The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, July 05, 1962, Page 11, Image 11

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    The Bend Bulletin, Thursday, July 5, 1962 11
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ON TO AKRON The chance for a trip to Akron, Ohio, and
the Ail-American Soap Box Derby Saturday, August 4, brought
out 170 hopeful boys Sunday in Salem, many of whom are
shown in the top photo taken along the parade route. David
Plans underway
on bridge start
NEW YORK (UPI)-De Long
Corp., recently awarded a $7.8
million contract to build piers for
the Astoria Megler bridge near
the mouth of the Columbia River,
said today it was rushing prepa
ration of a production schedule
for the Oregon Highway Commis
sion. "However, we can't yet make
public any tentative starting date
for the work or estimate of the
manpower we will have to hire,"
Executive Vice President George
Tait said.
De Long, which has been in
business since 1946, is a widely
known construction firm, which
has engaged in many large ma
rine projects both on its own and
as joint ventures wUh other big
contractors.
It built the first offshore radar
Texas Tower off Cape Cod,
Mass., in 1953. It was recently
engaged with other contractors in
the $20 million Hyperion outfall
sewer at Santa Monica, -am.
De Long also has built large
marine piers for the New African
Republic of Togoland.
It Is partner with a French con
tracting firm in a continuing ven
ture building large offshore oil
installations in the Persian Gulf
for Pan-American Oil Co., a sub
sidiary of Standard Oil Co. (In
diana). Principal owner and president
of the firm is L. B. De Long, a
native of Texas who now has
homes in Seattle and New York.
DIES WHILE SWIMMING
COOS BAY (UPD Ted Miller,
49, Coos Bay, died while swim
ming in the South Coos River
about 2 p.m. PST Wednesday. Of
ficials said death was apparently
due to a heart attack.
moreneat
Diane reports on
By Vernon Seolt
UPI Staff Writer
HOLLYWOOD (UPD If you're
going to play an Indian in the
movies and hope to avoid fatuous
cowboys and-or John Wayne the
solution is to head for Calcutta or
Bombay.
This move changes the setting
from Western to Eastern, and
sometimes alters the plot but not
often.
The trip was worth it for young
Diane Baker, blessed with a cher
ub's innocent face, who went to
India to portray a Punjabi prosti
tute, which some people consider
a better fate than perishing at the
hands of a cavalry troop led by
Wayne.
A delicate little thing, Diane
lived at home with her parents
and knew as little about India as
she did about the kind of girl she
was to play in "Nine Hours to
j ra. ' y . . M....n,., .-m.
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CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAKS 3 for 69c
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CITY MEAT MARKET
McCoy of Bend won two heats but failed to win top honors.
When the National is held at Akron, 184 cities compete with
cars much like the two in the bottom picture taken at Salem
by Chris Genna.
her Indian movie making
But produce r-director Mark
Robson, who apparently knows In
dia and is hip to shady ladies, re
served a camel for Diane and
spirited the actress off to the land
of Jackie Kennedy home movies.
Diane spent eight bewildering
weeks, some of them enlivened by
overdoses of curry, learning to
play an Indian girl for a mere
five days of work before the
cameras.
"Indian women walk and talk
differently, of course," Diane
said, crooking her little finger to
dispatch a noonday Bloody Mary.
"But their mannerisms and the
way they move their heads and
hands are very distinctive and not
easy to imitate. They use their
heads and necks to express all
manner of emotions.
"After about four weeks the In
dian customs and point of view
sank into my mind which helped
me bring authenticity to the
part."
In her search for realism Diane
went somewhat overboard, if not
berserk. She lived with one lower
class family for four days, sleep
ing in the same room with a doz
en women and children.
"We all slept on the floor on
mats. But I didn't got much sleep
because rats and mice were
scampering over us all night.
"You might call the family av
erage in India," she said. "There
were many relatives in the house,
including some married girls who
were only 12 and 13 years old.
Marriage at that age is rather
common over there."
Robson, a good-natured Sven
gali, telephoned Diane every few
nights to ask what she had
learned and to check on her Indian-British
accent.
