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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1963)
o O OUT OUR f AY JSt ALL 1 WANT iTwOULDtST V ' II ISJUSTTO I f EVEMHMFfl" "l J VfffilWITOl fiBr SOME 1 TO VOU 1 Saw II il ffSW!( V PRACTICE WAWT VOU AJ ifl I V4ffiJ313 ) KETCHIN1 OUT HEME WITM f J I " FORWARD II HER FUNNY SlUf I , II I I PASSES- 7 I TELLIN' YU TO JW VJ f I CANT. VOU f BE VERY CARE- .vWVSSl I ( JUST TOSS I FULAWDNOT A U'I'MlTm . I I ITUPFOR ( GET TOO r-?J.,';V i' ' 11 ft- y6 jabui7 y VW"-4 k HEROES ARE MADE-MOT STEVE CANYON CAPTAIN EASY liaS THERK K rtBPAT Lot Tl I ik' cePCTJV flW I I P1JWT TUATrtlltJ AT fciniA 1 A EXCITEMENT IN ?V AN ISLANP IN THC J S -r WE... vV rV ...j ; . JCj THE CUBAN RADIO- -1-, CARIBBEAN... 5 K S-trAT I I I If?! MONITORINa SYS- IftjsZfc -vr-fc-iw k V! h I S 7 ,i lV tem when napa JJ1i!S:M8K,i fn')fm jfcg l:':-isi-f5 -3r4 DICK TRACY ""rAyi-' i III I I f chassis, 91. y I r WHAT are Vthat I CANI can't sou imagine m,l.ai VK, VnOE 24. N . VOU TRVINQ UCCf SSRJLLV TV WHAT MEN OF POWER so THIS LIlr .L rrrfrfyr, i to prove, maie voung -J3 would give to have is iSji? PiW'llL Volga? from ol& Ttheib vouthfulviczjr . LI'L ABNER . AUf " AH HAS OUTRUN TH' J fL ficBPT PO'-Cfif- tfc) 0(7? JSAVED BVA MIRACLE .' fKABOODLE O1 THEM -T J JVfcwSS .XWIH?HT. 1 lMORE.TCITMETHROUGM REX MORGAN. M.D. EaTTnEgSJS'iS'?j:5S '!rl I I HOW MANY OF THOSE Yf I-l'MNOTSURE.' rMEflNWHlLeSr YE5.V.BIjfYOUCAM"0Niy" ga ; r- capsuled did you y'.v four or five talk for a couple of 1 5HE'5 COMING AR0UND,1S. J , N TflKE,MIDOt? rz,T, Vtwi v:, WILL YOU GET MY) MINUTES PR. MORGANS f riw mmld -gjs jji U6MT-HWJO t OS TO Plr THIS LOA! RAN . Wt;i VJ' I'tAriNLW.BUM rsr7v i piw n D I T I rui v u I MARY WORTH umi-ietiv M DOCTORS KINDLY BELIEVE VOU HEA55UKANCE, JAN FEELING MAKE A NORMAL RECOVERY, Mrti DESPONDENT AND BUT THE HUMAN DESERTED MCHINE PCEW COME VslTH A GUARANTfr! ALLEY OOP y. I US, NCW LOiX TANCL. 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UU J . i v, .' MAJOR HOOPLE TAST6 l ONE OF l UI4 1 MEALSA THEY'LL TOAST H'Mltf 8ICAKBON-. ' with AiO IP HE DOESN'T 4 enter we'll be in a I WITH THEIR EAP10 POWER CUT, WiK ANP HIS 'PA5SEN0EKS' HAVE HEAUP NONE OF TH6 PIS TRESS CHANNEL TALK. ..SO, SUDDENLY r NAIkTWft L5(AfW!V CAX ffSTKDLnJTS POR STAfiftEK ARCWJO WnHI I T SPCf WOCRAMJ NON -VHXti.-E GIP.9 I MXJ CON I AMINJ.M E IH P Ul IMAM CAi T 8 The Bulletin, Monday, November 18, 1963 DENNIS, THE MENACE nr 1 'GEE, I WNt KNOW WW JUST Xf WOULD AMKE YA SO TIRED, ffatl IF DU W3THE OL' LAW WHO UVED IN A SHOE Television in review He was relieved when she finally lost out in contest By Rick Du Brew UPI Staff Writer HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-I don't know what's happening to girls. The other night at the super market, I saw a gorgeous thing buy the Saturday Review, Sci entific American and Consumer Reports. Some girl. Some super market. Well, obviously we have to do something to keep our old-fashioned girls. And one of the things we could do is take a hard look at the commercialism of beauty contests, as illustrat ed bv Sunday night's NBC-TV study of a lovely Texas coed who somehow managed to come through her basic training for the Miss America Pageant. Anyone who has ever seen the close-up workings of beauty con tests knows they are generally as heartwarming as firms that start pushing Christmas sales even before Thanksgiving is here. Some of the judges wouldn t know a Ball dancer from a ballet dancer or belly dancer. Despite the accepted silliness she had to go through, I got to like Sunday night's contestant, Jeanne Richey Amacker, Beau mont, Tex., because when she wasn't caught up in the mad ness of staged naturalness, she revealed a down-to-earth warmth and eyes that showed humor. In fact, I was relieved when she finally lost the Miss America competition after be coming Miss Texas, because I didn't want her to have to go through any more commercial pressures. She got $10,000 in re wards for being chosen Miss Texas, and earned every penny of it. After Miss Amacker was se lected as Miss Texas, we