i
ilay's Jews
JIW. ' lMiMMIi
II v 1'IIANK JKNKINN
JN Puli-slliio ttxliiy, everybody l
1 nun nr leu silting t lu 111 "ml wall
lug for Muy 10 to niinti. Mny 16 la
Mix Iniig-iiwullcd (Into mi which the
llillli.il will mid pull nut, An
llirsa words urn written, II U only
lew hums sway,
t
TIIIC Jews niiiiiiuiiic Unit at one
1 mluula after midnight rrlilny
they will pruiialni ii-wii.li alum.
Wlii'll lliry ilu Hint, Fiilr-sUno will
ixt pitrtli loiirtl Ulillrd Nullum or no
IJniiril Nullum,
The next innvn will be up lo tli
Anili nullum.
CKVKRAL of llir.ie Anil) nations
" cimliilily Ktiyitl. Iniq mill Trans
Joritiini hnvn armies camped on the
ulralllin borders.
The duiuiuiir t lilh moi nliiK Uil
ue Hie Iruilrra of these Arnb furrra
are u.ully worrlril. II they tackle
llie embattled Jrwa anil take it llck
liiK. tlirre will be upheavals at home
anil maybe miieb.xly else will OE.T
INTO I'OWKIt.
)n Ihe other hand. II Ihey DONT
aiiack. there will be wicked op-
lCiciil at homo who will charge
thul they are afruld to lluht. No
body lovea a leader who la afraid lo
light Holhrro niliihl be trouble on
thai score!
I'ollllis, you ee. la politic the
world over.
BUT lor Just one Ihlm. we could
D all back and lei evema In Pairs
line take their course. Our big worry
U that It the fighting between Jews
and Arnbs gel hoi Russia will move
In on Ihe pretext that Ihe Unhung
ouiihl lo be inpiird and nobody else
irrmi to be willing lo atop It.
Once IliiMia eta an army Into
Palestine she will be very, very like
ly to keep It there. That would be
embarrassing to IM.
Such U diplomacy
BltOUT llie only ilium lhal stands
" out clearly Irom lhl Palcsilne
mesa It that our leadership there haa
been poor. We have backed and
filled. We have talked one way one
day and anulhrr way the next day.
We hnve marched boldly up iho hill
and then have turned around and
marched right down again. As
remit of tint oil ag In on ag in pro.
gram our prestige haa suffered
greatly.
Our Bdveuiurra In foreign policy
so far haven't paid much In Ihe
way of dlvldenda,
Phone Strike
'Plans Made
WA8IIINOTON. May 13 ii
Plana for nationwide airlke of
Icng dlatunre telephone cralnrt
were aet up today by Ihe CIO Amer
ican Telephone Worker union but
thr date for a walkout wna left open.
The union, headed by John J
Mnrnn, hut been engaged In a wage
dispute with Ihe American Tele
phone and Telegraph company.
The union repreaenla 23.000 long
distance wnrkera In 43 atatea. Union
and ATAT rrprrsentaUvca came
here yesterday for conference with
conciliator1 of the federal mediation
service In an effort to reach an
agreement.
Mnrnn anld actions of Hie ATAiT
and "failure to find some melhod of
effecting a peaceful ettlement
lenves ns Willi but one choice a
nationwide strike."
'llie union want a 30 cent an
licnr wage boost, a shorter work
week and larger pensions. It says
worker now average 1.21 an hour.
Moran and his bargaining com
nilltre planned to leave at once for
Iloatnn to confer Willi CIO Presl
tlcut Philip Murrny, attending Ihe
Steel Worker- convention.
$28.50 Bid
By Keno Men
Wins Timber
A record Oregon and California
alumpage price bid of (27.t0-l2H.90
liaa won 14 million feel of Ton
deroaa and augar pine llinlirr for
I'uiketl and Hrhrrrr, Keno lutubrr
mrn, The offer was made In an auction
of public land limber held In Port
land yesterday, The Kenu men bid
27.50 per 1000 feel for Ponderoaa
pine and 1211.50 for augur pine. The
prices aet new records for O and C
revested land limber.
Logs lo Keno
The limber lie In Western Kluin
ulli unci Kuslcrn Jackson counties in
Iho Jennie creek area, lagging will
slurt there this summer and Die logs
will be trucked lo Kenu tor sawing.
