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fTUDIES NOTES West German Chancel- nauer Bald his conference with President
ler Konrad Adenauer goea over his notes , Kennedy was "filled with the spirit of great
prior to speaking at a reception at the friendship.1' He said they had reached "100
Rational PrM Club in Washington.; Ade- per cent agreement." (UPI Telephoto)
:i Logal night To Try
. arusalem -ftW-. Adolf Eloh
n on will have to sweat out a
k and In hia cell before he
le nj whether he is going to
beZput through a trial that
m v tend him to lot callows.
. J'bree Israeli judges said to-
diflhey would rule Monday
on whether they 'have a legal
xifht to try the man accused
; of feeing history's worst mass
mif-derer. . -
Vord came Indirectly from
Eichmann today that at no
tu t since hi capture hat he
c ildtred suicide, and that
he : intends to fight his casa
'to ht and.. . " :"r
Kllot Aharonot, an after
r i newspaper In Tel Aviv,
t'w question of suicide to
t Ervatius, lichmann's
r, who replied:
Na QuUl
i ,ve asked the same
' i ry tnlks with Ilch
i .," 6rvatlus replied.
"; nmann told ma it was in
e livable because In this
v orld ' of ours suicide would
lv bean considered an ad-
r 'on of guilt ' He said he
...d prefer to be executed
- 1 an to commit suicide. 'I
v iuld rather that those who
' ie me carry the burden of
i. ir decision'." :
Servatiut said he had con-
t Jenca In the Israeli court
and added, 'The Judges make
a very good impression, Intel
lL"nt and aober."
When court convened this
morning, Xlchmann - seemed
' to realize his casa was moving
- up to a crucial point and ha
suddenly decided to take a
hand In his own defense. He
came Into court equipped with
two pair of glasses and scrib
bled notes which were passed
out of hts bullet-proof glass
box to his lawyers. - '
But shortly before 11 a.m.
Judge Moshe Landau spoke
Plans for Annual
Y Auction Started
Plans for the annual spring
auction, "to chink the budget,"
are under way at the Medford
YMCA.
Members of the board of di
rectors serve as a merchandise
procurement team to seek
gifts of saleable merchandise
from merchants and homes.
This year's publlo service
auction Is scheduled for late
May. O. B. Brenner and Bill
Bray, local auctioneers, will
donate their services 1 and
Brenner's sale barn and staff
will also be available.
Local residents are asked to
' check their storage areas for
surplus Items which they wish
to donate for the sale. A call
to the ,YMCA will provide
pickup service, If needed, Y
officials said.
THE SECRET OF
Without kibit-firinini irut
A mw technique eomblntt hundrada
f tiny bd of mWlcitlon In a
cjptul. HM of lhM dliislv to
lnduca tlMB quickly. Th otner hill
It gradually ralaaaad to euataln and
daapan your natural alaan. Take
Nlta-Rart tonlaM for aafa, unlntar
ruptod alaae. Waftt a rafnahed
NO PRnCMPnOM MQUMCD ;
cLains
DRUG CENTRE
Tkrifty Oraen Stamp ; .
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li Judges To Rule Monday
the words that spelled out a
tough 70 hours for Eichmann:
'"The court will render' its
decision - on the preliminary
points at 9 o'clock Monday
l.iorning. The court is now ad
journed." : . s.- .
.The "preliminary points"
mentioned by Judge Landau
Regional Edition
Medford
MEDFORD, OREGON,
Electronics
Wide Price Change
As Stocks
tfew York - (HTO - Stocks
firmed today with wide price
changea showing up in elec
tronics.. Steels were little
changed, motors, hardened
generally although GM lost
another Vt, and chemicals
turned lower in reaction to
Emergency
Clause Added To
Tidelands Bill
. Salem - (UFD - An emergen
cy clause, that would permit
oil exploration to begin off
the coast this summer was
added to a tidelands oil bill
Thursday, .
The House Natural Resourc
es committee pulled the com
mittee approved bill back
briefly to make sections of
the measure dealing with ex
ploratory geological and seis
mic permits efectlve immedi
ately upon signature.
Sections letting the Land
Board lease blocks offshore
land for full scale develop
ment and exploration would
not become effective for 90
days. .'
Said Best Tim
Chairman Clinton Halght
(D-Baker) said summer was
the best time for exploratory
offshore oil searches and he
felt some firms might be in
terested in obtaining permits
immediately.
But, he said, the board
should have the 90 day peri
od to study oil leasing before
calling for bids to lease the
offshore blocks.
