The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, December 12, 1963, Page 16, Image 16

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V6 The Bulletin, Thursday, December 12, 1963
DENNIS, THE MENACE
'See? Leather on the outsiob, siik on the wsioe, in a ff&u.
Television in review
Camera catches intense feel
of Negro ghetto in big city
By Rl:k Du Brow
UPI Staff Writer
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-As the
desegregation issue built up
this year, some Southerners
accused Northern communica
tions media of ignoring racial
problems above the Mason-Dixon
line.
Likewise, It was argued that
Southern media, along with
some in the North, suppressed
the race story. So touchy was
the issue that on Aug. 21, CBS
TV, which had been accused by
Walker action
may be dropped
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPD
Former Ma. Gen. Edwin Walk
er's $2 million libel suit against
the Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
WRAP radio-television and As
sociated Press will be dis
missed Friday unless Walker
appears in court, the judge
warned Wednesday.
Judge Charles J. Murray's
announcement drew no com
ment from Walker. The suit,
tiled Sept. 27, charged that an
Associated Press report of his
activities at Oxford, Miss., last
year subjected him to public
ridicule, hatred and contempt.
He alleged the two local me
dia used the dispatches.
Walker was arrested during
riots at the University of Mis
sissippi and charged with insur
rection, rebellion and seditious
conspiracy. Charges were
dropped when a grand Jury re
fused to indict him.
The former general filed $23
million in libel suits in eight
states In connection with tbe
Associated Press stories.
Murray said Walker and his
attorneys failed to appear Mon
day to give' depositions in the
case. Defense lawyers asked
that the case be dropped and
Murray said he would grant the
motion if Walker failed to ap
pear Friday.
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The Bend Bulletin (Weekly)
1903-1931. The Bend Bulletin
(Daily) Est. 1916. Published
Every Afternoon except Sun
days and certain holidays by tbe
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SL, Bend, Oregon.
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several quarters of slanting
coverage in favor of the Negro
cause, aired a unique-prime-
time discussion of how the
press and broadcasting were
reporting the events. Two
Southern editors took part.
In recent months, the various
charges at least the loud,
public ones seem to have
subsided somewhat, if only out
wardly. On Sept. 26, NBC-TV,
which had also been accused of
pro-Negro coverage, presented
a tough study about Negroes in
the nation's capital. And Wed
nesday night, "CBS Reports"
delved into the mood of Negroes
in the North, using New York's
Harlem as its focal point.
There was little new or start
ling in this one-hour study of
the moderate and extremist
groups competing to lead the
Negro movement. By now, the
point that the issue is not re
gional, but national, is old-hat.
But the chief value of CBS Re
ports" is that it provides a
place for a major forum of
what others ignore.
At times Wednesday night,
the camera caught the intense
feel of the Negro ghetto. Most
acutely captured was the ter
rible dramatic magnetism that
extremists hold for the populace
and the desperate need for
moderate leaders to seize the
imagination of the masses.
There were many words from
leaders, nnd one wishes that
there could have been more
talking from ordinary citizens.
It was mentioned casually but
impressively that 3,000 per
sons lived on a street shown;
and one felt that some more
expose - type reporting could
have probed deeper to un
cover the roots of resentment
in the words of those on the
street. Still, Ihe hour did pro
vide a dramatic forum and
verv little on video approaches
"CBS Reports."
Th Channel Swim: Blng
Crosby is the subject of NBC
TV's "Hollywood and the Stars"
two days before Christmas. . .
On Christmas morning, same
network's "Today" show offers
an all-musical program, featur
ing 16th Century instrumental
works.
Next Wednesday, "CBS Re
ports" has members of the
John F. Kennedy Lyndon B.
Johnson cabinet assess the na
tion and the world's future . . .
David Brinkley takes up the
subject of birth control in an
ABC-TV special Jan. 12.
HITS HEADLINES AGAIN
PASADENA, Calif. (UPD -The
first man to sign a petition
for a state lottery in California
made headlines once before in
another type of lottery.
Victor E. Scalora, 55. now an
East Pasadena shoe repairman,
had his name drawn from a
fishbowl beginning Selective
Service in ihe United Stales in
1940.
tnore meat
more flavors
Airmen emerge after 30 days In tank of pure oxygen
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPD I Rusiecki, 19, of Niagara Falls, , condition of the four against I Nov. 4 and spent five days
Four teen-age airmen emerged
Wednesday from a steel box
and 30 days in an explosive at
mosphere of pure oxygen, the
longest known test of its kind.
They underwent medical tests
then returned to their simulated
space capsule for five more
days of followup. Their condi
tions were good.
The test, part of a continuing
series of experiments to find out
man s reaction to space capsule
environment, was sponsored
jointly by the Air Force School
of Aerospace medicine at
Brooks Air Force Base, and the
Manned Spacecraft Center at
Houston.
The four airmen who breathed
pure oxygen for 30 days were
Jerry J. Huber, 18, of Hope,
Mich.; Philip B. Jameson, 18;
of Clearwater. Fla.; Thomas A.
Rusiecki, 19, of Niagara Falls,
N.Y. and Ronald D. Taskey, 19,
of Westernville, N.Y., all air
men 3.c.
Two other airmen 3.c,
George G. Vandall, 21, of Mil
ford, Mass. and Gary L. Mor
rill, 18, of Eaton Rapids, Mich.,
stayed outside the capsule as
controls. Doctors checked the
conditions ot tne two to com
pare effects.
Dr. Billy E. Welch, chief of
the school's environmental sys
tems branch, said "The men
are in fine shape and we are
very happy with the progress of
the experiment."
The men entered the capsule
Laughing judge calls if draw
SWANSEA, Wales (UPI)-Da-vid
Thomas offered to sell Da
vid Roberts a derelict railway
station which he didn't own.
And Roberts offered to pay for
it with a worthless check.
A laughing judge called it a
draw Wednesday and dismissed
a fraud charge against Thomas.
Thomas told the judge he
really thought he owned the
abandoned railway station be
cause he paid another man $14
for it. He offered it to Roberts
for $84. Roberts paid by check
and put a gang to work tear
ing it down for his scrap iron
business.
The station was halfway down
when a policeman came along
and stopped the work. Roberts'
check had bounced.
breathing normal air.
They then breathed oxygen
through masks to purge their
systems of nitrogen to avoid the
ber.ds, a painful malady caused
by formation of nitrogen bub
bles in the body fluids.
The atmospheric pressure In
the capsule was then reduced
to that found at 27,500 feet and
the capsule was flushed of all
gases but oxygen.
Normal air at sea level con
tains about 78 per cent nitro
gen. 21 per cent oxygen, 1 per
cent argon, and minute quanti
ties of carbon dioxide, hydro
gen, neon, helium, krypton and
xenon.
Air Force doctors watched the
men around the clock. Inside
the 25-foot by 9-foot capsule, the
men read, slept and performed
routine tests on themselves.
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