Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 31, 1963, Image 1

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    Rogue Valley Edition
58th Year Price 10 Cents
Medford
Tribune
HALLOWEEN TIME Ghosts, goblins, witches, owls and
jack o'lanterns will be in style this evening on Halloween. All
are shown in this painting on a window at Hubbard Brothers
store, West Main St., which is among those painted by chil
Kennedy
America
Election Set in
One Irrigation
District Nov. 12
Medford Irrigation District
will be the only one of four
districts which will hold an
election for the board of di
rectors from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Tuesday, Nov. 12, it was report
ed today.
Albert Hueners, incumbent
and board chairman, and Wil
ton White are candidates for a
three-year term on the Medford
Irrigation District board. Poll
ing place will be the Oak Grove
School.
The two incumbents on the
Talent Irrigation District board
face no opposition so an elec
tion will not be held. The TID
board is required by state law
to declare the incumbents elect
ed within 15 days after the
deadline for filing. Monday was
the filing deadline. Gilbert Hill
has filed for the remaining two
years of the unexpired term of
Homer Moore and Evan Ras
mussen. board chairman, has
filed for reelection for three
years. The board appointed Hill
to fill Moore's office as director
when Moore resigned Sept. 3.
Leonard Freeman has filed j
for reelection to the Rogue
River Valey Irrigation District
board for three years.
Roger Gratsingcr has filed
for the three-year term vacat
ed by Philip Nevin. Eagle
Point Irrigation District board
chairman.
Footlighters' Play
Ooens Mere Tonight
The Footlighters first fan
play, "Dirt;, Work at the Cross- j
road," opens at 8:30 o'clock to
night at the Fairgrounds the
ater located behind the Med
ford Armory. Tickets will be
on sale at the box office.
Director Frank Pinnock said
the old-fashioned melodrama has
all the ingredients for a fun eve
. ning and the audience will be
encouraged to boo the villain
and applaud the hero. Coffee : perintendent of Medford School
will be served at intermission. ; District 549C. to the full com
The play will continue Nov. mittee and all interested citi
1 and 2 and be staged again ; zens who wish to attend the ses
next vpek end. Nov. 7, 8 and 9. I sion, Bosworth said.
NEWStwjBlllEFS
IT IMS PROM X
SOVIET DIPLOMAT PACK BAGS
NEW YORK (I'PIt Three Soviet U.N. diplomats accused
of spying hurriedly packed their bags today to comply wilh a
State Department notice ordering them out of the country immediately.
COUNCIL CONDEMNS SLEASY ART
VATICAN CITY l'H The Ecumenical Council voled ov
erwhelmingly today lo condemn the use of sleazy religious art
and inappropriate images In Catholic churches.
THREE CUBANS SAID EXECUTED
MIAMI (LTD Havana Radio said today the Castro regime
executed three Cubans by firing squad in Camageuey Wednesday
night. A fourth Cuban, a 15-year-old boy was sentenced to life
Imprisonment In i "rehabilitation" camp.
EIGHT KILLED BY GRENADE
VIENTIANE. Laos -(L'PIi-Eight persons were killed and
(J injured today when i terrorist hurled a hand grrmde orr i
ra.-rugaled metal fence into a crowd at a fairground aear hv.
Tells Democrats
Is On The March
Large Homecoming
Parade Scheduled
For SOC Saturday
ASHLAND The 1963 Home
coming Parade, the largest in
Southern Oregon College his
tory, is scheduled to move
through Ashland at 10:a0 aga.
Saturday.
The parade route will stEi t at
Lithia Park and continue along
Siskiyou Blvd. to the Ashland
High School intersection.
In the line of march will be
groups from Medford. Grants
Pass, Malin, Gold Hill and
Ashland, in addition to the col
lege entries. Chuck Inskeep of
Medford, Homecoming chair
man, reported today.
These groups will include the
Grants Pass Cavemen, the Med
ford Horsemen's Association, a
42 - member girls marching
group from Malin, the Ashland
High School Flag Girls, the
Blue Mountain Boys from Gold
Hill, and the Jacksonville Stage
Coach.
Bands Participating
Bands participating will be
the Ashland, Medford, Crater
Education Group
To Meet Monday
Meeting of the Citizens Com
mittee on Education has been
called for Monday, Nov. 4, at
7:30 p.m. in the Lecture Room
of Medford High School to hear
the recommendations of the ad
ministrative staff of the Med
ford schools on t h e problems
which have been under study
for several months. H. P. Bos-
worth Jr., committee chairman.
announced today.