saw 'Uncle Carl' Vinson plans to retire after 50 years WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. Carl Vinson, D-Ga., one of the most powerful and colorful fig ures in Congress, announced to day he would not run for re election. He said 25 terms in the House are enough. In retiring at the end of next year "Uncle Carl" Vinson will have served a month more than 50 years, setting an all-time rec ord for House tenure. The veteran of the Armed Services Committee told a re porter he would leave Congress secure in the knowledge that the country was in fine shape and good Democratic hands. He said he would do what he could to sec that this condition con tinued. He foresaw no war with Russia atomic or otherwise providrd this country maintains its might. Rivers It Mentioned Vinson's departure will put Rep. L. Mendel Rivers. D-S.C, in line to become chairman of the Armed Services Committee provided the Democrats main tain control ot me Mouse. Todav was Vinson's 80th birthday. To the extent that his fellow lawmakers would let him he planned to observe it rou tinely. That meant arising be fore daylight, reaching his Capi tol office at 7:30 a.m., working till 4 p.m. and going to bed ahout 9 p.m. Vinson came to the House a country boy from Milledgeville, Ga., in 1914. He stayed to be come not only a dominant figure in Congress but a trusted ad viser to presidents and. during an incredible 29 years as chair man of the Armed Services Committee and its predecessor Committee on Naval Affairs, a principal architect of the na tion's defenses. Throuch it all he has retained his Milledgeville dr-wl. his countrified look, his unflagging energy, js ambling gait his a business meeting at which it was stipulated that she had to agree not to get married for a year, and that every news re lease had to be cleared. There were big stakes: $100,000 for the Miss America prize, and also her personal appearances as Miss Texas. At times Sunday night, the straight-faced approach of the cameras minus narration amounted to high satire by merely displaying some of the goings-on. At tunes, this objec tive approach brought home the point that truth is stranger than fiction by making one won der at the enormous amount of work poured into such an event. But best of all, the program. though pointing up the events that could make one shudder, never forgot that some very nice young ladies were doing the best they could as contest ants. Thus, it was not snobbish in its consideration of them per sonally. And thus it was not only a chivalrous program, but a tasteful, human one. It was the system that was put on trial by the cameras. The Channel Swim: Barbra Streisand guests with NBC-TV's Jack Paar Nov. 29 . . . Bert Lahr visits CBS-TV's Ed Sulli van this Sunday . . . Same net work's new Phil Silvers Show is being altered, to take a large part of the action out of the factory setting. A comedy-drama by the late Clifford Odets, about a proud old man who is forced out of his make-believe world by his daughter's impending marriage airs Dec. 10 on NBC-TV s Rich ard Boone series . . . Odets was story editor of the Boone an thology when he died. razor-edged wit. He also has clung to his chewing tobacco, his omnipresent goboons, and his regrettably casual aim. Retains Good Sense At 80 Vinson also retains not only his senses but his good sense. He told a reporter he wanted to quit before anybody could claim he was losing his grip. Up until now, that is the last criticism any House mem ber would be likely to level at him. They have called him a tyrant sometimes. They say he has run his committee more as mon arch than chairman. But they always fight to get on it and are quirk Republicans and Democrats alike to advertise their accredited standing in what has been known through the years as "Vinson College." Vinson is the kind of un-hy-phenated Democrat not general ly found among the Southern contingent in Congress. With advancing age, he has cocked his eye ever less to the past and more to the future. He thinks the future is bright. Farmers Union names