o
Univ. of Oregon Library
EUGENE, OaECOM
O
Fhe IBulletin
&4tered ihswert in Central
Origen through Tuesday.
Mild temperatures. Highs,
it to 65; lows, 4i to SO.
High yesterday, 60 degrees.
Low last night, 45 degrees.
Sunset today, 6:12. Sunrise
tomorrow, 7:28, PDT.
Hi and to
SERVING BEND AND CENTRAL OREGON
60th Year
Ten Pages
Monday, October 21, 1963
Ten Cents
No. 269
All is ready
for beginning
of 'Big Lift'
FT. HOOD, Tex. (UPI) The
United States assembled troops,
fliers and planes from Texas to
Maine today to show the world
that it can put 16,000 Army and
Air Force men with supporting
aircraft in Germany within 72
hours.
The project, whose code-name
is Operation "Big Lift," begins
one minute after midnight to
night when a C135 jet transport
takes off with 70 men from the
2nd "Hell on Wheels" Armored
Division in it.
The 2nd Division will supply
13.000 of the troops.
Transport planes will take off
from four air bases at intervals
ranging from 35 minutes to an
hour until a total of 14,500
troops-tankers and infantrymen
from Fort Hood and artillery
men from Fort Sill, Okla., are
in Germany.
To Have Support
The moment the first C135
takes off from Bergstrom Air
Force Base in Austin, Air Force
support planes will start taking
off for Europe from Dow and
Loring Air Force Bases in Maine
and Myrtle Beach AFB, S.C.
The Air Force contribution to
"Big Lift" is 1,500 men.
The support planes, including
about 100 rocket-firing jet fight
ers, will cover the 2nd division
when it tries to stop an "at
tack" on West Germany by an
enemy division.
Another U.S. Division already
tn Europe will play the role of
attacker.
In addition to the jet fighters,
42 other planes including recon
naissance air craft and C130
cargo planes with mechanics
and repair facilities will fly to
Germany.
The troop-carrying transport
planes will take off from Berg
strom AFB, James Connally
AFB at Waco, Tex., Sheppard
AFB, Wichita Falls, and Gray
Army Air Base, next door to
Ft.. . Hood. .--
Men Getting Prepared
Second Division men assem
bled in battalion areas at Ft.
Hood today, checking equip
ment and packing duffelbags.
The personnel carriers they will
use are already in Germany.
The first units will start mov
ing out by dusk at 10 p.m. EDT
from Ft. Hood to the air bases.
The troops will move out, board
planes and take off by a sched
ule as precise as that which
governs the launching of a man
into space.
When the troops arrive in Ger
many, they will have a couple
of days to get tanks out of stor
age. An advance party ot ra
men arrived in Germany Satur
day to establish communications
and set up a headquarters.
It will take from 10 hours and
25 minutes to 31. hours and 25
minutes for troops to reach Eu
rope, depending on the type of
plane they ride and the route
it takes.
Harvest Days
due on weekend
Harvest Days, one of the
special events arranged by re
tail merchants of the Bend
Chamber of Commerce for the
fall and early winter, will be
held here this weekend, on Fri
day and Saturday.
One of the highlights will be
a display of new automobiles on
a roped off section of Minneso
ta Avenue, In downtown Bend.
Cars .will go on display about
5:30 p.m. Friday, and will re
main in the area until store-
closing time, 9 p.m.
Calling attention to the har
vest of potatoes in the Central
Oreeon area. 10 pound bags of
Dotatoes will be offered in
stores of all merchants partici
pating in the Harvest Days pro
gram. The Central Oregon
grown potatoes will be offered
(or 27 cents a iu pouna Dag.
Throughout town, participat
ing merchants will have special
bargains for Harvest Day shop
pers, the retail merchants com
mittee in charge, headed by
Bob Somerville, has announced.
