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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1963)
o OtfT OUR WAY OUR BOARDING HPUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE IP OUCiHTEK DUST " NO, SODA, ALWAYS AKe L- HAK-RUMPrt IT MAY NTREST THIS JUGHEAD OUT X PLAY OF YORE WORK I'LL BV TH'WAV MAOR U6M&SOU' BUSTEe.TO KNOW THAT I I WITHASAPLIN'--SHE's ARK THESE INTO DICE, uc it n akVt -Ju-V TV& ALREADY ENTERED THE THROWED OFF THESE J AW' WHEN SHE SEES V , T COOKING CONTEST- AT THE- i- TWO BLOCKS OF V WE'RE HAVIW FUN LOCAL CON I CT t-C -V f?EatJEST Op THE ( SALT THREE X SHE'LL QUIT AMATEUR CHEF4? TOO nUAKTHEV WANTED TO BE rtTV Jfc J.T AO? Li ..TuJT f eV -iHASLECTUKEDTOAN VS V" AcnNTrV8 ASSEMBLY OP oujuaALON w!y?JMal I' U.. jniAiwi?-.Q ept SECRET STEVE CANYON AS THE ENGINES OF THE TRANSPORT SPUTTER AND tTOP AND THE CHINESE IN THE COPILOTS SEAT POINTS ITS NOSE STRAIGHT DOWN INTO THE SEA... i S- is-mim m. I NOTHING IS SAID ON THE RADIO- r- "k ft- -' . ' r J.' OR IN THE COCKPIT OF THE RENTED iCW"" AIRCRAFT... )A , 1 fcl M "fe. 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WILEY m HAVE Vwith mm NOW l I SEE YOU FOR ft 11 J WHAT'S HAPPENED TO ' in jLT-YOURSELF A DR.WROWCUmV Tt-T7 m-'HO WNUTE, PLEASET S I . CAPTAIN EASY ! NOT NEAR d WTUBBl IV fern wiv rv ir wni-t tbu nw tub lriukb'i i fif tb . vnwf. wewiEp CKtL) you kvotv au wbi MW f- in mm -mrrt tw.v n im u khs.t e policv, vva w FOR MARY WORTH THEY AY I - MAY THEY" ARE NOT NEVER WAU A6AIN, INFALLIBLE, JANI-WHtN -r-- I BOUOHI IHL LUIt LKi ClUR" "THEY" PREDICTED TUAT Tn RF RAUrPI DT in 60 days; wy'Sa I I " II I i-rv i I'W WKE YIR DOCTOR IS COMPETENT -HOWEVER, I'M TUTTING A WHOLE REGIMENT Of iPECIAUSTS ON YOUR CASE TOMORROW! AND I'M BETTING THAT YOUU BE ABLE TO GO SWING WITH ML BY CHRbTMAS! PUT, EVEN IF--. THINGS DON'T WORK OUT THAT WELLIT WILL MAKE NO DIFFERENCE, JAN-IN THE WAY 1 FEEL- AND WILL ALWAYS FEEL ABOUT YOU! ALLEY OOP DM. T TWlWkr -rjtec L YiAS A BIT MORS TO i II THAN THAT. i i . lA.CI" WVW''MO,13HT ) ..SO HXJ'KE GONNA pg I , i W3 ur irvac j mM3 llTVO.tNlt lt " II ENLIGHTENED ON TH' All -IWA.T IMCT NON-VIOLENCE GlTrtl RkiHT. I REPLkiNANT TO MB... ) EiSiS. .fSUr IJ.r?T f iv. Bj 10 The Bulletin, Wednesday, November 20, 1963 DENNIS, THE MENACE Television in review Golden Age of Greece subject for stimulating hour on TV By Rick Du Brow UPI Staff Writer HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-It was the contention of the renowned novelist and biographer, Ste fan Zweig, that the only real way to get to know a nation is "through its best people." Zweig was talking about di rect intellectual contact with the "best" living people; but Tuesday night NBC-TV produc er-writer Lou Hazam applied this technique to the past and therefore came up with a rele vant and stimulating hour in his special documentary "Greece: The Golden Age." By combining the words of the "best" people important to the times dealt with, and blend ing these texts with poetic cam era work reflecting the art, his tory and lovely land of Greece in the age of Pericles, he fur ther distinguished his television career. He has already turned out such programs as "Vincent Van Gogh: A Self-Portrait," 'The River Nile and "Shake speare: Soul of an Age." To those viewers used to a bang-bang tempo, Tuesday night's pace might have come out of a style that one could term Connecticut Gothic. It was however, to those who can live without the run-of-the-mill stuff, the gentle pace of a patient creator who wants to create not only an experience but the mood of adult leisure to have the time to savor it, and almost taste it. It was the attitude of a man who does not buy the approach of sugarcoating cul ture in order to draw the atten tion of those not worth attract ing in the first place. Trevor Howard was the nar rator, and though at times he was too matter-of-fact, giving the impression of an old Fitz gerald travelogue, most of the hour he contributed to the ap propriate tone. And to his words were added those of the historic figures, subtly instructive in pointing up the