UM. of oregois Library WEATHER Showers tonight, rain Thursday; high Thursday 55-60; lew teriah 31-40. THE BEND BULLETIN i TEMPERATURES yesterday, 40 degrees. Lew 34 degrees. Sunset Sunrise tomorrow. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER 60th Year Fourteen Pages Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Wednesday, May 1, 1963 Ten Cents No. 124 Model parking plan endorsed by merchants By Gerald Drapeau Bulletin Staff Writer About 30 retail merchants and business people who assembled last nigm witn a special Cham ber of Commerce parking com mittee gave their wholehearted backing to a model plan designed to keep shoppers in the downtown district. The plan was illustrated by means of a map and explained in detail hv Chamhw PmsiiHont flnr. don Randall. The map shows three locations termed suitable for prospective off-street parking areas, strategically spaced to ac commodate shopping motorists, plus the already existing city hall parking lot. If acquired. Ran- Home show tplans shaped by Bend Lions Lions at the Tuesday meeting shaped final plans for their an nual Home Show, to be held on May 9, 10 and 11 in the Oregon National Guard Armory. This will be the clubmen's second Home Show. i Work of readying the Armory jfor the show will start Monday, tvith a work crew to meet at the West Coffee Shop for a 7 a.m. breakfast before reporting to the Guard building to put up booths. The breakfast meeting originally was planned for the Superior Cafe. i Guest speaker at the luncheon ' tneeting was R. E. Jewell, Bend superintendent of schools, who re minded the Lions of the Monday, JMay 6, school election. Jewell reviewed the budget of approximately $2,000,000, which was adopted by a committee of 14 following eight weeks study. The superintendent reviewed (lie budget and mentioned the un expected school enrollment in crease this past fall. He said Nov. I, 1963, has been set as the date lor completion of the addition to the Senior High School and con struction of a new grade school. He expressed hope that the work will be completed prior to No vember 1. The school system faces some double-shifting in the early fall. Norman Whitney, program chairman, introduced Jewell. George Warrington, Lions' presi dent, beaded the meeting. Haiti-Dominican crisis has eased PORT - au PRINCE, Haiti (UPI) Haiti has agreed to the Dominican Republics demand that 22 political refugees in asy lum in the Dominican Embassy here be allowed to leave the country in safety, diplomatic tources said today. The decision by Haitian Presi dent Francois Duvalicr's govern ment appeared to ease further the crisis between Haiti and its neighbor republic on the Carib bean island of Hispaniola. It was communicated to Latin American diplomats as a five man team from the Organization of American States (OAS inves tigated Dominican charges that Haiti violated the embassy last Saturday while searching for op ponents of the Duvalier regime. Th; incident led Dominican President Juan Bosch to threaten the use of armed force unless Haiti withdrew a policeman from the embassy grounds and guaran teed the safety of Dominican dip lomats and the Haitian political refugees sheltered in the em bassy. Increase noted In building April building costs in Bend reached $244,280. an increase of $77,125 over the $167,155 April, '62 figure. .Most expensive single proj?ct . $140,000 for the new St. Jo seph conent at St. Charles Me morial Hospital. Total for miscel laneous construction in April was HTi.WO. A breakdown of building ex penses shows $59,000 spent tor new dwelling. SS.500 for dwelling alterations. $1,500 for new gar apes and $300 for noo-delling alterations. dall explained, these lots would make room for some 100 cars, thereby easing present parking problems considerably. In describing the need for addi tional off-street parking areas, Randall pointed to figures show ing substantial decline of shop ping traffic in downtown business districts of other cities. Portland, he said, is estimated to have lost 58 per cent of its downtown traf fic in the past seven years. Out of fear of a similar problem in Bend, the Chamber committee has been working steadily in search of a solution. Description Given Locations of lots described are the following: The present site of the Bancroft Hotel on Bond Street; the present Bond Street parking lot between Oregon and Minnesota, plus adjacent proper ty, and a tract between Brooks and Wall, from the edge of the Equitable Savings & Loan build ing to the Oregon Avenue line. A rough estimate of costs for acquisition, demolition, blacktop ping and decking of these proper ties was stated at $500,000. But it was pointed out the district would increase off-street parking facil ities by some 625 per cent if the lots are acquired. Core District An enclosed