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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1963)
Call to arms You can't tell from the When the Fourth holiday .Time was when you could never ' be confused about the arrival of Independence Day.- The kids wouldn't let you. They were on the streets In droves at the crack of dawn, setting off an endless stock of Roman candles, Chinese firecrack ers, Jady-fingers, rockets, cherry bombs and every other conceivable device capable of making a prodi gious racket. Nobody ever overslept on the morning of the Fourth. ' In most states, though as in Oregon fireworks are now a thing of the past; Legislation has pretty much done away with their sale and use. In a way, this is unfortunate. Fireworks have always provided much of the drama of America's most American holiday. But the lawmakers really had little choice. Too many youngsters suffered dis figuration from burns, or loss of .- .-. . ' , . - Uncomfortable A group of Oregon newspaper editors were whillng away time in a plane ten days or so ago, when one asked his fellows: "What's the most thankless job the governor of Oregon has to do? What's the one duty he's required to perform . which can draw the most fire?" The answer was quick, and unanimous. Everyone agreed that appointing a member of the Oregon State Game Commission probably brought more criticism down on the governor, and the appointee, than any other act a governor might be expected to perform during his term in office. Oregon , governors (ask Bob Holmes) have discovered in the past that those who hunt and fish in this state probably have stronger opinions on their pet subjects than almost any other Oregon group. So it was last week when Gov ernor Mark Hatfield announced the appointment of Pat Metkc of Bond as a member of the Game Commis sion. All sorts of guesses have been made which have attempted to put some sort of construction upon Hat field's motives in appointing Metkc or upon Metke's qualifications for the job. ; Too often those who seek ap pointment to the board and some pretty fancy lobbying has been done in 'past years for various favorite son candidates are single-interest men. They want to "straighten the commission out" on deer seasons, or trout limits, or salmon tags, or bird seasons, or limits, or something. The commission is relatively big business. It spends about S4 mil lion per year. Its actions touch most Oregonlans, including those who do not fish, or hunt. It must pay atten tion to striped bass in Coos Bay, black bass In Malheur Reservoir, salmon in Hosrwr lake, gteelhead in the Rogue, trout In the Santlam, deer in Central Oregon, elk In Wal lowa county, and many other things besides. Members of the commission, or employes of the commission, can not afford to be single-Interest men. The state cannot afford to have single-interest men on the commis sion. Metke's background is a rela tively good one, when it Is judged against commission appointments 1 '.v," ' ' noise comes fingers, vision, and even life. The drama has gone out of the Fourth, but, more important, so have those annual dangers. What remains for the kids to entertain themselves with? Not much. Oregon statute limits their holiday playthings to sparklers and paper-cap guns or canes that is, caps containing .25 grains or less of explosive compound. And the selling of fireworks in Oregon is strictly forbidden, except when sold for the purpose of an organized fireworks display. Bend has one grand-scale fire works display during the upcoming Water Pageant this month. This, it seems, will be the only opportunity youngsters have to watch what was once a traditional participant recreation. made by some governors In the past. He has had legislative experience, which is always valuable. He served for two years on a legislative in terim committee on fish and game, an education in itself. It Is true he does not hunt and fish to tho exclusion of every other spare-time activity. And although he has the desire and background to make a good commissioner, it is a foregone conclusion he will join other members of the commission in some unpopular decisions. There is no way to make all decisions of the commission popular. There is no way to make all ap pointments to the commission pop ular with all the diverse groups which take an interest in the work of the commission. If there is a way to perform this latter task, wire, don't write, to: Governor Mark O. Hatfield Oregon State Capitol . Salem, Oregon He'll be glad to hear from you. Quotable quotes There will be a unified, reunited Gorman nation. In our time it .can not be anything else than a unified socialist Germany. Sooner or later the imperialists will be thrown back. They will be smashed back. So viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, at a rally of 2,000 guests honoring East Berlin boss Walter Ulbrlcht. I regard that as being the most vicious and un-Christlan provision that's been in any piece of legisla tion since I have been a member of