Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1964)
Hie Bulletin, Friday, February 21, 1964 SERVICE RECOGNIZED Ford Hunnell and Mr. Albert . Gaiiner receive life memberships in A.M.Y. PTA from Mrs. R. J. Turner, president, right, Mrs. Gassner, a past president of the Allen-Marshall-Yew Lane Parent-Teacher Association, is USSR reported readying new barbs at China LONDON (UPI) - Authorita tive Communist sources said today the Soviet Union has given up on its attempts to ap pease Communist China in their ideological dispute and is pre paring a broad new accusation against Peking. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev will soon issue a statement accusing the Mao Tse-tung regime of outright ideological heresy and of split ting the international Commu nist movement, the source said. Last fall, Khrushchev called for an end to polemics in the conflict and Russian criticism of China was held to a mini mum. The Chinese defiantly ig nored the truce offer and con tinued their verbal attacks against the Russian govern ment. The Soviet leader was under stood to be lining up formal support from leaders of satellite Communist states and Commu nist parties in Western Europe in an attempt to isolate Peking within the Communist camp. An outline of the Kremlin's plan was understood to have been presented in the past few days to members of the central committee of the Soviet Communist party In Moscow. The conflict between Russia and China has centered mainly on the proper Communist atti tude toward the West. Khru shchev has staked his policy on peaceful coexistence with the West and nuclear disarmament. Death claims William Knox PORTLAND (UPI)- Dr. Wil liam S. Knox, a retired physi cian who was instrumental in establishing the Oregon liquor control system following repeal of the 18th amendment, died Thursday in a local hospital. Dr. Knox would have ob served his 79th birthday Sun day. The graduate of the Univer sity of Michigan Medical School was born In New York and at tended schools in Detroit be fore enrolling as an undergrad uate at Michigan. He came here in 1900 and was on the staff of Good Sa maritan Hospital until he re tired in 1946 because of ill health. When prohibition ended In 1933, Dr. Knox was appointed by Gov. Julius Meier to head a committee to draft a liquor con trol plan for the state. The measure was amended and passed by the legislature as the Oregon Liquor Control Act, or, as it is sometimes known, the Knox law. LADIES' SUITS Completely finished C QQ cleaned, pressed and II ea, ready-to-wear MILLER'S cl"Torsanc Bend's new super market for clttnlne, laundry, tailoring 2141 last First 3I2-520 Debate on wheat, cotton proposals gets under way WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate planned to begin debate today on a bill combining new wheat and cotton programs. with hopes of completing action next week before a prolonged civil rights battle starts. Backers and some opponents of the double-barreled measure, which includes two of President Johnson's trop-priority farm pro posals, agreed that the Senate probably would approve the bill after sharp debate. There was a possibility that a parliamentary objection could postpone Senate consideration of the bill until next Monday. In any case, no voting on the measure was scheduled until sometime next week. Democratic leaders - rushed Blaze claims lives of eight in Chicago CHICAGO (UPI)-Eight per sons, including seven young brothers and sisters, perished today when fire started by a neglected cigarette swept their small bungalow. The youngsters' father, James Alford, a Chicago Police Department detective, suffered bums and broken bones. An ex plosion blew him out of a sec ond floor window while he was trying to save his children. One youngster, Keith, 14, sur vived by leaping from an up stairs bedroom window. The dead were identified as James Alford, 11; his brothers, Calvin, 8, Stephen, S, and Ty rone, 3; and his sisters, Denise, 10, Patsy, 7, and Christine, 1. The adult was L. T. Robin son, 51, a cousin of the father. Officer Wesley Broderson, who headed the investigation of the blaze, said the fire started when Robinson fell asleep while smoking a cigarette in his bed room at the back of the house on Chicago's West Side. Alford was taken to Mount Sinai hospital in serious condi tion. His wife Gloria, was also admitted, in shock. Hope abandoned for 14 seamen NEW YORK (UPI) - Search craft headed for port today with 20 survivors and the dead captain from the storm-battered British freighter Ambassador, leaving at sea 14 missing sea men, presumably drowned. The Coast Guard cutter Coos Bay, the last vessel in the area where the missing men went into life rafts Tuesday, called off the North Atlantic search at sundown Thursday. The cutler headed for its home port, Port land, Maine, with 11 of the sur vivors, the body of Ambassador master Harry Strickland, and a seriously ill Coast Guardsman who developed appendicitis dur ing the search. now first Vice, president of the Oregon Congress of Parents and Teachers. Hunnell, Allen School principal, has been active in the organization since its formation 15 years ago. A.M.Y, now claims 368 members. Dennis Marvin spolce. the bill to the Senate floor ahead of the civil rights fight because the farm measure must be written into law by early April, to apply to this year's wheat and cotton crops. Avoid Delay Delaying the measure until af ter the expected Senate civil rights filibuster would make most provisions