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The Record du lieu suivant : Hackensack, New Jersey • 6

Publication:
The Recordi
Lieu:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Date de parution:
Page:
6
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

TiiK rf.coko. Thursday, may vm2 WOIN VOTERS Capital's Great For Tourists, But It's Easy To Go Astray Science Would Separate Fallout Myths From Facts To Allay Fear Pitfalls: Temptation To Wander, Gabby Bus Drivers, Advice From Strangers fly HARRY ITRGISON Washington, May 3 (ITI TourUU are passing through Washington now it the rate of about a day. They spent taao here in IftU and it luuks like around 4 v. Federal Hadiation Experts Establish Maximum Limits Of Safety (More so than In any olhrr field of prekinii public run-ffrn, seiftua speaks ilh a divided voice nn the haanU of fallout from nuclrttr lesu. In the last In a cnc on fads alxmt fallout, an I'rtss science writer decriles hM'lul venue of reaearvh and sums up v.

lint la known today.) By ALTOS ItLAKKSLKE (Associated Press Science Writer) Oak Kltljie, May 3 Outside, rain spattered down. And a frightened mother kept her children home from ichool. Rain, believed, would bring down deadly if: 5 that Caroline did not have her meals in (tits room, she ate upstairs and, as matter of fad, might be having luncheon riiiht this minute which would explain why she had left Hie Ureen Room in the sole custody of Calvin t'ooliiie. The Federal Bureau of Investl-gallon aha draws heavy tourist traffic, especially men with soiu between the agr of 10 and IB. Most visitors here Judge the Lincoln Memorial to be the capital's single most impressive monument.

Like the Taj Mahal, it should be seen at night and across water. Daniel Chester French' sculpture Is carved out of Georgia marble. Tourists chatter any gaily when visiting most points of Interest here, but Inside the Lincoln Memorial there usually Is silence. DON'T BEAR FRt'lT This Is the fiftieth anniversary of the planting of the first Japanese cherry-blossom free here by Mrs. William Howard Tart.

They do not bear edible fruit, but burst into pink and white blossoms any time between March 20 and April 17. The Japanese sent them to this country In appreciation of President Theodore Roosevelt' help In end-Ing the Russo-Japanese War with a treaty signed at Portsmouth, N. II. the same amount given rathrr rapidly. i winding Into the White House stood Mi Dorii Leppert.

12-yenr-old liirl Scout ifive merit badgest from New York City In charge of a patrol of six. In confident voire she stated that when we got Inside the White House and reached the Ureen Room. Caroline Kennedy would be there to receive us. Perhaps Caroline' mother, too. but we shouldn't count too heavily on that.

One hour later we arrived In the Green Room which was Inhabited only by an oil portrait of Calvt Coolulge. There was a long, embarrassed silence In our little group and then Miss Leppert said briskly: "Over at the Bureau of Engraving we will see them making dollar bills right before our eyes." JACKIF. CHANGED There wa a time, especially when Congress was in session, that the Capitol was the most popular tourist attraction. Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy changed all that with her televised lour of the White House.

The lower floor of the White House Is open to the public from 10 A. M. to noon on weekdays, and the line begins forming around 8 A. M. No matter what time you get in line you will not see any of the Kennedy family.

Their living quarters are on the upper floors. At the height of the tourist season almost 7.000 persons pass through the public rooms of the White House every hour. The State Dining Room seems to be the most popular room, especially with women tourists. There are 20 chairs at the table, but Miss Leppert explained to our group SCOOTER ROMF.O: Jim Owen, Sl-year-old ulvrrslly of Kentucky senior, takes a warm-up swing through New York streets before starting on hi projected lMHtO-mlle scooter trip to Chile to keep a Christmas Eve date with his Latin American girl friend. He'll leave later this week on Wirephoto.) TO GUIDED COUNTY TOUR Freeholders To Show lluildinKs, Park Next Week 100 WILL ATTKNO The Buaid of Frerliuldt-rs will sponsor a guided tour for more than 100 members of the League of Women Voters on Wednesday Acting Freeholder Director Caxiiu II.

Duly Jr. said todny llml the schedule calls for League member to avertible in the Freeholder public meeting room at ii A. M. rrmn 10 un tit 10:20 thry Mill be shown the new motion picture recently produced by the Freeholder about the role of the Bergen County Polite Department iu Inw enforcement. The League lias rented two buncs for the occasion.

