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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 18, 1960 "Everyone in Southern Oregon Red The Mil Tribune" Published Dally except StturdiFEV HEDnJHU MrUNTlHU W 33 North TU Ph 8P S-S11 RORERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY AdvKtlilnn Maneier GKI1A1.D T bATItAM BUS mar ERIC W ALLEN IR. Mm Editor EARL 8 ADAMS City Editor HA nil V PHIPMAN Tales Editor nlriiAnn ir.wm Snorts Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Ed'.tor DALE EHICKSUN circulation msr An 1nilAnindRnt NewBOBOCr Entered ai tecond class matter at Medrord Oregon unaer aci oi March S. 1B97 RimRrnlPTfON RATES By Mall - In Advance Copy 10c Dally ana aunaay i year Dally and Sunday mos 6 00 Dallv and Sunday 3 mos 4.3B Sunday Only One year $4 JO n fur! In Advanre Medlord Ashland Central Point Eaajle Point. Jacksonville Gold Hill Phnenlr Shady Cove Roaue Rlv Mr Talent atiti on .notOt mtltCI Daily and Sunday 1 veal SIB 00 Dallv and Sunday 1 mo 1 BO Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All TermiLCah in Advanca f)'lil paoer"f"City of Medford Official Papar of Jackson County United Press International Pull Leaied Wire 11 O I Tnlonhntn NftWHOlCtUreB " MKMriKR OF AimiTBirREAfl- OFUlHLUUllliJPin Adverllflne'pinreientntlve: WEST HOLIDAY CO. INC Of. ,ijia in Nnuu York Chlcaro De troit. San Francltjco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland at uouia rv laPtaVnncouver. B.f! NEWSPAM PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAI ASfSbCtfATUOh ...HMIE'ill.'XID Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History trom the filet of The Mall Trlbwe 10. 20, 30, 40 and SO veari ago. 10 YEARS AGO Nov. 18. 1950 (Saturday) Glenn Jackson, Medford has been apoplnted to the overall Oregon and California revested lands advisory com' mittce, it was announced to day. Excavation for the second pipeline from Medford to Big Butte springs has been or dercd halted for 90 days due to the muddy conditions caused by recent rains. 20 YEARS AGO Nov. IS, 1940 (Monday) James H. Owen, who re- cently resigned his post as general manager of the Med- ford Corporation, will be the guest of honor at a Jackson County Chamber of Com merce luncheon Friday, i From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The wide-awako grocers and butchers of the state now de- liver the Thanksgiving turkey snow-white and wrapped In cellophane, with all the pin- feathers and gold nuggets In the craw removed. 30 YEARS AGO Nov. 18. 1930 (Tuesday) The Medford city council last night voted to permit heads of families without jobs to peddle apples on city streets. The city council last night approved . purchase of land near Bear creek for a park site and gave the go ahead for construction of a bridge across the creek at Cottage St. 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 18. 1920 (Thursday) The new Groceteria, owned by W. A. Gates and W. H. Lydiard, will open tomorrow in the M and H building. Rnlnh Hand will wrestle Cliff Sorenson in tomorrow night's grappling match at Gold Hill. 50 YEARS AGO Nov. 18, 1910 (Friday) Medford's first art exhibit, Including the JSlson eauca- tlnnnl nrt exhibit from BOS- Inn w 111 ho dlsnlaved at the Nntninrium next week: the exhibit is sponsored by the Greuter Medford club. What's Your I.Q.? kit.. m,m,i U lunarian oven or eight ii ticellenti five ei lis it good. 1. What King built the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? 2. What Biblical character was fed by the ravens? 3. How does the squid de fend itself when attacked or frightened? 4. Who used the Jawbone of an ass in battle and slew a large number of the enemy? 5. What is a young pigeon of the winged variety called? 6. Did Esperanto, the pro posed universal language, orl- ginate in Germany, Holland, or Poland? 7. Without looking would you expect to find the odd numbered pages on the left or right hand pages of a book? 8. Do more State names have an Indian origin or an English origin? 9. Which Is larger in area: Newfoundland, or Labrador? 10. Whose portrait appears on the ten dollar bill? ... Aniwerai 1. Nebuchadnei sar. 2. Elijah. 3. It sends out a cloud of "ink." 4. Samson. 5. Squab. 8. Poland. 7. On the right hand pags. 8. Indian. 9. Labrador 10. Hamilton. 