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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1963)
The Bulletin, Monday. June 3, 1963 . fitsk mm Z r.lrirIk.9'rtjC8'r9 ,1ch,olir,hiP 9!"" B.nd Elk. w.r. .moo, ,.nior, honor- BpKr R I? n T ,,ft ,r C' Jhnn' youth "Mp scholarship win- Su.nS to Central Oregon Coll.,., .nd Sunn Schilling. Elks commercial scholarship. Many received other award.. Saturday, Sunday were days of confusion for lawmakers By Zan Stark UPI Staff Writer SALEM (UPI- Saturday, then Sunday, were days of disappoint ment, bitterness, frustration and confusion in the Capitol Building. The legislature was supposed to adjourn sine die but didn't. Saturday was a day of hopeful anticipation when the Senate and House convened at 9 a.m. But as the day grew longer, tempers shortened, plans were changed, the unexpected became the rule. Spectators In the galleries were confused as each house met for I while to act on a few bills, then recessed to wait for the other, and to let legislators confer. It was late in the afternoon when the trouble surfaced. The House refused to vote on the heavily - lobbied three - way workmen's compensation meas ure. The Senate Issued an ultima- Rain may force opera inside WASHINGTON (UPI) - Every thing was "go" except the weath er for the White House outdoor opera tonight honoring visiting president of India, Sarvepalli Rad hakrishnan. A steady rain threatened to mov. indoors a performance of "Th Magic Flute" which Presi dent and Mrs. Kennedy had plained as an aftermath to a stat! dinner. The Opera Society of Washing ton had to forego use of a por table stage with magnificent sets ofc the south lawn late Sunday nght to rehearse in the East Doom because of the drizzle. They are scheduled to run iSrough the Mozart fairytale again this afternoon for two very spe cial guests 5-year-old Caroline Kennedy and her 2 years old j brother John Jr. ' The two youngsters are expected to get' a thrill from the cavorting performers dressed as monkeys, lions and leopards and a blue crocodile who slithers on the stage when the magic instruments are played. First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, who Is expecting her third child in August, plans to attend the dinner in honor of the Indian dignitary. She has cancelled all of her offi cial schedule but will make an e ccplion tonight, having been a special guest in India last year. The lead roles will be played by Patricia Brooks and George Shir ley, a Negro, both of the Metro politan Opera Co. Redmond stop set by fliers tptclal fa Tha Bulletin REDMOND Redmond citi zens will form a welcoming com mittee to greet some 40 women pilots, flying In the Oregon Ninety-Nines' Petticoat Derby, when they make a stop at Roberts Field June 22. The Redmond Airport Commis sion has arranged for a delega tion to meet the group with cof fee, sandwiches, doughnuts and souvenirs. The women will take off from Troutdale and plan to stop at Redmond, Eugene, Astor ia. Springfield. Pendleton and Condon. Charlotte Dodson. Port land, chairman of the Ninety Nines, savs the derby is a navi gation contest for stock airplanes, the winner to be judged on the point system. Your Local ELECTROLUX Dealer PHIL PHILBROOK 38M251 M E. 3rd ' ia taut - "jflffKJfcy I x turn: Vote on the bill or the Sen ate will adjourn until Monday. Measure Killed House members were polled. When leaders were certain the bill could not pass, the rules suddenly were suspended. The House then killed the measure. Throughout the evening and night the hallways between the Senate and House were jammed with clusters of lobbyists. Some, smiling and relaxed, were waiting to see what would happen. Others, angry, tense and threatening, frantically tried to get last-minute consideration of a pet measure. By evening, all that blocked ad journment was a decision on high er education salaries, and whether the Portland tuberculosis hospital should be closed. Conferees argued, pleaded, threatened. But each chamber, sore at the other, refused to give. Sen. Dan Thiel, D-Astoria, who collapsed of exhaustion Friday, was ordered by the legislatures doctor not to serve on a confer ence committee. The House formally excused Rep. Joe Rogers, R-Independence, for a couple of hours so he could attend his daughter a wedding. Rep. Ray Dooley, D - Portland, who suffered a heart attack ear lier in the week, notified the speaker he had gone home. Pages stuffed legislators' papers and books Into boxes piled up along the walls of each chamber. Families