The Steering Committee of the
Citizens Committee on Educa
tion recently met and decided
that it is now time to receive
the opinions of Dr. Leonard B.
Mayfield and his staff regard
ing the secondary school prob
lems, which have been under
study.
The recommendation of t h e
school administrators will be
: presented by Dr. Mayfield. su
AROUND THI OlOM
dren in City's Park and Recreation Department competition.
Winners will be announced at 5 o'clock this evening in the de
partment's office on the second floor of the city hall. A total
of 56 children participated in the event.
and Phoenix High School
Bands, and junior high school
bands from Talent and Ash
land. From California will be
the Yreka High School band.
State Sen. Lvnn Newbry will
be grand marshal of the pa-1
rade. Other dignitaries in the i
uivioiun iui uiimais win uu
State Rep. Edward Branchfield,
John R. Dellenback and James
Redden: Jackson County Clerk
Marvin Madden, Ashland May
or Richard Neill and R. L.
Windsor, exalted ruler of the
Ashland Elks lodge.
Representing Southern Ore
gon College will be President
Elmo Stevenson and Dr. Alvin
Fellers, director of student af
fairs. The parade also will include
the rally squad of the college i
and the Homecoming Queen !
and her court. I
nn5 i Para-, !
Unique to this year's parade
... J r. ..
will be the appearance of the
preceding year s winner, Home
coming Queen Gay Schweibert,
who reigned during 12 festivi
ties: and two Miss Orcgons,
Marty Wyatt Foulon, the 1062
queen, and D'Ann Fullerton.
the 1963 Miss Oregon.
The many other festivities in
cluded in the three-day Home
coming got under way today.
Homecoming buttons, sold by
the committee, will be accept
ed for entrance to all events
except the barbecue and foot
ball game, for which the usual
price will be charged.
The Homecoming buttons are
still on sale in the Britt1 Stu
dent Union.
Duncan Schedules
Visit to Medford
Congressman Robert B. Dun-
can will be- guest in Medford
Tuesday, Nov. 12. at a "Meet
Your Congressman" night to be
sponsored by the Jackson Coun
ty Democratic Central Commit
tee, the Eleanor Roosevelt
League and the Jackson County
Democratic Social Club.
Charles Crary, Central Com-
mittee chairman; Mrs. Frank
Christian, president of the El-1
eanor Roosevelt League, and-
Gerald J. Scannell Jr.. who,
heads the Social Club, announc-1
Ume invited the publ to aU
tend the dinner and the social
halt-hmir which will nrecode
I dinner. The social gathering and
the dinner will be held at Kims
While on his Medford visit
Congressman Duncan will hold I " -r jnOWnqni ties in i "i "ie imie man hiuiimuiuh luru me noiei expenses ana iranspona-
open house in his former office poinlmcnl or t0 come to lhc I Inrluttr'ml ArriAant lrom Sl' 'uUl' lhe l'ri!"",al a'-j Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tion for Hoffa fell in the catc
?fL!n department on Mon- Industrial Accidenf ,,rney w,th Uie piercing eyes I hM charBMl ... T r gory et personal income and
.
exact time for receiving con-
smut-ma di uie unite win k
announced later when more def
inite plans for his western trip
are completed
Soldier Creek Unit
Designated by Udall
VALE (LTD - Interior Sec
retary Stewart Udall has de
signated the Soldier Creek Ad
ministrative unit of the Bureau
of Land Management ai one of
US resource conservation jrrai
t; fil.M
President Gives
Boost to Mayor
Candidate in Talk
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -President
Kennedy, who cam
paigned three years ago on a
pledge to get the country mov-
ing again, Wednesday night
told a Democratic fund-raising
dinner that "America is on the
march."
In a five-hour visit that net
ted the Democratic party treas-
ury $450,000 and gave a boost
to Mayor James H. J. Tate's
chances of election to his first
full four-year term, Kennedy
dwelt on the gains made in the
33 months of his administra
tion.
