V The Send Bulletin, Thursday, June 30, 1955 T i UlrHr IUICJICI Ylill In Sisters Area Early British History Eyed By Archeological' Detectives By ItOllKKT MI SKL Hiili-tl I'rvsH Stuff ('urrrspuiiileiit LONJjON I UP) King Arthur of the Knights I the Hound Table has just emerged from the rnists of legend into tin sunlight of real ity; lifter inure than S00 years. Science coaxed him forth in one of the prettiest displays of aren ae&logicul detective work in a long time. But, alas, at the same time it debunked the pretty picture of knights jousting with lances. The fact that King Arthur ac tually lived, fought and died and was not merely an invention of medieval storytellers (and Holly wood script writers) Is a by-prod uct of an inquiry by a team of scientists into Britains "lost cen tubes" the years between 400 and 625 A. D. The British Broadcasting Corpor ation, which docs things like this, decided to ask the scientists what they could find out about the dark era when the Roman occupation was ending. The usual picture painted by historians is that of a Britain populated mainly by Illit erate peasants and overrun by barbarians. C lues Assembled There are two ways of making scientific discoveries these days. One is to find something new. The other is to examine old research in the light of new techniques Koeciul to Hi- Bulletin which often produces jusl us many SISTERS Harold Oiclison, fur startling results. Operating much estry inspector from the Pnneville as detectives do in assembling ap parently unrelated eluts into a cast-iron ease, the scientists caim to this conclusion: The Britain of the lost centuries was a land of great country house and internal ional commerce a well as of hovels. It had illiterate jM'Usunts, but it also had famous scholars such as Pelagius who argued with St. Augustine for hu manism in Christianity. One of the team, areheologist Raleigh Radford, began to find as the sources were culled that he was getting frequent references to a war leader named Arthur. I If found that the Britons handed the State Forestry office spent Tues day working in the Sisters area. Mrs. Peril Huntington accom panied Mrs. Jimmie McCauley and son, William, to Roseburg on Sat urday where Mrs. Huntington visited with her daughter, Mrs Dick Kastman. The McCauley s at tended the wedding of Mrs. Me Cauley's niece. William returned to Sisters Sunday and his mother I and Mrs. Huntington remained in Roseburg for an extended visit with friend? and relatives. The picnic originally scheduler for Sunday by the Sisters Church 3f Christ was postponed becaust f cold weather and the dinner Saxons a crushing defeat at a was enjoyed at the church. place called Badon Hill in :jo a.u Mr and Mrs Howaitl Buchanan An eighth century work, based on d p , w visitors at the earner accounts, saw ine dhumi home of Mrs. Paul Hoke over Ih, Byrne , to Step Down on Friday EUGENK (UP) Dr. Charles D, Byrne will step down as chancellor of the State Board of Higher Edu cation tomorrow. Successor to Dr. Byrne will be Dr. John R. Richards, who lias served two years as vice chancel lor and board secretary. Byrne, who had been with the state board since lis formation in M12, became head of the organiza tion in l!t50 after serving as direc tor of information, board secretary and assistant chancellor. The outgoing chancellor at the December meeting asked to be re lieved of administrative duties. He said he planned to return to the board on a "part-time, non-administrative" basis. Richards came to Oregon in 1953 from New York University. He has been on the staff of Penn State and Wuyne University, and Is a former educational adviser to the Secretary of Ihe Army. PHONE (lit 1312 f Tho World's Most Efficient Furnnco Cleaning Equipment leader was named Arthur. Arthur I'reventn Kalil. Then, in Welsh laments, Kadforl found complaints that a leader named Arthur was preventing their cattle raids. A Welsh poet, Aneu- rln, remarked of a certain chieftain that he was "no Arthur but sill1 managed to kill a lot of people Hut Arthur and his knight? couldn't have tilled with lances Radford says, because the sadillr stirrup hadn't reached Uritalr from the steppes of Asia at thai time. Hadford