t i
Escape Attempt of San QuentmP
risoners Thwarte
sinessmen Criticize Part
JFK's Tax Revision Plan
Washington - 'ITU Busi
ness spokesmen Monday re-
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IOCAL D AN
335 . JACKSON ILVD.
Medtord Shoppini Cinur
nine: 773-7456 Dick Webb. Mji.
Optn Friday tdmr-i 'Til 7
newed their criticism before
Congress of sections of the
Kennedy administration s tax
revision bill.
They testified before the
Senate Finance Committee on
a proposal to change the sys
tem of collecting taxes on
American subsidiaries operat
ing overseas.
This provision would re
quire American - owned com
panies abroad to pay U. S.
corporate taxes on income
from royalties, patents and
other "passive" income in the
year earned. It also would
tax immediately income from
sales subsidiaries a s distin
quished from manufacturing
subsidiaries in foreign coun
tries. A. E. Kornnauser, of the
Controls Co, of America, an
electronics firm, testified that
this would "reduce the scope
of operations of foreign base
companies and would further
restrict the legitimate busi
ness of American companies
abroad."
Administration leaders have
said the tax is not new. The
provision is aimed at captur
ing taxes on earnings of sub
sidiaries the same year rather
than w;iit until the money is
channeled to the parent cor
poration. Other developments:
Rusk Secretary of slate
Dean Hu.sk appeared before
the House foreign affairs com
mittee to deliver a closed
briefing in his recent 10-day
trip to western Europe There
was no immediate disclosure
of what Husk told the con
gressmen about his talks with
leaders in France, Britain,
West Germany and Portugal..
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Open Friday Rights 'Til 9
Bold Effort To
Flee Death Row
Ends in Failure
San Qucntin - WD - Six
Df.'alh Row inmates at S.'n
Oucntin prison took two
I Kitaras hostage in a bold ef
fort to escape early today and
surrendered Ihree hours later
amid a barrage of tear gas
shells.
"We gambled and we lost,"
said Luig Moya, one of the six
convicts. "We were going out
the gates."
They also surrendered two
guns they had taken from one
of the hostages, gun rail offi
cer C. Dealrick. Deatrick
was struck on the head by
the inmates but not seriously
injured.
"We wanted to gel out,"
Warden Fred Dickson quoted
the inmates as saying. "We
didn't have much to lose.
We're all going to be executed
anyway."
Dickson said the plans of
the six men went awry when
tiiey discovered that the hos
tage guards did not have keys
to the two heavy doors which
seal off death row.
No Chance, Say Warden
He said the convicts, find
ing this strategy foiled, plan
ned to use their hostages to
persuade prison officials to
open the doors and let the six
convicted murders walk out
of the prison.
But, Dickson said, San
Qucntin policy is that even
the warden could be shot and
guards would still not be au
thorized to open the gates
and let inmates walk out.
The tear gas, Dickson said,
was the principal .eason the
convicts surrendered.
The first sign of trouble
came when Roy B. Kardell,
t lie guard assigned to Death
Row, telephoned at 1:07 a.m.
and said urgently, "We're in
trouble." Deatrick went to his
aid and moments Inter asso
ciate Warden Dale Frady
learned that both men were
hostages.
I Seize Weapons
The prosiners took a Hti-cai
1 iber revolver and a 12-gauge
shotgun from Deatrick.
More than a dozen guards,
led by Associate Warden
' Louis Nelson, massed on a
i ledge outside the row of cells
1 occupied by the condemned
I men and fired tear gas into
1 the cell area at 2:45 a.m.
I T h e prisoners responded
; with a telephoned plea to
J Warden Fred Dickson to
"knock it off." They said they
would release the hostages
when guards slopped firing
tear gas.
The six involved in the es
cape plot were identified as
Moya, Clyde Bales, Manuel
Chavez, Augustine Haldona
do, Willard Winhovcn, and
David Bickley. All six are
convicted murderers.
Order Restored
James N'ei.-wongcr. super
visor if the parole violator
unit, .-laid the prisoners return
ed to their cells at 4 117 a.m.
and order was restored.
He said only the six con
demned men participated in
the a. tempted break, and that
other death row prisoners
were urging them to give up
after the tear pas was fired.
The six got out of their cells
by s a wing the bar with a
hacksaw. It was not known,
how or where they obtained '
the hacksaw. Five of Ihem :
.sawed their way out and they
broke the I o e l; on Winhov
en's cell and released him.
