Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 29, 1949, Page 28, Image 28

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    ? rnHl Journal, Salem, Or., Thursday, Sept. 29, 1949
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MAY BURN FOR CENTURIES
Atomic Pile About to Go
Into Action as a 'Furnace'
Br ?AUL F. ELLIS
New York, Sept. 29 (M) The nation'! first postwar atomic
pile at Brookhaven on Long Island Is aoout to go into action and
once the atoms begin to split in chain reaction the "furnace"
may burn for centuries,
gets from the sun, was ached
uled originally to start early
this year but there have been
some "bugs" that had to be ell
minated.
Ladies' Day The CIO United Auto Workers' auxiliary iook
over the turbulent picket line before the Bell Aircraft plant
at Buffalo, N. Y., the 106th day of the strike by UAW local
eol representing 1,700 production workers. The group of
women, many with their children, succeeded in turning back
several autos bearing non-strikers despite the presence of
about 100 sheriff's deputies. (AP Wirephoto)
BLONDE HAS IT FIGURED OUT:
How to Cool Off a Wolf?
Tell 'Em They're Intelligent
By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON
Hollywood, Sept. 29 (UP) The best way to cool off a Hollywood
wolf, a New York blonde declared today, is to tell 'em they're
Intelligent for that sort of thing."
Blue-eyed Phyllis Kirk swears it works better'n a fistful of
hatpins.
That s what everbody on-
Broadway advised her to stock
up on when she transplanted
her talents to this land of bach
elor apartments and bared
fangs.
"Hat-pins," she grinned.
"Sharp ones. But I've found
something better."
Miss Kirk says, sure, she's
bumped Into her share of gents
with "ideas." But she gets their
minds on other things by butter
ing up their egoes.
And she s wiggled out un
scathed every time.
"All you do," Phyllis says
calmly, "is make sure you don't
startle 'em. Say you're caught
in a bear grip. Fighting does no
good. And you can t run.
"So you Just say: 'Come now,
I really don't want to. And I'm
sure you're Intelligent enough
and sensitive enough not to force
me against my will. You're real
ly a brilliant man. I know . . .
Otherwise I wouldn't hav gone
out with you,
And you'd be surprised, she
claims, how fast the boys for
get those etchings they wanted
to show her. They spend the rest
of the evening knocking them
selves out to prove how' right
she was about that "brilliant"
tuff.
"Of eourse, some of them
never ask you out again," Phyl
lis shrugged. "But who wants to
go through ail that again any
way?" Miss Kirk is a young actress
Bam Ooldwyn brought to movie
town for a top part in "With All
My Love." She's beautiful and
she's shapely and you can bet
she's been handing out a lot
of those "You're-too-intelligents"
since she arrived.
She tries to keep herself from
getting caught flatfooted with a
four-handed romeo by a little
pre-date screening.
"If you know a man has some
thing besides dinner and danc
ing on his mind you don't go out
with him," she says. "And their
are ways a girl can tell. It's a
feeling that conies through
even over a telephone line."
But now and then even the
most careful maiden gets fooled.
That's when you fall bark on
the Intelligence routine.
So far, Phyllis says she has
n't had to worry about what to
do If the gent doesn't care
whether she admires his brains
or not.
"I suppose," she says meek
lly, "I'd just run like the dickens
before it's too late.
Detroit Salt Mines
Air Raid Shelters
Detroit, Sept. 29 W Salt
mines under the city of Detroit
are being inspected for possible
usefulness as air raid ahelters in
case of an atomic bomb attack.
The mines honeycomb the
southwestern sector of the city.
City planning commission offi
cials are looking them over.
"They seem to think that with
proper ventilation the old salt
mines would make excellent
shelters," said John H. Wither
spoon, temporary chairman of
the mayor's civilian defense
committee.
One official pointed out that
the mines could only shelter a
part of the population. Others
would have to be evacuated.
The Status of Freedom atop
the Capitol dome In Washington,
D. C, weighs 14.985 pounds and
cost about $23,700.
SWITCH TO
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Emergency Landing
Field at Port Orford
Gold Beach, Ore., Sept. 29 Wi
The county airport, just north
of Port Orford, will provide an
emergency landing field for
planes in this area soon.
The airport, acquired by the
county from the navy, will have
a beacon operating soon. The
lights used for night landings,
shot out by vandals, are being
replaced.
County Judge Guy Forsyth
said that planes wishing to land
at night should circle Port Or
ford as a signal, and an employe
will drive to the field and turn
The "bugs" now are being ell
minated and the pile is going
through its final pre-start tests,
a progress report from the lab
oratory disclosed today,
In an atomic pile, slugs of
uranium, or other fissionable
material, art inserted between
blocks of pure graphite and
when a certain or "critical" size
is reached, the chain reaction
starts.
The amount of uranium and
the critical' size necessary for
chain reaction still is a top U.S.
secret despite evidence that Rus
sia now has been able to set off
an atomic explosion.
Atomic piles do not make
bombs but they do make an
other element, plutonium, that
is used In the atomic bomb. In
this country's first pile at the
University of Chicago it was the
"key" to the atomic bomb. Ac
tually, an atomic pile is a con
trolled chain of reaction of
splitting atoms, whereas in the
bomb the chain reaction is un
controlled. The Brookhaven laboratory
also disclosed in its progress re
port that the "atomic hospital"
has been in operation for some
on the lights.
The airport has a 1100-foot
paved runway.
months and that seven patients,
suffering cancer of the thyroid,
had been treated with radio
active iodine which is now being
produced in the atomic furnaces
at Oak Ridge, Tenn.
Eventually the Brookhaven
Reception Arranged
For Brooks Teachers
Brooks Teachers in the
Brooks grade school, Mrs. Esther
pile will be. turning out its own
radioactive substances, includ
ing iodine and other Isotopes
that are proving of value in
medicine, industry and agriculture.
The Brookhaven pile, owned
by the U.S. atomic energy com
mission and operated under con
tract by a group of eastern uni
versities, is designed so that it
might be used to create power.
but scientists have said that it
may never be used for that purpose.
Grant, principal, Mrs. Lauretta at the reception were Mrs.
Martin, Mrs. Alta Simmons and Waldo Lowery, Mrs. John Arch
Mrs. India Reavis were honoredier and Mrs. Orlo Palmer; pour-
with a reception at the school
house. Corsages were present
ed to each teacher.
Officers of the PTA serving
ing were Mrs. Andy Gilchrist
and Mrt. Harry Bosch; th pro
gram was in charge of Mrs. Les
lie Tontz.
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