officer SALEM (UPI) -Alan Ham of Rattle Ground, Wash., was re elected vice president of the Oregon-Washington Farmers Un ion at the close of the organi sation's three - day convention here Saturday. Al Lamb of Heppner and Dave St. John of Gervais were named directors, Ed Zimmerman of Sublimity was chosen as dele gate to the national convention next year and Mima Ham of La Center. Wash., was pi-ked as president of the junior farmers union for the two states. Economists see spotted picture for nations farmers next year By Gaylord P. Godwin UPI Staff Writer WASHINGTON (UPI) The Agriculture Department pre dicted today the farm economy for 1964 and the remainder of 1963 will form a spotted picture. Here is how the department economists see the farm eco nomic picture: Net farm income will drop this year from last and will go even lower in 1964. Farm production expenses will jump this year and next to new record highs. Farm exports for fiscal 1964 will be record high. This was the situation that greeted delegates to the depart ment's 41st annual National Ag ricultural Outlook Conference, a meeting to examine economic facts and interpret them from a standpoint of agriculture for the coming year. The confer ence is a fact-finding and fact interpreting workshop which is based on a continuous year round activity. Farm income for 1963 is ex pected to be about $12.25 billion down about 3 per cent from the estimated $12.6 billion of 1962. The drop for 1963 is due to pro duction expenses rising faster than realized gross farm in come, the department said. For 1964, net farm income is expected to sink 5 per cent to about $11.6 billion. Department economists said the drop for Death takes Fritz Reiner NEW YORK (UPI) - Fritz Reiner, 74, who fulfilled a boy hood dream by becoming one of the world's leading symphonic orchestra conductors, died in a hospital last week of pneumonia. Among Reiner's great accom plishments was his success in raising the once-mediocre Chi cago Symphony to a position of eminence in the classical music world. Reiner joined the orchestra as director in 1953. Within a few years it was regarded as the second best in the nation, just behind the Philadelphia Symphony. A heart attack in 1960 cur tailed his work with the orches tra, and he resigned h i s post two years later. He had planned to celebrate his 75th birthday next month with a four-week engagement with the Chicago Symphony. Reiner, born in Budapest, Hungary, studied law at the urging of his father. But his mother, an amateur musician, apparently had a stronger in fluence on him. He began study ing the piano at the age of 6, and by the time he was 13 he had decided to become a con ductor. D'Autremont count dropped PORTLAND (UPI) -A 40- year-old federal indictment growing out of one of the na tion's last great train robberies was dismissed last week by U.S. District judge John F. Kil kenny. The indictment charged Roy D Autremont, now 63, with as sault of a mail clerk. D'Autremont is now serving a life sentence in the Oregon State Hospital. He and his twin broth er, Ray, and a younger broth er, Hugh, were sentenced to life in prison in 1927, four years aft er the Oct. 11. 1923 train rob bery in the Siskiyous near Ash land. Four members of the train crew, including a mail clerk were killed. The clerk was killed by a charge of dynamite used to blow up a strong box. The train's engineer, fireman and brakeman were shot. Hugh was parolled in 1958 and died a year later in San Fran cisco. Ray is now on probation on the federal charge and Roy is in the mental institution. 1 00th test set off underground NEVADA TEST SITE (UPD The Atomic Energy Commission (AECI last week brought its total of underground nuclear tests to 100 since Sept. 15. 1961. when it detonated its second blast in two days. The explosion equal to less than 200.000 tons of TNT was similar to the low yield shot detonated on Thursday. Neither blast was noticeable in Las Vegas, 65 miles to the south east. The United States resumed testing at this remote desert proving ground on the 1961 date after a series of nuclear explo sions by the Soviet Union vio lated a three-year moratorium on such experiments. It was the 19th announced U.S. test this year and the ninth since Aug. 5. 