THE BEND BULLETIN Bend Forecast Night-Morning log and tow "clouds; clearing partially on Wednesday afternoon; low Tuesday night 10 to 15; ' high Wednesday 32 to 38. WORLD-WIDE NEWS SERVICE CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER j 4- 50th Year Convict Taken In Portland, f PORTLAND,-Dec... 23 (IB Two ; more of seven convicts who tun 'neled their way to freedom from the Washington state penitentiary Svere- reported Tuesday to have ft been1 seen here as police staked out ( hotels throughout the qlty. One1 of the escapees was shot i down and captured in a bullet-fly- 'Ing chase Monday afternoon after 'being spotted in a car stolen in Walla Walla, Wash. The other six ''remained at large. , . ... i. ' v A man who turned up at two downtown hotels was believed to . be Harold Coe., who was serving . B life term for murder. A clerk Identified a picture and finger prints Identified as Coe's were Ve- ' portedly found on a whisky bottle, ' Officers said a man seen with Coe was thought to be another of the escapees. ' ' f , Alerted to Watch - Authorities throughout the North- iwest were alerted to watch for the Vscapees, one of whom has sworn ''ho will never again be taken alive, Folice said they believed several of the convicts had fled to Portland as four piles of cigarette ashes were found In the stolen car. Also, officers said, prison clothing found in the car had numbers which tallied with those of some of the other escapees. aiitnnririoQ tzmn Tnpv nun nn in Others Sighted formation to indioate that the men who escaped from the Washing ' . 'ton State Penitentiary early Mon i ' day were armed. "But considering the caliber of the men, Including one murderer, 1 ,they will probably find arms," one 1 officer said. 'The men made their escape ' 'through a 200-foot tunnel which must have required months of la bor and painstaking secrecy to construct Convicted Robber Fugitive Ralph Courser, 45-year- iwMirfnlml mhW uhr WAS one 'Of the seven -whd tiinneled their way to freedom from the Walla Walla, Wash., prison, was being held under guard at St. Vincent's Hospital here after a Portland po liceman ran him down. Attendants said Courser was only ' slightly injured when a bullet from : the officer's gun pierced the back of his neck and went out through the left cheek. , Washington State policemen join ed local .'officers in the intense wwrnh after Courser was captured and another man. believed to be one of the "escapees, was sighted in a railroad yard here. Policeman Kills Grenade Tosser NEW YORK, Dec. 23 (fft-A Ma rine sergeant on Christmas leave ' threw an incendiary hand grenade into a crowded bar early Tuesday nri uno ehnt tn death bv an off- $k duty policeman in a seven-block chase through dark Manhattan The 19-year-old sergeant, identi : fied as Eugene McDermott of New York, died of a bullet wound in . the head six hours after he terror ized an entire neighborhood by throwing a grenade in a west side bar. Thirteen persons were injured in the spray of burning phosphor ous from the bomb. Police said the fiery blast lit erally "burned the pants off" one s man in the bar, John H. Orth, 50. federal narcotics agent. Ortn was in the bar on a narcotics in , vestigatlon not connected with tne McDermott, who was wearing elvilian clothes, was token to Ktiickerbocker Hospital with a bul let wound In the head. Patrolman Vincent Beckles. who chased Mc Dermott and finally downed him with a pistol shot, was treated for knife wounds. - .,,. Police could establish nodeflni e ' n., tnr ihi hnmbing. They said McDermott apparently threw the grenade in an outoursi m or resentment against someone in the bar. Jamboree Signup Deadline Jan. I eaii. of the Modoc area council were being advised by their .,t ,..oik.og this week that they must send in their registra tion cards not later man Jan. i if they wish to attend the nation- wide Boy Scout Jamboree to dc held near Santa Ana. Calif., next June. The Modoc council will be permitted to send IIS scouts to this meeting, and the Fremont dis trict, of which Bend is a part, will . t n,Bc, fnfvu-tivl hv Smut of fi Scour on i J dais today that an entire troon of tn Tri.n hnv fmm Warm Springs Twi"i.'JLZZZ r h San Bend Gets New Street Signs 0. - j New street signs, of steel with baked enamel facing, now are being put up in Bend by city street department crews. The tlty has pur chased 151 of the new signs. Estimated cost of the signs, plus Instal ... latlon, is 2,000. r ' Street Crews Busy Installing Sturdy New Markers in City City crews now are in the street signs, designed to serve: unmarked areas in all 'parts of Bend. The new signs are of enameled steel, and' much