The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, November 05, 1963, Page 10, Image 10

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    o
Safes yea?5
fire jinx has
been broken
OUT OUR WAY
OUR BOARDING HOUSE ith K8VJOR
OH, I'M HELP1N' HIM HOME
FROM THE FOOTBALL FIELD,
HE TWISTED HIS KNEE AMP
LIMP AHKAFP-KAFP-- 1
v 3LSST A SUSHT BIT OP
ThejTl Do It Erery Time
HAP SOME OF THE WIND
KNOCKED OUT OF HIM, BUT
I COMFUSIOM.LEAMDEK.'-
By Jigtmy Hatto
1 NFf.IIM-M UAR'RIIMM'
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WAT VOUK TEACMEfl
r7
SERIOUS ENOUGH TO
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WORRY ABOUT
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THAT X AW AM OXF
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BLACK MILLS STAKED
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CAPTAIN EASY
MARY WORTH
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J At U A o 55 Y sK t3EORGE O-VVOLFEa
ts. A. tsSJi 509 E.SCOTT AVE., SSJ
Grass-roots political impact of civil rights
'revolution' gets major assessment in voting
By Raymond M. Lahr
UPI Staff Wrlt.r
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
grass-roots political impact of
the Negro civil rights "revolu
tion" gets its first major assess
ment today in off-year state and
local elections across the na
tion. The racial controversy was
particularly in evidence in the
spirited contests for governor
conducted in Mississippi and
Kentucky, and in Philadelphia's
mayoralty election.
The response to the Negro de
mands was not of major con
cern to most political strate
gists; it was the reaction of the
white majority to those de
mands that was thought to pro
vide a clue to 1964's general
election.
In Mississippi, where both
candidates are ardent and out
spoken segregationists, the civ
il rights issue took an odd twist
as the Republicans made their
first serious bid since Recon
struction to capture the gover
nor s mansion.
Lt. Gov. Paul B. Johnson, a
Democrat, was still favored to
win but Republican Rubel Phil
lips, a handsome young admir
er of Sen. Barry M. Goldwater,
R-Ariz., made a race of it.
Barnett Backs Johnson
Johnson argued that a true
two-party system in Missis
sippi would split that state's
white voters and give Negroes
the balance of power. Phillips
said that segregation would be
strengthened by a two-party
system because each party
would serve as a racial watch
dog over the other.
Johnson was backed by out
going Gov. Ross R. Bamett,
who is barred by law from suc
ceeding himself, and some of
the biggest names in Mississip
pi politics. Phillips claimed he
would have stood stronger than
TRY EDDIE'S
ODY-BUILDING
SE
If your car has that run-down feeling, you need Eddie's
body-building help! Our complete body and paint shop is
at your disposal, ready and eager to put your car back on its
toes. .-rid best of all, the cost is surprisingly low. Eddie in
vites you to bring your car in now for a paint and body-work
estimate. Because Eddie can meet or beat any other bid in
the state!
EDDIE CAN MEET
IMPERIAL
CHRYSLER
NEWPORT
PODCI
DART
Barnett against the admission
of Negro James H. Meredith to
the University of Mississippi
last year.
The Democrats were also fa
vored to win the gubernatorial
race in Kentucky where Repub
lican Louie B. Nunn opposed
Democrat Edward T. Breathitt
Jr. But here again the Demo
cratic margin was expected to
be smaller than in recent years.
In Kentucky the civil rights
issue centered on the executive
order issued earlier this year by
retiring Democratic Gov. Bert
Combs. It forbids racial discrim
ination in all business estab
lishments licensed by the state.
Nunn Attack Order
Nunn hit hard at the order,
not on racial grounds, he said,
but on constitutional grounds
a position somewhat similar to
that of Sen. Goldwater. He also
attempted to link Breathitt to
the Kennedy administration.
Breathitt, a protege of Combs,
said he would leave the matter
of the executive order up to the
legislature. He scarcely men
tioned the Kennedys, except to
say that none of them is run
ning for governor of Kentucky.
If Nunn, who started the cam
paign a definite underdog,
should upset Breathitt in a state
where Republicans have occu
pied the executive mansion only
four times in this century, his
attack on Combs' executive or
der and his use of the "Kenne
dy issue" will get most of the
credit.
