The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, July 13, 1963, Page 1, Image 1

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    Weather
Fair weather In Central Ore
goo ana through Sunday. High
temperatures near M degree
Lows, 45 to 50.
60th Year
Demos blast
Goldwater's
JFK charges
WASHINGTON (UPI) Demo
cratic senators Friday called "in
flammatory" and "irresponsible"
a charge by Sen. Barry Goldwa-
ter, R-Ariz., that the Kennedy ad
ministration is ready to co-exist
witn international communism.
Goldwater, a 1964 GOP presi
dential possibility, said in a
speech before the Human Events
Conference that the nation's lib
erals suffer a "craven fear" of
the future and have taken the
country "too far to the left."
Goldwater told the conservative
organization that U.S. Communist
party leader Gus Hall was urg
ing defeat of Republican candi
dates next year and support of
"peoples's political movements."
Goldwater said Hall had said that
such movements operated within
the Democratic party's orbit.
The Arizona Republican said he
was not suggesting that Demo
crats were Communists or that
the Communists had captured
control of the Democratic party.
Douglas Answers Chargas
Asked for reaction to Goldwa
ter's charges, Sen. Paul H. Doug
las, D-Ill., said "the record shows
that liberals are just as much op
posed to communism as is Sen.
Goldwater.
"If necessary, we will use force
to check Communist aggression,"
Douglas said. "We do not believe
in rushing into nuclear war. And
I do not believe that inflamma
tory speeches such as that of
Sen. Goldwater help the national
interest or the cause of a clean
peace."
Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D
Minn., called Goldwater's refer
ence to communism an "irrespon
sible plot that comes up every
campaign.
Chairman J. William Fulbrlght,
D-Arm., of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, called Gold
water's remarks "very irrespon
sible." He said Goldwater offered
no alternative for anything he
criticized.
"If he wants to go to war,"
Fulbright said, "why doesn't he
say so?"
"Frightened Of Future" '
In his speech, Goldwater said
that "today's liberal is so fright
ened of the future that he is in
capable of acting in the present.
Such craven fear is completely
out of character with the Ameri
can spirit."
Goldwater criticized President
Kennedy's recent speech in which
the Chief Executive referred to a
Soviet interest in a "just and
genuine peace" and urged an ef
fort to "make the world safe for
diversity."
"I suggest that the President's
plea is just another way of say
ing that the New Frontier is de
termined to co-exist with interna
tional communism wherever it
thrives even in the Western
Hemisphere," he said.
He said that the cause "for our
indecision and inaction is a deep
rooted fear on the part of the
liberal establishment which fore
closes the possibility of any ac
tion at all that may contain a
slight element of risk."
,Crews warn of
local forest
fire danger
Crews guarding Central Oregon
forests from fires were warned
today that there is a chance of
thunderstorms over the weekend.
The chance today was small
about 10 per cent. But on Sunday,
if weather front shifts in expected
patterns, there will be a SO per
cent chance of lightning.
However, forecasters were mak
ing predictions with fingers cross
ed. There is a high center off the
coast To the north is a heavy
cell of moist air, and to the
south, in California, there is a
mass of dry air.
The mixing of these masses will
largely determine the weekend
weather.
In the Deschutes country, fire
guards were looking forward to
one of their warmest weekends of
the season, with temperatures
expected to range well into the
80s, and with humidity marks ex
pected to drop.
Virtually all lookout points in
the Deschutes country were
again occupied today, following
nearly two weeks of cool, damp
weather.
EVIDENCE RIDES AWAY
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Ralph
Anthony, a police patrol
man, chased down a hit-and-run
driver Friday and returned to the
scene of the collision with the cul
prit. He found that the other mo
torist had fled.
Eight Pages
Snnn-S
Racial
By United Press International
Cambridge, Md., and Savannah.
Ga., where racial strife boiled into
sudden violence this week, sim
mered under heavy guard today.
The commander of National
Guard troops, rushed back to
Cambridge to halt new riots,
turned back two Negro demon
strations Friday night without in
cident.
But Negro leaders in Cambridge
said they would demonstrate
'again and again" despite the
limited martial law ban on such
activities.
Gov. Carl Sanders of Georgia
placed a unit of the National
Guard on standby alert and
rushed 100 highway patrolmen into
Savannah to stop the violence and
vandalism that rocked the port
city Wednesday and Thursday
nights.
