o Onir. of Oregon Library . RBENE, 086GQM D BULDEHW THE BEN WEATHER Partly cloudy with local fog : morning hours; highs 40-46; lows 37-42. fcilll??RATURES High yesterday, 43 degrees. Law light, 30 degrees. Sunset 4:2v. Sunrise tsmorrew. :35. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER 60th Year Sixteen Pages Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Wednesday, December 19, 1962 Ten Cents No. 12 Boost sought in funds for state colleges SALEM (UPI Higher educa-! tion asked here Tuesday for an additional $14 million to add "the equivalent of another University of Oregon" to the state system in the next biennium. William Walsh, president of the State Board of Higher Education, said that is what growth in Ore gon's seven colleges and univer sities will amount to. Walsh said the 1963 Legislature should appropriate $96 million in ' general funds for higher education in 1963-63, instead of the $82 mil- COC funds for building are okayed SALEM (UPI) Allocation of $225,000 each to Central Oregon College, Bend, and Southwestern Oregon College, Coos Bay, for capital construction, was approved '; Tuesday night at a meeting of the State Emergency Board. The board also approved pre- , liminary architectural plans for the library building at Oregon Technical Institute at Klamath . Falls. It was reported that damage to state property in the Columbus j Day storm had topped the $1 mil , 7 lion mark, and that about half of ij the $300,000 general fund storm - allotment asked by Gov. Mark Hatfield had been spent to repair damage. Over-spending of appropriations by legislative interim committees was criticized by board members. The Small Business Committee asked $1,000, and the agricultural committee $2,300 in emergency al locations to pay bills. Rep. F. F. Montgomery, R-Eu-gene, warned the board was es tablishing "a bad precedent" by automatically granting such re quests. Sen. Dan Thiel, D-Astoria, said the board was "setting a prece dent difficult to live with." Rep. Leon Davis, R - Ilillsboro, commented, "It seems to me we are in a jackpot. I don't see how we can allow these deficits to stand." During the discussion it was pointed out that many committees had not spent their full allot ments, and there would be money available to meet the emergency requests. Then, with Montgomery voting no on the small business request, board members approved both al locations. Several quizzed youths in tree chopping case Efforts to clear up the mystery in a destructive tree-chopping in cident in Drake Park Tuesday morning are being made by city pohce. Officers have questioned sever al young persons and checked out rumors pertaining to others, but so far have no positive evidence as to the identity of the vandals. The incident occurred shortly past midnight Tuesday when po lice chased a band of boys through the park after they had chopped almost completely through the trunk of an elm tree. No one was caunht. Of significance, officers noted, is the fact that this same tree caused the death of a young Bend j motorist. LcRoy Davis, in an automobile mishap about two months ago. Police indicated that some of the youths questioned Tuesday were 21 years or older. Meeting planned by Commission Bend city commissioners to nisht will debate certain phases of the proposed dance-hall ordi nance governing young people's activities, in their regular 7:30 p m meeting in city hall. , They also will sign a proclama tion to put the Porrtland Ae- j n'ie bridge bond sale officially in- j to motion, and give the bond first I rpjHinff Low bids will be awarded on two citv maintenance pickup trwU and on prisoner's meals at .k- -;t ;,:i ii,t; ';'..; j...:..l; , nn p'iblic idcwalks will receive second reading lion proposed by Gov. Mark Hat- field Walsh and Higher Education Chancellor R. E. Lieuallcn dis cussed higher education financing at the climax of the second day of a three-day fiscal review for members of the approaching leg islature. Lieuallen told the lawmakers the 1961 Legislature estimated 24.300 college students during the present biennium. It turned out to bo 28.100. The board expects that to jump to 33,336 in the next bi ennium. Walsh said the board was only asking to maintain Die present quality of higher education for a grow ing enrollment. He said high er education's latest request was "set up on the basis of what time the legislature figured was the go ing rate" two years ago. Extra Money a Problem Walsh admitted he doesn't know where the extra money might come from. But, he said, that is the problem of the governor and the legislature. He said the board's job is to "give you all the facts as we see them" about higher education's needs. Walsh warned that the legisla ture faces a crucial crossroads. He said unless additional revenues are found, the whole level of serv ices will be changed. Walsh said higher education got a fair proportion of the governor's proposed $403 million general fund budget, a