J - MA '
New Jnferesf in Americana
spurred by Mrs. Kennedy
NEW YORlt (UPD-Mrs. John
F. Kennedy has spurred new in
terest at home in Americana with
her program of refurbishing the
White House in authentic furnish
ings from various periods of U.S.
history.
Abroad, a similar interest in
Americana gets a giant assist
from a unique museum started
by two men who believe the
cultural image overseas of the
United States could stand im
provement. The two are founders of the
American Museum in Britain,
which has just opened its latest
addition a detailed replica of the
flower gardens at George Wash
ington's Mount Vernon home. The
gardens are the gift of the Coloni
al Dames of America.
The museum is located at Clav
erton Manor, Bath, England, 107
miles west of London. Sir Winston
Churchill is supposed to have
made his first political speech at
Claverton 65 years ago.
Old Wait Next
When we heard of the garden
presentation, we hied ourselves
off to the headquarters of the
Friends of the American Museum
in Britain, where we found Mrs.
Norman Walker, widowed mother
of four grown sons, presiding.
The chic Mrs. Walker, with a
background in fashion sales and
magazine work, is the Friends
executive secretary. The Friends
chairman is Mrs. Thomas S. La-
mont of the Morgan and Lamont
banking families.
Tm the lookout girl for more
items of historical interest to add
to the museum," said Mrs.
Walker. "Our next big project
will be the Old West and we'll
have to add a wing to the muse
um to house it."
The site of the museum is 55
acres of rolling countryside in
cluding the manor house of some
33 rooms and galleries built in
1820 for one of England's landed
gentry. The architect, Sir Jeffrey
Wyatville, worked for George IV
and helped restore Windsor Castle,
one of the homes of the British
royal family.
Big Interest
Mrs. Walker said the museum
opened last July 15 for three
months and that 20.000 persons
visited it. This year, it will be
open for six months and the
number of visitors is expected to
triple.
'There is a tremendous interest
in Americana all over Europe,"
she said.
The museum rooms range
through furnishings and other an
tiquity of the first three centuries
of the United States. Included is
a candlestand which belonged to
Peregrine White, the first Ameri
can child, born on the May
flower's voyage to Plymouth
Rock.
The Museum curator is a
Briton Ian McCallum, an archi
tect who has traveled extensively
While You Are Away On Vacation?
While you were away on vacation last year,
The Bend Bulletin
Reported Births and Deaths
Covered Local Sports
Reported Society and Club News
Entertained with Your Favorite Comics
Reported Local Happenings
And In order ta keep Informed on local events, miny of my tub
criber have atked me to ve their cepiei and deliver tham In en
convtnient bundle and we call It the
"VACATION-PAK"
I found out from my customers that a newspaper is essentially local in character so I'm pre
pared to offer this EXTRA Service at
NO ADDITIONAL COST TO YOU
To place your VACATION-PAK order ... see me, your newspaper
boy or call
In Bend Circulation Department
EV 2-1811
In Redmond LI 8-4261
In Prineville HI 7-7730
The Bend Bulletin
in the United States. And there's
one other British touch a tea
room where all visitors may stop
for a refresher traditional of
England.
"Of course," said Mrs. Walker,
"the cakes and cookies served
with the tea are typically American."
Return seen
of confidence
in
market
NEW YORK (UPI) - The re
cent sharp rebound in stock
prices reflected a return of confi
dence in the market, particularly
on the part of those who were be
ginning to believe there was no
bottom, says the International
Statistical Bureau.
While "one swallow does not
make a summer," it says we
must construe the action as indi
cating very clearly that drastic
liquidation in the recent past
"was overdone and was unjusti
fied, even assuming that many se
curities which had reacted sharp
ly were over-inflated."
Joseph E. Granville of E. F.
Hutton & Co. warns that second
ary uptrends in a primary de
cline may last between three
weeks and three months. He says
still bet'er technical evidence
must be forthcoming before any
kind of longevity on the upside
can be projected.
W. I. La Touretto and Walter
Mintz of Shearson, Hammiil & Co.
say there is a growing amount of
evidence that the economy is
heading for a mild dip and this
obviously would have an impact
on corporate profits. In view of
the clouded business outlook, the
possibility of a tighter money pol
icy and the damaged state of in
vestor confidence "we would
doubt that the recent rally would
extend much further."
