al4. of Oragon Library EtWENE, 08GON WEATHER Increasing clouds Sunday; highs 3207; lows 5 below to S abova. nron TEMPERATURES High yesterday, 37 degrees. Lew last night, 11 degrees. Sunset today, 5:47. Sunrise tomorrow e:4. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER 59th Year Eight Pages Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Saturday, February 24, 1962 Ten Cents No. 68 Kennedy in talks with Adenauer nilitary rim BULLETIN BONN (UPI)-Atty. Gen. Rob ert F. Kennedy flew heie from West Berlin today and conferred privately with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer for 90 minutes. Kennedy said later they agreed on all mat ters including handling of Premier Nikita Khrushchev's demand for summit talks. The attorney general announced the accord with Adenauer shortly after it was disclosed in Washing ton that President Kennedy had rejected Khrushchev's new bid for a summit conference to open the 18-nation disarmament meeting in Geneva. At a news conference after his meeting and lunch with Adenauer who is exactly 50 years his senior Kennedy refused to go into detail on their talks. But he did describe them as "very helpful." Certain of Wosfs Success The attorney general, assuring West Germans that "we shall pre vail," arrived here with his wife, Ethel, and his younger brother, Edward, from Berlin and then flew by helicopter from Bonn air port to a soccer field adjoining the nation's capitol. They then drove to Adenauer's official residence. Kennedy and the chancellor had scheduled one hour for their private talk but they remained in Adenauer's office far longer, throwing off the rest of the day's schedule. Justice Ministry State Secretary Walther Strauss, one of those pres ent at the lunch that followed, told reporters that "Kennedy was sim ply felled by the old man's charm." During the lunch, Kennedy later told reporters: "Adenauer said, and I agree, that the United States and Germany are in full accord on all matters." Agreement About Summit Asked if that meant they also agreed fully on dealing with Khru shchev's summit demands. Ken nedy replied quietly: "On all mat ters, including that."' Kennedy repeated his promise of Friday night that "we will con tinue to fly to Berlin" regardless of Soviet interference in the Al lied air corridors. But he said that "they might have to be mili tary flights." JFK relaxes with family in Florida PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -President Kennedy, his agenda ap parently clear for the day, relaxed with his family today at a bor rowed ocean-front mansion and visited with his father. The elder Kennedy is convales cing at the family mansion from a paralytic stroke suffered last Dec. 19. The President and Mrs. Kennedy accepted the loan of an other home because his parents' residence is occupied by other family visitors. The President arrived at Palm Beach Thursday afternoon and then flew to Cape Canaveral Fri day for the ceremonies honoring astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. Ken nedy later returned to this resort about 125 miles down the Florida coast from the missile base. Vice President Lyndon B. John son, who also flew here, and the President talked at lunch Friday about space and other matters. Johnson stayed at Palm Beach overnight as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Wrightsman, whose estate is just down the ocean drive from the residence the Kennedys have borrowed. AN INSPIRATION LONDON (UPI) Astronaut John Glenn's orbital space flight Is as much an inspiration to middle-aged parents as to their children, a reader of the Daily Ex press said today. In a letter to the editor, Jessie E. Dent wrote, "Glenn has given hope to 40-year-olds . . . Take heart, life can still be marvel- Control SALEM (UPI)-The State Board of Control late Friday reaffirmed its policy of using inmates to build a greenhouse at Dammasch State Hospital and ordered return of inmates to the job Monday doming. The lineup was the same as the board's J-l vote last Novem ber Secretary of State Howell Appling Jr. and State Treasurer Howard C Bel ton both favored use of inmates, and Gov. Mark Hatfield was opposed. On Wednesday, Belton sided who Hatfield to have su inmates Red summit bid rejected by Kennedy WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi dent Kennedy, following a tele phone conference with British Prime Minister Harold Macmil lan, has turned down Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev's tough new bid for a summit conference to open the March disarmament meeting in Geneva. Officials said the President, in a note that probably will be de livered in Moscow today, again urged Khrushchev to send For eign Minister Andrei Gromyko to Geneva instead of continuing to demand a summit meeting. The State Department relayed Kennedy's latest message to the American Embassy during the night after the President Friday night approved the text at his weekend headquarters in Palm Beach, Fla. It was expected the text would be made public here as soon as U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn E. Thompson has con firmed he has delivered it Talks With Macmillan A few hours before Kennedy approved the text of the message that rejected Khrushchev's long and argumentative Thursday note, he talked the situation over with Macmillan by Transatlantic telephone. Macmillan expressed concern over the fact that the State Department Thursday night issued a public statement turning down Khrushchev's latest bid without first consulting London or awaiting Soviet release of the text. Macmillan. who also received a copy of the Russian proposal, was