said he hopes to find Ihe place where Arthur is buried He has found records 01 me liscovory of a grave at Glaston bury Abbey In 1191. In it were wo iHxhes. a man and a woman. On the breast of the man was a leaden cross which said "Here lies King Arthur In Ihe Island of Avalon. He said he thought he knew thi' exact spot and planned to exca vate there, but he will not reveal il because of the danger amateurs might start digging themselves and ruin the project. Merger Plans Are Announced SAN FRANCISCO (UP) Crown Zellerbaeh Corp. and Oaylord Con tainer Corp. announced plans for u possible merger yesterday on u basis of two shares of Crown el lerbach common for three share of (jaylord. J. O. Zellerbaeh, president of Crown Zellerbaeh and Kdwin .1 Spiegel, president of Gaylord Con tainer, Jointly announced the merger had been agreed to In principle and that the transaction would bo completed as soon as all legal requirements are fulfilled. weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Hewitt and family were visitors at the Hob Hewitt home In Redmond on Fri day. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoefliggor ind five children of Whittier, spent Saturday evening with the Serg Royals. The lloefliggers were en- route to their home. Mrs. Coval and Mrs. Hoefligger attended school together and this was their first visit in four years. Mr. and Mrs. Joy Laughlin ol Walla Walla were recent visitor? at Ihe George Meyer home. Mr Laughlin Is Mrs. Meyer's uncle, whom she hadn't seen for 27 years Mrs. Tillle Mann of San Fran cisco was a weekend visilor at the George Meyer home. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cooper and family led Sunday for Sacramen to, where they plan to visit with the Dewey Coopers and with other friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Pepper- ling and children, Gary and Del ma. are vacationing in Alaska. The Pepperlings plan to be gun.' about three weeks. Mrs. David Gridley has gone to join her husband who is stationed with the army in Alabama. 1'NIT IM'UCIIASKn PORTLAND (UP) Bonneville Power Administration said today it had purchased a SG2.925 mobile transformer from the Portland Genernl Klectric Company. I $1995 Delivered In Bend For a new 1955 Chevrolet 6-Passenger 2-door Se dan equipped with Power-Glide automatic trans mission, Airflow heater, Directional signals, Elec tric wipers, Oil Filter and Two-Tone paint. Another SPECIAL PRICE CAR ... in this home stretch finish of Chevrolet's Pacemaker Sales Contest. Regular Price as Equippd is $2206 Bend Garage Co. Inc. Your Chevrolet Dealer Since 1917 709 Wall St. Phone 193 Eastern Areas Get Muggy. Heat By UNITKU I'KF.SS Muggy heal covered much of the nation's Fast today, but tempera tures were dropping as much as 32 degrees 111 Ihe West. Temperatures climbed inlo Ihe 80s and !X)s practically every where east of the Continental Di vide late yesterday. Cool air had reached tile Western Dakotas by early today, but most of the na tion could hope lor little relief. At Detroit. Ihe cily's water sup py was pushed to the limits In meeting what may have been record water demand in the Motor City yesterday. Tempera- lures were expected to go slill higher in Detroit today and the Weather Bureau said the humidi ty would get worse. Oilier highs late yesterday In cluded 00 at Rapid City, S. D 101 at Presidio, Tex., 89 at Chi cago and an even 90 at New York City. In the West, meanwhile, cool Pa cific air tumbled temperatures 32 degrees from 77 to 55 at Pocotello, and 24 degrees from 73 to 49 at Salt Lake City. ? 1 V.."'ruM AV.