The Bulletin, RIDE 'EM Brone riding it just one of the seven exciting events fo be seen at this year's Deschutes County fair Rodeo. Other events will be wild horse racing, team roping, calf rop ing, brahma bull riding, bulldogging, saddle bronc riding, and girl's barrel racing. Top cow boys from all over the nation will compete again this year. Chanel keeps classic lines in collection PARIS (UPI) Followers of Gabriclle (Coco) Chanel still can wear their old suits. The designer did not change her classic lines In her 163-64 collection. The Chanel presentation Mon day marked the end ot press showings for fall and winter clothes. However, Hubert Given - chy and Cristobal Balenciago. re - garded as two of the most infill- entiai designers in rans, snow 10 buyers only Wednesday and Thursdayv Chanel,-railed "The Eternal" In Paris," did not disappoint her fans, including the many French women who follow only her style. While foreign buyers may flock to the other houses, it's Chanel that even Paris shopgirls copy. Her classic suit with its straight straight skirt and cardigan sweat erlike, simple jacket, the lining usually matching the blouse, is a standard item in Pans. .... . ... r ... - .. - Still many grand buy$ In stylos you've wanted all season. Heels from eyelash to tqll in popular new colers. Hurry for your size now at these grand valuesl Wednesday, July 31, 1963 if This season Hie Chanel models in bangs and hair-bows did not wear droopy chain necklaces but ro)es of colored beads. Another slight change was the disappear ance of the blouse with "pussy cat" scarf-bow at the neckline. The i!i,l-B4 Chanel suit blouses 1 are collai less and vertically 1 tucked for a long look. clianel made her new suii,s of i,.jsh tweeds, including one show- stopper of palest apricot yellow- orange with a blouse and jacket lining the same color. One suit was belted at the waist but all others hung straight. Some had braid trimmings, some had collars and other were col- larloss. The collection also included one example of Chanel's usual tailor ed suit with lapels, and her dark dresses with white collars and cuffs. The coals were one new item: -1 Narrow and fitted at the waist, but bcltlcss, of tweeds with fluf fy fur collars, cults and linings. One favorite with the audience was a pale orange-yellow tweed coat with orange fox collar worn over an orange-yellow tucked silk shirtwaist dress. , 'Final effort' at accord due PORTLAND (UPD- President Mayfield K. Webb of the Portland chapter of Uie National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored People said Monday his or ganization was making "one final effort" to reach an understanding on the hiring of Negroes on Portr land docks. Webb said no definite action has been planned if the meeting is fruitless. Union officials refused comment. News! Prices slashed even more on this season s famed fashions! ; 3 regularly to $14.99 Jacqueline9 regularly to $10.99 CoMiE reg. to 8.99 CASUAIS 'n FLATS Cptn ctotd tlyltt rr Million youngsters who enroll fhis fall in high school will never be graduated By Gay Pauley UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPI- One mil lion of those teen-agers who will enroll in high school this fall will never be graduated. The decade of the 1960's alone is expected to produce 7.5 million school dropouts. "Dropouts are everyone's con cern, says one woman writing on the subject. "Unless America cares enough about its schools to invest In preventive programs, taxpayers will be paying more heavily than ever for the treat ment of delinquents, the support or unempioyabies, and the care of those who sink into a state in which they cannot fend for themselves." Mrs. Edith G. Neisser. Chicago. a free-lance writer on family re lations and child guidance, dis cusses the numbers, the causes and the prevention of this mass exodus from school in the newest publication of the Public Affairs Committee, a non-profit education al organization founded in 1935. The title of the work published today: bchool Failures and Drop outs," prepared in cooperation with the American Personnel and Guidance Association. Nationally, she said, more than 30 per cent of students leave high school before graduation. High In South In Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi and Ken tucky, the rate is about 50 per cent. "But considering that New Jersey and Massachusetts have cut their, dropout rate to 26 per cent, Minnesota to 21 per cent, California to 20, and Wisconsin to 18, one cannot dismiss the higher rates as inevitable," she said. , ' ' tv' . " v.- , . --3v ' " '. " , . ' ' v H , ' ' ' ' ,3 . ". 'J, ' ' " ' It'' 2v 3 , , , V'St''" V1 " i fs?"-'' - 1 i Z S " - vti" ' 'jm-f- I ' - & $ i' m:yK'y $t 1 .i ' . !