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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1963)
.ic Z:'.'.:iiu, VVecr.csJcy, gP. $r r I 3 r 1 lip !; rJl '11 J IPS lllfte HELD IN BEND Delta Kappa Gamma, honorary society for women teachers, held a state planning meeting in Bend Satur- I day. State officers from the left are: Alice W. Otfis, state I president, Grants Pass; Florence Ferebee, first vice president, Pnneville; Edna E. Dean, second vice president, Baler; Merle Kennedy hoping for new talks on fish rights WASHINGTON UPI- Presi dent Kennedy expressed hope Tuesday that Japan will agree in renewed talks starting Sept. 16 to retain restrictions on fishing rights In the North Pacific. "It is obvious that unless inter national conservation agreements are ' itrlctly enforced there Is grave danger of permanent injury to our ocean resources," the Pres ident said in a statement. Kennedy Issued the statement after discussing the issue with Ambassador Benjamin A. Smith II, who will lead the U.S. dele gation In tho Tokyo discussions with Japanese and Canadian rep resentatives. With Kennedy and Smith wore Sens. Warren G. Wagnuson and Henry L. Jackson of Washington, E. L. Barl led of Alaska, and Ed win M. Kennedy, of Massachu setts. All are Democrats. .Japan, Canada and the United Stales are parties to a 10-year-old treaty on conservation and use of fishing resources in tho North Pacific. It can be reopened at the request of any party, and Japan made such a request in hoo of changing tho "abstention prin ciple" which calls for the fishing restrictions. Saying "This principle Is sound and reasonable," the President made known the United States would continue to insist that Jnpa ncso fishermen not take North Amorican salmon on the high ens. Current restrictions bar Ja pan from taking salmon east of 175 degrees west longitude in tho North Pacific. No conclusions were reached In a meeting held In the United States In June by the three na tions. He said Atlantic halibut fisher ies already had declined from 13.5 million pounds to 300,000 pounds. Iii hud Out Ih Ccnlra.Urygou BEND New patients at St. Charles Me morial Hospital aro William sw ing, Prlnevillc; Ann Ilohnsteln, Ilouie 1, Bend: Christ inn Bowls- by, 350 Columbia; David Downs, 80 McKay. ratients dismissed were John Beech, Mrs. Myma llohnstein, Doit Llnduren, Mrs. Max Ston kamp, Albert Eriksen. Linda Kl dridge. DRIVER CITED Melvln Craig Usher, 1455 Cum berland, collected a city police citation Tuesday charging him with a basic rule violation. Bail is $25. ake A New Look at Central Oregon SCENIC AIR TOURS GIBSON AIR SERVICE Bend Municipal Airport Ph. 382-2801 f P w ft. I Lawmakers, state agencies over-reacting to pressure (Editors note: State officials have become to sensitive to voter reaction that they are Inadvert ently contributing to the possible defeat of the legislature's t0 mil lion tax increase measure at the Oct. 15 election. Second of five- part series.) I By Zan Stark ' UPI Staff Writer SALEM (UPI) - Legislators and state agencies are so fearful Boards order post-high school study SALEM (UPI) An exhaustive Btudy of post-high school educa tion in Oregon was ordered Tues day by tho bourds of Education and Higher Education at their an nual Joint meeting here. Staff members from both the Department of Education and Higher Education will work to gether in drafting the report In ho)cs of having it ready for pre sentation to next year's meeting of the two boards. Dr. Miles Itomney, vice chan cellor of the Department of High er Education, said the study was urgently needed. Most of tho 214 hour joint meeting was devoted to discussion of the possible effects on the state's education system if the tax increase measure is defeated at the Oct. 15 referendum. Public Instruction Superintend ent Ixxm P. Minear said defeat of tho tax measure could result in major cuts in basic school sup port and force local property taxes up. Higher Education Chancellor Hoy Licuallen said defeat of the tax measure would forco limits on enrollment, higher tuition fees, and cuts in the building program and special