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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1963)
Univ. o: Crass Library EU3s::s. osiasoa nm ... , Mostly fair through Friday, WCQthCr bu with chanct of few thunder- showers. Highs, 88-90 Friday; lows 40-53. iL MI High yesterday, 71 degrees. Low la it night, 37 degrees. Sunset today, 8:43. Sunrise to morrow, 5:39, PDT. Hi and lo SERVING BEND AND CENTRAL OREGON 60th Year State bar to settle racial tiff By United Pratt International Negro leaders and officials of Cambridge. Md. agreed early to day to let the Maryland Bar As sociation mediate the city's racial dispute. Mrs. Gloria Richardson, an In tegration leader, indicated there would be no more racial demon strations until "we see what they (mediators) accomplish." National Guardsmen, called to Cambridge to preserve the peace, Wednesday night arrested six white men who attacked soldiers, reporters and photographers in a melee outside an armory. At Chicago, police clashed with rowdy integration demonstrators in front of the Chicago Board of Education building Wednesday night. Three demonstrators, two Negroes and a white man, were arrested. A 10-year-old Negro girl and three policemen were Injured in the pushing and shoving demon stration by about 150 persons pro testing alleged segregation in Chi cago public schools. ' Police stepped between rock throwing groups of whites and Negroes Wednesday night at Thomasville, N.C., and dispersed the crowds with threats of ar rest. The crowds of about 150 per sons each had gathered outside the Thomasville city hall where 68 Negroes were being booked for physically blocking the entrance to a segregated theater. Negroes held peaceful mass ral lies Wednesday night at Charles ton, S.C., where almost 200 police officers guarded against a recur rence of racial violence, and Sa vannah, Ga., where city council Wednesday banned all marches during the "state of severe Ta-j cial unrest." Elsewhere in the nation: Danville, Va. Integrationists threatened city officials of Cha tham with "non-violent" war un less eight racial demonstrators were released from jail by the first of next week. Montgomery, Ala. Gov. George Wallace said he would propose to the Alabama legisla ture bills providing for "segrega tion by color and sex" in public school classrooms. Jackson, Mitt. A circuit judge was to hear motions today in the case of Byron De La Beckwith, accused slayer of Ne gro leader Medgar Evers. The state has asked that Beckwith be given mental tests. JFK asks for temporary tax on borrowing WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi dent Kennedy asked Congress to day to enact a temporary tax on foreign borrowing of U.S: capital in a stepped-up effort to close the growing balance of payments gap. Th President said the new clampdown was needed to help nuke further "inroads into the hard core of our continuing pay , ments deficit." ' v DOW JONES AVERAGES By United Press International Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 Industrials 695.90, off 3.82; 20 railroads 170.28, off 1.09; 15 utili ties 137.76, off 0.12, and 65 stocks 251.22, off 120. Sales today were about 3.71 million shares compared with 3.94 million shares Wednesaay. Dntervievs bring varied parking' , . i , .ij i v w pnoern felt that , "They can't get all their busi-1 teacher, and George Hawes.lbe done. Hawes said the Cham- buUding three parking lots thaMhere L Hone in fust one hour." he Bend, felt that something has to ber of Commerce proposal ot help. By Jane Brown, p.,IUiin (faff Writer Local and visiting "men (and women) on the street" had varied opinions about the Bend parking problem. The most vivid com ments were made about the chalk- marking of tires. Out-of-town people, interviewed by Bulletin reporters, weren't aware of any parsing prouien. oi all. TUir !. o sharo contrast to dll. J tua 1- answers bv all local people ques tioned who felt there was a "def inite" problem. Mrs. Albert Reves. Tillamook, saia sne nau driven around the block to find a parking place, but hadn't found it particularly inconvenient. The subiect of happy tourists met opposition from a local man. Ed Park. He felt that local resi dents shouldn't be "kicked out" for touri-t trade. He sighted examples of rural residents who often come into Bend to buy supplies for several weeks, and often for two or three families. Sixteen Pages ' - ) V ' jiMiaiHMi i mi in JsAmmfcfe. ......... Sa--j Princess Linda McPhee enjoys Impulsive extrovert Princess Linda energetic, dynamic (Editor's Note: This Is the fourth In a series of interviews with Bend Water Pageant court members. They ara Ramona Adams, Rochelle Anderson, Anne Brandis, Linda McPhee and Ania VanCorder. A queen will be selected next Wednes day evening, preceding the coro nation ball at the Elks Temple.) By Ha Grant Hopper Bulletin Staff Writer Impetuous Princess Linda Ma rie McPhee, 18, has the energy of a dvnamo. the impulsiveness of a spring shower and the calculated purpose of a crusader. No timid violet, the statuesque court mem ber is extroverted without being brash, independent without being self-centered, disciplined without being tense. Lone-limbed and eracetui, sne has a stately height of five feet, 10 inches, is slim at 145 pounds, and has enviable tall-girl mea surements, 34-24-36. She has brown eyes, and hair to match. She loves