Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 22 October 1958 — Page 20

PAGE SIX-B

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIAN*

Indiana Republican

Chiefs Optimistic Feel Chances For Victory Improve INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—lndiana Republicans will try to count vote noses during the Indianapolis meeting of the Indiana Republican Editorial Association Saturday. For the first time since the I campaign began, the GOP chiefs believe they can win the election, albeit by a narrow vote margin. With the polls of newspapers showing GOP gains and indications that the attack on the Evansville mayoralty regime ot Vance Hartke and the antiReuther assault have been effective, the deep gloom of the GOP appears to have been relieved somewhat. Curiously, the Republican candidate in the gravest danger will be an oratorical headliner at the editors’ luncheon Saturday. He is Rep. F. Jay Nimtz, South Bend. It appears that at long last, youthful John Brademas, South Bend Democrat, may unseat Nimtz in the Third District, largely because of the recession’s effect in industrial South Bend. Farm State Speaker In line with GOP reliance on (the farm vote, the banquet speaker for the editors will be Sen. Andrew F. Schoeppel, of rural Kansas. With the election less than two weeks away, the Hoosier Republicans have begun to close ranks and to frown upon the disastrous factionalism of the past. Recent events along the harmony line have included: —After months of secret battling with Sen. Homer E. Capehart, Governor Handley went to Canossa. The governor called on Capehart at the latter's hotel and pleaded for help in the senatorial struggle. —Also, two other astute party chiefs, who have been either ignored or assailed by the Handley forces, have been called into the fold. They are Rep. Charles A. Halleck, Rensselaer, and former ■ Gov. Ralph F. Gates, who also is i national committeeman. They ; have been invited to high-level conferences at which their counsels have received respectful attention. Conspicuous by his absence, however, has been former Gov. George N. Craig during whose regime the damaging State Highway Department scandals occurred. GOP Had Big Margin The more optimistic GOP bigwigs point out that President Eisenhower carried Indiana by almost 400,000 votes only two I short years ago, the totals being I Eisenhower 1,182,811 and Adlai E. Stevenson 783,908. Those leaders reason that it will require a ter-

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rific vote swing to put the Democrats in the lead on Nov. 4. Most realistic observers believe that the Democrats are v sure to retain their two present congressmen—Ray J. Madden, Gary, and Winfield K. Denton, Evansville, and that the Democrats have a fair chance of unseating Republican Reps. John V. Beamer, Wabash, and Charles B. Brownson, Indianapolis. These observers opine that the following other GOP congressmen have the inside track. They are Halleck; E. Ross Adair, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Cecil M. Harden, Covington; William G. Bray, Martinsville; Earl Wilson, Bedford, and Ralph Harvey, New Castle. The other GOP state candidates will sink or swim with Governor Handley, but perhaps with more potes than the governop, according to all indications. Switch is Problem The politicos say that the big weakness of the governor with the Republican leaders, primarily, is the fact that he proposes to leave the gubernatorial chair and switch to the Senate in the middle of his term. This step is unprecedented in modern political history and has been taken in the face of a provision in the Indiana Constitution that says the governor and lieutenant governor are ineligible to fill any other office during their terms. Hartke, to a lesser extent, has lost popularity for being an absentee mayor and striving to go <o the Senate with one more year co serve as mayor. Hie indict-

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ments of eight city officials and policemen of the Hartke regime have sharpened this situation. Solar-Power Sails For Space Travel Says Sails Faster Than Rocket Engine PITTSBURGH (UPD—Dr. T.C. Tsu believes that the simple procedure of unfurling a sail beats all the fancier space-propulsion systems for reaching the planets Mars and Venus. Tsu, of the Westinghouse Research Laboratories, has made detailed studies of the force which the sun’s radiation could apply against a parachute • like sail, and has reached these conclusions. —A space ship weighing 1,000 pounds and bound for Mars would need a sail 1,600 feet in diameter, big enough to provide a tent for the Pentagon. But the sail would be very thin, would weigh only 800 pounds and would be unfurled after the ship had been rocketed into orbit. Faster Mars Trip —Solar radiation would provide a force of only half-a-pound or about half a horsepower, but this would continue indefinitely and would propel the ship to Mars in 118 days. By comparison. Dr. Wernher von Braun allows 260 days for reaching Mars in a rocket ship. —Although the planet Venus is

.flHDkJjfl fl - ? "'J GOING UP—Jordan’s King Hussein gets a helping hand in adjusting his helmet as he sits in a British Vampire jet of the Jordanian air force at airport near Amman. The young king, a flying enthusiast, often pays visits to air bases.

closer to the sun than is the earth, Tsu believes it could be reached with almost equal ease by a system that amounts to "tacking” — changing the position of the sail so as to move either towards or away from the sun. The same Kind 01 “tacking.” he said, could be used to slow down in space. After leaving its 18.000-mile-an-hour earth orbit, Tsu said the ship would hit a peak speed of 50,000 to 60,000 miles an hour on its journey to Mars. The scientist outlined his plan during a series of scientific demonstrations Monday. He said his ship would need no return fuel, but might want to carry an auxiliary landing craft for descent to the surface of the nearer planets. •

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1958

Demonstrates Dishwasher Sailing would be inefficient for reaching distant planets, he said, and would become worthless outside the solar system, where heat radiation from the stars would compete with that from the sun. Dr. R. A. Ramey, head of the laboratories’ new products division, meanwhile, said he is installing in his home an “ultrasonic” dishwasher that cleans dishes by sending sound vibrations through water. Ramey demonstrated that a co-coa-stained glass almost immediately became clean when placed in the sound - agitated water. He estimated the device will become "practical” in two to four years. At the close 01 1957 there were 563,543 oil-producing wens in the United States.