Tired Lawmakers' families who had come to Salem to see the final hours became weary. Desk staffs worked frantically to keep records straight. Senators suggested going home until Monday. Senate President Ben Musa stalled them. Then at 11 p.m., the Senate recessed until Sunday afternoon. The news stunned many secre taries, clerks and onlookers. The House threatened to quit until Monday. Then, after a caucus of nearly an hour, agreed to quit un til Sunday too. A pretty page exploded, "Damn, this will go on forever." A representative's wife, tired and puzzled, scolded her husband, "We can't stay. There's no place for the children to sleep." At midnight, the representatives trickled out of the Capitol. Sunday, no one was much hap pier about the political situation, but a night's sleep had made it possible to laugh a little. The spark of impending ad journment had died away, but the fire of the feud had not. Some were surprised, more seemed bitter Sunday night when a day's efforts at compromise was killed by a vote in the House. The Senate, enraged, laid off all secretaries and extra help and dug in for a long siege. The House followed suit an hour later. The 52nd legislative assembly girded for the 141st day. BUSINESS . . . runs more smoothly, more ef ficiently, when the daily routine is handled with the proper business forms -and that's where Fowler Print ing comes in. Call us or see us soon for a helpful discussion about your specific needs. Quality Drtfltlo k inur 938 Bond Street Band leader Skinnay Ennis dead at age 56 BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (UPI) Skinnay Ennis, S6, died Sunday night, the third bandleader who gained fame during the "era of the big bands" to die within one month. Cause of Ennis' death was not immediately determined, but an investigating officer said Ennis was choking on something when he arrived. The officer said the bandleader had stopped breathing and he applied external heart massage after trying to clear his throat. Ennis apparently revived mo mentarily but succumbed before medical aid could be reached. Police said an autopsy would be conducted today to determine cause of death. Ted Weems and Eddy Howard, both famed bandleaders of the same era and friends of Ennis, died last month. Howard choked during his sleep at his homo in Palm Springs May 18. Weems died May 6 at Tulsa, Okla. Ennis got his first big boost to fame in 1938 from Bob Hope, with whom he appeared for about eight years on Hope s radio show. That s so sad, so sad, so sad," Hope said early today when told of Ennis' death. "He was a wonderful guy, a wonder ful man. Why, only the other night he was on my birthday show." Born Edgar Clyde Ennis, the bandleader attended the Univer sity of North Carolina before join ing the Hal Kemp band as a drummer and featured singer. He had appeared at the Statler Hilton in Los Angeles for the past five years for seven or eight months out of the year and still sang with his band. He spent the rest of the year on tour or on vacation with occasional televi sion appearances and recording sessions. He recorded his theme song,. "I've Got a Date With an Angel," last in 1959. Ennis was divorced by his wife, the former Carmine Calhoun, In 1959 after 20 years of marriage. They had one son, Chris, 13. She was once a singer and appeared with Ennis' band. Warren gets advance rating Special to Tha BulltHn GILCHRIST Everett Gerald Warren, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac A. Warren, Box 675, Gil christ, has been advanced to the rate of radioman third class. Everett enlisted in the Navy in November 1961, at Bend, Oregon and is presently serving aboard the USS Penguin (ASR-12). than half a century 3824261 i 'Nature Girl' of 1957 has come long way since then GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI) -At 16, aha was an uneducated North Carolina mountain girl who wandered the backwoods in tat tered clothes and often without enough to eat. Today, Miss Dorothy Brown, 1957's "nature girl" is a college graduate and looking forward to teaching career and being "somebody." Dorothy's success story goes back to a hot day in August of I9o7. On that day, MooresvUle newspaperman Tom McKnlght and a photographer captured her natural beauty on film as the girl, who became known as "Long Sam," after the cartoon charac ter, stood beside a mountain stream. In National Spotlight McKnight was responsible for national distribution of the picture and later the Charlotte Observer ran a Sunday feature on