The committee also revised
a sectlon.of the bill to let the
land board set either flat oil
royalty rates, or slldlng-scale
rates that would be based on
the amount of production. The
12Vi per cent minimum was
retained.
A provision requiring hear
ings prior to granting beach
easements was further spelled
out.
MOW YOU KNOW
United Press International
Krakatoa, a small Indo
nesian bland located bo
rwten Bumaira and Java,
erupted en Aug. 27, 1883,
In the greatest natural ex
plosion of recorded histo
ry. Rocks were hurled to a
height of 34 miles and dust
from th eruption was still
falling 10 days later 3,000
rallec away.
x
Eichmann
constitute a basic decision as
to whether it is legal for three
Jewish- Judges to try a man
kidnapped from a .friendly
power for alleged crimes com
mitted outside the borders of
Israel years before the Jews
created a nation here In their
historic home land. ' ' '
.. Page 2A
Tribune
FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1961
Reco r d
Firm
DuPonts price cut on nylon
and dacron fibers.-Kennecott-
rose a" point in
an otherwise steady copper
section after announcing a
production step-up' and Kerr-
McGee featured a firm ou
group with a gain of 1.
Home Products lost nearly 3,
despite general Improvement
in the drugs.
Among the electronics, IBM
rose 6 Haveg 4, Litton 3, and
Transitron, Ampex, Texas In
struments and AMP Inc. over
a point, while, Beckman
slipped 1V4.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York (CPU Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 692.02, up
1.86; 20 railroads 143.17, up
0.24 15 utilities 112.13. up
0.02, and 65 stocks 229.99,
up 0.43. Sales Thursday
woro about 4.77 million
shares compared with 4.87
million sharas Wednesday.
Thursday's . prlcea . on
atocki: ,
Allied Chemical ,.
Alum Co. Am ;
American Atrllnei
American Can
American Motora ...............
AT&T
American Tobacco .
Anaconda Copper
Armco Steel
Bendix-Corp ...
Bethlehem Steel
Boeing Air
Brunswick
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler ' Corp r...
Coca Cola
ConUnental Can
Crown Zellerbach
Crucible Steel ,...
Curtlss Wrlsht
Dow Chemical
Du Pont.
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
Tord :
General Electric ....
General Foods ..
General Motors H ....
Georgia Pacific
Graham Paige
Oreyhound
Gull OU
Homestake Mining .......
I. B M
Int Paper .
Johns Manvllle
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aircraft .....
Morck j. ..u
Montana Power ..........
Montgomery ward
Nat'l Biscuit
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas Elec
Penney, J. C. u.
Penn RR
Phillip
Proctor and Gambia
Radio Corporation
Safeway
Seara
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil OU
Southern Co
Southern Pacific
Sperry Rand
Standard California
Standard Indiana
Standard NJ
Sun Mine ......................
Texas Co
Texas Gulf Sulphur
Texas Pac Land Trust ...
Thiokol
Transamerlca
Trans World Air
Tri-Continental
Union Carbide
Union Pacific .....
United Alrcroft .
United Air Unea
U. S. Rubber .
U. S. Steel ....
WaaUnshous
elected
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son
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Governor Wants
Clause Placing
Issue on Ballot
Salem-flJPB-Gov. Mark Hat
field issued an ultimatum to
backers of a million dollar
truck tax cut today.
The governor declared he
will veto a bill calling for tax
slashes for trucks over 44,000
pounds unless the legislature
adds a clause placing it on the
ballot.' It would be the ses
sion's first veto.'
Hatfield's announcement
posed a stiff choice for sup
porters of the hard-fought
measure which passed the
Senate 24-5 and the House
38-22. . '
That is four votes more
than the two-thirds needed to
override a veto in the Senate,
but two votes short of the
necessary number in the
House. .
"In addition, Republicans
might sustain the governor re
gardless of their earlier votes.
On the other hand, as Hat
field noted in his message,
the voters In 1952 turned
down a heatedly-campaigned
proposal to end the weight
mile tax on trucks, y -
A supporter of the present
bill estimated a campaign
would cost truckers $250,000,
with Voter approval still un
sure. ,
' The governor said "I can
not 'in good conscience sign a
bill which would reduce state
revenues more than a' million
dollars in a category on which
the people expressed them
selves so strongly in 1952." ;
Gasoline - The House killed
a bill to set new regulations
for transportation of flam
mable liquids. The measure
would have nullified some 20
cltsj ordinances. .
Daylight Time - A bill to
let cities or counties choose
summer daylight saving time
was sent to the House floor
with 4-2 committee approval.