WAITER WAS CROWNED
LONDON (UPI) Waiters at
the Pigalle, a London night
club, threatened to strike today
because singer Jill Day crowned
a waiter with a silver platter
full rif noac
"That damn waiter got on my
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through my act he was By United Pres. Int.rnat.onal
stackuig dishes on a tray and I Dow Jones final stock aver-
fraWm tTg I could
fav my hands on and sloshed
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FIRST STEP Uprooting stubborn Juniper Parle stump are these members of Bend Recreation
Council, engaged in preliminary work -for construction of frontier-type Fort Juniper. From left
are Bob Newman, Fred Raycraft, Chuck Ridderbusch, Cal Pacheco, Dennis Pacheco, Mary
Ellen Dyer and Saundra Petersen.
U.S. convoys
to demonstrate
access rights
BERLIN (UPI)-A U.S. Army
convoy rolled over the East
German Autobahn today while
troops of the American garri
son in Berlin were called out
on a dawn alert.
Today's convoy was a small
one with only eight men in four
trucks. All were considered
crewmen, not passengers.
The Soviet checkpoint officers
never have tried to make the
crews of allied military ve
hicles dismount for a head
count and did not do so today,
an Army spokesman said.
The convoy was the first of
several this week which will
demonstrate the U.S. right to
use the 110-mile highway be
tween West Berlin and West
Germany.
Most of the convoys were ex
pected to be small ones in
which the dismounting question
on which the Soviets held up
British and American convoys
recently will not arise, in
formed sources said.
Hence, any Soviet challenge
on the access routes would
have to be on different grounds.
Allied officials are watching all
convoy movements cioseiy to
see if such a challenge will be
made, these sources said.
Today's convoy drove from
Berlin to West Germany and
passed the Soviet checkpoint at
the West Berlin end of the Auto
bahn in 20 minutes, an Army
spokesman said.
Other U.S. troops were called
out of barracks in full combat
kit at 5 a.m. today.
Troops of one battalion
manned posts they would de
fend in case the Communists
used armed force on the city.
An Army spokesman said the
three-hour alert was "designed
to evaluate the units ability to
react to various situations."
2 Euqene
cars
i i
don
CO
ide hea
Two Eueene cars were in
volved in a headon collision in
LaPine Saturday about 7:40
p.m., with two persons injured
and taken to the St. Charles
Memorial Hospital in Bend.
Injured were Robert I. John
son, 46, Eugene, driver of one
of the vehicles, and Mildred
Bowen, 46, Eugene, wife of Ver
die Bowen, operator of the sec
ond car.
Bowen apparently was pre
paring to turn from U.S. High
way 97 into Mom's Cafe as the
Johnson car approached from
the north.
Oregon Slate Police, assisted
by Justice of the Peace Bamey
Martin, completed investigation
of the accident this morning.
The condition of Mrs. Bowen
and Johnson apparently was not
j se"3-
! S 20 railmads 172 27. up 0.10:
15 utilities 138.60, off 0.05. and
Teenagers begin
work at site of
'Fort Juniper'
Seven young members of the
Bend Teenage Recreation Coun
cil were busy with shovels and
rakes Saturday morning clear
ing a tract of land in Juniper
Park on which will rest Fort
Juniper.
The proposed Fort Juniper is
a 60 x 80-foot stockade of pine
logs standing five feet high. It
will contain as many of the tra
ditional frontier facilities as the
Recreation Department is able
to assemble including store
fronts, captain's quarters, liber
ty pole, parapets, etc.
There is no set completion
date but the Council hopes to
get the fort built as soon as
practicable. Tonight its mem
bers will meet in city hall to
discuss further plans.
Elderly pair
found safe
by searchers
FLORENCE. Ore. (UPI)-An
elderly Hollywood, Calif.,
couple, missing overnight in a
heavilv-wooded area near here,
was found safe today, police re
ported.
John Farneman, 79, and his
wife, Ethel, 70. were located by
searchers about 9:15 a.m. and
were reported in "pretty good
condition."