Congress. Sen. Richard Russell, (D-Ga.), on civil rights legislation which would give the President au thority to withhold federal funds from local projects involving discrimination. We are tired of canned reports, misleading synopses, garbled ac counts, half-truths and no-truths. Levi Laub, leader of 59 American college students who journeyed to Havana against State Department wishes to see what is happening in Cuba. I feel great. Bernard Harris, father of quadruplets. A school bus campouf fakes Oregonians across t he nation fo see the sights By Yvonne Franklin Bulletin Correspondent WASHINGTON Cynics who worry about what the younger generation Is coming to should take a look at the youngsters from around Colton, Oregon, who re sourcefully planned and made money for a month' camping trip across the continent to Washing ton, D C. in a borrowed school bUS. ' . '.' Around their campsite 30 miles from Washington, In the last hours before dark, after an exhausting day of touring the Capital, the 22 students and four adults explained how it all had happened. Roger Bishop's 8th graders he Kan talking alwut the United Na tions in history class last October and somewhere the idea was born i to make a trip East to see it and f their country. The students wrote .1 Ipltprs In nirtitlAS and hiiaoa nnrf J found it would cost $3000 to char. ter a bus and more to fly, which was too much. They thought thoy might be able to raise enough money if they could use a school bus. So they sent a delegation of five students to talk to the School Board about borrowing one. Evin Frank, a bubbling yet serious blonde, explained to the Board why they wanted to go: to learn to ac cept responsibility, to learn to live together, to learn the value of a dollar, and to see their American heritage. Gary Garbctt (who was pointed out as "our best athlete") pre sented the plan for using the bus and Ihe expected cost of operation. Sandy Bolkan showed maps of the itinerary, Charlcne Gall told how they expected to raise the money, and Alice Swanson summarized Ihe entire venture. Not surprisingly, the Board said they'd have to think about such a "wild idea", but by. springtime they had talked themselves into it and agreed to lease the bus to the class for a dollar, provided they met all expenses of running It. The boys and girls raised $1200 by randy sales, holding a circus and other means, and at the end Washington jyigu-rouiui Kennedy will find Italy's problems like his own By Drew Pearson WASHINGTON The first Catholic President in American history will find political prob lems similar to his own when lie meets with the leaders of the leading Catholic country of Eur ope. It so happens that the Christian Democratic Party, completely Catholic, which has dominated Italy ever since the war, has drifted fiu'Uier and further away from tho original liberal leader ship of Premier De Gasperi, and the recent liberalism of Pope John and Premier Fanfani; so that today the new premier can not control a majority in Parlia ment. Simultaneously In the U n 1 1 e d States, the Democratic Party, which John F. Kennedy heads, has drifted more and more away from his liberal leadership, so that today he cannot control a majority in Congress. Actually the Democratic Party in the United States is composed of splinter groups, similar to the splinter groups in the Italian government. All during the Roose velt and Truman administrations the Democratic Party consisted of an alliance between the Prot estant south: the big city ma chines, largely Catholic: labor, also largely Catholic; with con- sldorahle support from Jewish and Negro void's. But Ilia Democratic south, now prosperous from the southward trek of Industry and aroused over Civil Rights, has largely deserted tho Democratic President; while his own Catholic supporters have drifted more to the suburbs ami new middle class prosperity, and with this Uiey have more and more deserted their old liberal ism. Protpereus Italy In Italy the movement has been somewhat different, but the political results are similar. The population move in Italy '.las been from the poverty-stricken south to the prosperous north, where the Fiat Auto Works. Uic PcrcHi Tire factory, and various steel mills have made northern Italy one of the most prosperous areas in the world. These southern workers, moving to the unionized north, have join ed tin well-organized Communist t. i i wvm J n ni Si-1 vtv i , The Bulletin Monday, July 1, 1963 An Independent Newspaper Robert W. Chandler, Editor Cltnn Cushman, Central Manager Jack McDarmott, Adv. Manager Phil p. Brogan, Associate Editor Lou W. Mayers, Circ. Manager Lor an E. Oyer. Mech. Sup't. William A. Yates, Managing Ed. nterert At so r-0 Claa Mslter. Ja-unr S. 1817. at ta FVt Office at b,ra Or,!. U' tor Art of Maivh 4, 11. iuUik.td daily except Sunday hM c.