The president arrived at 4:56
p.m. EST. was whisked to a
downtown hotel, attended a re-
ception for 200 Democrats who
Pad S250 aen for " privilege,
dined alone in his room, ad-
dressed 4,000 party laitmul at a
?lwtP , athCnV"?n
tinn Ha l nnrl waft airnnrnp fni
tion Hall, and was airborne for
Washington at 10:04 p.m.
The Chief Executive referred
only slightly to the racial issue
which threatens to play a ma
jor role in next Tuesday's may
oralty election here.
Praises Democrats
But he praised Tate. Ren
William J. Green, D-Pa., the
Philadelphia Democratic city
chairman, and the people of
Philadelphia whose support in
the I960 presidential election
swung Pennsylvania's 32 elec
toral college votes to him.
Kennedy told the partisan
i convention hall audience that
today America is on the march.
American is stronger than ever
before and the possibilities of
peace are brighter than ever
before.
working and trying." he said
reminding his audience that
"the economy has grown by
nearly a hundred billion dollars
; which has enabled the U.S. to
j increase its nuclear weapons.
: its combat-ready army divi-
sions, its procurement of airlift
aircraft and its special guerril
la and c o u n t e r-insurgency
forces."
Deputy Fire Marshal
e . je.i un..
5ets Bedford Hours
Deputy State Fire Marshal
William P. Roble will be at the
iitrH Firo nnnai-imont ovnrv
Monday- slartin8 Nov' 4' the
' Medford department announced
todav.
Anyone wishing to contact a
representative from the State ''mmli m
Fire Marshal's office is asked '
, ..i.,. mw f, . .n.1 . ... ... ... ...
Medford department on Mon
Irtav
day
WEATHER
miUC,!iT: Vrlibl rlniiiUnrM
tonight ind trldav. Palrnrt it4
morning foj. thanir of tlm
laic Friday. Low tofllgjil near
.V!. Illth fria.v 6J.
HlKhMt Vntprdav ... .u
l.owrit Thlt Morning , :
Our Skies Tonight
Nlintet Infiav . S.fll D IM. !
.tinrlfcf tomnrrciw 4:H aw.
Moonrlia today ...: n.w.. ,
I'Mll Mf-wn tomorrpw 1:5ft p.rra.
iLV.!"ir.i.!"J.,4,u"li,.!l,-
hai ! la tmtnmj
44 Pages Four Sections
Fierce
Algeria -Morocco Border
Castro Broadcast
Claims Capture
Of Counterspies
HAVANA (UPI ) Fidel Castro i with prisoners from an Ameri-
claimcd Wednesday night his
men had captured U.S. counter
intelligence agents smuggling
explosives into Cuba and he
threatened to shoot them along
Mechanical Flaw
Condemns Miners
To Another Night
P I E N E (UPI) - Rescue
workers overcame an unex
pected difficulty in sealing a
life preserving airlock and
plunged ahead with speeded
up drilling operations llial in
dicated three trapped iron
miners would be brought to
safety today.
PEINE, Germany (UPI) -A
mechanical flaw in the rescue
rig today condemned three
trapped iron miners to spend
another night in their air - bub
ble 262 feet underground.
The mining company mana
ger said the three men who
have spent seven days in the
flooded mine could not be res
cued before Friday.
Rescuers originally had hoped
to bring the miners to the sur
face today.
Manager Rudolf Stein of the
llseder Mine Company said a
balky airlock was holding up
rescue efforts.
With drilling halted 65 feel
from the trapped miners, res
cue workers struggled to fasten
the airlock atop the borehole
through which they planned to
bring the men out in a torpedo
shaped rescue capsule.
Sudden Rush
Unless the airlock seal is
pressure-tight, the men could
drown in a sudden rush of flood
water from below when the gi
ant American-made drill breaks
through to them and allows
high pressure air in their cham
ber to escape.
The rescue drilling was being
conducted in two partially-completed
emergency shafts each
28 inches wide. It had been held
up earlier to await the harden
ing of concrete lining around
the steel shaft casings.
Morse Leads Fight
Against Aid Bill
WASHINGTON (UPD-Lead-ers
of a Liberal revolt against
the Senate's $4.2 billion foreign
aid bill decided today to try to
send Ihp measure hack In the
forei8n relalions committee for
' a complete overhaul,
The bill, now in its fourth day
i of debate, would authorize an
other year of economic and
military aid to friendly nations.
