Vouth
Regional Edition
Medford
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1983
Bonn Rejects
De Gaulle Foe's
Plea for Asylum
Bonn - (UPfi - West German
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
today spurned a plea for po
litical asylum from Georges
Bidault, leader of forces
seeking to topple French
President Charles de Gaulle.
Bidault had appealed to
Adenauer as an "old friend."
Bidault, fugitive former
V rencn premier wuu wuo
.InlrAiJ i,n In a nnlinn rnlri
' Sunday, also sought asylum
from the Bavarian state gov
ernment, but govc-rnr cnt
sources said Adenauers re
fusal to even accept Bidault's
letter apparently closed the
door to him - in all of West
Germany.
The continued presence of
Bidault In West Germany
could put a severe strain on
Community Club
01 Phoenix
Plans lo ui
Phoenix The Phoenix
Community club board of
directors will meet with nil
representatives of various
community organizations be
longing lo the community
club at 8 p.m., Thursday in
the meeting room of tiie
Phoenix Presbyterian church,
it was announced today.
r-urpose will De lo aecicie
what to do with the remaining
funds in the organization's
treasury, to close out the
community club organization
and disband.
Recently, the board of di
rectors met with the mayor
and a city councilman to dis
cuss the possibility of turn
ing community club funds
over to the city for operation
of a parks and recreation pro
gram. Howevor, following the
meeting the mayor asked the
board to present a proposed
program for continued opera
tion of the community club
under city council super
vision. The proposal presented to a
city council meeting was re
jected and the city council
presented a counter proposal
which has been rejected by
the community club board.
Arden Farm Reports
Net Income Increase
Arden Farms company has
reported consolidated net in
come of $4,305,896.07 for the
year ending Dec. 31, 1982.
This is an increase of near
ly $300,000 from the previous
year.
After preferred dividends,
the 1062 net income it equal
to $1.54 a share on common
stock, compared to $1.43 a
share for the previous year.
Sales for 1962 were $430,
762,297.67 as compared to
$404,237,458.03 in 1961.
SUIT NOT DISMISSED
Boston - llirn - A U.S. DIs
trict Court judge Friday re
fused to dismiss a $2.5 million
slander suit initialed by New
York Tilan owner Harry Wis
mcr against Boston industrial
ist Theodore Barron and New
ton attorney Harold Brown.
However, Judgo Charles E.
Wyzanskt Jr. ordered Wis
mer's counsel to file an
amended complain! with a
simple statement of the facts.
Wisiner has charged Barron
and Brown with making det
rimental remarks about him
on connection with their bid
lo buy the Titans.
"IT
. v -i.v
' 4'.."
Here comes April 15th! Income tax time. And if you have
trouble coming up with the cash, come to us. We make
prompt, cash loans lor any worthwhile purpose.
CITY FINANCE COMPANY
185 E. Main St. Phone: 482-2431, Ashland
Life insurance available on all loans at lot group rates
2522 to
1SOOS2
i
Conservation
Page 2A
Tribune
relations between France -nd
West Germany.
Possibilities were mounting,
government sources said, that
Bidault will be declared an
undesirable alien and depo-t-
ed across the border to a na
tion which would accept him.
Switzerland and Austria have
been mentioned as possibili
ties.
Bidault, 63, was placed un.
dor police protection in the
hilltop villa where has was
discovered. He immediately
asked Bavarian state author
ities for political asylum and
said he had mailed a similar
request to Adenauer.
Bidault was taken from his
guarded villa this morning
for more questioning about
his activities t. West Ger
many. The former premier ap.
pcared tired and slightly
stooped as he left the house
for the drive to police head
quarters five miles away.
Bidault's appearance in a
filmed television interview
over the British Broadcasting
Corp. network last week ag
gravated the already chilly
relations between Brita'i and
France. It resulted in wide
spread criticism of Prime Min
ister Harold Macmillan's gov
ernment by the British press
and opposition politicians.