of the farm bill useless for this year. The wheat section of the bill would use voluntary acreage controls to head off what ad ministration officials estimate would be a $600 million drop in grower income this year due to a scheduled drop in price sup ports. If the bill is passed, officials claim, farmers . would recoup about $450 million of the loss without any substantial increase in government spending. Farm income would be re stored by giving producers who limit acreage price supports boosted, over planned 1964 lev els by the use of redeemable market certificates. Two New Subsidies The cotton plan would use two new government subsidies. One subsidy would be paid to trad ers in an effort to step up sales of cotton to U.S. textile mills, and the other would be offered to. producers to persuade them to cut back surplus production. The subsidies to be used for lowering textile mill costs were aimed at eliminating the wide price gap between U.S. farm supports for cotton and the sub sidized cotton export price. At present, U.S. mills pay 32.5 cents a pound for cotton while foreign mills get the same fiber for about 24 cents a pound. Tex tile and cotton spokesmen claim the domestic subsidy is needed to help meet foreign competi tion and to help offset competi tion from synthetic fibers. DIDN'T WANT TO GO MARION, III. (UPI)-Taxi driver Donald Jones filed reck less driving and reckless con duct charges against motorist Luther Frey, Scottsboro, 111., who pushed Jones' cab three miles along Illinois 37. Jones said he did not want to be pushed. bo rrtuvr AefrW.Ht It (t8)' txENrructxv tavern IlltllCl'S KS1 WfU'UM I0UM, PP0UMT WESWIO IT (imiDOt DlttlUtHfS COHMIff, tOtllSnUE-OWUSKUtO, KlNTUCor...l-nJR-CLl KEWUCKT StMlGHt I0UHI0N WHISKEY, II PMOf; tUO tVHUILE M IN PfOOf MTUED-HMOIIO. I House supports LeMay plea for bomber funds WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con gress appears almost certain to back Air Force Gen. Curtis E. LeMay in his urgent request for authority to go ahead on de sign of a new bomber for the 1970's. The House Rave Its over whelming support to the idea Thursday in voting $92 million to get the bomber and an im proved manned interceptor out of the study stage. Funds for the bomber design were included in a record $16.9 billion defense authorization bill that the House approved by a vote of 336 to 0. Sen. Richard B. Russell, D Ga., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Sen. Leverett Saltonstail, Mass., top Republican member, also have pledged their support for the bomber plan. With this backing, the Senate seems like ly to go along with the idea. But the administration does not have to spend the money even if Congress appropriates it later in separate legislation. The decision would be up to De fense Secretary Robert S. Mc Namara. McNamara asked Congress for a modest $5 million for fur ther studies on the bomber but LeMay, Air Force chief of staff, said McNamara hadn't seen the latest recommendations of the Air Force yet and these urged faster action. Crash claims driver's life EUGENE (UPI) - An Inde pendence man, Duane Hunter Savely, 26, was killed Thursday night when his car plowed into an embankment just after turn ing off Interstate 5 about four miles south of here. State police said the victim's auto skidded about 180 feet be fore the impact. Savely was thrown from the car. He was traveling alone. Enjoy four extra years Of flaVOr (AT NO EXTRA COST). Kentucky Bourbons are considered to be at their best at 8 years old. Kentucky Tavern is 8 years old (at the peak of perfection) yet priced right along with whiskies half as old. Try Kentucky Tavern and... Taste what extra age will do Taste that flavor through and through Negroes attack school division at state level By United Pre International Neeroes for the first time at- tack public school segregation ; on a siaiewiae level loaay in Alabama. A three-judge federal panel hears arguments on a request ! by Negro parents for an injunc-1 tion prohibiting the operation 0f j segregated schools anywhere in 1 Alabama. Such suits in the past have been filed on the local level, but the plaintiffs claim the state Board of Education took over direction of school policy in Ma- white students. The state board, which later rescinded its orders to the Ma con County school boards, asked for dismissal of the suit on the ground it has no authority over local schools. At Oxford, Miss., Thursday night four Negroes were hissed when they attended a lecture at the University of Mississippi Chapel. A fifth Negro was turned away when he tried to enter later. The four Negroes left without incident after the speech by radio commentator Howard K. Smith. In Boston, the Rev. James P. Breeden, a leader of the sched uled boycott of city schools next Wednesday charged that Negro parents were being "intimidat ed" by overemphasis on possi ble extreme legal action against boycott organizers, The pro posed boycott is in protest against an alleged racial imbal ance in Boston scnoois. Elsewhere in the nation: Jackson. Miss.: A bill was in troduced in the Mississippi Leg-1 islature Thursday to revoke the j charter granted predominantly! Negro Tougaloo Soutnern uins- i tian College by a reconstruction j legislature. Tougaloo students have been active in recent in tegration drives. Montgomery, Ala.: A civic group announced plans Thurs- day for a 23-acre private park to avoid integration orders which forced the city to close its pub lic parks in 1959. Atlanta: Miss Mordon