ravioli, fudge, casual clothes and red. The eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A, D. McPhee, 1037 Harmon Boulevard, she has sisters 15, 13, 12, 7 and 5. "They're not stair steps," she says. "They're an es calator." Breezy and warm-hearted. Prin cess Linda is a personality girl with a zest for living. She has planned her life with the self-assurance of an expert chess-play er, who knows the game is his after the second move. Future Well Planned First Linda will attend Central Oregon College, on a scholarship from the Bend Ladies of Elks. Then, she says, she will go on to maior in secondary education in the field of English. Already she has it figured that teaching may not provide enough opportunities for service and expression She would like to join the Peace Corps, but would want to serve in the most helptui capacity po- ness done in just one hour," he uiri It is most inconvenient for them to have to move their cars ! every hour. It dissuades them I from doing their shopping in 'Bend. Park said there should be j "equal treatment for all. tourists I or not." I W. R. and Robert Ford, pass !ing through Bend from Redding : and Klamath Falls, respectively, j also found no definite parking problem. The Redding man found parking . in Bend easier than in his home town. He said that he had noticed a lark nf narkinff lots, althoueh there seemed to be quite a lot of street parking. Roberts, from Mamath rails aiH thai the narkine Droblem had been solved there by the foresight to put in lots before tne city oe- came swamped with cars, inis ne recommended for Bend. Proposals by the Bend Cham ber of Commerce met varied opinions. Olga Kjosh, Bend school sible. So, she says, she may go to a nursing school, to qualify as a professional nurse. But m the meantime, there's lots more liv ing to do. Linda would like to cook in a restaurant, because last summer, working as a waitress, she met so many interesting people. She felt absolutely indispensable, she says as though every vacationing tourist depended on her for serv ices ranging from map - reading and route advice to menu sugges tions and warming the baby's bot tle. Linda sculpts, paints and reads voraciously. She would like to write, to be an artist, to live on a ranch, "to go to school for ever." And with all these arrows for her bow, she thinks that even tually, her most important role will be as a wife and mother. Like a kaleidoscope, Linda is composed of individually unim- nortant fragments, that togetner. are a marvel of symmetrical pre cision. From her many fields of interest, she selected her favor ites Kahlil Gibran, author ot "The Prophet;" Bertrand Russell, English author and scientist; Vin cent Van Gogh, the painter who loved life and mankind; Helen Keller, whose will power triumph ed over the handicap of blind ness; Albert Schweitzer, me great humanitarian. Sponsored in the queen contest by the Soroptimist Club and Bend Shriners, Linda, with her usual enthusiasm, is enjoying the busy whirl. The whole thing is worth while, she says, because she is learning what makes the Pageant tick, meeting more people and "becoming more aware." That's Linda. TWO SOLDIERS MISSING SEOUL, Korea UP1 Two American soldiers swept away by the swift current of the Hantin River north of here were missing and presumed dead today, ac cording to an announcement by U.S. Army authorities. OZBEEDON "chalking has helped" Thursday, sculpturing Lumber strike spreading throughout NW By United Press International The rolling strike against Geor gia-Pacific Corp. by two lumber unions spread into Washington to day when about 300 workers failed to report for work at two Olympia plywood plants. Members of the International Woodworkers of America (IWA) set up picket lines before 8 a.m. Harvev Nelson, Western region al president of the IWA, predicted all'G-P operations in Oregon, Washington and California will be closed down by the end ot tne week. Some Plants Hit Earlier The IWA and the Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union (LSW) closed plants at Toledo, Coos Bay, Springfield and Coquille, Ore., and Samoa, Calif., earlier this week. Still operating today were some woods crews at Toledo and in the Coos Bay area, a pine mill at Pilot Rock, Ore., and woods crews and mills at Feather Falls and Woodleaf, Calif. The strike against Georgia-Pa cific is part of an industry-wide dispute over a new contract in the Douglas Fir belt. Nearly 25,000 workers now are idle. An unauthorized strike by 550 members of the LSW at a Simp son Timber Co. door and plywood plant at McLeary, Wash., Wednes day ended later in the day after a meeting between workers and Earl Hartley, executive-secretary of the union. Owens injured JOES, Colo. (UPI) RC Owens, a flanker back from the Baltimore Colts of the National Football League, was injured and his daughter killed Wednesday night in a one-car accident east of here. The victim was identified as Pamela Owens. 