o
Kennedy Rem
for Wa
Restraint
Pisa
Voters in Oregon
School Districts
Decide on Budgets
United Press International
Voters in Oregon tuned up
for the May 18 primary elec
tion Monday by casting bal
lots in school district elec
tions throughout the state.
At Beaverton, residents vot
ed to recall two school board
members, Albert Jensen and
Dr. Vernon Hansen. The
board has been in controversy
with Supt. D. Herbert Arm
strong, who has resigned ef
fective June 30. Voters there
also approved a $7.2 million
school budget, $4.2 million of
which is above the 6 per cent
tax base.
Lincoln Budget Defeated
Lincoln county voters de
feated a proposed S3.3 mil
lion budget for the second
time.. The vote was 3,190 to
1,619. '.The budget was $1.3
million above the 6 per cent
limitation.
Three Lane county school
districts voted for budgets in
excess of the 6 per cent limit.
Eugent voters approved a $7
million budget, Springfield
approved a $3.1 million budg
et and the Bethel district
agreed to a budget of $1.4
million.
Coburg voters rejected a
school district merger with
Eugene for the third time.
In the Reynolds district
near Portland, voters rejected
a $242,116 levy. Lake Oswego
voters approved a $1.1 mil
lion measure which had been
defeated twice.
A 1962-63 levy at Parkrose
Forest Service, BLM
Officials Testify
At Interim Session
U. S. forest service and
bureau of land management
officials testified Monday
afternoon that they could not
flatly guarantee that stock
men's grazing allotments
would not be cut. '
The testimony came in an
all day session of the sub
"committee of the legislative
interim committee on natural
resources, at the county ex
tension auditorium here.
Earlier, the Jackson county
Cattlemen's association criti
cized the forest service's
method of range analysis.
Election Called
On Bond Issue
White City-Voters in the
White City Sanitary district
will be asked to consider a
$125,000 bond issue at a spe
cial election June 14.
The district board Monday
night decided to call the bond
election to construct a lagoon
type sewage disposal system.
The present disposal system
Is inadequate and incomplete,
board members said. District
sewer lines originally were
connected with Medford's sys
tem but have since been cut
off.
The board also hopes to
place its proposed budget on
the June 14 ballot. It called
a special meeting May 21 at
7:30 p.m. at the Central Point
Rural Fire department sta
tion in White City to draw up
the budget.
A budget committee com
posed of the three board mem
bers. Tim, Horn, Rupert Wil
son and James Scott, plus
three other district residents
and property owners, is being
formed.
William Deatherage, attor
ney for the district, estimated
that the bonds and district
budget combined would cost
the owner of a $10,000 home
in the neighborhood of $15
to $20 a year.
TIMS WOM
t!FWS.v5. BRIEFS
TALKS ON BERLIN TO BE CONTINUED
Waihinaton - '1PI - The Slat Department laid today that
West German objection! will
delav Soviet-American talki
RUSSIAN PROPOSALS SAID UNACCEPTABLE
Geneva - I'Pli - The United Stales today laid Soviet Rut -
tia'i proposals iv verifying destruction 01 nucieer delivery
vehicles in a generel disarmament lreety were "unaccept
able" end would lead to "absurd results."
FIRST LADY LAUNCHES POLARIS SUBMARINE
Grolon, Conn. - H'PH - Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy launched
the Polaris submarine Lafayette todey. sending the 7,000
ton ship down the weyi after meshing bottle of ,fham
pagne againil the bunting-draped prow.
CARPENTER'S ORBITAL
Cans Canaveral. Fla. -
Scott Carpenter's orbital flight
two days by difficulties in his
ing
to informed sources.
of $1.6 million was approved.
The Milwaukie High school
district got approval of an
$826,569 levy. A levy of $517,
323 at Gresham was okayed.
In Nyssa voters turned
down the buSget for the com
ing year.
At Philomath, voters decid
ed 184-163 in favor of return
ing classes to standard time.
It will be up to the school
board to decide about the
hours, which were changed to
fast time April 29.
But rural area school vot
ers at Blodgett and Kings
Valley favored retention of
fast time.
The Umatilla County Rural
school district passed a budg
et of $1,056,000 by a vote of
1,796 to 1,326.
Pendleton School District
16-C passed its proposed
budget 719 to 665. The budget
was $2,300,000 and exceeded
the six per cent limitation by
$1,105,720.
