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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1963)
o The Bulletin, Friday, December 13, 1963 .. -r'7p-rT-TTWp.pinBI8WTOrill''W III . i r- - ' aaj-- - - - -w-t TOO CLOSE! Mrs. John Buck and her daughter Mrs. Rosalyn Leonard look out of their house in the outskirts of Findlay, Ohio, at a landing gear which nearly struck the home. A twin-engined converted B-26 crashed so close that flames singed the paint. Three aboard the plane were killed. Eight American servicemen killed in Viet Nam SAIGON, South " Viet tfdm (UPI) Two U.S. Army aircraft a helicopter and a light plane crashed in unrelated incidents Thursday, - apparently killing eight American servicemen, it was announced today. The heli copter was reported shot down by Communist ground fire. A U.S. military spokesman said a U.S. Army H-37 helicop ter with five American soldiers aboard crashed in the Mekong River Delta about 60 miles southeast of Saigon. Four men were killed and one seriously injured. In the other incident, the spokesman said the wreckage of a U.S. "Otter" light trans port plane with four Americans and three Vietnamese aboard was found during the night 500 feet from the peak of a 7.000 foot mountain in the jungles 160 miles north of Saigon. There was no sign of survivors. If all eight deaths are finally confirmed, they will bring the toll of Americans killed in ac tion here to 126, with 80 of them this year. The spokesman said two of the five men aboard the giant twin-engined helicopter were still alive when rescue forces arrived at the scene. One died before he could be evacuated. The other was taken to Saigon for medical treatment. Morrow heads ASC committee Special to The Bulletin MADRAS Robert E. Mor row was elected chairman of the Jefferson County Agricultur al Stabilization and Conserva tion committee at the conven tion of community committee men held recently, It was an nounced this week by Vern L. Hopper, county office manager. Other officers elected to the county committee for 1964 were Chester S. Luelling, vice chair man; John L. Campbell, regu lar member; Gene King, first alternate member and J, Willis Nartz, second alternate member. The spokesman said the heli copter pilot "lost control" and was forced to jettison wreckage of a twin-engined "Mohawk" plane which it had lifted from the ground by cables. The Mo hawk had crashed Wednesday. The military spokesman said there still was no explanation for the crash of the light trans port plane, which was on a rou tine flight from Ban Me Thut to the coastal city of Nha Trang. But there was some speculation that It hit the mountaintop because of bad weather. PLANS REPORTED ASHLAND (UPI) -Plans for a retirement village, sponsored by the Trinity Episcopal Church were announced here by Robert VanVleet, Ashland realtor. The 50 one-story garden type apartments will be built on a four-acre tract south of the junction of Highways 66 and 99. Vincent L. Oredsen has been named as architect of the development. Germans mourn death of Heuss STUTTGART, Germany (UPI) West Germans today mourned the death of Theodor Heuss, their first post war president. He was honored as a modest and popular man who helped bring democracy to his country. Heuss. 79. died Thursday night at his home In Stuttgart after a long illness and the am putation of his left leg. Doctors said death was caused by a blood circulation ailment. The friendly professor with the shock of white hair was venerated by West Germans as a "father." A journalist, a scholar, a pro fessor and a politician, he shunned pomp and helped create an Image that lifted Germany's status in the world following two devastating wars. Heuss served as president of West Germany from the na tion's founding in 1949 until 1959. Elected twice to the coun try's highest office, he held lit tle real political power but used his ceremonial post to set a modest and humane example for his countrymen. Hearing set on proposal Special te The Bulletin MADRAS A proposed quart er of a million dollar apartment building planned for construc tion at Ninth and Buff Streets in Madras, will be the subject of a public hearing called by the Madras city council for 8 p.m. Tuesday, December 17 In the city hall. Decision to call the hearing came at the regular December meeting of the council this week. The hearing will be on a requested variance in current zoning ordinances which would permit construction of the 24 unit apartment building at the location which Is currently zon ed for four living unit struc tures. The variance had been re quested by E. Lyle Parsley, Portland, who plans to build the modern 26-foot high structure. c &aj? everyone Wafccb ifye commevciats';. MS Move back in time to the days of King Arthur. Place a TV set on his Round Table and turn it on. Watch what