services. Minear pointed out the average Oregon teachers' salary is now about 25 per cent below the aver age salary paid in California. He warned tins could leod to deple tion of the state's supply of teach ers. Licuallen said higher education would aim to maintain quality in its instruction programs, and would make cuts accordingly. Sisters man offers top bid A Sisters man, Hov H. Hart ford, was successful bidder for timber in the Roaring Creek and Canyon Crook sfjvage sale areas afttn auction recently held In the Sisters Hanger District. Total stumpage in the two stiles aggre gated about 450.000 board feet. Hartford obtained tho timber i on minimum acceptable bids. The bid for the ponderosa pine and western white pine In tlie Rnar ' ing Creek area was $t4.75. and i that for Douglas lir, western larch and Englemann spruce was S4.75. White fir and other species i was sold for $2.90. I On the Canyon Creek sale, pon i derosa and western white pine I sold for $14 a thousand, and Douglas fir, western larch and Kngleiuaun spruce for (4 15. I White fir and other s p e c i e I brought $2. 10 per thousand. Choice Steak DINNERS Top Sirloin, Rib, T-Bone Only 1.95 PASCAL! CAFI 1219 S. 3rd 382 3511 H. Woodward, executive secretary, Grants Pass; Jaunita Pohl, parliamentarian, Sherwood; Jennie Calhoun, treasurer, Grants Pass; Bernice Conoley, recording secretary, Beaverton; and Valborg Fisher, president of the Central Oregon chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma from Bend. of defeat of the $60 million tax increase bill at the Oct. 15 elec tion they are unintentionally con tributing to its defeat. They seem to be over-reacting to public pressure for economy. An example Is the Sept. 6 meet ing of the State Emergency Board. This is a group made up of leg islators. They serve as fiscal watchdogs when the legislature is not m session. When state agencies need more money because of emergencies or because the legislature forgot to appropriate funds for certain Jobs, they take their case to the Emer gency Board. At the Sept. S meeting the Emergency Board refused to grant appropriations asked by the Justice Department and the State Tax Commission to implement new laws. Told to Juggle Resources Both agencies were told to jug gle the money and people Uiey al ready had, and to get tho job done without any more money. Emergency Board members told the agencies a "tax revolt" was underway, and that they had to economize. The reaction of the man on the streets is that the only reason economy is being stressed is be cause the tax increase measure has been referred. He wonders if the legislators would have been as economy-minded If a referen dum were not pending. The legislature set aside $300,- 000 to finance the Oct. 15 special election. The Emcrgoney board cut this to $275,000. This was pure window dressing, because the law sets aside the full $300,000, and the full amount will have to be spent If It is needed. If that -amount isn't needed, It won't be spent, regardless of the Emergency Board's action. But the man in the street thinks It is an economy move. Salary Cut Eyed At the previous Emergency Board meeting salary increases for state workers were approved only through the end of Uiis year. Tho idea was if the tax measure is defeated, tho salary increases would be withdrawn. But it mav not work this way The state can't play ping-pong with an employe's paycheck. If the tax bill is defeated some workers may be fired, or all may be forced to take days oft with out pay. But tho basic salary rates will stay up unless the Civil Service Commission adopts a lower salary schedule. Emergency Board members are worried. They're afraid of what can happen to the state's govern ment If the tax bill is defeated. They're sincerely concerned about the state's education pro gram, which will be the hardest hit. Tomorrow: The crisis In educa tion. HOUSE RAMS TRUCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (UPI) A house ran into a truck here Tuesday. As truck driver Bui Tomson was towing the dwelling down a street, he suddenly found the way blocked by parked cars. Tomson hit the