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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1962)
Univ. of Oregon Library EUGEHS, OREGON THE BEND BULLETIN WEATHER Occasional showers; high Friday Ii-0; lew 40-45. TEMPERATURES High yesterday, 4 degrees. Lew last night, IS degrees. Sun tat today, 5:2. SunriM tomor row, :15. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER 59th Year Sixteen Pages Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Thursday, October 11, 1962 Ten Cents No. 261 Faculty split on question of discipline . OXFORD, Miss. (UPI) The University of Mississippi Faculty Senate was unable to agree Wed nesday night on a resolution de manding disciplinary action against students heckling Negro James H. Meredith. A number of firecrackers were exploded by students during the meeting of the 28-member body. The fireworks were set off in the vicinity of the male dormitories where Meredith is quartered. The president of the senate, Dr. Randolph Kinabrew, refused to comment on the resolution but de nied there was any "major dis agreement" during the two-hour meeting. Kinabrew said that two resolu tions were presented and referred .' to a special committee for pos sible consolidation. Possibla Expulsion It was learned that one resolu tion called for university officials to take all necessary steps to bring the student body "under discipline proper to an institution of higher learning, including, if necessary, the expulsion disor ders." The other resolution was believed critical of the university's handling of unruly students. Earlier in the night, about 100 Students gathered in front of the university cafeteria and jeered Meredith when he came out with his escort of marshals after din ner. "Go back to the cotton patch, you nigger," shouted one rodent The taunts continued un til the Meredith party disappeared from view. Deputy U. S. Atty. Gen. Nicho las Katzenbach Wednesday turned over to Dean of Students L. L. Love a list of seven students the government accused of participa ting in the bloody rioting which followed Meredith's . admission Bept. 30. Katzenbach said "we have com petent evidence" of the group's Involvement but the university la ter said that one of the persons listed "had no connection" with (ha university. Other Names Later The Justice Department official aid that other names probably would ba turned over to school authorites later. He emphasized that the releasing of evidence to the university did not preclude eourt action against the students. "We don't plan to ( limit the names to those involved in the Sept. 30 rioting," a federal spokes man said. He said an effort is being made to get the names of atudents involved in a rowdy demonstration in front of the ca feteria Monday night. "We are hoping the university la making its own inquiry and will take appropriate action," he said. Nursing course starts Tuesday The American Red Cross Home Nursing course, a free seven-lesson program emphasizing instruc tion in caring for the sick and in jured in the home, will begin 8 p.m. Tuesday, October 23, in the Bend Red Cross office over, the J. C. Penney Building. The lessons will be held each Tuesday and Thursday until com pletion of the course. Persons interested should register with the Red Cross by calling EV 2 11142. Mrs. Job Thalhofer will instruct, with Mrs. Neal Goldsmith heading the committee. SKILLED HANDS . . . guide the preparation of your doc tor's orders faithfully, precisely here at the Owl Pharmacy. Put your trust in our professional prescription service. Free Delivery Open Evening! Till THE OWL PHARMACY tit Well IV a 261 'Unity' is keynote Ecumenical Council opened by Pope John VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pope John XXIII. 80, a portly, fatherly figure in white, today opened the 2lst Ecumenical Council of the Roman Catholic Church that he said may pave the way for the "unity of mankind." With the scene and the pontiff's words broadcast through space by the Telstar satellite, the church in a 4-hour and 38-minute cere mony began the task of attuning to the nuclear age. From the great Basilica of St Peter's the Pope addressed his words to all peoples as well as to the 3.000 Roman Catholic lead- COC board formally accepts site Formal acceptance of the site on the west slope of Awbrey Heights selected for the campus of Central Oregon College took place at the monthly meeting of the Cen tral Oregon Area Education Dis trict board of directors here Wed nesday night. Acceptance by the board of the 135-acre site now makes it possi ble to invite representatives of the State Board of Education, to in spect the area, for state approv al. Rupert Park, Redmond, chair man of the site