After the showing of the motion picture the Freeholders will take their guests on a guided lour of major Couniy facilities. The first stop will be at the County Child Welfare Home, lfiickensack, followed by a 30-mlnute Inspection of major facilities at Bergen Pines County Hospital, a 15-minute visit at the County Home for the Aged In Paramus. and a 13-mimile drive through Van Satin County Park in Paramus. A buffet luncheon will be served at the Bergen County Vocational and Technical limb School, following which League members will inspect the school. The tour will be concluded with a visit to Itockleigh county Golf Course with the guests returning to the Administrative Building at 3:30 P.

M. "The program was Inaugurated last year for the first time when more than 50 leading industrial ists and businessmen were taken on a guided tour of County facil ities, said freeholder Daly. "The comments and letters which we later received Indicated that this was one of the most successful public Information programs ever attempted by the Board of Freeholders. There is no substitute for a personal in spection of our County buildings and facilities. We are pleased that the League of Women Voters has requested to be taken on this guided tour." him $50 for the 13.000-milc round trip from New York.

His other trips have been to the West and the Pacific Northwest for a total of more than 30,000 miles. He estimates this journey will be about 23.000 miles round trip, including a side trip to the Tierra Del Fuego. As usual, he plans to take odd jobs along the way. He has worked as a fire fighter in Oregon, a circus attendant, and a dock and cannery worker. He has slept in abandoned huts, the back scats of cars, and a Zen Buddhist camp but most of the time in the open.

What will happen between him and Senorita Villarroel if and when he does make it to Chile-then he says, "I'll have to play it by ear." Soaring Soul Spurs Suitor And Scooter Stoutly Smitten Swain Plans Jaunt Of 12,000 Miles To See Senorita New York, May 3 An international love affair that blossomed in the Kentucky blue-grass country will start moving toward Santiago, Chile, this week on a scooter. amounts of radioactive fallout SOME REACTIONS EXTREME Other parent at timet of nuclear trstj, and even long afterward, won't allow their children to drink milk for fear It contaminated with radioactive Iodine that would give them thyroid cancer. A imnll boy broke hi finger. Ilia muiliiT convinced it healed alowly because fallout had weakened hit bones. Scientists are generally dismayed over such extreme reaction to real or potential hazards In fallout.

They know what happens to animals given pretty good wallops of radiation, or big doses of strontium-!) or radioactive Iodine. They know, for example, that strontium goes to bones, and can rroduca bone cancer in animals. But It takes 1.000 to strontium represented so far In fallout to produce the bone cancers In animals. Still, that gives them cause about what the far more tiny doses from fallout might do to humans over the years. But the scientist's phrase of "might be hazardous" Is sometimes taken to mean any amount will be hazardous.

Federal radiation experts have established what tliey believe are aounds safety limits regarding special-threat fallout atoms. These art the maximum amounts of radioactive strontium. Iodine, or cesium which they believe a person could take in or be exposed to daily and still not be harmed. Fallout in the air, in milk or food, rarely has exceeded these limits, and then only for brief periods. But they cannot offer absolute proof of no bodily harm from test fallout.

Full knowledge about such radiation is lacking. This uncertainty creates an Issue In discussions of the need for nuclear testing, the moral right to test, and the fear that testing enhances prospects of ultimata war. New research experiments are aimed at learning what the somatic or bodily effects of low-level, chronic radiation may be. One project being started here at the Oak Ridge National Labor, atory by a team of specialists will Involve a colony of 100,000 mice, quite apart from the mice used in genetic studies. Hundreds to thousands of mice will be exposed to various dosages of gamma rays from radioactive cesium over periods of days to months.

Then they Jl be observed and examined during their lifespans normally about 2 years or so to see if they live less long or get more cancers, leukemias and other ailments than mice not so exposed, explains Dr. A. C. Upton, a pathologist and physiologist. Little is known about the long-term effects of low amounts of external radiation, he adds.

Mice here will receive total dosages or five to 50 roentgens. That is about as low an amount as it is practical to give and still hope to see any measurable results among hundreds of mice. It is already known that a dosage given at a low rate generally has no more than one-quarter to one-third the effect on mice as Life shortening from radiation has been observed so fur In mice, ir. I'pion add. Hut little Information Is available about animals lamer than mice, and about humans.