-aji taxiilaji by T;w band tsulucun. Inc. Capital Report I a I' irtiiirfif'faaMMtiiiiiftjMifciiiiiiiftiiririiijft of the semester they each bor rowed $50 from their parents to , moot unexpected expenses. They will pay this back upon their re turn by working in fields picking beans. They left home June 3 in their jaunty school bus that seemed a little wayward to startled car oc cupants not used to such tights on the super highways. There are II boys. 11 girls, and four adults. The ladies slept in the back of the bus In sleeping bags: the men in a half-tent near Die two tents for the youngsters. The men spelled each other driving- The two mothers get up e a c h morning at 5:30 to prepare break fast and are usually the last to retire. They carried a large supply of canned foods as an emergency, but preferred to buy fresh meats, vegetables and fruits . daily to give the kids. a good diet, At half way point estimated costs were $2 per day per person for everything. The food was praised as being great. The youngsters were still filled with excitement over the day they had just spent in which they met Oregon's two Senators and toured the historic shrines of Washington. It was a toss-up as to whether Williamsburg, Virginia, a beauti fully reconstructed colonial town, or Washington had impressed them most. Don Calvin, a handsome new comer to Colton, who said he plans maybe to study law, said he was most impressed with having met Senator Wayne Morse and Se n. Maurina Neubergor that morning. Ho said Morse had talked to the students for about 20 minutes about civil rights and the message was still with Don. who thought fully shook his head aiyl said, "Why, there are Negro children hero in Washington who don't have enough food to eat w h 1 1 e we're sending food overseas." For Steve Hendrickson, a tous-lo-haired tall boy, Williamsburg was the high point. "The recon struction gave you the feeling that you really were back in colonial ' days," he said. Many girls echoed Party, and were one reason for the increased Communist vote at the last election. The Communist Party in Catholic Italy, today, in cidentally, is the biggest in Eur ope outside of Russia. But one development President Kennedy will find regarding his own church is that the top cardi nals of France and Germany have moved more to the left. They shared emphatically the liberal ism of Uio late Pope John, and even endorsed French coal miners when they wore striking against President de Gaulle. Meanwhile, most of the hier archy In the United States, with the exception of Kennedy's own cardinal, Cushing of Boston, have moved to the right. Generally they share the conservatism of Cardinal Spellman of New York. One reason for the left trend of the church in Italy has been the failure of the Italian government until recently to carry out basic social and economic re forms. Up untU Die center-left coali tion under Fanfani changed them, Italy still continued the motion picture censorship laws of Musso lini, the highly unfair system of taxing the consumer as against the wealthy, and various oilier hangovers from the Fascist re gime. It was only in the last two years that the new burst of Ital ian liberalism, encouraged by Pope John, put across pensions for older people such as tlie United States has had for twenty years, free text books for Hie first five grades in school, job protection (or pregnant women, a 15 per cent withholding tax on dividends, and certain amount of land reform. These were what caused some of the Catholic parly to move further to the right, while the Communists, who claimed the reforms were too cautious, picked up votes. HIS CONSCIENCE CLEAR LLANBARDARN. Wale (UPI) Magistrate Capt. C. F. Har rington Churchill said today "my conscience is perfectly clear" aft er acquitting Roy Langford of careless driving allegedly com mitted while he was driving home from a party at Churchill's home. tv ,.va the sentiment. Larry Wulf obliging got out his diary and explained their itinerary. They were roughly to follow the Lewis and Clark trail from the West to the East and, as they start their homeward trek this week, they expect to follow the Oregon Trail. Their trip East had taken them through Yellow stone, the Plains States, Michigan, Niagara Falls and Canada, New York State, Boston, New York City, Williamsburg, Va., and Wash ington, D.C. They expect to be home July 5. They camped in public camp grounds except for three nights in private camps which cost them 50 cents a person. Some camps were primitive, such as in South Dakota where the boys had to carry water from a hand pump a half mile to their campsite. The girls giggled in telling about the few (cold) showers they had had, explaining that they had even washed their hair in lakes, and they dressed in the crowded tent or in the bus. Kathleen Vraspir, a pretty girl with long dark hair, showed the reporter the girls' tent which had eleven sleeping bags close togeth er and a few small suitcases stacked around. She laughed that it was a little difficult dressing for church on Sunday under such con ditions, but they did manage to make themselves presentable. Susan Bishop, who tilt day of the interview had climbed to the top of the Washington