committee, re ported on site progress and re quested the board's acceptance of deeds and escrows. The board, headed by Owen Panner, Bend, as chairman, tent atively approved work so far com pleted on tlie 10-year projection. The directors authorized Don P. Pence, COC president, to pro ceed, working jointly with the school's architectural firm, to complete the projection - applica tion and present it to the State Department of Education. At November Meeting The board anticipates that work on the projection will be complet ed and the request for state lunds presented to the State Board of Education at the November 1 and 2 meeting in Astoria. Dick McRae, board member from Crook Coun ty, will accompany Pence and members of the school's archi tectural firm to the state board meeting. - If the request is approved, it will go before the State Emer gency Board in November. The request will be for $225,000 of state money appropriated by the last session of the Legislature and tentatively earmarked for Central Oregon College, subject to an acceptable application for funds. Part of this application will be presentation of a complete 10 year plan of development. William Hudson, professor of civil engineering at Central Oregon College, appeared before the board last night and explained the survey work on the college site, and the use that has been made of college students majoring in engineering in assisting in the sur vey. Orval Hansen, COC head librar ian, presented a brief report on the college library and discussed the manner in which the library has been built up, and the criteria used in selecting material. Directors preseot for last night's conference were Owen Panner, Bend; Rupert Park, Redmond; Dick McRae, Prineville; William E. Miller, Bend; Robert W. Chan dler, Bend; Stewart Sheik, Prine ville, and Boyd Overhulse, Madras. ers and about 50 observers from other Christian faiths assembled for the council. Pope John spoke for 37 minutes after an inaugural mass and a magnificent procession of richly garbed prelates which made its way through St. Peter's Square U the sound of pealing church bells and the cheers of more than 150.000 spectators. 'Long live the Pope, they cried in a multitude of languages. The Pope, who descended from his portable throne to enter and walk down the aisle of the ancient church converted into a modern council chamber with electronic novelties, was buoyant in the en thusiasm of opening the first Ecu menical Council in almost a cen tury. Historically, it wul be known as the Second Vatican Council, held on the site where the Roman Em peror Nero once fed Christians to the lions. It is the largest council in history, with prelates present from 53 countries on the six con tinents, and the first to be at tended by Protestant observers. The Pope set the tone of opti mism with his opening words: "Mother Church rejoices." For those of the non-Catholic ob servers who did not comprehend the ancient Latin tongue, Vatican interpreters murmured discreetly the translation in modern lan guages. A few minutes after the cere irlonies ended, the pontiff appeared at the window of his apartment to impart his benediction to 8,000 persons in the square below in cluding many of the council fathers who had just left the Basilica. Pope John, whose church must face the materialism, secularism and the atheism epitomized by world communism, confronted the issue frankly in his 4,000-word speech. "The great problem confronting the world after almost 2,000 years, remains unchanged," he said. "Christ is ever resplendent as the center of His history and of life. Men are either with Him and His church . . or else they are without Him and against Him." Those who are against God, he said, "give rise to confusion, to bitterness in human relations, and to constant dangers of fratricidal wars." Hopes brighten on adjournment WASHINGTON (UPI) Pros pects suddenly brightened today for quick adjournment of the longest congressional session in 11 years. Some lawmakers said it was possible the first Kennedy Congress would wind up its work late tonight. The break in the logjam came when Senate-House conferees in formally settled major differences over a multibillion dollar farm bill. Rep. Jamie L. Whitten, D-Miss., said the agreement was tentative. But he predicted it would be nailed down at a formal confer ence later today. The only other major stumbling block was a Senate-House dispute over a bill that would authorize construction of more than 200 rivers and harbors and otner water development projects throughout the country. Senate Democratic Whip Hubert H. Humphrey had said earlier that things were looking "much better" in the Senate - House squabble over the farm