brakes; the house kept going. Tlie runaway dwelling jack nlfed the truck, smashed into Its side and drove It across a lawn. FHEE-drllcl 0U8 9 'KRAUT IlECIPESl Irom , mi. Dpt. B r.0.Bw25.rortlind J,0re. Intermarriage between races opposed by HST NEW YORK (UPD-Former President Harry S. Truman said today he hopes that progress in integration in (he United States will not lead to intermarriage be tween the races. Truman discussed the subject during his regular morning walk which began the last day of a family visit here. He planned to return home to Independence, Mo., tonight. Asked his views on integration and whether it would lead to in termarriage, Truman said "I hope not. I don't believe in it. Tlie Lord created it that way. You read your Bible and you'll una out," he told reporters who accompanied him on the stroll along Madison and Park Avenues. Pressed further on his views, Truman answered queries with a question. He asked a reporter if he would want his daughter to marry a Negro. "If she loved him," the re porter replied. "She won't love somebody that's not her color," Truman said. "You will edit tlie man she goes out with. "I did and she got tlie right man," he said, referring to his daughter, Margaret. 'How did we get on this (ra cial) subject anyway?" he asked. His comments on intermarriage came after he praised President Kennedy's action in handling the Alabama integration crisis Tues day. Cases handled in LaPine court Special to The Bulletin LaPINE Cited by Oregon State Police on traffic charges, 12 motorists received fines in re cent appearances in tho court f Justice of the Peace Barney M. ninrun, utl'ino. Two men were cited for truck speeding. They were Donald R. Cook, Granger, Wash., and Wil liam Barricks, Silver Lake. Each was fined $10. Carl Best of San Gabriel. Calif., and Clifford H Tillman, Buena Park, Calif., ar rested on charges of operating ve hicles without public utilities com mission permits, received fines of $20 each. Frank A. Batchelor, Merlin, and Rudolph S. Buddec. San Francis co, Calif., appeared in court on charges of disobeying stop signs. Each was fined $15. Six were cited by Oregon State Police on charges of operating ve hicles having obstructed rear vis Ion. They v?n Sydney L. Morse, Prospect: Iroy H. Whitmore. Beaverton: Clarence L. Pirtii, Al bany. Calif.; Walter G. Talmer, Alderwood, Wash.; Joseph G. Markham. Ashland, and Clirp B Rasmussen, West Linn. Each was fined $10. "Nii-Way Newt" says: "Watch Your Step" Don'f fill for Inftrlor qutlltyl Sltp up to NU WAY cuttem liund.rtd Ihlrt . . . tht ihlrt thif It rdr to wetr . . . th ihlrt thtt nxdt no hand touch-up to jf out tho wrinklesi Clvt Nowt a ring today and Itt him aolva II your ihlrt probltmi, S&H Green Start.ps NU-WAY LAUNDRY S. City Limits Ph. 382-1101 41 persons nun as train rams into locomotive HUDSON, N.Y. (UPI) - A New York Central Railroad com muter express sped through an open switch Tuesday night and collided with a switching locomo tive on a siding, injuring 41 per sons, one of them critically. The impact derailed two en gines, three passenger coaches, and a baggage car, and left four mail cars strewn along the banks of the Hudson River here. None of the six derailed cars turned over; 300 feet of track was torn up. The train was the Henrick Hudson, en route to Albany from New York City. J. T. Miles, a switchman, said he saw an uni dentified man try to stop the ten car express from going off the main track. "I saw him at the switch," Miles said. "We were less than 50 feet away. But you can't stop a train going 70 miles an hour in 50 feet. He almost got killed trying." Lawrence Shallo, owner of a taxicab company located at the train station, said, "There was a loud crash and we could hear the people moaning." Ambulances and taxis took 25 persons to Columbia Hospital here, and all but 19 were released later. Frank Letzelter, 61, of Hudson, a conductor on the train, remained in critical condition with throat injuries. Authorities said at least 16 per sons were treated at the scene of the derailment and then re leased. Two smoke jumpers get treatment Two smoke jumpers