The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, May 14, 1963 S44 million budget for higher education voted by subcommittee SALEM (UPI) A $44 million higher education building program for 1963-65 was approved Monday by the Ways and Means Educa tion subcommittee part of it con tingent on voter approval of a bond issue. The subcommittee decided to ask voters next May to authorize $30 million in general obligation bonds for college instructional buildings. Only $12.5 million, how ever, would be authorized for 1963-65. The subcommittee also decided to go along with the building pri ority list of the Board of Higher Education. The decisions must be approved by the full Ways and Means Com mittee, the House, Senate and governor. Program Outlined Here is how the building pro gram approved by the subcom mittee looks: $11.5 million in general fund money to pay for projects 1-9 on the board's instructional building list. -412.5 million in bonds, contin gent on voter approval, to pay for projects 10-17. $10.5 million in already au thorized bonds for jelf-liquidating buildings such as dormitories. $9 5 million additional for self liquidating buildings. The Instructional projects, in order, are: Land purchases, re placement of Campbell Hall at Oregon College of Education, com pletion of educational and general plant at Oregon Technical Insti tute, Medical School heating plant, Oregon State University utility tunnel extensions. Library On List OSU library alterations, Port land State physical education building, Southern Oregon College classroom-laboratory- office build ing, Oregon College of Education classroom-laboratory- office build ing, Eastern Oregon College sci ence math building,. University of Oregon library ad dition, OSU pharmacy building ad dition, UO science building addi tion, OSU Cordley Hall addition. SOC physical education building addition, OCE library addition, medical school library addition. PSC library unit and alterations to existing library. The self-liquidating list includes projects at OSU, UO, OTI, OCE, PSC, SOC, and EOC. Several subcommittee members said they would prefer to use gen eral fund money instead of bonds, but noted the general fund is se verely pinched. Courtesy ticket plan approved Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE The city has given its permission to the Cham ber of Commerce for the use of courtesy stickers on out-of-town cars instead of parking tickets, during the tourist season. The attractively designed stick ers will be printed at chamber expense, and supplied to the po lice department as soon as pos sible, it was noted. In other city business of recent days, inquiring residents of small area at the west edge of wmevuie seeking annexation to the city were notified that those desiring annexation have three al ternatives. It was recommended to the in quirers that they secure a formal petition to present to the city. '63 RAMBLER AMERICAN 330 4 Dr. SEDAN $1995 HIMAC Fully equipped with radio, heater and overdrive Sticker Price 2358.55 Himac's Price 637 E. 3rd RAMBLER JEEP SALES Ph. 382-5511 MARV DACK Claims office opened in Bend Now in its fifth week as a Bend business operation is the Central Oregon Claims office, serving the region at 47 Oregon Avenue. The office, the company's third outlet, opened its doors on April 15 under ownership and supervi sion of Marv Dack, claims ad juster. Other offices in The Dalles and Longview, Wash, combine with the local branch as an inde pendent adjustment firm wliich handles multiple line claims. A 10-year insurance business veteran, Dack has made his home during the past eight years in The Dalles. Prior to joining the present firm he was associated as an adjustor with the General Insurance Business in Portland and later at The Dalles. A native Oregonian, he was born in Silver ton and educated at Linfield Col lege, McMinnville. Later he took an undergraduate degree at Gon zaga, Spokane, Wash., and enter ed the law school there. To facilitate the management of business negotiations, Dack flies his own single - engine airplane throughout the Pacific Northwest whenever necessary, and finds much enjoyment in flying as a hobby. The adjustor will be joined by his wife and four children in Bend at the end of the current school year, when they move here from The Dalles. SNEAKY SNAKE WICHITA. Kan. (UPI) Mrs. Margaret Mooney returned from grocery shopping Monday and found a two-foot snake in her re frigerator. She removed it with two largo butcher knives. The startled woman still is pondering how the snake got into the refrigerator. Copper fibers dumped into orbit in A. F. experiment WASHINGTON (UPI) Millions of tiny copper fibers were begin ning to disperse in a polar orbit around the earth Monday as part of a controversial Air Force com munications experiment. The Air Force announced Sun day that a canister containing the 400 million needles called dipole were dumped from a satellite launched Thursday from Point Ar guello, Calif. Radar sightings show the fibers, each about one-third the diameter of a human hair, are beginning to spread. They are expected to fan out into a narrow ring about the earth taking several months to complete the circle 40.000 miles in circumference and about 2,000 miles high. The belt will be used to bounce radio signals back to earth over great distances. The Air Force said the dipole belt is practically invulnerable to physical damage and is especially useful in long distance microwave communica tions. Some scientists have opposed the experiment saying it would clutter space with trash and im- Sex bills go to Governor SALEM (UPD-The first two of six sex offender bills were sent to the governor's desk Monday. The measures cleared the leg islature when the House concurred in Senate amendments to bills providing enhanced penalties for sex offenders and stiffening laws against "peeping toms." A third bill, involving jurisdic tion over sex offense cases where the parties include children under i6, went to a conference commit tee to iron out House-Senate dif ferences. Two more bills on juvenile jurisdiction and civil commitment of sexually dangerous persons have cleared the House and are in Senate committees. The sixth, providing for central reporting of all sex offenses, is being redrafted in the House Judi ciary Committee. The House passed a $32.7 mil lion budget for the state's mental health division including Oregon State hospital, Dammasch, Fair- view Home, Mid-Columbia, East ern Oregon State Hospital, and Mental health clinics. Rep. Stafford Hansell, R - Her- miston, said the Ways and Means Committee cut the governor's proposed budget by a not $262,125 to reflect a decline in patient population at tlie State