c Deterrent weapons Only for retaliation U. NORTON AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (UPI) The Air Force disclosed today it now has 500 operational intercontinental bal listic missiles within the United States all armed with nuclear warheads and aimed at "a specific target." But it emphasized that these missiles are deterrent weapons to be used only for retaliation in the event of an enemy nu clear attack on the U.S. "They are purely defensive," stressed Col. Arthur Snowden, a spokes man for the Air Force's Ballis tic Systems Division (BSD) here. Some light snow flurries; ForCCQSt cloudy through Tuesday. High temperature, around 35 to 40; low, 15 to 25. 61st Year Frank Studebaker to shut down U.S. plants DETROIT (UPI)-Studebaker Corp. wil1 shut down its U. S. automotive assembly lines Tues day, ending more than 61 years as a major automotive produc er, it was learned today. However, there were indica tions Studebaker would continue car production in Canada and market the cars in the United States. The company is not dead. Studebaker recently has lost money on its automotive opera tion but 12 other divisions are operating at a profit, company sources said. They will con tinue. Studebaker President Byers A. Burlingame and top com pany officials were in New York today for a Board meet ing. Meets With UAW The executives met in South Bend, Ind., with United Auto Workers union officials over the weekend to discuss the fate of about 5,000 workers who will lose their jobs as a result of the move. Burlingame was expected to announce the demise of Stude baker's auto operations Tues day. The company has a rich transportation history that traces its roots all the way to covered wagon days. Burlingame was unavailable for comment in New York as were other top executives in South Bend. However, reliable sources here said the announce ment would be made in New York Tuesday. The demise of Studebaker will reduce to four the number of major auto firms General Mo tors, Ford, Chrysler and Ameri can Motors. The automotive division of the company has been a money loser since 1959. That was its best year when it got the jump on the rest of the industry with a compact car and the corpora tion earned $28.5 million. However, Burlingame, in his first statement of policy since taking over the company, said arly this month the other 12 divisions of the highly diversi fied corporation are operating at a profit this year. Pellets strike boy in face A rharcw nf 7V4 shot from a 20 gauge shotgun struck a boy hunting in the Cloverdale area, northeast of Sisters, Sunday afternoon, with four pellets hit iinrt tVtA vnuncTctpr In the face. Taken to the Redmond Dis trict Hospital was Tygh Red fioiH 13 nf Osm Investieat ing Oregon State Police said the boy was tne vicum oi an accidental discharge of a shot gun held by his father, Scott Redfield, Jr., Oswego. One of the pellets struck the boy in the right eyeball. Father and son were hunting quail in the Cloverdale area, early in the afternoon, when the accident occurred. Oregon State Police were notified of the accident at 3 p.m. BOW JONES AVERAGES By United Prist International Dow Jones final stock aver ages: 30 industrials 759.08. off 1.17; 20 railroads ,173.66. up 0 23; 15 utilities 137.04, up 0.24, and 65 stocks 265.00, off 0.07. S. has By the first of the year the number of these rockets will swell to 550, and to "well over 600" by mid-1964. All of these missiles which include Atlas, Titan and Minute man are capable of hitting and devastating any possible enemy target. Although the military and government cautiously refuse to identify "the specific target," it is commonly known to be the Soviet Union. "What was a serious race be tween the U.S. and Russia a few years ago now has turned heavily in favor of this country Twelve Pages SiraEra ko DR. ORDE S. PINCKNEY Heeds junior college group Pinckney named president of , NW association Dr. Orde S. Pinckney, Central Oregon College dean of instruc tion, was elected president of the Northwest Association ot Junior Colleges at the annual meeting held in Reno, Nev. Dr. Pinckney, whose term will run through 1964, will head the or ganization composed of 47 jun ior and community colleges from Oregon, Washington, Ida ho, Montana, Utah, Nevada, Alaska, and Canada. At the time of his election, the Central Oregon College Dean was serving as chairman of the association's committee on Honors and Advanced Place ment. Dr. Pinckney was accompan ied to the meeting by Dr. Don Pence, COC president. While attending the meeting Pence and Pinckney conferred with officers of the Committee on Higher Education on plans to make application to start the process leading to accreditation for Central Oregon College. Kiwanis auction brings in $2400, clubmen report Bend Kiwanians were busy this morning totaling up their proceeds in a highly successful second annual radio - telephone auction this past weekend. Cort Hackett, chairman of the event, reported that it was in dicated that approximately $2, 400 was realized in the sale of the more than 300 items offered for auction. Because of the heavy Influx of bidding in the final afternoon of the sale Saturday, the club extended the sale beyond the radio cut-off time, with bids handled from the floor and by phone. Hackett emphasized that items were sold in each case to high bidders, with phone calls made to those who had placed bids before the radio phase of the sale ended. FIRST STEP CORFE MULLEN, England (UPI) Father Bernard Basset, a Jesuit pnest, spoke in an An' lican church Sunday night and told the congregation it would be a long time before the Chris tian faiths are united. "If I were an Anglican," the Roman Catholic priest said, "I would be suspicious ot being sucked into the Pope's control. We feel the same about you. The Anglic vicar, the Rev. William Rodda, said later that the Jesuit's ftrmon Was a "Jfi'st step to mutitsi mde&, standing." 