The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, September 05, 1962, Page 7, Image 7

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    The Bend Bulletin, Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1962
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it F
ISale of timber 1
being planned
SmiIiI te Th tuilttln
PR1NEVILLE - An estimate
109.000.000 board feet of timber
will be sold from the Crooked
River Working Circle of the Ocho
co National Forest during the cur
rent iiscu year, accoroing 10 u i u . : 7 . 7J .
L. Clark, forest supervisor. The ch"i u ' diSpUte
tlemenl.
The mayors' plans came to light
as Federal Mediator Francis A.
O'Neill Jr. prepared to meet sep
arately with both, parties in an
EXCHANGE PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS Theie tlx individuals, all under ths .pcnSorhip of
Exchange Students, Inc., recently returned from a summer trip to Honduras. They ara from
left: Row I, Elia Pineda, who will spend coming year in Redmond; Gayla Morrison, RUHS
senior; and Wilma Burgos, who will spend year in Culver. Row 2, Ramon Alvarei, who will live
In John Day; Willis Sintay, senior in Canyon City, and George Denny, local Spanish teacher.
6 Honduran boys and girls in mid-Oregon
under program sponsored by local group
By tuil LeBlant
Bulletin Staff Writer.
' Six Honduran boys and girls,
all youngsters of individuals as
sociated with the Pan American
School of Agriculture In Zamor
ano, are making their homes In
Central Oregon this year as a re
sult of the efforts of Exchange
Students, Inc., a local group or
ganized just a year ago.
Background of the; youth ex
change revolves around its presi
dent, Jim Miller of Bend, who
spent five years in Honduras
working for a North American
company during the 1950's. While
there he became acquainted with
Julio Pineda, an English profej.
sor at the school at Zamorano.
After the Millers had returned
home and settled again in Bend,
they wrote to the professor and
invited him to send one of hii
youngsters to live with them. In
May. 1S159. thirteen-year-old Elia
Pineda became the first in a long
line of Hondurans to make the
trip to Central Oregon.
A year later Mr. and Mrs.
George Ray of Bend expressed
interest in having a student live
with them, and Miller and the
Honduran professor arranged a
correspondence between them
and the Burgos family, also of
Zamorano. Fourteen-year-old Wil
ma Burgos came to live in Bend
at the Ravs invitation. .
r' Home for Visit
That summer Elia went home
for a visit, and her parents invited
two Oregon youths to accompany
her. Elizabeth Edmonds and Alice
Him of Redmond were selected
by a citizen's committee to make
the trip.
The third Honduran student to
come to Central Oregon was Ra
mon Alvarez, who in January,
1961, went to yve in John Day at
the invitation of Mr. and Mrs.
W. W. Badley. They had heard of
the program through Miller, who
arranged a correspondence be
tween them and Ramon's parents.
Thus far the exchange program
had been completely informal,
with foreign students coming to
this area as a result of direct in
vitations. But in May, 1061, Elia's
father made a trip to Bend, and
while here he and Miller organ
ized Exchange Student. Inc. A
Miller explains, the corporation
acts as a "go-between, making
arrangements in a business-like
manner."
Board Members Listed
Board members of the organi
zation include the Millers, Rays,
and Gerry deBrockert, all of
Bend; Arthur Edmonds and John
Hirn, Redmond; W. W. Badley,
John Day; Pineda of Honduras,
and former Bend Senior High
School principal Bill Edwards,
now in Germany.
Under the current program,
Pineda now acts as the official
screener of applicants. He selects
possible candidates by adminis
tering an elaborate written exam
designed to test their aptitudes,
intelligence, Interests and com
prehension. Names of successful
applicants ara sent to Miller, who
attempts to find homes for them
in Central Oregon.
The next three Honduran youths
to coma to Oregon were the first
to do so under the auspices of the
newly formed corporation, The
group, which arrived here last
January, included Miguel Ramon,
who is living with the Millers;
Celia Pelen, who is living with
the Dwight Macys of Culver, and
Marco Molina, who is living with
the Raymond Beckleys of Burns.
This summer three of the Hon
duran youths Elia, Ramon and
Futile break-in
attempt made
A variety of methods proved fu
tile for a prowler who attempted
to break into the office of Emile
P. Bachand, consulting engineer,
Tuesday morning.
Bachand told police that h I s
front doorknob was almost com
pletely torn off. First a key was
inserted but it broke off in the
lock. Then an attempt to pry the
door open was apparently made
with a large screwdriver.
Police found blood on the door
casing which indicated that the
prowler must hava cut himself In
the operation.
Wilma returned home for a
visit, accompanied by three Cen
tral Oregonians. In the group
were George Denny, local Span
ish teacher, and high school sen
iors Gayle Morrison of Redmond
and Willis Sintay of Canyon City.
Citizens' Group
According to Miller, Exchange
Students, Inc. is a citizens' group
which was organized because its
members share a common inter
est in the exchange of students.
"We have a particular interest in
exchanging students of the Cen
tral American countries espec
ially Honduras because they're
not often included in other pro
grams," he explains.
