"OW!" THE BEND BULLETIN 4 Tuesday, March 6, 1962 An Independent Newspaper Phil P. Brogen, Associate Editor Jack McDarmott, Advartliing Manager Glann Cuthman, Ctnaral Managar Leu W. May-are, Circulation Managar Loran E. Dyar, Machanlcal Superintendent William A. Yatai, Managing Editor Robert W. Chandlar, Editor and Publiihar Entarad u aaoond Cui Mattar. January a. HIT. at the Putt Offlca at Band. Oraauw mdar Ad at March a. in. Putt Uihad daily awapt Sunday and cartatn hnllrtays by Tha Band Hallatln. tno. Glenn's ride, missile developments bring us to threshhold of the ultimate weapon Military h i s t o r y is replete with Stories of the a 1 1 e m p t s to develop What, for lack of a better term, we have always called the ultimate weapon. This is something against which there is no known defense, and which com pletely outclasses any weapons of retal iation existing at the time. - Perhaps the first such weapon was the club. Held In the hand, it allowed Its user to stay out of range, and tre mendously increased the force of his blow. Then came the spear, which made ihe club out of date. And so it has gone, "through bows and arrows, to guns, to bombs, to hydrogen warheads on inter continental missiles. - - A high-ranking military official in .Washington, a close friend of Lyle C. Wilson who has been reporting the Washington news scene for more years than he likes to admit, told the other day of his impressions of the signifi cance of John Glenn's fast ride through space. Here's Wilson's account of the conversation: A military friend of mine with much experience In air warfare put astronaut John II. Glenn's achievement in focus for mc. In frightening focus. My friend said: "The greatest danger our country faces flows from the following possibilities: "Science and technology have reached a state which makes it possible to place in space weapons which can control the people of the earth. Such weapons can he developed for an expenditure of few billions of dollars and be available by 1970 to 1973. "The Russians are aware of this possibility. Ihtvp may be agreement that space be reserved for peaceful purposes and that no weapons be placed in orbit. If such an agreement were made, we would keep it and no funds would be appropri ated for space weapons. Tho Russians can be ex. pected to go full out, despite any treaty agreement, to develop such weapons. "Thus, In 1970 or thereabouts the people would be forced to surrender. "The antidote to such catastrophe is to proceed Good move Despite the black eyes it has been accumulating in the fight over medical care for the aged, the American Medical Assn. is sure to get applause from all , quarters for its now plan to help in crease the nation's supply of young doctors. Beginning next month, t ho AMA will underwrite loans for medical stu dents, interns, and physicians in resi dent training to help them complete their medical educations. Qualified Students and doctors will be able to borrow as much as $10,000 over a period of seven years, at five and one-half per cent interest, with no collateral requir ed. Repayments need not begin until five months after the borrowers com plete their training. This AMA program may not accom plish the 50 per cent gain in physicians' ranks which some authorities say our Humor from others "He made an unusually good after dinner speech." "What did he say?" "Waiter, give mc the check." GMAC News and Views. with all speed, energy and effort to develop opti mum weapons for space. Equal priority must be given to the earliest development of defense sys tems against space weapons. "No other problem facing the United States today is of equal importance or fraught with such fateful consequences." My military friend was thinking out loud. He Is an Intelligent man of sound judgment. He does not indulge in loose talk nor in superlatives. When he uses such words as "the greatest danger our country faces today," he means exactly that. So, too, when he says that under certain con ditions the United States, defenseless, would have to surrender. He means that in absolute terms and within the time stated, less than 15 years. This, then, is something for U.S. citizens to consider and to understand. Joseph L. Mylcr is Uie very competent reporter who experts for United Press International the news of the atomic and H-bombs. "Joe," I said to liim, "what is the optimum weapon my friend mentioned?" "Oil, you know," Joe replied, "it's that orbital H-bomb. You put it in orbit under electronic con trol. It spins around the earth until you decide where you want it to strike. Then, still under con trol, you bring it over the target, obtain its re entry and lot it go. BOOM!!" "Do we have it, or do the Russians?" "No, we don't have It," Joe replied. "The RiiS' sians could do it rather easily, however, because they