Rocky invades Washington, raps Goidwater WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gov. Nelson Rockefeller invaded Washington today fresh from a series of vigorous verbal at tacks on his leading potential opponent for the 1964 GOP presidential nomination, Sen. Barry Goidwater. The New York Republican was accompanied by his wife, "Happy," whose marriage to the multi-millionaire following his divorce has been blamed for lessening his presidential prospects. In St. Louis Sunday Rockefel ler lashed out at Goidwater, whose nomination, he said could be disastrous for the Re publican party. He said that the nature of Goldwater's conservative views which appeared in his book "Conscience of a Conserva tive," would lead to "a cam paign in which President Ken nedy could expose these posi tions in a way that would be disastrous for the party." Must Change Views While stating that the Arizona conservative was "a very at tractive personality" and "has shown independence," Rockefel ler said that in his opinion It would be impossible for Gold water to get the nomination without changing his present views. Rockefeller predicated his be lief on the view that the Re publican party will adept a platform to which Goidwater would have to commit himself. "The platform is adopted be fore the candidate is nomi nated, so the fight will come first in the party convention," he said. Asked if he could support Goidwater even if the senator did not change his conservative thinking, Rockefeller replied: "You are putting up a hypo thetical case which I think just will not happen." High Regard Rockefeller in an airport In terview in New York, before leaving for Washington Sunday night, expressed high regard for Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, R-Maine, who said recently she may enter the New Hampshire presidential primary to secure a vice presidential nomination. "She's a wonderful person and a very able woman, and I hope that she will come into the New Hampshire primary," the governor said. Since announcing his presi dential candidacy, the governor has concentrated on getting his New Hampshire presidential primary race launched and in building barriers against Gold water. Attempt made to reach accord in border snarl ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (UPI) An emergency meeting of African foreign ministers ap pointed a seven-nation arbitra tion commission today to at tempt a settlement of the Algerian-Moroccan border dispute. The 32 foreign ministers of the Organization for African Unity (OAU) decided on Nigeria this morning as the seventh member. Ethiopia, Mali, Sene gal, Ivory Coast, Tanganyika and Sudan had previously been agreed upon in behind-the-scenes negotiations. Even as the arbitration com mission was named, Algerian spokesman Mohamed Yazid re affirmed that Algeria is opposed to any revision of its frontier with Morocco. Ghana, Sierra Leone and Li hwta had also been reported as candidates for the seventh seat on the commission, which went to Nigeria. The arbitration commission will try to determine which na tion was responsible for the fighting which flared up Oct. 8 along the poorly-defined border between Algeria and Morocco in the western Sahara and will attempt to offer a solution. FARES INCREASED PORTLAND (UPI)-Rose City Transit Co. fares in Portland went up Sunday from 25 cents to 30 cents. The fare hike was approved by the City Council Oct. 31. The company said reason for the raise was a higher wage scale for drivers and declining passenger revenues. A Strong Tree . . . bends with the wind without breaking. Build your financial strength with our accident and sickness protection plan so jou can bounce back after an unex pected storm of doctor, hospital and medical bills. EASTERN OREGON AGENCY 13S Oregon Ave. 382-3783 representing WOODMEN ACCIDENT and LIFE COMPANT The Bulletin, Monday, November 18, 1963 mm I I Hi, , .jfft! --.5.