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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1963)
,v-.v -; 14 B WKUNKSIIAY, IJKUOMMLIt 18. UIKI .tlEDFOIID MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON ohnso ara. M a si Obeyed W armng And mow Has Good Health Oregon Enters Controversy Over FPC Ruling on Iron Gate Fish Regulations SALEM (UPI) Oregon has. The company was ordered to joined in California's battle build a fish hatchery as rcstitu ajtainsl a Federal Power Com- lion for IB miles of spawning mission ruling which would re- stream area flooded out by the quire California to share the op- j dam. cration and and maintenance 1 Thornton said PP&L is also cost of fish facilities at the' appealing the order, claiming new Iron Gale Dam on the Kla- the company should not be re math River, it was revealed to- quired to build the $1 million dav Oregon Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton announced he had filed a motion to intervene with the U.S. court of appeals for the ninth circuit court in San Fran cisco. "We have joined to support California because we feel this case involves an important pre cedent," Thornton said. California Fighting He said California was fight ing (he Federal Power Commis sion ol der which would require the slate to assume 20 per cent of the operation and mainte nance cost of fish facilities to be built at the dam, which is located just south of the Cali fornia-Oregon border. hatchery Thornton said he expected PP&L to oppose Oregon's mo tion to intervene in the case. Precedent Seen Thornton made it clear Ore gon was not opposing that part of the FPC order which requires cedent for requiring the Idaho PP&L to build the hatchery. He power company to build one or said Oregon docs- not believe j m0,.fi matchcrics on lhe mjdd,e lUIIIOI Hid SIIUUIU HdVU (U OlldlU in the maintenance and opera- I Snake River to make restitution lion costs once the hatchery is ! 'or 10,0011 salmon killed at the built. j Oxbow Dam in 1958." Requiring cainornia to snare in the cosls would create a precedent which could have a serious inpact upon projects in Oregon, " Thornton explained. The Oregon Attorney General said he thinks the order requir ing PP&L to build the hatchery "may establish a valuable pre- President in Oil Scandal Slated To Answer Citation NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) - The and refused to answer president of a refining com- liuns about the Bayonne, N. pany, wnicn iriggercii inc nuge vegetable oil scandal in going The dam was built by the Pa-, bankrupt, was to appear in fed- ques. cific Power and Light Company (PP&L). Delta Park Commission Elects New President PORTLAND (UPf) -C. How ard Lane, president of the! Mount Hood Radio and Televi sion Broadcasting Corp. has been elected chairman of the Delta Park Recreation Commis sion. He succeeds Hlllman Leuddc mann, who recently was named head of the slate's Department of Commerce. oral court today to contempt citation. Anthony Tino DcAngclis, president of lhe Allied Crude Vegetable Oil Refining Corp., and the firm's conlroller, Ben Ilotello, were scheduled to show cause why they should not be held in contempt and sent lo prison or "otherwise dealt with." Took Filth Amendment DeAngelis and Rolello were cited for contempt by referee William Tallyn in federal bank ruptcy court last week after they look the Fifth Amendment rcmcmbcred- For a long Buy her the f .... FINEST Push-button DuaCycle Portable the Professional DishwasherDryer Oislics rrI cleaner . . . dner, too, tn this new, big family capacily KilchenAirl. Plus these special features: s I Durable pnrcelnn inside and our New Classic Lnok with swept tront styling Guided Action Power Washing No hand rinsing Inclusive lan-circ.uittcd hot air for safe. 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Prevent I'inilinc,s The refusal of lhe two officers 10 answer more than 100 ques tions at the bankruptcy hea'ing prevented any light from being shed on the disappearance of at least 1.3 billion pounds of edible 011 that was supposed to be in slorage tanks at the Allied Crude's vast Bayonne tank farm. Hay Sadler, an assistant su perintendent al the tank farm, said Tuesday he believed thai Computer Work in Air Force Noted In Medford Talk Computers used in handling logistics and supply problems in today's Air Force have elimi nated lhe need for heavy stock piling of vital parts and sup plies and lhe result is a "great savings to taxpayers," M a j. Clifford C. Chase of the man agement section of Kingsley Air Force Base, Klamath Falls, told a Medford audience recent- iy. Speaking to members of Flight A of the 0-117lh Air Force Reserve