Dair, of Oregon Library
ewens, osmoti - . .
The
Fair tonight In Ctntrjl Oregon,
ForfiCOSt P4r"y cloudy, cooler on Sun
day. Lowt tonight, 37-45. High
Sunday, 70-75.
High yetterday, 77 dogrea.
Low lait night, 45 degreos.
SunMt today, 7:05. Sunris
tomorrow, t.il, PDT,
Hi and Lo
SERVING BEND AND CENTRAL OREGON
60th Year
Eight Pages
Saturday, September 21, 1963
Ten Cents
No. 244
accuses : China fi
birdbir violations
5000
Pope moves
to liberalize
Roman Curia
VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pope
Paul VI moved today to liberalize
the strongly-conservative Roman
Curia, the central administrative
body of the Roman Catho
lic Church.
Speaking to members of the
Curia at a special audience, the
Pope said that "various reforms
will be needed."
He said these reforms will be
considered carefully and then car
ried out both in accord with tradi
tion and in line with the needs
of the times.
One of the most significant of
the reforms indicated by the Pope
will be the addition of members
of the Roman Catholic hierarchy
from many lands in greater num
bers to the Curia, which now is
dominated largely by Italians.
Wants More Response
He also told the Curia mem
bers that they will have to be
more responsive to the spirit of
the Second Vatican Council, which
reconvenes Sept. 29, and also pay
more obedience to what the pon
tiff wishes.
The reform of the Curia was
considered of great importance by
observers. It could mean tremen
dous changes within the adminis
tration of the church although
dogma and matters of faith and
morals would remain the same.
The move lo streamline the
Curia was considered another mo
mentous step to bring the Roman
Catholic Church in line with the
space age.
It was considered on a par
with the activities of the council
Itself, which has as one of its
main aims an internal adjustment
of the church.
Makeup Of Curia
The Roman Curia is the cen
tral governmental structure of the
Roman Catholic Church. It is
made up of the secretariat of
state, 12 congregations such as
those of the holy office, rites,
ceremonies, and affairs of the re
ligious; and three tribunals plus
several other minor offices.
Each of these major groups is
headed by a cardinal usually
an Italian and has its own
component of workers and offi
cials. These, in the great majority,
are Italians.
Since the Curia is the control
line body of church machinery
its policies go a long way towards
defining the working policies of
the church throughout the world.
It has long been the stronghold
of the so-called "conservatives
of the church.
Plea ordered
from Rivera
LOS ANGELES (UPD George
Rivera, 28, a former mental pa
tient, has been ordered to enter a
plea Wednesday on charges of
murder and assault with a deadly
weapon as a result of running
down a delegate to the recent
Jehovah's Witnesses assembly
with his car.
Rivera was arraigned Friday in
Superior Court on charges stem
ming from the death of Harold
Mather, 38, Roseburg, Ore.
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w
n
5
Youth listed
as critical
after crash
Special to The Bulletin
REDMOND Three men, two
of them members of the staff of
Radio Station KPRB in Redmond,
were injured in a one-car acci
dent just south of the Redmond
city limits this morning about
3:45 o'clock.
In the Central Oregon District
Hospital are Lynne La Combe, 22,
and Leo Minton, 30, of the KPRB
staff, and Allen L. Clinton, 18,
Redmond resident. Clinton was
reported critically injured.
Minton lives at 206 East Revere
in Bend.
Minton was driver of the car.
The car, carrying the three
men, was headed south toward
Bend, when the vehicle left the
highway and rolled over.
Clinton is a member of a Cen
tral Oregon dance band. A broth
er, Robert L. Clinton, died in an
accident at Round Butte dam last
year.
Astoria man
I ri
rescued aner
1 0-day ordeal
MANILA (UPI) An American
mining executive and one of three
Filipino companions were res
cued today 10 days after their
light plane crashed during a
storm in mountain terrain in tne
northern Philippines.
The American, W. L. Shaner,
Astoria. Ore., and Attorney Ra-
mon Pacia, told rescuers their
two companions survived tne
crash but have not been heard
from since they left to seek help
the next day, bept vt.
