The Bulletin, Tuesday, May 21, 1963
Whittaker
way down
KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI)
James W. Whittaker, first Ameri
can to conquer Mt, Everest, had
to struggle down from the world's
highest peak for three and a half
hours without oxygen, he dis
closed Monday.
Whittaker, 32, Redmond, Wash.,
was accompanied by Neaplese
Sherpa guide Nowang Gombu on
the successful summit assault May
Details of the climb were made
known in Whittaker's first radio
expedition on the slopes of the
29,028-foot peak.
The broadcast also brought word
that a five-man team attempting
to scale the unexplored west
ridge of Mt. Everest would be
"very, very lucky" to reach the
summit but another team was pro
ceeding on schedule by the re
latively familiar south col route.
The two teams had hoped to
meet at the summit Wednesday.
Storms slowed the west ridge
team, scattered its equipment
and nearly swept away two of its
members.
Exhausted Oxygen Supply
Whittaker and Gombu carried
special new lightweight oxygen
Briefs
Activities tonight include the
Founder's Day banquet of Beta
Alpha chapter, Epsilon Sigma Al
pha sorority, at 7 o'clock at the
Thunderbird. At 7:30: Bend High
class of 1953, reunion - planning,
with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Roger
son, 1334 E. Fifth Street; Central
Oregon Licensed Practical Nurses
Association, Sunset Home; Bend
High Music Boosters, lobby of
high school auditorium. At 8
o'clock: Bend Provisional League
of Women Voters, Junior High li
brary; Pine Forest Grange,
Grange Hall; Degree of Honor
with Mrs. Leo Mickel, 719 Dela
ware Avenue; Daughters of the
American Revolution with Miss
Zola McDougall, 716 Broadway
Avenue.
Senior High Music Boosters will
hold a meeting tonight at 7:30 in
the lobby of the BSHS auditor
ium. An election of officers will
be held and refreshments served
following the meeting.
. Golden Age Club members will
meet Wednesday at their quart
ers at Fifth amLGlenwood. Doors
will open at noon, with the meet
ing to start at 1 p.m. There will
be? card games. Refreshments
will be served.
Bug Snatchers 4-H Club, an en
tomology group, met recently at
the home of Andy Wayman, with
Charles Bigelow, leader, in
charge. Others present were Gary
Teachers host
mothers' tea
Special to The Bulletin
FORT ROCK Mrs. Freda
Thayer and Mrs. Lawrence Rice,
co-teachers at Fort Rock School,
were hostesses for a mothers' tea
at the school recently.
Pupils from both rooms sang
selections from the annual Lake
County rural school music festi
val held May 17 at Paisley. This
year's theme centers around
birds.
Twelve girls danced the "Mock
inebird Waltz." Their matching
skirts and hair bows were made
by mothers who had brought their
sewing machines to school where
they could measure and fit the
girls. White blouses completed
the costumes.
Dancers included, Suzanne Gil-
Intte. Theresa Chancy, Barbara
McAllister, Linda Goeres, Bobbie
Bruch, Patricia Murphy, Sandra
Dutcher, Laura Brown, Kyna
Hall. Sue Hall, Cora Lea Hamil
ton and Judy Irwin. First grader
Kathy Elifntz served as center
and wore a matching costume.
After the program the teachers
orved refreshments and there
was time for informal visiting.
Estate planning
forum on tap
U. S. National Bank will pre
sent another in its new 1963 se
ries of estate planning forums in
the lobby of the Bend Branch,
Tuesday evening, May 28. Taxes
and estates will be stressed in the
riirrent series.
The forum is scheduled for 7:30
p.m. with John W. btenitamp,
Rpnd Branch manager, presiding.
Th Madras and Redmond
branches will also be represent
ed at the May 28tn lonim.
Use The Bulletin's Classification
on to find the home ot your
dreams.
Your Local
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PHIL PHILBROOK
Jltllii "04 E. 3rd
had to struggle part
Everest sans oxygen
tanks on their climb into the rare
fied atmosphere on the. windswept
peak, but apparently exhausted
their supply on the way to the
top.
"We were without oxygen from
the summit until we reached our
camp, about three and a half
hours," Whittaker said.
He said the wind was so strong
at the peak that he and Gombu
could hardly speak to each other.
"There was no communication
other than by jerks of the rope,"
he said.
Whittaker said he and Gombu
reached the summit side by side
and remained there about 20
minutes. It was previously report
ed they had spent a half hour on
the peak.
"I was so busy I did not check
my watch all the time," he said.
