The Dend Bulletin, Wednesday, June 29, 1955 1 Inter-Continental Missile Reported WASHINGTON (UIM The Air Force today rvjKjrtcd "some ud vancf's" in developing an inter- j cut ii mental ballistics missile against which there Is no known di'ft'tise. In a .vmi-annual rt'iurt to I'res i(icnt Kisenhowcr and Conri'Si, Air Force Secretary Harold K. Ttilbutl made only u cryptic two- lino reerence to the oceun-spun-nine " mUaiie. He reported some progress on the weapon and then described it as being "at critical imiortance to the basic security ol the United States and the free world." A true intercontinental ballis tics missile could travel above the atmosphere about 10.000 miles an hour. Armed with a hydrogen warhead, it could wronlf untol.l devastation. Russia also is bo- lievd to be working on such weapon. TuTbott also said this counti-y's B:2 -et hydrogen bomber is the "besT in tho world." He adder! that the Air Force is steadily de veloping "newer and belter' Bend Student Gets Four-Point UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu geneA total of 2'fi students were included on the university honor roll for spring term. Of these, 24 made a 4 point average or ail A's. On the honor roll from Bend is Donald J. Call, who made a per fect CPA of 4.00. A Junior m llb- beral arts, he Is the son ol Car son Call, Kt. 1, Bend. To lie listed on the honor roll, a student must earn a 3.50 belter grade point average and must carry not less than 12 term hours. The grade point average is figured on a scale with 4.00 being A, 3.U0 is B, and 2.00 is C. mm craft and guided missiles. His statement came in the face of widespread concern in Congress over Itussia s recent displays of airpower, including a formation of heavy bombers similar to the B52 The American bombers will begin going to combat units in a few days. Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D Wash) said yesterday he fears Russia is making such "ominous and unexpected strides" in air- power that It will have sunerioritv air- over this country within five yean. WAR MATERIAL MOUNTAIN CROWS You're looking at acres and acres of strategic metals, in stacks of Ingots 10 feet high. That's Just a "small" part of one of the nation's largest stockpiles of materials vital to the wartime operations of the armed forces. It's at the Sharonville Storage Depot of trie General Services Administration, near Cincinnati, covering a 604-acre area, inter laced with 19 miles of railroad track. There are nine 1000x240-foot warehouses, which are full. Outdoor storage has hardly been started yet. Additional loads lor the stockpiles arrive daily in trains and trucks. EXCLUSIVE NEA PHOTO. ??rt$fone 26-inch DE LUXE CRUISER BICYCLE A Real Beauty Bull! by Monark Has Everything You Want ... Including a LOW Price Tag! Bulll-ln tank with W.ctrlc horn .. 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Circum stances today arc such that a re orientation of thinking is .neces sary." He said the San Francisco meet ing was an excellent send-off for the coming Big Four meeting at the summit in Geneva. Krishna Menon again called for a renunciation of war by the na tions of the world. "Where there are barriers be (ween nations there Is fear," he said. "The most powerful nations aro the ones most overcast with fear. Strength is usually the mask for fear. j "We would be willing and wis Thornton Reports On Prostitution PORTLAND (UP) Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton said in a speech here yesterday that the state was just about free of organized prostitution. Thornton said he had received several complaints of syndicated prostitution which were verified when he first took office. He said the clean-up was made possible by the education of public officials; who formerly held .mistaken ideas about organized vice. "An astonishing number of peo ple had swallowed old myths, Thornton said, "about the desir ability of controlled, segregated prostitution." He said the American Medical Association had found that there was no safe medical supervision of prostitutes. INSPECTS PROJECT MANILA, P.I. (UP) U.S. Su preme Court Justice William u. Douglas flow 40 miles to San Luis, Pampanga by helicopter today to inspect an army settlement proj ect. He was accompanied by President Ramon Magsaysay. Douglas flew here from Tokyo early today and will fly back to the United States Thursday. to take risks for peace as we take the risks of war. The cause of peace through conciliation calls for courage and perseverance, naiiniice and magnanimity, ne said. OWOPEN CANTRELL'S FURNITURE 1834 East 1st St. North of Town on Our LOW OVERHEAD Makes PLENTY of FREE PARKING EASY BUDGET TERMS DEEP FRYER and COOKER Alcomatic. Fully Automatic U.L. 