- M FINSER !N THE DIKE Airman Second Class William L Bertram, Redmond, demonstrates how ha maintained oil pres sure to a diesel generator recently after the line ruptured. He was on duty with the Los Angeles Air Defense Sector when an equipment failure occurred. Rushing to the control panel, he spotted the ruptured line and clamped it shut until another generator was activated. Had the loss of pressure continued, a safety device would have shut down the 1.2 kilo watt generator system, knocking out power for the entire de fense sector. Professor freed by Russia returns to duties at Yale By James V. Healion UPI Staff Wrlttr NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI) A mild-mannered Yale Univer sity critic of Soviet ideology to day resumed his life in this community of scholars far re moved from the Russian prison where he spent 16 days on spy charges. Frederick C. Barghoorn, 52, returned late Sunday but re mained silent on details of his arrest Oct. 31 in Moscow while on sabbatical leave to research Ex-Oregon man beaten in New York NEW YORK (UPI) -A wealthy Wall Street banker who is a former resident of Port land, Ore., was pistol-whipped Sunday by two bold burglars who fled with $35,000 of his wife's jewelry. The robbery was the latest In a series of major Manhattan iewel thefts. This time police said they had "good" Informa tion about the pandits. The two men, one about 40 and the other about 28, over looked even more valuable gems in their haste to flee the Park Avenue apartment of John Gur ian, 62, a vice president of Mer rill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith, the country's largest stock brokerage firm. Gurian lived in Portland' for 50 years and headed the firm's office there before his transfer to New York in 1955. The pair forced an elevator operator to take them to the 12th floor apartment where Gur ian and his wife, Stella, were having a wedding anniversary breakfast. They carried a bunch of flowers, as a blind. Gurian was slugged with a pistol when he slowed his step while taking one of the gunmen from the dining room to the bed room where the gems were kept. Meanwhile, his wife bolted from under the gun of the sec ond man. She had managed to scream "help" into the house phone as the pair invaded the apartment and she ran for the door when hotel personnel arrived. An ele vator operator punched one of the gunmen in the nose. Both men dashed down 12 flights of stairs and escaped. DEPRESSING AD BEDFORD, England (UPD- A local bus company today re jected an anti-suicide group's advertising posters because they would ' depress passen eers." The posters, offered by the "Bedford Samaritans," read: "Despair? If you are in despair and tempted to suicide and don't know where to turn for help, ring Samaritans, Bedford 2200." FIREPLACE GLASS DOORS TRI-COUNTY WINDOW PRODUCTS 382-2824 or 447-7095 s. , a book and "investigate meth ods of political instruction and indoctrination." The Soviets have also de clined to elaborate on his ar rest but insisted they had evi dence indicating the sandy haired bachelor was on a mis sion for American intelligence. Barghoorn was released Sat urday from Russian custody in view of the personal con cern expressed by President Kennedy. He indicated he would not be admitted again, having been expelled under guard. Appears Decisive At a news conference in the university's new Art and Archi tecture Building, Barghoorn ap peared decisive and deliberate Sunday as he spurned questions relating to the "strange and bi zarre aspects" of his arrest. He said, however, "I wrote a number of letters to university officials and to the Soviet gov ernment, saying quite openly and frankly, what I wanted to do." Barghoorn contended that. If the Russians "felt these matters inappropriate, they simply should not nave issued a visa They had a very full knowledge of my activities and have never raised an objection m the past," ne said. The professor of political sci ence and head of the depart ment ot soviet studies at Yale visited Russia six times and spent 1946-1947 with the Ameri can Embassy in Moscow as a press officer. Barghoorn read from a state ment which he prepared on the flight from London to New York but revised after a reunion with his 80-year-old widowed mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Barghoorn, in his 11th floor suite at the Uni versity Towers near the Yale campus. Explains Soviet Term Chipper but tired, he conced ed he may have been jailed for "ideological intelligence activi ties," a term he said was fa miliar to Russian security agents but not to Americans. He explained that under So viet law, an individual could be arrested and held if it was de cided the suspect had what of ficials thought to be hostile in tentions toward the U.S.S.R. 'Behavior which we regard as completely innocent becomes an object of police suspicion," said Barghoorn. He said it seemed to be difficult for the Russians to view his social re search objectively. Barghoorn was arrested as he prepared to leave the Soviet Un ion after beginning his Euro pean tour In London on Sept. 29. "Arrest, investigation and in dictment on espionage charges is a deeply disturbing exper ience," he said. "It is true any place, but different in the So viet Union, where the law is the instrument of the state, not the individual." 