WITHYCOMBE AFFAIR State May Have To Pay Uncle Sam $40,000 I PAGE 2-A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Fills, Ore. Thursday, February H, 1963 SALEM (LTD Oregon may have to dig up $40,000 to repay the federal government for money misused by the State Military De partment while the late Alfred Hintz was Oregon Adjutant Gen oral, a legislative officer (aid Wednesday. The figure was given by Legis lative Fiscal Analyst Cleighton Pcnwell as a Ways and Means subcommittee continued its review of the military department budg-! el. A secretary of state's audit last month put the state's liability at 528.339. Penwell said continued in vestigation indicates the total may reach $40,000. The case came to light last year not long after Hintz died. It cen tered on Camp Withycombe In Clackamas County. It initially Involved what hap pened to surplus property from the Tongue Point Naval Station Investigation showed. $8,388 was put Into a special cash fund au thorized by Hintz. The secretary of state's audit detailed misuse of funds in the department. The items included falsified claims, sale of federal property, use of federal funds for unauthorized projects, misuse of state money, and use of paint and supplies for the general's home, The report included these items An oven, cooktop and electric hoist, bought for armories, ended up in Hintz's home, the hoist as an elevator. A check drawn for encamp- ment rations was used for activi ties at a governor's day review and the balance turned over to Hintz. Sale of Tongue Point logs val ued at $13,065, for $6,980, includ ing moving costs. Use of paint purchased for armories at Medford, Dallas, St. Helens and Clackamas on the gen eral's house. A grand jury investigated the Withycombe affair last year, but failed to return any indictments Rep. Beulah Hand, chairman of the subcommittee, said in addition to the $40,000 the situation could jeoparidze other federal funds. rvwmmiwmismmwwm-me'm '-v.tl f?i,ff-nai JWK' wmroiw mmvwwu .u. n mil Diggers Free Burled Man LAKE TOMAHAWK. Wis. (LTD A well digger trapped eight feet underground was freed by rescue workers today after spending nearly 15 hours buried to his shoulders in a sandy pit. Rescuers worked through the night before wresting Raymond Fink, 31, Athens, Wis., from a caved-in well where he was nearly buried alive Wednesday. He was pulled from the well early today. Fink was taken to a Woodruff. Wis., hospital where doctors said he was in good condition after his ordeal. Fink sipped warm milk and smoked cigarettes while rescue workers struggled to free him. His brother, Lawrence, stayed at his' side and when a second and third cive-in buried Fink to the neck his brother clawed away the dirt with his bare hands. The scene is located about 100 feet from the Chicago and North Western Railway tracks and au thorities ordered all train traffic halted so as not to cause another rnve-in from vibrations. After hours of waiting, trains were al lowed to proceed slowly. Fink's wife was at the scene hut did not speak with her trapped husband. A Catholic priest administered the last rites of the church to Fink and told the buried man he had his rosary beads "flying" for him. "I've got them going pretty fast down here, too, father, "Fink replied. More than lno rescue workers, Including 25 inmates of a state rrison farm, worked to save Fink. A large tunnel was dug next to the well and shored up with plywood boards. A culvert was lowered over Fink's body to provide protection ag iinst further cave-ins. Fink was at the bottom of the newly dug 10 foot well installing a pump when the initial cave-in occurred. Legislators Talk Rules Of Driving SACRAMENTO (LTD The California legislature is thinking about slowing motorists down, raising age limits for licenses and painting luminous strips down roads to keep them in the right lane. As usual, the lawmakers are concerned with the traffic prob lems of the nation's drivingest state. And this concern stretches from the freeways to the scenic backroad drives. Part of it is Gov. Edmund C. Brown's six-point traffic safety program but most of the bills in. traduced so far are creations of the individual legislators and lob One of the first to hit the legis lature would affect applicants for driver s licenses. The bill by As semblyman Milton Marks, R-San WASHLS'GTO.V (LTD - The mysterious crash of a Northwest Orient Airlines Boeing 720B in the Florida Everglades Tuesday will spur development of indestructi ble voice recorders. . Many air safety experts believe some means ol recording pilot voices will help provide the key to crashes which are becoming pro gressively more difficult to solve. Experts believe the last words of a crew caught up in a life-or- death emergency might supply clues to the cause of the result ing crash. All jet-polvered airluiers and HOPEFULS If hard work will get 41 boy and girl students of Spanish claiies at Klamath Union High School to Mexico next summer, they will all