The total is $300 million less
than President Kennedy asked
but $700 million more than the
$3.5 billion voted by the House,
Sen. Wayne L. Morse, D-Orc.,
who held a strategy huddle
with four other Democratic sen
ators seeking to revise the bill,
said they first would seek Sen
ate leadership agreement to re
commit the bill to the foreign
relations committee.
I If this fails, Morse said, they
'will make a floor fight on the
, issue. The group contends the
dim couia ne overnauica more
! ?"'cic.nt!y in committee than
PORTLAND (LPI) Loo r er -
! .Uso, a shipwright employed at
PORTLAND (UP!) -Loo Fer-
, ' guson, a shipwright employed at
! .Gimderson Brothers shipbuilding
I land construction firm, wasisea. They ar three members
Ikillod an industrial KCKk'rt of the regular pannl pjiw twa
today. I vVornat.es.
' Company fficialt i l ' Tilmor Euom ?S impwtn,
jP'ergu.sn was applying earn. Um criMmal Mmmj h at 3S
gated steel siding t a tMNMIstglwM fangMl kttw tragMy
I when h w-a atnicfc hy m svuf-jlwi wpfu ws sJ. kiwi Hft'wQ
! hcaij eraa ewryisa wiAfflri!. ami Vneaat rm.ml! baw town.
I , ' tfc enrtor ul !it'fVl mti mv
' BOSTON (L'f'I) Pniwiw - fvi i.wt ia tfro fvm
iKwoaoY - I
tttriMx afatt a Ikjt O.'uiftduiai
' I ttr. h'ii(.
New Battles
can-organized raiding party.
Castro, in a two hour and 40-
minute television and radio
broadcast to the nation, cited
the capture of agents, possibly
Canadians working for the U.S.
Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA), and exile raiders as
proof that U.S. foreign policy is
"hypocritical.
He compared the incidents
with the U2 affair of 1960, when
Russia announced it had shot
down U.S. pilot Francis Gary
Powers over the Soviet Union.
Apparently going on what he
had learned from interrogating
captured exile raiders, Castro
named the vessel "Rex" as the
'"mother ship" of an Oct. 21
landing attempt on Cuba's south
coast, described the vessel and
said it was based at west Palm
Beach.
A vessel named the Rex and
painted blue, as Castro said,
was found tied up at the port
of Palm Beach, just north of
west Palm Beach. It was regis
tered from Nicaragua, whose
government is strongly anti
Castro and, unofficially, has be
friended anti-Castro Cuban ex
ile groups.
Castro said the Rex was the
CIA's boat and had been used
in at least 10 raids against
Cuba.
The CIA in Washington had
no comment either on Castro's
speech or the vessel.
Castro did not identify by na
tionality the five men he said
were captured in the Oct. 21
landing attempt, which came
the same night the American
owned freighter J. Louis said
it was attacked by Cuban
planes in an area close to where
Castro placed the landing at
tempt. Castro said the landing inci
dent "uncovers the policy of the
United States and the proce
dures which they employ and
the cheap ideology with which
they try to defend their social
system."
Four Astronaut
Flights Cancelled
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In a
move to save money and speed
other projects in the U.S. moon
landing program, the federal
space agency is eliminating
four scheduled astronaut flights.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
said Wednesday Wat the re
phasing" of the manned flight
missions should advance the
date for launching of the space
craft designed to carry a man
I to Ihe moon
ine agency said mat tne can
cellation of the four flights
would save about $50 million
and help NASA stay within the
space budget recently author
ized by Congress.
The chanue would mean an
! estimated nine months delay in
ihe first manned orbit of earth
; bv the Anollo lunar vehicle but
would result in a greater effi
ciency that would keep the pro
gram on schedule, a NASA
spokesman said.
Murder Trial Jury
Still Not Complete
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI)
The Thompson "murder for
hire" trial hpflrlpH tnstnv ffir in-
! nition of the fireworks. That
beTked bv'Vn "
, nil !i. ....