1 Our New Senator ( The Jackson county court, in selecting a new state senator for Jackson county, faces one of its most important tasks in a long time. It may feel somewhat handicapped by the sour smell of partisan politics which is flavor ing the discussions as to who should succeed Dr. Edwin Durno in the senate. Under state law, selection of a new senator is entirely up to the court, with no strings, ifs, ands or buts. The only limitation is that the appointee must be an eligible elector, and be of the same political party as his predecessor. e DY TRADITION (and tradition only) the party central committee has in the past as sumed the right to make recommendations on such appointments. No one challenges that right. But it is still the duty of the court to make the selection, and it does not have to follow the central committee's recommendation. But the GOP central committee is taking its role very seriously. In our view, it would best serve the county by submitting a list of three or more eligible persons from which the court could make a choice, if it wished. If the central committee were to recommend only one person, it would put the court in an untenable position an em barrassing one, if the person recommended did not meet the criteria the court deemed essential. a IJERE are some of the factors the court un- doubtedly has in mind in making such a cru cial selection : 1. The county's two representatives-elect are both lawyers. While the law is an honorable pro fession, should not the delegation have at least one non-lawyer? 2. Both representatives-elect are Medford residents. Should not the third member of the delegation be from outside Medford say Ash land, or from the north part of the county? 3. Voters of the county did a massive job of party ticket-splitting at the election. And, while the new senator must be Republican by registration, he will have to represent ALL county residents not just one partv or one economic class or one industry or profession. a THESE add up to one mncif Vq a man n considers to be the best available person, with out regard to narrow partisanship or self-seeking political maneuvering. A choice on any other basis would be a repu diation of responsibility. But we are confident that the county court, composed of three highly conscientious gentle men, have these things firmly in mind as they approach the task of making their choice. E. A. DST Isn't Dead Once again, the people of Oregon turned down daylight savings time. The vote count on the measure in the Nov. 8 election was about 347,000 for DST, 379,000 against it a margin of some 32,000 votes. Have we heard the last of it? Not on your life. It will be back again. . One of the reasons for this is that Washing ton state voted for DST, and Oregon will now be an "island" of "slow time" during summer months, with both Washington and California one hour ahead. IN chief, this will bother the radio and television people, travelers (including tourists), and those who do business across state lines. And, in particular, it will have- its impact in Portland, where many people commute for work while living across trie river in Washington. In Multnomah county, the vote favored DST --143,928 to 98,862, more than 45,000 votes. And in the Oregon Journal the other day, there were two letters which are evidence of the continuing agitation for daylight time. "NE of them declared that Oregon probably would have voted for DST had its voters known in advance that Washington would. And the other urged the Portland city coun cil to adopt daylight time for the city alone something it cannot do under state law. So, the matter is bound to come up again. There's already "local option" law talk. But there's one thing we're mighty grateful for. That is the fact that not once during the campaign did we see anyone refer to Pacific Standard Time as "God's time." We're always grateful for such small favors. E.A. It Wont But It Could Woodrow Wilson, in his 1916 campaign for reelection, felt he was going to be defeated by Charles Evans Hughes, and was worried about the long transition period between the election and inauguration. He planned, if defeated, to name Hughes secretary of state, ask Vice President Thomas R. Marshall to resign, then resign himself, thus letting Hughes take over immediately. (In those days the secretary of state was third in line of succession.) loday it would be a It would call for a special session of congress, at which House Speaker Sam Rayburn (third in line) would temporarily vacate that office, the Senate would elect John Kennedy president pro tern, and then Nixon and Eisenhower would re sign, making Kennedy president it won t happen. But thing: The court's choice urnman i wV.rt tho n.nfr bit more complicated. it could. IS. A. Dennis the ' 6cv! mxxeise mo caddy do when HE WAS MY ASeGrWtfft ? Washington Report By WILLIAM APPROACH TO UNITY Washington - Presl dent elect Kennedy has gone far toward drawing up the most useful ap proach to na tional unity in the face of our foreign trou bles that this country has known since it became the leading world rail ' His action in opening intimate foreign policy discussions with his de feat rival for the presidency, Richard Nixon, is without ex ample in American politics. Franklin Roosevelt did not deal either so magnanimously or so sensibly with the top G.O.P. leader of his time. Her bert Hoover - not even after our entrance in the second World War was