" Shaner' is operations vice presf-
dent of Acoje Mines of the Philip
pines. Pacia is Acoje assistant
personnel manager. The two still
missing are Capt. Jose Salandan-
an, pilot of the Aztec-B twin-engine
plane, and Capt. Amado Cas
tro, Acoje assistant security chief.
A message received today trom
the rescue team in Zambales pro
vince, about 250 miles northwest
of Manila, said Pacia was being
airlifted to Manila, while Shaner
was taken aboard the plane of
Jesus Cabarrus, Acoje Mines
president
An earlier report said Shaner
was weak but otherwise unhurt.
Pacia was said to have suffered
a leg injury and bruises on the
head.
Move under way
by Bend Drug
Allen Young and members of
his Bend Rexall Drug staff were
busy this afternoon moving to
their new location, in the Erick
son Supermarket building on East
Greenwood.
The work will occupy the staff
over the weekend, and on Mon
day the store will open in its new
home, in quarters formerly oc
cupied by the Cornet store, which
is now in the recently completed
Erickson Supermarket addition.
Installation of fixtures in the
new quarters of Young's pharm
acy was completed yesterday, and
the display of new stock was
started.
I
H
M
Farm groups
would deny
Reds wheat
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Hie
American Farm Bureau Federa
tion and the National Grange, the
nation's two largest farm organi- j
zations, said today they were op-j
posed at present to exports ot
government-subsidized wheat to
the Soviet Union.
Spokesmen for the two groups
added, however, that the issue of
possible wheat sales to Russia
will be reviewed by Farm Bureau
and Grange members this fall.
Under present regulations, ex
ports of subsidized crops to Rus
sia is not permitted. And, at pres
ent, all wheat exports are subsi
dized with government payments
covering the gap between the
American support price and the
lower world market price.
Russia's recent purchases of
wheat from Canada and Australia
have produced speculation about
possible sales of American wheat
to the Soviet Union.
Some congressmen from wheat
states have called for a change
in government policy to allow for
such sales at the same subsidized
export price used on all foreign
sales of American wheat.
Administration farm officials
said that no wheat sales propos
als had been received from the
Soviet Union. But there have
been rumors of feelers in private
trade circles.
MOSCOW (UPI) - Drought has
severely cut back this year's So
viet grain harvest, forcing Rus
sia to import more wheat than at
any time since World War Q,
Western farm experts said.
Even in the North Caucasus,
where the .Russians claim record
harvests of grain, the crop did
not measure up to expectations
due to lack of rain in July and
August.
Foreign newsmen who visited
the Kuban River area of the
North Caucasus reported Friday
night that this traditionally rich
farm area had a poor com har
vest and good but not outstand
ing wheat yields.
In the widely separated bread
basket areas of the Ukraine and
Kazakhstan, thaws added to the
drought in cutting into the grain
harvests.
Russia, with large grain export
commitments, has found itself in
the position of having to buy 7
millions tons of grain from Can
ada and Australia to meet its re-
quirements at home and abroad.
Richard Boone's
condition said
fo be very good
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UPI)
Actor Richard Boone, of the
"Have Gun, Will Travel" televi
sion scries, was reported in
"very good" condition today in
St. John s Hospital.
Boone, 47, was hospitalized Fri
day after his powerful, expensive
foreign car slammed into a
parked car near his Pacific Pali
sades home.
Attendants said the craggy
faced actor received abrasions
and multiple lacerations of the
face and torn rib cartilage in the
smashup. The injuries were de
scribed as extremely painful.
USES LITTLE LIPSTICK
FONTANA. Calif. (UPIWack
Adams, managing editor of the
Fontana Herald-News, placed an
advertisement in the Los Angeles
metropolitan newspapers for a
woman's editor.
Adams said he received a call
from a woman in Long Beach,
Calif., asking about the job.
How are you on makeup?
Adams asked.
' Oh. I use a little lipstick," she
replied.
New Haven mayor blocks
By Unitod Press International
Gov. George Wallace of Ala
bama blamed the mayor of New
Haven, Conn., today for the can
celation of a scheduled Wallace
speech at Yale.