U.S. Flag at Peak
He said he drove a four-foot
aluminum pole bearing the Ameri
can flag into the snow "at the
highest point of Everest."
"The flag was unfurled and fly
ing in the high wind," he said.
There was no sign of a bust of
Communist Chinese party leader
Mao Tze-tung at the summit,
Hfcre and'
Their
Rutherford, Chuck Page, Karen
Bigelow, Steve Maker and Debby
Winkle. Hans Larson was a visit
or. Members participated in an
insect-identifying contest
SOS Club will meet Wednesday
at 2 p.m. with Mrs. Harry Drake,
1124 E. Third Street
Sagebriuhert are having a
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
at 851 Roosevelt.
Bend Business & Professional
Women's Club will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in the home of
Mrs. Delores Russell, 1053 Edge
water Lane, for dessert and a
white elephant sale. Dues for the
coming year will be payable at
this final meeting.
Young Stockmen's 4-H Club will
assemble at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
in the district courtroom of the
courthouse. Members should bring
their projects and record books.
Those who won't attend are ask
ed to inform their leaders.
Mrs. William Selken and Mrs.
Anna Delaney spent the past week
in Portland visiting Mr. Selken,
who is being treated for a heart
ailment at the U.S. Veteran's Hos
pital. The couple stayed at the
home of Merritt Howe, Mrs. Sel
ken's brother.
Bend Jayce Auxiliary will
sponsor regular duplicate bridge
play Wednesday evening in uie
dining room of the Elks Temple,
starting at 8 o'clock. Mrs. Earl
Hannen and Mrs. Gary Hermann
will be hostesses.
Skyline Squares will hold a reg
ular square dance Wednesday
night in the Central Oregon Beau
ty College ballroom, starting at
8:30. Russ Kiel will call. Refresh
ments will be served, and all
square dancers are invited.
Bend Ladies of Elks will have
a potluck dinner Thursday, May
23, at 7 o'clock in the dining
room, following a half-hour cock
tail period. Members are invited
to bring guests, and all women
who are wives, sisters or mothers
of Elks are invited. Reservations
are to be made by Wednesday
noon with Mrs. Lowell McMeen,
telephone 382-3849.
Aboard the aircraft carrier USS
Kearsarge when astronaut Leroy
Gordon Cooper, Jr., splashed into
the Pacific Thursday afternoon
was Marvin O. McManmon, son
of Mr. and Mrs. John McManmon
of Burns Star Route, Bend. Mc
Manmon is an electrician's mate
fireman with the Navy.
Chapter DE of PEO Sisterhood
will have a 1 p.m. luncheon meet
ing Thursday in the home of Mrs.
Oliver Jones, Mar Koute, km-
mond. Mrs. Walter O. Berger will
act as co-hostess. The program
is being given by Mrs. H. J. Curl
and by Mrs. Helen Cross.
Esther Circle, First Lutheran
Ladies Aid, has postponed its
meeting, originally scheduled
Thursday, until Tuesday, May 28.
in order that its members attend
the Otto Larson funeral. Other
Circles will meet at 2 p.m. Thurs
day as planned.
KENNETH JOHNSON
Representative '
Whittaker said. A Chinese team
claimed it scaled the peak in 1960
and left the bust there. Whittaker
said it might have been lodged
among rocks just below the sum
mit on the Tibetan side, where he
did not venture.
Barry C. Bishop, 30, Washing
ton, and Luther G. Jerstad, 26,
Eugene, Ore., were reported fol
lowing the route of Whittaker and
Gombu through the south col in
good weather today, with a good
chance of reaching the summit
sometime Wednesday.
The National Geographic Society
in Washington said James B.
Corbet, 26, Jackson, Wyo., and
Allen C. Auten, 36, Denver, along
with four Sherpa guides, spent
last Thursday night clinging to the
edge of a crevasse while being
buffeted by 80-mile-an-hour winds.
Tents Blown Away
The men had slid 100 feet down
the ridge during a storm that
blew away their tents. They were
pulled to safety unhurt by another
member of the team who had
inched down from a higher camp.
Corbet, Auten and Dr. Richard
M. Emerson, 37, Cincinnati, set
out on a reconnaisance climb to
day, according to radio reports
from the base camp. They were
attempting to establish Advance
Camp 5 W as close to the sum
mit as possible.
Dr. William Unsoeld, 36. Corval
lis, Ore., and Dr. Thomas F.
Hornbein, 32, San Diego, planned
to follow three hours later, saving
their strength for the summit as
sault they hoped to make.