injured Tuesday when they were dispatch ed irom tne Kcdmond Fire Con trol Center and dropped near a fire burning in the rugged Cala- pooya Mountain area of the Des chutes National Forest received treatment in an Eugene hospital. They were Tim Taylor and Paul Thomas, both of Okanogan. Wash., and were members of a unit of four dropped on the fire from a Cave Junction plane with Pilot Williams at the controls, It was first feared that one of the men suffered a broken lee, but it was learned today that in juries are confined to ankle sprains. They were to be taken from Eugene today to their home station at Okanogan. Rugged terrain along the Mid dle Fork of the Willamette and gusty winds were blamed for the injuries suffered by the smoke jumpers. The fire is under control. Caye expedition being planned Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland, is to spon sor a cave expedition into Cen tral Oregon this weekend, with a two-day trip planned to circle the Paulinas. Heading the expedition, plan ned for OMSI families, will be James O. Anderson, Jr., a former Bend resident. He is now natural ist for the Portland museum. Al ready enrolled for the trip are 93 persons. Just short of 30 cars will be in the caravan that will reach Bend about 12:30 p.m. Sat urday. The meeting place will be the Fort Rock District headquarters on East Greenwood. Joe Sten kamp of the district staff plans to accompany the group into the lava cave country. First stop will be at Skeleton Cave, with the Arneld Ice Cave also to bo visited. There will be an overnight, dry camp at Lava ciclc Cave. The largo group will set up camp near the cave en trance, have dinner, then spend the evening in the cavern. Sunday will find the group In the Fort Rock country, with a vis it to Derrick Cave planned. There be a stop at the ranch home of Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Long, where Long's fine collection of artifacts will be on display. As the group prepares for the return trip to Bend via LaPine, there will be a stop at the Hole-In-the-G round. Frot Pick-Up a Dtllvary Ariomey oeneiai says v;ov. make any cuts in basic school SALEM (UPI) Oregon Gov. Mark Hatfield cannot make cuts in the basic school allotment, Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton said Tuesday. The ruling may mean that a special session of the legislature will have to be called if the 1963 legislature's $60 million tax in crease measure is defeated at the Oct. 15 referendum election. Hatfield told United Press In ternational "no decision has yet been made" on whether to call a special session. Thornton said the Basic School Support Fund was a "dedicated fund" and that appropriations to and from the fund are not subject to allotment controls by the De partment of Finance and Adminis tration acting under authority of the governor. Mrs. Coyner to take part in DAR tour As a special observance of Constitution Week, members and friends of the Daughters of the American Revolution will visit the Schmink Memorial Museum in Lakeview next Tuesday. Mrs. W. C. Coyner of Bend, state regent, will join a state-wide group in Portland, for a three-day tour September 16, 17 and 18. Plans are being made for a group of local membe to go by car Tuesday morning for the program in Lakeview, returning that eve ning. The group leaving from Portland Monday will travel by chartered bus. In Lakeview, a marker will be placed at the grave of Mrs. Artie Lula Sclimink, who donated her property and the museum to the Oregon Society, Daughters of the American Revolution. Any income from the property above the up keep of the museum goes to the mountain schools maintained by the national society: Tamassee in South Carolina and Kate Duncan Smith in Alabama. Luncheon on Tuesday will be hosted by the Lakeview Soropti mist Club. A buffet dinner will be given by the Lakeview DAR chapter at the ranch home of Mrs. Beatrice M. Maxwell. At tlie museum, the visitors will see the noted glass collection, quilts, china, furniture and other histori cal items. On the way home, members of Winema chapter, Corvallis, will place a wreath at the