Wallace accused Mayor Rich
ard C. Lee of playing politics by
declaring the governor "officially
unwelcome" In New Haven, home
of Yale.
The university Political Union
had invited Wallace to speak on
the campus Nov. 4. but the invi
BUSY INTERSECTION Traffic signals soon will be installed at
E. Third Street and Franklin Avenue, where David Marsh and
Vickie Ramsey, both 1 1, are teen in action at members of Allen
King Potato
in spotlight
at Redmond
Special lo Tha Bull.tln
REDMOND King Potato was
in the spotlight here today as Red
mond played host to Central Ore
gon I . is and many out of area vis
itors at the sixth annual Potato
Festival.
Present for the occasion was a
crowd believed to be an all-time
record. Ideal weather prevailed.
The day started with a square
dance exhibition at the barbecue
pit site on Seventh Street, follow
ed by a gay parade through
downtown Redmond. Grand mar
shals wire Addie Bobkins and his
collie, "Feather," Portland tele
vision stars.
Rid In Parade
Up near the head of the parade
rode King and Queen Potato, Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Carlson of Cul
ver, and Miss Spud, Virginia How
ard of Culver, and her court. The
route was enlivened with music
and marching patterns by the
Ashland Kilty Scotch Band, and
high school bands from Bend,
Redmond and Prineville, as well
as other novelty music groups.
Judges at noon today were com
piling prize winners.
One of the many highlights of
the Festival was the smorgasbord
served at noon on roped off parts
of Sixth Street, in downtown Red
mond. Traffic from the arterial
roule was detoured. More than
1700 persons were fed last year,
and extra food was prepared this
season for the big event.
Afttrnoon Performance
Beginning at 1:15 p.m., the
Kilty Band, Addie Bobkins and
The Great Larry were joined by
the old-time fiddlers for afternoon
performances lasting until 3
o'clock. '
Evening activities include the
old-time fiddlers show and dance
at the armory and first half of
the Oregon Quarter Horse Show
at the fairgrounds. The show will
continue through Sunday morn
ning, with first haller classes
scheduled for 8 a.m.
URGES VACCINATION
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
Pubiic Health Service, predicting
sporadic outbreaks of influenza
this winter, has urged "high risk
groups" to get vaccinated as soon
tation was withdrawn after Lee
wired the governor that his pres
ence was not desired.
"I am certain that your politi
cal purposes have been served,"
wired Wallace, who termed the
mayor's telegram "offensive and
not representative of a responsi
ble public official."
Wallace also said he was "cer
tain that it is distasteful to the
Yale Political Union to find that
its cherished tradition of present
ing the views ofll can be cur
. c? Tnn; .
Money woes ahead?
JFK's moon proposal may have
damaged U.S.
WASHINGTON. (UPI),. Presi
dent Kennedy s proposal for a
joint U. S.-Russian moon expedi
tion may have damaged his civil
ian space agency's chances of
getting the money it wants for
its Apollo moon program.,
Director James E. Webb of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) was quick
to deny Friday that the proposal
meant there would be a slowdown
in project plans to put two Amer
icans on the moon by 1970.
Webb told agency colleagues
the United States would continue
the Apollo man-on-the-moon pro
gram pending any substantive ne
gotiations with Moscow for a
joint probe.
Dr. Robert C. Scamans, asso
ciate NASA administrator,
agreed, and added that Kennedy's
proposal proved that this coun-
Soviet press
ignores JFK
moon plan
MOSCOW (UPD The Soviet
press praised President Ken
nedy's United Nations speech to
day, but entirely ignored his sug
gestion of a joint U.S. Soviet
moonshot.
Diplomatic observers said the
omission indicated the Kremlin
either opposes the idea or wants
to study it carefully before tak
ing a stand.
The Moscow papers quoted gen
erously from Kennedy's address
before the U.N. General Assem
bly. They mentioned his call for
cooperation in space, but sain
nothing about his specific sugges
tion of a joint moon expedition,
as an example of such coopera
tion. Soviet press reaction appeared
favorable to Kennedy's state
ments urging an end to the cold
war and peaceful competition be
tween East and West.