Then t li e y overpowered
Kardell jind alter that, Deat
rick, who iis on duly on a
gun rail within the cell block.
Nei.wonger said they prob
.ibly struck De.tink tiom be
hind w ith Mime muniment.
The prisoner., in agreeing
to surrender, asked unlv that
1 they mil be harmed and that
no reprisals be taken against
them.
Neiswonger said that it was
unlikely the men would be
punished.
Slocks Fractionally
Mixed on Opening
New York TH- Most
stock w e r e fractionally
mixed m moderate morning
trading on the ' 11 x Hoard"
today
Leading steel?., antes ami
oils showed ltf.le change but
chemical?, slanted lower with
Du Pont and I'uum Carbide
olf n point and Hercules
Power dow n I1, A plurality
of the lads ;md utilities man
aged small gain.-
Mo-I el the faM mo nig
glamoi -to, k mo ed less
than point 10 both duee
tioti" Howexei UUt climbed
J v Fobo! named 1 ' and
leva" 1 n.! 1 u;nen!s ,vt a
point
Eight Petitions To Get Issues on
November Ballot Said To Be Failures
Siilem - il'PI' At least eiehl
of the 11 initiative petitions,
seeking to gel issues on the
November ballot have failed,
a survey by United Press In
ternational revealed today.
Sponsors of one of three
remaining initiative petitions
announced they have obtain
ed the necessary 42.000 signa
tures. This petition declares
stcelhead a game fish in Ore
gon, and would restrict the
catch on the Columbia river.
ment. and for repeal of the
school district reorganization
law.
Sponsors of the eight other
petitions, including two bar
ring daylight time, threw' in
the towel.
Mrs. Florence Reed Cook,
Eugene, said Saturday she had
given up her petition to re
peal the 1961 optional time
law, and make standard time
mandatory, throwing support
to the second standard time
Reported close to success petition circulated by Elmer
were petitions for a new sys- McClure, Milwaukie, and oth
tern of legislative reapportion- crs.
But McClure reported today
that his petition drive has
also failed. Of the 53,000 sig
natures needed, his standard
time committee gathered only
about 40,000, he said.
Otrfer petitions that failed
would have made car insur
ance compulsory in Oregon;
lower the voting age from 21
to 18; provide a $600 bonus
for Korean war veterans; set
up a system of public credit
in lieu of taxes; license medi
cal technicians; allowed cities
which take over transporta
tion systems to continue pen
sions of retired employees.
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Page 2-A1 . , . I M. T. . t'l
Mppis, tnerry, Doysenoerry, roecn ,: ;
MISS CALIFORNIA Pamela Jean Gamble, 18, of Monterey,
Calif., has been chosen at Santo Cruz, Calif., to represent
the state at the Miss America pageant in Atlantic City, N.J.
She was chosen over a bevy of 10 other beauties vying for
the title. Miss Gamble won the talent division with a dance
interpretation to the music of "West Side Story". She is a
student at University of Pacific at Stockton and holds a
scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in Lon
don. IUPI)
Regional Edition
MedfordSTribune
MEDKORD. OREGON. MONDAY. JULY 2. I!)fi2
oreign Briefs
SOVIET EMBASSY RESIDENCE IN FRANCE LOOTED
Versailles, France-'l P t-BurgUrs got into the Soviet em
bassy summer residence at Brunoy Sunday night and made
1 off with about S6Q worth of loot, police said.
The loot included a lacquered wooden box, several bottles
of liquor and a quantity of cigarettes and cigars.
COMMISSION' OF JURISTS TO MEET
Geneva-I'l! The International Commission of Jurists will
convene an International Congress in Rio dt Janeiro begin I
ning Dec. 11, according to an announcement here.
A spokesman said the meeting, to run through Dec. 15,
will consider "executive action and the rule of law."
GERMAN POSTAL WORKERS PLAN SLOWDOWN
Frankfurt. Germany-UM-About 300,000 German postal
workers planned to begin a three-day slowdown today to
support their demands for higher wages. The postal workers
union urged its members to engage in the slowddown by ad
hering strictly to all rules and regulations.
CHICAGO MAN SENTENCED IN SPAIN
Madrid-1 1'l-A Spanish civil tribunal today sentenced
William Bass of Chicago to a year in prison for twice tear
ing down a photograph of Generalissimo Francisco Franco,
a court spokesman reported.
Bass, 37, was convicted of "offenses to the chief of state."
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