Only sporadic vandalism was
Temporary halt in efforts
to approve cancer drug
CHICAGO (UPI) - The most
bitterly fought medical battle of
the decade took a dramatic turn
Friday when the discoverer of
Pageant queens
in Portland for
TV appearance
Pageant princesses will be tak
en to Portland Monday for a
KPTV television appearance, it
was announced today from the
Bend Chamber of Commerce. The
appearance of the five princesses,
Ramona Adams, Rochelle Ander
son, Anne Brandis, Linda Mc
Phee and Ania VanGorder, will
be taped for a later presentation.
The princesses will make their
Portland appearance with the
pageant date, July 26, 27 and 28,
less than two weeks away, it was
noted today as plans for the fete
moved into high gear. Most
activity at present centers on the
Mirror Pond, where a large arch
is taking tentative shape.
A river walkway, nearly 1000
feet in length and supported by
plastic "booms", has been placed
in the river. Bases for floats are
also at anchor behind the arch
structure.
The floats are being made in
Portland, and will be brought
here to be assembled on the
ses, which will be at anchor
behind the arch until pageant
time.
Pageants will be presented on
all three nights of the fete.
It was announced from the
Bend Chamber of Commerce of
fice today that the request for
reservations from outside points
arc three times as heavy as last
year. Reservation requests are
being received not only from
Oregon but from other western
states, especially California and
vi ashington.
This heavy ticket request is at
tributed to an article about the
pageant that appeared in Sunset
Magazine, and the distribution of
some 5,000 pageant folders by the
Chamber.
Strike
factions
to parley
PORTLAND (UPI) Representa
tives of two striking Pacific
Northwest lumber unions and the
Big Six Association will meet here
Monday morning, it was an
nounced Friday.
Federal Mediator Roy Smith
said the meeting will begin at
10:30 a.m. in the Masonic Temple.
The International Woodworkers
of America and the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers unions went out
on strike June 5 against two mem
bers of the Big Six in a dispute
over a new contract.
The other four members of the
association closed down the next
day. They said that a strike
azainst one was a strfke against
all.
The IBuIjIjEtin
SERVING BEND AND CENTRAL OREGON
Cambridge under guard
strife 'simmering'
reported Friday night, and Ne
groes attending a mass meeting
in a night club were urged by
their leaders to halt demonstra
tions temporarily.
Elsewhere in the nation, inte
grationists continued their pro
tests without violence, although
many were arrested.
Kneel In Doorway
At Windsor, Conn., thirteen
white and Negro demonstrators
knelt in the doorway of a restau
rant they claimed discriminated in
its hiring. Police bodily carried
them off and charged them with
breach of the peace.
Nineteen Negroes at Charleston,
S.C., pushed past a policewoman
and the manager of an all-white
city swimming pool and leaped
into the pool. Police ordered them
out of the water, charged them
with assault and jailed them.
Other racial developments:
krebiozen withdrew his applica
tion for continued experimental
status of the drug.
The move. In effect, meant at
least a temporary halt in efforts
to win federal approval of the
controversial cancer drug and put
it on the market.
Dr. Stevan Durovic, a refugee
Yugoslav physician who first ex
tracted the substance from the
blood serum of horses 16 years
ago, withdrew his application in
a letter to Anthony J. Celebreeze,
secretary of tha Department of
Health, Education and Welfare
(HEW).
He said the government had
waged a fight against "an un
biased clinical test" of the drug
with "unheard-of pressure, the
spreading of false statements to
the press, an attempt to frame
me and now an attempt to in
dict me."
He told Celebreeze he had "lost
hope that your department will
ever solve this controversy in
good faith."
The latest attempts to secure
an evaluation of krebiozen from
the National Cancer Institute
(NCI) and the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) bogged
down in a welter of charges and
counter-charges.
Federal officials maintained
that information provided by the
drug's sponsors was inadequate
for a thorough test. Durovic and
Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, who has vir
tually staked his professional ca
reer on his support of the drug,
maintained they submitted ade
quate information.
Krebiozen has long been op
posed by the American Medical
Association (AMA), which main
tains the drug is worthless in
the treatment of cancer.
Ivy is perhaps the one person
most caught up in the krebiozen
controversy. A physiologist of
considerable repute, he lost his
post as vice president of the Uni
versity of Illinois where he first
tested the drug and found it had
"merit."
Merchant offers parking
By Clam Cushman
Bullstln Staff Wrltar
A Dew plan to "solve" Bend's
downtown parking problems was
advocated today by a downtown
merchant who opposed the Cham
ber of Commerce plan announced
last week.
