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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1964)
OUT OUR WAY WES,TH6T0L0 NOT ON YOUR WILD COW IS GOIN' LIFE WE'VE I I TO BE AAAkIN' SOME I I GOT TO HAVB . wvvtx O THESE GENTLE 7 VsOME 6XOJSfi WVrV -1 ONES WILD-- I FOB HAVING i rfVKS-i (.WE'D BETTER V HORSES ON A THE 'H0B8V HORSED t nm, mu u xm m w m STEVE CANYON AW OVEZlViTEKEP SECRETARY WILL TAKE CU TO SEE AS. VEER, SINCE I HAVE BEEN CO..CMVCU, TUB VEER CASE SEEMS TO HAVE TCP PSICKIT SO WE LL WASTE SUMMONED BV TIAiE ON EIPLOAUTIC HE DICK TRACY LI'LABNER WHERE'S MY X HE'S IN TH' C YANEED y v f VHICH'LL BE ( OKAY, MARKY HIM j BOY FRIEND, CONFERENCE TWO TO MAKE A I MY CUT FOP. I BUT REMEMBER CASEY R0OM,WAS f GRAND? J (MILLION, j MARRVIN' A YOLREMY&OIU ) STRANSLE?CVW COMPETITOR. I I WHAT N BABY A' HILLBILLY WIT SO KEEP IT.. X ' tor? J yl PUTOp f REX MORGAN. M.D. ' I i f fgff T1 I JUST HEARD ABOUTTJt NOT WELL K f 1M VERY FOND OF V WE INTEND TO DO Tl BiT FTifS0 '"tHe ,imm.tiimmfmmm 0 .that kid, doctorJl EveRYroNewECflN. ll rprf 1 CAPTAIN EASY i.Ao 2,. 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I ""Aiw, I ...BUT 9HOU.P mtlwiwiion 1 1 1 ...xjlir nicks kuksuif i I VOU bO eOCU AGAIN SO FAR I BUT I JUST .DNfSO I I RETURN FROM THE HUNTANP1 H WILL TAKE HIM FAR I I IN SLKTH AN OUT-OFy FftM I I MAD TO SELDOM I I F1MD VOU HEVE, THERE CH, FEAR I I AFIELD THIS VAY. 1 I THE-WAY FLACBIOLVplFllS I SEE VOU J MEETS A I ki I IV CXXiLP M TROUBLE j 1 NOT, MY I PROMISE VUUI J, h -x X HERE? I I AAIM... IT nnpacnaV N-a"l 1 V nrAB ... I kj VIA COLONEL, I AW f I iasee palomino " -I HAVE MADE ALL THE CALLS ON All!., yR. PRIME A1INISTER. W lMW WhMPMV OUR BOARDING HOUSE MOW TMST Y&U MENTION IT. CHASE. A OAM800NI SWEEP fWO YOU KNOW THAT VAST OIL Just been discovered cv. THEYLL PROBABLY 6IV6 A llCKei lfvft-T UtAJJ HAK-KAFFW-wBUT NC3 VOJ'SB- A , LOYAL FRIEND, I'LL SELL ""J 3 YCO AUy FIND HER Tjj hostile! she is 1 WHAT A JOLLY AAOAAENT 10 ASK ANTI-AULITARY- HER TO FLy BACK TO THE JUNGLE AND SURELY NUA1B WITH GRIEF OVER WITH A STRANGER WHO 15 A profcs. THE DEATH OF HER, HU5BANP... SIONAL SOLDER. fl r?Mi a MMfflN ,M .,., ., , , with MAJOR HOOPLE rtUITT L K'LiOifS, .MO' YOU j i HAVEN'T. 607 ArJY -VORL1 CHANCE WITH THAT CLYOf T n.r. a . JTA.tES TICK'- r ( ffC-;;;VS HAVB - .r ; 4 i& ? why r', - ?: v;- oii SVERy VI'.L ti3TL)R TICKET THAN HALC OH MY AP.TI5T WITH ( I WONY TAKE SIPE5N BUT IF SHE THROWS Vol) OUT, THE CONSUL AND HIS WIFE AND I COULD USE A FOURTH FOE BRIDGE V7 V The Bulletin, DENNIS, THE MENACE 'Hl.tUO.'MwSNOTFEEUN'WEit.SO I'M HEWN' HEf? OUT Television in review Special takes making, here By Rick Du Brow UPI Staff Wrlttr HOLLYWOOD (UPI) The movie business has been so ana lyzed lately that it is often for gotten that it is, after all, fun as well as' hard work, full of attractive people, and even makes a few shekels now and then. Thus Friday night's 90 minute WBC-TV special, which looked at the glamor of movie making here and abroad, was refreshing for its mere enthus iasm. Entitled "Inside the Movie Kingdom 1964," and narrated with grace by the host, James Gamer, the program did not pretend to be, or attempt to be, a critical study, or a historical one. or another lament over the Hollywood that used to be. It simply visited a number of stars and a number of movie sets, capturing some of the in timate excitement of making a film, and coming up with a pleasant and easy-to-take effort. Script Unobtrusive The writer was Norman Cor- win, and his script was admir ably unobtrusive. The best lines came from some of the stars, such as Melina Mercouri, who reversed the Garbo philosophy by declaring "I hate to be alone. One especially good sequence had director Jules Dassin wor rying as one of his stars, Max Schell, had to repeat a long slide down a rope. The viewer might have hoped for some sub stantial footage about the avant Partial success reported in lung cancer treatment By Deloi Smith UPI Staff Wrlttr PALM BEACH SHORES. Fla. (UPI) In 1955 a cancer scien tist went against a common practice of doing nothing for a person whose lung cancer had been proved inoperable by sur