paths of super ior men and nations, and quiet ly drawing parallels between now and then. The cameras registered one remarkable impressionistic scene: A suggestion of the Bat tle of Marathon between the Greeks and Persians, using wheat and poppies in a field to represent the opposing forces. The wheat represented the Greeks, and the poppies the Persians and the wind aided the suggestion of battle. The Channel Swim: ABC-TV's "Outer Limits" series is firmed for at least 32 segments . . . Fredric March, the voice of Columbus in the same net work's recent "1492" documen tary, will be the voice of George Washington in a sequel, "1776," on Dec. 8. Tuscaloosa police hope to keep bomber from striking again By United Presc International Police in Tuscaloosa, pa trolled city streets and the in tegrated University of Alabama campus today in hopes of pre venting a sneak bomber from striking again. Three after-dark blasts with in the past four days were touched off by the bomber. Two were in a Negro residen tial community and one was a short distance from the univer sity dormitory where Vivian Malone, the school's only Negro student, resides. Tic bombs, so far. have caused no injuries and done very little properly damage, but residents of the community are jittery. "These blasts have gotten people s nerves on edge," Miss I Malone said Tuesday. Polite arrested a 40-year-old while man Tuesday in connec tion with the bombings, but re leased him after a few hours of questioning. Nineteen "peace marchers" face trial at Macon, Ga., today on charges of illegally distrib uting literature. The biracial group, hiking from Canada to Cuba to dem onstrate for peace, was arrest ed Tuesday after passing out pamphlets to the pastor of a Negro church in violation of a no-pamphlet ordinance. Some of the group were charged with resisting arrest when they lay down in the street. Led by Bradford Lyttle of Voluntown, Conn., the hikers carried signs reading "Demand freedom to visit Cuba," End racial discrimination" and "Re sist evil but not with violence." About 100 biracial demonstra tors picketed police headquar ters st New York City Tuesday in protest against alleged police brutality. The group accused police of using horses and nightsticks to break up recent civil rights demonstrations. Elsewhere in the nation: Philadelphia: The U.S. Dis trict Court was asked by the Philadelphia Teachers Associa tion Tuesday for permission to intervene in a segregation suit filed against the board of edu cation. The suit charged the board with violating an agree- ment to end de facto segrega tion and the teachers with at tempting to sabotage the agree ment. Chicago: Prof. Russell H. Barrett of the University of Mississippi says his school fol lowed a "policy of weakness" regarding the rights of haras sed white students who be friended former Negro student James Meredith. Raleigh, N.C.: Attorney C.C. Malone Jr. told Die state Su preme Court Tuesday that five Negro demonstrators were within their rights when they lay down in a Greensboro street. Anderson, S.C.: The Greater Anderson Ministerial Associa tion has voted to drop sponsor ship of annual Thanksgiving Day services in the city recre ation center following rejection by city council of a request that the services be integrated. Birmingham, Ala.: Edward Fields, information director of the National States Rights party, Tuesday filed a $1 mil lion libel suit against the Bir mingham News and columnist David Lawrence, charging they contrived in an article to "bring him into disrepute among his neighbors." 