I'urkrtt and bcherrr are currently
ulilalnlng logs I rum Hwan lake and
Ihe Klamath Indian reservation. The
O A (' purchase la understood to Se
about llirre-luurllis I'ondrrosa and
Ihe total price was around IJI0.OO0.
Modoc Lumber company of Klam
ath falls also wu a successful bld
drr for public lands timber In Ihe
sale. This firm obtained 1.7WJ.OO0
Iret uf timber near lt(tnnriAM on
public dullialu. Hie price totaled
s.'O.IXI.
The Umber lies In an aira In
which Modoc it now operating, and
the logs will be removed Hut sum-
nirr lur nulling at the company
plant on Lake Kwuuna In Klamath
Falls.
Indians Tour
Oregon Farms
OHKttllAM. May 13 Wi-Tno In
dian college student are here in
vestigating Oregon harvest sraott
Jul. projects for members of ihe
Nnva)o and llopl tribes of Ihe
Southwest.
Ttiey are Syndy Montova, Snia
fr . N. M., and Wilbur E. Bmnh,
Cherokee. N. C. Both are war vet
eran and sociology student. Thrv
will reimrt lo the Southwest tribe
whether they could adnpl them
selve to Oregon employment.
Both' came here after. A, W.
O'Connell, a Oreham berry grow
er, asked Ihe government to tnves-
i Urate moving Knvajoa to work In
j the Pacific Northwest. Tile plight
I of member of that tribe wu pub-
uciitea last wnucr.
The reservation area In Arliona,
New Mexico and Ulah are over
grared and the Indiana owners of
small flock of sheep are unablo to
provide their tanilllri with enough
food.
The two Indian plan to remain
In Ihe area through the summer.'
Truman Blasts
Outlawing Reds
J WASIIINOTON. May 13 (Pi
sJPieBldrnt Trnmnii expressed oppo
sition todny to oullnwing the com
munist pnrly In this country.
lie gave Mils view at a news con
ference during . discussion of the
MiiikIL bill to require communist
lo register with Ihe government,
Mr. Truman suld he was not forc
raallng his action on Hint bill If It
should reach htm, but Hint he
thought Hint Uiero were nniple laws
lo deal with persons who advocate
overthrow of the government.
lie nclclod that hn Illinium legisla
tion nutliiwlng a political pnrly la
contrary lo American principle.
Four Wilted
m it.
i
mm
Mm "JiiRi mrt of will" In mar
rlnxe Willi Mm. lUrhnm Joyce
VmiRhn, 21 (nbuvrl of Lux An
ItrlPM, who bo arcountpil for marry -Inf
four of thrm without brnrflt
of divorce. The 170-pound wonmn
w-Mi nrrnlnnrft on n rlmme of hljr
nn.y. Hnrlmm, who never BtKyed
more than four monthi with miy
of her poup)i, said, "I Juxt run'l
seem to find a man who wears
well."
rn mw MmK urn
jl Wis IfiElM ILULxl
. v.-' .
I'ltll'K K'VK CI'.NTH ,0 ' KLAMATH FALLM, OKKGO.N, Tilt KHDAY. MAV 13, 104 It
0 . .
nnBr, oH n nBi n
mmt&n im mmi Looms
, ? "
WEATHSR
Ma. Mr It) K Mill.
Prripiutln Isit t bsuri ...
Hlram year lo lt
l.aat r . 1.1 Narmal ....
rer-Ait: Show art.
Telephone BUI
Klamath's Top Flight Band To Play At Festival
ym it
f.
.itiaai
i.
0?
a)
The Kills music aludenls who make up the big concert band, will appear at the famous Portland
Rom festival, It was announced today. Here two girl member of the band are selling ticket to members
of the faculty. The band trip I being financed by tlrkeU to the festival with the sale starting today.
Left to right. Joe LaClair, supervisor of audio-visual education; ieraldine Lewis, Delores Kidder, band
members, and Charlra McLIn, Kl'IIH general science instructor. Both LaClair and McLin are reaching
tor their wallet.
KUHS Band Accepts Bid To (Nations Vho
Poy At Rose Festival icUDDv Defjs
i high school s band , studlum. The Friday show will be raV
Off ERP List
Kl..liullt Union
ha accented an Imitation to lake
pari In the big Rose Festival at Port
land, It wa announced today by
Andrew Loney Jr., director of music
duration In Uie city school?.
