The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, December 11, 1963, Page 9, Image 9

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FLANNING FOR 1964 PAGEANT Wintry days finds these "Folk Songs and Ballads of the United States" will be the 1964
two men and others on an 18-member board planning for 1964 Pageant theme. The 18-member Mirror Pond Pageant Corn
Mirror Pond Pageant days on the Deschutes River. Co-chair- mittee will work directly through the Bend Chamber of Corn
men of the summer show are Ron Young, left, and Hal Peck, merce, as in past years. Lyman C. Johnson was 1963 Pageant
They are shown examining a very fluffy replica of a swan, chairman.
Message thought from doomed
jet came from another plane
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
dramatic "Clipper 214 out of
control., .going down in
flames" message, supposedly
flashed by the pilot of a
doomed Pan American World
Airways jet, may have come
from another plane, it was
learned today.
The Civil Aeronautics Board
(CAB), UPI was informed by a
reliable source, has evidence
that the chilling words came in
stead from the co-pilot of a Na
tional Air Lines DC8 flying only
1,0(10 feet above the Pan Ameri
can 707 just before it fell in
flames at Elkton, Md., Sunday
night, killing all 81 aboard.
The Federal Aviation Agency
(FAA), which released the tape
recording containing what pre
sumably was the Pan Am pi
lot's final communication to the
Philadelphia approach control
center, apparently assumed it
must have come from Flight
214 the plane that crashed.
After the control center first
heard "Clipper 214. . .out of
control. . .down (or here) we
go," It immediately asked:
"Clipper 214, were you call
ing Philadelphia?"
-A voice calmly answered:
. "Clipper 214. . .going down In
flames."
Thinning work
in forests due
Two improvement projects
covering approximately 680
acres of public land in Oregon
are scheduled by the Bureau of
Land Managment, Department
of the Interior, under sealed
bids invited by the Portland of
fice of the Federal agency.
The work involves timber
stand improvement (thinning)
on 380 acres located in Des
chutes County, 25 miles south
of Bend, and hazard reduction
(site improvement) on approxi
mately 300 acres in Klamath
County, southeast of Medford,
for reducing existing fire haz
ards in a burned-over forest
area.
Bids for timber stand Im
provement will be opened at 2
p.m. December 18, in the Bu
reau's Field Administrative Of
fice, in Portland, Ore. On Invi
tation No. 1326 for hazard re
duction bids will be opened at
he same time and at the same
address on December 19.
The work is set aside for
Small Business Concerns only
and any contract awarded
which may be partially or com
pletely supported by appropri
ations from Accelerated Public
Works Program funds will re
quire performance by residents
of the counties concerned.
Complete information may be
obtained from the Bureau of
Land Management in Prineville
for the thinning project.
Seed growing
in new era
PORTLAND (UPI) -A farm
crops specialist at Oregon State
University said Monday that the
state's $25 million seed growing
industry was moving into a new
era.
Dr. J. R. Cowan spoke at the
23rd annual convention of the
Oregon Seed Growers League.
"Our biggest challenge is the
strong tendency toward compla
cency," he said. "Unless we are
aware of the new era we can
stand to s 1 i p back substantial
ly." Dr. Cowan urged the seed
growers to produce varieties
which the markets demand.
Both the "out of control"
message and the "down in
flames" cry, the source told
UPI, actually were flashed in
stead by one of the pilots on
National Flight 16 which was In
a holding pattern over New
Castle. Del., at 6,000 feet 1,000
feet above the Pan American
jet.
Before what had been pre
sumed to be the "final mes
sage," the Pan Am pilot had
informed the control center he
was "ready to go" meaning
he was ready to land any time
he received permission.
"Clipper 214, stay in pat
tern," the center replied.
Last Communication
"Roger, no hurry," was the
answer and the last positive
communication received from
FMeht 214.
Presumably, the CAB first
learned that the final message
probably came from another
plane when investigators ques
tioned the National pilots. Their
testimony may be the most vi
tal of all In the solution of the
tragedv, for they apparently
were the most reliable and clos
est eyewitnesses to the 707's
death throes. There was no In
dication what they told the
CAB.