the back woods girl which was picked up around the country and overseas. Dorothy suddenly found herself pushed into a national spotlight before a sometimes unbelieving public. Dorothy was one of nine chil dren of Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Brown who lived a hand-to-mouth existence near MooresvUle. The couple withdrew Dorothy from school when she was 14 to help take care of the other children and to do part time work In the area as a babysitter. "There were lots of skeptics then and I suppose there are now," Dorothy recalled after graduating from Woman's College here. "We did live In destitute cir cumstances and there were times when we didn't have anything to eat. You enn't begin to imagine what it was like to live like we did unless you've experienced a similar existence," she said. Appointed Ouardlan After his discovery, McKnlght was appointed the young girl's guardian and later an elderly Charlotte philanthropist paid $750 a year toward her education at Wingate Junior College where she crammed four years of courses Jackie's doq expecting soon WASHINGTON (UPI) Push inka, the doe Soviet Premier Nl- kita S. Khrushchev gave to Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, Is expecting again. The fluffy, white 2-year-old off spring ot tne Russian space dog, Strelka, is expected to deliver a litter in two or three weeks, it was learned today. The White House declined to confirm or deny that Pushinka was showing signs of mother hood. The pet was pregnant last December but suffered a miscar riage. , Five-year-old Caroline Ken nedy's Welsh Terrier "Charlie" is believed to be the father. Pushinka was sent to the First Lady as a gift in June, 1961, aft er the Kennedys and Khrushchevs had met in Vienna. GRANTS TAX RELIEF WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. Bernard F. Grabowski, D-Conn., said Sunday he had prepared a bill to grant tax relief for ex penses incurred in adoption of children. Grabowski said in a statement it seemed "unjust" that persons who adopted children were de nied tax advantages given to par ents for the expenses of childbirth. WORLD'S FIRST PRACTICAL HAIR PIECEI if Absolutely undetectable if Patented plastic base if As easy to put on as your hatl if No net no glue no fuss no mess I SEE THE NEW STYLES being demon I strated by Osver Gibson June 17 and 18 at the Pilot Butte Inn, 1101 Wall St., Bend. Phone 3824111 for private ap pointment ... or mail coupon below for further information. a ' Taylor Topper, Inc. lMl El Csmino Real " Attn: OsVer Gibson Millbri., Calif., Dept. B.B. 5 minutes from San Francisco International Airport. Please send me FREE, without obligation on my part, full details on TAYLOR TOPPER in plain envelope. 1 I WAMfl I NAME STREET CITY , TELEPHONE NO into two years before transfer to Woman's College. At the time Dorothy said "You've got to have an education to be somebody." She still stands by her desire to be somebody. "1 still want to be somebody, not necessarily somebody special, but a person who is worthwhile and who can help others In some way." This fall, Dorothy will begin teaching on the elementary level in the Charlotte Mecklenburg County school system. "Tell all those people who have written to me or have helped me along with their good wishes how appreciative I am of what has been able to happen to Dorothy Brown," she told reporters short ly after her graduation Sunday. She finally has degree from Yale NEW HAVEN. Conn. (UPI) Miss Matilda Fenberg entered the Yale Law School in 1919 and studied diligently for three years, but failed to win her degree. She complied with ail conditions for her degree except that her weighted average grade for her third year was only 60.2 points, 0.3 below the required total. Undismayed by her failure to win a degree, Miss Fenberg re turned to her native state of Ohio and passed the state bar examina tion. In 1923, she was admitted to the Illinois bar and moved to Chi cago where she became a law as sociate of famed attorney Clarence Darrow whom she served until 1928. Miss Fenberg was admitted to practice before the U. S. Supreme Court in 1937. Yale announced Sunday night that she was denied a degree due to a technical mix-up In tier rec ord. School officials said she had taken a law course at Columbia University In the summer of 1919 and attained a grade of "B." They said the grade was sufficient to raise her grade above the required 60,5 and she would receive her Bachelor of Laws de gree at Yale commencement June 10. Miss