Monument with the Jl boys in 90 degree weather, still had an infectious, happy grin and bounce in tolling about her adventures. She said that Boston had been a disappointment. "I expected it would be something like Williams burg," she said, "but It was so built up." The students didn't like the city slums of the East, nor the polluted Potomac River which they had seen that day when they toured Mount Vernon. Their word was "ick" for the crowded cities of the East; they liked the wide open spaces of Oregon. Chuck Wilcken said it really made h i m appreciate all they had in Oregon. Kennedy, Mac set strategy on test ban talks LONDON (UPI) President Kennedy and British Prime Min ister Harold Macmillan have ap proved a three-way strategy for the nuclear test ban negotiations in Moscow later this month, dip lomatic sources said today. The sources said the two West ern leaders worked out a set of instructions for their special en voys during their weekend sum mit meeting here. A joint communique issued at the conclusion of the talks Sun day also noted that Kennedy and Macmillan, as expected, failed to reach accord on the U.S.-proposed multinational nuclear force for the North Atlantic Treaty Organ ization (NATO). They decided to set the question aside because of British reluctance to join at this time. The communique underlined that there is no "rift" on the nuclear force plan, which West Germany has approved fully but which France rejects. British of ficials have questions about the plan's feasibility and the cost. The communique said Kennedy and Macmillan also discussed military aid to India for defense against Communist Chinese ag gression, and the unstable situa tions in Laos and South Viet Nam. The sources said tho three-way nuclear strategy for the Moscow talks provide for these courses: A comprehensive ban of all tests, including hard-lo-detect un derground explosions, with ade quate control provisions and on site inspections to police the agreement. A partial test ban on atmos pheric, underwater and surface nuclear explosions, to be con trolled by national control sys tems and robot recorders in the three nuclear countries. This would leave the question of un derground tests open. The Allies are not prepared to agree to an indefinite moratorium on such tests. Death claims made by Reds TOKYO (LTD The Commu nists claimed today they killed 51 Americans and wounded four others in the central part of South Vict Nam in the first five months of 1963. The Peking Radio, in a Hanoi dispatch, quote)! the South Viet Nam Liberation Press Agency as reporting that "the people and the people's self-defense forces' in that region "killed 6,225 enemy troops, among them 51 Ameri cans, wounded 3.6U9, among them four Americans, and captured S30." Six days of strategy sessions on integration get under way By United Press International Six days of strategy confer ences on racial integration and equal rights begin today in Chi cago. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored Poo pla (NAACP) is holding one of the most significant conventions in its 54-year history. Between 1,300 and 2,000 delegates are at tending the convention, which will plan new programs and tactics for the advancement of integra tion. . At Washington. Ally. Gen. Rob ert F. Kennedy appears before the Senate Commerce Committee today. Tho committee is opening hearings on the administration's controversial public accommoda tions bill part of President Kennedy's civil rights legislation. The bill would empower the fed eral government to ban discrim ination in most privately owned businesses open to the public. Sen. Richard Russell, D-Ga., recognized leader of the southern bloc opposing the legislation, said today that Kennedy's legislative proposals will not be helped by his civil rights measures but southern Democrats won't wage "all-out war" against it in retali ation. Other developments: Detroit: Negro leaders laid plans today for another integration Time has arrived for fine art of 'place-dropping' By Gay Pauley UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPP-Now that summer vacation time is here, so also Is the time for exercise of the fine art of place-dropping. Toss in also, as part of the summer regimen, the art of res taurant, hotel and visa-dropping. Leave name-dropping to Elsa Maxwell. As in all other exercise, the one of place-dropping is to be eased into gently. No headlong plunge, unless you can stand to be bruised at the first encounter. For, no expert in the art of place-dropping ever opens a con versation suddenly with "Well, the wife and I are just back from Paris and Rome, and I tell you, the prices!" The skilled one waits until the other person in the conversation group mentions that he or she just loved the Louvre and it was better to see the Mona Lisa on home ground than when it was on loan to those museums in Washington and New York. Btfert The Kennedys Then, the expert casually bores in with, "Now lot me think. . . I guess the first time I ever saw the Mona Lisa