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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1956)
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Sept. 30 WV-A1 ernate shuttle flights between Alaska and Russia by American and Soviet photo mapping planes were proposed by the United $20,321 Paid For Political Travels of Ike WASHINGTON, Sept. JO W-The Whitt House said today that the Republican National Committee has paid out $20,331 so fn for political travels of President Ei senhower in the 1956 campaign. Most of this was for the ,tise of government equipment, including the presidential plane Columbine III. Whits House press secretary James C. Hagerty told reporters the GOP is meeting all such e penses and "I would be curious to see If this was ever done by any other administration in a campaign." "I do not know whether this was done in past years." Hagerty said, "but I do know It will be done this year." And, he said, starting with Ei senhower's flight to Iowa today. ' the National Committee is pay ing the U.S. Treasury in advance of the trip." Hagerty said that for this trip' a chfck for $3,071 already has hien turned over to the Treasury) while an additional $50 has been; put up for the food the Presiotent and his party will consume aboard the -Columbine. The arrangement on the Colum bine, Hagerty said, is under ex actly the same sort of contract newsmen have in chartering a i nmmercial plane. That means. Hagerty said, that the charges , are based on mileage rather than ! hours. 1 States today as part of the Inter national Geophysical Year start ing in 1957. The Russians are expected to accept, inasmuch as their scien tists helped advance the proposal at informal , discussions already held. The proposal made by the State Department today calls for week ly flights, with Soviet and Ameri can planes, alternating, between Nome, Alaska, and Murmansk, Russia, to photograph the polar ice pack. Purely Seleatifte The flights, described as strictly nonpolitical and purely scientific, would start in March and continue through next September, taking advantage of the period of maxi mum sunlight in the arctic. In a note delivered to the Soviet Embassy yesterday and made public by the State Department today, the United States proposed that the flights be made "along routes and under such operating conditions as agreed upon by our two governments. The route from Nome to Mur mansk, which is near the arctic tip of the Scandinavian peninsula. would b I s i e c t a great circle around the North Pole and cover roughly 3.000 miles. Officials said three or four four-engine planes would be needed for the American share of the operation. They said the planes would not necessarily have to be military craft. Worldwide Projects The International Geophysical Year is a worldwide project Air ing which scientists of 41 nations; including Russia and other Com munist countries, wilt coordinate special observations as the most comprehensive study yet made ol the earth, its oceans and the at mosphere ahove. Worldwide improvements In navigation and weather forecast ing are among the hoped-for re sults, ' - TKs study of the arctic ice cap is designed to determine its exact boundaries and how it reacts to tides and winds. Rise in U.S. Capital Juvenile Problems Laid to Integration By FRANK K. TAYLOR WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 Two Washington school principals told House investigators today that racial integration of their schools was followed by a marked Doctors Soon to Measure Power Output of Heart WASHINGTON. Sept. 20 bT-The V. S. Public Health Service has reported it may soon be possi ble to calculate the power output r.f th human heart. Such information, it said, would! be of great value to doctors in do-1 termining the physical abilities! and limitations of heart patients. I The heart - power measurements ! u-oiild also be a valuable guide in j judging the risks of stressful ex periences such as surgical opera tions. The new technique measures blood velocity in the aorta section of the heart. Steam Threshers Plan Harvest Bee COLT0N, Wash., Sept. 20 (ffi Pages of the calendar will be flipped back Sunday when mem bers of the Western Steam Fiends Assn. operate noisy steam thresh ing machines on .the farm of Chris Busch, near here. Some 250 steam fiends, some from as far away as Michigan and Ohio, are expected to watch as the noisy old threshers, dat ing back to 1912, turn over. In keeping with the old fashioned atmosphere, a horse drswn water wagon will be used. Th association will hold a busi ness meeting .on the ve of the. till COIHMft ELECTRICITY upturn in police calls, student pregnancies and disciplinary prob lems. The school administrators gave their testimony at the second day of public hearings by a House Dis trict of Columbia subcommittee which is investigating the effect of integration on schools in the na tion's capital. Wilmer Bennett, principal of Hines Junior High School, said that after his school was integrat ed in the fall of 1954 there were "more fights . . . theft . . . bad language . . . loiterers." And tie said there were 10 stu dent pregnancies at the school last year, compared with two or three during the first year of inte gration. He was not aske:' the race of the girls who became pregnant. Arthur Storey, principal of Mac farland Junior High School, testi fied that since his school was in-: tegrated he has had to call police as often as 50 timrs year. He said his problems included "boys feeling girls," fighting and : the carrying of knives by students. ' But Storey said his disciplinary problems cannot be attributed en tirely to integration. A fourth-grade teacher, Mrs. Dorothy Denton, told the subcom mittee she believes white resi dents will move out of predomi nately Negro school districts and that in effect "the time will come when the schools will be segre gated again." "In my opinion," she said, "in tegration has lowered standards' education in the District." ' She said some of her pupils can read no more than 25 or 30 words. SchsetVs . NERVE f TONIC For relief of sleeplessness and restlessness, nervous tension, nervous headache and irrita bility.' 1.00 .m. SCHAEFER'S DRUG STORE Open Daily, 7:30 A.M. to P.M. " landays, i.nu U S p.m. ' 135 N. 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