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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1963)
10 7 , " tT ,'"'' " " ' : I M MR. AND MRS. Bend girl wed ' In Canal Zone Miss Robin Adair Boardman and Stephen Shepherd Belok were married May 23 in Baiboa, Canal Zone. The civil ceremony was performed in late afternoon, at the home of friends, Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Barkowitz. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Board man of Bend. The bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Belok, Hackensack, N.J. The ample will live in Balboa until BeJok completes military service. They plan to return to the States in September, 1H64. to enroll In an eastern university for graduate studies. Say goodbye to cocktail dress and full skirt By Gay Pauley , UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPU Say noon- bye to the cocktail dress in both title and traditionally full skirt, Bid farewell to the littlo black . crepe dress for late day, once the ' standby of every fashion-conscious woman s wardrobe. And say adieu also to the sweeping, full- skirted ball gown. AO these are so" rare In the New York fashion collections for Fall and Winter you can count their appearances on your hands. In their place, new names, bold and pastel shades to replace the black, and slithering evening gowns reaching to the floor. "This season, I predict the long dinner dress will be worn where last year a woman would have worn a short dress," said Larry Aldrlch, manufacturer and president of the New York cou ture group. Droll Renamed And in the two weeks I've been covering openings of the new collections, shown mainly for the nation's store buyers. I've heard the phrase "cocktail dress" twice. Moro often, it's a Into day dress In the parlance of the showroom conunentator. . , . Adelc Simpson, the designer manufacturer, renamed (lie cock tail "day's end social dress." Those dresses have changed In line from boll-shaped skirts and scooped necklines in warp silks to the sheerest of wools or crinkly and carved silks in colors ranging from palest pink and lime to bright reds , and greens. The line of the late day dress; slim. Formal Ltan For more formal occasions the look is also lean for the new son. son. There are a few dresses shaped closely to the figure with emplro waistlines. But most do. pend on draping the fabric through seaming and bias cut, to - outline the figure - skimming . ugnuy over n, not hugging it. Designers use both black and pastel colored wools of sheerest weight for many of the dinner dresses. By contrast, almost every collection has a group of formals in hnndjomo and costly brocades, metallics and jewel emoroidery. Numerous In both short and long nYessup coats are the copies of the casual trench coat. Every- ming s casual inese days on Sev. enth Avenue, center of the gar ment industry. NEED FOR KNOWLEDGE LEXINGTON, Va. (I'PD-Armv Secretary Cyrus R. Vance told the graduating class at Virginia Military Institute here Sunday tnat a bread knowledge of public affairs was needed to help main tain the United states role as leader of the free world. "In this day, in this land which leads the free peoples, we cannot afford, cftiiens who arc insensi tive to public affairs," Vance told the future Army officers The Bulletin, Monday, June 10, 1963 STEPHEN S. BELOK Mattress buyer lady of house in most cases By Jesse Bogus UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPI) -The con sumer who buys a new car today almost invariably road-tests it. If he buys a new house, he looks it over from foundation to roofpeak. Yet, although he spends a third of his life in bed; more time in sleep than in driving, and a high percentage of his time in his house or apartment will be spent in sleeping, rarely indeed does his mattress get more than the most casual type of hand-pressure or sit-down test before it is bought. The Burton-Dixie Corp. of Chi cago, in the sleep products busi ness for 67 years, finds that the average mattress buyer Is the lady of the house, and her usual method of picking one from an other is to tost each of a selec tion merely by pressing her hand on it or sitting on it. Please Lady Buyers Since such shopping habits are hard to change, Burton-Dixie some time ago decided to make the dovers on mattresses and box springs more attractive to the eyes: The result was the gradual disappearance of the old blue- and-wliite striped ticking which formerly was almost a standard uniform, for such bed gear. In its place have blossomed the pasti.3 and prints which now brighten the bedding corner of the furniture store. The Chicago firm, headed by John Sevcik, president of the Na tional Association of Bedding Manufacturers in 1059-60, found in its marketing research that there were differences in the types of mattresses selected by the home bodies and by the career woman. Choose Pastels Or Florals The woman who spends most of her time at home and is proud of her surroundings usually chooses a pastel color for mat tresses. The so-called career wom an tended to choose mattresses covered with floral prints. Most of tho reasons given for the trend away from tho old striped ticking was that it was just old-fashioned; it did not help to make bed-making any more pleansant. Yet 84 per cent of