Univ. of Oregon Library EUGENE, OBEQQN ULLETIN WEATHER Partly cloudy through Wtdnes day with snow flurries In moun tain) highs 50-55; low 13-31. TEMPERATURES High yesterday, 57 dtgrtti. Low last night, 33 degrees. Sunset today, t:U. Sunrise tomorrow, 5:54. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER 59th Year Eight Pages Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Tuesday, March 27, 1962 Ten Cents No. 94 BENB ;jt f. . A . . , - ' . " ; x ! : y jO ' ' 'i FOREIGN DISHES PLANNED Members of the Bend Senior High School International Relations Club were preparing today to "stir things up" for their benefit dinner Saturday night. Menu will feature a variety of foreign dishes. At left is Kathy Cand land, chairman of the event. Wielding paddle is David Kellogg, Police awaiting Arney s return from S. Dakota By Phil F. Brogan Bulletin Staff Writ.r Police today awaited the return from Watertown, S.D., of Officer Jack Arney to make a final check en the "confession" of Donald Ben Doran, 34, that he killed Judi Seeder, 17, In Bend on the Bight of February 2. Arney is due back in Bend to- nieht or early tomorrow morning, and officers are fearful handwrit ing examples he will bring here from the South Dakota town will throw the murder case wide open again. It has been established that a man bearing the name Donald Ben Doran, and answering the de scription of the man held in the Deschutes jail on a murder charge was in Watertown on Feb ruary 3. Stayed at Hotel Watertown's Donald Ben Doran stayed at the A & M Hotel in that city on the night of February 3, and on the following night check ed in at the Lincoln Hotel. He was back in the A & M Hotel on the night of February 5. At 12:40 Evaluation team due at BSHS An evaluation of recent innova tions In the academic program at Bend Senior High School will be made this week by a team of 27 persons being sent here by the Oregon School Study Council. A report on plans for the eval uation was made at last night's meeting of the District No. 1 School Board by Principal Don ald Empey. Empey said that the team wtmld arrive Wednesday after noon and will spend Thursday and Friday making the evaluation. Dr. Keith Goldhammer, executive sec retary of the Oregon School Study Council and a member of the Uni versity of Oregon Bureau of Edu cational Research, will be in charge of the study. The team will be composed of college and high school faculty members and several graduate student in education. It will in clude one out-of-state member, William K. Ramstad of Stanford University. He is a staff associate of the Commission of Staff Utili zation of the National Association of Secondary School Principals. He visited BSHS as a consultant last fall. Phases of the academic pro gram to be studied by the team include self-direction, large and small group instruction, extended period programming, honors pro grams, fireside seminars and the attitudes of pupils, teachers and parents toward the innovations be ing tried at BSHS. A dinner for the visitors will be held Wednesday evening at the high school, with local school of ficials and teachers involved in the new programs being invited to attend. A report of the evaluation will be published later by the Oteson School Study CounaL a.m. on February 7 he was in the Watertown jail, as a sleeper. On the nights of February 7 and 8, he stayed in a room at the Sokoll Bakery in Watertown. Arney reported this information late Monday in a telephone call to Police Chief Emll Moen of the Bend Police Department. Earlier in the day, The Bulletin had ob tained virtually the same infor mation from the Watertown Po lice Department. Watertown is some 1200 miles from Bend, in the eastern part of South Dakota. No Fingerprint Arney took Doran's fingerprints to Watertown, but found none there for a comparison. Pictures of Doran taken to South Dakota were identified as those of the man known to have been in Wa tertown as early as February 3. That was the morning the body was found in Bend. Should the handwriting Arney returns to Bend check with that of the man held here, Doran will be released, it was indicated to day. However, this will not take place until reports are received from Arney, and from the crime laboratory. District Attorney Louis Sclken said the possibility of holding Dor an on a charge of obstructing jus tice was considered, but inasmuch as Doran did not volunteer the information that he killed Judi Reeder until after he was ques tioned appears to rule out any original intent to obstruct jus tire. Still Claims Killing Meanwhile Doran still main tains from his county jail cell that he killed the girl. Once he re marked: "Maybe I shouldn't have done it." Do-an also on one occasion ask