The group, along with 11 out
standing bands and marching or
ganisation in the NorlhuoM, will
put on a show lor llie Friday night,
June 11, production In Multnomah
Late Spring
Hits Farmers
PORTLAND. May 13 I! The
late OrcKon spring la forcing revi
sion of crop plan In the Willamette
valley, federal agricultural depart
ment reported today.
Smaller planting of spring
wheat, oals. flaxseed and flax fiber
are planned because of the pro
longed season, but barley and pos
sibly corn acreage are expected to
be Increased above earlier estimate.
Oregon's strawberry acreage Is up
77 per cent from a year ago. but
the harvest la now exacted at about
14 per cent above 1947.
Fruit pollination ha been affect
ed because of the damp season.
Frost damage as yet haa not been
generally serious In Oregon, how
ever. Most promising result of the late
season Is the Eastern Oregon whi
ter wheat crop. Prospect Indicate
a bumtier harvest of 22 314.000 bush
els Till compares with 16.951,000
last year.
European
Backing Is
Tense issue
WASHINGTON, May 13 tJP The
senate foreifn relations committee
la split over how far this country
should co In pledging: military balk
ing for non-communist Europe.
That la why the "working paper"
resolution Chairman Vandenberf
IK.-Alich.) haa drafted to advise
President Truman on possible new
moves within the United Nations
failed to clear the committee on
schedule yesterday.
A senator familiar with the full
battleground gave a reporter the de- j
talis today on the understanding he
would not be named.
Regional Defense
Vandenberg's resolution : A
Stresses the Idea of regional defense
treaties within the framework of
the U. N. ch-irter: B calls for this
country to '.uke the lead in try.nn
to bring about voluntary discard of
the big power veto on most issues
short of the use of force; and C
advises against attempt to revise
the U. N. charter itself until all
other efforts to strengthen the or
ganization have failed.
Vandenberjr has been the republi
can leader In all of the major bi
partisan moves In international af
fairs for several years. Most of these
have come from the senate foreign
relations committee with unswerving !
13 to approval.
Inability to get jyuch backing for i
; ine uuesi move cau.sea yesteraay s
BMIiClliaMT, IUC JlllUI llltllllr BM1U. MU- i
......... .1.. '
reached
Some senators took the position
that the sudden Ruts tan announce
ment about an exchange of views
31
I l.st
ll.lt
I
No. 1368
Mtorns PrlAnu
If. 1c'
in 'j f
lr., i -!
I ll , J
Ml "i j
CSV ' i tm :
HAROLD E. STASSES
I
Courthouse
Talk Slated
In Evening
Harold Htassen'i visit to Klamath
Falls has been re-aeheduled for (hit
coming Friday night.
The republican presidential as
pirant will make an outdoor appear
snee and speech at the courthouse,
trpa at 11:45 o'clock.
The change In plan was an
nounced today by Ernest McBeth of
the Klamath Young Republican
club, which I In charge of local ar
rangements. Stassen had been previously
scheduled to come to Klamath
Falls on May 18, Just three days be
fore the primary election In which
he will match ballots with New
York's Governor Thomas E. Dewey
lor Oregon presidential preference.
Move Up
But Stassen has moved up his
Oregon speaking schedule, and will
be In Klamath four days sooner
than originally slated.
The Mlnnesotan will arrive at the
Klamath Falls municipal airport at
b:is p. m. Friday. He win come
Immediately Into town, and at 6:4S
p. m. will make an address from tht
courthouse steps.
About 7:30 or 7:45 p. m., he will
to to the Wlnema hotel for dinner.
and plans to remain In Klamath
Falls for the nig-bt with his party.
The next morning, gtasaen and
his group will fly to Rogue River
valley point.
A large crowd Is expected to tea
and hear Stassen In his courthouse
steps appearance. About 4000 per.
son were on hand when his op
ponent. Governor Dewey, made a
earn palm speech there Just last Sat
urday,
flavor
one ol the finest productions of its
kind ouuide of Uie Chicagoland Mu- j
sic Kestivul, held annually ai Soldier !