understood to be sending his own rejection. Officials here discounted Lon don reports that Macmillan was urging "more flexibility" in deal ing with Khrushchev's proposal. Urges Prompt Answer Kennedy was understood in his new message to have urged Khrushchev to give a prompt yes-or-no answer to the proposal the President and Macmillan made Feb. 7 for holding a British-American-Soviet foreign ministers meeting just prior to the opening of the 18-nation disarmament con ference on March 14 in Geneva. American officials said Khrush chev's summit campaign may be designed to try to dissuade Ken nedy from making his announce ment, expected next week, that the United States is going to re sume nuclear testing in the at mosphere. Khrushchev may be preparing, they added, to torpedo the disar mament meeting if Kennedy, as expected, announces the resump tion of atmospheric tests. In any event, the Khrushchev propaganda approach has dimmed hopes among western of ficials for any real progress on disarmament at Geneva. Last performance of 'Itch' tonight Bend Community Players gave a flawless performance of "Seven Year Itch" Friday evening in the Allen School Auditorium. The sophisticated modern come dy was very well received, and many in last night's audience ex pressed the opinion that this play is one of the best in the long his tory of the little theater group. Final performance of the play will be tonight, with curtain time at 8:15. Tickets will be available at the boxoffice. board votes to use inmates at Dammasch at the Dammasch greenhouse site removed after a union picket ap peared. But Belton said at Friday's special hour-long board meeting that he had not changed his mind and still went along with Appling, who said the picketing was an attempt to make the board "cower." Belton said he had agreed with Hatfield to have the inmates re moved Wednesday because ap pearance of a union picket was a new development and he thought the board should discuss Last seen Feb. 12 Mystery surrounds Castro whereabouts HAVANA (UPI) An unex plained two-week absence of Pre mier Fidel Castro from public view was the biggest subject of speculation today among the Cu ban public. The mystery was compounded by the failure of Castro to show up for an official function Friday night in spite of assurances by the official Cuban television net work. Castro was last seen in public Feb. 12. He attended the opening of the National Circut with Bra zilian Peasant Union leader Fran cisco Juliao and all Cuban news papers carried pictures and stor ies the following day. On Feb. 13, the Council of Ministers (cabinet) named Carlos Glenn rests before round of appearances next week CAPE CANAVERAL UPI Astronaut John Glenn temporari ly vanished for a rest today be fore embarking on a round of public appearances so strenuous that he probably will long for the loneliness of an orbital flight Federal space agency officials, anxious to give the astronaut a" period of relaxation after this in credible week in his life, refused to say where he had gone with his family after leaving here Fri day. But Hie period of rest will be short-lived. Waiting for him were countless demands for public ap pearances as the rest of the coun try prepared to give him the ac claim due to a genuine national hero. The start of it will come on Monday, when he goes to Freeze blamed for gas outage A frozen regulator at the point where El Paso taps the 36-inch Pacific Gas transmission main east of Bend to provide fuel for Cascade Natural gas left Bend without gas for most of this morn ing. The outage occurred about 6 a.m., and not until around 9:30 a.m. was the repair made. Fol lowing that, it took some time to get natural gas back into the main feeder and the various smaller lines serving all parts of Bend. Cascade Natural Gas head quarters here were swamped with telephone calls through the chilly morning, following a low of 11 here last night ' Idled by the outage were a number of local plants served by natural gas. Most of the calls, however, were from home own ers. Once the source of the trouble was discovered repairs were quickly made, and members of the local gas office are confident it will be permanent. The El Paso firm moves its gas through the Pacific Gas Trans mission line, which delivers fuel from Alberta, Canada gas fields, to California. El Paso installed the gas diver sion facilities after tapping the big line six miles east of Bend. From that point. Cascade Natural Gas brings the fuel into Bend. the situation before proceeding further. Union leaders at the meeting assured the board that pickets will be at Dammasch Monday also. The hospital is near Wilson ville, southwest of Portland. State Rep. Edward J. Whelan, D-Portland, secretary of the Port land Labor Council, said there is an "extreme unemployment prob lem" in his area and labor can not condone use of prison labor on jobs outside the penitentiary wallsi Whelan headed a group of labor Rafael Rodriguez as new presi dent of the National Institute of Agrarian Reform, replacing Cas tro. On Thursday, the columnist "Argoes" writing in the official Communist party newspaper Hoy urged Cubans to ignore the ru mors. "How many times did the AP and UPI kiil Fidel during the war?" the columnist asked. But Castro failed to appear at the theater Friday night as adver tised. The main address was de livered by Caspar Garcia Gallo, secretary general of the Teach ers' Union. The big question today was "Where is Fidel?" Washington to address a joint session of Congress and receive the capital's applause. The following day he will ap pear before congressional space committees to discuss the