The couple became lost about
eight miles south of here be
tween Highway 101 and Siltcoos
Lake Sunday.
More than 100 searchers, aid
ed by three helicopters, fanned
out on the search today. The
couple had been last seen at
10 a.m. Sunday when they told
other residents at the Fish Mill
Lodge on the lake they were
going on a mushroom hunting
trip.
They left a note saying they
would be back at 1 p.m. A
search was started when they
failed to return by 4:15. About
35 men, aided by bloodhounds,
covered five square miles be
fore darkness forced them to
Give uo about 10 p.m.
The bloodhounds did locate
four searchers who had become
lost in the heavy underbrush.
Heavy rain fell and a light
wind blew during the night, but
the temperature stayed about
50 degrees. The couple was
wearing only light clothing.
Oregon State Police, the Lane
County sheriff's office, Florence
city police and the Siuslaw Ru
ral Fire District combined their
facilities to coordinate
the search.
Tap Room hit
during night
Prowlers stole an estimated
$56.50 from three slot machines
and a cash register sometime
last nieht after breaking into
the Century Tap Room on W
14th.
Police said the thieves forced
ooen a front window with
ftcrewdrivj and probably used
the same tool m prying the slot
machines.
President Tito
feels well, tours
Princeton lab
PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI) -
President Tito of Yugoslavia,
"feeling well" after recovering
from the flu, today toured the
modernistic plasma physics lab
oratory at Princeton Universi
ty's Forrestal Research Center.
Princeton -President - Robert
F. Goheen and George Kennan,
former U.S. ambassador to Yu
goslavia and now a professor at
Princeton's Institute for Ad
vanced Studies, greeted the nat
tily dressed Communist lead
er on the steps of the research
center.
The three entered the build
ing followed by an entourage of
30 Yugoslav government offi
cials and their families.
Newsmen were not permitted
to accompany the touring party
inside the building, which con
tains laboratories for research
on hot gases.
Tito was scheduled to lunch
with Goheen, confer with Ken
nan and hold a news confer
ence before leaving the univer
sity. Only a few pedestrians and a
police detail noted his depar
ture from New York.
Tito's arrival Sunday at Idle
wild International Airport was
uneventful, but he was greeted
a short time later by about 50
demonstrators when his motor
cade arrived at the Waldorf
Astoria Hotel in Manhattan.
Searchers find
young nimrod
A young hunter from the Wil
lamette Valley, Emil Susee, 17,
who SDent the nieht in the Fort
Rock woods was reported locat
ed this morning, as searchers
prepared to comb the area.
Susee was hunting in the tim
bered Jones Wells country, di
rectly south of Newberry Cra
ter, when he was reported lost.
The hunt by members of the
party started Sunday afternoon
and lasted well Into tne nigni.
Members of the Fort Rock
district staff, Oregon State Po
lice and the sheriff's office were
alerted. Preparations for a wide
search of the area were called
off about mid morning today
when the boy was reported sate
in camp.
Churchill's eldest
found dead Sunday, inquest ordered
LONDON (UPI) - The West
minster coroner's office today
ordered an inquest into the
death of Sir Winston Churchill's
eldest daughter, Diana, who was
found dead Sunday In her Lon
don home.
Following a post-mortem ex
amination and study of some
bottles found at Miss Churchill's
home, the coroner decided to
open an inquest Thursday.
Miss uiurcnni. m,
peared "gay and
had ap-
carefree"
Parliament
delay sought
by Home
LONDON (UPI) - Prime
Minister Lord Home, first peer
to head a British government
since 1902, sought today to de
lay the opening of Parliament
until he can move from the
House of Lords to Commons.
Home spent the weekend at
tempting to patch the split in
the Conservative party caused
by the battle to succeed ailing
Harold Macmillan, who retired
Friday, selecting Home as his
replacement.