Field. I
Seventy students will participate I WASHINGTON, May 13 Pi The
In both ihe Kndr.y show and In the j United States will shut off economic
big Iloral parade. Tlw group lenves I ald w ,ny European natlotl which
a... ..,.knl Una TkiiMev flit 11 a.
turning Sunday June 13. ' ; auppUeM war machinery to Russta, ! between thU country and the Soviet
The Klairuiih Couniv chamber ot EHP Director ' Paul Hoffman said " - " wming
commerce Is sponsoring the trip and today.
a portion of the needed amount will We W(U leU tncm .y must 5top
be obtained locally by the sale of I u or we wo.t jumisj, aid.
tickets. These tickets, costing 111 ti ,i. .h. .jm.
each, can be exchnnged at the cham-i .. , , .
ber of commerce for festival buttons f!.,!" '.."le .Le .a.P'
and admittance to all festival events.
All proceeds from Uie sale of I
tickets will go to help finance t
this trip. In the event the tickets
Major Steel
?Firms Veto
New Contracts
Long Distance
Question Asked
SEATTLE. May 13 im-"U It a
fnrt." the voice on the other end
of the line asked Assistant Police
Chief Phil Bntson yesterday, "thnt
In 1P43 or 1944 a person could not
drink beer In Washington while
standing up?"
"II. wns true then, and H's still a
law," Bntson replied.
With a polite "Ihnnk you," the
man hung up.
Dntson said the pre-pnld long dis
tance call was made by n man who
identified himself only as "a clttr.cn
of Nashville, Tenn." No reason
was given for Uie call,
are turned in for buttons, the pur.
chaser will pay the added federal
Ux.
High school band members are
senilis tickets which may also be
obtained at the chamber of com
merce. Loney said todny that (1150 Is
needed to finance the trip. This will
handle all expenses In connection
with the, northern jaunt.
Other schools invited and from
which acceptances have been re
ceived, are Medlord. Eugene. The
Dalles, LaOrnndc and Roseburg In
Oregon, Victoria. B. C. Bremerton.
Vancouver, Olympla, Puyallup and
Camns, Wash.
propriaUons committee to ask fur
ther funds for Uie European recov
ery program.
Senator Cordon (R.-Ore.) asked
Hoflmnn what he Intended to do to
"control Uie transladon of our goods
and money" into war machinery for
Russia?
"If It is true," said Hoffman, "that
we are furnishing aid. and if a coun
try Is shipping such commodities.
to Russia), they have got to stop it
! or we won t furnish aid."
I Hoffman gave Uie senators assur-
ance, too. that ECA will ship abroad
j only those goods "which can wisely
and safely be spared."
Check Passing
Charge Filed
LAKEVIEW. May 13 Edward
William Jmnes, 36, a Summer Lake
farm hand, Was arrested In a hotel
here yesterday for Klamath county
authorities on bad check charges.
Sgt. Enrl Tichenor of the state
police, Sheriff Hank Caslday of
Lake county, sijd Deputy Sheriff
Willis Pankey of Bly, made the ar
rest, and also took into custody
Lloyd Lee Hasklns and Steve E.
Wlllse on vagrancy charges. They
were with James at the local hotel.
Officers said James Is accused of
cashing several $50 checks In Klam
ath Falls and Bly, Including one at
Uio liquor agency ill Bly. They were
rirnwn on the First National bank of
Lnkeview, where officials snld Jnmcs
had no account.
Deputy Sheriff Pnnkey returned
Jnmcs to Klnmnth county to face
prosecution.
UAW Raising $8 Million Kitty To Support Striking
Chrysler Workers As Industry Girds For Long Strike
1IKTKOIT, May 13 r An 18,000,.
000 "kitty" being raised by the
1 10 United Aulo Worker for Ihrlr
Chrysltrr Corp. striker today gave
Ihe aulo Industry reason to fear a
long walkout,
The big corporation's 75,000 pro
duction workers who walked off the
Job yrsterdny morning to enforce
union demands for 17 cents more per
hour whrro set fur a long siege on
Ihe picket lines.
"The lrlke of Ihe Chrysler work
ers Is solid," declared Knill Mnrey,
.HIV sccrctnry-treasurer and acl
Ing prrsidrnt who I directing the
niilkniit. "They are set for the dur
ation. The Chrysler workers will
win."
Home observers fsllmnled the
1
strike might last as long ns two
monlhs.
rickets Orderly
Orderly picket lines were aet up
at 12 Chrysler plant In Michigan,
two In Indiana and one in Califor
nia a short time after the strike
deadline yesterday morning.
