Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1963)
The Bulletin, Monday, August 19, 1963 Young Demos call on JFK to resume diplomatic, trade relations with Cuba BERKEI.K.Y, Calif. (UP1) -Young Democrats from 15 West ern states have called on Presi dent Kennedy to resume diploma tic and trade relations with Cuba. By a vote of 10-7, delegates to the western states conference of the YD Sunday night adopted a resolution that last October's Cuba crisis might have been avoided "if there had been contact be tween the Cuban government and the United States prior to the establishment of Russian missiles in that country." It added that the United States has diplomatic relations with other Tito tells Brown he may visit U.S. this fall BELGRADE (UPI) - Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito said to day he hopes to meet President Kennedy in the United States this fall. Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown of California told UPI after a 40 minute meeting with Tito that the Yugoslav leader said he thinks he will attend the United Nations General Assembly session in New York this fall. Brown said he asked Tito if he hopes to meet Kennedy then. He quoted Tito as replying, "Yes, I hope to see the President." "But it will not be the first time I have met him," Tito said. "I met President Kennedy when he came here in the early 1950's with Sen. (Owen) Brewster (for mer Republican ' senator from Maine) and Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.)." Tito Praises Pop Brov n quoted Tito also as prais ing Pope Paul VI. "We have very good relations with the Vatican. The Pope is for peace and so are we," Tito told Brown. The California governor, on a long European tour, told Tito he came to Yugoslavia from Italy where he received a medallion from the Pope in Vatican City. Brown, a Roman Catholic, quoted Tito, born a Roman Cath olic but now an atheist, as saying, ! Jn received a medal from the Pope." Brown said he asked Tito if "we can expect a better interna tional understanding." ' "World Situation Good" Tito, according to Brown, re plied, "Yes, the world situation is good but we can still do much to improve our relations." Brown said Tito talked politely and in general terms about Yugo slav concern over possible U. S. dropping of "most favored na tion" trade status for Yugoslavia. "We understand there are prob lems in America in that connec tion," Tito said. The California governor saw Tito during the Yugoslav leader's last - minute intense planning for Soviet Premier Nikita Khru shchev's arrival Tuesday for a 15 day visit. Tall, dapper man soughf in London LONDON (UPI) Scotland Yard checked passenger lists at London Airport today in search of a tall, dapper man who may be linked to Britain's daring $7.3 million train robbery. Detectives believed a black sports car left near the airport 5nay have been bought by one of the gang the day after the Aug. 8 robbery. Definite proof of the connection was not immediately available when the car was found Sunday night, but police laboratory ex. perts checked It out minutely for fingerprints and otner possime clues. Other detectives went to the air port to check passenger lists for the possibility someone linked to the robbery was on an outgoing nlane. So far, police have arrested five persons in connection with the robbery and recovered $677,420 in stolen bills. The rest of the gang and the bulk of the loot were the objects of a continuing wide spread search. A virtual blackout was main. tained bv police on information relating to the progress of the case. PLANS NEW HIKE ZENNOR. England (UPD-Dr. Rarhara Moore, the 59-year-old marathon hiker. Sunday began planned 1.000-mile walk from Land's End to John O'Groat's in Sr.nflflnd. Mrs. Moore made the trir three years ago in 21 days. In 1960 she walked from San rrancisco New York. socialist nations; and this does not imply approval of the exiting gov ernment. Furthermore, the resolution said it is well to minimize Soviet in fluence in the Western Hemis phere and "this could best be brought about by lessening of Cuban dependence on the Soviet bloc. Among 32 resolutions passed by the representatives were ones urging Reforms in Viet Nam and the withdrawal of United States troops there. Condemnation of any federal program for civil defense and fall out shelters. Abolition of the House commit tee on Un-American Activities; repeal of the internal security act, and complete revision of the Mc-Carran-Walters immigration law. Lifting of the prohibition on travel to such countries as Cuba and Red China. A national conference on peace sponsored by the Democratic party. Support for the United Nations. A conference of young politi cal leaders from the Afro-Asian Pacific rim countries. Endorsement of the forthcom ing civil rights march on Wash ington. The Young Democrats condemn ed the activities of various organ izations they said were trying to limit the civil rights of non whites. They included the John Birch Society, and Americans for Constitutional Action on the list. Saturday Gov. Grant Sawyer of Nevada teld the young politicians that President Kennedy would be elected