record. But he said higher education needs more, even if the total budget must be increased. He said if the legislature listens to the facts and still rejects the board's request, "We are not go ing to complain ... but we don t want to be told we can do as good a job on half or three-fourths." Lieuallcn also discussed the board request for $47 million for buildings during the next two years. Hauicld has proposed a $45 million bond issue for construction over four years. Lieuallen said classrooms will be increasingly over-used and lab oratories are becoming obsolete. He added a delay in voting on a bond issue until 1964 could be "quite a serious thing." Incoming mail still increases Outgoing mail apparently reached its peak in Bcno Mon day, but the tide of incoming mail is on the increase. Heaviest loads of incoming mail are expected on Thursday or Fri day, with big deliveries also an ticipated for the weekend. Post master Farley J. Elliott reported today. More than 200 big bags of in coming mail were delivered at the Armory auxiliary station this morning, and quickly sorted for rural and local carriers. In contrast with the situation Monday when mailing lines last ed through the day, patrons mail ing packages faced only short waits this morning. Post office windows will re main open Saturday afternoon for the convenience of patrons. There will be deliveries of Christmas packages around town on Sunday, as has been the custom of the lo cal Post Office through the years. Postmaster Elliott said weath er was a factor in the compara. lively easy delivery of mail this season. Christmas weather ot past years when sleds were used to reach some parts of town were recalled. Bend so far has experienced a snowless Christmas season. SHOPLIFTING DAYJ LONDON (L'PK The London Daily Telegraph headlined a story on stealing in stores: "Five more shoplifting days to Christmas." Welcome worthy of queen given NEW YORK (UPI i Mona Lisa. I ed by secret servicemen. Louvre the fragile beauty of the Old Museum guards and a contingent World, received a welcome of police, for the drive to Wash worthy of a queen on her arrival ington, where it will hang in the here today. great sculpture hall in the Nation- Leonardo da Vinci's 16th Cen- al Gallery. Its lone companions turv painting, vaiuea oy nperuiounnB iu untc-iTii ciiKCTrau ' at $100 million, completed its first Atlantic crossing aboard the lux- ury liner France to begin a tour I nl museums in Washington and . kw nrlc j It was placed in a bullet-proof, air-contioned truck heavily guard- Oregon relay team loses to Aussies AUCKLAND, N.Z. (UPI) - A long - awaited duel between the University of Oregon's four - mile relay and New Zealand's crack team ended in disappointment to day when Oregon leadoff runner Vic Reeve slipped and fell on the soggy track and wiped out his team's chances of victory. Given a huge lead by this acci dent. New Zealand held on to win by five yards in 16 minutes, 43 seconds although Oregon anchor man Keith Forman outran world mile record holder Peter Snell on the final leg. New Zealand held the world four-mile relay record at 16:23.8 until May 12 of this year when this same Oregon tearr smashed it to smithereens with a clocking of 16:08.9 at Fresno. Calif. Today's time was 34.1 seconds slower than the record. The race-marring accident oc curred just as B. Baillie of New Zealand, who was leading, and Reeve came out of the last bend in the first mile. Reeve slipped in the mushy cinders, struck his foot against a steel marking pin, and sprawled headlong, partly in side the track. Kenwood pupils offer program here Thursday Kenwood School pupils will take part in a program, "The Christ mas Card," Thursday at 2 p.m. in the school auditorium. Miss Marie Brosterhous ii the direc tor. The sixth grade will present a pageant, "Christmas Card Mem ories," featuring carols from dif ferent countries and a Nativity scene. Linda Smith and Steve Bjorvik will be Mary and Joseph, and Scott Harbison, Leonard Parker and Keith Berntsen will be the Wise Men. Douglas Herland will be narra tor, and Cathy Christian will be accompanist Jay Maudlin and Sam Taylor are trumpet soloists. Jay Maudlin also appears as Santa Claus, with Sara Stipe as a little girl, and Linda DeGrec, Lona Lance and Dennis Voglis as Victorian characters. Carolers are Diane Reece, Nan cy Pyle, Kathy Gilly, Nancy Prouty, Gary Schuman and Charles Bennett. Choir boys are Don Smith, Robert Johnson, Jim my Lowell and David Buckey. Shepherds who visit the C h r i s t Child are Boyd Bolton, Andy Car roll, Robert Gotchy, Richard Stevens and Terry Brandsma. The program will open with three Christmas numbers by the Kenwood orchestra, directed by Sam McCoy, followed by songs by the fifth grade chorus. Don Hamp son will play a cornet solo, "O Little Town of Bethlehem." There will be songs by the fourth and fifth grade choruses. with David Spence, Bruce Hill and Kent Towlerton as soloists in the latter