Tenure for School
Administrators
Killed by Vote
Salem ' (UPD The Senate Ed
ucation Committee Thursday
killed a controversial house-
approved bill to take tenure
away from school administra
tors, and gave a cool recep
tion to a proposed $400,000
educational research pro
gram. '
The committee also dead
locked over a bill to move
higher education system head
quarters from Eugene to
Salem.. '
; The bill to eliminate school
administrators' tenure was
vigorously opposed by educa
tors, who said it would give
school boards arbitrary pow?
ers.
Program Urged
It was killed by a 4-3 vote,
with Sens. William Grenfell,
Walter Leth, and Ward Cook
voting to keep It alive.
The education research pro
gram, which would be run by
a special council, was urged
by spokesmen for the Oregon
Education Association.
Committee members said,
however, funds were short
and the education department
already contained profession
als to do the job.
A bill to transfer higher
education system offices to
Salem ' remained ; half alive
after the committee failed 4-3
to table it and then failed 4-3
to approve It. '
Davies To Speak
At SOCTFA Meeting
. William Davies, a member
of the administrative staff,
school of forestry, Oregon
State college, will speak at
the April meeting of the
Southern Oregon . Conserva
tion and Tree Farm associa
tion tonight.
The meeting will be held
at the Jackson hotel, Med
ford, starting with a social
hour at 7 o'clock. Dinner will
be served at 7:30, according
to Dale Prentice, secretary
manager of the association.
Davies is expected to report
on the general operation and
administration of the school
of forestry as well as explain
the current research projects
in progress. Management and
logging practices used on the
school's McDonald forest will
also be reviewed.
Al Smith, association pres
ident, urged members to at
tend to reacquaint themselves
with the activities of the
school of forestry, and to dis
cuss the various legislative
developments which are fac
ing the lumber Industry in
southern Oregon.
Logging operators and mill
management people from both
Jackson and Josephine coun
ties are invited to attend the
meeting, Smith said, whether
they are members of the as
sociation or not.
JFK Asks Latin Americans
For Deadline on Projects
Washington OIPB President
Kennedy called today on Lat
in American nations to set a
deadline this summer for
starting projects to improve
their economic and social
standards.
He said in a speech marking
Pan American 'Day that he
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GREETED BY PREMIER Soviet spaceman
Maj. Yuri Gagarin, center, salutes following
his arrival in Moscow. At right'is Premier
Nikita Khrushchev who personally greeted
Planning Commission
Public Purchase of
The Medford city planning
commission last night ex
pressed disappointment that a
narrow strip of apparently
useless land has been left
along the west side of Biddle
rd. as a result of the new free
way, and recommended to the
city council that the land be
purchased for public use.
The action came after the
commission unanimously re
jected a request to change the
zone of three lots on Biddle
rd.' from single family to lim
ited commercial. The zone
change had been requested by
Lee Bumgardner and Ira Law
rence for property located at
801, 851 and 895 Biddle rd. '
Commission Member Don
ald Walters said that if the
commission were to approve
the requests "it's going to cost
the taxpayers in the future
much more money." Because
of the shallow depth of the
land, 80 feet, Walters said
that whatever the land is used
Big Cuban
Totally Destroyed
As Crowds Cheer
Havana-fllPD-Two of Cuba's
biggest department stores in
cities nearly 500 miles apart
lay In , ruins today, de
stroyed by fires in a coordi
nated campaign - of sabotage
against Premier Fidel Castro.
A $7 million, fire, apparent
ly started by dropping phos
phorus into the air-conditioning
system, totally destroyed
the ' El Encanto department
store in Havana, Cuba's larg
est. At the same time, flames
raced through Santiago's big
gest department store, La Co
mercial, leaving it a charred
shell. ,
Street crowds cheered as
the flames brought down the
walls of nationalized El En
canto, a six-story building
filling three-quarters of a Ha
vana block.
A third fire, In the govern,
ment-owned . national paper
factory, was discovered and
put out before it could
spread. Damage was estimat
ed at about $900.
The crashing volley from a
firing squad at the grim Ca
bana fortress-prison here last
midnight gave the govern
ment's reply to the anti
Castro campaign harsh re
prisals against the premier's
foes.
Abelardo A. Aguiar, a sus
pected saboteur caught with
several electric detonators in
his possession, was this year's
25th victim of the firing
squads which have killed
more than 600 Cubans since
Castro seized power.
Anti-Castro spokesmen say
trained, fully equipped sabo
teurs have been slipping into
Cuba from abroad to carry
out a campaign planned by a
new "unified command" of
groups opposing the premier.