already have put in orbit very weighty objects. You remember, just the other day, Khrushchev was talking about what he called fantastic new Russian weapon." "This space weapon," I suggested, "would be something like the Sword of Damocles, wouldn't it?" "Yeah," said Joe, "sort of, maybe. But this orbital H-bomb is no fable." Earlier I had said to my friend: "You really mean surrender?" "Yeah." ha said, "I really mean the United States could be forced to surrender." If this isn't the ultimate weapon, it will do until one comes along. nation must have by 1975. More medical schools will be required to help bring about such an Impressive result, and more youngsters with the attitudes and intelligence medicine requires will have to be attracted to these schools. Cur rently, many potential physicians are being drawn to careers in other scienti fic fields because they feel medicine is too demanding. However, it is reassuring to know now that any capable aspirant for a ca reer as a physician need no longer settle for less, simply because he hasn't enough to finance his medical educa tion. The effect of the AMA loan pro gram surely will be an Important increase in the number of physicians we have to tend our ills as our popula tion continues to expand, (Eugene Register-Guard) Politician:: "How did you like my speech on the farm program?" Hiram: "Twarnt bad, but a good soaking rain would hev bin better." National Grange Monthly. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Minutemen have rifles ready for 'U.N. invasion' By Draw Pearson WASHINGTON A secret meeting of the Minutemen took place in the National Guard Arm ory near the UCLA campus in Los Angeles the other day in which a bizarre plan was outlined to defend the United States from Tccupation by the United Nations "They'll have big smiling Swedes and Irish and Italians oc cupying us, like in the Congo," the Minuteman commander warn ed about 40 armed "patriots" gathered secretly in one part of the armory. The Minutemen are a group of volunteers, described by their na tional commander, Robert De Pugh, as "men who will crawl out of holes as a hard-knit combat outfit" trained for guerrilla war "if the bomb falls." In southern California these grass - roots guerrillas claim to have a strength of 2,000 men, each with a rifle and 100 rounds of ammunition, and 800 with ma chine guns. The first California commander of the Minutemen, Troy Hough ton, alias Troy Boyle and Troy pany has been holding up in Phil adelphia the telegrams that you send to congressmen telling them how to vote on bills holding them up until after the bills were passed. Then they put in a special seventy-five-cent rate to get tele grams directly to Washington, I have documented proof of this. They were holding them up in Philadelphia." These are the men who say they will save the United States in case of atomic war. Maupin woman is named states mother of '62 CORVALLIS (UPD-Mrs. Peter J. Kirsch, wife of a retired Maupin iarmer, Monday was named Oregon's mother for 1962. The announcement was made by Mrs. C. P. McCracken, chair- r-p.. was pic-sea up lor lauing ' of le sclection commiUee, to rePLster for a spy offense, .... while the San Diego commander, William Colley, was arrested for indecent exposure. At the recent meeting near the UCLA campus, the Minutemen's commander was introduced only as "Jack," apparently to protect his identity. This column, how- ever, can report in detail exactly what was said. Alter a hair - raising warning that the United States was in grave danger of being taken over, Commander Jack bellowed: "How will this take-over come? won't go into the conspiracy and the group within our govern ment that are doing away with the constitution. You are aware of that or you wouldn't be here. There are many ways they could do it. Red Chinata in Mexico "The UN is one of the ways. All the power that we're giving to the UN. Our counterintelligence units report large numbers of Chi nese Communist troops in Baja, California and on the Mexican mainland. There are several hundred thousand of these crack shock troops. Of course, if they invaded they wouldn't get very far, maybe only up to Long Beach. One American is worth ten Chinks. "But the UN would declare an act of overt aggression and would come in and occupy us. They'd do away with our constitution and put in new laws like their men tal health laws. Do you know about mental health laws? They can arrest you and then they'll give you a shot that'll make you a schizophrenic and then they'll try you and find you insane. "Of course you'll have big smil ing Swedes and Irish and Italians occupying, like in tiie Congo. Ital ians you know Italy just went Communist. The other day their government went Communist. That's when we must rise up. "There are lots of guys, some times whole