bill. But Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., one of the principals in the dis pute, had been noncommital. Even so the pain to adjourn ment until next January still was not completely clear. Congressional leaders said pri vately however that the rivers and harbors legislation probably would be jettisoned unless quick agreement was reached. Airline, FFA officials meet WASHINGTON (UPD Najeeb E. Halaby, chief of the Federal Aviation Administration finished two days of meetings with airline officials Wednesday on ways to enforce cockpit discipline in air linen. The meetings concerned charges by flight engineers and former cabin attendants that pilots have been reading and sleeping at the controls and let ting stewardesses fly their planes. Halaby had no comment on the meetings and the FAA issued no formal statement. An agency spokesman said there was unan imous agreement" that the con ditions described by witnesses at recent congressional hearings no longer prevailed. JFK launches campaign bid in five states NEW YORK (UPI I President Kennedy arrived in New York to day to begin a lightning-paced campaign tour to bolster chances of Democratic election victories in five states, ' . The four-day tour of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Indi ana and Kentucky considered the key battlegrounds in Kennedy's announced effort to get more Democrats elected to Congress- was reminiscent of the whirlwind tempo he set during his success ful campaign for the presidency in 1960. The chief executive arranged a series of afternoon and evening strategy ' conferences with New York Democratic leaders, among them Mayor Robert F. Wagner and Democratic gubernatorial candidate Robert M. Morgenthau, son of the former treasury sec retary in the Roosevelt Admini stration. In Reviewing Stands Friday the President will be In the reviewing stands at Columbus Day parades in New York City and Newark, N. J., appear at a Newark rally and make a motor tour of New York City before de parting for Pittsburgh. Before leaving Washington, Ken nedy signed two major bills re cently passed by Congress the trade bill and a measure combin ing a penny postal rate increase with a pay raise for federal workers. The President got a jump on his campaigning Wednesday night when he helicoptered to nearby Baltimore to address a political rally. He told more than 4,000 per sons that the Democratic 87th Congress had accomplished much but that voters had to elect more legislators "who believe in pro gress. It was a theme that he has stressed this year and will con tinue to press during the cam paign. No Appearance Today After his arrival In New York, Kennedy planned to go directly to the Carlyle Hotel. There were no appearances on his schedule today but the White House said he would have several unan nounced appointments presumab ly of a political nature.' New York Democrats are wag ing an uphill fight to unseat Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and Sen. Ja cob K. Javits. Neither Robert Morgenthau former U.S. attorney who is opposing Rockefeller nor attorney James B. Donovan who is battling Javits is given much chance of success. What Democrats are hoping Is that Morgenthau can make the race close enough to diminish Rockefeller's chance of receiving the GOP presidential nomination in 1964. Kennedy will put In a full day of campaigning on Friday, Co lumbus Day. He will participate in a rally at City Hall in Newark, N.J. and then cross back over the Hudson River to join the Co lumbus Day parade up Fifth Av enue with New York Mayor Rob ert Wagner. In the afternoon the President will fly to Pittsburgh and motor to nearby Ahquippa, Pa. He will briefly address a rally there and then drive into downtown Pitta burgh. 'Bomb' joke delays plane at Eugene EUGENE (UPD A Kentucky minister's joke about a "bomb" caused a 25-minute delay on a United Air Lines flight here Tues day. Eugene police and FBI agents rushed to the airport after Rev. Charles Edgar Dietza made the remark. Dietze is president of the College of the Bible at Lexington, Ky Stewardess Coral Jane Smith of San Mateo, Calif., said she was taking Dietze'i coat to hang up and asked him if he wanted to remove anything from the pock ets. She said he replied that he had taken a little bomb out of the pocket so it wouldn't make such a "big mess" when it went off. Then he laughed jokingly, she said. Miss Smith, following standard instructions, notified the pilot. Fifteen passengers were removed from the plane and Dietze'i coat and luggage were searched. No bomb was found. The flight later continued to San Francisco without Dietze. He caught a northbound flight for Portland. The justice department ottice in Portland