the women questioned in the market ing research said they didn't mind making beds with a new and more brightly adorned mattress; 21 per cent even said they en joyed it. All of 'which helped to boost sales of mnttrcsses, which was the idea in the first place. SEES PRO-COP TREND WASHINGTON UPI - Sen mirry uoiowntcr, K-Arti., says Republican chances for winning the White House "are not blight right now. . .but they are getting Drigmcr every day." Goldwator, a possible presiden tial nominee, said Sunday that "it s becoming increasingly cvh dent that any Republican would be more desirable than what we have today. WE'VE MOVED! That's right Woodmen's Bend offices have been moved to a new, more central location for your convenience. You're invit ed to visit our new quarters at 13S OREGON AVENUE. EASTERN OREGON AGENCY 135 Oregon Ave. 382-378 representing WOODMEN ACCIDENT and LIFE COMPANY Army fries to reduce pack weight WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Army is doing its best to reduce the pack of the foot-slogging soldier, but progress has been slow, the Defense Department re ported today. . - The fully armed infantryman now carries a total of 90 pounds of clothing, weapons, and pack. This compares with just over 100 pounds when the GI's surged over the beaches on D - Day in World War II, and with 92 pounds in the frigid cold of Korea. Scientific studies have shown Hiat, ideally, the infantryman should not carry more than 50 pounds, preferably by hand or not more than 40 pounds in a shoulder pack. So there still is a long way to go. Asks For Study According to the independent Army-Navy-Air Force Journal, Defense Secretary Robert S. Mc- Namara has asked for a study of the weight of the soldier's pack. The publication said the study was included on a list of projects not yet made public. But the Journal noted that every previous defense secretary has asked for similar studies, with little noticeable result. The Army said the World War II and Korea packs were almost the same, except that the latter was "lightened by using a bed roll instead of blankets." Somewhat lighter packaging and thinner cartridge cases have helped trim off another two pounds since the Korean War. Makeup Of Load The current distribution of the soldier's weight-load was given as follows: Clothing, including a nine pound armored vest, 23 pounds. Battle load, including a rifle, grenades, ammunition and so forth, 31 pounds. The pack, called the "exist ence and comfort load" and in cluding bed roll, gas mask, toilet articles, rations and such, 36 pounds. Reds continue Laos advances VIENTIANE, Laos (UPO -Neutralist Gen. Kong Le confer red with Premier Souvanna Phou- ma here today on new Commu nist advances which threatened to encircle neutralist headquarters on the Plain of Jars. Kong Le told Souvanna Sunday that two I -llions of Communist Pathet 1 ;ps had skirted his artillery i and turned his southern I,.i..k. pushing to a point five miles south of neutralist head quarters at Muong Phanh. It was the deepest penetration by the Pathet Lao troops re portedly led by Communist North Vietnamese officers sir.ee th.y captured Dong Dane from the neu tralists early last week. Diplomatic observers said the Pathet Lao were aiming to win place in the coalition govern ment for dissident neutralists who have broken away from Kong Le and sided with the Communists. This would give the Communists half of a four-way coalition in stead ot one-third of the present setup. SHIP AND TRAVEL... ajLitomated rail way UNION PACIFIC For information, call: 332-1901 CHET MYERS Agency Mgr. .n H. w.J. J Educators' experiences with legislature in 1963 ranged from cordial to rugged Editors note: The education of more than one-half million youths from first grade through college and graduate study is Oregon's greatest expense. How did educa tion fare at the 1961 legislature? By Zan Stark and Ann H. Pearson UPI Staff Writers SALEM (UPI) The Educa tors responsible for Oregon's stu dents came to the 1963 legislature with pleas, cajolery, and warn ings that the level of education must be kept up. Their experiences with the leg islature ranged from cordial to rugged. When it was all over, their feelings ranged from satisfied, to mixed, to outspokenly adverse. The biggest problem was money. Education will take more than half the $404 million for the next two years. The most bruising fight was over the college and university system, which got the most detailed re view of any subject before the legislature. Walsh Urged More When the legislature convened in January, William Walsh of the state Board of Higher Education jabbed his glasses at a commit tee and declared the system would fight for more than the gov ernor had proposed. It ended up with a little less, but in view of the money prob lem, it fared well. Higher education came out with a $77.3 million general fund oper ating budget plus $2 million for a hospital transferred to its medi- FOR THE BIRDS VERWOOD. England (UPI) Stephen Morey has two garages but birds have built nests in both of them so he parks his car outside. vmMiJ SiZJ p;pLiiJ Mp If3 ill IlL ML . Ill III Mli'ililiiJ hi.ti.a WhiiLjL . f tmm -in i r ' nli t ,j jrrii. mi, -J AiiLi )!,4mJ tmI U-rfn WIiyuljuii(iaalieilieliiiiBUaM i i .lu.,, Mflfc I 1 l.'atgaasacyWESLl ' 150 GALL0 