area on the map indicates the core business dis trict, bordered, roughly, by Ver mont Place on the north, the riv er on the west, the alley immedi ately east of Bond on the east, and Louisiana on the south. Sev eral possibilities for financing the proposed projects were discussed, but it is probable that all of the financial burden would fall on businessmen inside the district, according to assessed valuation and distance from- the proposed improvements. Randall made it clear to those present that the plan submitted Is merely a suggested one. He said Chamber committeemen had ex hausted themselves seeking park ing solutions, and were "begging" for ideas. First of three concerts Frt The first of a series of t h r e e spring music programs presented by Bend schools will be presented Friday night, with the elementary school orchestras, bands and choruses to appear in the Senior High School auditorium, at 8 p.m. Directors will be Sam McCoy, Marie Brosterhous and Joe Hau gen. The concert will start at 8 p.m. On May 10 at 8 p.m., also in the senior high auditorium, Junior High orchestras, bands, chorus and choirs will present a concert. Directors will be Joe Haugen. Earl Roarig. Bonnie Graves and Don Goodwin. Final of the three concerts will be on Tuesday night. May 14, in the auditorium, under the direc tion of Norman Whitney and Don Goodwin. This will be the Bend Senior High concert. Featured will be orchestras, band and choirs. More than 1.000 youngsters will take part in the three spring con certs. Lawmakers bury sales tax bill SALEM (VPI)-In an unexpect ed series of actions, the House to day stored its sales tax bill out of reach for the rest of this ses sion. The House voted 34-26 to 'post pone indefinitely" action on the measure. This means it cannot be brought up again. Youngsters study nature at first hand By Phil F. Brogan Bulletin Staff Writer CAMP TAMARACK Flakes whitened alpine trees bordering I Dark Lake early this morning to j create a Christmas atmosphere where some 80 Prineville sixth graders are participating in an experience unique in America an outdoor school project Last nicht, the youngsters and , their leaders, with Mrs. Efelyn Elkins as camp director, gather ed in the big Camp Tamarack hall in front of a fireplace, to : hear the story of their "back-1 yard" the snow . whitened Caa-1 Usual tirades missing By United Press International The Communist world flexed its military muscles to mark May Day today, but the speeches lacked the usual tirades against "Imperialism" and the United States. Focal point of the observance was Moscow, where Cuban Premi er Fidel Castro showed up as guest ot honor at the traditional Red Square parade. Castro was flanked by Premier I 7 If I i u t jr a i to " .. FIRST UNIT FINISHED The "Imperial 500," first trailer house off the Imperial Mobile Homes assembly line, is inspected by O. F. Kline, salesman for G. T. Wolfe Inc. and Paul Tobkin, Dinner held in honor -of Silkworth More than 50 persons were pres ent for a dinner at the Prineville Country Club Tuesday night hon oring George A. Silkworth, Bend, who is retiring as general agent for the SP & S Railway Company after 38 years of service. Presid ing at the dinner was Ed Wilson, Prineville lumberman. Succeeding Silkworth as gener al agent in Bend is G. E. "Skip" Skinner, who started with the company in 1938 in the account ing department. He comes to Bend from Portland, where he was chief clerk in the traffic depart ment since 1959. Skinner will be joined here later bv his wife, Eileen, and their son. Bill, 16. Silkworth started his railroad career in the local SP & S office in Portland in 1925. He was pro moted to traveling freight agent in Bend in 1947, and was named general agent here in 1953. Silkworth and his wife, Thel ma, plan to make their home in Bend for the present. Their son, George, a former naval officer, is a pharmacist in California. Present for the dinner in Prine ville last night were rail offic ials that included N. S. Wetergard, SP & S vice - president: R. A. LawTence, traffic manager and his assistant Earnest Block, and Arthur Kimmel. assistant North em Pacific traffic manager from Seattle. Wash. FEE BOOST VOTED SACRAMENTO (UPI) Out-of-state hunters would have to pay an extra $20 for California oeT tags, under a bill approved Tue day by the assembly fish and game committee. The measure would hike the non-resident fee for a set of two deer tags from $10 to $30. Thus, coupled with the $25 non-resident hunting license, an out-of-stater would have to pay $55 to shoot deer in California. The cost now is $35. cades. Traced for the students was the ancient story of the Cas cades: the manner great volcan oes built up on the Cascade sky line and the later sculpturing by glaciers. The youngsters were told that the basin of nearby Suttle Lake was gouged by a glacier, which dumped its terminal moraine in the valley to block the flow of Lake Creek and form the lake. Resource consultants from the U.S. Soil Conservation Service, the VS. Forest Sen-ice and the Oregon State Game Corrirnission are working with the youngsters. leis 'flex military Nikita Khrushchev and other So viet dignitaries atop Lenin's tomb. But the affair was boycot ted by American diplomats for the first time since Washington and Moscow established diplomatic re lations 30 years ago. Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Rodion Malinovsky said the dan ger of nuclear war with the Unit ed States still exists, but he made no threats. In East Berlin, the Communist V County Budget Committee studies 1963-64 expenses By I la S. Grant Bulletin Staff Writer The Deschutes County Budget Committee took a look at antici pated expenses for the 1963-64 fiscal year, at a three-and-a-half-hour meeting last night at the courthouse. Present were appoin tive members Priday Holmes, who was elected chairman, and Robert D. Whittier, both of Red mond, and county court members D. L. Penhollow, Fred Shepard and George Baker. John Sten kamp, Bend, last year's chair man, is the other appointive mem ber. Anticipated receipts have not yet been compiled to the point where it can be determined ex actly how much money the board will have to work with, but last year's levy of $389,704.15 can be increased to $413,106.40, to stay within the six per cent limita tion. The levy will certainly be in creased, probably the full amount allowed without a budget election, and it appears that some sharp pencils will be needed, to provide for several budget increases which have been recommended. Among these is a $5,000 capital outlay item, to go towards a new build ing at the Deschutes County Fair Grounds, Redmondv Increase Granted The amount for the County Planning Commission was tent atively increased from $2,500 to $3,500, to provide for a county de velopment program in coopera tion with the Bend and Redmond city planning commissions. The request was made because the commission feels the need for a planned program with profession al guidance, according to Don Conner, chairman. Less than $100 has been spent from the amount budgeted last year, and it is assumed there will be few additional expenses before the end of the current fiscal year, and most of the amount will be This morning, some of the stu dents were up at dawn, for a bird watch in the great tamaracks that crowd to the shore of Dark Lake, but the "rise and shine" call did not come until 6 45. Then followed a flag ceremony and breakfast Instructions in forestry, wild life, soil and water was to con tinue through the day. Field study, with trips into nearby areas keep the youngsters busy in the rnornings. There Is camp craft and recreation in the after noons. Each tveoing. the young people East Germans paraded Soviet rockets and goose-stepping troops in a display that defied four-power agreements demilitarizing the di vided city. Parade l Denounced The three Western military com mandants promptly denounced the East German parade, saying that it showed clearly to the whole world that "the Soviet zone re gime still remains the enemy of freedom." as-nsMV '"" . V as 2 r. i ifi) i3:l 2S general manager for Imperial. Driving Hyster is Ed Bennett, finish line foreman. Factory It located in Highway 97 industrial area, at 2561 E. Fourth Street, Eend. : returned to the general fund. Assessor Robert Lyons submit ted a preliminary budget of $72, 960, a $200 drop from last year's amount, and requested a salary increase from $6,200 to $7,200. A $12,000 item' for new calculating equipment brought up the total last year, and in its place this year is a request for $2,100 for a new automobile. Sheriff Forrest C. Sholcs asked for $38,805 for his office, includ ing a $1,400 salary increase, and $19,460 for the tax department, in cluding a $390 increase for mater ials and supplies, and a $1,400 in crease for equipment and furni ture. Superintendent eyes office move Plans of Deschutes County School Superintendent David Pot ter to move his office to Red mond were made known at last night's meeting of the County Budget Committee. The proposed budget includes a $900 item for the superintendent's office rent. Potter said today that plans are not yet definite, but that he needs more space, particularly for the county school film library which is being developed. He has three assistants in his office this year, and plans to raise the number to four next year. County Judge D. L. Penhollow said last right that. Potter had re quested the entire upper floor of the courthouse. His office now oc cupies space at one end of the floor. The judge .aid that the law does not specify that the superin