1 'Jnlv. of Oregon Library EU'JSMS, OREGON rees to provide Ccamiada nuclear vcarHeoHs See story, Col. 5 Bulletin Fair through Saturday in Cen- J ForGCQt ,ra' Oregon 4nc' generally over ' i victual l(a(t Hig(u jn Btnd g7M; lowi, around 40-45. High yesterday, 82 degrees. Low last night, 41 degree:. Sunset Mi MnJ - today, 1:01. Sunrise tomorrow, " ' IV PDT. SERVING BEND AND CENTRAL OREGON 60th Year Ten Pages Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, Friday, August 16, 1963 Ten Cents No. 214 U.S. og FlFfTIR agree m pM satellite program RAZED BY FLAMES Burned-out hull of Severance Building, Prineville, occupied by Kresse Motor Ct., tells story of Thurs- fire, which charred four cars and disabled 1500 pairs of day Venezuelan ''dictator loses tilth hour bid wires on pole behind nearby Pacific Northwest Bell building. Telephone service was expected to be near normal by noon today. (Bulletin photo by Jack Turner) wmmMwmmmsm Prineville JO Jonger isolated tmjamanmtamaaun Phone service restored ' MIAMI, Fla. (UPI Former Venezuelan dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez, 49, lost an 11th hour legal battle against extradition to day and was flown to his home land to face charges he looted the national treasury of S13.5 mil lion. Two last-minute appeals, to the Supreme Court in Washington and In state courts in Florida, failed to delay the hour that Perez had fought with all his millions lor our years. A white Avensa airliner took off from the Miami International Air port bound for Caracas where Perez must stand trial. His attorneys argued that his return meant "certain death." The final attempts to stay the extradition through state courts delayed the formal delivery of Perez to Venezuelan authorities for more than 45 minutes. Shortly after 11 a.m. EDT, Su preme Court Justice Arthur Gold berg cut away iour years ui i--s" entanglements in Washington D.C. by rejecting a final appeal for a stay of extradition from Perez's attorneys Special to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE Prineville was back in contact with outside points last night, after being isolated all afternoon and part of the evening, as the result of a fire that de stroyed a business building and disabled telephone communica tion. The interior of the Kresse Motor Co. building at Second and Bea ver Streets, owned by Harry F. Severance, was reduced to rub ble. Several automobiles, there for repairs, were destroyed. There was no estimate today of the damage, but it was reported that the building and contents are covered by insurance. Cables from the adjacent build ing occupied by Pacific Northwest Bell ceased to function when a pole beside the Kresse building burned. About half the local lines and all long-distance ones were out. Part of the service was re stored around noon yesterday, and by 6 p.m., most long-distance tolls were in operation. Telephone service was expect ed to be back to normal by noon today. Cable splicers and other technicians, many flown to Prine ville by the telephone company, worked through the night, under brilliant flood lights. Repairmen came from Port land, Pendleton, The Dalles and other points, with R. W. Cook, Pendleton, district plant manager, in charge. Fourteen men were brought from Bend. The fire affected 1400 local sta tions, with the towns of Mitchell, Spray and Paulina completely without service for a time. Es sential services were the first re stored. The flash fire started in the gar age, where a welder was working. A spark from the welding equip ment was believed to have ig nited a gas tank, and flames spread at a furious pace. Flames leaping high in the air were visible from outlying resi dential areas and a vast column of smoke poured skyward with in moments after the fire alarm sounded. The fire in the concrete block structure burned with such intensity that it held firemen at bay in the streets for nearly half an hour. Walter Kresse. owner of the bus iness, said that employes had been able to remove three new cars on the showroom floor and several other vehicles. Four cars in the garage could not be moved, according to a mechanic. Joint control plan reported by Pearson OTTAWA (UPI) Prime Min ister Lester B. Pearson today an nounced an agreement with the United States to give Canada nu clear warheads under "joint con trol" with "satisfactory" protec tion for Canada's national inter ests. Pearson announced the general terms of the warheads agree ment in a prepared statement. He and External Affairs Minis ter Paul Martin planned to elaborate on it at a news con ference. On the Important subject of con trol, he said the warheads would remain In U. S. custody after the stockpiles are established for Bo- marc missile bases and voodoo interceptors in Canada, and Hon est John artillery rockets and Starfighter strike - reconnaissance aircraft under NATO control in Europe. Provision was made lor tne most strineent safety measures" at all times, he said, and the warheads cannot be used "op erationally without the authoriza tion ot the Canadian govern ment." "Joint control is thus assured," he said. He said small units of United States custodial personnel will be stationed at the Canadian storage sites, but the bases themselves "will of - course remain under Canadian command and control." With custody remaining with the U. S.. the arrangement "does not add to the number of gov ernments having nuclear weap ons