VACATION GAS... Yours FREE with the purchase of any new 1 963 Ford car or truck . . . now at R0BBERS0N FORD! Get free plus amazing savings, too! example: NEW 1963 FORD FOUR-DOOR STATION WAGON IT'S A BEAUTY! Ming green with a big 170-cu. in. special engine . . . white sidewall tires . . . electric tail gate window . . . deluxe wheel covers . . . heater . . . plus full factory equipment. License and title includedl ONLY cal school from the board of con trol. It was given a $44 million build ing program, using both bonds and general funds, although a por tion of it is contingent upon voter approval of a bond issue. And it got $1.7 for salary improvements over and above built-in raises. The main cuts in the operating budget came from a reduction in new teachers. Under legislative pressure, the system also in creased student fees, particularly for out-of-state students. Deterioration Claimed When it ended, Walsh called it "the hardest blow higher educa tion has suffered in 20 years. . . it means a real deterioration." ChanccIlorR. E. Lieuallen spoke more softly. He said the system "fared well in some areas and suffered setbacks in others." He was critical of faculty cuts, and said inadequate salary money will cause the system to "slip back an additional step or two." His praise took in graduate pro grams and scholarships. The new chancellor also spoke well of the committee that gave him his baptism on fire at the leg islature. Its members, after work ing with him through the session, returned the praise and called relations a "decided improve ment" over 1961. But a few other legislators were rankled at education pressures, and termed Lieuallen the legisla ture's "highest paid lobbyist." Gov. Mark Hatfield called the legislature's actions "detriment al to the quality of higher edu cation." Freedom Left Intact In an area perhaps more im portant than money, however, higher education came out of the session with its freedom intact. The lawmakers talked, as they 99 37J MONTHS ON THE BALANCE $2463 FULL PRICE! " 1 . . .i ---.. .I.-: i- i 1. inn I always do, of spelling out just where the dollars are to be spent, as is done in other budgets, but they didn't do it. For lower education, from grade one through community colleges, the legislative experience was quieter and happier. Hatfield and Superintendent of Public Instruction Leon Minear noted that schools got what the governor requested, and the com munity colleges got a little more. The legislature approved $141 million for aid to schools, an in crease of about $10 per child. It still left the state's share of school costs at only about 39 per cent. Special Programs Helped Special programs got $5.8 mil lion, community colleges, $4.3, the department of education and vo cational rehabilitation $4.1. The legislature said it's possible for new community colleges to be created, but they won't get any state help for a while. Of equal importance, the legis lature overhauled basic school funding, separating special pro grams and changing to a more realistic count of school children. Its appropriations come out to $143 per child the first year of the biennium and $152 the second. Adjustments were made else where in education. To move school district reorganization along another small step, a rw unit was created the inter mediate education district. It will have the effect of letting the old county superintendent's offices contract. across county lines. SCREENS " TRI-COUNTY WINDOW PRODUCTS 382-2824 or 447-7095 gas For DOWN Temperatures Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT to- High Low I Bend 61 33 1 Astoria 62 SI Baker 58 47 1 K. Falls 64 40 : Medford 74 39 1 Newport 60 43 1 N. Bend 65 51 1 Pendleton 68 50 Portland 65 47 Redmond 63 43 Salem 64 49 The Dalles 69 55 Chicago 98 74 Los Angeles 66 58 New York 87 69 San Fran. 60 52 Washington 89 74 GREETING FOR JFK HONOLULU (UPI) Among 100,000 Hawaiians cheering Presi dent Kennedy Sunday was one who took note of his Boston ac cent by waving this sign "Aloh er. Jack." LETTER HEADS letterheads, two heads are better than one yours and oursl We can help you with style, color and substance, so that your business stationery is in harmony with your business, itself. Let's get together for an analysis of your printing needsl Quality printing lor more than half a century 936 Bond Street 3824261 WANT A FREE DEMONSTRATION? Just give any one of these Robberson Ford rep. resentatives a call, for a no-obligation test drive. We'll pick you up at your home any time you wish I JACK SWANS0N r.fcphon.M2,,M DEAN THOMPSON BOB 0RCUTT r.fcphon.MM3o1 424 E. 3rd 3824521 J June 10, 1963 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT application was made on the 24th day of May, 1963, by Western Union Tel egraph Company to the Fed eral Communications Com mission to discontinue their telephone - operated agency office at Sitters, Oregon. If application is granted, substitute service will be available by telephone through the Western Union Telegraph Company's offices at Bend, Oregon, the com bined hours of which repre sent an "always open" basis. Any member of the public desiring to protest or sup port the closing of this office may communicate with the Federal Communications Commission, Washington 25, D.C. on or before June 30, 1963. When it comes to