Home won all but two of his
opponents for the cabinet, in
cluding former Deputy Premier
R. A. Butler, who had been con
sidered the favorite to succeed
Macmillan.
Those who refused to serve
were lain MacLeod, co-cnair-
man of the Conservative party
and leader of the House of
Commons, and Enoch Pow
ell, former health minister.
Both led the revolt against the
selection of Home, but neither
gave a reason for not joining
his cabinet.
"I am sorry they did not feel
they could accept office," Home
said Sunday. "It does not mean
the party is split. I have no
doubt they will give me the
most loyal support."
Home was reported consider
ing asking Queen EUzabetn to
delay the resumption of Parlia
ment until after Nov. 7, when
he will run for election in the
House of Commons.
Labor has opposed such a de
lay Parliament now is set to
reconvene Oct. 29 but the
Queen has the right to set the
date. Labor leader Harold Wil
son said such a request would
be "an impertinence."
Home, a 60-year old Scottish
peer, could remain in the House
of Lords and still serve as pre
mier, but he would not be able
to function effectively. Peers
cannot appear in Commons and
it is in the lower house that the
policy debating and decision
making takes-placer -v
42 Vietnamese
soldiers killed
in major battle
SAIGON, South Viet Nam
(UPI) Communist guerrillas
killed 42 Vietnamese soldiers
and wounded 13 U.S. officers
and men in one of the biggest
battles of the war, U.S. mili
tary spokesmen announced Sun
day. The Communists lost 30 dead
in the fighting 150 miles south
west of Saigon. Vietnamese
wounded numbered 83. The
American casualties eight of
ficers and five enlisted men
was the highest number incur
red in a single battle since U.S.
advisers began aiding Vietna
mese forces in the fullscale pro
gram that began in 1961.
The military spokesmen with
held word of the battle 24 hours.
The Communists attacked Satur
day morning, driving against a
government force twice as large
as their estimated battalion
strencth.
The battle was not fought on
the usual hit-and-run guerrilla
dan. The Communists made a
frontal attack, cutting down
eovernment troops with ma
chincgun fire and pinning them
down in rice paddies.
Most of the Americans wouna
ed were pilots and crewmen of
aircraft ferrying troops to the
battle area and striking at the
Communist positions. The guer
rillas shot down one troop car
rier helicopter and damaged a
twin-engine B26 bomber so bad
ly it crashed while attempting
to land. They hit a total of 14
aircraft.
The Communists incurred
most of their casualties in air
strikes.
when she returned to her home
in the expensive Belgravia dis
trict Saturday night, neighbors
said.
Miss Churchill had not been
ill, neighbors said.
Miss Churchill was the former
wife of Duncan Sandys, Com
monwealth relations secretary
in the current cabinet. They
were divorced in 1960 and she
tnnir hp mairien name again.
Miss Churchill also had necn
rtn . . .
l married to John Milncr Bauey,
If Mo
Court orders
rehearing on
Genovese
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court today ordered
an appeals court rehearing of
the narcotics conviction of Vito
Genovese, recently identified as
"boss of all bosses" of the Cosa
Nostra crime cartel.
In a brief order vacating the
1959 convictions of Genovese
and nine co - defendants, the
high court directed the 2nd U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals to take
another look at the case in light
of a Supreme Court decision
last term.
Today's action does not mean
an automatic retrial for Geno
vese. Nor does it mean that he
can now leave prison where he
is serving a 15-year sentence.
Justice Department sources
said that Inasmuch as Geno
vese still is considered under
indictment, he can be held by
federal authorities. His attor
neys could make application for
bail but this would be subject
to court consideration.
Genovese was fingered as the
Cosa Nostra crime chief at re
cent Senate hearings by under
world Informer Joseph Valachi
It was Valachi who Identified
the 65-year-old crime figure as
the "boss of all bosses" in the
Mafia-type organization.