group. A clarinet trio composed of Su san Love, Judy Richards and Joan Raymond will play. Accom panists for the chorus and instru mental groups will be Martha El lis, Debra Curl, Allison Foley, Jill Robinson and Maureen Carty. Faculty members are assisting Miss Brosterhous with make-up. costumes, staging and other de tails. BULLETIN HAVANA (UPI) Attorney James B. Donovan said today ha has Fidel Castro's reply to the ransom offar for tha re lease of 1,113 Cuban invasion prisoners and plans to leave with It for Miami Immediately. Ha said ha would return to Ha vana from Miami Thursday. The Donovan announcement strengthened belief that negot iations for the release of the men either had reached, or ware on the verge of e success ful conclusion. MINOR QUAKE NOTED PORTLAND (LTD The seismo graph at Oregon State University Tuesday confirmed reports of a temblor in Portland Monday just before midnight. in the hall will be two portrait j busts of Lorenz and Guihano di , Medici. Da Vinci's patrons, France's chief art treasure. 456 I vears old. was carried from Its i first class stateroom aboard the liner while the public address sys - Effort made to solve U.S., British issues NASSAU, Bahamas (UPI) President Kennedy and Prune Minister Harold Macmillan met for two hours today in an effort to resolve British-American differ ences over the Skybolt missile program and other issues. They started their first formal conference at the stucco cottage which Macmillan is using as a residence while here. A White House spokesman merely announced the end of the meeting and said he had no fur ther information at the time about what went on. Before they met, officials said they expected Kennedy and Mac millan to make a general assess ment of East-West problems be fore thev tackled the issues of the Skybolt's future and a threatened new crisis in the Congo. In a luxurious cottage overlook ing the Atlantic at Lyford Cay club, the President and prime minister were confronted by the grimmest agenda of their six con ferences in two years. They met informally late Tues day for about 45 minutes and ar ranged their first formal session, with key advisers, for 9:30 a.m., EST today. Expect U. S. Concession The British knew before coming to Nassau that the United States had decided to drop its end of the highly expensive program to develoD the 1,000-mue air-u ground Skybolt missile. What Macmillan was believed to be seeking here was a solid indication of what the United States is willing to do to fill the gap in Britain's nuclear deterrent that will be caused by Skybolt s loss. The United States i expected to make some sort of concession but American officials said flatly Kennedy had made a final deci sion not to pour further U. S. millions into Skybolt The crave XI. S. view of possi ble Soviet intervention in the Coneo appeared to be the nei element injected by Kennedy into the Big Two meeting. Mission To Congo Shortly after the President ar rived and received a warm air port wclcoiM from Macmillan and Bahamian officialdom, Amer ican sources disclosed that a high level U. S. military mission had been ordered to the Congo for a fast survey of United Nations and Congolese defense forces. American officials reported the Congo is becoming an increasing ly tempting target for Soviet am bitions. According to these sources the failure of efforts to integrate mineral-rich Katanga Province into the rest of the Con go is shaking the central govern ment of Premier Cyrille Adoula. The United States is particular ly interested in recent indications that the Soviet Union wants to be invited to intervene in the Congo an invitation that might be forthcoming from a future Congo regime if the Adoula government should fall. Possibility of white yule here seen There is some prospect of a white Christmas in Central Ore gon but if snow does fall it will not be heavy. At least this Is the content oi the five-day forecast for the coun try east of the Oregon Cascades. "Light to moderate precipitation as rain or snow at the end of the week," the forecast notes. That storm may influence weather in the first part of the coming week. Christmas will be on Tuesday. Temperatures in the area will be above normal for the first part of the five-day period, with temp eratures expected to range as high as 45 degrees. Lows may reach 22, the forecast adds. In Bend last night, the mercury dropped to 30 degrees as clouds partly cleared. tern played the stirring strains of Moussorsky's "Pictures at an Ex hibition." During a 45-minute ceremony in the ship's first class lounge, John Walker, director of the National Gallery who accepted the painting on President Kennedy's behalf, said that the visit "will leave a deep imprint on the cultural hi.v torv of the United States. The Mona Lisa will stir Americans 1 more than any other work of art ft, w W (j STUDENTS EXPLORE 'UNDERWORLD' Thirty-one Portland science students on an Oregon Museum of Science end