ed to see the girl's parents, to "apologize" for "killing" the girl. Permission to make such an apol ogy was not granted. Officers said that Doran ap pears fully convinced he kilied judi. Earlier when he was con fronted with the information that he apparently was not in the area on the night of February 2, he wanted officers to believe that the murder occurred on another night Chance in Million Doran's "confession" included some information believed known only to officers, and up until late yesterday the investigators were reluctant not to believe Doran was in Bend on the murder night. Now it appears there is only once chance in a million that he was here. That chance is that there is another Donald Ben Dor an. same age and same descrip tion, who was in Watertown on February 3. A BIRD STORY ALBANY. N Y. UTt) This hapjKfiod Monday, according to the police blotter: A man named Pigeon, who lives on Jay St., was driving on Hawk St.. when his car sideswiped an other owned by a man who lives on Eagle St in German garb. To his left, in Latin American costume, is Wilma Burgos. At right are Peggy Matson, in Japanese kimono, and Marjono Ali Putra, exchange student attending Bend High this year from Indonesia. Profits from dinner will help sand a BSHS student overseas this summer. IRC dinner will feature foreign food A benefit dinner featuring for eign food specialties will be held Saturday night at the Senior High School cafeteria from 5 to 8 p.m. Sponsoring group is the Interna tional Relations Club of BSHS. Profits from the dinner will be used to help send a Bend High student to a foreign country this summer under the American Field Service program. According to Pennie Dick and Peggy Matson, publicity chair men for the dinner, entertain ment is being arranged and will include a group of "Irish danc ers." Tickets for the event are be ing handled by members of the International Relations Club and will be priced at $1.50 for adults, $1 for students, and 75 cents for children under 12. Tickets may al so be obtained at the door Satur day night. David Kellogg is president of the IRC and Harold Bock is advi sor. Mid-Oregon chamber sets time action The Central Oregon Chamber of Commerce will meet in Bend tonight primarily for the purpose of making a recommendation rel ative to "sunshine time" for the area in the 1962 vacation season. The meeting will be held at the Superior Cafe, at 7:30. Three cities of the area, one of them Bend, have already de cided to go on daylight time pro viding the entire Mid-Oregon area shifts. Action by the Central Oregon Chamber of Commerce members tonight will determine the area time for 19S2. There appears little doubt about the decision that will be reached tonight: Fast time is expected to get Uie nod because the Portland metropolitan area will be on fast time. Robert F. Smith, temporary president of the newly formed Eastern Oregon Chamber of Com merce, will be present to discuss objectives of the new group. Robert Love, Prineville, Is president of the Central Oregon Chamber of Commerce. He has invited all interested persons to attend tonight's dinner meeting in Bend. isagreement noted over court SALEM (UPI)-There was dis agreement today over who'her the U.S. Supreme Court's decision on apportionment of state legisla tures will have any material af fect on efforts to change Oregon's reapportionment law at the No vember election. The high court ruled citizens could go to Federal Court to seek better representation. State Sen. Vernon Cook, D Troutdale, a foe of a proposed ballot measure that would make School budget work completed by committee The District No. 1 school budget committee last night put finishing touches on a 1962-63 budget pro posal which calls for total ex penditures of $2,008,547 and esti mated tax levies of $1,301,599. Following approval of the bud get, the district board met and set May 7 as the date for an elect;pn on the amount of the budget out side the six per cent limitation. This figure is $816,077. In summarizing the budget, Sup erintendent R. E. Jewell esti mated that what he termed the "effective levy" will be approxi mately $16,000 more than the one for the current year. This, he said, would represent an increase of considerably less than one mill. Increased Income The tax picture has been bright ened for the coming year by a sizable boost in estimated re ceipts and available cash bal ances. The increase is nearly $89, 000. In addition, the district will re ceive an increase of approximate ly $36,000 in tax offset funds from the state basic school support fund. Before giving final approval to the 1962-63 budget, committee members voted to adopt a new schedule for extra duty pay. Un der the schedule, teachers