-f'J' -r "--,f-5ir, WP' -W.I t?.f 7 J' IT'S A WEDDING Tins unusual scene shows the first w-edding in the new, modernistic chapel at Massachusetts Institute ot 'lecnnoiogy at Cambridge. Newlyweds are ffc. Banke Bos, formerly of The Hague,. Holland, and Mary Lynn Smoot, of Cambridge. The nondenominational chapel is circular and win dowlcss. Light and sound bn files hang behind the altar, from the skylight, main source of light. Dame Edith Wishes She Had Never Met Marilyn Monroe SHEFFIELD. England (UP) Monnx. Shu is not, she stated Dame Edith Sitwcll, Britain's top lady of letters, said today her life had been "absolute hell" since she t Marilyn Monroe last year in Hollywood. If I hear that youtiK woman's name again 1 shall shriek, sh declared. Dame Edith took the occasion f receiving an honorary degree from Sheffield University to re veal a personal f'ud with the film actress but explained it is not Marilyn's fault at all. She is tired, she said, of bein asked why she is a friend of Miss Accident Takes Youngster's Life SANDY, Ore. (UP) Ronny Searls, Iwo-year-old son of Mr. and Mi's. O. Searls, Kelso, Ore., was killed about noon yesterday when he fell out of his mother's car and was run over by a lumber truck. The tragedy occurred about one qtinrter mile west of Snndy on the Mount Hood Loop Highway. Sisters Man In Hospital Special to The itulh tin SISTERS Floyd Barnes was taken to the Central Oregon Dis trict Hospital in Redmond Monday when he became ill. Dave Johnson, high school in structor in the Sisters system, is attending the University of Oregon during the summer session now in progress. Mrs. George Wilson and Mrs. Jesse Scott returned home Friday after spending two weeks at th' Oregon College of Education i:i Monmouth where t In y took pari in an educational workshop. Mrs. Cieorge Wakefield and Mrs. deny: Benson drove to Monmouth lo get i the teachers. Mrs. Delmar I'epperling andl Mrs. A. W. Fry were in Engem Saturday. Mrs. John Stellar and Mrs. A. I W. Fry drove to Seattle last week' to get Deanna Stellar who has! been spending pad of her vaca-1 tion visiting friends in Seattle. Mr. and Mis. Eldon Barclay and two daughters of Salem wen1 guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barclay on Sunday. House guests at the Harold Bar clay home this week are Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Barclay and tvi hildren from Seattle. Mrs. David Tripiano and sons, David and Joe, of Mountain View, California are visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Scott "Mrs. Tripiano expects lo he i Sisters about a month. firmly, a friend of the blonde ac tress. "It's absolute hell," she added, which was a firm statement com ing from the best-known of Bri tain's lady writers. Miss Sitwell is a poetess and a lecturer of considerable renown and as such travels considerably. That is what took her to Hollywood when she met Miss Monroe. "Some magazine photographers brought Miss Monroe to see me,' she explained. "I don't know why. She seemed a nice, quiet girl. "Being a polite and, I hope, chivalrous woman, I said to her as I would to any other lady that I hoped if she came lo Lon don she would let me know and have tea with me. "That is all there was to it and that doesn't seem to me such a phenomenon of nature. But sinci then my life has been made abso lute hell. "Some tiresome people will not let me have any peace. They even nd me letters addivssed to her. Newspapers all over the world commented about our meeting. "But you must not think by this that I imply anything against the girl. I liked her, and certainly do not wish lo be horrid to her. "I should be very pleased to see her again if she comes to Lon don." Miss Silwell is a dame of the British Empire, a sort of fema!e knight; and her title is the feml.i iue equivalent of "Sir." ii"lll i mmmmidmmmlm!mlmmmm - 11 i nTim n r TWJ-Tll''W Skyralder Crash Kills Tacoman SAN FRANCISCO (I'D A Navy ADC Skyraider crashed into the ocean near Santa Cruz yester-j day, apparently killing Pilot Lt. ! ijg Charles Herbert Nylund, 21. of Tacoma, Wash., the 12th Naval District announced. The Coast Guard Air-Sea Rescu.' Station reported late last night il had abandoned the search for Ny lund's body after searching the waters off Pigeon Point for hour-; after the crash. Nlund, stationed at Alameda Naval Air Station, was on a rou tine bombing practice run, diving, on n smoke pot floating on the ocean. Other pilots on the maneu ver reorted the plane flew too close and crashed into the water.; It disintegrated on impact, they I said. After the crash, pilots in Ny lund's squadron 95 circled anmnd the area until a Coast Guard helicopter and an Albatross i amphibian from Hamilton Air Force Base could reach the scene A Coast Guard cutter was alu dispatched to aid in the futilt search for Ihe pilot. Situation