gical exploration beyond reliev ing pain or any other sympton that may develop. She did something she cut massive doses of high voltage x-rays into these persons, directed with great care pre cisely at their cancers. Now she lis able to report on the basis I of 82 such persons that this will prolong the lives of many of them, a few indefinitely. Dr. Ruth Guttmann, profes sor of radiology at Columbia University and director of ra diotherapy at Frances Delafield Hospital, New York, told the annual science writers seminar of the American Cancer Socie ty that two of the 82 are still alive eight years afterward. Another Is alive seven years and five months later. Another has survived seven years and still another, five years. Three more lived on three years after they were evidently doomed to imminent death. The total of three years or more survivors is eight. Cancer doctors generally be lieve a lung cancer demonstrat ed by surgery to be Inoperable cannot be checked, no longer than lu weeks to six months after their cancers are discov ered, even If conventional rela tively low dosage and low vol tage radiation is given. Of the 82 patients 58 per cent survived one year, 29.2 per cent two years, ib.s per cent three years, 10 per cent four years and 7.5 per cent five years or longer. Dr. Guttmann also has used I the same drastic radiation on ! i5 persons wnose lung cancers : were so far advanced when dis covered hopelessness could be proved without surgical explora tion. The life expectancy for such persons is even shorter. nun uiese pauenu sne nas.on strike, demandinp Saturday, March 21, 1964 look at movie and abroad garde movement in modern movie-making. As solace, how ever, there was a party at Car roll Baker's house. Wheel And later, there was a barely dressed Miss Baker, in a scene from "The Carpetbaggers," ca vorting on a chandelier. Double wheel The chandelier fell, by the way, with Miss Baker aboard. She's okay. NBC-TV offered another ami able Friday night relaxer, a one-hour special called "Ameri can Spectacle," with Van Hef lin guiding a tour of the na tion's natural wonders from the Atlantic Coast to Hawaii and including Niagara Falls, Yel lowstone, Yosemite and the Rockies, as well as animals and rare rock formations. As many airplane travelers may have forgotten, it's a beautiful country. Tlw Channel Swim: ABC-TV's "Combat" series was renewed for its third season . . . same network's "The Fugitive" will return too. Harry Belafonte guests with CBS-TV's Ed Sullivan March S9 . . . Tony Martin and his wife, Cyd Charisse, will co-host ABC-TV's "Hollywood Palace" April 4. Mme. Nhu was interviewed In Paris for CBS-TV's April 1 re port on the Viet Nam situation . . . "The Deputy," the Broad way play that has caused such heated debate, is the subject of a second "Camera Three" dis cussion Sunday on the same network. vivals, 13 per cent two-year sur vivals, 7 per cent three years, five per cent four years, and 2.5 per cent five years or long er. She emphasized the skill and care which are needed to direct these massive doses over a five-week period from a two million electron volt x-ray. The dose must reach the cancer as a bullet hits a bulls eye, other wise adjacent tissues and or gans will be badly damaged. Her greatest emphasis was on "aggressive therapy" no mat ter how hopelessly advanced lung cancer may seem to be. 3 women named to top posts , by President WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson is living up to his promise to give more women a chance In high government posts. The Chief Executive named three women to top jobs Friday bringing to 33 the number since he announced a target goal of 50 earlier this year. The President officially named Mrs. Katherine E 1 k u s White, Red Bank, N.J., as U.S. ambassador to Denmark; Mrs. Dorothy Jacobson, a Minnesota Democrat, as assistant secre tary of agriculture, and Mrs. Ruth Van Cleve, a native of Minneapolis, as director of the Interior Department's Office of Territories. DOCTORS ON STRIKE ROME (UPI) Surgeons In Italian hospitals were on strike today to orotest alleeed unfair distribution of