sturdier than the previous aluminum and wooden signs that marked city streets, according ment superintendent. , ' . Drost estimated that between 50 and 60 of the new signs 1 already have been put In place. Federal-Workers Get 4-Day Holiday Most federal employes In Bend will have a four-day holiday this week, as a result" of an executive order signed by President Tru man designating Friday as a holi day for the majority of federal employes. To be closed Thursday, Christ mas day, Friday, Saturday and Sunday of this week will be the Deschutes National Forest of fice, the local recruiting offices, the selective service office, the Soil Conservation, Bureau of Land Management and Bureau of Reclamation offices. The Bend post office, however, will provide bothe delivery and win dow service Friday, with the ex ception of rural deliveries, which will not be made, it was report ed. Local postal employes, under a directive received here, will be elven a day off within the next 30 days, to compensate for time worked Friday. Federal employes whose duties are connected with public" safety are not included in the president's holiday proclamation. All state, city and county of fices in ' Bend will be closed Thursday, Christmas day, but will be open on regular schedules Friday and faaturuay. City offices will be open Friday and Saturday morning, but will be closed Wednesday afternoon, to afford employes an opportun ity to prepare for Christmas, it was reported today by W. O. Cuthbertson, city manager. State offices here will maintain regu lar schedules. Ice Skating By Christmas Is Aim Here Bend will have Ice skating by Christmas, if the weather man is gracious. As a matter of fact Bend's younger skaters, who may not mind rough ice, will be wel come to try the city rink tomor row morning, according to Wayne Hamilton, city recreation director. Hamilton explained today that the Troy laundry field has been snraved the past two nights and a firm" Inundation of Ice has been obtained. Another layer wm ,"-.yn, . d lce should added tonight and tn be in fair shape for SKaung oy Christmas eve, barring a Chinook wind or rain. , , . Good skating will be In order Christmas day. again if the ele ments are favorable, Hamilton ad?ea- ...... (imnf la -eel - ' A piev, - in.tr-x,,,. N,nif ntavi. the former ton ; Bend s mun ipa a warm to opera"".. t ,k. - 1 wind ana mm process of installing 151 new to Percy Drost street depart' ! :; , , ... The tetters and figures are 'larger than those on,,theolder . s s, making" the new marlcers more legible, both during the day and at night. . .... . Heavier' and stronger material used in the new signs, it is hoped, will discourage young pranksters from ripping them off, next Hallo, ween or when the impulse strikes, Drost explained today. Vandalism has been responsible for destruc tion of so many older signs that it has been difficult for strangers to find their vay around in some sections of Bend, due to Inadequate marking of streets. The 151 new signs will not be sufficient to mark completely the Bend business and residential areas. Where the aluminum signs or wooden signs were found in good condition, they were not re placed this year. Drost estimates the cost of the new signs, plus installation, will be more than $2,000. Education Board Submits Budget EUGENE, Dec. 23 OB The State Board of Hihger Education's bien nial report to Gov. Paul Patterson calls for an annual operating budg et of $11,749,000 in state funds for Instruction and general services, the board said in a statement Tuesday. The budget calls for a 6.9 per cent Increase over the current bi- ennium. This is lower than In creases sought by other publicly supported Institutions in other states, Chancellor Charles D. By. me said. The requested operating budget includes full costs of operating and maintaining eight campus instruc tional units. No Increase in funds for added instructional staff or for added classified civil service personnel is requested by the board, Byrne said. The board said the Increases was necessary to bring academic sal ary levels up to standards ot other state higher educational institu tions, to provide for operation and maintenance of buildings complet ed or to be completed In the cur rent biennium and to provide small requested expansion in statewide services. AT NEW inOH SALEM. Def. 23 1P Average earnings of Oregon's production workers reached a new high of $2.12 an hour and S82.16 a week rlnrlne November, the State Un- Emoloyment Compensation Com mission said Tuesday. The com m;einn aaiH It u.