The Bulletin, Thursday, February 20, 1964 11 IAN; t . ; V ! I VvVs V- 14 t. j MR. AND MRS. RICHARD D. SMITH Young couple making home in Hawaii after honeymoon Special to The Bullitln SISTERS - Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Smith (Sondra Jan ice Reese) are at home in Hon olulu, Hawaii, at 440 A Pau Street, after a honeymoon in San Francisco. They were mar ried February 8 at the Powell Butte Community Church. The bride, a graduate of Sis ters High School, is the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Orphy H. Reese, Sisters. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Smith, Corry, Pa. Smith is a passenger agent for United Airlines in Honolulu. The former Miss Reese is em ployed there as a teletype oper ator. The Rev. D.. L. Penhollow performed the marriage cere mony, in which rings were ex changed, as well as leis, in the Hagenston faces two indictments PORTLAND (UPI)-A federal grand jury Wednesday indicted Robert Hagenston, 35, a former FBI aeent. on two local bank robbery charges. Hagenston, who also is want ed in Salt Lake City and Seattle in connection with bank robber ies there, was indicted just a week after he was arrested here. One indictment charged him with the attempted robbery last Wednesday of the Metropolitan Branch of the U.S. National Bank. He was apprehended in the bank after a note was hand ed to a bank official demanding '-$20,000. - The other indictment charged him with the $828 drive-in hold up at the head office of the US. National Bank last Aug. 23. Holloway named :Walsh successor ' pnRTl.AND fUPn Charles Holloway Jr. of Portland Wed nesday was elected president of the State Board of Higher Edu cation. ; Holloway, 52, succeeds Wil liam Walsh, Coos Bay, who re-signed from the board after 11 years to head the Rockefeller-for-President campaign in Ore gon. Holloway is vice president of Northwest Natural Gas Co. and has been vice president of the board. Pendleton newspaper publish er J. W. (Bud) Forrester was elected vice president. Dr. Ralph Purvine, Salem physician, was named the third member of the board's executive com mittee. IBank robber gets 10 years PORTLAND (UPI) - Bank robber Vern (Smoky) Stover, 40, of Seattle was sentenced to 10 years in prison Wednesday by ; U.S. District Judge Gus J. Solo mon. - Stover's testimony last week - tune naetinllv mMVmilihlfi for the conviction of another Seattle man. John A. Vladovic. for me robbery of the Hawthorne : Branch of the Benjamin Frank ;lin Savings and Loan Associa--tion here. - Stover was convicted of the holdun of the St. John's Branch Hawaiian tradition. Mrs. Jane Goddard Taylor was the bride's attendant. Paul Swasey of Honolulu was best man. After the ceremony, a recep tion was held at the home of the bride's parents. Mrs. George Baker cut the wedding cake. Mrs. Don Reinecker poured the coffee, assisted by Darlene Ba ker. Out-of-town guests were the bride's grandmother, Mrs. Hil da Iverson, Mr. and Mrs. George Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Don Reinecker, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Currier and Mr. and Mrs. Berth el Caverhill and daughter, all of Bend, and the bride's brother, Denny Reese, from the University of Oregon, uugene. After a trip to San Francisco, the newlyweds left from Port land by plane for Hawaii. Dirksen getting ready for fight on civil rights WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen ate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen, 111., is organizing his own corps of "floor cap tains" for the coming civil rights battle. The omnibus civil rights bill, passed by the House Feb. 10, is expected to be taken up by the Senate sometime next week. The measure seeks to end racial discrimination in voting, education, employment, unions and in use of privately owned lodgings, eating estab lishments and places of amusement. Senate Democratic leaders openly acknowledge that they will need Republican help to cut off any southern filibuster and pass the bill. They have said they are willing to give the GOP "full credit" if the necessary votes are provided. Dirksen has come under fire from some Negro leaders be cause of his opposition to the key public accommodations section of tne Dili, out ne la vors most of the measure. He intends to name a number of his Republican colleagues to handle separate phases of wnat is shaping up as a long fight. It is almost certain that GOP Whip Thomas H. Kuchel, Calif., and Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R N.Y., both longtime civil rights advocates, will be named to that group. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., who is prepared to bypass the hostile Judiciary Committee, is holding up action on the civil rights bill until the Senate passes the compromise $11.5 billion tax cut bill early next week. Mansfield designated Senate Democratic Whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., as general floor manager for the civil rights bill. Humphrey will be assisted by Sens. Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., who will handle the public accommoda tions section; Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., Fair Employment Prac tices (FEPC) section, and Phil ip A. Hart, D-Mich., judicial questions. NOTHING FOR FREE MADISON, Wis. (UPI)-Uni-versity of Wisconsin students are going to learn at least one thing in college nothing is for free. . A spokesman for the tele phone company said it was checking more than 2,000 long distance phone calls made when the campus telephone system went out of kilter. Students who thought they were getting "free" long distance calls will be billed. 'Nice' boy shot by officer in fracas in Spanish Harlem NEW YORK (UPI) Spanish Harlem is a squalid place, crime-ridden and a breeding ground for social ills. It isn't easy to grow up to be a "nice" boy there. Frank Rodriguez, 18, seemed to have risen above his sur roundings. He made a point of staying out of trouble. He was to have been graduated from high school this year more of an accomplishment in this tene ment jungle than most places in this affluent land. In 1962, Frank was honored by the Boys Club of New York as its "boy of the year." Frank was married and had an 11-month-old son. His wife Anna expects another child in June. Killed By Policeman But this portrait of a model youth was shattered Tuesday mgnt by a policeman s bullet. An off-duty probationary patrol man shot Frank dead on a Harlem street. He said the youth attacked him with a knife. Frank was going to a Boy's Club meeting with a friend. He kissed me and left, wept his wife, 19. "That's the last 1 saw of him." Frank and his friend. Jose Soto, met two other teen-age boys loitering on a street cor ner. One of them asked Soto for a cigarette and was re fused. Insults were exchanged and a fight broke out. Rodriguez pitched In to help his friend. Patrolman Donald Meszaros, 23, came upon the melee and, though off-duty, he plunged in to break it up. Shot In Head Meszaros said Rodriguez lunged at him with a knife and cut his coat. Then he ran. The policeman said he fired a warning shot. Frank kept run ning. A second shot hit him in the back of the head. He died instantly. "Look, I know this was a good kid," said a detective. "But he had a knife." Frank's widow denied Wednesday he ever carried a knife. "He never had one. He had never been in trouble," she said. Then pointing to a portrait of Frank in the $26 a month fourth-floor flat they shared, she said: "Did you know he was the boy of the year?" STIR SOME INTEREST RENO, Nev. (UPI) A re cent report that silver dollars may become collector's items within a year has stirred a re action in at least one "collec tor." The U. S. Postal Service re ported that 7,000 of the silver coins were stolen from the Riv erside postal annex. The 420 pounds of "cart wheels" were hauled away in seven mail sacks. Negro leaders report plans to go ahead wfh planned boycott next week of Boston schools By United Presi International Negro leaders say they will go ahead with a planned boy cott of Boston city schools next week in protest against the al leged racial imbalance in the institutions. The Rev. James P. Breoden of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) made the an nouncement Wednesday night following a two-hour meeting with the Boston school commit tee. Breeden termed the meeting "deeply disappointing." Four of the five committee members deny that a racial imbalance exists. Police arrested more than 40 Negroes at Pine Bluff, Ark., Wednesday night during a dem onstration in front of a lunch counter where jailed Negro comedian Dick Gregory was ar rested Monday. The Negroes were arrested when they tried to enter the segregated restau rant. At