happens! Gay knights, fair damsels (still in distress), serfs and scullery maids all crowded around to see this miracle. They are entranced. Their eyes, minds and imaginations are popped wide open. They are learning, wishing and planning for the interest ing things dangled before their eyes. Advertising is doing the same thing today via many media such as this newspaper. People are learning, build ing dreams and taking action for a higher standard of living. For it is only through the persuasiveness of adver tising that men's minds are stirred to the possibility of a new and better way of life. Without advertising we would still be living in the dark ages of enjoy ment and physical comfort. obaf as always, "It Pays to be Advertised at". PukKt 9tnvJa Mwptfiaaiant apoared by raw; ORtgtR atfvtriaj aemcy at thm mmm Ow()i Pubhfthtrs m4 vktattntJ hy M wmmptpf frr yur MiMh." Tories score narrow win in key Scottish election LONDON (UPIl-Prime Min ister Sir Alec Douglas Home's Conservatives won a narrow victory today in a key by election In Scotland. The defeat ed Labor candidate called it a vote of no confidence in the government. The election in Dumfriesshire attracted national interest be cause general elections are no Carols to be offered Sunday Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE - The choirs of Our Savior's Lutheran Church, Prineville, will present a service of carols and candle lighting Sunday, December 15, at 7:30 p.m. The junior, high school and senior choirs will present groups of numbers separately, and the high school and senior choirs will appear in a combi nation number. Soloists will be JoAnne Jor dan, who will sing O'Hara's "Come to the Stable with Je sus," and Jerry Bannon, who will sing "All My Heart this Night Rejoices," by Ebeling. A special feature will be a se lection by a brass quartet com posed of Steve Pearson, George Brick, Phil Powell and Fred Endicott. They will play "II uulci Jubilo," by Bach. The choirs are under the di rection of Mrs. K. Baalson, and Gary Stephenson is instrumen tal director. Mrs. Ed Reede and Mrs. Gene Brick are accompanists. more than 10 months away and public opinion polls show that Labor is leading the Conserva tives. Conservative candidate David Anderson. 47. a member of Douglas-Home's cabinet as so licitor general for Scotland, won the race with Labor can didate Iain Jordan by 971 votes, returns showed early today. It was a loss of nearly 6.500 votes from the 7,430 vote mar gin the last Conservative can didate won in Dumfriesshire four years ago. The by-election, the last of of the year, was expected to weigh heavily in Conserva tive plans to set the date for the general election. Labor party leader Harold Wilson, who will oppose Douglas-Home In the campaign, is reported to have told his aides to expect an election in March. Political observers said, how- ever, that the Conservatives might now decide to delay the voting. DECIDE TO STAY EUGENE UPI) -Six of the nine Cambodian students parti cipating in a special educational program at the University m Oregon have decided to stay un til the end of the school year. The other three plan to return home at the end of this term. The program was halted re cently when the Cambodian gov ernment announced it would ac cept no more U.S. aid, but the students were told they could stay in seliool until the end of the academic year if they wished. Railroad, union reach agreemenf CLEVELAND (UPI) - The Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers (BLE) and the Union Railroad reached agreement Thursday on full attrition for firemen. Spokesmen for the union said the attrition agreement was negotiated rapicKy because of a decision by a federal judge pre venting a federal arbitration board from interfering with the U.S. Steel-owned railroad and its 600 BLE - represented employes. The decision signed In Wash ington Thursday by Judge Al exander Holtzoff was directed at the arbitration board ap pointed to settle the railroad work rules dispute on a nation al level. The board refused to exclude the Union Railroad from the national dispute, and Thurs day's court decision was the first of a series of legal chal lenges by the BLE and other operating brotherhoods directed at testing the validity of the award by the board late last month. Under the agreement reached iimisutty uciweeu uie Dua gnu the Union Railroad, limited pro visions were made for operat ing some locomotives without firemen-helpers. It also provid ed a five-year moratorium on further rules changes involving, firemen-helpers. Under the attrition agree ment, firemen's jobs will be vsfc cated only by death, retire ment, resignation or promotiorr Engineers required . to work- without firemen will receive $S per day above their basic daily rates. 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