blocks, who have bought rifles and plan to stand in the doorway and shoot. That's no good. When the man is killed, his wife'll still be ravaged raped. And his properly pillaged. We want to train people to survive. "The Congo shows what can happen. The UN crushed Tsliom bc. Tho UN can be anywhere in the world in a flash. "They're taking silver off the market, you know. It's getting as hard to buy as gold. Did you ever look at any bill over a dollar say a five or a ten? It's not a sil ver certificate. It's a Federal Re serve note. It's just paper. And the Federal Reserve is part of the International Bank with head quarters in Switzerland. It's con trolled by the UN, not by the Uni ted Stales. They can split your money overnight, just like they split slock. You can have $10,000 in (lie bank and the next morn ing it can be worth $r,noO. "Road the UN charter," exhort ed Commander Jack to his pa triots. "That filthy rag! You know it was written by our friend Alger Hiss, a convicted Commiuiist. Did you know the California constitu tion was changed and amended in line with the UN charter? It used to be like the U.S. constitu tion, with a few minor changes. Now it's like the UN charter. "Did you know that you can bo arrested for speaking agaiivst the UN on the street corner and you'll be tried by the world court? It's in the UN charter. Read it! Kannedy a Dictator "Kennedy has more power than any other President has ever Even if it's against the will of the people. When he went to sec Khrushchev and you know every lime the President goes to one of those meetings he concedes something when he went lo see Khrushchev, Congress told him ho couldn't go. But he went any- y. he just issued an executive order. Against Congress. againt the will of the people. There were rl. the bark paces of all the newspapers up and down the coast telling him not to go. You could see all the names of all tho people Rut he went anyway. "Is the tape recorder oik a-k- ed the Minuteman commander, "well. I'll tell you something A very well-known telegraph corn- Mrs. Kirsch, 72, is the mother of three sons and a daughter. Her oldest son, Ted, 43, is man ager of Sun Valley farms at Myrtle Point. Her daughter, Gortrudo (Mrs. John Hoss), 41, was listed in the 1943-44 edition of "Who's Who Among Students in American Uni versities and Colleges." Ernest, 44, is a county agent at Condon. Paul, 37, is a disabled war veteran living at home. Before her marriage, early in the century, tho 1962 Oregon mother filed a claim on unbroken homestead land in the Criterion area of Wasco County. While proving up on her claim she taught school in a one-room school house for several years. After her marriage she taught Sunday school. In 1942 their home burned and the family moved to Maupin. Ted was graduated from Ore gon State University and won a national award as the outstanding 4-H boy of Oregon. Gertrude and Ernest also are graduates of Oregon State. Mrs. Kirsch has been a 4-H loader for 37 years and is still active in the program. She was president of the Wasco County Leaders Association for a year and drove 50 miles to conduct tho business meetings at The Dalles. Mrs. Kirsch will go to New York in May to attend the Ameri can Mothers Association meeting where she will compote for the national mother of the year award. American photographer roughed up ALGIERS, Algeria (UPD-Two men believed to be members of the outlawed Secret Army Organi zation wounded an American news photographer here Monday night and warned him to leave Algeria. For reasons of safety the in jured photographer was not iden tified. He was not seriously in jured. Twenty-four hours after the OAS had forced 11 Italian journalists to leave Algiers, the photographer was returning to his office Mon day night when two young men stopped him inside the entrance. "Are you a journalist?" one of the men asked in the dimly light ed hallway. "Yes," replied the photog rapher. One of the youths suddenly drew his hand with nil open razor across the lower part of the pho tographer's face, opening a cut on his jaw. 'That's just in the nature of warning," the razor slasher said. "You will have to leave." Temperatures Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST today. High Low Precip T .19 .73 .01 .11 .05 .2.", .41 .20 .09 12 .03 .03 .17 1 24 .80 Imf iWp,iiii . i ii mm i,a i ii i I ire-, s 1 r-:s i ;ihv;,; - vy - ' p I ifairfniiitrirr-inilainrT - m.ahaa - Trifinteiwn iimtj uBirr 'iilrl trnnirr r A OLD PAPER TELLS RAIL STORY Ernie Steigleder, left, who came to Fort Rock during home stead days, and Charles Tomplins look at a 1926 newspaper found between the walls of tha recently renovated store building. The news centered around a proposal to cross the Fort Rock Valley by rail. Musty old newspaper found, plan for railroad recalled Special to Tha