-n nmhahlv Mow to all-time peaks for tne united States. The new hourly figure Is States. The new hourly figure red senHmber and at that hizher than for any other BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY. DECEMBER Truckers to Next President In Conference With Hoover NEW YORK, Dec. 23 (1B-Presi. dent-elect Eisenhower discussed re organization of the executive branch of the government at lunch eon Tuesday with former President Herbert Hoover and Dr. Arthur Fleming, president of Ohio Wcs- leyan University. . The luncheon was at the home of Secretary of Slate-designate John Foster Dulles, who was pres ent. . It was at Dulles' home last Wednesday that Eisenhower got together with Gen. Douglas . Mac Arthur to receive MacArthur's counsel on Uie Korean war. - One of Eisenhower's visitors earl ier Tuesday was Hamilton Fish Armstrong, editor of Foreign Af fairs, a quarterly publication. El senhower is a member of the ed itorial board of the Council on Foreign Relations, which publishes the magazine. . ; Armstrong said they nad dis cussed "foreign policy in general terms." The President-elect, was tapering off his visitor's schedule looking forward to a ou.et Chrisemas at home, pinch-hitting for his son in Korea as daddy-by-proxy to three small grandchildren. The Pres dent-elect s son, John, an Army major, Is on duty In Ko reans his wife will bring their three children from Highland Falls, N, Y.. to the Eisenhower, home here to spend the holiday with their , grandmother- and grand, father. .'.The Grandchildren uro Dwight pavjd,;v4;. Barbara, Anne,, 3, and The President-elect's schedule of appointments at his Commodore Hotel headquarters mesaay in cluded only ihree persons. The first was Jack Connelly, head of the newsreel section of the "Voice of America." Others Listed The second was with Hamilton Fish Armstrong, editor of the quar terly Foreign Affairs, The last was Edward C. Jancway. or south Lon donderry, Vt., who was elected Re publican national committeeman from Vermont after; the national GOP convention last July. A surprise visitor at Eisenhower headquarters last Monday was John Roosevelt, youngest son oi ine. laie President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He supported the Elsenhower pres idential candidacy aitnougn nis mother and two of his brothers made campaiim speeches for Dem ocratic candidate Adiai E. Stev enson. . . Rooseve't, In answer to a ques tion following his talk with the President-elect, said he thought Eisenhowers cabinet appointments were "wondertui. He said ne sun was registered Democrat but when asked if he intends to retain that status, Rcosevelt smiled and said: 'That's an 'if question. MUMPS REPORTED PRINEVILLE; Dec. 23 An epi demic of mumps in the Mitchell community of west Wheeler coun ty caused cancellation' of the pre- Chrlstmas school program. Many students are convalescent whne many others, chool authorities report, arc absent from the ma lady. OKDPIIH 1SSUFD VKTfSmiRfi. Mich. Dec. 23 im- r-hiof nt Pniir-n .1bsp Rraw ordered his men to ignore 'downtown park - Ing violations as a Christmas pres - int tn shnnnnm hut ordered them tn ffot hunk on the ball for the New Year celebrants Jan. 1. Communists Consider Charitable Foundations 'Very Lucrative,' Ex-Party Workers Testify WASHINGTON, Dec. 23 (IB Communists have considered char itable foundations "very lucrative" sources of funds "to help in the task ot subverting America," ac cording to two former Reds. A House committee investigating whether tax-exempt foundations have been used for subversive pur poses heard the testimony Monday from Manning Johnson, a party member from 1930 to 1940, .and Maurice Malkin, a charter member of the U. S. Communist Party who was expelled in 1937. The witness ssid Reds In 1928 began worming their way Into the foundations as well as labor un ions and other orcanizatlons. John son and Malkin, who now work for the Immigration and Naturaliza tion Service of the Justice Depart ment In New York as eoraultants on Communism, have testified pre viously before other congressional Heroic Captain Of Passengers BEIRUT. Lebanon Dec. 23 UPl The heroic captain of u Lebanese motor launch rescued almost single-handed ull remaining passen gers and some crewmen n total of about 150 personsfrom the wmcked French cruise liner Cham pollion Tuesday. ' , Heiore the rescue, scores ot panic- stricken passengers had leaped from the slanting deck of the liner into the sea, 17 to death, about 45 to be rescued by Lebanese fishing bouts. As night interrupted rescue oper ations, only about 100 of the Cham- pollion s crew remained aboard, confident of rescue in the morning. 