tliree- orbit flight last Tuesday that made American space history. Later in the week, he is to take part with the other astronauts in an enormous ticker tape parade in New York City, just as Charles A. Lindbergh did when he estab lished another milestone in 1927 by flying Hie Atlantic. And these appearances are only the beginning for the modest, 40-year-old redhead who told Presi dent Kennedy two weeks ago that he felt too much attention was being paid to him and not enough to the scientific aspects of Proj ect Mercury. Kennedy himself tried to put Glenn at ease on this score dur ing Friday's hectic ceremonies on the Cape. Referring to Glenn's protest against the publicity in volving himself, the President said: "My own feeling is that both are equally important, in the sense that we are proud of this trip because of its scientific achievement and we are also proud of it because of the men and women that are involved in it Our boosters may not be as large as some others, but the men and women are." Ill At Ease One During a long press conference Friday afternoon. Glenn seemed ill at ease only when space agen cy officials were discussing their future plans for him. James E. Webb, head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), said that Glenn would be more in the pub lic view than was the case with sub-orbital astronauts Alan B. Shepard Jr. and Virgil (Gus) Gnssom. Webb also did not rule out over seas trips for Glenn, although he did not say specifically that they would be made. The subject came up when a reporter asked Glenn whether he would object to mak ing such tours, as did Soviet cos monaut Yuri Gagarin. After his orbital flight, Gagarin became a powerful propaganda, weapon for the Russians. Glenn declined to answer the question. He said no such trips were planned, but with a vague ly troubled look on his face, add ed that many decisions on this still had to be made. officials who attended the board's meeting. Return of the bimales Monday and posting of pickets is expected to shut down work on a $250,000 multi-purpose building being con structed at Dammasch by union labor. When the picket was post ed Wednesday by the Portland Building and Construction Trades Council, workers abandoned the multi-purpose building project. The building is about 19 per cent completed. Construction be gan last year and the building is due for completion July L Moves taken to block any revolt action PARIS (UPI) President Charles de Gaulle today com pleted secret talks with France's top military commanders that ap parently mapped strategy to com bat a possible rightist revolt when the Algerian cease-fire is pro claimed. De Gaulle met this morning with commanders of the naval and air regions and of the fleet and tactical war forces. He met Fri day1 with his National Defense Council and commanding generals of all French military regions. A brief communique stated merely that "all reported on prob lems of their respective com mands." Possible Violence But informed sources said they assumed De Gaulle told the gen erals and admirals of heavy se curity measures against possible major violence in Algeria and France when a cease-fire is announced. The cease-fire Is expected with in a week. The French govern ment already has approved the terms of the French-Algerian reb el provisional government, and in dicated the Algerians may approve the terms of the agreement this weekend, with the cease-fire an nouncement coming shortly there- alter. 'The rebels' National Council (CNR A) is meeting in Tripoli, Libya, to discuss the terms. Ob servers said the meeting would last at least until Sunday night There was no report on the meet ing, but Tunis sources were op timistic. De Gaulle met Friday with the commanding generals of France's nine military regions. Attending tins morning s session were three admirals and four air force gen erals. No Explanation There was no government ex planation of the meetings. But it was assumed De Gaulle was planning security measures against a possible insurrection by Secret Army Organization (OAS) extremists who have vowed to keep Algeria French. Any cease fire would be followed by steps leading toward Algerian inde pendence and Arab rule. There was no indication of what security moves De Gaulle had hi mind. But French newspapers said the president might resume the near-dictatorial powers he took after the generals' revolt in Algiers last ApnL He surrendered the powers five months later, but under the French constitution, he can assume them again. Sunday Heart drive postponed Due to weather conditions, the Heart Sunday drive for contribu tions planned for tomorrow, has been postponed for a week. Volunteers who planned to make the home to home campaign Sunday were being advised that the project would be rescheduled for March 4. Awarding of a TV set to a heart fund contributor will be delayed a week also. A public meeting scheduled for 8 p.m. tonight at the Episcopal church auditorium will still be held by the Deschutes County Heart Council. Dr. Albert Starr, noted open heart surgeon, will address the group. He will illustrate his talk with slides and film. Coffee will be served following the meeting. The greenhouse is $35,000 project Appling and Belton said they favor use of Inmates on some state projects to help in rehabili tation having the prisoners do productive work. There are 200 inmates at the penitentiary with out tasks. Appling said. The use of prison labor also means the greenhouse can be built within tht legislative appropriation. Pri vate bids last year were too high. Hatfield said the state's "first obligation is to its law-abiding