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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 15

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

REPUBLIC REPUBLIC MAIL BULLDOG Monday, November 18, 1937 15 Arizona Republic, Phoenix, Arizona. )tci) Taken CHRISTMAS SPECIAL i Firm Creates) 150 Attend School U.S. Satellite, Press Convention i a IT. 1 1 ICBM Unit FLAGSTAFF (Special) About 150 delegates to the ninth annual convention of the Arizona Intcrscholastic Press Association met here Saturday for workshop, business, and social sessions. lv 7- BALTIVORE Mi (L'P)-The' Speakers, following the workshops on photography, newspaper Martm Company yesterday an- mane-up.

sports, ana oinur caa-yuncs ui T1 50 icuuidi noimcfd creation of a new division newspaper and yearoooK proauc i Harness H-Bomb Fury LONDON (UP) British nuclear scientists have artificially rrcated the almost two-mil-linn df-eree temperatures to harness the furv of the hydrogen bomb for peaceful uses, it was announced yesterday. Atomic Energy Authority cautiously announced that "the indications are that fusion has been achieved" a major scientific breakthrough in the goal to con- included Bill Cameron and to soecil what it drsciibed as "on- llon' 87.50 Now il Cnntfnlrnt Trrm Phoenix, vice president; and Ft the-spot arrangements" for launchv I-plcr. est Martin, Winslow High, execu- Cameron, editor and publisher, tive-secrctary. inp the navy anguard earth sal elhte and the air forte Titan in ballistic missile. msss Other schools represented included the new high school at of the Verde Independent at Cot-umwood, talked on weekly newspaper problems.

Epler, on the Martin President George Bunk Pace. Tempe. West and South whose firm is prime confrac-staff of the Arizona Daily Sun at of' phoenX( GUa Bend. or for the proposed earth satel- Flagstaff, talked on daily mI anA er Miami. Flagstaff, and Scottsdale.

(30 W. VMnitnn Ah 8-4l lite's three-sUiM latinchiiv; rocket paper operations. in named G. T. Wilkv, corporate the deadliest forces known to Xt man.

1 Vl5? US ivice president in charge of manii-! Both student and faculty fi assume duties immo- oi tne association cieciea oiucers. diatelv as ceneinl mananrr of the New student officers are Jim Tin spokesman said scientists at the Harwell Atomic Center suc-cuxled in creating temperatures of more than 1,800,000 degrees fahrenhcit. It was the first known artificial achievement of fusion outside an H-bomb explosion. They new division. The division was Sphar, Pueblo High School, Tuc-given equal status with Martin -on, president; Malcolm Terence, opertitions in Baltimore, Denver, Amphitheater High, Tucson, vice and Orlando, I president; and Kathleen Kenyon, Willey will directly st.perviso'P0'"10 niSh.

Tucson, secretary, all Martin acuities in the Patrick; New of the Air l'orcc Base-Cape Canaveral' Jim Lconardi Aglia Fria area in Ilonda. Thn. e. amirdmp Schnol pr0si(lpnt; to the company, will include the Gj Camelback High, contimif testina of ths; latest ver-. sinus of the M'Jiadtir tactical mis- u'd an apparatus described only as Ask for dependablo A style to suit your bathroom, kitchen or laundry needs.

Featuring the NU-RE-NU valve assembly for extra-long life. Beautiful lines to choose from colorful Monogram, sparkling Quality trim. See our complete stock today. sile. At present, known scientific advances have included atomic fission, the power of the atomic tomb, for peacetime uses.

The hydropen bomb, containing even greater power, had blocked efforts in a great measure because of the fantastic temperatures cri'iiA sifiK nits HOLLYWOOD (AP) Mrs. Bunker declared that Willry'sj new assignment was an indication of the Martin Company's di lermi-, nit ion to do its work effectively! and in the shortest time. C'cpha Frances Sisk. 53, wife of Television Producer Robert Sisk, dii in a hospital yesterday after .1 th.ree-ye.ir illness. Sisk.

former- W. D. MANOR riu.bln, 3612 N. 7rh STREET Phone AM 5-1664 WppIv Flfth 8raders from uuuiv cciv Papag0 School view book display in children's room of Phoenix Public L-ibrary, arranged for National Book Week, starting today through Saturday. Library will have and other functions, open to the public.