coming near, Dwight Elsenhower, upon his election, brusquely exclud ed Harry s. Truman from any sort of role in world affairs. Indeed, the principal weak ness of the retiring adminis tration has not lain in Mr, Elsenhower's alleged "soft ness" as a party leader, so far as foreign policy is concerned. It has lain, instead, in his curious "hardness," in this area, toward Democrats who could and would have helped him and he allowed it. e WHAT Mr. Kennedy has done is to bring Mr. Nix on Into a genuine advisory relationship in world affairs which cannot possibly hurt either man and might just pos sibly help the country. It can show ithat though we disagree on a thousand things at home, we are basically together on the big things abroad. It is a relationship that is oddly misunderstood by two wholly different groups for two totally different reasons, If personal references may be excused to illustrate the point this correspondent suggested the day after the election that the winner might bring the loser into a close creative ad visory association" with the new administration. Such a thing had in fact al ready been in Mr. Kennedy's mind, And it was made abso lutely certain that he would carry through on it once his victory turned out to be so narrow in popular votes. (There was, at the time, rea son to believe also that had the election result gone the other way Mr. Nixon would have done the same tiling.) ryo anybody remotely aware of political reality there never was, of course, a chemi- cal trace of possibility that Mr. Kennedy would actually ask Mr. Nixon himself Into his cabinet. Such an offer would have been manifestly absurd, And Mr. Nixon, as still the head of a powerful opposition party, would not for one mo ment have contemplated it even If it had been made. A man still well in the running for a future presidency in one party would hardly leave that for the glories, say, of being secretary of something or other In another party. Democratic professional ultra-liberals, however, immedi ately began to hiss in angry fear at the mere thought of any conciliation whatever of the Nixon followors-who do. after all, make up half the country. They sec politics as a kind of civil war. They overlooked that Kennedy is a political professional, not an emotional amateur. HE IS fully aware that par tisanship, the division of the sheep from the goats, is for campaign purposes, where as your problem, once elected, is to be able to govern - gov ern all the nation and not just its Democratic halt, J Menace S. WHITE The second and persistent misunderstanding of this en terprise comes from another group preoccupied with anoth er groundless fear. This is that a symbolic all-national front (on foreign policy alone) made possible by a Kennedy-Nixon cooperation is somehow a plot to smother and "silence Nixon in the political embrace of his en emies. ' One group, in short, is un conquerably little minded - and far more shrilly partisan than are the true and profes sional Democratic partisans. The other group is uncon querably melodramatic - and far more afraid for Nixon's future than he is afraid for his own. (Copyright. 1960. by Unitad Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Communications Lottera to the Editor muat bear the name and addreaa of the writer although undei cer tain circumstances the use of fian name 01 Initial for publica Ion la permissible. The MaU Tribune reserves the rlKht to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensation I .nil a r. mhnilllM ttr n.ihllnn. tlon must not exceed aodwordtj Speedy Justice To the Editor: Enclosed is a copy of a letter sent to the District Attorney for Jackson county. I have a slight theory it may not be well received. I have a bad habit of telling our public officials what I think about their procedures and ac tions. Sooner or later I'll no doubt make a mistake and jump onto the wrong public official, but at least 1 think I've done some good. Floyd R. McCabe Dear Mr. Reeder: In regard to the two men who are being held as material witnesses in the Medford city jail. It is my understanding, sub ject to possible revision that the Constitutions of both the United State and the State of Oregon guarantee the accused to a speedy trial. What I should like to know (and I am under the impression there are otlv ers who would also like to know) is why the delay in scheduling of a trial, and pos sible illegal detainment of the defendant, and the totally un necessary detention of the two material witnesses to the crime. If the office of the District Attorney is so swamped with work (this I doubt) that it can not prepare and schedule an early trial, I'd suggest the dis trict attorney andor their as sistants eliminate some of their private cases, get busy and do the work they are hired to do, and that the judges of the circuit court do likewise. I further suggest our repre sentatives in the legislature and our local state senator in troduce a bill to provide a minimum of $10 dally while being held as material wit nesses.. This would, in part. offset the loss in wages which the material witness, quite possibly, would have made. This could very well be made also to apply to a defendant who is found not to be guilty. After all if a defendant be not guilty he should not be made to suffer loss of wages during the time he is held in jail. Floyd R. McCabe, Butte Falls. Ore. NAMED TO AEC POSTS Augusta. Ga.