Irradiated mice usually die of about the same rauM'S as normal mice, but they die sooner. The timetable fr deathls advanced. The more radiation received, the earlier Hie appearance of diseases of old age, such as cancer. A. E.

C. SKTS I LABORATORY At the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago, the Atomic Knergy Commission also Is set ting up still another colony of 10,000 mice. Some of these will bo dosed with varying amounts of stron-llum-90 and perhaps other fallout atoms to pinpoint effects. The amounts will be about 1,000 times or so larger than the amounts humans now are exposed to from fallout. Out of this will come more solid clues to human hazards from long-lasting fallout atoms such as strontium and cesium.

The research seeking basic Information could also produce extremely valuable dividends, he adds: Sounder estimates of the protections really needed for workers in the atomic age as atomic energy power plans expand. Opportunities to test, In animals, antidotes or preventives proposed for radiation sickness, or protection against genetic or somatic hazards. Clearer understanding of how radiation acts to kill cancer cells or combat leukemia, or how large doses act to bring on these diseases. Clues to the Immunity reaction by which a living body rejects borrowed organs, and study of methods to make borrowed organs survive to save lives. Clues to the action of some viruses which, like genes, are regarded as bundles of genetic information to dictate what happens to cells and organisms.

JERSEY COMPANY AWARDED LICENSE F. C. C. Picks New Radio Station To Operate In Mount Holly Washington. May 3 (LPI) A Federal Communications Commission hearing examiner's initial 'decision has awarded Bur lington County Broadcasting Com pany a new standard broadcasting station in Mount Holly, N.

J. Examiner Jay A. Kyle awarded the station grant to Burlington County over applications for same facilities in Burlington and Mount Holly from Burlington Broadcasting Co. and Mt. Holly-Burlington Broadcasting respectively.

The initial decision called for Burlington County to operate the station in Mount Holly on 1460 kilocycles, with a power of 5 kilowatts and unlimited hours. The initial decision becomes effective automatically in 50 days, unless objections are filed that the Commission deems worthy of consideration. II 3 DAYS ONLY THURS.r FRI. SAT. NAME BRAND PAINTS AT DISCOUNT PRICES COST OF PAINTING LESS THAN lc PER SQ.

LAZY DAY'S WORK Waterloo, Iowa, May 3 tl'PD Two 12-ycar old boys confessed to police yesterday thnt since they had nothing else to do thry got up extra early Tuesday and let the air out of the tires of 70 parked ears. XOVIHflMMKNf Stop Bad Breath stent Moufti-Stimicli Times fitter CirliSH latvilory titltorott BELL-ANS Ub-lilt Mutrihra 3 linn mucs HomitS acidity In int mlnutt many ItHina fieiitm latlilt. Eit RELL-ANS today tor Iht (attest -o nlirf. Jit at avujjutl. Send sottal to BELL-ASS, 0faraiut, H.

V. for liberal trt lamoli. SPECIAL OFFER! Dutch Boy BRIGHT WHITI per gal. 1962 WALLPAPER thousand! of patterns rhoosa from 50 0 0 OFF prici Room Lot WALLPAPER 1.50 bundle nough for a 12 room IT TV no 1 the long trip to Santiago. tA.

transfer his scooter by boat to Venezuela. Then he will push on to Bogota, Colombia, to Lima, Peru, and up to 17.000 feet to Cuzco. Peru. He will roll on to La Paz. Bolivia, across the Andes to Argentina and then back again to Chile.

Owen says his father is not too happy about the venture and that Senorita Villarroel's father doubts Owen will make it. However, there are some more optimistic parties willing to take a gamble on youthful love. The managing director of the motor-scooter company gave Jim a free machine valued at $475 and a large oil company has donated enough gas for him to get there and back. Several newspapers and magazines have agreed to buy articles based on the trip. Owen is confident he will reach Chile.

He said during the past 3 summers he has driven his old scooter all across the United States and to Alaska where he reached the most northerly point serviced by a road Point Circle about 50 miles south of the Arctic Circle. He said his Alaska jaunt cost A -rit ptrformir I this handtoma lndscnt olfva filaid auto coat a crito cotton acatata bland. 16 95 i fP'itmi i nj FV For comfort, you'll ROAD IS ROUGH The 21-ycar-old swain, Jim Owen, will take off on his small Italian motor scooter for a 12-000-mile voyage of the heart to keep a Christmas Eve date with his exotic Latin American beauty, Senorita Ximina Villarroel. Ximina, 20, met Jim last February while she was on a 2-week student exchange trip to the University of Kentucky where he was a senior majoring in English. It was love at first sight, he said, but she had to return home.