Nor was there any Immediate
explanation how the National
crew knew that the flaming jet
below them was Pan American
Flight 214. It was assumed that
the National pilots were aware
that 214 was the aircraft below
them in the holding pattern
through previous communica
tions on a radio frequency
available to both planes.
Fund-raising groups turn
fo businessman for help
NEW YORK (UPI) -This is I Mitchell Felt, community devel-
a season when the business
man's thoughts may turn
among other things, to giving.
Not merely by himself, but
in a way of himself, on behalf
of others.
In the fall and winter season
as many as nine out of 10 of
this city's most active business
men may devote time to fund
raising enterprises for various
charities; for health and wel
fare institutions and services,
for hospitals, schools, houses of
worship.
Joseph Willen, executive vice
president of the Federation of
Jewish Philanthropies of New
York, said recently that the
businessman who did not accept
at least one philanthropic assign
ment either lacks roots in his
community or is moving too
fast for bis own physical good.
Fund-raising organizations are
for the most part no longer
willing merely to accept con
tributions from the good organizer-businessman;
they look for
a greater donation, his time.
And usually get it.
Austin V. McClain, president
of Marts & Lundy, Inc., one of
the nation's top fund-raising
firms, has estimated corporate
and executive philanthrophy at
$9.S billion a year.
McClain said that many top
executives spend up to 20 per
cent of their business day In
fund-raising pursuits. Once en
listed, he said, the truly effect
ive business executives will give
the same kind of talents and
energy to their philanthropy
that they devote to their own
professions or industries.
The group for which Willen
works is headed by Irving
oper and head of Madison
Square Garden Corp. It has a
building fund goal of $156 mil
lion, described as the largest
single philanthropic drive in his
story, and has raised about $90
million of this to date.
Often, businessmen start out
with an Interest In specific and
perhaps limited groups, then
expand their activities into
overall community affairs.
McClain has said that a study
of Uie activities of principal
officers of leading corporations
show they frequently are moved
by a strong sense of civic res
ponsibility; some say that they
favor voluntary systems of sup
port to remove needs for com
plete dependence upon federal
or state aid.
Often the business executive
who has turned time and talent
to philanthropic causes may get
his start through joining in a
class drive for funds for his
school or college: once Intro
duced to the new hobby or
avocation he may find that the
sense of personal satisfaction,
or of helping to discharge civic
responsibility, may lead him on.
NEW NAME
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI)
The city commission an
nounced Tuesday that the plaza
on the Boardwalk In front of
Convention Hall will be named
in honor of the late President
Kennedy.
The John F. Kennedy Plaza
will have a bronze or alumi
num bust of the late Chief Ex
ecutive on a marble pedestal In
the center of the rotunda facing
the boardwalk.
a-
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m
I
f
legance
for the Holly -Days
Dance in the glow of candlelight, go
in the glamour of the season with these
festive stylings resplendent with
radiance. Devistatingly charming with
simplicity of design.
16"
Tweedies Seneca '
Other Brands From 8.99
ND BOOTERY
A
Support given
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Justice Department and two
prominent civil rights organiza
tions teamed up today to sup
port a couple of segregationists
in an unusual free speech case
called up by the Supreme Court.
ine segregationists are Ed
ward R. Fields, Information di
rector of the National States
Rights party, and Robert Ly
ons, the party's youth organizer.
They were convicted of con
tempt of court in Fairfield, Ala.
after defying an order not to
distribute handbills and hold a
public meeting.
Despite the party's advocacy
of white supremacy, an attorn
ey from the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) is ar
guing the case. The National
Association for the Advance
ment of Colored People
(NAACP) and the Justice De
partment filed supporting briefs.
The gist of their argument Is
that the court order was based
on two local ordinances which
violated the Constitution. The
local statutes prohibit the hold
ing of public meetings without
a permit and the distribution of
handbills. It Is contended that
these ordinances infringe on the
constitutional right of free
speech.