Fenberg, who maintains her law offices In Chicago, has in formed Yale officials that she will be on hand to accept the degree. Ste Is 75. PickeH pulled at Klamath Falls KLAMATH FALLS (UPl)-Ma- chinists Union pickets were re moved from the big Weyer haeuser Co. sawmill plant here Saturday afternoon, only hours after a hastily called strute snut the mill. The Machinists Union, Local 1943, shut down the mill at ( a.m. when the current contract ex pired. The union represents 200 of the 800 employes at the mill. The company and union offic ials met Saturday morning and it was decided to extend the con tract into next week pending fur ther negotiations with a federal mediator. A union spokesman said work ers wanted a 10 per cent wage increase across the board and other undisclosed contract changes. If it's gone you can't restore it . . . and old-fashioned wigs are impractical. The answer? The amazing new TAYLOR TOPPER STATE Bishop Dagwell taken by death PORTLAND (UPI) - The Rt. Rev. Benjamin Dunlop Dagwell, retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Oregon, died Sunday night He was 73. Bishop Dagwell had preached a sermon at an evening service and was returning to his home at the Arlington Club when he collapsed as he got out of his car. The Rev. H. C. Greenfield, who had followed Bishop DagweU home in his own car, said the bishop had complained of not feel ing well just before leaving the church service. Bishop Dagwell was born July 21, 1890, in Pennsylvania. He was the fifth bishop of the Oregon uioceso ot tne Episcopal Church, succeeding the late Rt. Rev. Wal ter Taylor Summer In 1936. Bishop Dagwell was active In civic affairs here. He acted as chairman of a committee of min isters who participated in a labor and industries board formed In 1938 and has served since as a regent of Reed College and as Portland Housing Code chairman. He was honored as Portland's first citizen in 1957. In November of 1960 he took a temporary assignment as acting rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Rome.' He returned to Oregon in 1981. Funeral arrangements were pending. White House has new social aide WASHINGTON (UPI) - A pe tite, attractive brunette takes over command of White House so cial activities today from Letitia Baldrige who has resigned to work for the Kennedy family In Chicago. Miss Nancy Tuckerman, a for mer roommate of First Lady Jac queline Kennedy at Miss Portier's School in Farmington, Conn., said she still has a "lot to leant" about her new job as social sec retary. Nicknamed "Tuck" or "Tucky", Miss Tuckerman has been visiting the White House for the past month to be briefed on presiden tial protocol, partying and plan ning by "Tish" Baldrige. She Is attractive with golden brown hair, blue eyes and a comely B-foot-5 figure and dresses fashionably. For the past ten years aha has been a New York travel agent. Previously, Miss Tuckerman was a secretary at Miss Chapin s School. She is a political Independent." Miss Baldrige is leaving the White House to work for the Ken nedy family enterprise in Chi cago, the Merchandise Mart, starting July 1, BISQUICK "The Variety REG. 47c Save 18c 40-oz. Pkg. sssi Tomato Juice Felgar'a COFFEE . Best Feeda COOKING OIL Nallty-i FRENCH DRESSING Hand's Sterna A PlK.a MUSHROOMS Golden Crltp SLICED BACON Shoulder Cut PORK STEAK P.sWJ Hi I SHOT mTDAYYOU jgS Limit Rights Reserved HOLD BRIEF SESSION - WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate dashed through a si second session Friday but failed to set a new record for brevity. Tha session was officially record ed for tha Congressional Record at six seconds, and an unofficial stopwatch clocked It at nine. In neither case was It a Senate record. AS .ONLY W& SLEEK. SUMMING. AND OH SO COMFORTABLE,, IN HELANCA STRETCH NYLON. , White, fiiack and Assorted Colors 'a M0.95 : Prices Effective June 3-4-5 Baking Mix" Limit Please Tastewell 46-oz. Tin 2-lb. 1 17 Tin 1 Mb. Tin Qlurt49c Bo8t 19c 2n10c Mb. Pkg. 49' lb. ' In im a similar pro forma session took six seconds, and the late Alben W. Barkley got the job done In five seconds on Sept. 4, 1951. The session is made neces sary by the constitutional require ment that neither House recess for more than three days without obtaining formal permission from the other. Pants CAN FASHION THEM? i R IF Toilet Tissue Soflin White or Colored 4uWpc nl 17c SNOW'S Minced or Chopped Clams, Clam Chowder or Stew Your Choice CQc J7 41 00 CANTALOUPE Large, Thick-Meated 19c each CONGRESS THRIFTWAY 210 Congress 382-4711