shaken up by tha noise. Without fluttering an eye lid, our city editor slowly looked around to sea tha cause of tha noise. Shades of individualism- The manager of the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce rolls his own. So does one of our staff mem bers (who recently returned from the University of Oregon for the summer), but not as efficiently as the Chamber's manager. One of our staff members (who is now at the National Guard summer camp) tees at least one drawback in the May flower II landing at Plymouth: "It will mean the creation of a whole new generation of sailors for bluebloodi to de scend from." A staff member and his wife faced almost bare food supply shelves when they returned from a mide-western vacation re cently. After considerable dis cussion as to what to prepare for dinner, they decided to dine out instead of eating the only available food at home: Hot beans and cold sardines. Boyer Lists Gains In 1957 Legislature Bend Robert Boyer, Demo cratic state chairman from Med ford, Friday listed several "im portant gains" of the 1957 Dem ocratic legislature Friday at a central Oregon conference of party leaders here. Boyer said the gains were In the fields of agriculture, educa tion, social welfare, labor, Ore gon development, election laws and local property tax relief. He especially praised the leadership of Gov. Robert D. Holmes during the legislative session. Referring to the need for in creased financing, Boyer stated, "The party which has elected two senators, three representa tives, a governor and a legisla ture, must be solvent. It must also remain unified, refusing to fragmentize itself out of exist ence as has the Republican party of Oregon, where the Arlington Club boys sit back like spiders in a web laughing at the 'modern Republicans' who are bright, beaming and bankrupt." Judge Crawford to Hear Schrunk Trial Portland 0P Judge James W. Crawford Friday was assign ed to preside over the perjury trial here Monday of Mayor Terry Schrunk. The trial will be gin at 9:30 a.m. Presiding Circuit Judge Char les Redding, who made the Crow ford assignment, at the same time denied a defense motion for a transcript of the mayor's testimony before the Multnoamh county grand jury. Judge Redding said there ap peared to be no unusual or ex ceptional circumstances which would justify his allowing the motion. Mayor Schrunk is accused in a grand jury indictment of lying when he denied that he accepted a bribe from an operator of an after-hours night spot. Four Injured in Car Crash in Redmond Redmond W Four persona were injured here Friday when a car driven by Eldon Lea Tompsett, 22. Madras, Ore, struck a car driven by John L. Campbell, 68, also of Madras. State police said that the ac cident occurred when Campbell and his wife, Ella Elizabeth, 6,, were turning off the highway to enter a park. Tompsett's car struck them dead center critical ly injuring both of them. Tompsett was treated for head injuries and his passenger, La Vonne Ethelyn Jennerjohn, 19, was hospitalized for shock. Police said Tompsett's car skidded 200 feet before striking Campbell's car. v