with extra duties will be paid on a ten step program of increment raises instead of the set scale type of schedule in use here in the past. Schedule Approved The new schedule was present ed by Richard Geser, athletic di rector, and represents a boost of $4,900 in extra pay in the coming year. The committee also voted to provide $2200 for possible rental of several rooms at the new Pres byterian church for use by the senior high school next year. The sum was provided by deleting from the proposed budget another $2200 sum which had been includ ed for partitioning of a room in the high school building. A hearing on the proposed bud get will be held on April 16. Later this week the complete budget will be published as a legal advertise ment in The Bulletin. Polling places in the May 7 elec tion will be established at Allen, Kenwood and the junior high schools in Bend and Young and LaPine schools. Chairman John W. Stcnkamp presided at last night's final ses sion of the budget committee. It was held at the junior high school. area and population twin factors in allocating seats of slate repre sentatives, said the decision "should establish a general tone of opposition" to the attempt The Citizens Committee for Representative Government is cir culating petitions and needs 53,000 signatures by July 5. The com mittee opposes the pure popula tion system of allocating House scats, a system which has cut down representation in less pop" lous Eastern Oregon. Living costs push to new high in U.S. WASHINGTON (UPD Living costs climbed to a record high in February, shattering six months of price stability, the, government reported today. A sharp increase in food prices pushed . up the Labor Depart ment's consumer price index by three-tenths of 1 per cent last month, the biggest increase for any month since last July. This pushed the index to a new peak of 104.8 per cent of aver age 1957-59 prices. In other words, it would cost $10.48 today to buy the same goods and services thai cost $10 about three years ago. Robert W. Myers, deputy com missioner of labor statistics, said (lie increase was sizable. But he said it did not indicate the start of a broad upturn in consumer prices. He said the February increase ended at least temporarily the period of price stability that be gan about a year ago. But Myers said prices were still only nine tenths of 1 per cent above tile level of February, 1961. Food prices weiU up by six tenths of 1 per cent last month although they normally decline tliis time of year. Crop freezes and storm damage in Texas, Florida and California pushed up the price of fresh fruits and vegetables. Poultry, beef and veal also cost more. Vegetables showed the largest monthly advance in 10 years. Onions were up 37 per cent. Higher prices also were report ed for house furnishing, household operation, clothing, medical care. newspapers, sporting goods and movie admissions. The department said 77,000 workers would receive one cent hourly increases in wages on the basis of the national index. They work for Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Martin-Marietta and North Ameri can Aviation Co. Their wages are tied to the index by escalator clauses. , , ... ...... Another 13,000 supermarket em ployes in Southern California will receive penny-an-hour pay boosts based on the Los Angeles index. A worker with three dependents had earnings after federal taxes of $84.41 an increase of 26 cents a week over January. The raise was attributed to longer hours. persons receive vaccine A thousand persons attended the Jaycee-sponsored oral polio vaccine clinic Monday night in the basement of the Elks Temple. Approximately 450 took the type 1 vaccine, about 550, type 2. About 750 persons were given the vaccine in the first half-hour of the clinic. Dr. Robert L. Cutter and Dr. E. A. Moody represented the medical profession. In addition to Chairman Milton Schultz, Jaycees assisting were Dr. Herbert Berrcth, Dolph El lingson. Bob Fowler, Howard Hobson, Jack Davis. Bob Arn dorfer, Dr. Ed Timm and Gene Wegner. Eight members of the Bend High School Pep Club also assisted. The next clinic will be held In about eight weeks, Schultz said. At that time, types 2 and 3 will be administered. Edmund Hillary due on forest PORTLAND (UPI) Mountain climber Sir Edmund Hillary is scheduled to visit five Oregon na tional forests sometime this sum mer, the U.S. Forest Service said today. A spokesman said the visits were planned to the Mt. Hood, Deschutes, Willamette, Siskiyou and Rogue River Forests. The conqueror of Mt. Everest is scheduled to leave Denver in July and visit forests in Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California and Oregon as a consultant