- : 'vH fffc? 5s-W 1 -4 ; 'ft1 S i l !V - 'V 1 s - 3V I , fflpr- if: t I- ; . ' V A i- fer V y;H - ft Z k ,f C rsM' . , ft "Since at least one fifth of these early leavers have marked men tal ability, a shoulder-shrugging 'good riddance' is not answer either." Mrs. Neisser says dropouts mean that we are sending into the labor market an ever-increasing number of unskilled workers, while jobs for the unskilled are decreasing sharply because of automation, mechanization and scientific advances. She said the unemployment rate among dropouts is double that of the general population, they are out of work longer, dropouts are the hard core of those who do the most menial and routine tasks year after year, and finally, 85 per cent of the relief clients to take Cook County, I., as an ex amplehave not completed high schools. Mrs. Neisser said leaving school is nearly always a symptom or symbol of a problem which has been building over a long period. "The way to dropping out is paved with failures," she wrote. Reading Problems Particularly significant Is fail ure to learn to read: three times as many poor readers as good ones drop out. Other causes: Family instability and the shifting population of big-city slums, where 75 to BO per cent of the 'high school boys and girls are -"disadvantaged Negroes, Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, or south ern white mountain people. -"Socially inherited dropouts where the child's parents have had scant education. A survey made in Iowa showed 70 per cent of the early leavers had fathers who did not finish high school. A piece of paper that makes cash old-fashioned ! Oh, sure, coins are handy for parTring meters and telephone calls. But the modern, time-saving way to pay bills is by check. It's businesslike, too cancelled checks are proof of payment. Besides regular checking accounts, we have low-cost Special Check ing Accounta-for folks who don't write many checks. A Special Checking Account requires no monthly service charge and no minimum monthly balance. And each ',' check is personalized with your name and address free. Now is the time to start enjoy ing the convenience of a checking account at U. S. "A consuming desire for ready money for dates or a car ...an Inability to keep up with the Jonses, buy the school ring, pay the class dues, purchase the tickets for games and proms that student public opinion demands." Entering the armed services, being needed at home, or having been expelled from school, al though the percentages in these categories are extremely low. Up To Parents What can be done? Parents, schools and the community all must take action, says Mrs. Neis er. She said parents could help set up resistance to leaving school by dosing the children with "emo tional vitamins" self-confidence and self-respect, and by provid ing a home atmosphere "where allowances are made for individu al strengths and weaknesses." Encourage rather than punish, she advised parents. Not to be used is the approach, "why don't you bring home decent grades the way your sister (or your cousin or the girl next door) does?" Mrs. Neisser said many cities have set up programs, often start ing in the early grades, to spot unusual ability and to reach those who are not making progress with their studies. And in communities from Rhode Island to California, plans to keep young people in school include work-study combi nations which start in junior high or high school. 'Often it happens that at work a youngster lor tne tirst tune sees why it is important to be able to read, to spell, to do arith metic, and to write a paragraph correctly," she said. Bend Branch Oregon at Bond : The United States National Bank of Portland Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Couple to fly over N. Pole in light plane FAIRBANKS, Alaska (UPI) -Mr. and Mrs. Einar Pedersen left here Monday in their red and white single engine plane on a projected flight over the North Pole to Bodo, Norway. Mrs. Pedersen expects to be the first woman to fly a single-engine plane over the pole. Her husband, a navigator for Scandinavian Air lines System, is charting the course for the polar flight. . The couple left Anchorage Fri day but were held up one night at Talkeetna and two nights here because of poor weather. In his flight plan filed with the Federal Aviation Agency, Peder sen estimated 21 hours flying time from Fairbanks to Nord, Green lane, where the couple hope to make a refueling stop before tak ing off again for Bodo. The Pedersens' plane, dubbed the Snow Goose, is specially equipped with extra fuel tanks and survival gear for the polar trip. " 1 Qualify producti A& for your safety and service 758 WALL 382-9994 Manger named for newspaper PHOENIX (UPI)-The appoint ment of Milton L. Whittenberger Twin Falls, Idaho, as general manager of Central Arizona News papers, Inc., was announced today by James M. Smith, president of the corporation. Central Arizona Newspapers will publish the Arizona Journal, which will resume publication in August. Whittenberger has published, managed and owned weekly and daily newspapers in the West and is experienced in advertising pro motion as well as in editorial work, Smith said. . Presently, Whittenberger owns two newspapers and a printing plant in Idaho, which he has leased to others to operate for him. Choice Steak . DINNERS Top Sirloin, Rib, T-Bone Only 1.95 , PASCALE CAFE 1219 S. 3rd 382-3581 Oor specialty is fast, effi cient tune-up service ... featuring brand-name parts and satisfaction guarantee I on every job. B 900 Walt