Jim was so smitten he quit school. To prove the depth of his affection, he promised to ride his scooter over 12,000 miles of jungle and mountain roads and to meet his dark-eyed senorita this December 24 in front of her house in Santiago, Chile. Young Owen, a Lexington den-list's son, has packed his scooter with 75 pounds of gear, including 22 pounds of books and clothes and camping equipment which will be suitable for both the Guatemalan tropics and the Bolivian highland. IS REAL PROOF He Is also carrying $350 for the journey which he estimates will take about 15 months round trip. "I've declared my love already and now I'm going to prove it," he said.

"She has the most beautiful brown eyes in the world and the most wonderful smile. "When I first met her, I sent her a yellow rose, her favorite flower, every day. I also sent her poetry which I had a friend translate into Spanish." Owen plans to leave from New York and cross into Mexico at Laredo, Tex. From there he said he will travel on the Pan American Highway to Panama and $100 million this year. WIILRK'S MUX.

CINSBtltG? The timrht guide book lit 61 nun point of tnti'ret and fur $1130 you ran git a 2ly but lour that Imluiln all of them. Or yu ran get a 3 hour job fur Ij. Whlngtoi a ftittinating and Inspirational cily, and every American should it. Hut there are perils and pitlulU, too, and the following advice Is free: Don't wander too far way from your sightseeing bus when you ti out to Inspect a building. Tour No.

62 lost Mrs. F.Iva Gins- burg the other day and nobody knows her present whereabouts. During a 20-niiiiute stop at the National Archives Building she went inside to see the original of the Declaration of Independence and never rrturned. After a long wail, the driver of No. 62.

Orrin Rogers, reported by radio to headquarters and received this order: "Proceed to treasury without Mrs. Uinsburg." If she is still in the Archives Building, she must be hungry, for It is filled with slns reading: "No Smoking, No Eating." Wear lightweight cluthtng. It I getting hot here. The driver of the sightseeing bus delivers a running lecture but here you must proceed at your own risk. You will pick up fascinating Information such as the fact that the Washington Monument is 535 feet, 5' Inches tall and sways one-quarter of an inch in a 30-mlle wind.

But you also will get: "On our right, ladies and gentlemen. Is the Bureau of Infernal Revenue, ha ha." Your ticket clearly states that you cannot get off the bus at any intermediate stage and claim a refund. Like matrimony, you are aboard for better or for worse, in sickness and in health. Beware of advice from strangers. At the end of a lone line stretching four abreast for tnrce-quarters of a mile and Mrs.

Roosevelt Speaks Monday To F.D.U. Class Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Assistant Secretary of State Har lan Cleveland will be the guest speakers next week at the class of Representative James Roosevelt Calif.) at Fairlelgh Dickinson University. Airs. Roosevelt will speak at 8 P.

M. Monday In the Teaneck campus gymnasium. The session will be open to the public. She will discuss world order through law. On May 4, Secretary Cleveland will speak at the Little Theater on the Rutherford campus of the University.

He is the Assistant Secretary of State on Interna tional Organization Affairs, and he will discuss the same topic as Mrs. Roosevelt. This pacosettar Is our picKea-stitcned Ban ion Jacket, adventurously atyled tor men on the move. Black or olive. 16 95 CuPentsylos flbaf AN EXTRA PINT With Every Gallon at no extra cost! Limittd Quantities! DUP742 HOUSE PAINT 1962 WALLTEX in Stack MONTGOMERY Exterior Whit $0" gat.

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tirzu mem? TAILOR-MADE CLOTHES FOR MEN AND bOVS 324 ESSEX STREET Phone: HU 9-7337 Open Doily Wtd. 'til 369 MONTGOMERY ST. JERSEY CITY 132-48th Stmt. Union In 8 to 9 Ample Free Parking P. M.

1136 E. ST. GEORGE AV. LINDEN City UN 7-0336 BERGEN MALL, PARAMUS 214 MAIN STREET, HACKENSACK tsmi4fiMIaj.

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Pages disponibles:
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Années disponibles:
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