government health Insurance allowances. The doctors report at the hospitals but refuse to treat non-emergency cases. Members of a government workers' health Insurance plan also are new De Gaulle heeds Greeley advice to 'Go West!' By Chat Di Mauro UPI Staff Wrlttr General Charles De Gaulle this week heeded the advice once given to young American men "Go West!" The French president's west ern voyage took him to Mexico followed by a tour of French possessions in the Caribbean and South America. Specifically, the 10-day visit took the seemingly tireless 73-year-old French leader to Mexi co City, the islands of Guade loupe and Martinique and French Guiana. Significantly, the French par ry into this area of the world was viewed by Western ob servers as another Gaullist step of winning friends and influenc ing people on a global scale. His bid to pull France back Into a position of pre-eminance in the international arena seem ed to have paid off. The French president, in uniform, received a tumultuous reception in Mex ico Uty. president Adolro Lopez Mateos of Mexico called the the visit an important move linking France with Mexico, in deed with all of Latin America. Standing on the balcony of the National Palace, De Gaulle told the Mexicans "...We have reasons that urge us to draw closer to each other." Diplomats from practically all South American countries pick ed up the cue. De Gaulle was besieged with invitations for personal visits to other South American nations. Indicating his willingness to extend the friendship of France, De Gaulle speaking in Spanish urged Mexico to build closer ties with Paris. "This then is what the French people suggest to the Mexican people:" he said, "Let us walk hand in hand." Having put his best foot for ward in his first visit to South America, De Gaulle made plans to return for a far more exten sive visit in autumn. Around the world, around the clock: Waahington President John son urged Congress to adopt his $1 billion war on poverty program, giving priority to the establishment of a job training corps for U.S. youth. Waihington Pierre Salin ger quit his job as the Presi dent's press secretary and re turned to his native California to run for senator on the Dem ocratic ticket. Saigon On the heels of De fense Secretary Robert S. Mc Namara's factfinding tour to South Viet Nam, the military rulers there announced a civili an mobilization program de signed to throw the entire pop ulation into the fight against the Communists. Geneva The U. S., at the Geneva disarmament confer ence, got a cold response from the Russians when it offered to set a match to a comparable number of U. S. Russian bomb ers. Moscow The U. S. warned the Soviet Union that Soviet American relations would be jeopardized unless the Soviets released three U. S. airmen shot down over East Germany. The Russians, apparently try ing to win recognition for its East German regime, told the U. S. the matter was in the hands of the East Germans. Nicosia, Cyprus The U. N. peacekeeping force ran into in ternational red tape as it tried to consolidate its role on the strife-torn Mediterranean island amid renewed violence between Greek and Turkish factions. Miami Two Cubans defect ed to the United States in a daring plot that Included shoot ing to death the pilot of a Cu ban military helicopter and then flying the chopper to Key West, Fla., where they asked for po litical asylum. Montreal Actress Eliza beth Taylor and actor Richard Burton officially became man and wife. Washington Heavyweight boxing champion Cassius Clay was rejected for military serv ice because he failed to pass standard qualification tests. Negroes stage prayer march' BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) Two Negro ministers staged a "prayer march" In protest of segregation here shortly after sunrise today. There were no Incidents. Police officers watched the walk around a 35-block area. A I paddy wagon followed the two ministers but officers made no move to arrest the ministers, identified as Nathaniel Lindsey and L. H. Whelchel. They said the protest walks would con- $1.5 million plant