The government organ Izvestia
headlined its report "favorable
winds are blowing."
Branded 'officially unwelcome
tailed overnight."
Wallace also wired the Political
Union and said he was shocked
"that a segment of the New
Haven community is now dictat
ing to a great university who
may or may not speak on your
campus."
Elsewhere in the North, civil
rights leaders planned widespread
demonstrations and mourning for
the four Negro children killed In
the Birmingham bombing.
Mayor Robert F. Wagner pro
School Safety Patrol. New signali will replace present four-way
blinker light. Oregon State Highway Department will receive
project bids Oct. 10 in Salem.
Apollo program
try's apace effort was strong and
right on schedule.
At a news conference at the
Manned Spacecraft Center in
Houston, Tex., Seamans said
"The reason we have an oppor
tunity to make this offer is be
cause of our forward-looking pro
gram. This demonstrates we have
been able to accelerate our pro
gram to inititate this type of of
fer."
Sm Trouble Ahead
But other NASA sources pre
dicted the President's proposal
would weaken the agency's case
before congressional appropria
tions committees, some of whose
members already have indicated
they would: like lo cut the $5.35
billion sought to finance the pro
gram this year.
The sources discounted any no
tion that the President, by pro
posing a joint program, was
hedging in any way on the Apollo
project, which will cost an esti
mated $20 billion for the rest of
the decade.
These sources said the admin
istration still wants Congress to
appropriate the money to finance
the program authorized for the
current fiscal year.
But one official admitted the
program had been sold to Con
gress on the basis of competition
with Russia and it would be dif
ficult to recall it now on the bas
is of cooperation with the Soviets.
Advisors In Dark
Kennedy did not clear his
speech with the secretariat of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Council, which was created specif
ically to advise him on U. S.
space programs.
But Webb said he and his dep
uty, Dr. Hugh L. Dryden. were
consulted. Webb said McGcorge
Bundy, Kennedy's special assis
tant for national security affairs,
called him in St. Louis Thursday
and "read the language (of the
speech) to me."
Asked if the President's pro
posal signaled a radical depart
ure in U. S. policy, Webb re
plied with a flat "no." He said
it had always been U. S. policy
to seek International cooperation
in space exploration.
Wallace
claimed Sunday "an official day
of sympathy" In New York and
said Times Square will be redes
ignated Monday for the day as
"Avenue of Equal Opportunity."
Philadelphia Mayor James H. J.
Tate also proclaimed Sunday as
a "day of mourning." He urged
the citizen) to attend church to
seek "divine guidance in over
coming universal prejudice" and
repentance "for those who perpe
trated this crime ..."
A group of University of Wis
Demos spurn
GOP appeal
on tax plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) Demo
cratic leaders were more opti-
mlstlc today about their chances
for pushing President Kennedy's
ill Diuion tax cut tnrougn tne
House minus a Republican anti
spending amendment.
They rejected a fresh GOP ap
peal, broadcast to the nation Fri
day night on radio and television,
for Democratic support of a trig
ger" provision that would bar the
tax reduction unless the President
revised his spending plans down
ward In January.
The leaders pressed ahead with
their drive to line up a solid
party front against the amend
ment. One key legislator said the
leaders were feeling better
about tax cut prospects after a
partial nose-count of Democratic
lawmakers.
Earlier, the Democrats had
feared that the Republican move,
which they labeled a "pony," had
the kind of political appeal cer
tain to draw considerable support
from conservative southern Demo
crats. The Republicans are cer
tain to back it, almost to a man.
Oatt Equal Tim
Rep. John W. Byrnes, R-Wis.,
top GOP member of the tax
writing House Ways !e Means
Committee, got "equal time'
from the major networks Friday
night to reply lo Kennedy's ap
peal Wednesday for support of
the tax cut witnoul any sucn
"ruinous limitations.
Byrnes said the tax cut would
chart the way to economic dis
aster unless coupled with a firm
lid on government spending, with
out this, he said, all signs are
that the federal budget and the
national debt will continue to
soar, with resulting further infla
tion and "financial ruin" in the
end.