Grows More Serious 'in Cyprus Fight By MIAKI.KS M. MCCANX j I'tiiled rrttiN Stafl Correspondi-nt i The situation on the Eastern Mediterranean island of Cyprus is getting dangerous. The island is a British possession. Greece wants it. Turkey says "no to that. Greece has been demanding Cyp rus ever since tiie end of World War II, on the ground that it once was Greek and thut most of its people are of Greek background. But Cyprus has not been Greeh since pre-Christian days. It is only 40 miles from Turkey and 4(0 miles from the Greek mainland. Britain acquired it from Turkey in 1878. Turkey had possessed ii previously since 1571. Before that, tor centuries it had undergone var ious kinds of rule. Turkey, inci dentally, took the island li-om the Venetian Republic. About four-fifths of the island's 500.000 people are of Greek back ground. Most of the rest are runts Turkey holds that, historically and geographically, it has the right to Cyprus if Britain ever gels out. A campaign of open terrorism against British rule has now brok en out in Cyprus. Illumes Radio Britain asserted in u formal note to Greece yesterday that the offi ciaj Athens Radio is broadcasting propaganda which is inciting re voll. The three-cornered dispute over Cyprus involves three countries, all friends of the United States, which think alike about cold war problems. They are allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza tion. Cyprus is being made a major NATO military base. The present dispute can be help ful only to the Communists. A strange angle of the situation is that the Communists rule most Cyprus towns and that they are nost active in inciting terrorism in support of Greek rule. But Communism is outlawed in bitter ly anti-Red Greece. If the Com munists went there they would face a firing squad. Greece has tried unsuccessful lv to get the United Nations to in tervene in the dispute. Now Britain may take it before NATO, on the ground that one member of the alliance is work ing against another. - Many Incidents There were anti-British incidents on Cyprus before World War II Since the war, such incidents have multiplied. What appeare to be an organ ized campaign of terrorism by the Cyprus "E.O.K.A. organization- the organization of Cypriot fight ersbroke out one- week ago to day. British buildings and homes have been bombed. Police stations have been attacked. Telephone lines have been cut. Britain's note to the Greek gov ernment complained especially that the Athens Radio broadcast last Tuesday, the day the cam paign started, an E.O.K.A. mani festo calling on tiie people to "rise" and "liberate" the island., BAIL POSTTD Special to The Hulletlll SISTERS Three motorists post ed $10 bail for violations of the basic rule in Sisters recently. Eve lyn Roner, Scio, was arrested for driving 45 n:ph in a 25 mile zone on June 23. Claude A. Smiley, Poc atcllo, w:.s cited for driving 41 mph In a 25 mile zone and Deo Fred Meredith of Roswell, N. M , was arrested on the same chai-ge. The male Kodiak bear weighs around 1,500 pounds while the po lar bear's weight runs around 1,100 pounds. FOURTH BUI.Y for that PARTY or PICNIC have plenty of CRACKUH' CRISP end FRESH Distributed by JAPPERT DISTRIBUTING CO. Bend, Oregon Portland Area Earnings Jump SAI.KM (l'P- Both the number of workers and their earnings Im pmved during May in the Portland Vancouver metropolitan area, the State Unemployment Compensa tion Commission said today. i An estimated 237.WO persons were employed in non-farm job: tst month. 3600 more than in April i and 3000 more than a year ago. Earnings of production workei-s 'raed $s? 57 a week compared! with $S0 52 the month before and' 577 SO in May, 1954. asthis (jjj tfStafo IF A I ! . r wit means money ou ran Lank onlintli ihoso nyiiilinlx . .. nnvplaco ' in Anirrira. One iiIhuy means ddllars . . . the oilier alu ays means llie finest Ameriran wlii-ke . And because Seagram's 7 Cnmn is Ameriran vltiskey at its finest, it . Anierii-a's most hiiii lar vhUkey by millions ami millions of bottles. Saycagmm'Saiul be ... of American Whiskey at its finest Seagram-Distillers Company, New York City. Blended Whiskey. 86.8 Proof. 65 Grain Neutral Spirits. mm j 4