to the Agriculture Department. "This effort," Cook said, "is an attempt to turn hack the clocks to the opposite direction of what the U.S. Supreme Court is doing." Lemon Airs View In Corvallis, E. B. Lemon, co chairman of the citizens commit tee, said he doubted if the deci sion would adversely affect the effort. "We've got a peculiar situation in Oregon because of our great expanse of territory and relative ly small population concentrated oviets threaten n anot off Watch for it Progress issue scheduled The Bend Bulletin's first an nual "Central Oregon Progress Edition" will roll off the presses Wednesday. There will be 54 pages in this special edition aimed at telling people here and in other parts of Oregon and the West the story of progress in Central Oregon. Over 1,000 copies have already been reserved for mailing to far away places by residents of this area. There will be additional copies available for mailing for Quiet in Algiers shattered as sporadic shots ring out ALGIERS (UPI) Sporadic i hind. shooting erupted in downtown Al- gicrs today at a spot where French soldiers killed 60 and wounded 200 persons Monday. The shooting broke a tense quiet cre ated by a general strike. The shots rang out from bal conies- .overlooking the Plateau des Glieres and brought riot po lice in half-tracks and armored cars with machine guns rumbling into the area. More shooting was heard after the armor appeared but there were no immediate reports of casualties. A general strike gripped the city and spread to Oran and Sahara desert oilfields 600 miles southeast of Algiers in protest over Monday's shooting of the unarmed demonstrators. The shutdown of shops and of fices here did not come from a call for a strike by the outlawed Secret Army Organization, which is battling to keep Algeria French. It seemed to stem from the sud den realization that French sol diers were ready to shoot and kill their own countrymen if nec essary. It appeared no one had the heart to follow the daily routine. The strike in Oran was called by union officials who asked citi zens to "assemble in calm and homage to the innocent victims" of Monday's shooting in Algiers. It extended to the Hassi Mes- saoud oilfield where the employes of French companies in general seemed sympathetic to the 'French Algeria" cause. Two thousand Europeans crowded into the Rue d'Isly and nearby streets in Algiers to see the bloodstains on the paving stones and bullet-pocketed build ings. A few shopkeepers who opened up in the suburbs this morning quickly shut down again. But later in the day riot police sealed off the Plateau des Glieres and stationed themselves at 15 foot intervals to prevent further disturbances. The early crowd In downtown Algiers piled heaps of flowers at spots where Europeans had died. A doctor said many of the cas ualties had been shot from be- DOW JONES AVERAGES Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 Industrials 707.28, off 3.39; 20 railroads 144.24, up 0.33; 15 Utili ties 130.53, up 0.02, and 65 stocks 241.05, off 0.55. Sales today were about 3.09 million shares compared with 3.04 million shares Monday. in a few areas," Lemon said. Secretary of Slauj Howell Ap pling Jr., the state's chief elec tions officer, said the Supreme Court's ruling for federal court power in amending unfair re apportionments shouldn't affect Oicgon. Appling said that history shows that Oregon is "one of the better states" as far as an equal appor tioning of seats. Cook tended to go along with this. At any rate, he added, there toeir sere: nuclear test tomorrow one month after the Wednesday publication. Copies will be mailed any place in the United States for 25 cents. Wednesday's newspaper will be substantially larger than the reg ular size. It will take longer for our newspaper boys to process and fold these papers. If your "Central Oregon Progress Edi tion" is a bit later than usual, the size will be the reason. We hope that you enjoy reading about progress in Central Oregon. Oran police said the OAS lobbed mortar shells into a crowded suburban market this morning, killing 4 Moslems and wounding 20. The shelling plus otlicr casual ties from scattered violence brought the Algerian death toll since a Franco-Algerian cease fire was signed March 19 to 443 persons killed and 781 wounded. Prineville plans hanging baskets on main street SpicUl to Th Bulletin PRINEVILLE - At least 34 hanging flower baskets will bright en Prineville s mam street next summer, with plantings to include such trailing flowers as lobelia and petunias. That is the report made by the Ochoco Garden Club, sponsoring the project, to the city council. Councdmen approved the plan as submitted by the garden club some time ago. Hie club will buy 20 baskets, they report, and merchants have agreed to furnish 14 more. Addi tional ornamental baskets are be ing solicited from individuals and other places of business. The baskets will be installed on brackets attached to power com pany light poles in the city as soon as the weather permits. The brackets are to be attached 11 feet from the around, with the baskets hanging down to about nine feot above the sidewalk. Honesty pays, Tommy discovers Honesty paid off for Tommy Stewart, 11-ycar-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Stewart. 