Industry sponsored trip visited leva caverns of the Deschutes country on an overnight outing this past weekend. Some of the youngstert are pictured here in the spectacular tube of Skeleton Cave, 12 miles south of Bend. Jim Anderson, OMSI, naturalist photographer, was in charge of the outing. He is en ex-Bend resident. . i Hatfield urges formal outdoor recreation plan SALEM (UPI) Development of a formal outdoor recreation policy for Oregon was urged today by Gov. Mark Hatfield.' "The economic value of outdoor recreation is of sufficient impor tance that such a policy is in the public interest. "With the addition of less tan gible values which are of social and moral significance, outdoor recreation is vital to the well being of all our citizens," Hatfield said. The governor made his com ments at the first meeting of the Oregon Outdoor Recreation Coun cil. Hatfield told council members they should be able to "develop a workable, coordinated state wide program to assure that our citizens have available adequate outdoor recreational opportuni ties." He told members "you have be fore you unlimited opportunity." Hatfield said "as we plan for public development, we must also encourage private Initiative." He called for "greater recogni tion of the role which private or ganizations have played in the over-all outdoor recreational pro gram." "The private sector is in a posi tion to play a key role in filling the outdoor recreation needs of our citizens. Much has already been done by the timlwr industry, private utilities, and other seg ments of the economy," he said. He commented that Portland General Electric Company (PGE) has become recognized as out standing In the field of outdoor recreation. He said recently interior Under secretary James Carr stated PGE has done the best job of any pri vate power company in the coun try. that has ever crossed the ocean." He predicted that huge numbers of Americans would make the "pilgrimage" to see it. In turning over the painting. Jean Chatelain. director of French Museums, said the loan "is mere ly a question of France giving pleasure to its friends and war time ally." Then the ship's chef brought out a pastry replica of the painting and placed it upon the treasure's aluminum packing Ibes ion 31 Portland students tour mid-Oregon , 'underworld' Thirty-one young' science stu dents from Portland schools this past weekend toured tho "under world of the Deschutes country, according to information received today from Jim Anderson, Ore gon Museum of Science and In dustry naturalist-photographer. The youngsters, who slept one night under the stars, explored lava caves of tho Deschutes Na tional Forest, with Anderson as their guide. He Is a former Bend resident and leader for a number of years, with Phil Coynu, of the local "cavemen." The Portland youngsters had planned to spend a night in the Derrick Cave of the Fort Rock Agents seizing pinball machines WASHINGTON (UPI) The In ternal Revenue Service announced today that special agents are seiz ing coin-operated pinball machines in principal cities in the nation under a new law classifying them as gambling devices. "We're going out and confiscat ing this property and disposing of it as an illegal gambling device," an IRS spokesman said. He said that special agents of the IRS intelligence division pres ently were fanning out to major cities in virtually every state. An IRS agent said that under the previous statute, the agency could not confiscate a pinball machine as an Illegal gambling device unless an agent actually played it and received a payoff for winning. He said that under the new law mere possessionoftho coin operated machines gives the IRS authority to scizo them as illegal gambling devices and no evidence of a winning payoff was needed. Owners of the pinball machines being confiscated had bought only $10 amusement tax stamps, he said. 'MoncT After the ceremony, the paint ing was carried down to the wait ing truck, then driven off in the motorcade by the gallery's regu lar chauffeur, Hillary H. Brown. The painting, which the Presi dent has ordered guarded around - 1 the clock by the Secret Service, will be returned to New York in February for a three-week show ing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. AtrcjeDnaoiiS country, but wore so intrigued with formations found in Skeleton Cave, 12 miles south of Bend, that they spent Saturday night in that area, bedding down near the en trance to Wind Cave. Stars gave way to clouds late in the night and rain fell. Before heading south Sunday, tho boys explored little known Wind Cave. In tho Fort Rock country, the major stop was at Lavacicle Cave. This is the cavern of lavaciclcs and lava stalagmites kept under lock and key by the Forest Service, in an effort to pro tect the delicate formations. An derson obtained a permit from the Fort Rock district to enter the cavern. The trip was primarily intend ed as a nature tour for the Port land