was about 1953. . . before all that excitement about it and the Kennedys. Time to stand there quietly in the Louvre and contemplate that smile. I suppose it was about 1957 when I was in Paris that I went back again. . ." Place-dropping is a breeze If you listen in and catch a victim who's never traveled abroad. If he's wide-eyed enough to re mark he's just picked up his first passport, and is headed for, say Scandinavia because that's where his people came from orig inally, you're home free. You can place-drop, hotel-drop, restaurant-drop and advice-drop "Take warm clothing, don't tip as much as you do in the States, and you won't find any storks roosting on rooftops like it says in the travel folders." For this poor traveler, even haul out col or slides from your last trip to where he's headed. SOMEBODY should have the benefit of all that camera angling. The most difficult person on whom to place-drop is the steady traveler and indomitable sight seer. He or she has been EVERY WHERE and now has reached the specialization stage. 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IS Bov't name SORIbbrtl fabric 21 Not tllcoUx 33 B, 27 Penvad 82 Extract from aloes 33 Diadem 34 Watered silk 33 Tedium 36 Bulged 30 Pilfer 40 Ship deviatlcn 42 Sick 45 Turmeric r-f Pacific MaadJ 44 Test lUUoa (ib) 49 Theatrt district 62 rtnil ball imckel) 55 Blacker M Shipboard trip 7 Insert bad pillari 55 Odorous weed DOWN lThrired 2 Hindu queen 3 Ota 4 Guide's high note 5 Scold ffiihime leader 7 Spiced neat dish S Minarsl rack Statue box 19 Goddtss of the dawn 21 Latin text 22 Despise 23 Spring 24 Bitter herb 25 Make turbid 26 Maid 2S Garnish for roast 19 Heavr hair 30 Babylonian chief goddess 31 Irish Isiuialure 37 Mislskas 58 Decease r'ji J '4 5 It, I 7 "9 IIS 111 hi" ti ir; iV """ !6 - rr"" " ' !Tiia jT nr 5"i a u i -a "13 a 30 Ji jl '-- y 5? 3 U a 5 "" 40 41 l U 44 i T (4 41 144 ii '50 51 r U ii a4 '3 3 51 1 , i I march through the" Detroit sub urbs like the one Gov. 'George Romney led last Saturday. Williamston. N.C.: Around IX Negroes staged a "prayer meet ing for desegregation" on the steps of city hall Sunday, Jackson, Mils.; A grand jury meets today with one of the top orders of business the considera tion of a murder charge against former Marine Byron de la Beck with, Ihe accused sniper slayer o( Negro leader Medgar Evers. Kansas City, Kan.: Between 700 and 800 Negroes marched Sunday in downtown Kansas City In mem ory of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers of Mississippi. Philadelphia: Four-hundred Ne- gro ministers said Surday they had called off their "selective patronage" campaign' against a chain store before the firm had yielded to their integration de mands. Stamford, Cenn.i An hour-long demonstration protesting, alleged inequities in employment and housing opoortunlties for minori ties was held. Sunday by more than 600 Negroes Cambridge, Md.: The city com mission instructed its attorney Sunday night to prepare an amendment to the city charter providing equal public accommo. dations in the racially troubled Eastern Shore city guarded by National Guardsmen. tie hops, cathedral hopa, or wine cellar hops. . . Only way to top thi place, dropper is to bide your time. Somewhere he'll coma a cropper. Then yon casually obsei'vo that, "Well, I'd thought of doing that, cathedral tiling through Franca, and decided nope, none of thosej organized tours for me. It'd be fiui to do Greenland." You've topped him. Greenland he missed. So tell him ail about its icy mountains. The restaurant or hotel-dropping art is of two varieties. Ei ther you case the trend of the conversation and decide to men tion the newest "in" spot in Washington, Dublin, Athens, or Hong Kong, or, you pull the re verse and casually lord it over all with the observation that: "Those) new places are all right, I sup pose. But what can match the charm, the service, the atmos phere, the splendor of in Wash ington, Dublin, Athens or Hong Kong?" -" ' Visa-dropping is a subtle art. But tho curious invariably will check out the various stampings of assorted countries In your passport. . .if you leave the pass port lying on a desk or tab nearby. . . . , SATELLITE LAUNCHED VANDENBERG AFB, Calif. (UPI) A satellite employing a Thor-Agena booster combination was launched Saturday from this base. No further information was available in keeping with Defense . Department policy. A judge barred children from his courtroom because he felt it gave them a poor outlook on life. Some kids get it at home. A let of hem accidents happen In the kitchen. Give the new bride time and she'll learn to ceek. Little kids' pants would be full of rips and tears if it weren't for the stitch In lime. Autos are at thick at ruth hours at the htadt of seme of the driv ers. Answer to Previous Ptmla 41 "In the Spring. 47 In addition a young man t 48 Expelled air SO Girl's nickruasj 42 Spring flower 42 Sprin S3 f luff iil Golf gadget S3 Mouths 64 Prickly teed envelope (vmrj 44 Body of water 44 Pen Tie n F'Rllggax gfa I ii