Tommy Warnock, 10, left, 2121 N. 39th Mrs. Agnes Rolhlisbcrg, fifth grade teacher; and Linda Sutton, 10, of 4111 E. McKinlcy, examines one of books on display. 'iv with MGM and RKO studios, is Most of the licorice used in the tlrj producer of TV shows "Wyatt It, was understood that the experiments have utilized "They'll Do It Every Time" in the comics lUni'ed Slates conies from Harp" and 1 ho Californians." pure deuterium which can be pro- booK bazaar, i.V.

discussion program, duced easily from water at a cost of ST.noo a ton. Engineers esti- lB.ts-fc., mated that tins amount would yield energy equivalent to one million tons of coal costing four tines as much. AX New Service Offered By Phoenix Library If you want to learn about early Canadian history, or vhat makes computers tick, or if you just want to broaden yourself generally in the liberal arts, there are books which will give you what you want. Ask Mrs. Helen E.

Miler, 2226 E. Avalon. She runs Phoenix Public Library's new readers' advisory Avondolc Plans Meet AVONDALE (Spccial)-An open meeting to discuss the Agua Fria Union High School District's 000 bond election Nov. 2G has been service, scheduled for tomorrow night. School and one year at Emerson Elementary School.

"WHEN I'M home, I read for v-. J' cvs, A v- '-r'; 4., At -M A 4'. At her desk in the main lobby, she dispenses help from 2 to 5 p.m. weekdays and Monday and Wednesday evenings from 6 to 9. Chaunrey Coor, superintendent of the district, said the meeting will be held at p.m.

in the high school auditorium. He said members of the district's board of education and administrative staff will explain bond m-eis and an the pleasure of it, she said. "Then when I go back to work, they pay me for what I've read. It's a nice arrangement." It's impossible for a person wanting to pursue a certain course of study to read all the books listed in the average bibliography, she said. So she helps the reader pick out the ones which are available at the Phoenix library and which she believes will be most helpful.

Some bibliographies are too broad, she said, explaining that many books on gardening contain but little information of use to people living in the arid Southwest. The new library service also ALTHOUGH, she. is. raising, three children, ages 10, 7 and 3, she still finds time to read exhaustively. As a matter of fact, she has been reading books of all, sorts avidly since her high school days.

So she has personal knowledge of many bocks to help guide readers. Mrs. Miller has a degree in library science from the University of Minnesota and 17 years experience in library work. This experience includes four vcars at Gilbert High swer questions. Property taxpayers alo will be asked to approve spending of already by a 10-cent levy in the Nov.

25 election. Coor said the money raised by the bond issue would be used to add a classroom wing on the high school, enlarge physical education dre-jing rooms, anil add a vocational agriculture building. He said the additional will be needed to keep up with aiuicipated rft-dont population in-rrra of 100 students in each of the next four years. fi0EW fi i Win i- -i 1 -v It 'J ss i ri -f x-r 1 will help clubs and other organizations draw up reading il its for their members. No charge is made for this service.

Farmers To Meet Andy sends a 13-volume sot of Compton's Pictured to Brcnda Wentworth, 12, of Portland, Maine, for her Three Maricopa County Farm Bureaus have scheduled pot luck What are fossils? dinner meetings this week. They Fossils arc the remains of animals and plants that lived long rhe Litchfield, Buckeye, and ago. some ot tnese iossus nave oten mineu in uie eauu lur Dureaus. hundreds of millions of years. They tell ot bygone animals and plants that no longer exist in the world.

The expert who studies fossils is called a paleontologist mean- The Litchfield bureau meets at 7: 15 tonight in the Litchfield Community Church. Jim Carter, assist- a student oi ancient iiwng uiiiigs. rui cvciy ujsmi is il-u uy a iant Maricopa couniy iaim aj-m, civaturc that once lived. It may be a footstep in the ancient mud, show a motion picture, "Ri- -i i -1 i Mt'ir i- tmi'iinrttini i Miti'Mnmirfif i i 1 -h. bones or the stony mold of a shell.