Bulletin FORT ROCK Big news for Fort Rock in days gone by was recalled by a musty old newspa per uncovered while renovating an abandoned building here to serve once more as a store. Splashed in big type on the front page of the July 17, 1926 "Central Oregon Press." was the story that the Public Utilities Commission had ordered the Union Pacific Railroad to build the cross state line from Crane to Crescent Lake. If built, this line would have crossed the Harney Valley south Bend 50 32 Astoria 50 44 Baker 31 33 Rrookings 34 45 i Burns 48 34 j K. Falls 40 35 Medford 61 44 Newport 35 45 N. Bend 51 43 Portland 50 41 Redmond 52 33 Salem 51 44 The Dalles 4t 36 j Chicago 31 71 Los Angeles 63 48 New York 38 34 San Fran. 51 48 Washington 37 34 j to the Editor "When men differ in opinion, both sides ought equally to have the advantage of being heard by tha public." Banjamin Franklin. Non-churched group's religion is mystery To the Editor: Your editorial in the March 3 issue of The Bulletin has made it clear, I think, that we can not introduce into our public schools the teaching of beliefs peculiar to any church group in exclusion of others. This, of course, is not workable nor would it be right in a system ot education that in cludes people of different back grounds with different beliefs. The only satisfactory answer to the question of religious educa tion in the school, 1 believe, can be found in the establishment of separate Christian schools sup ported and controlled by a church group or by a society of parents ot like beliefs. Such schools have been operating extensively and successfully in our land for many years, notably by tho Lutheran Church, the Roman Catholic Church, and the Reformed and Presbyterian Churches. But' the thing. Mr. Editor, that has me puzzled is your assertion that "the biggest single religi ous group in this country is that group which doesn't attend any church." What kind of religious group is this that has no interest in the church and that has no need of its services? Has this "religious group" advanced so far along religious lines that for them the Church has become ob solete? We would like to know just what religious beliefs this non - churched "religious group" holds to and where they got their beliefs. Still puzzled! Sincerely. Edward P. Wybenga Bend. Oregon, March 5. 1962 of Burns, passed south of Wagon tire Mountain, crossed the Christ mas Lake and Fort Rock Valleys to reach Crescent Lake where it would join the just then completed Southern Pacific Cascade Line. Hopes ran high at Fort Rock for in those days the area was far removed from transportation. Several Fort Rock people testi fied before ICC hearings and the case attracted regional and even national attention. The late Hen ry M. Parks, who took an active part in favor of the line, had a copy of the published testimony which was the size of a mail or der catalog. It would appear, judging from the testimony, that emotions were steamed up simi lar to the recent fight between Southern Pacific and Santa Fc for control of the Western Pacific. Testimony appeared then, too, from persons and organizations not too closely associated with the line. While the hearings dragged on for a long time, it was actually the great depression which shat tered Fort Rock hopes for a rail road. Had the line been built, it would have been an operating depart ment's dream for grades and curves were slight, from tne standpoint of on-line industries and local traffic the picture would have been bleak, judging from the look along the route today. Sun bleached survey stakes from this proposed railroad can still be found in portions of the Fort Rock Valley today even though the locating party worked through here about 1909, much earlier than the hearings. Weathered stakes lying flat on the desert sand, a yellowed news paper found in the walls of an old building are the only tangible remains of Fort Rock's railroad ambitions. NEWS SCHEDULE WASHINGTON UPI Presi dent Kennedy will hold a news conference at 3:30 p.m. EST. Wednesday. The White House said that there had not yet been any network requests for live television. World Day of Prayer planned Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Citizens In the Redmond area have been invited to take part in a special obser vance of World Day of Prayer Friday from 1 until 3 p.m. in the Redmond Christian Church. Theme of the observance is "The Church Purchased With His Blood." A nationwide proj ect, the special day places em phasis on prayer for Christians in many areas of the world where worship and witnessing are re stricted or prohibited. SPRING IN AIR MOUNT VERNON, III. (UPI There was snow in the air here Monday but Mrs. Elnora Wilbanks reported a harbinger of spring someone stole her lawnmower. 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