Indicated no charges will be filed. U.S. to.pay pairs I ' IIP ... d Wf3 f V H STORMY WEATHER An October storm dropped snow in the mountains and rain on Cen tral Oregon the last few days. Ona of the bright spots in the dreary weather is this picture of 22-year-old Betty Newell on her way to work this morning in the rain. Sen. Grenfell to continue his campaign PORTLAND (UPD State Sen. William Grenfell Jr. D-Portland who admitted he concocted a story he had been kidnaped and shoved from a moving automobile said he plans to continue his cam paign for Multnomah County com missioner. : Grenfell's attorney, William C. Hcfferin, released a statement Wednesday which said Grenfell was injured in an automobile ac cident Monday night in which Harold A. Jones, 61, Portland, was killed. The attorney said Grenfell was returning from Van couver, Wash., and driving the car of Mrs. Natalie Crenshaw, 23, when the accident occurred. - Grenfell told police earlier he had been abducted from near his campaign headquarters and push ed from his car. He was found by a taxi driver early Tuesday, near the scene of the fatal auto mobile accident The statement said Grenfell and Mrs. Crenshaw were going south on Union Avenue in a heavy rain when another car appeared to swerve into his lane and that in attempting to avert a collision the car skidded, spinning into the northbound lane into the path of another vehicle. Mrs. Crenshaw was found wan dering dazedly near the accident and it was first assumed she had been the driver and only occupant of her car. "He was obsessed with a strong desire to protect Mrs. Crenshaw from criticism although it must be emphasized their respective conduct was perfectly proper and In his dazed condition, he made some remarks which were to be come banner line news." the statement from Hefferin said. Grenfell, who suffered fractures of the pelvis, right hip and collar bone, was listed in satisfactory condition. He said he believed he would be a good county commissioner and could "... see no reason at this fate date why I should give up my campaign." DOW JONES AVERAGES Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 industrials 586.47 off 1.67; 20 railroads 117.90, off 0.10: IS utili ties 120.97. off 0.36, and 65 stocks 205.32, off 0.51. Sales today were about 2.46 million shares compared with 1.04 million shares Wednesday. reported prepaid Area well soaked New storm reported moving into region By Phil F. Brogan Bulletin Staff Writer ' A new storm, greatly Intensi fied and potentially a bearer of heavy rain, was moving into Cen tral Oregon today, born of a Pa cific disturbance. - Forecasts indicate Uio storm will drop heavy rain in Central Oregon, a region already well soaked, especially on slopes lead ing from the east up to the Cas cade crest. ' ' Temperatures slightly moderat ed In the area today, melting some of the October snow that fell in the high country earlier in the week. On Wednesday evening, the snowline was not far west of Bend. Six inches of snow was reported in the Wood Road No. 1 area, on the Cascade Lakes highway. Buttcs were well covered with snow. Tn the south, in the storm-sweat Klamath basin, most of the snow Jimmie, 'Sporf back together thanks to ad Jimmie and "Sport" are to gether today, thanks to an adver tisement that appeared In the classified section of The Bulletin Wednesday evening. Jimmie is J. R. Riley, 512 Ari zona. "Sport" is his close com panion, a four-year old gold and white Chihuahua. Both have been familiar figures In downtown for the past several years. Occasion ally they wore "at home" in a car parked at the corner of Bond and Franklin, adjacent to rhe Cor ner Snack, managed by Mrs. Ri ley. Physically handicapped, Ri ley frequently remains in the car while Mrs. Riley is at work. "Sport" was missed from the Riley home Monday about 3 p.m A frantic search for the little dog was started. Wednesday, Mrs. Ri ley placed an ad in The Bulletin. It was read by Mrs. Matt Wil liams, of the Hill Crest Motel on the South Highway. Soon, "Sport" and Jimmie were reunited. Mrs. Williams said the little dog showed up at the motel early in the week, but refused food, and could not be approached. of - ransonn,. - it I was gone this morning, but a 16- inch pack remained on Sycun Butte northwest of Klamath Falls. Over Foot of Snow Earlier in the week, more than a foot of snow covered the Dutch man Flat area in the Cascades west of Bend. - The now Pacific storm lashed at Western Oregon early today, as it started inland. There were pow er outages, mostly caused by bro ken tree limbs along the coast and in Portland. A roof was ripped from a house at Gold Beach by the high wind. Bend today recorded its fourth consecutive day of