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 If s correct If It'i done it Fowler's! Aid situation in Cambodia still confused PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI) Prince Norodom Si hanouk made another statement over the weekend "to clarify the situation" on the future of U.S. aid to Cambodia, but it had American officials here as puz zled as ever. The prince said the United States must withdraw its mili tary mission from Cambodia and cut all strings attached to military aid. There was no comment from the U. S. Embassy, but offi cials were concerned over the reasoning behind the latest statement on his position. Informed sources said his anti-aid policy indicates to them that he fears the activities of the U. S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and is afraid it is plotting to overthrow him. Feari Similar Fate They said Sihanouk Is con vinced the CIA was behind the coup in neighboring South Viet Nam and that a similar fate could be in store for him. Sihanouk called a news con ference Saturday to clear up a series of conflicting statements. A man noted for his change ability, Sihanouk switched po sition several times in the past two weeks about American mili tary and economic aid. Sihanouk had rocked Western chancellories first by declaring that Cambodia would renounce neutralism and end all Western economic aid if the United States did not silence by next Dec. 31 radio broadcasts by reb el forces who he said are plot ting against him in neighbor ing Thailand and South Viet Nam. By design or coincidence, the broadcasts stopped almost Im mediately. Nationalized Trad Then on Nov. 10, Sihanouk announced that starting next Jan. 1. the nation's export import business would be na tionalized. Then, on Tuesday Nov. 12, Si hanouk decided to cancel Amer ican aid after all, starting next Jan. 1, a move that would cost Cambodia $10.4 million yearly in U.S. economic help and $18.8 million in military aid at cur rent rates. "We'll be poorer, but we'll be more independent," Sihanouk said. But two days later, he said that American military aid could continue if it was offered without strings attached. He added that cultural or project aid also would be acceptable provided the United States helped Cambodia halt the ac tivities of the "Free Khmer" rebels. He apparently remained convinced that the rebel group is being sheltered in South Viet Nam and that it would be a simple thing for the United States to stop it. However, Sihanouks real views are uncertain. Temperatures Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST to day: High Low Pep Bend AS 33 T Astoria 50 41 .27 Baker 43 27 .04 Brookings 57 46 1.09 Klamath Falls 40 30 .03 Medford 46 39 .06 Newport 33 44 .42 Newport 53 44 .42 North Bend 54 46 .66 Pendleton 52 41 Portland 50 39 .14 Redmond 50 24 .01 Salem 51 42 .16 The Dalles 51 39 T Chicago 71 49 .09 Los Angeles 65 49 New York 60 51 Phoenix 70 49 San Fran. 59 52 Washington 72 45 CHINESE DISHES all Cart Barbecued pork noodles 75c Pork ess Too young 80c Poric chow meln tl Swert-and-ttnur inane rins ... I1.3S SKYLINE DRIVE-IN 1D43 South Third . . . SW SS11 Open Noon to 10 P ffl. doled Monday QUALITY PRINTING or more than half a century 936 BONO 382-4261 HORTON REASSIGNED Airman John H. Horton, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Horton of 1224 Taft, Bend, Ore., is being reassigned to Clinton Sherman AFB, Okla., for train ing and duty as an air police man. Horton recenlly com pleted United States Air Force basic military training at Lackland AFB, Tex. The air man is a former student at Bend Senior High School. Council debate is touched off VATICAN CITY (UPI) - A document calling for warmer Roman Catholic relations with Protestants and Jews touched off sharp debate in the Ecu menical Council today. A liberal prelate, Joseph Car dinal Ritter of St. Louis, hailed it as "the end of the counter reformation" the Catholic Church's 400-year-old campaign against Protestantism. But conservative Ernesto Car dinal Ruffini of Palermo, Sicily, decried the inclusion of a chap ter that says Jews must not be made scapegoats for the cruci fixion of Christ. RUSK BECOMES GRANDPA WASHINGTON (UPI) Sec retary of State Dean Rusk be came a grandfather Friday for the first time. A 6 pound, 9 ounce son was born to David B. Rusk and Del cia Rusk at Columbia Hospital here. The baby has been named Ciregory Marshall Rusk. i Jr.- L t f I . f 1)4 H (J f'x I J'J til,' 1 i : shsws! "!