next year despite the loss of "political posture" over the civil rights issue. Sawyer and Sen. Lee Metcalf of Montana said that the John Birch Society was strong in their states. Metcalf denounced the society as "un-American and tyrannical. It's just as foreign to our demo cratic system as Nazism or Com munism." Divers making another attempt to reach boat NAHA, Okinawa (UPI) Divers made their second attempt today to recover bodies believed trapped in a sunken ferryboat which cap sized and sank off Okinawa with at least 270 persons aboard. Rescue officials said 142 persons who were aboard the Midori Saturday had been rescued. They said 13 bodies had been recovered and 116 persons were reported missing. It was one of the worst mari time disasters in Okinawa's his tory. The exact number of people aboard the ferry, a converted wartime Japanese navy patrol ship, was not known since many of the passengers were not listed. The pasengers Included about 90 school children returning to their homes on the island of Kume from Naha, Okinawa. Four Americans aboard the ferrv were rescued. They were identified as Capt. Finis E. Drink- water of Phoenix. Ariz.; Airman 2C. Edward G. Bangkroft, Wauke- gan, 111.; Garry D. Little of East Detroit, Mich., and Robert Oster- miller of Reno, Nev. The ferryboat sank within a few minutes after being hit by a sudden squall in treacherous wa ters, with whirlpools and swift cur rents, near Kamiya Island. For FAST RESULTS Advertise in The Bulletin Classified . . . Jf t : ;, ' f ' nliiw m ar a -; THE PIPERS ARE COMING The Albany Scottish Pipe Band, a popular feature of the Jef ferson County Fair last year, will be back !n Madras Saturday and Sunday for the 1963 Fair and Rodeo. The kilted pipers will march in the fair parade Saturday, pipe in the riders during the rodeo grand entry both Saturday and Sunday, play a concert at 6:30 p.m. Saturday pre ceding the 4-H market animal sale, and play during the pancake breakfast Sunday. Lucky Mid-wesfern children to get Pushinka puppies WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi dent Kennedy returned to Wash ington today after a quiet week end with his convalescent wife on Cape Cod. Closely following on an other White House plane were two VIP's (very important puppies). The President's plane landed at Andrews Air Force Base at 10:06 a.m. EDT after a 54-minute flight from Otis Air Force Base, Mass., and he took a helicopter to the White House. He had no major appointments scheduled today but will hold a news conference Tues day at 1 p.m. PDT before a mid week return to Hyannis Port, Mass. The puppies born at the White House June 14 were headed for new homes with a pair of lucky Midwest children. The dogs a male, Streaker, and a female, Butterfly, named by 5 - year - old Caroline Kennedy are half the litter of four pups born to Pushin ka, a mongrel given to Mrs. Jac queline Kennedy by Soviet Pre mier Nikita S. Khrushchev in 1961. Caroline and little brother Jo' n F. Kennedy Jr., 2, got a last chance to play with the puppies while accompanying their father this morning on a helicopter ride from the Kennedy summer home on Squaw Island to Otis Air Base. Besides the puppies, accompany ing the President on the return flight to Washington were broth ers Atty. Gen. Robert F. Ken nedy, along with his wife, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy ID Mass.) Sunday, the White House an nounced that Mrs. Kennedy had at random selected two letters from about 5,000 that had been sent to her and the President ask ing for Pushinka's offspring. The father of the puppies is Charlie, a Welsh terrier and senior mem ber of the Kennedy kennel. Lucky Youngsters The lucky youngsters are Karen House, 10, of Westchester, 111., a Chicago suburb, and Mark Bruce, 9, of Columbia Mo. Kennedy's secretary, Mrs. Eve lyn Lincoln, phoned the House and Bruce families Sunday to tell them the pups were on the way aboard Kennedy's plane to Washington, and then by air freight at the President's ex pense. Karen, late in July , wrote a letter to the President asking for "one of your pretty dog puppies because I never had a dog be fore and I like your dog very (sic) much." "Write me back and asnwer my letter please, Mr. Kennedy," the girl pleaded. "I don't know how to spell the name of the dog that just had the babies (sic)." Boy's More Poignant Mark Bruce's letter was more poignant. "On June 8, I was playing base ball," the boy said in a letter of June 19 to Mrs. Kennedy. "I Complete Auto and Truck HEAD and BLOCK REFIN ISHING STROUT'S AUTOMOTIVE 168 Greenwood Ph. 382-2442 X' was batting. Our dog Midget out behind me when I was swinging the bat and I accidentally hit her in the head. She died almost im mediately (sic)." ; Mark said he was a 4-H Ciub member whose project was dog care, which meant he had to have a dog. He said a Pushinka pup could solve this problem for him. Hayes faces prosecution MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. UPI Minneapolis police said today they expect to prosecute Oregon State Hospital escapee Royal Kenneth Hayes, 26, for an attempt to steal narcotics from a downtown drug store. Hayes, who told