It was immediately clear
whether Bavarian police
actually were hunting for
Bidault when they found him
Sunday morning In a three-
story stone villa, 20 miles
from Munich.
Heinz Graf Nouhuys, a
Dutch journalist who rents
the villa, told newsmen 12
police officials entered the
house looking for members of
the Secret Army Organiza
tion, the anti-Gaullist French
terrorist group allied with
the CNR.
"They were greatly sur
prised when one of the guests
of the House produced a dip.
lomat's passport Issued for
Georges Bidault," Noulwys
said.
Nouhuys claimed federal of
ficials in Bonn had known
since last week thai Bidault
was in Bavaria.
Grange News
Butt Falls Grange
The Butte Falls Grange
held Its regular March bus
iness meeting with Master
Ted Frcdcnburg presiding.
Miss Arlene Cothrin re
ceived Hie first and second
degrees of the order and Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Hartlcrode
were obligated In the third
and fourth degrees.
Lecturer Ben Fulton led
the program with Irish jokes,
songs and gunics.
Elga Abbott of the ways
and means committee report
ed the politick supper was a
social and financial success.
Paint has been purchased for
the Brownsboro church.
The program consisted of
severe 1 selections of the
school band followed by plnno
solos by Sherry Tyuart, Barb
ara Crammer and Steve Strat-
ton with arias by Louis Crnuv
mcr and Mrs. William liar
his. County Extension Agent
Bert Wilcox explained the
purposes and advantages of
the rural area redevelopment
program.
Gay Hawoilh, agricullurc
committee chairman, read an
article on the new proposed
sluughtcr law. The Home
Economics club will hold its
next meeting March 12. at
1:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs.
Everett Moore.
m m
Proposal To Be
Target for GOP
To Cut Spending
Washington - 1W - The
Youth Conservation Corps, a
New Frontier version of a
New Deal fixture, will pro
vide the first major test of
President Kennedy's program
in the 88th Congress.
It also will present the first
big target for Republicans to
shoot at in their campaign to
cut spending before reducing
taxes.
The bill, titled "The Youth
Employment Act," is a key
stone of Kennedy's program
for dealing with young men
and women in their late 'teens
who arc neither at work nor
in school.
The administration official
ly estimates the first - year
cost of the program at $100
million.
Officials have shied away
from cost estimates for the
full three-to-five-ycar life of
the program, but their own
testimony indicates a price
lag of about $1 billion.
CCC Revival
It would set up two feder
ally financed work programs.
One, a revival of the old
Civilian Conservation Corps,
would be only for young men
aged 16-22, and provide work
in the nation's forests, parks
and reclamation areas.
The other, for youngsters
of both sexes in the same age
group, would be called "The
Local Area Youth Employ
ment Program.". This group,
dubbed by some witnescs "The
Home Town Youth Corps,"
would work on local and slate
projects and in community
service activities.
Kennedy has said he hopes
to have the youth bill through
Congress by Easter. House
and Senate committees are
working hard toward that
goal and it is entirely possi
ble that the President will
have an indication of what
he will get by early April.
At present, the outlook for
the bill is for a tough battle
along the lines of the mini
mum wage and farm price
support fights of 1961-62.
These were so close that
House leaders were reluctant
lo predict the outcomes right
up to the start of the roll
calls.
The main attack on the bill
by Republicans and some con
servative Democrats will be
based on its cost and its use
fulnes. Timing Criiiciied
They will question the wis
dom of starting any big new
program at a lime when the
Treasury is in the red and
the White House is calling
for tax cuts.
The opponents also argue
that there is little to be gain
ed by sending a young man
into the deep woods with pick
and shovel for six months to
two years. They say far more
could be accomplished by
teaching youths the modern
skills they need to find work
in the nation's increasingly
more specialized job market.