The new plan is the brain child
of Darrell Liska, owner of Dar
rell's House of Music.
The plan, basically, would
change downtown Bend streets to
a one-way grid and effect angle
parking instead of the present
parallel parking. There are other
refinements, but this is Liska's
basic plan.
It would, he claims, increase
downtown parking capacity on the
streets by 40 per cent at small
cost
Liska opposed the Chamber of
Commerce plan which would have
the City of Bend purchase three
parcels of property tn the core
area at an approximate cost of
Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Saturday, July 13, 1963
no
mm
New Orleans The U.S. Fifth
Circuit Court of Appeals ordered
Birmingham, Ala., officials to sub
mit a plan for desegregating Bir
mingham classrooms this fall. It
brought to three the number of
large southern cities ordered to
desegregate public schools in Sep-
lemDer Birmingnam, Mobile and
Savannah.
Peoria, 111. Demonstrators re
sumed picketing the Central Illi
nois Light Co. Building after nego
tiations over the firm's hiring
practices broke down.
Bamett Blames Reds
Washington The Senate Com
merce Committee promised to look
unto Mississippi Gov. Ross Bar-
nett's charge that Communists
are causing the nation's racial
strife. Barnett, testifying before
the committee, said the adminis
tration is "sowing seeds of hate
and violence" and may reap a
"bloody harvest."
Torrance, Calif. A builder
agreed to sell a home to a Negro,
hire a Negro salesman and adopt
a "no discrimination policy." end- j
ing a year-long housing battle.
Jackson, Miss. The State Su
preme Court reversed itself and
upheld the conviction of Aaron
Henry, state president of the Na
tional Association for the Ad
vancement of Colored People, on
a morals charge. The court's ear
lier decision overturned the con
viction on grounds of an illegal
seared. Friday s reversal still said
the search was illegal, but that
Henry's defense lost its right to
object by failing to do so when
testimony about the search was
delivered.
Macmillan
to ride out
scandal
LONDON (UPI) - Prime Min
ister Harold Macmillan appeared
determined today to hold on to
his office at least until some con
crete progress is made on a nu
clear test ban treaty with Rus-
a.
Political observers said the 69-
year-old "unflappable Mac" in
tended to ride out the Profumo
scandal and resist demands for
his immediate retirement from
the opposition Labor Party and
from within his own Conserva
tive Party.
Macmillan does not want to go
down in history as the leader of
a Conservative government that
was disgraced by one of his cab
inet ministers, the observers
said.
He particularly does not want
to retire at a time when he
thinks the West may be on the
threshold of a nuclear treaty of
some sort with Moscow.
Macmillan snid in an exclusive
interview in the Daily Express
Friday that he has high hopes
for the nuclear talks beginning in
Moscow Monday.
"I can't think of anything more
important at this time," he said.
"Either in itself or for East-West
relations generally."
u
warn mmuamtsmmm
$312,000. The- Chamber plan calls
for parking lots that would add
125 spaces to the core area. It
does not advocate a one-way grid
system.
Liska's business is one of about
15 that would have to be relocated
if the Chamber of Commerce plan
were put into effect He says that
threatened loss of his location is
not what prompted him to oppose
the Chamber of Commerce plan.
"I have only a year left on my
present lease. The building has
been for sale for some time. I
might have to move anyway," he
said.
"Tearing down, of three com
mercial buildings without replac
ing those buildings with other
commercial buildings would be a
mistake, particularly with the ex
pense factor involved," he says.
His plan, he says, is based in
part on a study which the City of
Bend ordered in 1937 from J. Has
lett Bell, Seattle planner.
we
CMra
Talks may
end without
formal split
TOKYO (UPI) Red China
said today the ideological dispute
with Russia is "very grave," and
hinted the Moscow talks between
the two Communist giants may
De DroKen oil tor the time being,
The Peking regime said that
overcoming the doctrinal and po
litical onierences witn Moscow is
difficult, but it expressed belief
the dispute can be solved. It de
scribed the differences as
"serious".
An editorial in the official Pe
king Peoples Daily said the Chi
nese Communist gov e r n m e n t
hopes that the Soviet leaders will
refrain from rash actions . . .
and not push things to the ex
treme."