Montgomery, Ala., State Atty. Gen. Richmond Flowers filed a motion for dismissal of a federal suit by Negroes seek ing desegregation of all public schools in Alabama. A three judge federal panel will hear arguments Friday on the Ne groes' request for a blanket in junction against segregated schools. Elsewhere in the nation: Tampa, Fla.: Plans to Inte grate the white and Negro jur isdiction of the Methodist Church were announced Some gun seen used in shooting DALLAS (UPI) Ballistic tests, police said today, give a good indication that the same rule that shot President Ken nedy was used by a sniper who I tried to kill former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker. j ' The ballistic report cannot be final or conclusive," police said, "but generally the com- parison points of the slugs were good." Mrs. Marina Oswald told au thorities that her husband, Lee Harvey Oswald, told her that he was the sniper who shot a I single snot over walker s shoul ; der last April at the general's home in Dallas. FREY SELECTED PORTLAND (UPI) Michael J. Frey, publisher of the Port land Oregonian, was named 1964 president of the Lang Syne So ciety Wednesday night. Frey succeeds City Commis sioner Ormond Bean as head of the 51-year-old organization. Members must be business men or have held positions of trust and responsibility for at least 30 years. Wednesday at a meeting of a National board of the church. Miami Beach: AFL-CIO lead ers revealed that President Johnson is appointing 16 labor leaders to develop programs aimed at halting racial discrim ination in union ranks and creating more job opportunities for Negroes. Jackion, Mlis.i Bills ap proved by the House Wednes day would authorize municipali ties, in the event of racial dis order, to pool manpower and equipment and to restrict the movement of any or all citizens. Columbia, S.C.i A House com mittee reported favorably Wednesday on a bill aimed at ending racial demonstrations by teen-agers. The bill would fix a fine of $100, 30 days in jail or both for demonstrations by youths 17 years of age or under. The parents as well as the youth could be held responsible. Jackson, Miss: U.S. District Judge Sidney Mlze has before him a request to set a hearing as soon as possible on suits to desegregate schools at Jackson and Biloxi and Leake County. New Orleans: A Negro honor student from Xavier University of New Orleans said Wednesday she had received an Invitation to apply for graduate work at the segregated University of Mississippi. However Nicola Felton, a chemistry senior, said she would not try to enter the Mississippi school. FRANCISCIAN Discontinued Pattern Sale 50 OFF Was Now CYPRESS 1 -16 pc. starter set 19.9S 9.98 SPICE 1 large Vegetable Dish 3.95 2.98 4 Dinner plates 2.50 1.2S 3 B. & B. plate 1.20 .60 1 Cup & Saucer 2.80 1.40 1 Sugar 3.25 1.63 2 Creamer 2.50 1.25 DUET 2 dinner plates 2.S0 1.25 1 B. & B. plate 1.20 .60 4 salad plates 1.80 .90 3 cup & saucers 2.80 1.40 1 platter 5.95 2.98 5 cereal 1.95 .98 8 mugs 1.75 .87 1 large veg. 3.95 1.98 1 creamer 2.50 1.25 1 sugar 3.25 1.63 1 teapot 6.95 3.50 1 pr. salt it pepper 2.95 1.50 4 ash trays 95 .48 1 large ash tray 2.50 1.25 SPRING SONG 8 cereals 2.50 1.25 8 salad plates 2.10 1.05 1 large platter 6.95 3.48 1 divided veg 5.75 2.88 1 pitcher 6.95 3.48 ITS A BREEZE 1 dinner plate 2.00 1.00 2 cereals 1.55 .78 7 B. It B. plates 95 .48 1 large veg 3.75 1.88 1 large platter 5.75 2.88 HAPPY TALK 7 dinner plates 2.00 1.00 5 B. & B. Plates 95 .48 1 cup 160 .80 5 saucers 85 .43 8 cereals 155 .78 8 fruit dishes 135 .68 Franciscian Fine China Service for 6 Wat 119.70 50 00 Symons Bros. Jewelers 947 Wall Ph. 382-1851 WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY BATH TOWELS Cannon, solidi and strip!, large 22x44". Good for crying towels If you mlis out on any of thtte bargains. BED PILLOWS Foam filled, colorful printed ticking. George never had it so soft. 2 days only or while they last LADIES' DRESSES Cotton print house dress es, washable colors. Most sizes, 4 styles. Low Honest George Price mi I tAnnlNbJ Large group with valuta to 1.001 Georg didn't want theie either. BERSERK BUY ID 5P TRAIN CASE Complete with mirror. Not very many of these but look at the prlcel 1 00 DAVENPORT 1 only. 6 ft. with detach able back. Turquoise. Reg. 39.95 (Honest it was). 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