4. Her father, who comes from Belmont, Calif was hospitalized with head and chest injuries at Yuma, Colo, Visitors claim 1 nrJ MRS. ALBERT REYES "unaware of problem" July 18, 1963 sttil D. Hale named sales chief at Brooks-Scanlon Delbert Hale, 51, today was named sales manager of Brooks- Scanlon, Inc., filling the vacancy created bv the recent death of Loyde S. Blakley. Bert Hagen, 43, was promoted to Hale's former position as assistant sales mana ger. The announcement was made by Freeman Schultz, manager. Hale, a member of a pioneer Oregon family, was born in El mira, in Lane county, and has been a Bend resident since 1916. He started to work for Brooks Scanlon on a part-time and sum mer basis in May, 1926, four years before his graduation from Bend High School. He worked in the plant until 1935; in the building department from 1935 to 1941, and in the sales department from 1941 to the present. His mother, widow of Dorris C. Hale, and his sisters, Mrs. Eloise Johnson and Miss Frances Hale, are also Bend residents. He was married Oct. 2, 1939 to the former Joan Helfrich. They are parents of a four-year-old daughter, Su san. Long active In work of Boy Scouts of America, Hale is member of that organization's na : i :i 1 iu. nnntitn , , . .j n u .v - a r iha nnA . j vi i .u f rmmm h. iraak v,""llu,;' v,v........-, UInlt T.onmi mill thn IJnnd IrxW nf F.lks Hacen is the nephew ot Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Hill of Bend with whom he made his home as a youngster and youth. He was born in Virginia, Minn., ana came to Bend in 1927, after a year in Montana. He was graduated from Bend Hieh School in 1937, attend ed (he University of Oregon three years and served in the Navy Air Corps in World war 11. Haeen s ta r t e d to worK ior Brooks-Scanlon in March, 1948, the entire tenure of his employ ment being in the sales depart ment. He and his wife, the former Bette Jo Plant of Eugene, have a daughter, Kris, 15, and a son, Lar ry, 14. Barry rejects TV debate NEW YORK (UPI) The gov ernor of New York said yes, but the senator from Arizona declined the offer on grounds that it might contribute to disunity in the Re publican party. And so Gov. Nelson A. Rocke feller and Sen. Barry Goldwater will not be swapping opinions in what now ranks as one of the na tion's most popular political side shows: The television debate. At least not for a while. The two leading contenders for the 1964 GOP presidential nomina tion were invited by the Columbia Broadcasting System to spend an hour nf air time discussing one of their favorite subjects: The role of the Republican party in next year's election )blem Ki .u MRS. F. W. ROGERS "north and needs lot" v r r . i I feito ralte test ban Kennedy not certain Sino-Soviet dispute at point of no return WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi dent Kennedy says he is not at all certain the dispute between Russia and Red China has passed the point of no return. Quite obviously there are strong indications of pressure," he said at a news conference Wednesday, but premature opin ions would be foolish because history has shown that they are frequently reversed. The President was cautiously optimistic on the possibility of reaching at least a limited nu clear test ban agreement with Russia and said this should be possible if at all without a summit meeting. Fair weather in Central Oregon Fair weather throueh Friday has been forecast for the Central Oreeon area, with slowly mount- ")g temperatures' and dropping . : ,L .! ul u, SKies were Clear over interim i ureguu uu ,,y....6 cool night. The area was one ot the coolest summer spots In the entire United States. Low for the night in Bend was 37 degrees. The forecast Indicates there Is a chance of some afternoon and evening thunder showers in the northeast part of the stale. Cloudy night and morning nours are forecast for the coast. Preparation of COC site to start Monday morning Preparation of the site for the new Central Oregon College com pound, on the southwest slope of Awbrey Butte, will start next Monday, with ground clearing and the building of an access roaa to the construction area. A contract with Steinlicht Construction Co., the amount of $342,466, was signed last night at a special ses sion of the college board of di rectors. Of (he total amount, $301,327 is for construction of the initial four buildings. The remainder, $41,139, is for site work. This includes ex tension of basic utilities to the building area, development of a sewer system, ana consirucuun nf the access road. Signing of the contract had been held up pending approval by the State Board of Education, wea nesdav morning at its regular Ju ly meetine. the state board ap proved the college board's request to sign the contract for construc tion purposes, $301.327. GEORGE HAWES "definite problem" Ten Cents feel He added, however, that he would be ready to consider a ses sion with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev if the "situation" be came such that it was "essential to the making of an effective agreement." Kennedy sought to reassure U.S. congressmen and NATO al lies that the American mission negotiating with the Russians and British in Moscow would not make any secret deals or fatal concessions. He noted that any test ban greement which might emerge from the Moscow negotiations being carried on by Under Secre tary of State W. Averell Harri man would have to be approved by the Senate. The NATO Allies, Kennedy add ed, could be certain no deals af fecting their "rights and inter ests" would be made in Moscow and they would be fully filled in on any discussion of European subjects which might be going on there. This obviously meant the Unit ed States would not give Khrush chev any assurance, one way or the other, on the non-aggression