get there on tha double (by charteVed bus). Tha students are selling boxes of candy at $1 a box to raise the funds to take a 10-day trip to Mazatlan,, Mexico, chaperoned by their Span ish instructor, Mrs. Beatrice Tanielian, and two others, a man and a nurse. Mazatlan is about halfway down on tha Wast Coast. Left to right are Dennica Hall, sopho more, Charles Sanders, junior, and Mary Draee, sophomore. Interested persons may place orders at TU 4-9757. Reluctant Income Tax Payers Applaud Repeal SALEM (LTD-The forces be hind the "liberty amendment" ap plauded their spokesman on Wed nesday night as he called for re peal of the federal income tax. Nearly 300 reluctant taxpayers crowded Into the House State and Federal Affairs Committee hear ing to backstop Willis E. Stone, author of the proposed amend ment to the U.S. constitution. Stone said it would mean a 20 per cent increase in take home pay. More important, lie said, it ould take the federal govern ment out of some 700 activities that are in direct competition with private enterprise, and are losing money as well. It would strip away overgrown federal powers, he said, and re turn sovereignty tu the slates and the people. Tile amendment, along with re pealing the tax, would limit Uie Francisco, would require driving federal government to only those tests every 10 years. innn'i pi im-s !.hchipu m me cun- Ine legislature s only woman. Assemblywoman Pauline L. Davis, u-Porloia, authored a measure to cut the statewide speed limit from S3 to 60 miles an hour. Drunken drivers are a major target already In the legislature. A number of bills affecting their area have been 'introduced hy lawmakers. Sen. Randolph Collier, D-Vreka, Introduced a bill to tepeal a mill law allowing Judges to waive a mandatory six-month license sus pension in hardship rases. Assemblymarf William T. Hag- ley, R-San Rafael, proposed two bills to curb drunken driving. One would require that all applicants (or a driver's license agree In advance to submit to a blood test if arrested on suspicion of drunken driving. The oilier would establish a .15 per cent blood alcohol test as prima facie evi dence of intoxication. Assemblyman Joseph M. Ken- nick. P-l,ong Reach, authored an administration-backed bill to al low the highway palro' to use radar in apprehending speeders. AEnds Soonll. M C M ftiwitj vVi a nsiuruK piofotM I DORIS DAY- J STEPHEN Bafir 1 . I JIMMY DURANTE MARTHA RAYE J y in filUV ROSC'S v Weather Roundup Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a m. PST today. , High Low Astoria Baker Brookings Medlord Newport N. Bend Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem The Dalles Chicago 1,0s Angeles New Vork San Fran. Washington Northern California: 55 4.1 lit 5H : .VI .TH 4'.l 5J Rusk Talks On Cold War LOS ANGELES (IIPD Secre tary of State Dean ftusk Wednes day night gave a full explanation of U.S. cold war tactics and con tinued the call for removal of all Soviet military forces in Cuba. He reiterated President Ken nedy's statement of last week thai "we arc reasonably certain thai the offensive" weapons deployed by Soviets in Cuba have been re moved. But he admitted that the United States cannot he certain about this without on-the - spot inspection. The secretary spoke Wednesday night at a dinner at the end of a daylong State Department for eign policy conference for In Icrested citizens. About 2,4(Hi per sons attended the dinner and an oilier 1,2011 listened to various State Department experts explain foreign policy at a series of brief ings. About a dojrn persons, includ ing our member of a local chap ter of the John Bnch Society, picketed the Palladium. There were no incidents. Bihk said I lint "the armed forces ol the I nited Slstes and Us neighbors in the hemisphere will insure that arms in Cuba will not he used outside Cuba stitution." Stone said, the cutback would save $45 billion a year. Programs that would be elimi nated include the Small Business Administration, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Bonneville Power Administration, and the Federal School Lunch Program. The proposal has been approved by the legislatures of Georgia, South Carolina, Louisiana, Texas Wyoming and Nevada. If two- thirds of the states approve it, it would become a formal proposed amendment, needing final ratifica tion hy three fourths of the states. Several members of the com mittee agreed the federal govern ment should relinquish some of its enterprises, but they balked at re pealing the income tax which makes up the largest block of federal income. Tom Scanlnn of the Oregon AFL - CIO, testified against the measure. We see nothing desirable in 1 he said. "It would leave us open to complete and easy at tack, he said, "and remove the underpinnings of free enterprise to such an extent tivat we could have a depression like we have not had to date. Fire Sweeps Peoria Hotel PEORIA, III. I LTD Fire swept through the Mayer Hotel in downtown Peoria early today and