-(UPD-Prcsldent Elsenhower appointed John H. Williams and Dr. Norman F. Ramsey Jr. to the Atomic Energy commission's general advisory committee Thursday. Williams, a former AEC mem ber, is a professor of physics at the University of Minne sota. Ramsey is a professor of physics at Harvard. Richard M. Nixon Looks Like Good Bet For 1964 GOP Presidential Nomination By LYLE C. WILSON Washington (WD - A good political bet for the winter books would be this: Richard M. Nixon to seek and, win the 1964 Republi can presiden tial nnminn- N tlon. Medical sci ence and po litical history combine t o support the c o n v i c t ion .U XT I u a n .1. T. Hlll.nn will seek the 1964 nomina tion. An axiom of medical science and political history is this: Whereas the bite of the presidential bug need not be and rarely is fatal, that bite is absolutely, unqualifiedly Incurable. Once bitten, you stay bit. There being no cure for this presidential inflama tion, a defeated presidential nominee tries and tries again. In the Days News By FRANK JENKINS This modern world note: James Merson, head of the agricultural engineering de partment at California State Polytechnic college at San Luis Obispo, tells farmers at tending the 42nd Annual Farm Bureau Federation con vention now in session at Berkeley that mechanization is inevitable in these days but warns them, before going in too deep too soon, to take a good look at the future and what it may hold. Once started, he said, farm machinery engineers have an unlimited field. Nobody knows what they may come up with. T7OR example: l A possibility of the not too distant future, he told his hearers, is an electronically controlled machine that will follow along down a row of plants, AUTOMATICALLY AVOIDING THE PLANTS THEMSELVES while stirring the soil and plowing out the weeds! How? It's simple. Implant RA DIOACTIVE ISOTOPES in the seed. These isotopes will remain in the growing plants and will warn the machines when the cultivator shovels get too close. An electronic Jigger will then take over and move the shovel blades away from the plants. TJMMMMMM. " I wonder how many mo dern farmers (or ex-farmers) ever plowed corn with a one row walking cultivator and a team of mules. In those long- ago days when we got the mules trained so tney would turn almost by themselves at the end of the row, we thought we were going places. Now look what's happen ing! WHAT of the future? " Who knows? There may be devices that will permit the farmer to sit on the porch, sipping a cool drink and watching a screen and maybe twiddling a switch now and then when something goes wrong. And - one presumes - the next development after that would be an automatic Jigger to TWIDDLE THE SWITCH. . Something like that could start a back-to-the-farm move ment. MORE modern world stuff Liz Taylor and her teeth. Yesterday the outlook was grim. It 'looked like they might all have to be pulled. If they were all pulled, she'd have to have a set of false ones. Falsies might mar her fabulous beauty. Her personal physician was rushed by Jet plane from New York to London and went to work on the problem, aided by a team of physicians and dental experts. His report this morning is bright and full of hope. He says: "Liz's tooth problem is all solved She Is showing tremendous Improvement. She is suffer ing from a prolonged virus infection complicated by meninglsmus, which means simply symptoms like menin gitis. A spinal tap was neces sary." It looks this morning like the worst that could happen would be the extraction of one tooth. AMONG those experiencing extreme relief. It is safe to assume, is Spiros Skouras, president of 20th Century Fox, which is producing the super-film in which Miss Taylor is starring. He says that delays up to last Sunday had cost MILLIONS OF DOL LARS. But he's game. He says Miss Taylor and NO BODY ELSE will star In Cleopatra and he will hold up production for her as long as may be needed. It s a rugged world we're living In, mates. Nobody knows at any minute what may happen next, if his party will permit. So, get your-bets down that Rich ard Nixon will try again. Now, as to Nixon winning a second nomination in 1964. There -is less certainty here, but not much. Some gaudy political blunder, of course, could disqualify Nixon be tween now and July, 1964. Cautious