'Truth serum' due for Evans PORTLAND (LTD - Accused slayer Robert Evans of Honolu lu will be examined while under the influence of "truth serum." Circuit Judge Charles Redding ruled Tuesday. Attorneys for Evans, 27. asked for sodium penathol questioning and a psychiatric examination for their client before he entered a plea to a charge of first de gree murder. Evans is charged In the strangulation death of Mrs. Irene Davis, a 41-year-old Pay ette, Idaho, cattle heiress whose body was found in a room at the Portland Hilton Hotel Aug. 6. His trial is scheduled to begin Dec. 2. Agriculture Department offers forecast on outlook for farmer By Caylord P. Godwin UPI Staff Writer WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ag riculture Department econo mists today reviewed for dele gates to the annual Agricultural Outlook Conference the 1964 out look for livestock and meats, poultry and eggs, and livestock feed. Some improvement in hog prices is in prospect for 1964, but little change is seen in cat tle and lamb prices, economists Antony Rojko and Donald Sea board told the extension work ers who will take back to state and local communities informa tion on the agricultural econ omy. Cattle marketings will in crease again, according to the economists, but likely no more than can be absorbed by the gain in population, increase in consumer incomes, and contin ued preference for beef. The increased marketings and little change in price means cash receipts from cattle and calves will be up next year from the estimated $8.1 billion in 1963. Cash receipts from hogs also will be up, but cash re ceipts from sheep and lambs are expected to be about the This time Wallendas using a net FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI1 The Flying Wallendas, haunted by a possible "jinx" and mem ories of death on the high wire, today opened what may be the last performances of their fa mous "human pyramid." This time it will be done with a net. Today's performance, for un derprivileged children at the 21st annual Fort Worth Shrine Circus, was to be the first pub lic performance since the pyra mid collapsed in Detroit Jan. 30, 1962, killing two members of the troupe and paralyzing an other. Karl Wallenda. 58. who origi nated the act in Germany in 1954, said Tuesday he did not want to talk about the Detroit accident. "It was bad, very bad," he said. "After the show, then I will talk about it." Karl said as leader of the act, the decision to use a net for the Fort Worth performance was his. "This time I am for the net," he said. "Should I be responsi ble for what happened in De troit happening again people would spit in my face on the streets." Karl saved himself in the De troit accident by scissoring his legs around the wire as he fell. He also grabbed the hand of his niece, Jana Shepp as she fell. Jana has since retired. Her hus band, Ditcr, 23, died in the fall. Herman Wallenda, Karl's brother and at 62 the eldest member of the troupe, an nounced he will retire at the end of the circus in Fort Worth. He said he felt fit as ever but "if anything should happen to the act in the future I might be blamed." Karl scoffed at the idea the troupe was accident prone and said one reason they would try the human pyramid again was "to show that we still can do it." Just two weeks ago, the pyr amid collapsed during a rehear sal at Sarasota, Fla., but the wire was only 12 feet off the ground instead of the normal 40. Karl said the act would work the three-decker pyramid with a full complement of eight peo ple "for the last time any where." "I will never risk so many people on the wire again." "After Fort Worth," Karl said, "I intend to cut the act to four people and do a less dangerous pyramid on bicycles." Presidency due for Penhollow Deschutes County Judge D. L. Tenhollow will be elevated to the presidency of the Associa tion of Oregon Counties, at the conclusion of the annual con vention which opened today in Portland. Headquarters will be at the Benson Hotel. Judge Penhollow. now vice - president. will preside at the Wednesday luncheon. j County judges, commission ! ers, engineers and roadmasters of Oregon counties will attend ; the sessions. Discussion subjects j will include automatic data pro j cessing. water pollution, current legal problems, budget prnce idures. county parks and county ; road classification and priority J systems. Keynote speaker at the open ing session will be Bernard F. Hillenbrand, executive director of the National Association of Counties. Convention consultants Include William C. James, Rend. Des chutes