Genovese is now hospitalized
at Leavenworth Penitentiary for
high blood pressure and a heart
condition.
In other actions today, the
Supreme Court:
Reversed the convictions of
373 Negro students found guilty
of breach of the peace for dem
onstrating against segregation
policies at Orangeburg, S.C, in
1960. The court had sent tne
case back to South Carolina
last term for rehearing and the
state Supreme Court had up
held the convictions. Today's
brief order was a summary re
versal of the state action.
Denied hearings to two men
sentenced to death in Virginia
and Alabama for rape. Justice
Arthur J. Goldberg dissented
in the dismissal of appeals of
Frank Jimmy Snider Jr. and
Frank Lee Rudolph. Goldberg,
declaring review should have
been granted, said the court
should decide whether the Con
stitution permits imposition of
the death penalty "on a con
victed rapist who has neither
taken nor endangered human
life."
Agreed to hear arguments
on a challenge to Delaware's
recent lecislature reapportion
ment. Four cases frr.m other
states also will be heard this
year.
SIGHT SUBMARINE
STOCKHOLM (UPI)-An un
identified submarine was re
norted in Swedish waters Sun
day night northeast of Svenska
Hoegama in tne aiocKiioim ai
chipelago. The lighthouse keeper at
Svenska Hoegama reported the
sighting. He said the vessel was
surfaced but disappeared into
heavy fog before he could Iden
tify its markings.
the Swedish navy said it had
no submarines in the area at
the time.
daughter,
a wealthy Soutn Airican. iney
were divorced in 1935 after
three years of marriage.
Miss Churchill was one of the
first women to volunteer for
military duty when World War
II broke out in 1939. She be
came an officer In the Women's
Royal Naval Service and later
a Red Cross worker.
She had three thjdren from
her marQge with Sandys. The
oldest. Julian, is 29.
Sir Winston was reported to
100 rales
tmdlm
10 nominees
picked for
C of C board
Ten members of the Bend
Chamber of Commerce have
been nominated to serve as di
rectors for the ensuing three
years, with five of the group to
be named in a final vote that
will end at the annual meeting,
set for November 15.
Nominated were Steve Jack
son, Darrcll Liska, Don Bagley,
Ralph Moore, Lyman C. John
son, Bob Thomas, Frank Bock
hold, Hap Taylor, John Sten
kamp and Dick Brandis,
The five men elected in a vote
of the general membership in
November will succeed Al ttriK-
sen, Ray LeBlanc, Gordon
McKay, G. E. Wiley and Bill
Yates, whose terms are end
ing. Holdover directors are Gor
don Randall, president; R. G.
McFarland, Harvey Watt, Rob
ert L. Bristol. Chester i Cor
yell. William G. Ellis, Ashley
A. Foust, Faui Keynoios, rree-
man Schultz and George A.
Warrington.
Manrir-B shellon is chairman
of a committee in charge of
making arrangements for the
annual meeting, at which new
directors will be introduced.
Voting will end as members
gather for the annual meeting.
Red China bid
beaten, 57-41
by Assembly
UNITED N A T I O N S, N. Y.
(UPI) The General Assembly
today rejected Albania's bid to
seat Red China in place of the
Chinese Nationalists by a vote
of 57-41 with 12 abstentions.
The margin in favor of retain
ing the Chiang Kai-shek regime
as China's legal U.N. represent
ative was two votes greater
than last vcar.
The weeklong debate on the
China representation Issue
wound up with a new attack on
the United States and Nationalist
China by Albania, the only Eu
ropean Communist country on
good terms with the Peking re
gime. The vote was on a resolution
sponsored by Albunla and Cam
bodia to oust the Nationalist re
gime and give China's scat to
the Chinese Communists. A
similar resolution, sponsored by
Russia, was defeated last year
by 56-42 vote with 12 absten
tions. The percentage of members
present and voting in favor of
the Taipei government rose to
57.9 per cent, the strongest ma
jority in the assembly for the
Nationalists since I'Joa.