Voters in the Klamath Falls
school district turned down a
proposed $1,374,000 budget by
a margin of 11 votes.
The total vote was the larg
est in the district's history for
a school board election, 2,626.
The vote was 1,211 to 1,200.
School board officials said
they may ask for a recount.
At the same time, a build
ing proposal of $3,100,000 was
defeated 1,499 to 1,127. It
would have provided for a
ninth grade school and a two
year junior high school.
They asked that a board of
qualified, impartial range
specialists be appointed with
the approval of the stockmen,
to make the analysis and that
the location of plots and tran
sects for analysis purposes be
qualified ana approved by
the stockmen.
They also asked that tim
bered and browse areas be
considered as grazing areas
and evaluated as such.
Ralph Wiese, Rogue River
National Forest officer, said
cooperative agreements with
stockmen involved will do a
great deal to benefit both
sides.
Under the agreements the
forest service would supply
range improvement materials
and the stockmen would use
them. This would include
fences, developing of water
holes, reseeding and spraying
of brush.
It had previously been stat
ed that current -ange analysis
showed that if nothing was
done to improve the range, the
allotments might be cut up
to 64 per cent over a 10-year
period. Wiese stressed that it
would be the case only if
nothing was done during this
time. He added that the coop
erative agreement would nul
lify most of such a cut.
He said misunderstandings
between the forest service and
the stockmen was due to a
lack w communication.
John Carnegie of BLM said
its grazing program is similar
to the forest service, but due
to the lack of manpower the
BLM did not have the analysis
studies of the forest service.
Harold Davis, representing
the trucking committee of the
Southern Oregon Tree Farm
association, asked that the
committee consider legislation
to reduce overweight fines for
logging trucks. He also sought
computing highway taxes for
logging trucks by a formula
which would consider such
things as type of highway.
AROUND THI OlOII
not be permitted to block or
on the Berlin emu.
FLIGHT POSTONI3
IPli - The timelDle lor astronaut
has been pushed back at least
Atlas booster rocket, accord-
aiier .auncn urouv.
Budget for Rural
School Approved;
Canvass Slated
Vote Is 1,478 Yes,
731 No in County
Th'e Jackson county rural
school budget was approved
by a vote of 1,478 to 731 yes
terday, according to unofficial
counts in the various school
districts.
An official canvass of the
election results will be made
Friday, according to an offi
cial of the county school of
fice. The vote was on the $598,
054.51 in excess of the tax
base, or approximately 28 per
cent of the total rural school
district budget of ' $2,761,
337.40. The vote by districts on the
rural school district budget
was: Phoenix, 164 to 615 no
votes; Ashland, 246 to 114;
Central Point, 307 to 68;
Eagle Point, 177 to 83; Rogue
River, 86 to 9; Applegate, 38,1
to 19; Prospect, 17 to 8; Evans
Valley, 40 to 45; Butte Falls,
62 to 65; and Pinehurst 19
to 1.
All of the school district
budgets up for vote at the
annual school election passed.
These included Phoenix, 208
to 119; Ashland, 259 to. 102;
Central Point, 309 to 58;
Eagle Point, 204 to 74; Ap
plegate, 42 to 16, and 35 td
13 on a serial levy for school
construction; Evans Valley;
58 to 29; Butte Falls, 66 to 56;
Pinehurst, 17 to 3.
Elected to the rural school
board from Zone 3 (Eagle
Point, Prospect and Butte
Falls) was James Grieve.
Elected from Zone 4 (Phoe
nix, Applegate), was Jean
nette Grove. Elected as mem-ber-at-large
was John Span
gler. School board members
elected by district were Pros
pect, Clarence Hedgepeth;
Butte Falls, Andrew Hamstra;
Central Point, C. W. Anhorn;
Ashland, Robert O'Hara, four
years, and Jack Williams, five
years; Applegate, Vernon
Fowler; Phoenix, John Span-
gler; Evans Valley, Ford Pat
erson; Eagle Point, Edward
Learning; Medford, Mrs. Car
roll Haupert; Rogue River,
Harry W. Andrews; and Pine
hurst, Dorothy Moore and
Beverly Estes.
Nurses To Assist
In Sabin Clinics
Approximately 50 nurses
will staff the seven Sabin
oral polio vaccine clinics in
Jackson county May 12 and
13, according to Mrs. Jane
Anders, president of district
4, Oregon State Nurses asso
ciation, who is in charge of
soliciting the services of the
group.