Philadelphians, divided by ex
plosive racial tensions, vote on
whether to give Democratic
Mayor James H. J. Tate his
own four-year term or turn the
Democrats out of office for the
first time In 12 years in favor
of Republican James T. Mc
Dermott. Tate, who became mayor
when Democrat Richardson Dil-
got a tender fender?
RVICE!
OR
:DD1
SALES & SERVICE
worth resigned to run unsuc
cessfully for governor against
Republican William W. Scran
ton, ran with the backing of
Rep. William J. Green Jr., city
Democratic chairman, and the
on-the-scene endorsement of
President Kennedy, who made
a special trip to Philadelphia
last Wednesday.
Racial Issue Arises
Both sides attempted to play
down the racial issue, but the
explosive local situation which
has resulted in a scries of dis
turbances during the last few
weeks forced it into the cam
paign. McDermott charged Tate with
giving in to Negro pressures all
along the line. Tate accused
McDermott of trying to squeak
into office by capitalizing on
white resentments built up
through recent Negro gains in
employment, housing and edu
cation. Purely local issues dominated
most of the rest of the hundreds
of state, city and county elec
tions across the nation.
In New York City, voters were
to register their opinions on a
controversial proposition con
cerning legalized off-track horse
race betting. The proposal,
championed by Democratic Ma
yor Robert F. Wagner and hot
ly opposed by Republican lead
ers of the State Legislature,
would allow the mayor to ap
point a committee to draw up
a plan for legalized bookie par
lors in the city.
Other major cities holding
municipal elections included:
Cleveland. Columbus, Youngs
town. Akron, Canton. Toledo
and Dayton, Ohio; Boston: San
Francisco and San Diego, Calif;
Rochester and Niagara Falls,
N.Y.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Tuc
son, Ariz., and Salt Lake City,
Utah.
BEAT ANY BID!
Wall at
Greenwood
Phono
-362-351
By Zan Stark
UPI Staff Writer
SALEM (UPI) Oregon's six '
year fire jinx is broken.
Jubilant state forestry offl.
cials, eyeing rain-dripping Urn.
berlands, have declared tba
fire season over in Western Ore
gon. They find It hard to believe
that the state was not ravaged
by flaming disaster again this
year as it has been every sis
years since 1933, except for 1957.
For this year forestlands were
ripe for disaster.
Millions of board feet of stand
ing timber were toppled In the
savage Columbus Day, 1962
storm.
The "jinx" was bom In 19J3
in the first great "Tillamook
Burn." That fire exploded over
a 407-square mile area almost
half the size of the stats of
Rhode Island.
12 Billion Feet Lost
Destroyed was 12 billion board
feet of timber more than
enough to build a million five
room houses.
It was one of the worst forest
disasters ever recorded In the
United States.
Six years later the same re
gion was laid waste by a fire
which ravaged more than 200,
000 acres.
Then in 1945 the area was hit
again, this time by a 182,000
acre fire.
In 1951 a series of three ma
jor blazes took a 55.000-acre
toll, although the Tillamook
area in Northwest Oregon was
spared.
The myth of the terrible "sis
year jinx" was firmly fixed.
Foresters prepared for the
jinx in 1957 but there were no
major fires that year.
With Oregon's timberlands
this year described by State
Forester Dwight L. Phipps as
"potentially the most dangerous
in the recorded history of the
state" because of storm blow
down, officials prepared for the
worst.
Massive Appeals Made
There were massive education
campaigns newspaper stories,
television appeals, radio an
nouncements. Timber operators and forestry
officials began mapping fire
fighting strategy early this
spring.
They did everything but plead
with the weatherman.
He's the one who saved the
day.
Oregon's summer was not the
kind a Chamber of Commerce
would order. It was unusually
cool, and wet.
There were a few dry periods,
and the forests were closed.
But each time rain fell before
the situation became critical.
As a result, instead of another
jinx disaster. Oregon had one of
its smallest forest fire losses in
history. Less than 7,000 acres
were blackened.
There were 491 man-caused
fires. 137 less than last year.
Lightning caused 430 fires al
most four times as many as the
year before. They were a result
of the storms which saved the
timberlands from disaster.
To foresters, it meant that the
disastrous six-year fire jinx
had finally been broken.
LUNCH WITH EDITORS
WASHINGTON (UPD-Presi-dent
Kennedy plans to lunch
Wednesday with a group of 25
Ohio newspaper editors and pub
lishers. It will be the 23rd of a
series of such meetings with
editors from various states.
THE BULLETIN
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