Supporters will reply that
the cost of the bill, no mailer
how figured, is small com
pared lo the outlay for relief
payments and crime control
that would follow failure to
help Jobless, unskilled young
sters. One cabinet member
told House members the first
year cost was the same as
16 hours of defense spending.
They conceded that many
youngsters may not learn
marketable skills in the Con
servation Corps, bul lay
heavy emphasis on the train
ing in work habits to be gain
ed fro m it. They say the
chance to carry out long-delayed
conservation work,
while helping give aimless
youths a sense of direction is
well worth the cost.
Aside from these disputes
there may be a side battle
over racial inlcgratiun. He
publicans pressed Ally. Gen.
Robert Kennedy to support
language forbidding separa
llon of the races in the Youth
Corps, but he insisted it would
be handled without an anti
discrimination clause.
In the GOP members insist
on such language, in a n y
northern Democrats might
have lo support it. That, in
turn, could turn large num.
bers of otherwise lukewarm
southerners into flat oppo
nents of the measure.
Van Johnson Said
Recovering 'Nicely'
Hollywood - urn - Actor
Van Johnson was reported
"recovering nicely" today
from surgery on his left thigh
lor what was described s
"a mild case of skin earner "
A spokesman at Cedars of
Lebanon hospital said the sur
gery Friday was "very suc
cessful." Johnson was expect
ed to be rclca.-cd from the
hospital later this week to
resume work on the film
"Wives and Lovers."
Oorps
Foreign Briefs
KENNEDY INVITED TO VISIT GERMANY
Nuernberg, Germay - IUPII - A high-ranking member of
Chancellor Kenrad Adenauer's Christian Democratic parly
has invited President Kennedy to pay a visit to Berlin on his
scheduled European lour in the spring, it was disclosed
today.
Ernst Lemmer, former minister for all-German atfairs
in the Bonn cabinet, said he sent an invitation to the White
House over the week end.
STATUE TO MARK 'VICTORY OVER FASCISM'
Moscow-WPIl-The official news agency Tass said today a
monument to the "victory over fascism" will be erected on
Poklonneya hill, the highest point in Moscow.
Tast said the monument will contain a 272 foot-high
statute of Soviet soldier with e Fascist swastika under his
feet.
DEADLY GAS ESCAPES INTO ITALIAN RIVER
Tumi, Ilaly-iUPll-Polica said today 75 gallons of deadly
potassium cyanide escaped from a factory into the river
Dora, killing tens of thousand? of fish and severely affecting
vegetation along the shores.
Police issued en immediate warning that anyone eating
the fish could die almost instanly. There heve been no re
ports of fatalities.
SUPPLIES MOVED TO PERU FLOOD VICTIMS
Lima, Peru-WPIi-The armed forces moved emergency food
supplies in a truck convoy today 160 miles northwest to
I -. City, whose 180,000 inhabitants faced hunger and disease
following week end floods.
General Services
Department Urged
For California
Sacramento - IUPII - Cali
fornia's T.itili Hoover com
mission today recommended
ereation of a state Depart
ment of General Services by
the 1963 legislature,
in a renort to Gov. Edmund
G. Brown and the legislators,
the commission said such a
department would provide for
greater administrative emc-
iency."
Under the Drooosal. the
general services department
would be creaiea Dy divining
the duties of the present slate
department of finance.
Finance would keep fiscal,
planning and policy respon
sibilities; general services
would take care of "house
keeping." Stocks Firm in
Early Dealings
New York - (UN) - Stocks
firmed In moderate first hour
dealings today.
Leading oils and chemicals
were firm among the major
groups, featuring a 2 point
opening rise in Du Pont.
Leading steels and autos were
narrowly mixed along with
rails and utilities.
Johns-Manvillc ran ahead
nearly a point, making it the
only wide mover among the
miscellaneous blue chips.