grave of their namesake at Beatty, near Klamath Falls. Princess Winema was a Modoc Indian girl who risked her life several times to save both members of her own tribe and white friends from treachery. A picnic at Crater Lake will be a feature of the return trip. Mrs. Oliver N. Adams of Portland is in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Robert Lyons is regent of Bend chapter, and Miss Marguer ite Elder is chairman of District No. 6 and state chairman of Americanism manuals. Entire wheel assembly taken An entire wheel assembly, In cluding bearings and tire, was stolen from a Forest Service truck parked three miles west of the end of the pavement on Century Drive. The theft was reported to the sheriff's office yestorday from the Blue River Guard Station, Mc Kenzie Bridge. The vehicle, a half-ton pickup, was near the Six Lakes Trail be tween Doris and Blow lakes. Be cause it is federal property, the theft was also reported to the Fed eral Bureau of Investigation. Use Classification No. 32 to find the musical instrument you want Start Thursday ER REVOR'LyNLEY Ttrror Filled Co-Hit House of fte Dawned And The Men i 1 v JJP Who led 1 Her lb Become ,. 1 It had been assumed that if Hatfield had authority to make cuts he might have made them himself rather than call a special legislative session. The school fund totals $141 mil lion, about one-third of the $404 million general fund budget for 1963-65. The governor said Thornton's opinion "further restricts my au thority to deal with the financial emergency that will face the state If the tax measure is defeated Oct. 15. "His opinion removes 30 per cent of the general fund budget from the possibility of reduction by my action. "I am now reviewing the pos sible impact of his opinion on other budgets and will report the facts to the people." Hatfield had asked Thornton for an opinion on the legality of the executive branch making tlie cuts. It was the first time in more than four years the Republican gover nor had asked the opinion of the democratic attorney general. Thornton's opinion noted the basic School Support Fund was established in 1947 when it was provided that certain tax moneys Union target in equity suit An equity suit seeking an in junction to restrain a union from picketing is among civil actions filed in circuit court. Also on file was a new divorce suit and an action seeking a lien against prop erty for work done. Lynn A. Baker, Redmond, is the plaintiff in an action against Carpenters Union Local 1277. Al so named as defendants are Roy Letz, president of the local; Har old Davis, secretary and business agent, and Earl Farley and R. F. Hussell, agents and employes. Barker, who states in his com plaint that he is constructing a building in Redmond for Leon ard Downs, asks a judgment for $750 damages from the union and an injunction against the defend ants. The complaint states that the employes are not members of a union, to the plaintiff's knowl edge, and that the plaintiff has sent a petition to the State Labor Management Relations Board ask ing that an election be conducted. Caroline A. Dally has filed for divorce from Rodney O. Dally. They were married Nov. 20, 1961. in Williams, Minn. The plaintiff seeks custody of the couple's year-old child and $50 monthly support. Frank Durham is suing Mr. and Mrs. James J. Rosenthal, owners of property at 1439 W. Fourth Street, Bend, for $564, balance due on a bill of $964, plus 6 per cent interest from May 19, 1963. MOVING??? PHONE 382-5641 BEND STORAGE & TRANSFER Agent For Insured Storage Office & Warehouse Located at 539 E. 1st Noxt to Let Schwab Tlrt Cantor !'; v'J Daily KOIN TV WKPNESPAY 6:00 Newscene Huniley-Brlnkley Report Rifleman ?; Cronklte News News Beal! Cochran A ths yws 7-on Pipcon! Outdoor Sportsman Lawman 7:30 F-rtu. In Latin America The Virginian Wagon Train 8:1 Doble GIlUs Going My Wsy 9'00 Hevcrlv Hillbillies Kraft Mystery Theatrs 9:30 Pick Van Dyke Show " Our Man Hlgglns 10:00 Roots of Freedom The Eleventh Hour Naked City 10:30 " " 11-00 Ninhlscene Mht Beat News Kinal 11:30 All Siar Wrest lln Tonight Show Movie 12 K 4TU-TV rhunnel