Staff members
-
explain budget
Members of the Tri - County
Health Department staff attend
ed the county budget meeting last
night, to explain askings for 1963-
64. Deschutes county's share of
the proposed budget is $45,798.80
for general health and $15,618 for
mental health, for a total of $61,
416.W. This is an increase of about
$8300 over last year's combined
budget, and just about represents
the county's share of the salary
of public health physician, Dr.
William Maier, who will join the
staff June 1.
Anticipated receipts are $20,
535.60 for the general health bud
get andll,022 for mental health.
The budgets were separated
this year because of a difference
in sources of funds. General
health receives 15 per cent federal
money, on the basis of expendi
tures. Mental health is supported
50 per cent by the state.
Salary Increases ot $25 monuuy
per staff member were request
ed. The board decided last week
to table salary fixing until other
budget items are established, and
then work out a general schedule.
This policy will be followed in the
health department as well as oth
er offices, it was indicated.
Speakers in the delegation were
Miss Hiltje Hubbard, head nurse;
Miss Helen Marcy, psychiatric so
cial worker, and A. W. Westfall,
sanitarian.
Daniels serves
in county jail
LeWayne Hubert Daniels, 19,
Bend, was fined $25 plus $5 costs
Monday in Deschutes County Dis
trict Court, on a disorderly con
duct charge. He had been arrest
ed early Saturday on the com
plaint of a restaurant north of
town, and was held in the city
jail over the weekend, unable to
post the $50 bail.
Daniels was using profane lang
uage and was intoxicated when
he was arrested, according to the
arresting officer.
Daniels was committed to the
county jail in lieu of the fine, and
is to be given credit for the time
spent in the city jail.
Missing boy's
body recovered
LONGV1EW, Wash. (UPI) The
body of Rickey Krugle, 3, was
found in the Columbia River near
here Monday afternoon.
The boy vanished April 30 while
playing near his home at Lex
ington which is about three blocks
from the Cowlitz River.
Sheriffs officers said the boy
apparently fell into the Cowlitz
and drowned and that his body
was carried downstream.
GOLDEN years???
Yes! If you are age 60 or over,
days can be sunny and serene
when you eliminate the worry
of sudden accident or sickness
expense. Call me now, and let
me explain the advantages of
our hospital surgical plan de
signed especially for men and
women 60 years and over.
EASTERN OREGON AGENCY
1043 Bond St. 382-3783
representing
WOODMEN
ACCIDENT
and
LIFE
COMPANY
Great issue posed by sit-in
prosecutions remains unsolved
By Charlotte G. Moulton
UPI Staff Writer
WASHINGTON (UPD-The Su
preme Court has momentarily re
moved the sting from Southern
sit-in prosecutions, but the great
issue posed by the cases remains
undecided.
It Is: Does a business establish
ment open to the general public
have a right to choose its own
customers?
This blockbuster was reserved
by the court at least until next
term.
It could be speculated that the
short step the court took Monday
was all it felt the country could
stand in view of current racial un
rest But the truth is that no one
but the nine justices know why
Full grazing
due on May 16
Full grazing use of the Fort
Rock district of the Deschutes Na
tional Forest will not be possible
this season until a week or more
following the regular
date, May 16.
opening !
Some cattle have been placed
on the forest, in instances where i
their presence on home ranches '
was causing some trouble, but
most of the stock will not be mov
ed on the range until later in the
week. Some of the cattle of Arn
old ranchers are now on the sum
mer range.
Jack Shumway of the Powell
Butte area placed some of his cat
tle on the federal range today.
on the Cinder Hill allotment west
of Pine Mountain. There are also
some cattle on Cabin Lake range.
maximum of around 2,000 cat
tle will be grazed on the district
this season. I
Sheep will not Co on the Fort
Rock range until after June 16, !
with a total of around 50,000 head
to be pastured there this summer. I
In 1940, there were about 50,000
in this same area.
Water for all stock on the Fort
Rock summer ranges is hauled,
mostly from deep wells. Fairly
good range is expected this sea
son.
Disturbance
brings action
SALEM (UPI) A disturbance
near the home of Gov. Mark Hat
field Saturday brought quick re
action trom the legislature.
A House joint memorial intro
duced today "directs the superin
tendent of state police to provide
security and protection for the
governor and the governor's fam
ily to the extent and in the man
ner the superintendent deems ap
propriate and adequate."
In Saturday s incident, a bullet
was fired into a car parked in
Hatfield s driveway.
FIGURE GIVEN
SALEM (UPI)- State-wide col
lections by the welfare recovery
division of the State Department
of Justice totaled $54,394 for April,
Atty. Gen. Robert Thornton said.