here, it was tinue for the next seven days, announced Fridav Rev Lindsey said. "There! The plant will' produce ad "rSnf 0f US' We waUted,hesive resins and formaldehyde. Wil . , , . J " wi" have an capacity The ministers, associated; of 60 million pounds with the United Methodist Al- Construction will 'begin this liance, were denied a city per-!.Drinir nrf ..Crf mil to parade earlier Uusiuled -T. .".i'TE Paper mill irs full production NEW YORK (UPI)- Interna tional Paper Co. announced Fr! day its new $35 million pape mill at Gardner, Ore., is now ii full commercial production. Most of the production of tin new mill will be consumed bj the company's own West Coas converting plants which former ly were supplied by Internatlon al Paper's mills in the South These include corrugated con tainer plants in Fresno, Los An geles and San Jose, Calif., ant a shipping sack plant in Sai Jose. The new Gardiner mill has capacity of more than 10,001 tons a year and can manufac hire kraft linerboard, cornigat ing medium and unbleached kraft paper. She worries sometimes oyer assorted roles By Gay Pauley UPI Staff Wrlttr NEW YORK (UPI)-Sonw women combine role of home maker and careerist with com plete assurance. Some candidly admit they can't. Betty Comden says she it among the latter group. Miss Comden is wife, mother, per former and half of a writing team highly successful on Broadway and in Hollywood. In filling these assorted roles, she voices what many another woman in multiple roles must often feel. "I'm going off In so many directions I probably do each job less well than I'd like to," said Miss Comden. "I've always admired the women who do so many things with aplomb. "I'm always deeply concerned that I might neglect. But I think we working women learn to live with the problems which are there. They won't disap pear." Likes to Work To those who would say, "Well! Miss Comden. You don't HAVE to work, why don't you quit?", she answers: "I've always worked. It Is part of what I am. Since my husband is aware of this, I think we both feel we have a better family situation. I don't see me as a keeper of the hearth alone." In professional life, the writer is the one half of the Betty Comden -Adolph Green team which has done books and lyrics for a long string of Broadway hits starting with "On the Town" and more re cently "Subways Are for Sleep ing." They did the lyrics for "Wonderful Town", for Mary Martin's "Peter Pan" and for "Do Re Mi." Among the movies they've written are "Singin In The Rain", "On the Town", "Auntie Mame" and "Bells Are Ringing." Two seasons ago, first in Greenwich Village then on Broadway, the pair presented "a party" in which they per formed material from their ear lier days as part of a troupe called "The Revuers." Judy Holiday was one of the early revuers. Now, Comden-Green are going into rehearsal for "Fade Out Fade In," the Carol Burnett musical they wrote scheduled to open on Broadway May 26. Julie Styne wrote the music, operate Lives In private life, Betty Comden has been married for 22 years to Seven Kyle, designer of household accessories and head of Americraft. The couple has two children, Susanna, 14, and Alan, 10. Green is married to actress Phyllis Newman and they have two children also, Adam, 3, and Amanda, 4 months. Brooklyn-born Miss Comden's teaming with Green began during the late 1930's, she said, "when we both were out of work." Does the close professional association create any friction in home life? "It would be impossible to continue the partnership if there were any," she said. "My husband, who loves the theater, often is our sounding board. We'll grab him and read him the lines. He was the one who encouraged us to do 'The Party.'" The writer said she gets open ing night nerves severe as the actors and a bad review makes me feel suicidal." Kyle, who by now had arrived home from his office, said he didn t get any first night litters over a Comden-Green show. I m too busy calming Betty." PLANT PLANNED EUGENE (UPI) The Mon- ; santo Chemical Co. will hniM had 40 per cent ont-yev fur contract. week. 1 qvi HUMWI TT BJ UKt Uiiaf 1 jeer.