4 According to official figures subject still to revision there were 113 passmgers and 205 crewmen in the 12,546-ton Christmas cruise liner when it was smashed into a reef in a howling gale, only 200 yards offshore. i i Seventeen crewmen who volun teered to try to swim ashore with a lifeline were picked up Monday by little Lebanese fishing, boats, It looked glim for those remain ing aboard today, with the ship Crew Taken Off Wrecked Vessel ' WASHINGTON, Dec. 23 (IPI-The Justice Department said Tuesday that moro than one-fourth of the crew of the French luxury liner SS Liberie will nbt be permitted to go ashore when the ship docks In New York Wednesday. ' The reply to Inquiries, a depart ment spokesman said 269 of the 974 crew ''members refused to an irver questions of U, S. immiera- aon Inspector put abotavat the -ship to make sure they complied with the seamen landing requirements of the new McCorran-Walter Im migration Law. The law goes into effect Wednes day. It requires a security check of all seamen entering U. S. ports before they can be permitted to enjoy any kind of shore leave. ,'. French and British authorities have protested ' informally to the statement about these examina tions of their nationals. Foreign complaints against this provision of,. the law have been mounting. .i; The burden of complaint is that the provision will require ships to lay over for extra duys in Ameri can ports thus delaying the "turn around" and cutting Into profits of foreign shippers. Mercury Drops Toll in Night Clear weather and bright sun shirte was Bend's lot today after storm clouds rolled away last night and brought a crisp temper ature of 11 above at 8 o'clock this morning. The mercury fell from a high of 43 yesterday and, strangely, was 12 above at 7 o'clock this morning, dropping one more de gree between 7 and 8. The U. S. weather bureau was cautloua In its forecast for the next 24 hours, seeing the possl blllty of some snow without much change In temperature. Another storm Is reported to be approach Ine the Pacific Northwest, bill 'wnciner or noi n win carry imo Eastern Oregon was not indicated i In forecasts. i Travel was at winter normal In 1 Central Oregon today, with mo. ! torlsts advised to carry chains, . but no fresh snow reiwrted In I Cascade mountain passes. committees. ' Johnson said n special Commu nist Party committee was set up In the 1930's to tap all possible sources of funds -"bleeding hearts foundations, labor unions, fellow travelers, and others." Johnson, a Negro, testified he has been "persecuted" since he broke with the party on learning that Its promises to American Ne groes are hoilow and that Negroes are being used merely as pawns In the Communist scheme of world conquest. He said all. Communists who break with the party and then give evidence to Congress or the gov ernment face constant danger. "Our movements are restricted," he said. "We have to be very care ful where we go. careful to stay out of crowds. The Communists have many strong men, skilled in the use ot the knife, the acid ato 23, 1952 Pay from Nov. 4 Praised After from Grounded fust breaking up and waves sweep ing over it. There was an anxious huddle ot otfieials and boatmen on the shore. Capt. H. . Rudwan, who pilots occun-going ships into Beirut har bor, volunteered to go to the res cue. Rudwan bounced his launch through the seas to the Chamnol lion, its buck broken and heeling over at a 50-degree slant. Crew members of the Champol lion threw him ropes. He secured his little craft to the side of the liner. ? The crewmen threw rope ladders over the side. While Rudwan ma neuvered his boat close, men and women started clambering down the side, first the women, . then the men passengers, then some crewmen. Three women carried babies In their arms. Three other children climbed down in safety. . The one casualty was a 12-year-old boy. He, tell, while climbing down a ladder, His head struck a bulwark of the launch and he died on the way to shore. Radwan made three trips In all, Pi nay Resignation Plunges France Into Grave Crisis PARIS. Dec. 23 je President Vincent Aurlol Tuesday accepted the resignation of France nlunired into a Krave Auriol acted alter he railed in a last-ditch plea to tne popular, business-man ' premier to stay on the job and see One Dead as Car One man was ' killed arid four other persons Injured at 10:20 this morning, when a south-bound pas senger car crashed Into a stukc truck at the Brooks-Scanlon, Inc., crossing, about a mile south of Crescent. , The dead man's name was given as Adam Vollmer, of College Place, Wash. Brought to the St. Charles Memorial Hospital by Owl Taxi ambulance were Mrs. Vollmer, 54, the dead man's wife; Mary Ann Snd Irene Vollmer, daughters