Hospital, Here's a new reason why the sign of WcpfyMfouHf is America's First Choice: Now Hnmble brings you a new multi-grade motor oU that exceeds by far the toughest . New UNIFLO, the .uura , cvcrjr tar manuiaciurer ior au recommended oil-change periods . . . V extended Life oil. NewEnco UNIFLO e)(tended-ife motor oil exceeds ' " in ill ii in i mximiteiMt i,.wiiiaSiKii2S5) New UNIFLO protects your engine better and longer. On long hard trips, it gives you lasting protection. In stop-and-go driving, it helps prevent wear, and the rust and harmful deposits that age an engine. all car makers' requirements for longer protection pair observations of the stars and planets with telescopes. Astronomers also fear the fibers might reflect back to earth a con fusing jumble of radio signals that ordinarly might pass into space. Dubbed the west Ford Project, the experiment is being conducted for the Air Force by the Lincoln Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Information on the experiment is being distributed internationally to help world optical and radio astronomers in making independ ent observations. The Air Force said it hoped some observations could be made of the needles by a worldwide camera network oper ated by the Smithsonian Astro physical Observatory. The Air Force previously tried a similar experiment using 75 pounds of the needles but was un successful when they apparently failed to spread into orbit. Fifty pounds were used in the new ex periment. The dipole fibers are expected to disappear within five years as radiation pressure from sunlight forces them down into altitudes of greater atmospheric density where they will burn up. Marketing group announces sale The Central Oregon Livestock Marketing Association announces the sale of their wool pool at 55.8c per pound. The sale was made to the Portland Hide and Wool Com pany, Portland, reports Gus Woods, Crook County Extension Agent, who is secretary for the pool. Lamb wool brought 41c per pound, black wool 40c, and tags 16c. Wool sold through the pool comes from sheep raisers in the Central Oregon area. The Livestock Association will start their lamb pool shipments late in June. Shipments will be made once a week for a period of several weeks. Pooled Iambs are sold at the Portland Union Stockyards market. Sheep owners in Deschutes County interested in selling lambs through the pool can leave their names at the County Extension Office, Redmond, re ports R. H. Sterling, County Ex tension Agent. Wah Chang may sell interest to N.Y. firms ALBANY. Ore. (UPI) Wah Chang Corp. was reported today to be in advanced negotiations with two New York companies to take financial interest and partici pate in Wah Chang's manage ment. Reliable sources in New York reported that Wah Chang's nego tiations are establishing "close cooperation" with W. R. Grace and Co. and Newmont Mining Corp. both of New York. Under an agreement which has already been approved by the boards of directors of the three companies, the sources indicated, Grace and Newmont would take a financial interest in Wah Chang and participate in its manage ment. Steven Yih, vice president of the Wah Chang Corp., declined comment. In addition to its plant in Al bany, Wah Chang, a leading smelter refiner, operates the only tin smelter on the North Ameri can continent in Texas City, Tex., and manufacturing facilities in Glen Cove, Long Island and in Huntsville, Ala. W. R. Grace and Co. is one of the largest chemical concerns in the United States and has diversi fied interests in domestic and in ternational manufacturing, ship ping and trading. Newmont Mining Corp. is a managing and holding organiza tion with substantial world-wide interests in mining companies, oil and recently the cement industry. Temperatures Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT to day. High Low Bend 62 30 Astoria 64 41 Baker 60 34 Brookings 60 41 K. Falls 56 35 Medford 6S 40 Newport 59 40 N. Bend 63 44 Pendleton 68 45 Portland 68 41 Redmond 64 33 Salem 68 39 The Dalles 74 43 Chicago 79 58 Los Angeles 75 56 New York 67 50 Railroads study merger plan NEW YORK (UPI) Agree ment has been reached by the managements of the Union Pa cific Railroad and the Chicago Rock Island & Pacific Railroad on terms for a merger of the two roads, it was announced Monday. The terms of the agreement al so prov ide that if the merger pro posal is consummated the South ern Pacific will acquire Rock Is land lines south and southwest of Kansas City "at a price to be determined on final conclusion of engineering studies now under way," the joint announcement by the three roads said. The three-way proposal, the an nouncement said, will be present ed "shortly" for approval by the boards of directors, and later by stockholders, of the Union Pacific and the Rock Island. If the plan clears these hurdles, the three lines will then seek authority from the Interstate Commerce Commission to put the arrange ment into effect. A merger of the Union Pacific and the Rock Island would give the Union Pacific its direct track age into Chicago from Omaha and Kansas City. In turn, it would provide the Rock Island with fi nancial resources to make needed equipment and property improve ments. Officials of the three railroads declined to speculate as to when the commission might approve the merger. They said the Union Pacific and Rock Island would call special meetings of their stockholders "at an early date." The proposed merger calls for the Union Pacific to exchange .718 of an authorized but unissued com mon share of its stock for each common share of Rock Island stock. The announcement did not disclose how much the Southern Pacific would pay for the Rock Is land properties. Union Pacific now has 22,429,235 common shares outstanding and Rock Island has 2,916.711 shares outstanding. The announcement said the three railroads contem plate that "this will be a tax free merger." BRANDO LEAVES HOSPITAL SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UPI) Actor Marlon Brando was re cuperating at home today from an apparent virus attack. Brando Monday left St. John's Hospital where he was taken last Friday when he was suddenly tak en ill on the movie set of "King of the Mountain." WATCH FOR IT! Biggest photographic news of the year . . . coming to THE OWL THIS WEEK THE 0L0 CROW DISTILLERY CO. FRANKFORT, XV. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY ( So change to new UNIFLO, the extended Life oil that sets a new standard of value. New UNIFLO leads a new family of quality oils for every ear and budget. Your Enco dealer has them now. HUMBLE OIL 4 RE5ININ3 COMPANY ..America's Leading Nergy company mini R LOOK! 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