Squadron, Maj. Chase described the complex workings of computers. lie explained the ways by which the various priority items were fed into the machines and how the computers furnished in stantaneous inventories and many other types of data need ed to keep planes operational at all times. The speaker pointed out that such instantaneous control eliminated, at a savings to the taxpayers, the need for heavy stockpiling of vital parts and supplies. Kxplains System lie also explained how lhe 1 V "A -3 fj? VJi 41 1 4M mm$&' .him 46 W ' 6 1 7" KAKI.Y CIIIIIST.MAS IIINNKK The pup at front looking into the camera cant figure the antics of his friend, who keeps! trying to de-whisker Santa Claus at lhe Anti-Cruelty .Society! in Chicago, where the pups had an early dinner. Santa, in the j person of Bernard Mathews, a dog food company representa tive, saved his whiskers but got a nip on the hand. The occasion Goldmark, Wife Under Subpoena In Suit for Libel most of the oil existed only on ! system was coded so lhat inter paper- j changeable items could be used Sadler, who directed all as well as substitute items, the movements of oil in and nut of j latter differing from the inler Ihc tanks, said il would not be changeable items by lhe fact possible to pump 1.3 billion 1 thai they require modifications pounds of nil within lhe five- j before use. By utilizing this sys day period hclween Nov. IS and ' tern, the Air Force is enabled Nov. n when it allegedly dis appeared. Creditors began looking for lhe oil last month when Allied Crude failed lo meet $18.6 mil lion in margin calls. Theory Humored Sadler's theory that the miss ing oil never existed had been rumored since the scandal broke. II was echoed Tuesday by the president of the New York Produce Exchange, Don ald Mac-Donald. "There was no oil in (he first place," MacDonald said, ac cording to figures from lhe Census Bureau of the Depart ment of Commerce. Sadler' testified thai he hud sometimes deliberately falsified lhe n m on it I of oil in tanks on "confidential" orders from l.eo Britcconei'i, DeAngelis' brother-in-law and an employe of Allied Crude. lie said, however, lhat lhe amount involved in lhe false lank measurements would not aci-ounl (or even a small por tion of lhe missing oil. In another development, Su perior (.'mill Judge Hubert A. Matthews in Jersey Cily au thorized the Bunge Corp. of New York to question officers and employes of five surveying companies in an effort lo trace the missing oil. In use older slocks of materials and parts at the various air in stillations around lhe world wilh savings of time and money. Maj. Chase was assisted by Sgls. Melvin Mitchell and How ard Shakespeare. U-Col. Max well P. (iuilcy, Flight A com mander, reported. Also attending the lecture was the il-IITIh squadron comman der. I.I. Col. W. .1. Chambers from Tulelakc. Calif., who was accompanied by Maj. Dale B. Topper, Klamath Falls: Airman Second Calss W. J. Richardson, Klamath Falls, and U. Col. Paul Christy. Flichl B commander. Klamath Falls. OKANOGAN, Wash. (UPI) -Former State Rep. John Cold mark and his wife, Sally, plain tiffs in a $225,000 libel suit, were under subpoena today to testify as defense witnesses in the trial of the claim. The subpoenas, issued by fe fense attorney E. Glenn Har mon, ordered them In bring lo lhe witness stand certain docu ments and records. The subpoenas drew objec tions from the Goldmarks' at-' torney, William Dwyer. I Returning lo lhe witness sland this morning was John l.aulner. New York City, who said he be longed lo the Communist party nearly 20 years before he was beaten up and expelled in 1H50. Since Iben, he said, he has ap peared as a government witness testifying as an expert on com munism in about 00 cases. He said he considered the .Menace l-'elt Greater menace of communism in lhe last year or two greater than before. He said, "vou cannot raised regard WASHINGTON (UPI) -The entire Senate rose and stood in silent prayer for the life of Lyn don B. Johnson. A few miles away in lhe Bethesda, Md., Naval Hospital, Johnson lay under an oxygen tent, the victim of a heart at tack. That day of prayer was July S 1955, the end of a long Fourth of July holiday for Congress. I our days before, the then Sen ale Democratic leader had left Washington for a visit lo the Middleburg, Va., home of a friend, contractor George R. Brown. That evening tell-tale chest pains began. A local doctor was called. His diagnosis: heart ail ment. An ambulance was or dered and at 10:30 p.m., EDT, Johnson was checked into B?thesda. His personal physician al lhe time. Dr. James Cain, a Mayo (,1:nic specialist, diagnosed Johnson's condition as a "myo cardial infraction of moderate ly severe character." In layman's language this meant that an artery had been plugged, limiting the supply of blood to lhe heart. Doctors said the stoppage could have been caused by a clot. Six months later Johnson was back al his desk. Since that lime he has worked at a pace thai would lire some men lo r.