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Next to Scotty's Feed Store Rearmament Plans Slowed BONN, GERmany (UP) A "go slow" approach by the West German Parliament today wreck ed Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's chances of getting West Ger many s rearmament started be fore the Big Four summit" talks in Geneva. Adenauer also had hoped to have a volunteer program well under, way before he left for Moscow for talks with the Kremlin, but an all-party revolt against the first government rearmament bill pro mised a two to three month de lay in his entire rearmament timetable. The "volunteers bill." under which the government planned to "nlist 6000 volunteers by next March, passed its first parlia mentary hurdle in the Bundestag i Lower House! last night. It was approved and passed on to com mittee on the first of the three readings it must survive but only ifter 10 hours of heated debate. But the full-scale revolt, which cut across party lines, indicated the measure would have heavy going in committee. Severe criticisms were express ed not only by the opposition So cialists but also by spokesmen of Adenauer's coalition parties and members of his own Christian Democrats. Ed son in Washington Stickled Up in Sugar Politics SK Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON (NKAl The Ei senhower administration and Con gress are now all stickled up in sugar politics both domestic ami international. A new sugar policy statement, intended to comprom se and please everybody, ends P by pleasing nobody. It was masterminded by Under secretary of Agriculture True D. Norse with the advice but not much consent of Undersecretary of State Herbert Hoover, Jr., and Assistant Secretary of State Henry F. Holland, in charge of Latin American affairs. Secretary of AgricJflture Ezra Taft Benson, from the big beet sugar state of Utah, was in the background. What finally came out had the blessing of Gov. Sher man Adams, the assistant to the President and the White House, staff. It leaves suspended and com plelely unexplained a proposal to set aside 100,000 tons of sugar to reduce existing surpluses. The de tails of where it would come from, who would pay for it and where it would go have not been worked out. Presumably they will be ex plained when Department of Ag riculture experts are scheduled to go before the House Agricultural Committee June 22 to testify on revising the Sugar Act of 19-18. Only sugar specialists can under stand alt the figures of quotas, ta riffs, subsidies and differential nrices. When the statistics are brushed aside, however, a coupie. of fundamentals of American po litics stand out. There are five Republican sena tors from beet sugar producing, states whose terms expire next year. There are four Democratic senators from sugar cane produc ing states in the same boat. And. of course, alt the 20 sugar stare representatives' terms expire next year. This puts the first, domestic pressure on the adminstration to take care of the sugar issue now. The irlea of Irvine to handle it in the election year of 19d6 Is con sidertd politically impossible. Domestic sugar production has since 1934 been protected by law with a Guaranteed share of the market, a tariff, and a tax on all sugar to puy a subsidy to U. S. growers. Since the iihs act was passeu, increased use of fertilizer, better pest control, better beet and cane varieties and exceptional weather have increased American produc tion by as much as 20 per cent. Acreage allotments have been cut down 15 to 18 per cent. But there is'stiil overproduction us new hind has been opened in western re clamation areas. The. result is an American siyur surplus of 200,000 Ions U. S. in ducers and sugar btale congress men theivtore propose that a new sugar act be passed tiiis year to remedy the situation. It wuld guarantee American producers 55 per cent of the U.S. market througlit 1962. This was the percentage in effect from 191 to 1948, when American growers decided to take a fixed tonnage quota . An amendment to the 19-18 act now would amount to changing the rules in the middle of the game, since it isn't due to expire until the end of 1S56. And this causes consternation in Cuba. The Cubans also have a sugar surulus hanging over their heads, Theirs is closer to two million tons as compared to the U. S. surplus of 200,000. Cuban overpro duction of sugar and the resulting economic crisis on the island was the underlying cause of the BatisU revolution of 19u2. Sugar is, of course, Cuba's life blood. All the money Cuba gels from sales of sugar to the U. S. and more, too is spent for Amer ican autos, machinery and even farm products. This fact has enabled the Cu bans to build up a major pressure drive in the nonsugar - producing states, against any revision of the sugar act and downward revision of Cuban quotas. A score of lobbyists have been registered by Cuban sugar inter ests in major American cities. They have been making the pitch that if Cuba's sugar sales are cut down, Cuba's imports will be cut down. This argument has been used to bring pressure on Congressmen to protect their ex-; porting industries at home and to, let the 19-18 sugar act run itsj course through 1956. I Redmond Hospital Sjeiial to Tin- Hull. llil REDMOND Five oul-patients wt-re treated at Centra Oregon district hospital Tuesday. Dis missed were Mrs. Mauihe Cooley, Class Valley: Gwemth Arthur, II months, Warm Springs, and Leo'l aid Larsjil, Bend. VISIT KKI'ORTF.D SH-eiut lo Tile BulU-tin SISTKltS Ueui-ge Spaur, state forester, and James Walker, as sistant state forester, finm Salem were visitors at the Sisters forest ry offi'.'e Tuesday morning. The foresters were on their way lo eastern Oregon. SAVE MONEY on your FIRE INSURANCE! WHY . . . pay your present fire In surance premium for 3 yeor in advance .... 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