1847 Harriman Street. Approximately $50 that he found in the entry way of First National Bank has been turned over to him to keep. Tommy, going home from school with two companions, saw the money March 3, on the floor of the First National Bank vesti bule. He picked it up and took it inside to a teller. The incident was publicized in The Bend Bulletin, not mention ing tiie amount, but the money was not claimed. Yesterday Maurice Shelton, president of the bank, gave Tom my the money. decision doesn't seem to be any solid case for the fact that Multnomah Coun ty didn't get another state senator last year although by population it has a major fraction. Cook noted that other Oregon counties such as Washington and Yamhill, were in the same boat Cook said there is nothing to do "unless they (the citizens commit tee) succeed" in getting Ihe area- populntion amendment to Hie Ore- Son constitution on the ballot Rusk returns from session at Geneva GENEVA (UPI)- Secretary of State Dean Rusk flew back to Washington today to report to President Kennedy shortly after Russia announced it will stage a new series of nuclear tests if the United Slates resumes testing in the atmosphere next month. Rusk took off at 6:45 a.m. PST aboard an Air Force jet transport following a final speech to the 17-nation General Conference on Disarmament in which he called for an immediate crash program of controls to reduce the risk of a nuclear war. But even as he spoke, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko shattered the diplomatic calm with new charges of bad faith against the United States and the an nouncement that Russia would re sume nuclear tests. Rusk and Gromyko said In a joint communique issued earlier in the day that their exhaustive talks on Berlin in the past 18 days had resulted in "some prog ress" in outlining more sharply the points of agreement and dis agreement. They agreed on the wisdom of another round of Soviet-American talks on the sub ject, but set no time, place or forum. Borlin Is Peril Polnf U.S. officials said, however, that despite minor variations in So viet proposals, there wag no les sening of the deadlock and Berlin remained the world s No. 1 peril point. Russia still demanded "solu tion" of the German problem on the basis of a proposed peace treaty with East Germany which would liquidate the Allied position in Red-encircled West Berlin. The Western answer to this demand was still "no." Rusk left with the East-West test ban stalemate tighter than ever and with both sides prepar ing to resume experimental ex plosions. These talks foundered on Russia s complete unwillingness to accept any International Inspec tion to police the ban. This confirmed Rusk s belief that the Soviet Union did not real ly want a ban because it is anx ious for more tests. It also damp ened his hopes for general dis armament However, he still hoped the dis armament conference here would make some progress on individual measures such as prohibiting the spread of nuclear weapons and know-how, and on reserving outer space for peaceful purposes. Conference to Continue The arms conference will con tinue for months, with officials at a lower level than foreign min isters carrying on. Britain s Foreign Secretary Lord Home returned to London today. Gromyko and Canada's External Affairs Minister Howard Green announced they were leaving Thursday. Rusk and Home both said they were willing to return any time their presence would be necessary or helpful. Gromyko's latest statement, in which he virtually accused Rusk of hypocrisy and the United States of trying to plant spies on Soviet territory under the guise of inter national inspection to police a test ban, seemed to rule out any agreement in the foreseeable fu ture. Rusk said the U.S. plan for ur gent action on interim measures might avert an outbreak of hos tilities while the conference works on long-range plans leading to complete and general disarma ment. Bonds approved at Beaverton BEAVERTON UPI Voters approved a $2.7 million school bond issue here Monday 4,061 to 3,074. Approval came in spite of flyers circulated over the weekend at tacking the proposal