1 5 as far as the number of mis siles is concerned," said Snow den, who is in charge of BSD plans and policy. BDS is the headquarters man agement agency for all of the nation's ICBM's. Snowden said that Minuteman "instant ICBM" missiles are in mass production and are being put into underground silos at the rate of one a day. He said that by the late 1960s the U.S. will have 900 operational Minuteman poised in firing position. Another leader in the space missile field, Maj. Gen. W. Aus tin Davis who is the BSD com ruiE Pan-Am jet crash takes lives ot 81 ELKTON, Md. (UPI)-A Pan American World Airways jet liner en route from Puerto Rico to Philadelphia crashed in flames Sunday night, apparent ly during a thunderstorm, bringing fiery death to 81 per sons. About two dozen policemen and a like number of sailors moved out with the first light of dawn today to pick up the remains of the 73 passengers and 8 crewmen from the frost-cov ered cornfield where the Boeing 707 crashed-at 8:28 p.m. -EST. It was at this precise moment Sunday night that the plane's pilot radioed the Philadelphia control tower: "We're going down in flames." Lightning Reported Numerous eyewitnesses In sisted they saw lightning strike the plane or flash near it, fol lowed by at least one and pos sibly two in-the-air explosions. But, investigators said, if it were lightning that destroyed the plane, it was a l-in-10 mil lion shot. The giant plane began Its flight in San Juan, P.R. with 144 persons aboard, according to the airline. It discharged 71 persons in Baltimore and left for Philadelphia with 73 passen gers and the crew of 8 aboard. it was eany toaay oeiore ran American was able to set the death toll precisely at 81, final ly confirming that the 48-day-old infant daughter of Mrs. Carmen Davila of Philadelphia, one of the victims, perished with the mother. Holding Pattern While the big four-engine jet was en route northward, the FAA air traffic control center ordered it into a circling hold ing pattern over New Castle, Del., to await the final ap proach clearance it never re ceived. The jet feu in a cornfield near the Maryland-Delaware state line, missing a suburban home by 100 feet. Part of the wreckage dug a shell-like crat er 15 feet wide and six feet deep in a two-lane macadam road next to the corntieid. rne U.S. Weather Bureau said a thunderstorm accompanied by lightning, thunder and heavy rain swept the Wilmington, Del., area shortly after the crash. CAB Investigating The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) took over the investiga tion, aided by representatives of the airline, Boeing Co., the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) and the Air Line Pilots Association. FBI agents also were present to aid in victim identification as well as inves tigating any possibility of sabo tage. But weather, not sabotage, appeared to offer the most ob vious clues to the crash which ruined what was shaping up as the second safest year in the history of the nation s sched uled airlines. Until Sunday night's disaster, the passenger fatality rate since the beginning of the year stood at 0.09 per loo million miles of flight a safety rec ord exceeded only by the 0.07 rate achieved in 1954. The CAB'S accident files con tain no previous case in which lightning itself has destroyed a modem metal airliner. ICBAA s aimed, ready to mandertold United Press In ternational: "We are going to have a tre mendous missile force in the field in the near future. One of our follow-on efforts will be to field weapons as fast as we can build and develop them." But Davis pointed out that this country's big lead in the num ber of missiles does not mean an end to all aspects of the missile race. The Air Force acknowledges that a new rivalry has emerged between the world's two might iest powers. Both nations now are waging a race to develop Bulletin SERVING BEND AND Monday, December 9, 1963 kidnaped! from ITahoe ow i t . & . ..... I ' s' - ; - -. ' ... 