Mrs. Anders said county
public health nurses also
have volunteered to assist in
the program. Ashland nurses,
comprising a subdistrict of the
association, will staff the
clinic there. .
Members of the Medford
Jaycees will serve as couriers
between the central vaccine
mixing center in the court
house and the clinics.
The vaccine remains frozen
in dry ice until ready for
mixing and initial distribu
tion to the clinics will be
made on a basis of estimated
demand. Surpluses or short
ages will be remedied by ex
change between the clinics by
the couriers. The couriers are
being directed by H. E. Hay
dal and the vaccine will be
mixed by a registered phar
macist. Meanwhile, Eugene Garner,
chairman of the county chap
ter of the National Founda
tion, said an additional 10,0uu
coupons have been printed to
meet demands for the vaccine.
The coupons are on sale
throughout the county for $1
for the series of three doses
or a maximum of $5 for a
family.
District 6 Voters
Approve New Budget
Central Point - School dis
trict 6 patrons yesterday ap
proved 30 9to 58 a 1962-63
budget totaling $1,443,545.
I The amount outside the 6 per
I cent limitation was $777
'978.24.
By precincts, the vote was
! Gold Hill, 96 yes. J3 no: Sams
Valley, 23 yj, 11 no; Central
Point. 190 yes, 34 no.
C. W. (Bill) Anhorn was re
elected to the school board by
14 votes over Mrs. Elizabeth!, '
rarnisn. nnnurn receivea kvo
votes.
and Mrs. Parrish had
181
o
Cape Canaveral, Fla. - (UPT -An
attempt to send a revolu
tionary Hew Centaur rocket
: on its maiden flight ended in
a tier explosion 60 seconds
Regional Edition
Medford
14 Pages
Two Shattered Laotian Units Thought
Trapped by Communist Rebel Forces
b"u' w,. wtb -a . : "
3 !
DRIVE-UP CLINIC - Seven thousand persons received
Sabin oral polio vaccine at a drive-up clinic at the Douglas
county fairgrounds in Roseburg Sunday. The rate equaled
Bellevue, Wash.,
Man Takes Plane,
Flies To Region
A 36 -year -old Bellevue,
Wash., man who reportedly
stole a plane from Boeing
field in Seattle and buzzed
two Oregon communities with
it before finally landing for
fuel, was arraigned before
U.S. Commissioner Frank Van
Dyke in Klamath Falls yes
terday. ,
The accused, Homer Ken
neth Wolfsen, waived prelimi
nary hearing, pleaded guilty
and was lodged in Klamath
county jail to await the U.S.
marshal.
Wolfsen, in company with
two other men who were not
charged, allegedly stole a
Cessna 180 about 5:10 p.m.
Saturday and took off from
Boeing field without authori
zation from the field tower.
Flew to Lakeview
Apparently without realiz
ing in what direction he was
flying, Wolfsen flew the plane
into southeastern Oregon. He
buzzed the community of
Lakeview, flying so low that
he ripped down some high
wires with the plane's under
carriage. The Bellevue man then flew
the craft to Klamath Falls,
where he buzzed Kingsley
field, a U.S. Ar Force fighter
interceptor base. Wolfsen
landed there for fuel and was
immediately arrested by Ore
gon state police on a charge
of being drunk in public.
Federal Aeronautics Agen
cy Inspector Bud Martineau,
who is stationed in Medford,
flew to Klamath Falls Sunday
and determined the plane was
the one stolen from Seattle.
Monday, Martineau, accom
panied by Van Dyke and a
Medford FBI agent, flew to
Klamath Falls, where Wolfsen
was arraigned on a charge of
interstate transportation of
stolen aircraft.
An aerial camera, valued at
$18,000, aboard the plane was
found intact, FBI agents said.
Josephine County
School Funds Approved
Grants Pass-Voters in the
Josephine County School dis
trict approved the proposed
district budget, which exceed
ed the 6 per cent limitation,
by a vote of 584 to 404 Mon
day. Mrs. Joan Millemann of
Murphy was elected to the dis
trict board. Running without
opposition, she received 674
votes.