bettors will consid er that factor, and probably, ignore it. Political Stature The vice president emerged from the 1960 campaign a bigger man than when he entered. Nixon ran ahead of his party. He was licked by an attractive new political personality who, somehow, reminded a great many per sons of the late, great FDR. Defeated though Nixon was, it seems reasonable to believe Castro, Other Forces In Latin American Skirmishing By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Fortign Editor The man of the Week: President Miguel Ydigorai Fuentei of Guatemala. The p 1 a c at Guatemala City. The quote: "We know the rebels are receiving aid, in cluding planes, from Cuba. We are ready to defend ourselves, and to attack any one who attacks us." Two Central American gov ernments were under armed attack this week, and a third had its forces s k i r mishing with armed bands appar ently attempt ing to use its jumping point for inva- SMj The two un- phil newsom der attack were Guatemala and Nica ragua. The third was Nica ragua's neighbor, Costa Rica. All three were unanimous in linking the attackers with the revolutionary government of Cuba's Communist-loving Fidel Castro. Threat Seems Ended As the week neared its end, there still were pockets of re sistance but the major threats appeared to have been crush ed. In Guatemala there was an gry talk of a declaration of war against Cuba, and, in Washington, the peace com mittee of the Organization of American States agreed to ex amine Guatemala's charges that the Castro regime had supported the attack. Presi dent Eisenhower told the U.S. Navy to halt any invasions. There was no doubt that Castro would regard as a vic tory the overthrow of either the Guatemalan or the Nica raguan governments. He has attacked the Somozo Bock Stairs: By WILLIAM J. EATON Augusta, Ga. - 01PD - Back stairs at the vacation White House: Jack Romagna, White House shorthand reporter for the past 20 years, still be lieves the pen is mightier than a transcription machine, He wields a sawed-off desk fountain pen in an era when stenotypists are taking over virtually all the stenographic work at Congressional hear ings and in the court. London-born Romagna, who learned the Gregg shorthand system before it was simpli fied, can take down up to 240 words per minute of normal conversation. His speed drops if the talk turns to technical subjects, of course. Romagna believes that President-elect John F. Ken nedy speaks faster than Presi dent Eisenhower, but he is not worried about keeping up with the Incoming chief ex ecutive. Kennedy, he says, talks in more direct, simple sentences than Elsenhower and would be easier to follow despite a tendency toward machine-gun delivery. In addition to transcribing p r e s i dential speeches and news conferences, the White House stenographer keeps records of the press secretary's verbal exchanges with news men. James C. Haqerty's words have filled up 186 shorthand books since he became Eisen hower's chief spokesman near ly eight years ago. t There is an outside chance that Kennedy would want to replace Romagna with a man at a stenotypc, but veterans at the White House doubt that any such shift would be made. Romagna's accuracy has been challenged only once -as he recalls it. That was im mediately after Eisenhower's heart attack in September, 1955. He mistook "fluid" for "blood" because the symbols! I" w I - ia territory as a Kir that the I-Hate-Nixon legion has lost some membership and that the vice president gained some political stature by the events of 1960. . To cap it all, nearly 33.5 million Americans wanted badly enough to put Nixon in the White House to go out and vote for him. Sen. John F. Kennedy won the popular vote, but by the merest whisker. It must be accepted as a fact that Nixon has consid erable attraction for those in dependents and Democrats who prefer to hold closer to the middle of the road than do the elements which con trol the Democratic party. Minus Indications Those are the Nixon plusses toward re-nomination in 1964. The minus is double barrelled: brothers who run Nicaragua as dictators, and he has ac cused Guatemala of plotting with the United Fruit Com pany for an armed attack against Cuba. But in the tempestuous cur rents of Central American politics there were others also who would like to see the fall of Ydigoras Fuentes and the Somozas, and it was unlikely that the blame could all be Castro's. Canter of Disputes Old soldier Ydigoras Fuen tes took over as Guatemalan president on March 2, 1958, after a series of interim gov ernments following the assas- Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF A SAGE at the big Clark City, makes this sound for the coming season: Business will continue in itn whprff invited and remain where appre- dated. Performance will con tinue to outsell promises. Enthusiasm will