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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1956)
Statesman,' Salem, Ore., Fri, May 4, '56 (Sec. II)-17 Tests Capable of Identifying Driver More Likely to Have Automobile Accidents Tests to Aid rost'Mature Baby Births By KEMilE TATLOt AieseJate4 Press Ideaee tfrir LOS ANGfXES lev- A micro scope tut which may help prevent the km of babies through post mature birth wis described here . Wednesday by a Cleveland physi cian. Post-maturity, in which tha baby arrival . late, is more common than generally supposed, Dr. Allan C. Barnes, of Western Reserve University School of Medicine, told the California Medical Ana. He cited series of cases indi cating S out of every t.ooo births art post-mature, and that 10 per cent of these result In stillbirths. Post-mature babies are fully de veloped but are malnourished be causa of deterioratioa of the pla- the vital connections between mother and babv. Tha later the baby la In arriving the more malnourished be is likely to be because the placental deteri oration is progressive. The infant becomes spotted. Hi loses his na tural oily coat of substance called verniz. He becomes wrin kled through km at. intestinal fluids. Placental failure caa affect even Kemature and full-term babies, '. Barnes said. It probably Is responsible for about 15 per cent of all fetal deaths, he added. Microscopic examinations of cells discarded into tha birth canal can yield clues as to tha condition of the placenta, Dr. Barnes said. It I takes special training to recognize the significance of their appear ance. In tests which were made on women in various stages of pregnancy H was about TO per ,cent accurate, ha reported. These findings, along with other muMm MtrnmnH atari a rati K1n tha obstetrician to determine the criti cal time for delivery, Dr. Barnes said. non-accident counterparts, leu ia harmony with their environ- V j f 1 1 r..V II f 1 S -K amSBS mm m T-r W0m, SAVE By XOBEKT COLD EX STEIN land the relatively lower religious CHICAGO I.V-A dream of high- n .. .. j duals. ff-KXadVSr.rthrr a - PI that the accident peon U mentally accident-prone , thTt or accident-proof appeared f'i'J0.' ,h?A! step nearer realization Thursday. Details of tests which proved a b e a t 80 per cent accurate in three separate trials were pre pared lor the annual convention of the American Psychiatric A cull Preliminary findings from the S-year-old accident researca proj ect at ue university toionoo School of Medicine, conducted In conjunction with fltzsimons Arm hmnitil. indicated: 1. Beligiously inclined persons make the safest drivers. 1 Motorists with a predomi nant interest ia aetneuc or "He retical values have tha worst safety records. tea ilm The project leaders psycholo gists and psyenutnsts icnea and interviewed 204 airmen from Lowry Air force Base, Denver, oa their psychological, psycho physical and psychophysiological . characteristics. The airmen had high, moderate or accident-free driving moras. "The stable results achieved mHW hia tot niveeata that dif ferent sorts of individuals are represented in tha accident ana noa-aceiaenf groups, wey mo. Stressing that this is a prelimi nary report, appuea to a relative ly small group and limited ex clusively 10 airmen uvinj n base, toey saoea: "Frankly, the authors are put tied at the relatively higher the oretical and aesthetic interests ment snd less conventional . .v elaborate physiological defense; the forms of truancy, dellnquen- Tbere is some sign that they systems and snow less tendency, jcy snd minor otienses, and they (the non-accident group) tend to both as children and adults, to i more regularly gt to church, en- accept conventional values to a engage in contentious or acting- gage in prayer and in general be- greater extent; have simpler snd out behavior. inave in rawer socially conionn- on the whole leu demanding Fewer Ceeiucts ing ways." needs; have leu conflict, both in- The non-accident group bad The test used this criteria: ternal and external; posse sa leu! fewer conflicts with authority in I A pure aesthetic would be 'a person for whom beauty, as ex-! style than as a spiritual revela- pressed ia form and harmony, is tion." the highest value. As an example. Gather Kaewicdge be might expreu this viewpoint A pure theoretical individual about the Bible: "Taking the Bi- would be one whose dominant in- ble as a whole, one would retard tereat is truth as aurh- He would it from the point of view of its avoid making ji beautiful mythology and literary I values. His c hi nents about aim In life I statistically significant personal!" ty differences between high-accW would be to .gather and systema tise knowledge. A pure religious person would dent and non-accident groups. be concerned with the superna-f The report was by Dr. John J. tural meaning of all existence: Conger, Ph.D Dr. Herbert S. and particularly his place ia it. Gaskill and Dr. Donald D. Glad. The researchers next will de-iPh.D., all of the University el termine whether there are other! Colorado. LAgff &0(1 AVSS France Asks U.S. to Back Economic Aid PARIS VI franc Wednes day urged the United States to join la organizing a new interna tional agency to distribute eco nomic aid to the worlds needy French officials ssid Foreign Minister Christian Plnesu 1 s i d the plan before U.S. Secretary of State Dulles in a two-hour confer ence at the foreign office. Tha two ministers met shortly after Dulles flew into Paris (or what Western diplomats say may be a momentous session of the Ministerial Council of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Before leaving Washington. Dulles said one of the main aims of the session is to plsn the re shaping of NATO "into something more then a military alliance." The secretary apparently favors widening NATO into the political and economic fields to meet the "challenge of Russia's worldwide trade and aid offensive. Informants said the French plan Calls for a new aid agency set up outside NATO snd "within the framework of the United Nations or some similar world organiza tion." Presumably Russia would be tree to Join. The agency would aim not only at bolstering underdeveloped coun tries of Asia, Africa snd the Mid dle East, but also such depressed EuroDean areas as Southern Italy Plnesu told Dulles the agency must be kept outside of NATO to avoid having it looked on as another instrument of the cold war. The informants declined to give Dulles' reaction to the plan. An American spokesman also refused comment. Pineau plans to present his icheme to the council at Its two day session opening Friday. 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