&'. -.i'-i - i-vs .f :.Ff The day your newspaper cost$1.50! Tliat wa3 the day it carried no advertise ments. That was tho same day business dropped off 80. No one was advertising a clearance sale on fashionable dresses. No one was advertising a new improved vacuum cleaner, or electric shaver, or outboard motor. The day your newspaper cost $1.50, there was no communication between buyer and seller. For that's exactly what advertising does. Advertising, whether it be a newspaper advertisement, a radio or television com Wallace may cftftf fcfif rf rtfiaff fir north DALLAS fUPD-Gov. Geerae Wallace of Alabama, puffing en a cigar and greeting everybody in sight, arrived in Dallas Sun day night and said he might run for the Democratic nomina tion for President in the Indiana and New Hampshire primaries. "I'm not thinking of running to help Barry Goidwater," Wal lace said, "but I'm not going to help the Kennedys either." Anybody would be better than Kennedy," Wallace said. W allace said he was thinking about running in the northern primaries because of "the ex cellent reception" he had on his recent speaking trip. "They weren't just apprecia tivethey were enthusiastic," Wallace said. Wallace is scheduled to hold a press conference today and make a speech at a public af fairs club lunch. School officials open session PORTLAND (UPI) -Superin tendents of education from throughout the United States convened today for a four-day conference. Host is Dr. Leon Minear. state superintendent of instruction in Oregon. Among the speakers will be Francis Keppel, U. S. Commis sioner of Education, Gov. Mark Hatfield and Dr. Roy Lieuallen, chancellor of the Oregon State System of Higher Education. BTHE BM tea flWj HBBh SsttftiUJ PLAN NOW to treat your family to our completa Thanksgiving Dinner A pleasant drive from anywhere in Central Oregon hi 3 miles south of Redmond 12 miles north of Bend j ) Open 11 A.M. till 10 P.M. . . Closed Sundays 1 For reservations call 548-3310 H J Bob & Ula Blair M it' a t .it A Public Service Adverlltemenl prewired by a Leading Oregon Ad vertising Agency at the reqmcst the Oregtn Newipaper Publitherl Association and titt RtRJtgtyr or your information. , "I tKii tfev KemttAe ace u worst thing that has boppened to the nation," he said, "and if I run, I intend to show the peo ple the truth." "We don't want anybody com ing in from the outside to tell us how to run our affairs." Wallace scoffed at foreign press criticism of racial inci dents in Alabama and Missis sippi, saying, "we shouldn't care what they think, they should care what we think, "if India gets rid of her un- Strange tuna taken at L A. LOS ANGELES (UPI) A rare 10-pound fish known scien tifically as an Aiiothuimus Fal lal (it iooks something like Char lie the Tuna) was landed in a bait net in Los Angeles Harbor over the weekend. Richard McCann, 22-year-old fisherman from Downey, Calif, hauled up the 28-inch "tunny fish" which experts say is the first of its kind ever caught in the Northern Hemisphere and the tenth in the world. The tunny has no scales on its lower side and very fine scales on its back. GETS A BIRDIE FRESHWATER, Isle of Wight (UPI) Golfer Charles King got a birdie a thrush in flight with his tee shot on the 12th hole here Sunday. The bird was killed. Central Oregon's Family . RESTAURANT M Make it a SPECIAL EVENT! ;f B ,Q af . u.'rJf.;. ...... '4 l it i ' ' T 1 , i t mercial, a billboard or a pamphlet at your doorstep, is communication to peoplo to in vilo them to enjoy a product or service, to go to church, to select a school, or to come) ' to Oregon to live. Today, advertising keeps you and you? i family and 175 million other Americana in formed of products, services, values and prices. The result is that there are more and better products at lower cost to you. Your newspaper costs only 5J to 10. Don't you think it pays to be advertised of .e. ; j touchables," Wallace said! 1 "then maybe they can begin criticizing segregation. We can't just change our system of Inr; dividual freedom for the sake of the Hottentots in Africa." -v . Wallace said a Dallas Countfcl (Selma, Ala.) grand jury inves tigating the use of a Justice Department car by the Rev. Martin Lulher King Jr. to transport him from Birmingk ham to Selma "should expose tne justice Department tor, what it is." "They will show the world how the federal government is interfering in our local affairs," he said. He said he did not think any charges would arise out of the hearing unless "a Justice De partment official lies before th grand jury." 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