Aircraft shares firmed wl'h
General Dynamics up nearly
Hi following strong Defense
Department support for lis
selection as the contract for
the controversial TEX fight
er. California Savings & Loan
holding shares were firm and
active following favorable
comment in a leading business
weekly. Wcsco and Financial
Federation led the pack with
point or better gains.
Meningitis Noted
At San Diego Base
San Diego. Calif - lUri) -More
than 12,000 personnel at
the Naval Training Center re
mained in quarantine today
because of an outbreak of
five cases of spinal meningi
tis. One sailor has died of the
disease
"So far as we know at this
time, these cases have been
ot a sporadic, not epidemic I
type," Capt. J. F. Chacc of I
the Medical Corps said Sun- i
day.
Chacc said James S. llulc,
22, of Osborne, Kan., died
Thursday, four hours after re
porting to Balboa Naval hos
pital. The meningitis outbreak
was the second to be report
ed at (he center in less than
a year. Four cases were re
ported last July, but there
were no deaths.
Siilrm ifrii - A hearing will
be held in Portland March 27
on a truckers' request for
lower rales for hauling resi
dual fuel oil.
Advertisement
My false teeth
were killing me...
I tried ll ihe pMf and noder and
pad. Stmt old trouble! Rotkini and
lipptnn made my mcufh xve and
mad me irritable, then I poke 10
my dfnhM . . . h loW me about
I IMIION, I he Miftflcmini plait
ilut mold lo the umv Now eat
hi t nt enjoy ht I eai and
mr turn feel o food. CTSHION
il.iyx soil . ilat Hi vret md
ihji wdi my relief Mildly mediviied
to hel uni orciict$. pleant mirm
fUvor iurd ur breath k vour
druin.M for 11 SMION. You muM
he Minfied or you fei your money
PJtk I on -laitini lupply only
Jt 49
Bill To Tost
Creation of such a depart
ment had been recommended
as far back as 1939 and
Governor Brown said only
last week that he favored
such an arrangement.
The Little Hoover group,
known formally as the Cali
fornia Commission on Gov
ernment Organization and
Economy, said the reorgan
ized Department of Finance
should continue but recom
mended againsl creation of a
new "executive office."
. This brought a favorable
response from Assembly
Speaker Jesse M. Unhuh (D
inglcwood). He said crcalion
of the executive office could
have made the man in charge
a deputy governor.
"It could have prevented
legislators from gecling bud
get information not colored
by political interpretations,"
Unruh said.
Would Improve Work
The commission said the
reorganization would facili
tate an improved level of
general services administra
tion and permit the director
of finance to take care of his
principal assignment as the
governor's chief fiscal, plan
ning and program adviser.
The present director of fi
nance is Hale Champion,
hired by Brown in 1959 from
his job as a newsman for the
San Francisco Chronicle to be
the governor's news secre
tary. Later, he became
Brown's executive secretary
and then about two years igo
was appointed finance chief.
Champion has said that the
present pattern of slate pro
gram development docs not
allow his agency time for
"identification and discussion
of fundamental policy ques
tions." The Little Hoover group
agreed.
"A good place lo
RESTAURANT
We are a friend of
family ... do dine
Easing
Capital
Salem (UPD A possible
easing of tensions between the
governor and legislative lead
ers was hinted today by House
Speaker Clarence Barton and
and Senate President Ben
Musa.
Gov. Mark Hatfield has a
press conference scheduled
for this afternoon which may
indicate if there has been any
relaxing of feelings on the
part of the chief executive.
Barton, commenting on
last week's running battle be
tween legislators and the gov
ernor, said "This is not per
sonal with nje."
"I still have great admira
ation for the goverher. I
think he is doing what he
feels is best for the state."
Musa commented "I think
the feud has slowed down lo
a walk."
'Most Unfortunate'
The Senate president add
ed, however, that he felt it
"most unfortunate that the
governor castigated Demo
crats and legislative leaders
from a political forum." It
was a reference to Hatfield's
speech before a Republican
women's group in Portland
last week in which he termed
Democrats "soft on defense."