AN OLD TRICK
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI)
James L. Mason was in jail on
suspicion of robbery today be
cause he refused to fall for an
old trick.
Police said Mason was
hnlrtinp un a service station and
when the attendant began talk
ing to someone behind Mason's
back patrolman Allen Dun
can.
Diana,
be at his London home. Lady
Churchill. 78, entered Westmins
ter Hospital last week for
rest.
The Churchills had four
dauuhters and a son. One
rlauchter died at the age of
three. Marv Churchill Is mar
ried to Agricultural Minister
flhristnnher Sonnies, and Sarah
hurchill. the actress, is t
widow of Lord Audlcy. Mj
Hninh rhiirrhill served in iWlia
mcnt and is a London jour
nalist.
Winds batter
vessel with
ten aboard
CAPE HATTERAS, N. C
(UPI) Hurricane Ginny
stalled 100 miles off the North
Carolina coast today and bat
tered a destroyer escort adrift
with 10 persons aboard with
howling winds and 40-to-50-foot
seas.
Winds of about 90 miles per
hour were reported near the cen
ter of the storm, seventh of th
season and the first to threaten
the eastern coast of the United
States.
Hurricane winds of 75 milei
an hour extended out 60 miles
in all directions from the cen
ter of the storm, which boiled
up Sunday night and sent gala
winds and high tides crashing
against North Carolina's storied
Outer Banks.
A late Washington Weather
Bureau advisory located Ginny
about 100 miles southeast ot
Cape Hatleras.
In this same vicinity the dis
abled destroyer escort USS Fogg
was adrift after its tow rope
I snapped two days ago. Ships
and planes searched tnrougn
blinding rain for the stricken
vessel.
"With just 10 men aboard
they're probably just doing their
best to hang onto the rails in
40-to-50 - foot seas," a Coast
Guard spokesman at Ports
mouth, Va., said.
Storm Moves Slowly
The Weather Bureau said Gin
ny would likely continue its slow
progress during much of today.
"Hurricane Ginny Is expected
to move very slowly during th
next 12 hours, probably towards
the east-northeast about 5 miles
per hour. Intensit" should re
main about the same during tna
next 12 to 24 hours," the Weath
er Bureau said.
Gale force winds raked the
Outer Banks but the hurricane
wise Inhabitants of the sand
spits off the North Carolina
coast refused to move out un
til the hurricane took on a
more definite pettem of move
ment.
United Press International
staff photographer Joseph Hollo
way Jr. reported from Manteo.
N. C. that strong winds almost
toppled the phone booth from
which he was talking.
Heavy surf pounded tM
silvery dunes along the Dara
County coast early today. Wind
gusts up to 70 miles an nour
were reported In the Nags Head
area.
Ship Is Helpless
The Fogg, a decommissioned
destroyer escort, was bouncing
helplessly In the hurricane witn
its engines and most of its equip
ment not operating.
Two ships and two airplanes
were in the area searching for
the vessel. They were hampered
by the heavy rain which cut
visibility to zero.
Tides from the Virginia Capes
southward along the North Caro
lina coast were expected to con
tinue 2 to 3 feet above normal
today and tonight with soma
flooding at time of high tides.
the Weather Bureau said.
Rough, heavy pounding surf
along the outer coast will con
tinue to cause beach erosion.
Worker at dam
Cu-I-I jh TUm StulUlltl
MADRAS Harry T. Strand,
47, City Trailer Court, Madras,
Saturday in a construction acci
dent at the Round Butte Dam.
Strand, a catskinner, was
standing atop the dam fill when
a rocker loaded wiih rock back
ed over him. The truck was
about 24 yard capacity and
driver of the wagon was Jim
mie Dexter.
Strand is survived by a wifa
and one teenage son.
hi-B over the head with it." to stocks au.w, up v.n.
t.