Kennedy said the cut was ur
gently needed to keep the econ
omy climbing. He pledged the ad
ministration to hold a tight rein
on unneeded spending, and said
these actions added up to the best
way to get the government into
the black.
Byrnes said Kennedy was
"dead right" when he said a tax
cut was urgently needed. But he
said the President's commitment
against wasteful spending flew in
the face of the facts.
speech
consin students scheduled a "Bir
mingham sympathy march" in
Madison Sunday in protest of the
"brutal bombing and slaughter"
of the Negroes in Birmingham.
Minneapolis, Minn., Mayor Ar
thur Naflalin asked clergymen of
all faiths to "take note of this
tragic event" during their week
end religious services. Naftalin
said he would wear a black rib
bon Sunday as a symbol of
mouirig.
Russia looks
at situation
with alarm
MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet
government accused China to
night of 5.000 border violations
since 19tS0 in moves intended to
claim Soviet territory which al
legedly once belonged to China.
The charge was made in the
second installment of a Soviet
statement on Sino-Sovict affairs
published by the government
newspaper Izvestia.
The statement said that Chinese
fishermen had been poaching on
Soviet islands in the Amur River
area, and refused to leave when
ordered by Soviet Border guards
on the ground that the territory
belonged to China.
The statement said the Soviet
government has repeatedly re
quested the Chinese to arrange
consultations on the demarcation
of certain parts of the frontier in
order to avoid misunderstandings
but the Chinese have consistently
refused to negotiate and are con
tinuing to violate the border.
Alleged lriutticei
The Kremlin described the bor
der situation as "alarming, es
pecially in view of the fact that
Chinese propaganda has clearly
hinted about alleged injustices of
the past connected with certain
areas of the Soviet-Chinese bor
der." The Soviet government warned:
"The artifical creation in our
time of territorial problems es
pecially among Socialist countries
means the pursuit of a dangerous
path. If governments today be
gin to advance territorial claims
on the basis of ancient data, on
the basis of ancestral tombs and
demand review of historically es
tablished borders, it would lead
to nothing good and only create
dissension among nations to the
joy of the enemies of peace."
The statement obviously refer
red to the recent publication in
China of 18th and 19th century
maps which showed that presently-held
Soviet territories in Siberia
and Asia once belonged to the im
perial Manchu empire.
Furthtr Warning
The Soviet government further
warned that territorial disputes
and conflicts were formerly used
for wars of conquest, and for this
reason it urged "peaceful solution
of border disputes by means of
negotiations."
Only Friday the Soviet Union
rapped Communist China for using
force In its border dispute witfi
India.
Conservatives
quit in Norway
OSLO (UPI) Norway's first
non-socialist government in 28
years resigned today, only four
weeks alter it look ollicc.
Conservative Prime Minister
John Lyng, defeated Friday night
in his first important parliamen
tary vote, handed his cabinet's
resignation to King Olav V.
The King asked Lyng to carry
on in a caretaker capacity, but
called on former Labor Party
Premier Einar Gorhardsen
whose government fell four weeks
agoto form a new cabinet,
Gcrhardscn was expected to be
sworn In as the new premier next
Wednesday, just one month and
two days after he left the office.
But informed sources said some
members might be dropped from
Gerhardsen's previous cabinet.
Including former U.N. Secretary
General Trygve Lie, previously
industry minister and target of
severe criticism.
The Norwegian Storting (parlia
ment) kicked Lyng out of office
Friday night by defeating his
party program, 78 votes to 74
the same count that unseated
Gerhardsen on Aug. 23. Represen
tatives of the Socialist People's
Party cast the two deciding
votes, as they did last month.
In the earlier statement, the So
viet Union virtually accused Red
China of trying to acquire atomic
weapons to blackmail Afro-Asians
and Latin Americans into accept
ing Peking's leadership.
CHAIRMAN'S LIGHT OUT
LONDON (UPI) Lord Strath
clyde, 64, chairman of the North
of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board,
returned to his apartment several
days ago and discovered his elec
tricity had been cut off because
he didn't pay his bill.
"They did the right thing."
Lord Strathclyde admitted, )