be as contagious as ever. Trust, not tricks, will keep cus tomers loyal. Reputations will con tinue to be made by many acts and lost by one. Go-givers will become the best go-getters. A London psychologist put this Interesting question to nil class: "If you were offered the wage you are getting now, every week for the rest of your life guaranteed on the sole condition that you never work again, would you accept?" Most of the) class said they would refuse, but a few cautious students wanted time to reflect. Bill Feather, of Cleveland, reworded the proposition. Suppose we moved into a society of absolute equality of incomes: would you carry on with your present Job, or make an Immediate shift T There's one to ponder over! C two, by Bennatt Cerf. Distributed by King Features Srndlcete Reporter Favors Pen were nearly identical, but re porters caught the mistake. A tall, bespectacled man with thinning black hair, Romagna takes a keen inter est in chess and carries chess men and a board with him wherever he goes He also delights in playing the organ and often requests permission to practice on church organs when he's on the road with the President. One of his biggest problems at the White House, he recalls, was getting used to the medl- Papa Keeps Word When Mama Wins Prize at Store Dallas, Tex. rtTPD Mama has a new vacuum cleaner plus a new mink stole lo day because papa opened hit mouth ai just the wrong time. A Dallas store was giv ing away iha fur to attract customers during a special sal. M. A. Burns and his wife went shopping. During the evening, Dal Cross, a talesman, gave Burnt a big pitch about th vacuum cleaner. "Tall you what." Burnt taid. "If my wife wins that stole, I'll buy one." . No sooner had Burnt spoken, when an announce ment cam over th ttore't loud speaker giving th nam of th winner. I She did. He did. NICE TO CONTEMPLATE Denton, Tex.-t!PD-A North Texas State college English class on folklore and what this country once was like was asked by Dr. George Hen dricks, "Can you imagine 1,000 wolves running across this campus?" I most certainly can, re plied one pretty coed. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefel ler of New York would be come a formidable contestant for the 1964 nomination if he were re-elected in 1962 by a decisive majority. The anti-Nixon elements of the Republican party might come up with a bright, new star in 1964 to stop him as the anti-Tad elements came up in 1952 with Dwight D. Eisen hower to stop Sen. Robert A. Taft. Of these two possibilities, the emergence of Rockefeller as the 1964 stop-Nixon leader is the more likely, however, unlikely it may be. There is not in the works now nor ia anything in sight which might be expected to create for the Republicans soon another miracle man in the Eisen hower image. Involved s I n a 1 1 o n of U.S.-supported President Carlos Castillo Ar mas. He quickly became embroil ed in numerous arguments with his neighbors. He press ed unsuccessfully a claim against Britain for British Honduras. His war planes fir ed upon Mexican fishing boats, with subsequent bitter reaction from Mexico. But of late his ire has been directed against Cuba almost exclusively. On April 26 of this year, he severed relations with Cuba and charges and counter-charges o f invasion plots have followed ever since. Printing Company, In Kansas and sensible business forecast OilOMcre aa7iv l&UDIfNb&a k oT") WILL., cal jargon used by doctors and reporters after Eisenhower's heart attack, ileitis operation and mild stroke. Business Club Hears Attorney Ashland-The Business Club of Southern Oregon college met recently to hear Attorney Harry Skerry speak about the aspects of the legal secretary. In his talk Skerry stressed the fact that the legal secre tar is a valuable asset to the efficient management of the office. He gave helpful hints to be used when one is applying for a job and stressed the showing of confidence as an important factor. Other com ments concerning the law pro fession were given before the question-answer period which concluded the program. A trip to one of the lo cal fruit - packing plants is planned for the next meeting. Charges Against Papers Dismissed Portland -(UPD- Legal action brought by Levi S. McDonald charging the two Portland daily newspapers, the Ore gonian and the Oregon Jour nal, with contempt of court was dismissed Thursday. McDonald, convicted in Multnomah and Clackamas counties on charges arising out of dynamiting of trucks supplying newsprint to the two dailies, had sought the contempt charges on the grounds that articles printed in both papers influenced the grand Jury in returning an indictment against him. Circuit Judge Charles Red ding denied the action. Red ding said that both newspa pers acted under freedom of expression provisions of th federal constitution. ii m ri Wouldn t it be wonderful?" i X