R. E. Buchsbaum of W. E. Hut-
ton & Co. says barring new out
side influences, 590-600 in thi D-J
industrial average is going to be
an area of congestion. He cays It
seems doubtful whether stocks
can pierce that area on this move
and he thinks that if they do this
summer, the danger signals would
be flying again because the fac
tors which were blamed for the
big market decline are stlU with
us.
SERVICES SET
ALBANY (UPl)-Funoral serv.
ices for Ralph R. Cror.ise, 76, for
mer publisher of the Albany
Democrat - Herald, will be held
Friday at 2:30 p.m. PDT at the
Westminster United Presbyterian
Church here. Cronise died Tues
day. I
MAY I SAVE
YOUR COPIES OF
THE BULLETIN
Ex-moYie idol
Rex Bell dead
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (l'PI)-Ne-vada's
Lt. Gov. Rex Bell, onetime
western movie idol and husband
of former "It" girl Clara Bow,
died of a heart attack Wednes
day night shortly after greeting
supporters of his gubernatorial
bid at a Fourth of July picnic.
Only hours before, the colorful,
58-year-old campaigner who
brought his filmland flair for
western attire into his everyday
life, had spoken at a Republican
Independence Day rally to boost
his candidacy for governor.
As he would have wanted it.
and in the tradition of the cow
boys he portrayed so many times
on the screen, he died with his
boots on.
The friendly, hand-shaking poli
tician was a familiar sight in
most every Nevada city always
attired in colorful western garb,
a white ten gallon hat and hand
tooled leather boots. And he head
ed numerous parades with his
familiar white horse.
Bell's death threw the 1962 GOP
gubernatorial election hopes into
turmoil. Republicans had high
hopes that Bell could wrest the
state house from incumbent Dem
ocrat Gov. Grant Sawyer.
The silver-haired politician col
lapsed at the home of Miss Katie
Jenkins shortly before dinner.
Survivors include his widow and
two sons, Rex Anthony, 27, and
George, 24.
Jackie. Caroline
fo visif Italy
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Mrs.
Jacqueline Kennedy plans to take
her 4-year-old daughter Caroline
for a two-week vacation on the
Italian Riviera next month.
Pamela Tumure, the First
Lady's press secretary, said
Wednesday night that Mrs. Ken
nedy and Caroline will join her
sister, Princess Lee Radziwill, at
the Radziwill villa while President
Kennedy is traveling about the
United States.
She said the trip would be a
private visit, and no specific dates
have been set for it.
SUNRISE
BAKERY
Available Every Day At Sunrise Retail Store
or Your Favorite Grocery Store
PEASANT BREAD ..
SALT FREE BREAD
HI GIUTEH BREAD
CHEESE BREAD
'Peaceful' blast
due in Nevada
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Atomic Energy Commission plans
to set off soon the second atomic
blast in its program to discover
peaceful uses for nuclear explo
sives. The AEC said Wednesday that
the nuclear excavation experi
mentknown as Project Sdan
would take place "on or after
July 6" at its Nevada test site.
Soblen proves
'hot potato'
LONDON (UPI) - The United
States, Britain and Israel today
disclaimed responsibility for run-
away Soviet spy Dr. Robert Sob
len during his recovery here from
a suicide attempt.
A spokesman for the American
Embassy said the British govern
ment was responsible for "when
he moves and whether he moves
from the hospital. The British
Home Office said the . 62-year-old
spy was still in transit and under
the jurisdiction of the United
States.
An Israeli Embassy spokesman
said the Soblen case was now a
matter of concern for either the
United States or Britain.
2 CREWMEN KILLED
EFFINGHAM, S.C. (UPI)
Havana Special No. 76, an Atlan
tic Coast Line railroad express
passenger train, derailed Wednes
day while switching tracks near
this rural community. Two crew
men were killed and 11 of the
train's 50 passengers were In
jured. ERICKSON'S SUPER
MARKET
725 East Greenwood Bend
15-oz.
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.. loaf 30
15-oz. oQc
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15-oz. jrc
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953 Wall Phone EV 2-1301