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Ml urtytni chariot, all Moral Um paid. Do. Mt htttoda apfloAal awlpmoat, trafisfotiaUoa. inwiau, atato and local Uitt, rl toy.
they do things, and they aren't
telling.
The court overturned trespass
and criminal mischief convictions
in four lunch-counter cases on he
ground that local governments
not storekeepers were actually to
blame for the racial discrimina
tion. Chief Justice Earl Warren held
in the court's decision that locai
laws and edicts had deprived busi
nessmen of their freedom of
choice as to who could be served
on their premises.
The thrust of the court's opin
ion was that so long as these laws
are on the books the proprietor of
a store is presumed to act under
them. What he would do if left
to himself is beside the point at
the moment, under the decision.
In one case, from New Orleans,
there was no local segregation
ordinance. But Warren said state
ments by the mayor and the po
lice superintendent amounted to
the same thing.
This handling or the touchy "sit
in" issue was urged on the court
by the Justice Department in ac
cordance with the time-honored
principle that a major constitu-
tional decision Is always avoid
ed u a case can De disposed 01
on narrower grounds,
As " Is. the decision will free
hundreds of demonstrators who
took part in the 196041 sit-in
movement in places having simi
lar segregation ordinances. They
have been free on bond awaiting
the results of Monday's cases,
which came from Greenville, S.C.,
Birmingham, Ala., and Durham,
N.C., in addition to New Orleans.
The ruling had the preculiar re
sult of barring discrimination in
cities where there are local ordi
nances requiring segregation, and
leaving the whole matter up In
the air in cities which
do not
have such ordinances.
The suggestion was made dur-
Ing November arguments that a
decision like Monday's might well
result in a rush to get such ordi-
nances off the books.
Justice Harlan Dissents
! ni i,n ti, t ui
U',.. from m.. .lrt.: rMsnn.
ing in the sit-in cases. He said
"Freedom of the Individual to
choose his associates or his neigh
bors, to use and dispose of his
property as he sees fit, to be irra
tional, arbitrary, capricious, even
unjust in his personal relations
are tilings all entitled to a large
measure of protection from gov
ernmental interference.
Harlan said the mere existence
of ordinances requiring segrega
tion in public eating places did
not remove the businessman from
the sphere of private choice. He
said it should be shown in each
case whether the proprietor was
motivated by the ordinance or by
some purpose of his own.
A case argued last fall first pin
pointed the rights of the operator
of a private business. It concerned
five Negroes who insisted on rid
ing the carousel in privately oper
ated Glen Echo Amusement Park
in Montgomery County, Md.
The court announced Monday
that the case would be re-argued
some time during the term start
ing next October.
Now you
r
bar none.
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Don't monkey
around with
Lucky Briggs
TITUSVILLE, Fla. (UPI) You
don't monkey around with Lucky
Briggs.
He won a $750 set of fancy dish
es in a drawing here, but It was
obvious he wasn't impressed. It
was even more obvious he'd never
use them. .
The First Federal Savings and
Loan Association pulled his name
out of a barrel last week and they
couldn t find bun. An ad was put
in the paper, and Lucky finally
showed up Monday. .
He wouldn't even talk to contest
officials and he refused to smile
for the cameras.
Lucky is a monkey.
His owner, Charles Briggs, put
Lucky's name into the contest oe-
cause "He s almost numan and
he'd seen all those humans putting
their names in."
Yukon flooding
forces families
to flee homes
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI) -Raging
flood waters of the Yukon
River in central Alaska and the
lower Kuskokwim River near the
southwest coast forced hundreds of
residents to flee their homes for
higher ground today.
Nearly 200 persons, mostly wom
en and children, were flown to
Fairbanks aboard Air Force
planes from the villages of Ruby,
Koyukuk, Campion and Galena on
the Yukon.
Emergency rations and medical
supplies were flown from Galena
to another river village, Nulato.
At Koyukuk, the water was ris
ing so fast that Air Force heli
copters were forced to pick up
evacuees with canvas slings be
cause the helicopters had no dry
ground space to land.
At Galena, the ice-choked Yukon
was within five feet of spilling
over a dike protecting the Air
Force installation there.
Air Force IX. Col. Richard Por-
tillo, Los Angeles, supervising the
operations of five H21 helicopters
and four C123 transport planes,
said massive chunks of ice and
debris were tearing up homes and
boats along the river.