firemen feared not everyone was evacuated safely. At least eight persons were hospitalized. Many of the 130 per sons fled in their night clothes. Others were taken from the five- story brick structure by ladders. Fire Chief Lester Menace said ixilice and firemen ran through the 200-room hotel and crashed in doors trying In evacuate the oc cupants. But he said they were driven back by the flames which erupted in the northwest wing ol the filth floor. An adjoining motel. The Sands, iilso was evacuated, and owners of surrounding buildings Mood on the rools of their stores and watched for wind-driven sparks. The top floor of the brick struc ture was completely burned and flames leaped from windows on all floors. Fire departments from four suburbs were called into Peoria to stand hy. Five ambulances ilso stood bv. Senate Eyes Uninspected Meat Claim SALEM (UPD-A chaige that uninspected meat was being used in school lunch programs was made Wednesday at a Senate Ag riculture Committee hearing on the farm slaughter bill. Floyd Green, representing a Eugene meat company, voiced the charge, and urged laws prohibit ing the sale of uninspected meat. Sen. L. W. Newbry, R-Ashland. asked if Green personally knew of any uninspected meat going to schools. 'I know it gets into the school program, Green answered. "Can you prove it?" Newbry asked. I think we could, hut why should we, that's up to the stale," Green replied. Meat inspection and the use of mobile slaughtering units are key features of the bill, SB103. Under present laws, both in spected and uninspected meat can be cut in packing houses. The proposed law would prohibit this Proponents of the new law say loopholes in present regulations do not prevent some packing houses from selling uninspected meat to retail outlets. Among those favoring the bill were Donald Gardner, Medford, representing four meat packing lirms. He urged "protection of c o n s u me rs from uninspected meat." Fred Bnycr, Roseburg. charged "mobile slaughter units are a loophole" and can sell uninspect ed meat to markets. John Johnson of Eagle Point. speaking against the proposed new law, said he invested $13,000 in a mobile slaughter unit. Ho does custom cutting, and said this was "a great asset to formers in our area." He said passage of the hill could cause hardships for "a lot of small businesses." He added he had neier before heard of any uninspected meat being sold to retailers. Committee Chairman Walter l.eth. K Salem, said. "We have no fixed ideas on this issue, this bill was drafted so we could start dis cussions . . . . " Use Of Pilot Voice Recorders Proposed To Help Solve Plane Crash Mysteries some piston-engine planes now carry flight recorders. These sup ply data on such actors as speed, altitude, direction, G (gravity) forces encountered and attitude. They arc required on high - per formance airliners simply because such planes are extremely com plicatedand complexity makes an accident that much harder to solve. The flight recorder on the North west Orient plane has been re covered and sent to Washington (or analysis which may take sev eral davs or longer. But the de vice admittedly is second choice to a voice recorder placed in the cockpit. Rep. Roman C. Pucinski. D-lll., has introduced legislation which would make installation of 'voice recorders mandatory on all air liners. While he has considerable support from pilots, airlines and both federal air agencies, experts point out that (D more research is needed to perfect such a de vice and .121 tliey probably will be enormously expensive. One estimate gives $8,000 per aircraft as the cost of a voice recorder that would be immune from impact, fire or water dam age. The tentative bill lor equip- ping about 2.000 aircraft would hit $16 million. There is a third obstacle the feeling of some authorities that the last words of a crew in trou ble could mislead investigators. Pilots may not always recognize the source of an emergency and could give the wrong information. In one case on record, a crew ra dioed that a fire was raging in a baggage compartment. A fatal crash followed, but it turned out that the fire originated outside the baggage compartment and the pilots' last message led in vestigators info a fruitless search down the wrong allev. W,l. Known Square Danct Calltr LATON NELSON of Cool Boy Saturday, feb. 16 MERRY MIXERS HALL 6:30 POTLUCK EVERYONE WELCOME! :t.i 211 is 58 24 51 33 a Occasional 4a 2.1 hn .11 HI rain north part Friday. Ski Rrpnrt Timbcrline- Roads clear bul icy; total snow 51 Inches, no new. hard pack : Temp. 2a at 7 a m ; skiing good. Ml. Bachelor: Temp. 24 at 7 am.: trace ol new snow, total 5.1 inches; skiing good, tows nivr- ulinc: carrv chains. NOW PLAYING! ir... r wTl M-.'i n Hatfield Asks Liberal Title SAN FRANCISCO U'PD- Gov. Mark Hatfield of Oiegon said Wednesday that he is generally labeled as a liberal Hi publican hut that he would prefer "no lag at all." 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