of the couple, and ' Leonard Wheeler, 19, driver of the automobile. . '! Mrs. Vollmer's' Injuries were re ported to be serious and she under went emergency surgery nt the Hospital, this afternoon. Wheeler was being treated for lacerations and possible fractures. The two daughters were given first aid, but not hospltullzcd., En Route to California The Vollmers were en route to Lodi, Calif., to spend Christmos with friends and relatives, when the accident occurred. Wheeler, a student at Walla Wnllu college, was taken along as the driver. ' According to persons who wit nessed the wreckage, the Vollmer car apparently crashed broadside into the light truck, as It was crossing the highway. Packed snow covers the highway at this point. The Identity of the truck driver had not been learned here this afternoon, but It was reported that he escaped serious injury in the crash. JOINT MEETING SET REDMOND, Dec. 23 The Red mond Klwanlans and Rotarlans will hold a Joint meeting Wednes day noon at the Redmond hotel with the Kiwanlnns In charge of the program. This will take the place of the regular Thursday meet ing or Rotary club since It would fall on Christmas Day. mizer, the blackjack.' Doth witnesses said they have been threatened from time to time. Malkin said two attempts have been mado to kill him, once by stabbing and once by gunfire. The two ex-Communlsts named as having been used or "Infiltrat ed" by the Communists at various times the Garland Fund, the Phelps- Stokes fund, the Robert Marshall Fund, the Marshall Field tund, the Hecksher Foundation, the Car. negle Foundation, the Guggenheim Fund, the Kussen bage f ounua. tlon, the Rosenberg Foundation, and the Rosenwald Fund. Some of these funds no longer ex. 1st. Some are not tax-exempt. Spokesmen for several of the groups, testifying earlier, conceded they have made s few mistakes but Said they do all they can to safeguard themselves from sub versive employes. Daring Rescue French Vessel bringing about 50 persons to safety each time., , . Crews ashore helped the ex hasuted victims off Rudwflri's boat, while women knelt In prayer In the background. , , ' ; . ;' . Messagiercs Murltimes Co., own er of the cruise ship, said in Paris there was a brief panic abourd Tuesday morning as the ship set tled Into the sand of the Mediter ranean bottom but the punic soon ended. Survivors Included 17 crew mem bers who came ashore safely Mon day and made it vain ut tempt to secure a line from land to the 12,546-ton cruise ship aground on a sandbar 200 yards oftshore. , Charles Harris, listed as a "U.S. painter," was among the passen gers. .. . The marooned passengers and crew huddled In the superstructure of the vessel, the only part above the, vush of the crashing seas. , With holes below the water' line and badly split amidships, t h e Champollion settled deeper into the sandy floor of the Mediterranean. Premier Antoine P i n a y and Christmas time crisis. ' through his program to save France from economic disaster. Plnay, disillusioned by rebuffs In the National Assembly, refused to reconsider his dramatic early morning resignation. "On no bretext Will I descend .efsajjfaptillpirisde;. jfc !9dJJ The Frenuh president ; immedij utoly resumed ;tuiks with top Politi cal leaders to find a successor to Plnay, whose nine-month term of office gave France its third long est government in postwar politics. Even boforo accepting Plnay's resignation, he conferred with for mer Pr6micr Georges Bldault and Plerre-Hemi Teitgen, leaders - of the Moderate Catholic Popular Republican Party (MRP). . It was the MRP which drove Pl- nuy Into resigning by refusing to back him on three confidence votes on the 1953 budget the premier was to have faced before his resignation cut short un oarly morning Nation al Assembly debate.. Salt Used Here ; In New Treatment For Icy Streets A new treatment for Icy streets, as a means of providing greater traction during winter months now is being tested by the street de partment, according to W. O. Cuth bertson. city manager. The salt re places cinders, formerly employed for this purpose. As explained by the city muna ger, application of the salt Is made as early as possible when a storm develops. Results to date would Indicate that less labor is neces sary, in cleaning up. after a storm, and Hint greater traction is pro vided for motor vehicles, Cuth bertson explained. A rust Inhibitor is mixed with the salt before it is applied 'to city streets, to prevent spruy from rust ing metal parts of cars and trucks. A salt spreader hus liecn obtained by the city, for use in application. Under the old system cinders were spread on the streets, when