"It's not good to make com
ments such as this when the
legislature is in session, that's
the kind of talk you expect
during an election campaign."
Musa said last week's bat
tle was "blown a little out
of proportion. He's entitled
to fight for his views just
like we are. It's not smart to
belittle another's actions just
because you don't agree."
Musa added that "the grass
roots seem to favor a cutback
in civil defense," and cited
letters he had received, and
comments from constituents
while he was at home over
the week end.
Seeking Some Goal
Barton said "we are all try
ing for the same goal the
governor, the ways and means
committee, and the legislature
all are trying to do what is
best for the people of the
stale."
He added, "J hope he cred
its us with the same inten
tion
Barton explained the gov
ernor has to rely on Finance
Director Freeman Holmer for
budget advice because Hat
field "doesn't have time to
go into every agency's budg
et. "We have our fiscal com
mittee. They haven't had time
lo go into every budget either,
so they have concentrated on
the important ones," Barton
added.
DOGS CATCH RABBIT
St. Petersburg, Fla. - (UPD -It
finally happened the
greyhounds caught the me
chanical rabbit. Eight dogs
jumped on the metal bunny
and happily tried to tear it to
shreds when an electrical
storm this week end knocked
oul the circuit that keeps the
rabbit one step ahead of pur
suers. A "no race" was de
clared and more than SIS, 000
was returned to bettors. Races
resumed when power was re
stored. eat."
the
with us!
The man who comes to din
ner . . . with his family is
given royal treatment here.
Relax with the family over our
fine meals.
We feature children-siie
portions of our Mvory
food. You'll find a menu
with a wide range of
choice.
Open Daily
6 a.m.
Social Hours
Nightly
3 to 7
510 N. Riverside
Kennedy's Program
of Tensions in
Squabbles Seen
Musa responded to charges
that the legislature was not
working hard enough by cit
ing the case of Sen. Anthony
Yturri (R-Ontario) who be
came ill last Friday. "He
worked himself into a fraz
zle," Musa said.
oooooo fplssiy
o
o
SESTABIISHED 18
I GREEN I
ySTAM PSy
o
Or-
Super Market
FROZEN
STRAWBERRIES
10-oz. Pkg.
Regular 25c Each
o
o
All Popular Brands
tSIABllSHEO 1896 I fllTYOu XI
1
stamps J Shamrock -Large 22V2-oz.
Bread
Bradley's Crispi
FROZEN
PIES
Apple and Peach
8 inch Pies
O White
O r
ESTABLISHED 1896
I GREEN
tSTAMPS
Green Boens, Cream Style Corn, Whole
Q Peas, Tomatoes end Applesauce
Armour Star
SHANK HAM
49s
o
o
I GREEN
STAMPS,
o
o
U.S. No. 2 Oregon Russet
Pot at oes
Urge, Bright, Fresh
Artichokes
A
Qtowrift SL
aewvvaa e
Musa also lauded the coop
eration between the House
and Senate tax committees,
and said "this is the way the
leigslature should act. It takes
time to find out what is nec
essary. But we are making
great progress."
wiggiy
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M.
VVIIUV Ub. Tin -V
L
Satin
Dundee -303 Tins -Reg. 5
Canned Goods
3
20
urge v.mp Washington Red
Delicious Apples
ItfiriM Prit" E,,",iv Mon., Tuei., end Wed.,
ameaej
SHIP IT USMF
to er from Oakland, San Fran,
cisce, Los Angeles and other
California points,
sjgFitzgeralc'
n 773.7761 n
I
to 9 P.M.
U
2.lb. Tin 7f
Loaf
4 99
(oV
V Pkg.
(oV
My pie
lOte'89
for $1.00
6 99'
Kernel Corn,
Fresh
GROUND
BEEF
ibi 1
00
lb. Bag
jtt
&
March 11,1213. limit Right! Reserved.
7