Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 32, Decatur, Adams County, 8 February 1956 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

New Russian Regime Is In Power For Year Allied Diplomats Ruefully Confess Soviet Fares Well WASHINGTON (INS) A- Bulganin and Nikita RKbrush cbev took aver power lav Russia a year ago today and have done very Well. This was admitted somewhat ruefully today hy U.S. and foreign diplomats who reviewed the accomplishments of the BulganU-Kbrush-chev team. - ■ ■ ■ ■ U.S. officials were not too concerned about Soviet moves in Europe. but were worried about Rus

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sian advances In the broad area from “Olbralter to Singapore.” That takes in the whole Middle Bast and South Asia. Some fdteign diplomats did not even share the comparatively optimistic U.S. view on the position In Europe. They said the Russians have made a deep impression on public opinion in Prance. Italy and even West Germany and Great, Britain by professing a willingness to “make up" with the West < One foreign diplomat said the Russians have made their impression in several ways. They took the lead in calling for top-level negotiations at Geneva in July. The West issued the invitation to the summit meetings but it was Russia which had stirred up the inter est in them. ... The Russians patched up their quarrel with Yugoslavia. The Yugoslavs are wary about Soviet motives but are accepting Russian aid. More important, the BpiganinKbrushchev mission to Belgrade was a public confession that Moscow now admits the Russian way

Js not tbs only path to communism. Politically that Is Important In Europe. It permits each Communist party in the West to support nationalistic rather than Russian aims, and thereby to get out from under the stigma of “Russianism.'' Recognition of the West German government helped the Russians in Europe hy giving them a lever’ which they are using to try to prod Bonn toward direct negotiations with Communist East Germany on reunification. * Ace in the hole for the Russians is the desire of many western countrtep, to? trqde with Communist C|ina. ’ - — ■ ■ ?■'! 5 PressurS is mounting in Europe to drop the trade ban and admit Red China to the United Nations. ORDINANCES (Continued from Page Ow») stream pollution control board urging that the city take immediate steps toward* the eventual construction of the sewage .disposal plant.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Egypt Admits Arms Taken From Russia Cairo Government Makes Admission CAIRO (LNS)*-Egypt admitted for the first- time today that her troops on the Gaza border with Israel were equipped with Russian, and not Csecboslovakla, heavy armaments. The government - censored weekly Akber Sa published pictures of Egyptian troops manning Soviet armored cars. The cars were described as so formidable they "took our breath away." The Cairo government announced last year signing of a barter agreement with Czechoslovakia whereby Egypt would receive arms in return for surplus cotton and rice. Previously, all guarded references to eastern arms described them as part of the Czech shipments from the |BO million barter deal made last September. Other photographs in Akher Sa showed an Arab soldier manning a Russian gun in a trench and the commander-in-chief of Egyptian armed forces, Maj. Gen. Abdel Hakim Amer, testing a machine gun. Weetern military experts also report that Russian medium jet bombers were seen flying over Cairo in the past ton daya x . At least 40 of the bombers were seen in one group. Most reliable sources said that 300 Egyptian pilots are training in Czechoslovakia and ferrying bomb-

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•rs and fighUrs to Yields in northeastern Egypt. , Reports circulating in Cairo during the past two weeks say Egypt has signed another arms deal with the Prague Communist government for mostly Russian equipment. Usually reliable sources report the deal amounts tp $260 million. New Yorker Heads Lutheran Council MINNEAPOLIS (1N8) -Dr F. EReinartz, M, of New York, was elected Tuesday to succeed Dr- Oscar Benson of Minneapolis as president of tbe national Lutheran council. Two Indianapolis Men Being Hunted INDIANAROUS (W 9 tP. The FBI today sought two Indianapolis men for questioning in the Jan. 23 burglary of Ittenback and Son Construction Co. Wanted are Chester L. West, 34'. and Oren C. Rexroat, », who AVb said to have left the city on Janitn and are believed to have beaded toy Loa Angeles, Cam. Lost Union Survivor Marks 109th Birthday DULUTH. Minn. (INS) —Albert Woolson, last survivor of tbe Civil War's Union army, will celebrate hie lOeth birthday next Saturday in Duluth. Woolson. recently hospitalized after a series of minor bear! attacks and fainting spells, is reported gaining strength satisfactorily-

GARDNER <Co"tlnued From Where ft is expected to ba accepted by President Elsenhower. Gardner, who conferred Tuesday with defense secretary Charles E. Wilson on vacation in Miami Beach, Fla., was scheduled to return to his Pentagon office today. Air force secretary Donald A. Quarles, who reportedly turned the matter over to Wilson after Gardner submitted his resignation, refused comment Beth Quartos and Gardner are selentlsts experienced In atomic and rocket work. Gaednee reterred. to, the “breakthrough” in a news conference last August. The discovery, which he contends is of sueb Importance as to warrant an all-out effort to develop long-range miaslles, is understood <0 involve: 1. A hydrogen “fusion booster” locked Inside the atomic bomb that triggers the H-bomb—making it possible to uae a, much small Aborab trigger. 2. A method of confining a mixture of .hydrogen and lithium withbi a casing of ordinary uranium--238. which multiplies the bomb’s radioactivity and explosive power. The steps are said to result in a bomb weighing between two and four tons, which conceivably could be launched on a S.OOG-mile course hy a multi-stage rocket that might stand 109 or 200 feet high. By contrast. H-bombs known to have been exploded have weighed between 20 and 50 tons —much too big to be carried by a rocket. Scientists In a position to know the facts have, without giving details, placed before the government, . reports predicting that the H-bomb will be the principal war-

head of intercontinental missiles. The reports have resulted in a great acceleration of the missile program, for which the administration seeks a total of two billion dollar* in appropriations this yqar. The bulk of the money in for missile production. Gardner has been unsuccessful In attempts to obtain a major increase In the budget for missile research and development. He was denied permission to seek an immediate supplemental appropriation of more than 100 million dollars. The increase in air force research funds for the coming year will be from 551 to 610 million dollars, if the President’s budget is adopted. IKE WILL USE (Continues worn Page On*> tary of state Robert Murphy who is one of secretary of Mat« John Foster Dulles’ top advisers, Allen and two other assistant secretaries, Livingston T. Merchant, in charge of European affairs, and Francis O. Wilcox, in charge of UN matter*. Trade in a Jod Towa — Decatn

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1888

Tipton Newspaper Increases Rates TIPTON, Ind. (INS) —The Tipton Tribune has increased its weekly delivery rata to 30 cents and is one of the last dally newspapers in the state to do so. The newspaper said Its first hike In six years was necessary because of the second raise in the price of newsprint in the last 15 months, plus added production costs- ■ Carrier bolts will share in tbe Increase, beginning when they make their collections for the week of Feb U. '

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