County Budget Committee Considers
Funds for Public Library,
Indications were this morn
ing that the Jackson county 1 bniry budget. Medford has
budget committee would not j yet to make a decision on the
finish its budget studies today i $36,636 requested of it.
as planned, and possibly noil Snider saie) he was speaking
this week. Inr all the Incorporated cities
The budget work slowed ( in the county in asking the
this morning as the committee 'county to allocate some of its
heard proposals Irom Medford ! road improvement funds to
Mayor John Snider and Med
City Manager
Robert
Duff
relating to the
budget
request?of the Public Library
I of Medford and Jackson coun-1 heavily traveled thorough
ly and from the Jackson ! (ares which particularly need j
County Empl'Qees associa- I attention. Duff pointed out.
tion on requp.-ted increases in
i fringe benefits.
I No decision was made on
Ohe SR1.73.S reqnrsted the
t
MEDFORD,
I " tj. "i u n) : I - I! V.I V F a . ""AT M mit - J ? a -W
Job Activity in
County Stays High,
Manager Reports
Job activity in Jackson
county last month remained
high, with new hiring picking
up considerably compared to
the previous month, according
to John J. Patton, manager of
the Medford office of the state
employment service.
In recent months, he said,
some decline in jobs and pay
roll has been experienced in
the lumber industry, but these
losses have been largely offset
by increases in service and
trade jobs which are becoming
more numerous.
Job placements, represent
ing new hires, increased al
most 40 per cent over March
and for the 10th consecutive
month were higher than in the
same month a year previous.
Dropping Rapidly
Patton noted that unemploy
ment is now dropping rapidly,
and said "we appear to have
considerably less of it than
might be considered our share
in proportion to our popula
tion." At the end of April, the per-
ccnlage of insured unemploy-
Wafer Supply for
Area Changes Little
Prospects for water supplies
in the Medford and Klamath
Falls areas have changed lit
tle from last month, according
to the May 1 water supply
forecast by the weather bu
reau, Most of April was warm
and dry, the weather bureau
noted, and the storm of April
27 and 28, which brought
heavy rain to the Willamette
valley and rain and snow to
the upper Umpqua basin,
missed most o fthis area, the
weather bureau said.
Water year forecasts for
this area remain about the
same as last month. However,
because of warm tempera
tures, April runoff was some
what above average. Conse
quently, residual forecasts are
generally lower than indicat
ed last month, the weather
bureau noted.
Stream flow on the Rogue
river below south fork be
tween May and September is
forecast at 540,000 acre feet,
or 92 per cent of average.
Upper Klamath lake net in
flow is forecast at 331,000
acre feet ,or 77 per cent of
average, and the Williamson
river below Sprague is fore
cast at 760.000 acre feet or 87
oer cent of average.
- i county for its share in the li
- the cities for improvements
for their streets and roads.
llillcrest, Harnett, and Val-
Sey View rds. are among thC
The road to the White City
garbage dump maintained by
the city of Medford must be
closed or repaired More ronn-
OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY
b " i ?
about one dose of Type 1 vaccine administered every 12
seconds during the day. The scene above shows motorists
going through the outdoor clinic. (UPI)
ment in Jackson county was
7.1 per cent, compared to 9.3
per cent at the end of March
and 9.5 per cent in April, 1961.
Job orders currently being
received are mainly for skilled
or experienced semi - skilled
workers, or office occupations,
Patton said. There are rela
tively few unskilled jobs and
these are usually of short dur
ation.
The little demand in agri
culture is not expected to
change for several weeks, Pat
ton noted.
Number of Applicant!
Patton said the office ex
pects a large number of appli-
cants from among high school
I students in about a month
' when school is out. Some of
them will seek summer work
only, but there will be a sub
stantial number who complete
high school and are not plan
ning to continue to college.
Patton said this provides "n
point that forward-looking em
ployers will want to think
about." This labor force, he
said, will be available to fill
some of the loss already being
felt in occupations where
skilled workers are at a pre
mium.
"Making ready now to fill
those expected gaps in the
work force is a prudent move,
and hiring young workers is
the only way, when you get
down to it, to insure this con
tinuity of skills," Patton
noted.
XI 5 Withstands
Temperature Test
Edwards AFB, Calif. - IUPI1 -Maj.
Bob Rushworth, 37,
piloted the X15 rocket ship
through a heat test today and
safely withstood a tempera
ture of 1,250 degrees Fahren
heit that could burn a man to
a crisp.