County Civil Drter.se director. same as in 1963. Consumers will eat about 170 pounds of red meat in 1963. This is 6 pounds more than in 1962. Most of the increase will be in beef. Economist Herman Blucstone said economic signs point to a larger production of eggs and poultry in 1964. Only a small in crease from 1963 appears likely for eggs but a moderate expan sion may be in the offing for broilers and turkeys, Bluestone said. There is a possibility, Blue stone said, that the total in crease in egg production in 1964 may not be great enough to maintain the current civilian per capita consumption rate of 316 eggs. He said prices to egg produc ers probably will be below a year earlier in the first half of 1964. And even though eggs may show a greater seasonal rise next year, the average price for all of 1964 is likely to be a little below the 34.1 cents per dozen in prospect this year. Bluestone said per capita con sumption of chicken in 1964 probably will exceed the 30.6 pounds currently estimated for 1963. In a review of the feed grain situation, economist Malcolm Clough said feed grain produc tion this year is 6 per cent smaller than in 1962 and only a little below the record output in 1960. But with the smaller carryover stocks, the total sup ply for 1963-64 is about equal to the 1962-63 supply. Feed grain production is ex pected to be only a little below total requirements for the 1963 64 marketing year, Clough said. ; He predicted carryover stocks will be reduced about three or four million tons this year, much less than in the past two years. Both domestic and for eign demand will continue gen erally strong, he said. Feed grain and h i g h-protein feed prices probably will average near the 1962-63 level. Indian trust decision upheld SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) A de cision in the U.S. Court of Ap peals Tuesday upheld the estab lishment of trusts for some Klamath Indians "in need of assistance in conducting their affairs." Under the Klamath Termina tion Act, the Indians were al lowed to choose in 1958 whether they would withdraw from the Southern Oregon tribe and take their share of tribal assets in cash or remain in the tribe and have their share of assets man aged with the group's. The then-secretary of interior determined that the plaintiffs in the appeals case, Furman Crain Sr., Marian Crain and Tilda Chavez, were in need of assis tance. He placed their assets, which they had withdrawn from the tribe's, in trust with the First National Bank of Oregon at Portland. Under law, the plaintiffs could have challenged this arrange ment in a naturalization court, but they did not do so. Instead, they asked a Federal District Court to hold the pri vate trust unconstitutional. The district court rendered summary judgment against them. The court of appeals denied the argument of unconstitution ality. Also rejected was an argu- ment that the form of the choice , given the Klamath Indians lib 1958 did not comply with the re quirements of the termination act. The court of appeals said the law did not require any particu lar form of ballot and that the interior secretary had ultimate authority in the adoption of any j plan. j The opinion, issued last Wed j ncsday in Los Angeles, was written by U.S. Dist. Judge Wil ! liam T. Beeks of Seattle. It also : was sicned bv Chief Judge Richard H. Chambers and Judge Stanley Bames of the U.S. Court of Appeals. Mayor resigns at The Dalles THE DALLES i UPI) -Mayor Mel Davison announced his re signation Monday night because of what he called "a conflict of interest." The resignation is effective Nov. 30. Davidson, who is in the rock-crushing business, said he intends to bid on supplying the city's needs for street improve ment materials for the coming year. The mayor served two earlier j terms, from 1953 to 1957, and was re-elected last November. He took office in January and , will leave office with 13 months jof his term remaining. Dr. John Skining, the citv's councilman-at-laree. will suc ceed Davidson until the council 1 appoints a new mayor. 3 r-v