1963. when an in ternational agreement banning atmospheric, space and under water testing was signed. o I 1964 will be largely the result of sharply reduced income from wheat and a continued rise in farm production expenses. Under current legislation, a substantial drop in cash re ceipts from wheat, including government payments, is antic ipated in 1964, the department said. Wheat producers in May turned down the Administra tion's wheat program for 1964 that would have kept price sup port at $2 per bushel and would have Imposed strict production and marketing controls. As a result, the wheat pro gram for 1964 now calls for price support of $1.25 per bush el for those who plant within their acreage allotments. The market price of wheat Is ex pected to be near or below the support price. The department said the cur rent outlook for farm income assumes no change in legisla tion for 1964 crops of wheat and cotton, a continuation of the present dairy program, and av erage growing conditions next year. Farm production expenses this year are expected to rise about $600 million from the $28.2 billion estimated for 1962. The department said the farm , cost outlook for 1964 indicates another $600 million will be piled atop the $28 8 billion that finally will pay the production costs of 1963. Red dilemma at U.N. noted UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) Communist countries were reported in a dilemma to day about how to vote on a 10 power resolution aimed at mak ing Latin America a nuclear free zone. The General Assembly's main political committee had hoped to vote on the measure last Friday, but the Communists in scribed themselves on the speakers' list in a strung-out manner that guaranteed post ponement of the vote until at least next Thursday. Ten Latin American powers proposed a resolution which would set up a conference to prepare for hemispheric denu clearization. The United States supported the move, provided all countries of the area in cluding Cuba participated in it. Cuba, scheduled to speak to day, has demanded that nucle ar weapons must be removed from the Panama Canal Zone and Puerto Rico, controlled by the United States, in any denu clearization plan. Despite this Fidel Castro's delegation was reported ready to abstain in the vote on the resolution, rather than op pose it. The Cubans were confident that the 10-member Soviet bloc would follow their lead and also abstain. Pre-seasonal weather seen By United Press International Old man winter promised to make a pre-seasonal impression along the Northern Plains and the Northwest but wasn't ex pected to show up anywhere else in the nation. A snow and cold wave warn ing was out for eastern Mon tana, the Plains and the North west with showers expected along the Pacific Coast Precipitation was generally light Sunday with the bulk of it in the country's midsection. Ty ler, Texas, had 1.22 Inches and Grand Rapids. Mich., 1.02 Inch es within a six-hour period. The East had clear skies and temperature readings running into the 60's early today. The Western two-thirds of the na tion showed temperatures in the 2fls and 30s. The Atlantic seaboard wa warm and was expected to stay that way. A rise in the mercury was likely for the upper Missis sippi Valley, Central Plains and souther half of the Rockies. N. C. girl new Grange princess PORTLAND (UPI) - Misi Marie Newton, 22, of Winston Salem. N.C.. is the npw Natinn! Grange princess. ne was chosen Saturday night as the Grance nearerf th mrf of its national convetntion here. ne is a school teacher. Another member of the Old Richmond Granro at Wintn-. Salem. Richard L. Angell," 18, finished second in the race for national Drinre title Thi n-o. won by James H. Simpson, 21, iMiiid, lUdllO. The awards were harf Aft outstandinz Granr inl . munity work. Miss Marion Pvl Bethany. W. Va.. was runner-up in the princess contest, o o