pact between NATO and the Communist. Warsaw ract coun tries which the Soviet leader wants. Kennedy said the first three dava of the Moscow talks had been "businesslike" and he was "still hoDeful" of securing a test ban treaty, at lease one pronioa inir atmosDheric. land and under water blasts which can be de tected afar without on-site inspec tion. In its approval action, the board officially allocated $225,000 of state money to the construction project. The board is concerned only with the classroom construc tion work, since only this phase of the project is eligible for state matching funds. The main public access road through the campus is now under construction by the Deschutes County road department. It is expected that the buildings will be ready for occupancy ear ly in 1964. The contractor has agreed to a construction period of 120 working days, when the site preparation is completed. The only other action taken by (he board last night was to cancel the regular August meeting, upon recommendation of Don Pence, college president. It is anticipat ed, however, that the board may he called in for special meetings next month, in connection with the construction project comments I stiace in the north end of town. I made on the practice " on the corner Larking auto tire, eve- i . w rhis is completely ot She felt that a lot on the comer of Oregon and Wall would solve the situation in that zone. "It's immaterial to me" was the comment on the proposal by an anonymous man. He pointed out that there is a parking lot be hind the city hall which is seldom used. He commented that "if peo ple are too lazy to use the city lot because they have to walk a rnllnlp nf blocks. . .Well." Carol Beaver. Bend, didn't fa vor the Chamber of Commerce proposal. Yes, there is a definite problem, she said, dui tne pro posal will eliminate quite a num ber of apartments in the build ings which would be torn down. Miss Beaver pointed out that there is already a shortage of apartments, and when Central Oregon College is expanded, an even larger number will be de manded. The hottest comments were No. 189 'pacf Indications still assure partial go MOSCOW (UPD-Top-level U.S. British, and Soviet negotiators met anew today in the Moscow three-power nuclear conference amid increasing indications an agreement may be reached soon I a partial test ban. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, U.S. Undersecretary of Stale W. Averell Harrunan and British Science Minister Lord Hailsham opened the fourth ses sion of the Big Three talks at 30 a.m. PDT. The negotiations resumed in the ake of a Washington news con ference statement by President Kennedy that he was "hopeful" the negotiators would agree to halting nuclear tests in the at mosphere, underwater and in space. Progress Noted A three-power communique Is sued in Moscow Wednesday night said that progress had been made in drafting treaty provi sions. The rival East and West drafts already put forward at the. Moscow nuclear talks were under stood to be fairly close In posi tions. The Big Three talks began an hour and a half later than sched uled today because of a lunch Gromyko gave for visiting East German Foreign Minister Lothar Boltz. . East German sources said Boltz was in Moscow to discuss the Berlin problem in connection with the three-power talks. The consultations between So viet and East German leaders during the nuclear conference led to speculation that another move might be in the works to try to solve the Berlin problem. The conference, although pri marily devoted to the nuclear is sue, was understood 10 nave al ready held soundings but not ne gotiationson a number of cow war issues, including an East West non-aggression pact and the problem of Laos. While the Soviets waroea to link a partial test ban treaty with a non-aggression pact between NATO and the Warsaw Pact na tions, the Western Allies were op posed on the grounds such a pact would involve Western diplomatic recognition of Communist East Germany. Diplomats here speculated a new formula excluding Western recognition of the regime of East Gorman Communist leader Wal ter Ulbricht might be under dis cussion. U.S. sources said that under no circumstances would there be any diplomatic contact between West ern representatives ana uioso from East Germany on the grounds that, "we have no rec ognition of that regime." Diplo matic circles here felt that any agreement on a partial nuclear test ban and progress on other cold war issues could pave tie way for an eventual summit meeting. made on the practice of chalk marking auto tires every hour. "This is completely out of line. Miss Beaver said. Park had al ready pointed out that it is driving rural people away. Barbara Westfall, waitress at the Skyline Cafe, felt that chalk marking has created a problem for the business people. They are not always able to move their cars every hour. She pointed out that now everyone is trying to park along Drake Park. A parking lot attendant of First National Bank, Oz Beedon, did h had noticed that the chalk marking had improved the turn over ot street parising. Mrs. Otis Lipps, who was just pulling out of the bank parking lot. said that there is a problem when "it takes a whole gallon of gas to find a parking place." City Manager Hal Puddy, when questioned, said that the city would do whatever was rec ommended to it.