police he lived in Westboro, Mass., was arrested Friday. Police said he tried to leave the drug store with n bag of narcotics. Hayes was committed to the Oregon hospital at Salem after a judge found him innocent by rea son of insanity in the fatal shoot ing of Theodore Robert Ross, a fellow security guard at the Ore gon Journal building in Portland. He escaped Aug. 11. Police here said a clerk in the store called for help after Hayes Dulled a Bun on personnel behind the prescription counter. A police man waited for the man to leave the store and then collared him. A loaded .38 caliber revolver was hidden under his shirt. As a mental patient, Hayes can not be extradited to Oregon. Hos pital Superintendent Dr. Dean K. Brooks said today the only way ho could be returned to Oregon is for him to be found insane at the time of the attempted holdup here and then transferred from a Minnesota mental institution to one in Oregon. SOUND SUGGESTION LONDON (UPI) Judges, lawyers, doctors and policemen should be thoroughly experienced in drinking before they take part in drunk driving cases, a phys ician believes. Dr. B. N. Wright of the Nation al Institute for Medical Research suggested they drink enough to test their own capacity before judging others. In an article in tlie Magistrate's Journal, he said the drink test would put judg ments on "a sounder basis." Dr. Joseph W. Paulson Osteopathic Physician and Surgeon Announces The Opening of an Office in the Medical-Dental Building 7th and Deschutes Redmond Phone 548-2929 hot issue! oil heat vs. gas vs. 2 a summer decision e Why get all fired up? Oil, gas ot electricity are all "warm, comfortable, clean, efficient and modern" methods of heating It says so in their ads The burning difference is that Oil Heat costs less than gas or electricity So, if you want all the comforts of home when it's cold-and still want to save money-there's only one thing to do Insist on Oil Heat when you buy or build-or when you convert or modernize your furnace Simple, isn't it? GET THE FACTS FOR THIS AREA... WRITE FOR HEATING ENGINEER STUDY and prove to yourself the Fact is Oil Heat costs less. Oil HIT mnwt.lt 4tim Fittf"l trf4lit tt hitirf Hnuihlf t1li4 gffni 4)3 Hf 1Ii4Am the MEAT Meredith gets his diploma from Ole Miss OXFORD, Miss. (UPI) Negro James H. Meredith graduated from the University of Mississip pi in a quiet ceremony Sunday in an oak grove within rock-throwing distance of the center of last fall's rioting touched off by his enrollment. The 30-year-old Air Force veter an, wearing the black cap and gown of the graduating senior, re ceived a bachelor of arts degree in political science to become the first Negro alumnus in the school's 115-year-old history. Campus police and federal mar shals stood guard during the 1V4 hour program, held in a shady grove of giant oak trees about 100 yards from the center of rioting which erupted last autumn follow ing Meredith's arrival on campus. Two men were killed and scores injured in the Sept. 30 riot that brought 30,000 federal troops streaming into this small college town. But the last of the troops were gone Sunday. The graduation went off without a hitch. There were no incidents. When his name was called, Meredith stepped up to Chancel lor J. D. Williams to receive the diploma and the traditional "Con gratulations and good luck." Accord sought by negotiators GENEVA (UPI) Western disarmament negotiators today were reported hopeful the Soviet Union will agree this week to negotiate on exchanging observa tion posts against surprise at tacks and not insist on a prior non-aggression pact. Informed sources said the West regards talks on exchanging posts as a test case ot Soviet readiness to negotiate further limited East- West accords rather than de manding negotiations at this stage on complex issues like a non-ag gression pact between the West ern and Communist military blocs. They said Western negotiators hope the Soviets will give the "virtual go-ahead" to new bilater al negotiations by agreeing to treat observation posts as a sep arate issue with no strings at tached. electricity costs less than gas or electricity In 18 years since first atomic blast some 450 f nuclear test explosions have been touched off EDITOR'S NOTE: Russia and the United States, en the brink of war over Cuban missile bases less than a year ago, re cently signed a treaty designed to steer mankind away from possible nuclear destruction. Now it Is befor the U.S. Sen ate for ratification. In the fol lowing dispatch, a veteran UPI reporter who covered the first Bikini bomb tests describes the nuclear race which led to the treaty and what It has meant to space-age weaponry. By Joseph L. Myler UPI Staff Writer WASHINGTON (UPI) His tory's first nuclear weapon was exploded in the summer of 1945. Its power frightened even those who made it. Some called it the "ultimate weapon." It was so bulky that only the biggest U. S. bomber could carry it. It weighted five tons. But it was equal in violence to nearly 20,000 tons (20 kilotons) of TNT. This bomb and another one, dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshi ma in World War II, killed 106, 