The argument goes still furth
er. The Justice Department and
the ACLU say that in free
speech situations individuals
should have the right to test a
court order by disobeying it.
The Supreme Court ruled other
wise some years ago in a Unit
ed Mine Workers strike case,
but free speech was not In
volved in that instance.
Innocence plea
made by Dixon
KLAMATH FAI.T.S TIP!)
Oliver Dixon, 52, pleaded inno
cent in circuit Court Monday to
a charge of first degree murder.
Circuit Judge Donalri Plnpr
scheduled the trial to start Feb.
3.
Dixon is charged with the fa
tal shooting of his wife, Ellen,
42, here Nov. 26. .
Eugene Beierle, 47, also ap
peared before Judge Piper and
was granted until Wednesday
before entering a plea to a
charge of first degree murder.
Beierle is accused with fatally
shooting his wife, Gloria, 23,
here Nov. 22.
The Bulletin, Wednesday, December 11, 1953 9
Russians have one standard of comparison
By Phil Newsom
UPI Staff Wrlttr
Under the leadership of Ni
kita Khrushchev, the Soviet Un
ion has had but one standard
of comparison, the United
States.
For the people of the 15 So
viet republics, living on broken
promises, it has been a tragedy.
For Khrushchev, first secretary
of the Communist party since
1853 ana premier since 1958, it
has been an example of personal
indestructibility. -
For example:
On July 30, 1961, the Soviet
Communist party announced its
third program, a milestone in
the history of communism.
The first program had been
drawn up in 1903 and called for
uie overthrow of the Czarist
autocracy" and the "establish
ment of the dictatorship of the
proletariat."
"Soclallrt Society"
The second program, drawn
up by Lenin in 1919, had for its
goal the "building of a Socialist
society."
The third, drawn up under
Khrushchev, declared:
"In the current decade 1961
1970) the Soviet Union will sur
pass the strongest and richest
capitalist country, the United
States, in production per head
of population; the people's
standard of living and their cul
tural and technical standards
will improve substantially . . .
hard physical work will disap
pear ..."
This week before 8,000 mem
bers of the Soviet leadership in
the Kremlin Hall of Congresses,
Khrushchev gave his accounting
of failure.
Typically, his accounting con
tained no note of personal fail
ure nor of the fact that as he
personally guided the destiny of
Soviet agriculture he has seen
first mechanization as the cure
all for the Ills of Soviet produc
tion, tnen tne opening ot tne
virgin lands and now, finally,
the massive use of fertilizer.
To bring this about he an
nounced a crash program to
more than triple the output of
the Soviet chemical industry in
the next seven years.
' Two hundred new chemical
plants are to be built and 500
existing ones rebuilt.
But, again' typical of the
twists and turns of various So
viet five, seven and 20-year
programs, the announcement
took no notice of past failure.
"Unprecedented" Plan
The Khrushchev announce
ment called the new plan "un
precedented" and, among other their own use.
things, called for the production I He also failed to note that
by 1970 of 3.5 to 4 million tons ,vhile production was increas
of plastics and synthetic resins, ing so was tne Soviet popula-
a jump o: six to seven limes lion at tne rate o 3 5 mmio
over the present level. pcr vear
Ignored was the fact that the Wilh vict space accomplish-fly-in-the-sky
program of 1961 ments in mind, there is no dis
called for more than 5 million position to discount Soviet tech.
tons of plastics and synthetic nca abmiy. Rather, U.S. -ex-resins
by 1970. j perts are inclined to attribute
Khrushchev made special i Soviet failures to too much
note of the claim that since the j haste and too little planning,
death of Josef Stalin 10 years! .
ago, Soviet production of meatjSTREET SWEEPERS SAVE
and milk has more than dou-1 VIENNA (UPI) Three mil
bled and the production of eggs j lion volunteer women street"
tripled. But he om'ited to nole sweepers saved Komama $13
that most of thU gain came million this year, the Romanian
from the small private plots al- newspaper New Way said to
lotted to Soviet peasants for I day.
j n It uk.i I -
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