The Air Force test pilot
went faster than planned in
the pre -flight schedule. He
was shielded from fiery death
by the craft's ingeniously de
signed cockpit, armored with
protective insulation and cool
ed with liquid oxygen. His
pressurized flight suit of silver
nylon also created a "live
able" atmosphere for him.
The XI 5 reached a top
speed of 3,51 1 miles an hour -more
than three times the
speed of sound - after It was
launched from a B52 mother
ship. Top altitude was 72,000
feet. The powered part of the
flight lasted 99 seconds.
Employees
ty than city residents use the
dump, Duff said
Ralph Fitzgerald, president
of the employee's association,
and six other members of the
executive committee, asked
the county pay a full portion
to the employees' insurance
benefits rather than one half
of the premiums.
The association also request
ed that the committee allow
the employees to use part of
their sick leave time for cmer
gency leave when deaths oc
cur in the immediate family.
This and sick leave time is
now being deducted from the
employees' vacation time in
some cases, it was reported,
to O
Tribune
8, 1962
Organizations
Have Opposition
To Home Rule
Two county organizations
this week announced they
have adopted resolutions op
posing the proposed Jackson
County Home Rule Charter,
Residents of the county will
vote on whether or not the
county will adopt the charter
at an election May 18.
The Jackson County Cen
tral Labor Council, in a reso
lution adopted at its last meet
ing, went on record against
the proposal because It "will
remove tne touowing ottices
from the vote of the people:
sheriff, county clerk, treasur
er, surveyor, and assessor.
The Labor Council asked
voters to "join hands in the
defeat" of the charter.
Opposes Charter
The Taxpayers' League said
today the board of governors
of the league opposes the pro
posed charter because It de-
stroys the two-party system,
takes away the freedom of the
people to choose their repre
sentatives in elective offices,
and It does nothing to prevent
the administrator or chair
man of the board of commis
sioners from bringing in peo
ple from outside the county
and state to fill county of
fices. Tom Williams, Central
Point, a spokesman for the
Taxpayers' League, said "the
board of governors voted 100
per cent in opposition to the
Home Rule charter."
Williams said "we have
quite a few members, but it
is not our policy to divulge
the number."
Previously, the Southern
Oregon Peace Officers associa
tion went on record opposing
the proposed Home Rule
Charter.
Hatfield Reveals
New Gardiner Mill
Salem - IUPD - Gov. Mark
Hatfield announced today that
International Paper Co. has
made a final determination on
a $35 million pulp, paper and
sawmill operation and is lo
cating it at Gardiner.
Site of the plant 'had been
in doubt. International Paper
was considering four sites in
the Northwest - three in Ore
gon and one in Washington.
Company officials said at a
news conference here that
construction at Gardiner
should begin in about six
weeks. Gardiner Is near
Reedsporl in Douglas county
on the Oregon coast.
Hatfield said the operation
will employ 650 workers dur
ing the construction, peaking
out to 1,000. When the con
struction Is completed in 1964
the average number of new
jobs created will be 850.
WEATHER
rKPCAT; ihoWfri thrnuch
Wer1nt.t1i9 , Chaftctt of Ihun
dentormi ft inMnlr , over ..the
mountain.. low XonfM 44 to
45. Hlfh WMLhffdy near 15.
' ' Tump.
Hlthrit VflrtUy 71
l.ownt ThU MnrtHnf . .... 41
Prfr, to ( p.m. YnUrdaf . .03
I'rrc. to 10 a.m. -Today .01
Ou I0 Skies Tonight
flunt't today . .. p.m.
ft ii n Mir tomorrow ... 4:51 a.m.
Moontet tontihl 11:59 p.m.
Flnt quarter May II
PHOMINKNT UTAH
Aldfhiran, ' 1:17 p.m.
KVrNIM, I'l.AN KT S
Mrrrury, north of Aldeoaran
and a bit hrlghttr.
Venui, above Aldfharan and
' miirh brighter.
57th Year Price 10 Cents
No. 41
Royal Battalions
Seek To Regroup
South of Nam Tha
Supplies Being
Dropped From Air
Vientiane, Laos - IUPD - Two
Royal Laotian army battalions
may have been trapped when
Communist rebel forces over
ran the provincial capital
town of Nam Tha, a senior
American military adviser
said today.
The Americans identified
the battalions as the 28th and
30th.
Shattered elements of t h e
Laotian forces attempted to
regroup about 40 miles south
west of Nam Tha.