The plant at New Castle, Ind.,
which was the only one operating
yesterday, closed down this morn
ing. Loral union officials arrived
this morning from Detroit and gave
the word lo strike. The delegates
snld they hnri been delayed by high
water In Michigan.
Almost Immediately effects of the
auto Industry's first major strike In
two years began to spread. Itrlgg
Manufacturing Co., which supplies
Chrysler plants, laid off 11,000 work
ers today and said the rest of Its
work force of 13,000 would be sent
home Monday.
With the strike a day old, It was
still uiireiinln whether It would be
used as a test of Michigan's new la
bor lnw,
No Strike Vole
The nonlne-Trlpp legislation re
quires a strike vote. The HAW,
contending It did not apply because
several Chrysler plants are outside
Michigan, look strike action without
such a vote.
Gov. Kim 8lglcr ordered llie
Michigan labor mediation hoard to
find nut "if the law Is constitution
al," Philip Weiss, chairman of the
board, asked Prosecutor James B.
McNally of Wayne county (Detroit)
to take notion.
But McNally said he needed a
formal complaint from the police
department, and police commission
er Harry S. Toy Insisted he could
aet only If asked to do so by a
private eltlien.
Should the walkout stretch Into
weeks, the UAW should be well set
to lend financial assistance to
Chrysler employes.
Its executive board yesterday ap
proved plans to assess a million aulo
worker across Ihe country 50 cents
a week In June and II weekly In
July.
Strikers stand to lose 180.000
day In wages as long as Uie dispute
lasts, It has been estimated. Chrys
ler will be out about 5,000 cars and
trucks dally.
Cattle Fattened
On Grapefruit
LAKE ALFRED. Fla.. May 13 (PI
Oood-natured cattle can be fattened
on a grapefruit diet.
But, an expert warned in a talk
before cattlemen last night, it won't
work if the animals have a trace of
wildness. Dr. W. O. Kirk, vice di
rector of Florida's cattle experiment
station, said undue , excitement
seemed to disturb the wild ones.
This keeps weight down.
The cattle like Uie taste of grape
ftult even more so if it's fermented
a bit, he said. Dr. Kirk added that
meat from grapefruit-fed cattle is
as good ns western beef.
to the Vandenberg proposal.
Taft For Prexy
Button Unique
CHENEY. Wash.. May 13 lii A
red. white and blue "Taft for Presi
dent" button brightened the lapel
of Dr. Edgar I. Stewart today as he
faced his sociology class at Eastern
Washington college.
"I don't know where you can get
one like It." he replied to student
queries.
The button advocated the election
In 1908 of William Howard Taft.
father of Senator and Presidential
Candidate Robert A. Taft.
Thye To Support
Stassen In Oregon
PORTLAND. May 13 P Senator
Edward J. Thye. who inherited
Minnesota's governorship in 1943
when Harold E. Stassen resigned,
today joined the Oregon primary
campaign battle.
Thye flew here from Washington.
D. C last night and today took the
stump In support of Stassen in his
republican presidential nomination
contest with Gov. Thomas E. Dewey.
The senator spoke this morning at
Vanport college and was booked for
a Woodburn Rotary club luncheon
at noon.
Robert Elliott. Stassen's Oregon
campaign manager, said Thye would
speak at several communities in the
middle valley Uiis afternoon but the
schedule was being arranged locally
and was not known here.
BOSTON, May 13 uPi-CIO Presl-
dent Philip Murray said today that
the major steel companies have re-"
fused to negotiate new contracts
with the CIO Steelwarkers unless
the union complies with the Taft
Hartley act.
Murray said the problem of
whether or not to obey the non
communist pledge In the law has
made the union's situation "ex
tremely grave." But he pleaded
with Uie 3200 Steelworkers' dele
gates to give their execuUve board
"the power to make this enormous
determination."
Murray charged that there has
been "raiding of extremely dis
reputable nature by some CIO
unions which have complied against
those who have not complied.
"The American Federation of
Labor has taken advantage of every
single opportunity to use the facili
ties, of the national labor relations
board to take away Uie rights of
unions which have not complied."
The CIO president said that U. S.
Steel, Bethlehem. Republic. Inland.
Allegheny and "Uie major basic steel
companies have informed me that it
Is not their Intention to renegotiate
new agreements if the union has
not complied."