He has also stressed that the
group is not attempting to com
pete with the American Field
Service program, which has also
placed foreign students through
out the area.
There ara several differences
between the two programs, he
points out. AFS requires appli
cants to have studied English and
to be eligible to enroll In the sen
ior year of high school. They may
stay in the country only one year.
On the other hand, Exchange Stu
dents, Inc. allows the youngsters
to stay for several years, placing
them in several different homes.
They are not required to be able
to speak English but learn after
they arrive. Youngsters may ap
ply at any age Miller says that
by coincidence most ot them have
so far been 13.
Much Approval
The program has met with
much approval, especially among
the parents of the Honduran
youngsters. In a recent letter ad
dressed to the organization, they
wrote:
"The idea of sending several
students from the same commun
ity has done a great deal to unite
the parents in discussing and
sharing the various experiences
undergone by our children. These
frequent contacts have stimulated
an individual as well as a collec
tive revaluation on our part of
American people in general and
you In particular, your way of
life, and your interest in our welfare."
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Crook County
enrollment up
Spuld te The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE A record nunv
suburban communities along the r"1 o( PuPil" nrolled at Crook
Mayors seek
fo intercede
in rail fleup
CHICAGO (UPP Mayors of
Chicago and North Western Rail
way, closed down by a telegraph
ers sirixe. asked todav lor a
working circle Is one of two in
the Ochoco forest, and feeds the
Prlneville mills primarily.
Since the beginning of the fis
cal year, July 1, 21,290.000 board
feet of timber has been sold in I "
. , "" , J locked dispute. O'Neill was sched-
vwin one excepuon, a sale 01 1 uled to meet with the Order of
Railroad Telegraphers and later
wilh railroad officials.
With negotiations deadlocked
and no prospect of an early set.
tlement, the full Impact of the
shutdown in the Midwest was be
coming apparent. Construction
projects and grain shipments were
delayed or halted. In northwest
Iowa, one grain elevator closed
and laid off four employes.
CO. Schlaver. president of sub
urban Mount Prospect, said at
least 12 mayors and village presi
dents in his area would like to
attend joint sessions between the
disputants. The joint sessions were
broken off Monday.
O'Neill said President Kennedy
was "very concerned" about the
strike, which the ORT staged to.
enforce its demands that layoffs
of telegraphers be subject to ne
gotiation. The carrier has contend
ed the elimination of telegraphers
jobs should be left to manage-
1 ment.
11,050.000 million board feet on
July 31, sales thus far in this cal
endar year have been salvage
sales of diseased and insect dam
aged trees.
In the past fiscal year, Clark
said, 84,109,000 board feet of tim
ber was sold from the working
circle. The annual allowable cut
presently assigned in this work
ing circle is 71,100,000 hoard feet.
This figure will apply until a man
agement plan based upon the re
inventory which is now in pro
gress is completed, Clark said.
An undercut which was experi
enced during the previous budget
period can be recovered during
the current budget period, or
prior to the establishment of the
new management plan.
By comparison with the amount
of timber sold during the past fis
cal year, mill operators cut 99,
190,070 board feet, including
salvage which is not chargeable
to the annual allowable cut.
County High School Tuesday, Sep
tember 4, as the school year be
gan. The total was 714, with an
increase of 110 over last year.
All but one Prlneville school
showed an increase. At the Jun
ior High School, enrollment was
379, up by 17 pupils. At the
Crooked River school on the east
side of Prlneville, the total is MO.
This figure includes the sixth
grade students of the community
who are attending the remodeled
junior high school in a building
immediately adjacent to the regu
lar Croaked River Grade School.
The enrollment is up by 13 pu
pils
At the Ochoco School at the
west edge of Prineville, enroll
ment Tuesday was 559. Ochoco
school lost one sixth grade class
room, resulting in five fewer pu
pils on opening day of the school
year.
The county school office states
that a slight increase in enroll
ment can be expected during the
coming week as late-comers reg
ister to Increase Tuesday's total
Prlneville enrollment somewhat
from ths S.232 tallied that day,
Although not a record figure,
the total is close to the maximum
number ever in Prineville schools,
it was stated.
GOP teen-agers
set convention
SALEM (UPD - Oregon's teen
age Republicans will hold their
first state party convention Satur.
day in the Senator Hotel.
At the oneway meet the young,
stert will attend classes on party
principles, candidates, the 1961
campaign, fund-raising and teen
age club activities.
Speeches are planned by OOP
senatorial candidate Slg Unander
and Robert Ingalla, state Republi
can Principles Committee chair
man. The convention Is being spon
sored by the Corvallis teen-age
Republican Club.
BLAZE REPORTED
PORTLAND (UPD - A fire
broke out on the third floor of
the B. P. John Furniture Co.'
plant on Southwest Macadam Ave.
shortly before I a.m. Tuesday.
The blaze was brought under
control quickly, with greatest;
damage expected to be from wa
ter from an automatic sprinkling
system. 1
Firemen said that if the sprink
ling system had not put out the
blaze a five-alarm fire might
have resulted.
WINDOW
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