Regrouped to South
Pilots flying reconnaissance
missions and supply drops
over the Nam Tha area Mon
day reported that only 1,000
to 3,000 members of the 5,000
man government garrison
there had been regrouped to
the south.
Incoming stragglers were
expected to increase the size
of this force, but by Just how
much still was unclear.
The Reds drove the Royal
Army forces out of Nam Tha,
near the Communist Chinese
border and about 225 miles
northwest of the administra
tive capital of Vientiane, fol
lowing a thunderous artillery
barrage Sunday.
Billet Blow
The fall of Nam Tha, which
with Luang Prabani and
Houel Sel, formed the apex of
a government defense triangle
near the Red Chinese border,
was a bitter blow to the Royal
Government headed by Prince
Boun Oum.
It followed the fall of the
city of Muong Sing earlier
last week and marked what
the United States and Britain
considered a gross violation of
the year-old cease fire which
had prevailed in Laos.
When the Reds attacked,
the Royal Laotian government
maintained that the force in
cluded Communist Chinese.
However, U. S. spokesmen
have said they found no evi
dence to support this posi
tion. Lightning Causes
Area Power Outage
A general power outage at
10:17 a.m. today, which lasted
for about 2'4 minutes, was
due to a lightning strike on a
main transmission line east
of the Cascades, according to
Pacific Power & Light Co. of.
fficlals.
The strike occurred while
the line was being cut over
from 120 KV to 230 KV oper
ation and caused the outage,
which otherwise would not
have happened, they ex
plained. The power outage was gen
eral throughout the county,
PP&L officials Indicated, and
may have extended Into
Klamath county.
La
UAW Delegates
Cheer President
At Convention
Public Interest
Consideration Urged
Atlantic City, N.J. - IUPD -President
Kennedy told the
United Auto Workers conven
tion today his administration
will not fix prices or wages
but wants organized labor and
management to show "respon
sible" restraint. ,
The chief executive was
cheered by an estimated 10,
000 delegates and guests when
he entered the huge conven
tion hall, which was decor
ated with a banner saying:
"UAW - all the way with
JFK."
Kennedy declared that
unions must consider the pub
lic interest in shaping wage
demands to avoid inflationary
settlements.
Renewed Plea
"What good is it to get n
increase in wages if it is taken
away , by an increase in
prices?" he asked in a re
newed plea for limiting wage
price advances to increases in
productivity.
The President hailed the
UAW for what he termed its
historic, policy of seeking pay
boosts out of increased output
per man-hour.
: Walter P. Rcuther, UAW
president, who has called for
wage gains greater than pro
ductivity increases for the
short-range future, told the
convention that the union
would back Kennedy's effort
to keep prices stable.
n ,i n : . ,
Praising Reuther as a dis
tinguished labor leader, the
President added: "He and I
do not always agree. He is .
happy to say it and I am not
reluctant to say it. But he
recognizes that I must meet '
my responsibilities as he meets
his."
The UAW delegates, who
waved signs and placards to
demonstrate their support for '
Kennedy, cheered loudest
j when the President predicted
imaaagc mis- year UL Ills IIU-
posal to proVide medical care
for the-aged under social security.
They were silent, however,
when the President told them,
to negotiate a "noninflation- .
ary and peaceful settlement"
In this year's bargaining with
aircraft and missile firms. The
UAW has called for "catch-up"
pay raises in this industry. W.
Kennedy responded to .
two-minute ovation with trus "r
comment:-
"After speaking to the
Chamber ,of Commerce and
the leaders of the American
Medical association last week.
I wondered how I got elected.
Now I remember."
Land Board Grants
Onshore Oil Leases
Sale m IUPII The Oregon
Land Board today granted 10
year oil leases to four firms
covering 5,637 acres In West
ern Oregon.'
The leases went to Super
ior, Humble and Gulf Oil
companies of California, and
Farnham Chemical Co., Port
land. They are the first state oil
leases granted here under
new onshore oil lease applica
tion.
In addition. Shell Oil Co.,
which holds an Oregon off
shore oil exploration permit,
was authorized to detonate
70 charges ranging from 100
to 300 pounds of explosives
of the coast. The request Indi
cated that Shell is tuning up
or another summer of off
shore mapping on Oregon'!
600,000 acre tidelands.
Peste
fttt fcirstM-eieneJui psWT 1
4
O