Castro declared Thursday
he would be "implacably
hard" in imposing firing
squad justice on terrorists
would instruct the U.S. dele
gation to the Intr-American
Development Bank meeting
now under way in Rio de Ja
neiro to work for this "next
step" in his alliance-for-pro-gress
program.
The President, speaking at
a session of the Council of the
for "it is going to be a slum
area. '. ' ' '
The entire strip of land lo
cated between Biddle rd. and
the new freeway is approxi
mately 2,900 feet long, and
varies in width from 80 to
100 feet. It is all in private
ownership. In its proposed
land-use plan the city has des
ignated this land as a special
problem area.
Lawrence told the commis
sion that the state paid for
the rear three-quarters of his
property but his home is lo
cated on the' front quarter of
the property and this repre
sents the majority of the
value of the property.
Under questioning . by . the
commission, Lawrence said
the state did pay , for some
damages to the remaining
property, but added that this
did not begin to pay for the
full value of the land before
the freeway was located there.
One problem that is being
Stores
and those who transport or
conceal terrorist equipment.
Observers here foresee a
"reign of terror" in Cuba as
growing sabotage increases
the number of executions and
anti-Castroites retaliate with
still more sabotage in a vici
ous circle.
TAX RETURNS
2.00
Save Taxes. Find out your deducts. All
Returns prepared on comparative basis
and filed in accordance with Internal
Revenue Code. Fast Service.
OREGON
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
217 Fluhrer Bldg. SP 3-6874
OPEN SATURDAY T1LI 1 P.M.
OREGON'S LARGEST TAX SERVICE
Organization of American
States, renewed his proposal
for a meeting of -'the Inter
American Economic and So
cial Council at the ministerial
level this summer. He said it
would have three fundamen
tal goals:
-To "encourage all free
'Gagarin after flying in from his Black Sea
vacation retreat only minutes before. This
photo was taken from a television screen.
. (UPI Telephoto)
Suggests
Land Strip
considered by the commission
is that Biddle rd. is designated
as a niajor street. It is felt that
widened and that will de
crease the already shallow
depth of the property nearest
the freeway.
City Manager Robert Duff
said last night' that the city
did make an effort- to have
the highway commission pur
chase all of this land and
make it part of the freeway
right of way. He said the com
mission appeared willing, but
it apparently was stopped by
the Bureau of Public Boads.
Walter : declared: "It is un
fortunate that as a result of
the freeway (it) dumps a
bunch of problems off locally
like this." He said this is
something that the public
should be aware of "because
it's happening all over."
Planning Consultant Ned
Langford said the planning
staff feels "this property is
not suited to residential, not
suited to commercial develop
ment and not suited to indus
trial development" The only
alternative this leaves, he
said, is public purchase.
Langford suggested that the
land might be put to some use
as a nursery either for the
city park department or for
local garden clubs.' This strip
of land will be easily visible
from the freeway it was
pointed out.
The commission did not nec
essarily suggest to the council
that the city purchase the
land, but asked that an effort
be made to have some public
agency, such as the state, pur
chase it.
up
states of the hemisphere to
set a deadline for completion
of preliminary plans" ' for
needed projects to enhance the
well-being of all peoples in
the hemisphere.
To "set up the machinery
to aid the participating coun
tries in realizatlon'of develop
ment plans."
To outline "basic develop
ment goals'Vuv key- areas in-,
eluding education, land use,
taxation, public health, mobil
ization of resources, self-help
programs and stabilization of
commodity markets.
Our task is to build a so
ciety of men and women con
scious of individual identity
and '. . . hemispheric inter
est," Kennedy said.:-' '
He said this "means re
creating our - social system"
with appropriate legislation
for both workers and farmers.
He said it means abolishing il
literacy for adults' as well as
children, providing : doctors
and hospitals for the 'sick,
roads to link areas of produc
tion with consumers, and to
increase industrial and agri
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Packable-it takes little space. i
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cultural capacity.
- Above all, he said the pro
gram means there must be
"assurance that the benefits
of economic growth will ac
crue not just for the privil
eged few but for the entire
international community."
Kennedy said much of the
task is the responsibility of
the Organization of American
States which has been "nur
tured in time" and has proved
its value. He said there is no
need to create new organiza
tions when the OAS Is at
hand to do the job.
Jackson.
Council of Blind
RUMMAGE SALE
FEHL BUILDING
, ' Saturday, April 22
9:00 to 4:30 . "
Donations to Hia Council may
ba left at 22 W. Jackson m
call SP 2-5SJ2. .,
i-
35
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