4 .V i CHRISTMAS WEATHERI Children were delighted with the winter wonderland that greeted them this morning. Rene Westcott, 6, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken Westcott of 1576 Awbrey Road, has cold-weather fun by making first snowball of the season. Nikita tells crash plan on chemicals MOSCOW (UPI)-Premier Ni kita S. Khrushchev today an nounced an "unprecedented" plan aimed at more than trip ling development of the Soviet chemical industry in the next seven years in a crash program to boost Russia's farm and in dustrial production. The program, under which 200 new chemical plants are to be built and over 500 existing ones reconstructed at an ex pense of about $46 billion, was outlined by Khrushchev to a plenary meeting of the Commu nist party Central Committee. Khrushchev also told the as sembled Communist party leadership that two of his pred ecessors, Josef Stalin and V. M. Molotov, sold grain abroad while people were starving in the Soviet Union. Khrushchev said that as re cently as 1947, Stalin kept sell ing wheat abroad even though there were critical shortages in areas of the Soviet Union. The Soviet premier, in a speech of nearly five hours, told the Western powers that the So viet Union is not weak econom ically and warned them not to "put your knee on our breast" by imposing conditions on wheat sales to Russia. Khrushchev's long speech, de livered before 5.000 delegates in the Kremlin Palace of Con gresses was devoted mainly to the need for "chemicalization" of agriculture, by stepping up production of chemical fertiliz ers that would help make up for disastrous harvests such as this year's sub-par yield. invincible anti-missile systems and at the same time working on missile deception techniques for penetrating enemy defenses. Early last month Russia dis played a rocket which it said was an anti-ICBM capable of intercepting missiles. Later in the month the U.S. said its Nike-Zeus anti-missile missile had scored its 10th successful intercept on one of our own ICBM's in the Pacific. In addition to an anti-ICBM systems, Davis said the U.S. must "improve its re-entry ve hicles to give us a better capa bility in this field." He said this CENTRAL OREGON Icy noted veneer Mid-Oregon region whitened by snow A storm that whitened all of Central Oregon last night cov ered roads with an icy veneer ?arlv m &e dav' dropped six inches of snow on the Ochoco summit and slowed travel over interior highways. A two-inch pack of snow was measured at the Bend weather station at 7 a.m., and it went into the records as the heaviest fall of the young season. Mois ture content of the snow, plus that measured in Sunday show ers, was 0.35 of an inch. Snow warnings for motorists traveling over southeastern Liquor store is burglarized A burglar who shattered a window of Bend's Oregon State Liquor Commission store on Bond Street early Sunday morn ing apparently made a hasty selection of whiskey. He grabbed four bottles, not top brands, and dropped one of those in making nis getaway The bottle that was broken was dropped after the prowler left the store. The burglar broke the comer of a window, reached inside and opened the door, then made his hurried entry. Oregon State Police, who In vestigated the burglary, said the theft of liquor occurred Sun day morning between 3:30 and 4 meant learning how to increase the capability of re-entry ve hicles to fulfill their missions. The re-entry vehicle is the nose cone section of the ICBM Uiat is designed to hit an enemy target with a nuclear warhead. "We must try to stay ahead of any defensive svstem that an enemy might have," he said. At the present time, he dis closed, the U.S. is exploring several missile "penetration" techniques. One is the decoy method. The BSD commandant said this would be the sending of a nu Oregon roads today were Issued this morning, with from two to four hiches of snow predicted However, the forecast for the Bend - Redmond area was for scattered flurries, or freezing drizzle. The five-day forecast for the eastern part of the state lndi' cates that the precipitation will be less than normal, with scat tered snow flurries. Tempera tures are expected to drop lo the 25-15 level tonight. New snow covered all Cas cades passes this morning, but it was well packed ana was be ing sanded. Dangerously slick roads, covered by blacK ice, were reported in the Warm Springs Junction area. Three inches of snow fell on the Santiam divide, and the roadside depth was 19 inches this morning. Snow reached east over the plateau to Burns, and south in to the Klamath country. Heavy rains fell in the west ern part of the state. Driver unhurt A car operated by a Burns resident, John Chickcrallio, skidded cn slick snow this morning, left the roadbed and turned over several times. The Burns man was not in jured in the accident, and was broueht to Bend bv a bassing motorist. Chickerallio was awneftcried in the car when the accident occurred. clear-laden missile with an es cort of possibly as many as five decoy "birds" to confuse an enemy. The deadly missile could theoretically reach its target be fore all of the rockets could be intercepted. Gen. Davis also noted that the U.S. already has electronic de coys on its Titans which give the impression that more than one missile is approaching to confuse defenses in the target area. He said another method under study was "low observability." "This means a missile could High yesterday, 42 degrees. Low last night, 25 degrws. Sunset today, 4:27. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:29, PST. Ten Cents Two prison escapees believed abductors, storm slows search STATEL1NE. Nev. (UPI) Frank Sinatra Jr., 19, was kid naped at gunpoint from this Lake Tahoe gambling center Sunday night and authorities believed he and his abductors were holed up in the immediate area. Two men armed with a sawed- off shotgun and a .45 caliber pis tol forced the son of the famous entertainer from his motel room shortly before he was to make a singing appearance at a gam bling casino (tiarrans; at xv o clock. . l.-;. 