1 and the silvery-mousy crewcut, in ., . ,
entered its fourth day today :i President James R. 1Mb and
entered its fourth day today
, with five jurors yet tc be cho
: Cm k tw MMtt4
uaM mM Mt mutest aVsMrant:
O. My .BMIX '
4
MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY,
P0RTUGAl SPAIN pf
ATLANTIC OCEAN P 1 11 RQ
ALGERIA
rarqccoJ
AREA jM
ftaaaa
SPANISH
SAHARA
MAURANIAS
DISPUTED AREA This newsmap spots disputed area (shaded
portion) in the Algerian-Moroccan border war. It was announced
in Bamako, Mali, Wednesday that President Ben Bella of Algeria
and King Hassan II of Morocco have agreed to a cease fire
effective Friday, Nov. 2. But new fighting was reported to have
erupted in three places today. (UPI)
Helicopter
Scans Viet
U.S. Military Men
SAIGON, South Viet Nam-
( UPI ) Forty-five U.S. helicop
ters today spearheaded a search
for three U.S. military advisers
believed captured by the Com
munists Tuesday in an ambush.
Two of the men, both Army
officers, were believed to be
wounded.
The condition of the third, an
enlisted medical technician, was
not known.
The Defense Department in
Washington identified the Amer
icans as Capt. Humbert R. Ver
sace of Baltimore, Md.; First
Lt. James N. Rowe of MeAl-
len, Tex.; and Sgt. Daniel L.
Pitzer of Spring Lake, N.C.
They wore officially listed as
missing.
In another development, three
members of Ihe United Nations
observer mission to Vict Nam
left Wednesday for the city of
Hue in central Viet Nam, where
the government's crisis with the
Buddhists began last May,
Troops Fired
The observers were sent here
to investigate charges of relig
ious repression in connection
with President Ngo Dinh Diem's
crackdown on the Buddhists. A
U.N. spokesman said they will
hear testimony from several
witnesses in Hue, where gov
ernment troops fired on Bud
dhist demonstrators May 8, kill
ing nine.
Informed sources said the
tnrce missing Americans ere
last seen walking with .heir
hands tied behind their backs,
Wildcat Walkout
Ends at Project
REDDING, Calif. (UPI) A
two-week wildcat strike by la
borers who demanded mileage
pay for travel to the $93 million
Pit-McCloud River Project near
near here ended today and
workers were scheduled to re
turn Monday.
Laborers voted to return to
work after meeting with spokes
men for contractors at the pro
ject, who argued that travel pay
was not included in the labor
ers' contracts.
Travel pay had been provided,
however, in the contracts of the
crafts unions, the contractors
said. They receive $4.50 daily.
Internal Revenue Claims Hoffa
.Cic COft OO Sm 8 T
IWCS 4iU,73 in D3CK I 3X68
.r,..v .,.. ........ .. . ..
uo.... ..n
- ,ms wllc owe $0,295 in addition -
i al income taxes for IMS, it vac
disclosed today.
Hoffa challenHod A tUiia
and ha4 mkui for a trial m tlu
itir ia aaiJnraJ turt i Ccv-
Vtei f iioj 1pmW
MamtML ratwt to hi 'vAnw in
tM iwtk vt m V tint
:i tutk tw wM fesjMl
- . MMmMat ak4 4jtn
I WutktuM tttSCttM'. r fees
,KJL . .
OCTOBER 31, 1963
Rage
COlOM-kVECHAR
JtH..IBtlda
SAHARA
Fleet
Nam for
under guard of Communist
guerrillas in a swamp near the
scene of the ambush, about 16a
miles southwest of Saigon.
OXonnell May Seek
Governor's Office
SEATTLE (UPI) -Atty. Gen.
John J. O'Connell said Wenes-
day night that he will run for
governor if Gov. Albert D. Ros
sellini decides against seeking a
third term.
O'Connell said he has not yet
decided whether he would run
against the governor in next
year's primary election should
Rosellini try to become the first
governor of the state to serve
three successive terms.
The attorney general, speak
ing to members of the Seattle
chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, a
society of journalists, said that
he is against a third term at
either the gubernatorial or pres
idential level.
Court Can Not Hold
Election for Board
The Jackson County Court
would not be authorized to
sponsor an election for direc
tors of the Rock Point Ceme
tery board, according to a legal
opinion submitted to the Coun
ty Court by Deputy District
Attorney Thomas Owens.
The cemetery group had sub
mitted petitions to the County
Court signed by residents of
the Gold Hill area requesting
that the County Court hold an
election for the three cemetery
directors in the town of Gold
Hill. An order signed by an
earlier County Court did not
provide for continuity of the
directors, the petitions stated.