at their Independent dispos al," Pearson said. These arrangements "satisfac torily protect Canada s national interests and conform with the position Canada has taken inter nationally on the non-dissemina tion of nuclear weapons, ne saia. 186 vote margin Hospital proposal passes at Redmond Speelel to The Bulletin REDMOND On its second time around, Central Oregon Dis trict Hospital's $390,000 bond pro posal was approved Thursday by a margin of 186 votes. Yes votes numbered 520; no's, 334. The 854 who cast their ballots represented an especially large turnout for this type of election Redmond. The proposal was defeated in March by a margin of votes, a total of 556 casting ballots. The board of directors and hos pital administration have ex pressed their appreciation to the many organizations and individ uals who have assisted in the past few weeks. Work will begin immediately on preparation for the sale of bonds and letting of bids on the new hospital wing and modernization of present facilities. Joseph H. Rudd of Portland Is the architect in charge. The construction project will consolidate the maternity depart ment into one unit; provide a com plete pediatric section; provide surgical recovery rooms, a minor surgery room, a conference room, office for the director of nurses, a mental unit, a physical therapy unit and more bed space. Included in the cost will be a new addition covering 13,513 square feet, and remodeling of 1739 square feet of the existing structure. The new wing is expected to be ready for use nine months aft er groundbreaking, according to Fred Baer, hospital administra tor. Total value of the present plant and equipment is in excess of one million dollars, according to the i 1962 audit. The payroll of 84 per sons, most of them women, is ex pected to be Increased to about 1 92, when the construction is com- I pleted. . Goldwater says Gen. LeMay's testimony indicates Very grave reservations' over test ban treaty WASHINGTON (UPI) Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, Air Force chief of staff, lined up with other mil- In Miami. U.S. ollicials moveu i ,tary cnieis looay in quaiuieu eii swiftlv to end 248 days more I dorsement of the limited nuclear than eight monws in a iesi can ueaiy. Sen. Barry Goldwater, K-Ariz., said LeMay expressed "very grave reservations" about the agreement during closed testi mony before a Senate prepared ness subcommittee, but told sena tors he felt it should be ratified. LeMay's official position, Gold- water said, was one of support for the position taken by other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff favoring Senate ratification. That position had been previously outlined by Gen. Maxwell D. Tay lor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs. ,u fnr thp moon-laced u"" American who rose quickly, through army officer ranks to rule Venezuela with an iron hand for six years. Burglar hits Shoop & Schuize A safe thief got into the Shoop J, Schuize Tire Service building early this morning and made off with nearly $150 in cash plus a $20 check. The prowler gained entrance through a sliding door at the south side by loosening the inside hasp screws with a wrecking bar or similar Implement. From the up stairs safe he took a metal box containing approximately $50. a canvas bag with $38.67 and a sin- Investigating police said that j neither the combination dial nor the Iockina arm of the safe was damaged. Two office girls gold an officer they were certain the safe had been locked before closing time Thursday. No fingerprints were found on the safe or in the area. A close check of the building showed that the prowler also had made ef forts to enter a storeroom door, buv failed. acc Gun wounds ident man A visiting Newberg man is in St. Charles Memorial Hospital re ceiving treatment for a self-inflicted gunshot wound he suffer ed as a camper in Shevlin Park, Dolice said today. Jim jicKinley, T). loia oincers he shot himself in the left thigh late Thursday evening while at tempting to break open a 25-cal-iber automatic pistoL The bullet erazed his left hand and enter ed his thigh about hip leveL He said the weapon discharged when he oressed the release button. MrKinlev brought himself to the hospital by car. No report of his condition was immediately avail able. Goldwater told newsmen, how ever, that he had yet to sense "any enthusiasm for the treaty" by military leaders. "I just don't think the military has their heart in this," he said. In connection with military lead ers' views on a test ban, Secre tary of State Dean Rusk was questioned at a news conference today whether there still were dif ferences within the administration whereby the chiefs were opposed to a complete test ban. This would prohibit underground tests as well as those in the air, space and underwater as con tained in the partial treaty. Rusk replied that he felt Presi dent Kennedy had resolved this dispute in favor of a policy of striving for an overall ban. But Rusk saw little chance of any im minent agreement by Russia to this because of Soviet resistance to Western insistence for on-site inspection to assure compliance with a pact to ban below-ground tests. While LeMay testified before the preparedness subcommittee, John A. McCone. director of Cen tral Intelligence (CIA) also ap peared for closed testimony be fore three other Senate groups conducting hearings on the treaty. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee heard McCone with senators from the armed services committee and the Joint Atom Energy Committee sitting in. Prior to McCone's testimony, chairmen of all three committees assessed the testimony to date as effective and persuasive. Their comments suggested that the treaty has gained Senate strength in the first week of hearings on its ratification. Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D- Ark., of the Senate Foreign Re lations Committee, said Taylor and other administration witness es "have presented a very effec- tive case for the treaty" in the hearings to date. Chairman Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., of the Armed Services Committee, agreed in a separate interview that "they make a very strong case." Russell, who has not committed himself to support the treaty, said he was impressed by the fact that Taylor and Sec retary of State Dean Rusk can didly "recognized the military disadvantages" of t h e proposed test ban and contended that those Russians urged to withdraw trooDs in UuDa WASHINGTON (UPI) - Secre tary of State Dean Rusk said to day Russia could make a "very helpful contribution" to overall improvement in U.S.-Soviet rela tions by completely withdrawing its military personel from Cuba. Rusk did not appear, however, to make this a condition for East West talks to follow up the limited nuclear test ban treaty with other tension-easing agree ments. Rusk told a news conference he had discussed the matter of Rus sian troops in Cuba with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko during recent Moscow test ban talks and expressed continuing U.S. concern. The secretary declined to say what Gromyko s reply was or give any indication whether he thought a reduction in Soviet troops on the Communist island is a possibility. Rusk, In his first news confer ence since the Moscow talks which brought agreement on the test ban, said he does not fore see now prospects of any "across- the-board" settlement of the broad range of U.S.-Soviet dis putes. But he said his talks with the Russians have led him to believe it is now "worthwhile" to explore disadvantages were outweighed with the Soviets soma isolated by prospects of reduced world subjects on wnicn runner agree- tensions. ments might be reached. Genera Powell nominated for ' ambassador role A formor member of The Bul letin H, Gen. Herbert P. Powell, hat been nominated by President Kennedy to serve as ambassador to Nv Zealand. Gen. Powell, 40, Is a native of Monmouth, and was chief of the U.S. Continental Army Com mand before retiring from mili tary service lata in 1942. A graduate from the Univer sity of Oregon, Powell was a member of Tha Bulletin's news staff for a tima in 1726, before receiving an Army commission as second lieutenant. He contin ued his Army career through World War II, to become com manding general of tha U.S. Continental Army Command. On his formal retirement, at a ceremony held at Port Mon roe, Va., General Powell receiv ed a salute from President Kennedy. leen-agers taunt police, 71 arrested By United Press International Teen-age civil rights demonstra tors taunted police at an Eliza beth, N.J. construction site today and at least 71 were arrested. The demonstrators were picket- ine a Union County courthouse annex project. Some squatted in the streets, others chained them selves to trucks, to a police bar ricade and to each other. Police used wire cutters on the chains and police director Wil liam Mulkeen told the pickets, You are endangering the uves and limbs of the public and the Police Department will not toler ate it." Those arrested were taken to police headquarters in a fleet of patrol cars. In Chicago, lour wmie men faced charges of assault and re sisting arrest for battling police when officers tried to question them about attempts to bunt mo bile classrooms on Chicago's South Side. Judge Joseph E. Fleming's in junction named the National As sociation for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the NAACP Youth Council. Conservatives win, but only by small margin STRATFORD- ON - AVON, Eng land (UPD Prime Minister Har old - Macmillan's Conservat i v e party was rocked anew today by the results of an election to fill the parliamentary seat vacated by disgraced War Minister John Profumo. The Conservative candid ate won Thursday's by-election, but the margin was so small the op position claimed a moral vic tory." The results appeared to forecast further trouble for Mac millan whose government was nearly toppled last month by the repercussions from the Profumo scandal. Conservative candidate Angus Maude, a 50-year-old journalist, was the victor as expected in this Tory stronghold, but his majority was so much less than his party s margin in the last election that the opposition Labor party claimed a "moral victory." Observers had regarded the Stratford-On-Avon by-clcction the toughest public test for Macmillan since the Profumo scandal shocked the nation earlier this summer and nearly toppled his Conservative government. The observers had predicted that a significant drop in the Con servative majority compared to Profumo's 14,129 margin in 1959 would indicate serious public con cern over the scandal and would spell grave problems for the prime minister and his party. An announcement at noon of the results of Thursday's ballot ing gave Maude 15,846 votes, fol lowed