S 7:30 Two for the Show fi OO Kxpcdiuon 9:W Billy Graham 6 30 Ann Sothern 1V00 X-2 News Special 7:00 Croucho Marx 10:30 Steve Allen KOr-TV Channel 10 S:00 Refresher Enallsh 6 30 What's New 8:30 What In tht World 7 00 Pet's for Kids :00 TRA 7-13 Friendly Giant 9:30 Eric Hoffef 7:30 Refresher Math 10:00 Flaherty Film " THtnsiUV I: jo Prayer H-mn 7 00 Today 7 30 Weather Forecast " Paul's Atriscopa T:5 Cart.xyi Time " " $ l Captain Kansaroo Canooner'S Club Dr. Znom's Cartoon $.t5 The Klna Odl g;30 " Telescope Romper Rovn o in Mike Wallace. News " Jack LaLanns Snow 9 30 I Lve Lucy Ploy Your Hunch Way of Life 10 it) The McCoys 0noeniratin Life ot Riley in 30 Pete A Gladys Mi sung Links TV Rlnjr 11 00 Love of Life Y.mr First Impression The Price Is Right 11 30 Search for Tomorrow Truth or Consequences Seven Keys 11 M Guiding Light " " 1- no ill NeighMr People UlU Talk Emis Ford 12:30 As The World Turns The CVvtors Faiher Knowi Beat I'OO KOIN Kitchen Loretta Young Show General Hospital 1-30 Huse Party You Pont Say Girl Tslk ; mi To Tell TV Truth The Match Game Peter Cum 3 Edse of Nisht Make Room for Dudy Day In Court tt secret Storm The Matine Queen For A Day 3 sn pn.wvrd " Who Do You Trust 4 M Cart.xm Orcue " Trail mater 4 1 Early Show " 4.50 Cart-inn OrnU (c 5 hj " Three Stootes j 15 Popet Cartoons 5 JO " Space Angel " S W Newc-e " " KtTl-TY tluinnet t 1 30 A marMC 1 30 yv-het Matine 4 00 Cirt'-vmval 1 TfcH log h mad mp from aerMravj cannot b Baranlee! harrieia can t allotment "shall be placed by the state trea surer in a fund to be known as the Basic School Support Fund to be used exclusively for the Im provement and support of the pub lic elementary and secondary schools of the state. "It has been continued In ex istence and remains dedicated to school purposes. "It falls within the definition of a 'dedicated fund,' . . . and, even if it may be considered as a fund expended by a state agency, ex penditures from the fund could be made without allotment "In the light of our conclusion that the allotment system does not include expenditures from the Basic School Support Fund, we can find no basis for stating that it includes appropriations into that came fund. "The allotment system involves the obtaining of prior approval of the Department of Finance and Administration to governmental expenditures. If the allotment sys tem does not apply to expendi tures from a dedicated fund. It has no application to appropria tions into the dedicated fund," Thornton said. KBND I110KC , t SMOWatti) tali li "la:-- - . TONIGHT'S P HOC! BAMS 8:00 Sam Bailer Sport 6:10 Paul Harvey News 6:15 Ralph Curtis Show 6: 2S Flair Reports 8:30 Central Oregon College 6:4S-Alex Dreler News 6: 55 News 7:00 K-Bend Musk-al Patrol 8: SO Ralph Curtis Show 5:55 Network News 8:55 Network News 9:00 Ralph Curtii Show 9:55 Network Newt 10:00 Dick Clark Reports 10:l& Ralph Curtis Show, Jftwi THU USD A 6:00 News Around Uit World 6:05 TNT 6:30 Local News 6:45 Farm Reporter 7:00 Frank Hemingway 7:15 Morning Melotilci 7:25 News 7:30 M rnlng Roundup 8:00 Dun Allen with Uie news 8:10 Northwest News 6:15 Larry Wilson Show 8:30 Memo from Mary 8:35 Larry Wilson Show 8:55 Network News 9:00 Bulletin Board 9:10 Larry Wilson Show 9:30 Golden Hila 9:45 Top Tunes ld:0O Larry Wilson Show 10: 1!5 Flair Reports 10:30 Local News 10:35 Larry Wilson Show 10:55 Network News U:00 Larry Wilson Show 11:55 Network News 12:00 Noontime Melodies 12: 10 Today's Classifieds 12: 15 Sports Review 12:20 Noontime Melodies 12:30 Noon News 3': 45 Farmers Hour 3:00 Sam Bass Show 1:25 Flair Reports 3:30 Paul Harvey News 1:45 Sam Bass Show 3:55 Network News 2;0rt Five Golden Mlnulei 2:05 Sam Bass Show 2:55 Network News 8:oo collectors Comer 8:25 Sam Bass Show 8:55 Network Newt 4:00 Sam Bass Show 4:25 Northwest News 4:30 Sam Bass Show 4:40 Tom Harmon Snorts 4:50 Sam Bass Show 4:55 Network News 5:00 Sam Bass Show 8:25 Local News 5:30 Ralph Curtis Show Packing & Crating Heated Warehouse Bonded Drivers Certified Service TCO)g8"wa KGW 1 2 TV 4.30 Rusty Nails h no supcrmi- S.30 Mickey MeuM Club tn format t"i fnmbaW by Teleitstoa Mauoas i bg The Bwlletia.