Owens' opinion stated the
County Court can sponsor such
ai election when the initial re
quirements for forming a ceme
tery district are met. However.
the petitions submitted did not
come under the state law pro
visions applying to cemetery
districts, Owens stated.
A cemetery district must in
clude at least 4,000 acres or in
clude land with an assessed
valuation of at least $200,000,
Owens explained.
that he should have paid la;
, k p
ui(
, u,Cr answer, the Heffas
claimeal thoss payments were-
lot subject U taxa-tioti m
jraM(I (4y wars sithor 1-a.v-aximpi
- ei (J;-j and hwcps
Nry nxpeiwos connccM with
fcvHt kiMW-Rw ac a union office?.
Tbi t.Rii mid tkra Ifeffas's
ttnfciMn MMMan for ma- w- ('
j!! 'CT.,-l). mn)4l a t'.m
I wrist wd W Kk
tuh inuatl abauM
J. Aave mr. ,. fern eft ?Wf0.519.77.
.
No. 192
Along
Strip
Fighting Breaks
Out Despite Pact
For Cease-Fire
Algerians Attack
At Three Points
RABAT, Morocco (UPI)
Fierce new fighting raged today
between Algerian and Moroccan
forces along their disputed bor
der despite a cease-fire agree
ment that comes into effect Fri
day. Moroccan King Hassan II re
turned home from Bamako,
Mali, where he signed the
cease-fire arrangement Wednes
day with Algerian President
Ahmed Ben Bella.
An announcement said that
Algerian troops launched at
tacks at three points in
the western Sahara in the past
24 hours and said fighting 13
still going on.
The battles took place to the
north of Colomb Bechar, Al
geria, near the village of
Ich; at Djcbel El Hammar in
the Ksar Es Souk Province 1F.0
miles southwest of Colomb Be
char; and at Ain Char, about 80
miles west of Figiug. AH are
points along the disputed bor
der in areas where unexploited
mineral resources reportedly
have been found.
Government sources said all
three attacks were pushed back
and that the Algerians suffered
heavy losses. Moroccans at Ain
Bechar reportedly captured 40
Algerian paratroopers.
The .sources said all three
battle sites were "clearly in
Moroccan territory." The bat
tle of Ich was 600 miles to tha
north of Hassi Bcida and Tinn
joub, the tiny desert oases
which were the scenes of orig
inal clashes between the two
countries three weeks ago.
(In Algiers early today the
Algerian government also an
nounced that fighting still wan
going on. It said that Algerian
forces had recaptured much of
the ground that Moroccans had
captured in the three weeks of
fighting.
An Algerian report from Co
lomb Bechar quoted a military
leader as saying, "we will fight
until the cease-fire goes into ef
fect." Despite the settlement on
paper engineered through the
mediation of Emperor Haile Se
lassie of Ethiopia and President
Modibo Kcita of Mali both
sides appeared to be pressing
the battle along the vaguely
marked frontier in hopes of
gaining advantages right up to
the moment the cease-fire takes
effect.
Holmer to Return
As Finance Director
ALBUQUERQUE, N M. (UPI)
Freeman Holmer said today
he will return to his duties as
Oregon director of finance and
administration prior to the Ore
gon legislature's special session
next month.
Holmer took a leave of ab
sence from his post earlier this
month to conduct a market sur
vey for a private firm. He is
in Albuquerque attending the
Western Conference of the Coun
cil on State Governments.
"Initial findings of the survey
did not warrant a recommenda
tion to the firm that the survey
be completed at this time," Hoi
mer said today.
"Accordingly, I have request
ed and Governor Hatfield has
granted a termination of by
leave of absence in time lo par
ticipate in preparations for the
special legislative sessions
scheduled for Nov. 11."
ine tax on
that would be
$54,001.85.
The tax proceeding is civil,
not criminal.
Ifl addition, the government
said that Hoffa claimed $10,000
( much in a capital loss
earryover deduction from 1958
to 19S!) in connection with the
sale of the lloffns' interest in
JoH Properties. Hof.fa said the
amount dedueted w.as coiect
Thii' legal fees- apparently
w pst.l.di itt connection with
liWla'f todcra.1 trial in New
YKk' City on .wiretapping con
piracy charges. IJr- w3 8"ti,ii(
ted after) the second trial.' Tin
first ended in a hung jury.
3 a
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i
4)
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