000 persons outright and inflicted grievous injury on 97,000 more. The first combat use of a nu clear weapon was the bombing of Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945. The second was the bombing of Naga saki on Aug. 9, 1945. To date there have been no others. But in the 18 years after the first experimental blast in the New Mexican desert there have been approximately 450 nuclear test explosions. Hie first nuclear bomb repre sented a 4,000-fold jump in power over TNT weapons. Now there exists in the Soviet arsenal a weapon with an energy potential 5,000 times greater than the early A-bombs. Like tlie bombs of 1945, the So viet weapon can be carried only by a heavy modern bomber, al though missiles or spacecraft cap. able of delivering it may be in the cards. The Soviet bomb is equivalent in energy to 100 million tons (100 megatons) of TNT, This one weap on could do to greater Now York what those little ones of 1945 did to Hiroshima. Its toll would be reckoned not in thousands but in millions of lives. The 25-mcgatonner is tlie big gest bomb in the U. S. arsenal. This country, scientists say, could have developed a 100 -megaton bomb any time It wanted to the past 10 years. But the 25 mcgalonner is considered the biggest with any real military worth. Since 1945 both sides have ex ploded more than 400 nuclear test weapons equal in power more than 511 million tons (511 mega tons) of TNT. This works out at 25,550 limes the power of the Hiroshima bomb. Strictly Farm Fresh LARGE Lady Elberta Halves PEACHES TOMATO SOUP 9 Campbell's Reg. Tin CIDER VINEGAR 69 Hood River Gallon Hormel Dairy Brand BACON Fancy Sliced 59 Mb. Pkg. Limit Rights Reserved CONGRESS THRIFTWAY 210 Congress Of the 511 megaton total, the Russians exploded 357.7 megatons and the United States and Brit ain together, 153.3 megatons. If nuclear experimentation should continue indefinitely, ac cording to the experts, the variety of weapons might also be ex panded indefinitely, resulting at one extreme in the "gigaton" weapon. This would be a bomb equal to 1,000 megatons of TNT. It prob ably would weigh 100 to 200 tons. It could hardly be delivered by anything but a submarine or sur face ship. A few of them explod ed off the West Coast could doom half of the United States. At tlie other end of the scale might be the tiny H-bomb cap able of killing with radiation at short range without destroying property or contaminating the at mosphere. This, the little "clean" H-bomb, is otherwise known a: the neutron bomb. Now the three nuclear powers have proposed a limited test ban treaty. It would not necessarily halt the arms race, but it might slow development of horrible new weapons and curb contamination of the world's atmosphere with dangerous debris. It would prohibit tests in the at mosphere, under water, and in space. It would permit only those deep or shallow underground tests which did not pollute the air outside the testing nation. The United States apparently has a fine head start on all other nations in testing underground. So far 71 of its tests have been underground. The British have tested two nuclear devices in un derground shots in Nevada. The French, according to reports, have staged two underground ex plosions. Russia is known to have exploded one nuclear weapon underground. THE KING'S ENGLISH We shudder at sloven, inaccurate language. Things like split infinitives and misplaced apos trophies distress us. Our customers deserve better. That's why every printing job, here at , Fowler's, Is carefully screened for proper English, You can be sure It's correct If it's done at Fowler's! PRWTIN6 COMMNY Lfi'iWf I'MY I m Grade AA EGGS or Slices FROZEN FOODS All 49c Varieties Chefs Froien DINNERS' ea. 39c Sera Lee Froien Pecen COFFEE CAKE 79c Sunnee Froien Buttered BEEF STEAKS Pkg. 69c CORN Fresh Golden 49c Doz. us. no. 2 POTATOES 20 lb. 7QC Bag 77 Ph. 3824711 Authorities have emphasized that the limited test ban would not, of itself, slow down the stock-, piling of nuclear weapons. ' Missiles are the biff thine these days. But this country has 500 or' more B52 and 1,000 or more B47 bombers capable of carrying its big city-killing bombs. Practically every U.S. warplane is geared to deliver nuclear weapons of one kind or another. A recently published list shows that the United States has 34 dif ferent kinds of missiles aside from its warplanes designed toJ deliver nuclear blows. Of the 34 types, 24 are said to be ready to fire with the other 10 still in the development stage. Less is known about Soviet capabilities. But the Russians, have their Badger, Bear, and Bi son warplanes, plus a long list of ..' ballistic missiles. Of a dozen So- ; viet missiles capable of delivering - nuclear warheads at various dis-... tances, 10 are said to be ready for combat and two are still un-' ' der development. LEARN TO FLY IT'S EASY IT'S FUN! Terms Available GIBSON AIR SERVICE Bend Municipal Airport Ph. 382-2801 QUALITY PRINTING or more than half a century 936 BOND 382-4261 2i85' 4 s. I00 Tastewell TOMATO JUICE 19 46 oz. Can Frozen Food LOCKERS 10 00 Only Year Custom Cutting & Wrapping Locker Beef lor Sale Check With Claude