Walker, a white exchange student from Connecticut, was convicted Thursday of violating Georgia's anti-trespass law during a res taurant sit-in. She was fined $1,000 and sentenced to six months in jail and 12 months in a public works camp. Giggles, smirks greet testimony trial in crimes FRANKFURT, Germany -Auschwitz war crimes trial de fendants giggled and smirked today when told that the Iirst Nazi concentration camp was set up by a man just out of an insane asylum. Only Robert Mulka, one of the 22 defendants accused of helping kill 2.5 to 4 million per sons at the Auschwitz death camp, appeared unhappy about it. The former assistant Ausch witz commandant shook his head and apparently regarded the testimony of Professor Martin Broszat as undignified. Broszat, a witness for the prosecution, told how a Nazi named Theodor Eicke organ ized Dachau, the Third Reich's first concentration camp, into an "efficient" organization a few months after Adolf Hitler took power in 1933. Broszat said the man who released Eicke for concentra tion camp duty was Dr. Wer ner Heyde, the psychiatrist who committed suicide last week while waiting trial for alleged ly killing 100,000 persons in Hitler's "mercy killing" cam paign. 5.65 45 QUART Code 136 B 3.60 PINT Code 130-C Testimony reveals that late Sen. Kerr sfeered Baker into profitable stock deal WASHINGTON (UPI) - The late Sen. Robert S. Kerr, T Okla., steered former Senate aide Robert G. (Bobby) Baiter and a friend into a profitable bank stock deal in Oklahoma. according to testimony released today by a Senate committee uivcMigmmg dukci-. The testimony, by Fred B. ?a Jr- a'a c'osed. hea,ri1nS Momlay by the Senate Rules Committee, referred to a deep fnendslnp - like father and son - between the politically powerful Kerr and Baker, sec retary to Senate Democrats at the time. Black, Washington repre sentative for North American Aviation Corp., and formerly associated with Baker In Fidelity National Bank in Okla homa City to buy 6,400 shares of stock in the Farmers and Merchants State Bank of Tulsa on advice from Kerr. The purchase was made, ac cording to Black, with the un derstanding that Baker could have one-half of the stock , "at any time that he could come up with the money." Asked by Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., a Rules Com mittee member, whether he suggested that Baker take part of the stock, Black replied: "I didn't suggest that. Sen. Kerr did." A transcript of the testimony made public today showed that Black discussed Kerr's warm SKI WEAR Men's & Ladies' i UNLINED PARKAS S Men's & Ladies' Boys' or Girls' UNLINED PARKAS RIgfTnlrft no Boys' or Girls' QUILTED PARKAS MEN'S & LADIES CHILDREN'S Wr Reduction of Discontinued Models MEN'S & LADIES Entire Stock SKI CAPS & HEAD BANDS Reg. 3.98 to 14.98 - Men's, Women's & Children's SKI GLOVES & MITTENS Regular 1.98 to 3.98 KNICKER SOCKS Men's & Ladies' Entire Stock Small Group 1962 PARKAS & PRICE regard for Baker under ques tioning by Sen. Howard Cannon D-Nev. "Senator Kerr told me. . .that outside of his sons, his wife, he never knew and loved a man so much as he did Bobby Bak er, said Black. As to whether Krr helped Baker in financial transactions, Black said: "I can only answer that by saying that Senator Kerr told me there wasn't any thing In the world that Bobby Baker would ask him to do for him, if he had the power to do it, that he would not do. On the bank stock purchase, Black said he only had an oral agreement with Baker and that the former Senate aide has not paid for his half. The committee will call Bak er's confidential secretary, Ten- Temperatures Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST to day. High Low Bend 55 22 Astoria 56 32 Baker 34 18 Brookings 76 K. Falls 39 20 Lakeview 40 24 Medford 84 24 N. Bend 65 34 Pendleton 52 32 Portland 57 31 Redmond 53 12 Salem 57 30 The Dalles 58 26 Chicago 32 23 WELCOME To Bend For The Annual PORTLAND STATE WINTER CARNIVAL St Famous Brand uui SKI PARKAS PARKAS 39.95 To a0 le oo STRETCH PANTS iff a mo Sar MISC. ITEMS styles Ski PANTS nessee beauty queen Carole Ty ler, to testify publicly Wednes day, the day after Baker him self is to take the stand. Lennox P. McLendon, the committee's special counsel, said a subpoena would be is sued over the weekend order ing Miss Tyler to appear. She has refused to appear voluntar ily, he said. Black, said to be of North American's highest paid offi cials, and Baker owned major ity control of Serv-U Corp., a lucrative vending machine firm. Each held 28.5 per cent of the Serv-U stock, although neither had it listed in his name. William Strong, president of Serv-U, told the committee Thursday that 98 per cent of the company's business, was with North American' and Northrup Aviation Co. He said he first learned Baker was a silent partner in the firm when he read it in the newspapers. The rules committee is inves tigating whether Baker was guilty of conflict of interest in engaging in numerous outside business deals while serving as the $19,612-a-year secretary to Senate Democrats. He resigned the post under fire last October. FAMILY DINNER FOR 3 Tnke your cholct ot tny thnm hmlly-ityle dUhei. from our Ml (Ion ot over ten different Chinese (oodi. Fried rice Included. j SKYLINB DRIVE-IN 12U south Third . . . ssj-esn Open Noon to 10 p.m. T days a week 5.33 11.98t0 26.63 4.00 & 5.33 8.67 10.64 to 10.00-13.33 20.00 8.63 39.95 REDUCED 13 REDUCED 13 REDUCED 13 REDUCED 13 REDUCED 13 OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.