Jews Blast
U.S. Plan
LAKE SUCCESS, May 13 UP)
The Jewish agency charged today
the new U. 8. plan for a Palestine
high commissioner Is an attempt to
set aside Uie United Nations parti
tion project.
A Jewish agency spokesman said
in a formal statement that the
American proposal would Increase
disorder and conflict In Palestine
Instead of bringing peace.
The plan was announced last
night after President Truman and
Secretary of State Marshall con
ferred, in Washington on Palestine.
' The U. S. plan, brought forward,
less than two days before the British'
end their League of Nations man
date rule over the Holy Land, calls
for appointment of a high commis
sioner, to represent Uie UN In Pales
Une. .
Li
Faces Eviction In Iron Lung
V t (fc V - Si k !
v a miii l
TV -?
iwiaatiaJaiaM
IS Ill II I It'll is
Edmond Z. Normandin, Infantile paralysis victim, and his wife,
Blanche, are shown in their New Bedford, Ma., home from which
they and their two children fare eviction. In a wheel chair, Normandin
wears a portable Iron lung. He use switchboard, shown In photo, In
operating a telephone secretarial service. NEA telephoto.
Highway Meet
At John Day
Klamath will be represented at.
meetings of the Three Flags associa
tion at John Day and the US 97 as
sociation at Bend this week-end.
Charles Stark, manager ot the
chamber of commerce, and Malcolm
Epley. representing the roads and
highways committee, will go to both
sessions. The Bend meeting Is Fri
day night, and the Three Flags
meeting at John Day Is Saturday
and Sunday.
Lakeview will send a large delega
tion to the Three Flags meeting as
well as Alturas. .The Three Flags
highway is US 395.
HST To Keep
Secret Files
WASHINGTON, May 13 UP)
President Truman today defied
congress to get confidential infor
mation from the White House or
the cabinet.
He told a news conference that
congress has no right to confiden
tial records of members of his
cabinet
He said he would veto any legis
lation requiring such records, and
that he did not believe the veto
would be overridden.
The courts have held repeatedly.
he said, that the president and his
cabinet cannot be forced to divulge
confidential lniormauon.
Congressional committee workers
and officials In executive agencies
appear likely to be the only per
sons subject to Jail terms under a
so-called "secrets" bill now pending.
Single Bid Made
On Branch PO
Only one bid was submitted for
the branch post office to be estab
lished on S. 6th street between
Homedale and Gary. The lone bid
was from Carl Schneider, proprietor
of Schneider's Variety store, 4801
S. 6th.
Assistant Postmaster R. L. Grif
fith said today that the bid Is being
forwarded to Washington for con
sideration. Awarding of the bid
should be announced In about three
weeks.
Time set for opening bids was 3
p. m., Wednesday.
Runaway Oilwell In Alberta
Halts Production In Big Field
EDMONTON, Alta.. May 13 (Al
Fire and explosion hazards from a
runaway oil well near Leduc, 16
miles south of here, have forced ex
treme precautions and halted output
of the entire field.
The well. Atlantic Oil compnny's
No. y, has gushed uncontrolled since
March 8.
Its flow of 10,000 barrels of oil
dally Is greater than that ot the
remainder of the field combined,
and far in excess of capacity of
piesent equipment to handle it.
Earth for two miles around is sat
urated, while an estimated 75.000.
Ouo cubic feet of gas daily bubbles
through thousands of punctures In
the ground.
Aircraft are forbidden to fly over
ths area lest a spark from an engine
touch oft a major disaster. Workers
must leave smoking equipment be
hind; sightseers are banned.'
Valves of all 60 producing Weill
In the field were shut off this morn. ,
lng as the Alberta government toot
over the job of controlling the situ
ation. Experts said the shutdown would
last at least three weeks, with po
tential loss ot $5,000,000.
Frank M. McMahon of the Atlan
tic oil company said In Calgary lasl
night that reports of fire and ex
plosion danger at the field wen
"greatly exaggerated."
"There Is a definite danger ol
both fire and explosions In the Im
mediate vicinity of our No. 3 well
but this Is confined to sn ares a
about 10 acres around No, 3, am
well within the 40-acre site of ttv
well," he said.
The green-black liquid Is con
tained by a 20-foot dyks encloslm
more than 40 acres about the wall
s