tendent must have his office in the courthouse, but the county must provide either office space or rent. meet their teachers, to review the day's events. Then come the campfire and evening programs, such as the one held last night when the geological story of the area was traced. The first of three week-long ses sions started Monday. Only sixth graders take part in the school under the tamaracks, with na ture providing the textbooks for the dail studies. Cecil Sly. Crook County school superintendent who was instru mental in establishing the outdoor schooL assisted with pre-camp On the other side of the Com munists' antirefugee wall, West BerUners attended a rally in which they pledged to continue protecting their freedom. West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt said the Russian backdown in Cuba had taken the pressure off the city but a new Communist threat might crop up at any time. A carnival atmosphere existed in Peking, capital of Red China and rival of Moscow for leader First mobile home rolls ; ; off line here The first mobile home com pleted by Imperial Mobile Homes Inc., 2561 E. Fourth Street, went off the assembly line yesterday. It goes to Ideal Trailer Village, The Dalles, and will be displayed at the home show in that city next week. A similar Imperial unit will be seen at the home show in Bend, sponsored by the Lions Club, May 8, 9 and 10. It is expected that the plant will reach its full capacity of about 50 workers in another two weeks, according to Paul Tobkin, general manager. Manufacturing operations started April 22. with a crew of about two dozen, and half a dozen trailers, in various stages of construction, are on the assembly line. At top production, the plant will turn out two units a day, Tobkin said. All machinery has been install ed. Revamping of the entire manufacturing area and business offices has been completed, and arrangements are being com pleted for distribution through 25 dealerships in the Pacific North west. G. T. Wolfe Mobile Homes Inc., with headquarters in t h e building which also houses the manufacturing plant, is the sales organization. The first unit completed, is the "Imperial 500," a 50-foot two bedroom model. One and three bedroom units are also available. In addition to the 50-foot models, 55 and 60-foot units are offered. Exteriors are of 20-gauge p re painted aluminum, with windows cased in aluminum. Interiors are of wood paneling, with bathroom and kitchen fixtures available in a number of colors. Both electric and gas heating and cooking fa cilities are offered. This is the fifth plant of the or ganization, which grossed six mil lion dollars last year. The local outlet will have dealer represent ation in northern California, Ore gon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Utah. preparation. One of the features of the out door schools is a night hike in midweek, in which youngsters are acquainted with the sounds of the "little people" of the nocturnal woods, and are provided an op portunity of viewing the wheeling stars. R e g o II a r classroom work is combined with the forest lore studies. The outdoor school project which baa received nation wide attention, was pioneered by the Crook County school system. Castro honored observer muscles ship in the ideological struggle between Khrushchev's coexistence policy and Mao Tse-tung's hard line. The Red Chinese held massive celebrations and pledged that the Chinese people will do their best to strengthen "friendship and uni ty" with Russia. Chinese Show Contempt But the Peking Reds showed their contempt for Khrushchev by displaying a huge portrait of the Jackson skips ceremony at White House WASHINGTON (UPD A Ma rine captain ousted from the corps for the shooting and secret burial of a suspected Cuban spy has de cided against attending a White House reception for Medal of Honor winners for fear his pres ence would embarrass the Presi dent, it was announced today. The White House said, however, he would always be welcome there. Capt. Arthur J. Jackson, San Jose, Calif., said in a telegram to President Kennedy that his presence at the White House "at this time might possibly be an embarrassment to you." The tele gram was released today . by Pierre Salinger, White House press secretary. Jackson previously had accepted the invitation to the reception Thursday evening along with near ly 250 other Medal of Honor win ners. About 45 others previously declined invitations. "We respect his decision," Sal inger said. "Capt. Jackson and his wife will always be welccme at the White House." Jackson told Kennedy, "I have the highest regard for you and your office and sincerely hope you'U understand why we must decline your kindness. The tele gram ended "With deep regret Arthur J. Jackson." Jackson and three other Marine officers