It may lie amher, a goo ot jval Worlds. The Buckeye bureau meets at 7:30 tonight, in the Buckeye High his son iv! i ill go to School. Holiday decorations wi'J be demonstrated by Helen and John Beauchamp. rem from a long dead tree. It may be petroleum or tne mipres-simi of an ancient frond in a seam of coal.

All these are fossil records made by once living creatures. Four hundred years ago, it was the common idea that the world ws a few thousand years old. So the first theories of paleontology were far from the mark. A theory was needed to explain vhv 'these buried remains were so different from any living crea- tU'ic u-ic nn Ninnh'Q flnnd rnnnllpsQ Save with confidence Washington Farm Bureau mctv at 7: 3(1 n.m. tomorrow in the! i.

i. t-iH vnrti u-hon the Washincton School, 2626 V. North- peilslK'U uuill uiu caim, sain i ern. Marvin Morrison, county resolutions committee chairman, will review the policy recommendations of the bureau. ney grows faster wnere year mor His it a firm policy to have your money available on a moment's er, too.

Here's a lucky youp': bonus s.v.ins actunt at to send son notice. i i 1 .1 woild was drowned. I exoerts read oilier events in the rocks of the earth's crust. Scars, ffniiches, misplaced boulders and debris told of the Ice A its. These events it was plain, took ages of time.

The earth was thousands, but millions of years old. And fossils were found in thee rocks. The paleontologists learned to date their fos-s'ls from the rocks in which they were found. Many dinosaur bones v.ere preserved in ancient swamps where the mud later became ri'-v kind. Decav bacteria do not live in stagnant water because theie is a shortage of oxygen.

Tree fossils were also preserved in water whole forests, which later became coal. u'f! the Ice Ages, huge mammoths were overtaken by gla-t-ii is. Bones and tu-'ks ae found in the ice cliffs of Alaska, China f.nd The complete body of one big mammoth recently was his flerh eaten. This fellow has been in deep freeze for thousands of years, since the Ice Age. Send aues'ips to Ask Andy, The Arizona Republic.

Soviet Rrnoiis Spulnik Mileage LONDON (UP) A Soviet prog a i to coilee, So why not transfer your to Arizona Savings s.u. retire- where you can save with confidence. You'll enjoy doing business at any one of our 17 convenient offices. Make r.cw i on fijiks so s.nc regularly Arizona Savings your headquarters for savings, mortgages, a pr.yr your I Acaiht ress report on the M'lttnik will have made 2CS cr-j suits around the bv 10 p.m. lat night, covering a distance of.

5.521,233 miles. average dr. t.ian er Travelers Cneques and U. S. Savings Bends, All Arizona Savings offices are open for business from 0:00 am to LOO pm, Monday through Thursday, and until tjj ni profitable, icy i hcc.i first your 6:00 pm on Friday.

Stop in soon, and start saving at Arizona An-1 it has alwavs made Savings, wiiere your money grows faster, to Know gooJ ft. Radio Moscow sa'd that by same hnnr Sputnik I will hive! made 667 circuits. Tts fellow-! traveling carrier rocket will have! Rvpri'srntini; Many of America Leiiilinq Insurance Companies made 672 circuits. paid 4 times a year epoH I 5 ten full 4 d---di trom ths Is T.O:' 4V2 turrent rafe per onnum ASSETS OVER $30 MILLION Applications Open In Navv I'rosram J' and loan association i Applications are now being ac-j cepted from qualified colleee students for enrollment in the re-! serve officer candidate program; of the nay. Fire, Automobile, Casualty, Aircraft Accident.

Marine Insurance Fidelity and Surety Bonds Office HourS 8:00 A.M.-4:45 P.M. Closed Saturdoy 181 1 Nonh Central 4327 South Centra! Mesa, 3 S. Macdona'd I 122 Fast MiDocI. Gltnthle. 33 3rd Ave.

Scottsdale, 28 Pima PUza. Also 9 Other Statewide Offices miasm mmwz WHM) LILL3 12 Students don't have to enlist in the naval reserve to be eligible. Information may be obtained at' the naval and marine corp; reserve training center, 20 12 W. Thomas. tiiivtance Phoenii.

Aritona Ground Floor. Professional Bldg. A14-2191.

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Pages Available:
5,584,045
Years Available:
1890-2024