youngsters, and on tho drive south they saw herds of deer, in cluding some fine bucks. How ever, Anderson regretfully report ed, they did not see an antelope or coyote. Bats in cavern hibernation at tracted the interest of the stu dent scientists, who made the trip into Central Oregon by bus. Program set at St. Francis St. Francis elementary school children will present the second performance of their Christmas program at 7:30 tonight in the Parish Hall. First program was given Tuesday evening. A chorus made up of sixth, sev enth and eighth graders will sing Christmas carols, with seventh and eighth graders giving the Christmas pageant, A special feature is the per formance of second graders in an adaptation of "Why tho Chimes Rang." Schools an hour here on to close earlier Friday Christmas vacations for all stu dents in the public school system start one hour before the usual closing time on Friday, it was announced today by school offic ials. All children will go home one hour earlier than their usual time Friday, with the exception of chil dren in the afternoon double shift Their hour remains the same. All school bus schedules will be fixed In accordance with dismis sal times. School will resume on Tuesday, January 2. Guards storm cells, execute 4 ringleaders BUENOS AIRES (UPD-Guard, police and troops crushed an at tempted mass break from the Vil la Devoto jail early today after 12 hours of rioting. At least 25 persons were killed and 30 wounded. Enraged guards, avenging tlx cold-blooded murder by convicts of other guards, executed four riot ringleaders in their cells aft er the prisoners had accepted a "truce agreement" which ended the worst prison disturbance in Argentine penal history. . No one escaped despite the sav agery of the fighting. . , The last hours of the savage fighting which started at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday were tho bloodiest In furiated guards rebelled against their superiors, stormed cell tier! and used tommyguns to shoot down ringleaders in retaliation. . The official casualty total was announced by Federal Judge Mi guel Irurzun In a news conferonco nearly 24 hours after the fighting started. He said the dead included 10 guards and IS prisoners. Bodies Thrown Out Prisoners had killed guard they were holding as hostages at frequent Intervals to "dramatize" their demands, mey tnrew me bodies of two slain guards out Into the prison courtyard from second story windows. Through an open telephone switchboard held by the rioting prisoners could be heard cries of "We will kill them all" as the riot leaders sought to negotiate their way to freedom. It was not until 4:40 a.m. to day that comparative quiet re turned to the big suburban prison where 400 men, including des perate criminals, political prison ers and jailed strikeleadera, joined the rioting. Prisoners who did not join In the break forced their rioting fel low convicts to release 20 ward ens they held as hostages for nearly 11 hours in a fourth-floor washroom. The rioting broke out on a pre arranged signal from outside ilia explosion of Molotov cocktailf against prison walls. As police re constructed the story, at least four men on the outside drove a station wagon loaded with guns and ammunition up against the prison doors. - Ringleaders on the Inside seized their guards and an estimated 200 prisoners tried to fight their way to the street armed with .38 and .45 - caliber pistols apparently smuggled to them earlier. Police said the station wagon in the street was loaded with unused fire bombs which the escaping prisoners apparently intended to use. As the gunfire increased in In tensity, police called up all re serves and rushed them into the area. Army troops with tommy guns later threw a cordon around the building. Sharp gun battles were frequent throughout the late afternoon 1iout3. They increased in Intensity as night fell and Ihe prisoners grew more desperate. A trace was finally arranged when Federal Judge Lcopoldo In surralde assured the ringleaders a fair trial and said their livei and those of their families would be spared if they surrendered. A condemned murderer, Hugo Uran Lujan, 28, told the judge he assumed rcs)onsibility for all the guard slayings. Uran was one of the four ringleaders subsequently executed by the enraged guards after Ihe "truce" agreement. Altogether, five convicts as sumed responsibility as ring leaders. Four were separated from the others and placed in a small room where they later were executed in a revengeful outburst of tom mygun fire. A filth ringleader apparently escaped execution be cause he was kept in his fourth floor cell. DOW JONES AVERAGES By Unittd Press Intamatlenel Dow Jones final stock aver ages: 30 industrials 647.00, up 6 KG; 20 railroad 138.36, up 1.09: 15 utilities 1Z7.64, up 0.30, and 65 Stocks 226.81, up 1.84. Sales tcxiay were about 4 mil lion sluues compared with 3.62 million shares traded Tuesday. 1 . ...... . . ,