were reported to have been forced out of the sernce for their alleged part in the Castro spy incident in September, 1961, at Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba. Jackson's telegram was sent from Campbell, Calif., Tuesday. Until the White House announced this morning that it had received the telegram, it had been under stood that Jackson was coming Jackson, 38, is the father of five children. The reception for Medal of Hon or holders, to be held on the south lawn of the White House, is an annual affair. Jackson won the Medal of Honor College to host honor society conference here Central Oregon College on Tues day, May 14, will host the first conference of Central Oregon Hon or Socieities with Governor Mark O. Hatfield to be the principal speaker. The conference will be held at the Pilot Butte Inn from 8:45 a.m. to 4 p.m., with a prepa-ed box lunch to be held in Pioneer Park. A special program between 3 and 4 p.m. Is being arranged for principals, honor society advisers and guidance personnel of the area. Dr. Gerald Becker, Lewis and Clark College, will be the speaker. Dr. Orde S. Pinckney, COC dean of instruction, will deliver the keynote address setting the conference theme, "Excellence." The address of welcome will be by Vernon Crawford. COC honor student from Prineville, who will represent Phi Theta Kappa, na tional junior college honor society. Seven area high schools will be represented. DOW JOflES AVERAGES By United Press Internatienal Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 industrials 719 67, up HIT; 20 railroads 164.23. up 0.50; 15 utili ties 138.67, off 0.27, and 65 Hocks 254 40. op 0 41 Sales today were about S.l" million shares compared with 4 68 million shares Tuesday. late Josef Stalin alongside those of other saints of communism. Stalin has been downgraded and discredited by Khrushchev. Similar observances were held in Belgrade, Warsaw and other capitals of the Communist world. In Havana, an artillery salvo launched a four-hour military pa rade with an estimated 140,000 marchers, as Maj. Raul Castro substituted as the main attrac tion for his brother, Fidel. for bravery during retaking of the island of Peleliu from the Jap anese during World War II. Jackson, now a postman, has declined comment on the incident saying he signed a statement agreeing not to. But his wife said last Saturday that her husband was "thrown out" of the Marina Corps in connection with the kill ing of Ruben Lopez, a Cuban civilian worke- at Guantanamo. William A. Szili, a former Ma rine lieutenant who said he waa forced out of the service for tak ing part in the clandestine burial of the Cuban after Jackson al legedly shot him, said Saturday that he and Jackson were ousted without presentation of charges. Szili said Jackson, bis superior officer at tho time, caught Lopez, a bus driver, in a restricted pow der magazine area late at night He said he and Jackson sought to eject the Cuban from the base but that, while Szili was away, Lopez attacked Jackson and the captain shot the Cuban. Japanese say Red Chinese ship torpedoed TOKYO (UPD The Japanese Maritime Agency said today that it had been advised that a Com munist Chinese freighter was tor pedoed and sunk in the Yellow Sea between Korea and China. The vessel reported sunk waa the 11,432-ton freighter Leap For ward, which was en route from Tsingtao, China, to the port of Moji, on Japan's southernmost Is land of Kyushu. A spokesman for the Maritime Agency said a Japanese fishing boat had radioed that it picked up 29 members of the Chinese ship's crew. The Japanese boat's captain quoted the Chinese as saying the Leap Forward had been hit by three torpedoes. No other details of the reported sinking were available. The Leap Forward was the first Red Chinese freighter scheduled to visit Japan. It was carrying a cargo of maize and minerals under private trade contracts signed between Japan and Communist China. The Leap Forward was expect ed to visit other Japanese ports such as Kobe, Tokyo and Kawasa ki after it left Moji. Before the report of the torpedo ing, Japanese authorities had been deciding whether to permit the Leap Forward's crew to land. Bend woman in PTA race EUGENE (UPI) A motion calling for a statewide tax study in 1963-64 by the Oregon Congress of Parents and Teachers was ap proved Tuesday at the organiza tion's annual convention here. The motion was offered by Thomas L. Jacfcson, legislative chairman of the Benton County PTA Council. The goal is mora funds for education from source other than property taxes. A race developed for first vicsj presidency of the PTA betweta Mrs. Frank Hayner. Astoria, and Mrs. Albert Gassner, Bend. Pa suit were to be announced to night Other nominees, mdudinf; Mrs. Stephen Turell cl Portland for president, were mnpposed I