-id about. But he said the heart attack saved his life. "It slowed my pace, taught me to live more sensibly," he told newsmen. The heart attack is the most I serious incident on Johnson's ! health chart. But his record in j Congress since the attack, his i work as vice president, und the fast-paced schedule he had been keeping since laking over the I White House show outwardly that he has suffered no ill cf 1 fects. He hasn't smoked since the I attack, and he follows a low calorie diet. But he has changed : his habits little outside of that. When he returned to Congress ' after his convalescence from 1 the 1955 attack, he brought with him a clean hill of health signed by no less than six doc tors. j In a statemenl Johnson hand ed to newsmen, the doctors re- 1 polled his blood pressure and i heart size were normal, and so was his electrocardiogram. i They said there was every rea son for him to "return to his . duties and to resume major ac tivity." They recommended only that he work regular hours and take short vacations throughout the year. Has Kidney Surgery Anothei notation on Johnson's health file concerns a kidney, i In January of 1955, six months before his heart attack, j Johnson entered the Mayo Clinic for surgery to remove a kid ' ney stone. lie remained in the hospital 10 days after lhe operation and recuperation at his Texas ranch. He returned to the clinic on Feb. 27 for a post-operative checkup and has had no trouble wilh the kidney since. Physically, Johnson is a big man. He stands 6 feet 3 inches and weighs around 200 pounds. Johnson, like President Dwight D. Eisenhower, another heart victim, has shown that a full recovery from a heart at tack can mean a full life. for the Traveler in your life . form our Leather Corner i' Under Arm Cases ' Attache Casei f' Brief Cases Bcautifull Selection in All Colors From Walt Young's MEDFORD STATIONERY 210 E. Main 773-3668 The qucslion was earlier testimony in the Goldmark marriage, with Mrs. Goldmark denying lhat the parly was involved in her mar riage to Goldmark in 19-12 while she was a Communist and hp was a Navy officer. Also testifying Tuesday was Ashley llolden Sr., publisher of a weekly newspaper at Tnnasket and a defendant in the suit. He defended lhe truth of two arti cles in his Tnnasket Tribune for which lhe Goldmaiks seek ?.'i0, (100 damages. Hnlden said his statement lhat "Goldmark has sponsored mea sures to socialize our economy" was based on Goldmark's entire legislative record. He said, as examples, that Goldmark had voted for a high tax program and for a bill which would aholish county assessors and place their authority in Olym pia. Goldmark's legislative career ended when he lost a bid for the Democratic nomination to a separate the issue of a domestic fourth term in the 19112 primary Of Hie 102 West Pointers who re-entered Union army service al lhe start of the Civil War, 51 became generals. threat and a foreign threat. They are all part of a world wide movement." l.aulner also teslified that he knew I h e Communist parly forced marriages between ils members because lie had twice been married at Communist direction. election. In their suit, lhe Gold marks claim statements made during lhe campaign preceding the eleclion libeled them by linking them to communism. Rulli sides in Hie Civil War released chaplains immediately when Ihey were captured. Local Woman Hurt In Traffic Mishap Mrs. Carol Alelra Waltcrmire, 4::. of ;i;;;c Forest lord, was reported in union mis morning al Kugue Valley Hospital where she is under observation tor iossihlc in lories billowing a two-car col lision yesterday. A car driven by W Washington Dickens. Ii7, Pros- peel, liirned in front of the auermire car on m egim ic k ,- at White Cilv. stale police saiil I i Moderale damage resulted to lhe VA allerniii e car. A Southern Pacific Railroad engine caught lhe coiner of a truck at l-'.hrman Way and the railroad tracks last night, but only minor damage resulted and no injuries, stale police said. The truck, driven by David John Jackson. 19. of 2":i0 Corona Ave , Modioli!, turned loo short and went into a ditch by lhe tracks, police said The engine was operated by Howard Edgar Mcl.ane. 42, of 297t; Crater Lake Ave., Medford. Stale police also r e p o r I e d numerous cars in ditches due lo lhe fog and slick pavement. 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