rain, mostly showers. Total moisture recorded for the storm up until 7 a.m. to day in Bend was 1.51 inches. That brought the total for the year up to 8.80 Inches. Well Under Record Bend's normal October moisture is 0.80 of an inch, but that is well under the record October rain fall, 3.32 inches in 1923. A special forecast received in the office of the Deschutes Na tional Forest here this morning indicated there is no sign of a let up in the series of storms sweep ing across the Pacific to the Northwest coast. It was one of these storms that struck the Oregon coast early to day, then lashed into the Cas cades before spilling over into the central part of the state. Edge of Storm The edge of the new storm reached Bend about 3 a.m. this morning. Up until 7 a.m., how ever, only 0.19 of an inch of mois ture had been recorded at the lo cal weather station. Mountain passes were damp but snow free this morning as the freezing level went up to around 7,000 feet Cooler weather has been forecast for Friday as the new storm moves east. More snow is expected in the Cascades and on high tips of the Paulinas Ochocos and Fremont woods. FIRST FATALITY JOHN DAY (UPP-Grant Coun ty recorded its first 19S2 hunting season death Wednesday when Emmelt E. Belcher, 62, Bridge. Ore., was stricken with a fatal heart attack while hunting in the Murderer's Creek area 40 miles southeast of here. Demand for probe made by lawmaker WASHINGTON (UPI) A Re publican House member today de manded a congressional investi gation of reports that the U.S. government might pay part of the ransom for Cuban invasion prisoners. Rep. William C. Cramer, K Fla, asked for Immediate hear ings on negotiations between New York attorney James B. Donovan and Cuban Premier Fidel Castro for release of the prisoners. He made the demand In indent! cal letters to Chairmen Clarence Cannon, D-Mo., of the House ap propriations Committee arid Thomas Morgan, D-Pa., of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Cramer said he was deeply dis turbed by the negotiations, es pecially by reports of proposals , to pay some or the ransom tn dollars from CIA funds. Abuse Seen "This is about the greatest abuse of presidential discretion as I can remember in the his tory of this country," Cramer wrote. He said he never had voted for any bill "that would -permit the President to . . . give in to blackmail threats by an enemy government and, in particular, Fidel Castro." "If the Congress does not stop this unwholesome, degrading and humiliating blackmail deal, the. prestige of the United States will be forever irreparably harmed," he said. Cramer later voiced the same demands in a brief speech on the House floor, bringing an acid re joinder from Rep. Barratt O'Hara, D-IU., the, only surviving veteran of the Spanish-American War left in Congress, Suggestion Made O'Hara suggested that Cramer might be a good man "to lead the army" if an American force ever should have to go into Cuba. "If he shoots as loud as he talks," O'Hara told the House, "Lord help the enemy! Congressional sources said they understood that the United States was prepared to put up "lots of money" to ' help free the more than 1,000 Cubans captured In the abortive invasion last year. These sources gave no estimate on exactly how much federal money might be used, Castro Is demanding about $62 million for release of the prisoners. Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., urged President Kennedy Wednes day to deny reports that federal funds would be involved. The State Department and White House declined comment Power failure in Bend blamed on transformer ; A power failure occurred In the Bend area in the pre-dawn hours today, result of a current trans former failure in the main-Bend substation of the Pacific Power k Light Company. The entire area was affected for 12 minutes, with the exception of the Bond Street feeder that serves the St Charles Memorial Hospital. The 12,000-volt circuits serving parts of the city and adjacent rural areas were affected for 1 hour and 17 minutes. Local PP & L crews were able to by-pass the damaged equip ment Service was restored In rec ord time, R. G. McFarland, PP&L manager, reported. Electric clocks in many parts of the area lost time due to the power failure, and, as a result most local residents had hurried breakfasts this morning. Rain cancels Series workouts SAN FRANCISCO (UPD A steady rain forced cancellation today of scheduled workouts of the New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants at Candlestick Park. The two teams had been slated lo stage workouts in preparation for the sixth game of the World Series Friday. The weatherman wasn't too op timistic about the future, either.