The editorial, broadcast by the
New China news agency and
monitored in Tokyo, said the
Kremlin's anti-China campaign
and its failure to acknowledge
the Chinese side of the quarrel
gave people reason to wonder
whether the Russians wanted to
"push Sino-Soviet relations to the
brink of rupture."
The showdown talks in Mos
cow, with the leadership of the
Communist camp at stake, began
July 5. They have been held un
der tight secrecy, but propaganda
blasts outside the conference
room have indicated no progress
toward healing the breach.
Suggesting that the Moscow
talks might be ended soon, the
Peoples Daily said if the differ
ences cannot be resolved today
"they can wait until tomorrow.
If they cannot be resolved this
year, they can wait until next
year."
"The Chinese Communist Party
is patient, the newspaper said.
It added that only Western
"imperialists" and "modern re
visionists" of Yugoslavia were
hopeful that the Sino-Soviet talks
would fail, leading to a formal
split of Moscow and Peking.
The Daily accused the Krem
lin of trying to hide the facts in
the dispute and of inciting the
Soviet people against Red China
through meetings and articles in
the press.
Efforts to
halt rail
i
war stvmied
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
government's efforts to settle the
railroad work rules dispute were
virtually halted today. Some offi
cials predicted that congressional
action would be needed to avoid
a crippling rail strike after July
29.
President Kennedy's six-man
fact-finding committee adjourned
until Monday its investigation of
tile four-year-old battle over rail
road demands for rule changes to
abolish alleged "featherbedding,"
or unnecessary jobs.
Solution Opposes C of C 'st;CTe;?jRMgiir;;;r Kmiw,mxifmmesm
It would
1. Establish a one-way grid
south on Wall Street
2. Establish a one-way grid
north on Bond Street
3. Establish a one-way grid
west on Greenwood from Wall to
Bond.
4. Establish a one-way grid
east on Oregon Avenue from
Brooks to Bond.
Liska would also install traffic
lights at the following downtown
comers: Bond and Franklin, Wall
and Newport and Wall and Green
wood, and Greenwood and Bond.
A two way light would replace the
three-way light presently at Wall
and Franklin.
He would pave the city-owned
parking lot near the hospital and
make it either free parking or
place four hour meters on it. The
same would be true for the city
owned parking lot behind the city
hall. He would also change many
meters in downtown Bend from
Univ. of
BALE BUCKING Silhouetted farmers against twilight sky flex their muscles as they under
taka -first cutting of alfalfa hay in Central Oregon region. Area farmers manage twosome
times three cuttings during summer season. Baled hay industry is profitable enterprise, but
blazing heat of summer months often confines working hours to early mornings and (at
evenings.
Rescue teams in
final search for
boys lost in mine
PITTSBURGH (UPI) Dog
tired rescue teams prepared to go
nearly a half-mile underground in
an old abandoned coal mine to
day for one final push to learn
the fate of three missing boys.
Samuel Cortis, state mine in
spector, said the search would be
concentrated in an area of the
mine which has not yet been cov
ered.
Cortis said If the boys Danny
O'Kain and Billy Burke, both 13,
of nearby Baldwin Borough, and
Bobby Abbott, 14, of Pittsburgh-
are in the mine they would be in
this area. They have been miss
ing since Thursday.
The search was to resume at
9 a.m., EDT.
Cortis declined to speculate
whether the youngsters could still
be alive if they had been in the
mine.
"We're not even certain they're
in there," he said, "but we've got
to keep pushing."
Parents Fool Cartaln
Despite reports that the three
boys had been seen near Colum
bus, Ohio and Conway, Pa., the
parents of the youngsters felt cer
tain their youngsters were in the
mine which has not yet been cov-
for about 25 years.
Rescuers have been at the mine
No. 2 of the Castle Shannon Coal
Co., since Thursday night when
the boy's bicycles were found at
the entrance.
Their efforts Friday night were
stalled by deadly black damp, a
combination of explosive methane
one to two hours.
Liska claims his one-way grid
and angle parking would Increase
downtown parking spaces by
about 150. "And the cost would
be almost nothing," he said.
Under the one-way grid system,
there would be two lanes of traf
fic. With angle parking, each lane
would be from eight to 10 feet in
width.
Liska urges planning for the
future. He envisions the city pur
chasing Lundgren property on the
river and turning it into a park
ing lot eventually. He also thinks
the city should purchase all the
Deschutes River frontage be
tween Franklin and Newport on
the east side.
This would eventually become
city park, he said and could be
purchased as present occupants
leave their homes.