ice conditions developed. Effective nt the moment, cinders soon would be coaled with Ice, especially when tempernture fluctuations caused alternate periods of freezing and thawing. The rock salt tends to melt snow and Ice, and keep the footing soft even though more snow may fall on It, according to the city manager. In addition cinders must he swept up and hauled away, afler storms abate. The new method Is more econo mical than the old, even though the original cost of the rock salt exceeds that of the cinders, Cuth bertson commented. OFFICERS PICKED MADRAS. Dec. 2.3 At the annual election, held at the home of Mrs. Edith Chester at Warm Springs, the Madras Toastmis- tress club named Mrs. Earl Town send as president for the coming term. Other new officers are! Mrs. Howard W. Kriz, vice presi dent; Mrs. Con Herbstcr, secre tary; and Mrs. Cecil . Vandal, treasurer. Officers will ' be . In stalled at a meeting at the home of Mrs. Carl Darrar Jn Madras on January 14, when husbands will be Invited. ! No. 15 Marion Judge Rules Against Jan. 1 Date SALEM, Dec. 23 (IB Truckers ex pressed pleasure Tuesday over tt : decision late Monday by Marion County Circuit Judge Rex Klmmeli which ruled that an Increase In tho wclght-mllo tax rate on truck a went Into effect Nov. 4, the day -the voters of Oregon backed the Legislature in'the Increase.- . - If Jho tax had been retroactive . to Jan. 1 It (vould have cost truck ing concerns an estimated $2,UU0, 000 In back taxes. Moo Tonkan, attorney for the trucking interiors, termed the decision "an excellent ! opinion," - The decision will undoubtedly bo appealed to the Oregon Supreme- Court, observers said. The test case was up for court determina tion attcr Attorney uenerat ueorge Ncuner ruled that the increase was retroactive to last Jan. 1. , i : Sponsored by Council . -The suit was brought by the Portland-Pendleton Transportation Co. on behalf of the industry and was sponsored by the Oregon High- ' way Council, It had the approval of tho Legislative Interim Commit tee on Highways which nan rec- ommended - that the increase be forgiven until Nov, 5 so that no hardship would be worked on small ' truckers. The trucking industry had asked -a Deo, 1 start on the tax. The i action was brought against Publlo Utilities Commissioner Charles H. HelUtel.j Arguments were . heard ; Deo, 15, Judge Klmmeli ruled out the Dec. 1 dato asked by , the truokers on grounds that- the dtate constitu tion says- a' -referendum measure, "shall lake effect and become tho law when it Is approved by a ma jority of the votes cast thereon,! and not otherwise." . . Statutory Method ' , i s Ho hold tho Kovomor's procla-" mnllnn "Is onlv the statutory meth od of legally establishing a publlo record oi an existing tact.-. T. to governor proclaimed the measure -as iaw Dec. 1. " The increase was voted oy tne 1951 legislature, then referred by petition by the trucking lndustry.t At the same time the trucking in dustry Initialed a measure tor abol ish the weight mile tax, The voters rejected this proposal to abolish the weight mile tax and at the same time backed up the legisla ture In the Increase, Bus Line Drivers Seek Pay Hike PORTLAND, Dec. 23 (Ui Some 40 drivers of the : Continental Paclflo Bus Line in Washington, Oregon nnd northern California were still striking Tuesday and negotiations had not been re sumed. Ted Scott, general chairman of the drivers' union, said drivers were seeking the same pay re ceived by drivers on other routes operated by the parent firm Transcontinental Bus Corp. ot Dallas, Tex. Scott said the union, which is affiliated with the Brotherhpod ot Railway Trainmen, fell behind tho others heeause of a two-year con tract. Drivers on oihers runs of tho company, Scott declared, won a scale of seven cents a mile last year. " He buUI tho seven cents a mile Is all his union seeks.- The company has offered to renew the old contract. Services Held For Victi LARSON AIR FORCE BASE, Wash., Dec. 23 ttPt Memorial serv ices for 88 men who had hoped to be home for Christmas will be con ducted Tuesday and investigation was to continue on the crash of the C-124 Globema8tcr which car ried them to their death Saturday. Wing Chaplain MaJ. George E. Rutnmey will conduct Protestant services and Lt. Thomas G. O' Brien, Catholic chaplain, will con duct Catholic services for those who perished in aviation's worst air disaster. . Meanwhile, an investigating team was to continue questioning those who survived the crash, except for those on the critical list, In an ef fort to determine what caused the huge plane to thud to earth short ly after takeoff. UJsmb: fully prepared ice. ,