'An all-points bulletin was Is sued for two young prison es capees who were reported to have been in the Lake Tahoe area earlier Sunday. They are sought for a previous kidnaping and two Southern California bank robberies, and were de scribed by El Dorado County Sheriff Ernest Carlson as "very, very dangerous men." Carlson said olficers were in vestigating unconfirmed reports that the two kidnapers had four accomplices. FBI agents ana California and Nevada sheriff's officers and highway patrolmen were manning roadblocks and questioning casino employes. Meanwhile, young Sinatra and his abductors had apparent ly dropped from sight in a driving snowstorm that dumped more than a foot ot snow in this 6,225-foot Sierra Nevada resort since Sunday night. There had been no known ransom demands. We feel they're still In the area because we've had all the roads blocked," Carlson said. If they're still up there, they're probably inside because night temperatures drop to oi 10 25 degrees. They could be in any one of thousands ot motel rooms, hundreds of locked-up summer homes or in an apart ment." Sinatra's father arrived in Reno early today from Palm Springs, Calif. He was reported to have attempted to drive to Lake Tahoe with Washoe Coun ty Dist. Atty. William Raggio, a long-time friend, but heavy snow iorced them to turn back. The abductors were armed with a sawed off shotgun and a .45 caliber pistol. Named in the all points bul letin were Joseph J. Sorce, 23, and Thomas Keating, 21, both from Los Angeles County. They already face kidnaping charges risine from their escape uci. from the Deuel Vocational Insti tution, Tracy, Calif., State Pris on, when they forced a 16-year-old boy to drive them to free dom. They are suspected of robbing two Southern California banks after their escape and were described as "extremely dangerous. Sinatra's father arrived at Reno early today from Palm Springs, Calif., after being noti fied of the abduction. He was reported Incommunicado at Reno hotel. The youth's mother, Nancy Sinatra, Sinatra's first wife, was keeping her home line open at her Hollywood home in case the abductors made a ransom demand. The suspects were believed to be traveling in a 1962 or 1963 white Chevrolet Impala with a California license plate. 0 The kidnaping was first re- by Gene bvans, a spokesman for Harrah s uuo I at Stateline's south shore, a go be made so slim that It would be virtually impossible to be seen on a radar screen," ha explained. "The nature of radar is such that this is possible. Radar has a limitation on how small an object it can display." As for its own defenses at present, -She U.S. has nothing W worry about, the general said. "The missile units now opera tional, in combination with the Strategic Air Command's man ned bomber forces, constitute the most powerful deterrent force which any nation has yet been able to create. . . " Hi and Lo No. 3 plush gambling resort area near the Nevada - California state line. Evans said the kidnaping oc curred at a motel on the Cali fornia side shortly before th young singer was scheduled to make his appearance at the Casino lounge at 10 p.m., PST (1 a.m., EST Monday). Frank Sinatra Sr., and the young singer's mother, Nancy, were notified immediately. The elder Sinatra departed from Palm Springs for Tahoe In his nritrmtm nl.na imA- l.ia . fill wife said she was "keeping her phone open" in Los Angeles in case the kidnapers called. Evans said young Sinatra and John Foss, a trumpet play er with the Tommy Dorsey band, were in their motel room when someone knocked at the door. Foss said Sinatra asked who was there, and a voice replied: "Hoom service." The trumpeter said Sinatra opened the door and two men carrying weapons pushed their way into the room. Foss said they overpowered him, bound his wrists and taped his mouth with adhesive tape. Foss said the two men, and possibly a third who remained outside, forced Sinatra into the car and sped away. The musi cian said he managed to breaK his bonds and call for help. Compromise af hand on chool aid WASHINGTON (UPD- House-Scnate conferees neared final compromise agreement to day on a bill to boost federal help to vocational schools and expand the government's stu dent loan program. The measure one of two education bills expected to ba passed this session would In crease the present $58 million aid program for vocational schools by four or five times. The compromise also was ex pected to continue the present national aeiense eaucauon act for student loans and extend the $400 million "impacted areas" program for schools crowded by children of service men and government workers. The conferees planned to complete work on the legisla tion Tuesday. The compromise would cut the extension of the student loan and impacted areas pro grams from three to two years. In turn, the House negotiators agreed to a senate formula for allocating the vocational school aid. Other congressional news: Subpoena t The Senate quick ly passed and sped to the House a bill giving subpoena power to the blue ribbon commis sion named to investigate the assassination of the late Presi dent John F. Kennedy. Taxes: The Senate Finance Committee decided to hold one additional day of public hear ings on the $11 billion tax cut bill which had been slated to end today. The extra session Tuesday will permit Federal Reserve Board Chairman Wil liam McChesney Martin, to tes tify ot the measure.