The Chamber of Commerce plan
would result in a cost of about
$2,496 per space on the downtown
Crayon Library
High yastarday, H dagraat.
Low last night, 43 degraes.
SunMt today, 8:47. Sunrisa to
morrow, 4:35, PDT.
Ten Cents
and carbon dioxide. Fresh air
was pumped into the mine, locat
ed on a hillside seven miles south
of Pittsburgh, and the rescue
teams reentered two hours later.
They were ordered to halt tem
porarily at 12:30 a.m. today.
Rescuers Saa Prints
J. M. Hovanic, a state mine in
spector, said the rescuers had
seen "what appeared to be small
footprints in one area" and such
items as pop bottles and matches
during their rugged foray of the
dark passageways. But he would
not venture an opinion on wheth
er the boys were lost in the mine.
The boys were reported missing
by Billy's mother, Mrs. Florence
Burke. She said she found the bi
cycles near the mine entrance sit
uated below the tracks of the
Pittsburgh and West Virginia Rail
road in a shrub-covered gully.
An engineer for the railroad
said he saw the boys near Colum
bus, and another report from Con
way indicated the boys had been
in that area. But there was no
positive proof the youngsters had
hopped a train after leaving their
bicycles at the mine entrance.
TO VISIT IRAN
THE HAGUE (UPI) - Queen
Juliana, Prince Bernhard and
Crown Princess Beatrix will make
a state visit to Iran Oct. 3-6, a
palace spokesman said today.
The visit is In return for the
state visit made by Shah of Iran
in 1959.
plan
parking lots. In Portland, officials
pointed out recently, cost of pro
viding downtown offstreet park
ing is costing about $5,000 a
space.
"If the Chamber follows the
proposed plan, I think it will en
courage a shopping center on the
frbige somewhere. The added ex
pense on the property owners and
merchants will cause them to give
serious consideration to moving
out of the core area," Liska said.
At one time. Bend had angle
parking without a one-way grid.
This was changed several years
ago to parallel parking because of
traffic congestion in the core
area. Liska says that with a grid,
plus the added traffic drain of the
highway on East Third, conges
tion would be no problem.
Meanwhile, activity on behalf
of the Chamber's project has been
slow. Printed forma detailing the
plan, which were going to be cir
culated this week, have yet to
appear.
Hi and Lo
No. 185
ounty Demos
urge voters not
sign petitions
The executive committee of .the
Democratiir Party U Doschkes
County has passed a resolution
in opposition to the proposed ref
erendum to the income tax law
enacted by the 1963 session of the
state legislature.
Voters were urged to refuse to
sign such petitions when and if
they are circulated in this area.
The c o m m i t e e, under tha
chairmanship of Dr. Orde Pinck
ney, took the action following an
address by State Senator Boyd
Overhulse, who outlined tha tax
law that was enacted and said it
was based "on the person's abil
ity to pay."
The senator from Madras said
that referral could have "disas
terous consequences to education
and public welfare." Sen. O v e r-
hulse charged that Gov. Hatfield's
statement saying that the tax law
enacted by the legislture was oot
a fair tax is completely false.
He called on all voters. Demo
crats and Republicans alike, to
think "twice or three times" be
fore signing the petitions, should
they be offered. Sea Overhulse
said that if the legislature should
be called back into session be
cause of the referral, it would
mean that budgets would have to
be cut, chiefly in education and
welfare. "This would mean that
the counties would have to make
up the difference if they contin
ued these services at their pres
ent schedule," lie said.
The senator roported also that
a sales tax had been discussed
as a possible revenue measure;
but here, too, he pointed out, it
would place this tax "on a ma
jority of people who were tha
least able to pay an additional
tax." He added that he and tha
Democratic party were tradition.
ally opposed to a sales tax for
Oregon.
Professor says
Portland Negroes
have problems
PORTLAND (UPI)- Dr. Rich
ard Frost, vice president of Reed
College, said here Friday that tha
Portland Negro still faces the
"grotesque merry- go -round" of
discrimination.
Dr. Frost, in a speech at tha
City Club, described the "merry-go-round"
as that of inappropri
ate education, making the Negro
less employable, which in turn
keeps him from decent housing,
which leads back again to educa
tional problems.
He said that discrimination ex
ists in employment in public
agencies in Portland. He cited the
Housing Authority of Portland
and the City Bureau of Parks as
examples of public agencies with
less than "open" employment policies.