Newspaper Page Text
Instant
Rainmakei
produces artificial
precipitation for test
ing rain removal and
de-icing equipment
on airplanes. The
rainmaker is
equipped with stor
age tanks and a 10-
nozzled boom which
emits a trail of mois
ture that ices a fol
lowing plane, as seen
at right and below.
The system is used
by the Air Force, and
by the Cessna Air
craft Co., shown here
with its own rain
maker.
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House Tax Men Chip
Away At 10 Pct. Hike
WASHINGTON (UPD—A psy
chologist recommended today
that and new congressional code
of ethics Include realistic
standards, measured penalties,
and plenty of ventilation for
public scrutiny.
Dr. Franklin P. Kilpatrick,
dean of graduate studies at the
University of Delaware, ap
peared before the House Ethics
Committee at the opening of
hearings on a code of standards
for congressmen.
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The committee, commissioned
by the House to write a new
code, also heard from Norman
E. Isaacs, executive editor of
the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-
Journal and Times, represent
ing the American Society of
Newspaper Editors ASNEI.
The House committee was
established this year in the
wake of the investigation that
resulted in the exclusion of
Rep. - elect Adam Clayton
Powell, D-N.Y.
The Senate has an older,
parallel committee also working
on a new code. It held some
closed sessions on the subject
both before and after it
investigated and recommended
the censure of Sen. Thomas J.
Dodd, D-Conn. Today’s hearing
was the first thrown open to
testimony from outside Con
gress, however. £
Kilpatrick, who conducted a
three-year study of public
attitudes toward politicians,
Wm«WiKiai!
Tito To Brief LBJ On
Arab Mideast Views
By WALTER LOGAN
United Press International
Yugoslav President Tito will
send President Johnson a
"complete summary of the
Arab leaders’ views on the
Mideast crisis” when the
Communist leader completes
his one-week tour of Arab
capitals, the semiofficial Cairo
newspaper Al Ahram said
today.
Iraqi President Abdel Rah
man Ares opened the Baghdad
conference of Arab economic
ministers with the declaration
Arabs "will not lay down their
arms and are determined to
seek revenge” agamst Israel.
The Arab economic chiefs
warned against setting unr-alis
tically severe rules, such as low
dollar limits on campaign
spending, that would be honored
in the breach.
"Establish only those stan
dards which all honorable
members can live with under
vir'-ially all circumst: ices,” he
said.
Both Kilpatrick and Isaacs
recommended that congressmen
and legislative employes dis
close their personal finances.
The psychologist cor-eded dis
closure might be “a painful
invasion of privacy,” but said
"it seems to me not too high a
price to pay for the privilege of
public office and the gain in
public confidence.”
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were gathered to plot retaliation
against the United States and
other alleged "supporters of
Israeli aggression” during the
June 5-10 Middle East war.
"If we are to live with honor
and dignity, we must use our
strongest economic weapon in
the battle,” Ares told the
ministers. He was referring to
the Iraqi plan for a three-month
stoppage of all Arab oil
shipments to try to exhaust the
supplies of Britain and West
Germany.
Term Reports Unfounded
In Jerusalem, Israeli Foreign
Minister Abba Eban said
reports of a United States-
Russian accord on the Middle
East crisis were unfounded.
Eban said in a Radio Israel
interview there was no reason
to assume such an accord was
in the offing. The Soviet Union
has been the champion of the
Arab cause.
The Israeli leader warned any
accord, even between major
powers, which was against
Israel’s interests would not be
considered binding.
Eban said Israeli-American
cooperation would continue as
long as Washington adhered to
its five-point Middle East peace
plan announced by President
Johnson just before the U.N.
General Assembly’s emergency
debate on the crisis.
Summary of Views
Tito today was giving Egyp
tian President Gamal Abdel
Nasser a summary of the latest
Syrian and Iraqi views on the
situation. The 75-year-old Yugo
slav leader spent the last three
days conferring with Syrian
President Noureddin Al Atassi
and Ares.
Tito was meeting Nasser in
Alexandria before leaving in his
private yacht for Yugoslavia.
They were to have met in Cairo
but 10-degree heat in the
Egyptian capital forced reloca
tion of their final round of talks
to the famous Mediteranean
city.
Al Ahram said Tito would
send personal messages to
Soviet leaders, the heads of
other East Eurpoean countries
and the presidents of other
nonaligned nations in addition to
President Johnson.
Washington defeated Lord
Cornwallis at Princeton, N. J.,
Jan. 3, 1777.
The State Flower of Alabama
is the camellia.
The area of the District of Col
umbia is 69 square miles.
The world’s first flight kitchen
was opened by United Air Lines
in Oakland, Calif., in 1936.
The Royal Gramma fish hat
ches egs by carrying them in a
portion of its mouth.
Griffin Daily News
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RAY GUN FOR SALE, this long-life gas laser is the first
to become commercially available for producing intense
beams of ultraviolet light continuously. Use would be in
the bio-chemical field, industrial and chemical processing,
drug and pharmaceutical manufacture, and in photo
graphic and copying industries. When used, it emits
invisible rays from the top of the long cylinder at right,
held by Dr. Karl Hernqvist of the RCA Laboratories in
Princeton, N.J.
20
Wednesday, Aug. 16, 1967