The refugees were housed in a
Fairbanks school under the care
of the Red Cross. Radio stations
broadcast pleas for 'volunteer Jiclp
to tako care of the smaller chll-
Idren. Fairbanks Civil Defense di
rector Leonard Lobbon said the
Yukon was rising at the rate of
one foot in 12 hours at Galena.
Predicted rain threatened to make
flooding worse.
On the lower Kuskokwim. Bethel
Civil Defense Director Robert Gib
son said the water had reached
"an unprecedented dangerously
high" level. Townspeople at Bethel
were beginning to move to higher
ground and a number of small
homes at Napaskiak and Oscar
ville, just below Bethel, were al
ready Inundated.
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Otto S. Larson
taken by death
Otto S. Larson, 64 Gilchrist Ave
nue, died early Monday in his
home at the age of 74 years.
An employe of Brooks-Scanlon,
Mr. Larson had resided in the
community since 1923. He is sur
vived by his wife Selma, of Bend,
and two sisters and a mother liv
ing in Norway.
He was born in Norway on July
2, 1888. In Bend he was affiliated
with the First Lutheran Church,
the Sons of Norway and the Ma
sonic Order.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday in the Niswonger-Rey-nolds
Funeral Home. Graveside
services following at Pilot Butte
Cemetery will be in charge of the
Masonic Lodge, with George
Drost acting as chaplain. The
Rev. Richard Knutzen, First Luth
eran Church, will officiate serv
ices. Active pallbearers will be mem
bers of the Masonic Lodge: Chris
Kostol, Irving Walter, Clarence
Nelson, Robert Martin, W. A. Hun
nell and Elmer Hudson. Honorary
bearers are Knute Herland, Har
ry Herland, John Mikelson, Al
fred Fordcn, Harvey Olscn and
Gunnar Bjorvik.
Memorials to the First Lutheran
Church will be appreciated.
District court
cases reported
District Judge Joe Thalhofer,
back from active duty at Fort
Knox, Ky., with the National
Guard, held court yesterday to
clear up some unfinished busi
ness.
Bruce Thomas McKay, Salem,
was lined $30 for a basic rule
violation, and James Junior
White, Bend, paid $10 for an in
adequate muffler.
Truckers, arrested for over
loads, forfeited bail as follows:
William Donald Henderson,
Springfield, $92; Sisto Juarez Ren-
tcria, San Joaquin, Calif., $80;
Donald Wayne Winton, San Joa
quin, Calif., $25; Ralph Malcolm
llyder, Portland, $35.
A 14-year-old boy, Jim Edward
Humm, Bend, was fined $10 last
Friday for operating a motor ve
hicle without a license. Circuit
Judge Robert H. Foley sat in
Judge Thalhofcr's place.
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DAIRY MARKET . "
PORTLAND (UPI) Dairy
market: ,
Eggs To retailers: AA extr
large 39-43c; AA large 38-tlc; A
large 3740c; AA medium 32-37C;
AA small 28 30c; cartons l-3c
higher.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
prints 66c; cartons 3c higher; B
prints 65c.
Cheese (medium cured) To
retailers: 46-48c; processed Amer
ican 5-10 lb loaf, 4345c.
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND (UPI) (USDA)
Livestock:
Cattle 150; small lot choice
heifers 23; mostly choice 22.50.
Calves 50; few good choice
vealers 30-31.
Hogs 250; one lot 1 and 1
butchers 17. .
Sheep 100; no early sales;
around 1,650 old crop lambs held
over trom Monday,
POTATO MARKET
PORTLAND (UPI) Potato
market:
Steady; Ore Russets U.S. No 1
3.00-3.50, some best 4.25; sized 1
oz spread 5.00-5.75; bakers 4.00-
50; bakers U.S. No 2 3.25-3.50;
50 lb sks No 2 1.00-1.25. '
Rebekah Lodge;
r- I
session Friday
Bend Rebekah Lodge will hold a
regular meeting Friday at 8 p.m.,
at the Odd Fellows Hall. Mrs.
Kenneth Arnold, noble grand, will
be in charge.
The charter will be draped lit
memory of Mrs. Mary Cox, a
long-iime local member of the or
der. . . ,. .
Members and officers are ask
ed to be present to practice for
the re-obligation march, to be
given at a special meeting June
at 8 p.m. at the hall. The
state assembly president, Mrs.
Bertra Bagley, will make her of
ficial visit at that tune. The meet
ing will follow a 6:30. potluck 4u.
ncr.
After the meeting Friday, Mrs.
Ethel Gist and Mrs. Arnold will
serve refreshments.
ACME SILENT
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