Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 280, Decatur, Adams County, 27 November 1957 — Page 15
WEftRE&DAY, NOVEMBER H, ifctt
v ** «! ir 1 vlilFw « I -Mb f- *MW' mB B<. ; - ." / "' x r W P '(‘wwxNk ># - GETS HIS "CREDENTIALS"—Dr. Eduardo Augusto Garcia (left), newly elected president of the Organization of American States, receives his desk marker from the outgoing president, Dr. Fernando Lobo of Brazil, in Washington. Looking on is Dr. Gonzalo F. Facio of Costa Rica. OAS vice president. (International)
■ ; 'M ' I !. M&d 115S 1 ; KWw’ ♦’’Ml NfSt j| STILL GOING AT 83 — James Michael Curley, former Massachusetts governor, former Boston mayor and former representative in Congress, looks as spry as ever as he marks .his 83rd birthday with a stroll in Boston. /tiijernatio'nfil) '*'■ I _ ;j '*,- ~
\ The Boldest Advance in 50 Years! ■ ii< fi '■■ and RIGHT HERE is where yoe’ll discover a row Uml es driving! • --. -■ - , =- — —-— * ' J i V? •■ 1 ‘ J I __Get set for a revolution on wheel®—you've never driven anything like the Bold New Pontiac at our showroom now! Come in—roadtest the most important engineering advances of qty time, teamed together for the first time ip. a Golden Jubilee showpiece for Pontiac and General Motors. Sixteen models, from the spectacular new Ronnevilles to low-priced Chieftains . . . -with Air Suspension*, Fuel Injection* and many custom-tailoring options available in every ~ mtxiel! * extra-coot option SEE HD Min INI ONLY <tt TO OFFtt ML THESE-AERO-FRAME CHASSIS DESIGN • CIRCLES-OF-STEEL SAFETY BODY • TEMPEST 395 PERFORMANCE • EVER-LEVEL AIR SUSPENSION' • PONTIAC FUEL INJECTION* • and many, many morel Boi.il WJfflß DECATUR Super Service 224 W. MONROE STREET
Great Deal Already Known About Moon Prospective Moon Travelers Warned By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor NEW YORK (UP) — To avoid disappointment, prospective travelers to the moon ought to understand they won’t find a great deal there which isn’t known already. For example, a scientist has just figured out a plausible explanation of why the moon's “seas’’ < are quite flat although they are not seas of water but seas of rock rubble. Dr. John J. Gilvarry of Milwaukee reasoned that the moon is periodically shaken by moonquakes, as the earth is shaken by earthquakes — and the effect is something like that produced by shaking flour through a sieve. Moonquakes, he reasoned, break up the rocks in high moon places and shake the rubble into the low places, forming moon “seas.” Meteors Create Craters He proceeded from the theory that the moon's craters were made by the impacts of meteors, and the "seas” merely are bigger craters which have been filled with rubble. A rival theory is that the craters are cones of extinct volcanoes and the “seas” are vast beds of the lava which once poured from them The meteor-collision theory supposes that some sort of erosion process is going on in the moon-’s mountains which breaks u piffle
rocky peaks, and reduces those big pieces into small chunks and dust. But it would* have to be a different kind of erosion from the common earth one, and there would have to be a “transport system” more effective than simple gravity to get the rubble aown into the “seas.” Gilvarry, who is well known in science for his previous calculations on the nature of the moon's surface, cited the evidence that the moon was formed “cold,” that is, it was never a molten mass of matter as the earth was once. Therefore, the moon would have had no volcanoes but would have structural faults which because they violate the physical laws of balance, would cause violent) quakes periodically. . Earthquakes More Frequent Having been a molten ball once upon a time, earth has an in-1 terior balance which the moon, if i | it were formed "cold,” could not have. Nevertheless the earth has, iin addition to volcanoes, faults which produce some 10 million quakes annually — most of them extremely minor, fortunately. Calculating with earth equations and putting gravity accelerations intd the balance, (the moon's gravitational acceleration is onesixth that ot earth,) his mathematics produced an approximation* of the energy needed for a succession of moon quakes to have broken up rocks in the moon mountains and to have shaken the rubble and dust down into the “seas.” Violent quakes shake the earth every few centuries. Gilvarry figured that one such quake every million years on the moon could have filled huge holes with rubble and dust and produced the appearance of the moon seas as any of us may see them with even a low-power telescope. To Raise Sub WATERFORD, Conn. — (IF — An attraction for skin-divers and underwater “tourists” is to be removed. The William McGuire Co., a New York Salvage firm, said it would refloat the old G-2 submarine which had been at the bottom of Long Island Sound since 1919.
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TRE 6BCATOH DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA
« " I * isl i t Here’s merry news for girls and B 1■ w I H ’■ —4' v r-'. : FJr boys! Santa’s here with a bagfull of toys, W for IE presents by the score. So hurry to Toyland, every- . one. We're sure you’ll have a lot of fun. i BOWERS HARDWARE CO. I | “FREE PARKING FOR OUR CUSTOMERS ON EAST SIDE OF BUILDING” | g 236 WEST MONROE STREET. DECATUR, IND.
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