by 12,376 lor Laoonte An drew Faulds, 40. a bearded Shakespearean actor. The 3,470 majority for Maude was far be low that of former War Minister Profumo in the 1959 general election. The Liberal party candidate, Derick Mirfin, 33, was third with 7,622 votes. DOW JONES AVERAGES Dow Jones final stock averages 30 industrials 719.32, up 0.77; 20 railroads 176.31, up 2.95; 15 utili ties 144.03, up 0.14, and 65 stocks 260.37. ud 1.25. Sales today were about 4.13 mil lion shares compared with 4.96 million shares Thursday. Nations plan limited space cooperation WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States and Russia today announced final approval of a joint program of experiments with weather and communication satellites starting next year. The two nations also agreed to contribute satellite information to a world magnetic survey to be made in 1965. The U.S.-Russia agreement for limited cooperation in space was reached at Geneva in June, 1962. The program given final approval today was worked out at Rome last March and In Geneva in May. The experiments with weatlier satellites will result in the ex change of information and cloud pictures by means of a full time, four-wire telecommunication link between Washington and Moscow. Early in 1964 This link is to be established by early 1964 and probably will jbe routed from Washington to (Moscow by way of New York, ! London or Paris, Berlin and Poland. Both nations will launch satel lites for use in the space weather observation program. The experiment in satellite communications will be conducted with an Echo II to be launched this country In 1964. Echo U will be a shiny 135 foot 'Sphere which will be used as a banking board for radio signals., Since Echo IL to be launched in a near polar orbit, will not be in line of sight the same time between United States and Rus sia, exchanges will be made with the help of Great Britain's Jod rell Bank Radioastronomy Ob servatory at Manchester. Jodrell Relay Communications will be sent from the United States to Jodrell by cable or radio and Jodrell will relay them to Russia by the Echo II satellite. These experiments, too, will begin next year. The two nations will each launch a special satellite equipped to measure Uie earth's magnetic field. This information will sup plement various other ground, sea and air measurements to be un dertaken internationally during the world magnetic survey to be conducted in 1965. Nehru says Communist China massing for possible new attack against India NEW DELHI, India (UPI) Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru said today that Communist Chi nese troops were massing along the border for a possible new at tack on India. Nehru said the strength of the Chinese forces is greater than at the time of the Communist inva sion last October. He added the Chinese were constructing new gun emplacements, air strips, storage dumps sjnd roads in the region of the military buildup. He told Parliament India must intensify its defense preparations to resist any further threat to its territorial integrity. Relations between India and Communist China, the two biggest powers of Asia, have been tense since last autumn when armies of the two countries battled along their common border. The Indian government charged the Peking regime with outright invasion. After several weeks of confron tation, the fighting stopped and Peking announced a ceasefire on Nov. 21 and a withdrawal of its forces back from the battle line, starting Dec. 1. While there has been no more fighting, there have been frequent infiltrations across the frontier. Neutral attempts to negotiate a settlement of the border dispute have been unsuccessful. Nehru, speaking in a parlia mentary debate today on foreign affairs, said "the strength of the Chinese forces along our borders today is larger than what it was at the time of tht unprovoked massive attack In October, 1962: "Apart from this augmentation of Chinese fosres, a further de velopment has been the forward movement of these troops to camps and strong points nearer the Indian border than they were last October," he added. Appeal issued by Buddhists SAIGON South Viet Nam (UPI) South Viet Nam's Buddhists ap pealed to President Kennedy and other Free World leaders today to intervene in the bloody dispute with the government of President Ngo Dinh Diem. The appeal was contained in cables filed at the government post office in Saigon for trans mission. It followed the fifth sui cide by fire of a Buddhist priest or nun to protest alleged govern ment discrimination. The latest fiery victim was a 71-year-old Buddhist priest in the provincial city ot Hue, 400 muos north of Saigon. He doused his yellow robes with gasoline and set fire to them with a match. Three other Buddhist priests and a nun have died similarly in recent weeks. Young escapee drowns in lake STEILACOOM, Wash. (UPI) Steven Scott, 16, an escapee from Western State Hospital here, drowned in Lake Steilacoom Thursday as he attempted to swim away from hospital attendants who were chasing him. A young girl, also an escapee, swam out into the lake with Scott but she managed to reach the oth er side safely. She later turned herself in at the hospital. PRESIDENT NAMED PORTLAND (UPD Dot W. Montgomery of Celine, Ohio, was elected president of the National Association of Mututual Insuran.a Companies during the closing ses sion of its annual convetion hem