Pife; Us- rs 'W0 iJ 'nl i f v ' yCvi; "v 'A;i v I 1 WINTER CARNIVAL PRINCESSES Tonight the Winter Carnival Queen will be chosen from candidates from colleges at the Carnival. Four of the princesses are from left to right: fVanei Johnson, Portland State College and Winter Carnival Hostess; Will Langendoen, Clarlc Col lege (Washington), Connie McGreevy, Gomag a University (Washington), and Susan Solie,. Pacific Lutheran University (Washington). . Busy day at Bachelor Butte Weatherman cooperates as ski carnival moves into high gear By Phil F. Brogan Bulletin Staff Writer Sunny skies came to the yule like Mid-Oregon Cascades this morning as the sixth annual In tercollegiate Winter Carnival moved into high gear at Bachelor Butte. The clearing weather was wel comed by participants following a rugged day on The lull yes terday, when cold winds, laden with snow, whipped over the snowy slopes of the old volcano that guards the Three bisters from the east. Portland State College, under whose sponsorship the annual col lege ski carnivals are held, plac ed first in the slalom team com petition Friday with a total elapsed time of 218.4 seconds. About six seconds behind the win ners was the University of Ore gon team with a time of 22S.9 seconds. Places Third Lewis and Clark. Portland, was third, with a total time of 233.7 seconds and host Central Oregon College of Bend was fourth with 242.5 seconds. Oregon State Uni versity placed fifth. The time was 245.0 seconds. Times of other par ticipants follows: Linfield, 251.5 seconds: Willa mette, 252.0; Pacific University, 253.0; Eastern Oregon College, 2.VJ.5; Pacific Lutheran College, 339.9; Skagit Valley College, 302.9 and Clark Junior College, 462.2. The storm, which whipped much of the Northwest Friday, kept some registered teams home, and cut down others. Gonzaga citizens" and welfare of the con victs is a secondary responsibility. Fred Manash, secretary of the Portland Building and Construc tion Trades Council, said if the board is concerned about rehabili tation and a lack of jobs for in mates, it could order inmates to build a practice building within the prison walls, tear it down snd do this over and over. The board also intends to use prison labor to build the new women's prison here. Plans for that project aren't completed. University and University of Port land were unable to qualify full teams. The storm also made necessary some changes in the three-day program. The major changes set Iho crowning of the snow queen tonight, at a dance to be held at Bend Armory between the hours of 8:30 and midnight Party Planned Ski awards and presentations will also be made at the Armory party tonight. Giant slalom competition was to get under way at Bachelor Butte this afternoon at 1 o'clock. This Skies clear after snow storm here Clearing skies and cool sunshine came to much of the region this morning following a storm that dropped new snow on Cascade passes, whitened Bend and lower ed the temperature here to 11 above zero, chilliest mark of the month. Tonight's low temperature in Bend is expected to range from five below zero to five above. Despite the night storm, routes over the Cascades were in good winter shape by mid-morning to day. On the Santiam, packed snow was well sanded. Flurries contin ued over the Willamette divide, and motorists were a d v 1 s e d to carry chains. Clear weather was reported from Government Camp, where the road was sanded. Bend streets were dangerously slick this morning, following a two and a half inch fall of snow. Over the state, heavy snow struck unexpected Friday, most ly in northern Oregon, clogging roads and contributing to many accidents. The storm left six inch' es of snow at higher elevations in Portland. Salem got about lour inches. The Baldock Freeway's south bound lane south of Salem was blocked Friday night for two hours by a mammoth traffic jam. Partly cloudy weather and cold' er temperatures were predicted foremost of the state today. evening, as participants come in to town from the ski hill, thers will bo a spaghetti feed at the Bond Senior High cafeteria, at 4 p.m. This will be under sponsor ship of Central Oregon College. A bonfire and noise parade li scheduled to be held tonight at t o'clock, at the Bend Senior High School athletic field. Primarily because of the storm, attendance is not up to ex pectations. From carnival headquarters at the Pilot Butte Inn this morning came the word that the road to Bachelor Butte is in good shape and that conditions in the ski area "are out of this world." , Veneer of Snow , Hie new snow has provided a veneer on the ski course that is expected to provide for some fast limes this afternoon. On Sunday, the Bachelor Bulla will be available for open skiing, with a large crowd expected. Fi nal event scheduled by the carni val committee is downhill compe tition Sunday starting at 11 a.m. Final awards will be presented on completion of tabulations. ; Extra events include powder puff and non-classified races, ,' Schrunk talks ; with marchers PORTLAND (UPD-A delega tion of 75 to 100 unemployed per sons marched into a city council meeting here Friday to demand public works projects and emer gency living quarters. Mayor Terry Schrunk granted them an unscheduled hearing, but became angered when Robert Driscoll, a spokesman for the group, threatened action outside legal channels. Schrunk accused Driscoll o! being responsible for some of the picket line violence in the Port land newspaper strike and told him, "you're advocating the same) thing right here, or very close to it." Driscoll, an engineer, was fired from the city's public works bu reau last year.