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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1963)
THE WIZARDS OF SPACE d 6) By Don Oakley and John Lane JETTISON SERVICE MODULE 40AAILE v V() . "m. . m, S"? - CORRECTION TRACKINS KARTH FINAL -" Time: Sometime between 1968 and 1970. Place: 100 miles above the moon. So far the '. first American lunar landing mission has been successful. Now comes the critical phase. Two of the three Apollo astronauts have al- ready transferred from the main capsule to the : lunar excursion module (LEMj. II now drops ; away from the command module. Through a delicate balancing of manual and automatic control, the LEM is lowered close to the surface. It hovers, then moves laterally as' the crew looks for the best landing place. 1 They are guided by maps and data from un manned probes landed years before and from manned reconnaissance made in a round-the-moon flight the previous year. Finally, the landing bug settles on its spindly legs and the rockets are cut. Immediately, the two men prepare for relaunching. Once this has been done, actual exploration begins. The astronauts are busy during their brief 20-hour stay on the moon, carrying out expert ments with their payload of scientific instru ments, photographing the moonscape, collect ing samples. Some of the apparatus they pre pare to leave behind for automatic operation. It is time for relaunch. As the Apollo mother ship speeds in orbit overhead, the explorers conduct their own countdown. The LEM rises at a precisely calculated instant, separating from its legs and base. Now years of orbital rendezvous practice pay off. Halfway around the moon, the LEM makes contact with the main capsule and the explorers transfer to it. Another checkout, more calculations and the command and service modules are fired into earth trajectory. The little LEM is left to cir cle alone above the moon. Another critical phase remains: entry into the earth's atmosphere. This is made througn a corridor only 40 miles deep. If the angle is too flat, the Apollo will skip back into space, like a stone off water. If the angle is too steep, it may burn up from excessive heating. But the entry is perfect. After more than a week and half a million miles of space travel, the Apollo astronauts are home. NEXT: Beyond the Moon PAGE 10-A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon Monday, July 1, 1961 JFK Tops In Berlin Popularity BERLIN (WD - Berliners have ruled President Kenne dy the overwhelming winner in the popularity contest staged by Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush chev. The Communists themselves did not admit Khrushchev's de feat. But it had been document ed by Western newsmen who at tended Khrushchev's arrival Fri day in East Berlin, by those East Berliners attending, and by the East German television network, whose word pirture of Khrushchev's "triumphant" re ception was belied by a screen showing sparse and indifferent crowds. The Communists, who had been determined to match the unprece dented welcome given Kennedy in West Berlin Wednesday, insisted Saturday they had done just that. "Unparallelled reception," ban nered the Neues Deutschland, of ficial East German Communist party newspaper. "Nikita Khrushchev's triumph ant drive through the capital," said the Berliner Zeitung. However, the West German na tional newspaper Bild Zeitung headlined "Rebuff for Khrush- 52-Year-Oid Grandmother Wins Struggle To Become Doctor LOS ANGELES (UPI)-A 52 year-old grandmother, after a 30-' year Btruggle to become a physi cian, is studying here quietly for an assignment with the Peace Corps in Ethiopia. Dr. Use lleilbrunn's veined finely. c h i s e 1 e d hands suggest courage and a capacity lor work These characteristics brought her through the Nazi persecution. Dr. lleilbrunn had to care for her two children alone while sepa rated from her husband for eight vcars by World War II. She managed to continue her cduca tion during this period. She arrived last week, the same day she finished her internship at Mcnorah Medical Center in Kan sas City. She hopped a plane for Los Angeles and arrived only slightly tardy for the first oricnta tion program for the Peace Corps at the University of Southern California. The completion of the intern ship was the realization of a dream Attorneys Given Warning SALEM (UPD New rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court will make It more difficult for police and prosecutors to obtain convictions in criminal cases, Oregon district attorneys were warned here. The warning came from Lincoln County Dist. Atty. A. It. McMul len and Asst. Atty. Gen. Collis 'Marstcrs at a session of the two day institute for district attnrncys. The two speakers said the new curbs are threatened from recent decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court and probably in time will 'become binding on Oregon's slate trial courts. . The decisions were those deal ing with the right of an accused person to the services of an altor ney. Marstcrs and McMullen said the U.S. high court has moved in re cent years to expand the rights of an accused person to right of legal counsel by refusing to admit into evidence any statements made prior to conference with a competent lawyer. Marstcrs, who handles all the post conviction appeals filed by inmates of Oregon's penitentiary the federal rulings have had an effect on investigative procedures of the state police. Marstcrs said state police have been instructed to prepare all cases so they may be effective even if a confession is excluded from the evidence. which began with her study of medicine in her native Germany I, in 11128. Halfway through training, she quit school to marry another med ical student, Max lleilbrunn. They were separated in i!)a by tho. Nazi persecution of the Jews. She came to the United Slates with their two children and he fled to England. During the separation, Dr. Heil- brunn supported the children by working s a laboratory techni cian, lust in Chicago and later all Fort Worth. Tex. She tried to get into over crowded medical schools, but her credentials were in Germany and she was unsuccessful. Dr. Hcu-j Driinn began working toward a bachelor of arts degree at Texas Christian University. She later earned a master's in parasitology at Tulane University. Her husband rejoined the famHy in 1946 and completed his Intern ship in Kansas City. She worked as a research assistant at Kansas University Medical Center. He began a practice in Lockwood, Mo., before his death in 1959. With his death, Dr. lleilbrunn returned to Germany and com- SCATTERED SEEDS Seeds of the giant Douglas fir, built with almost perfect aerody namic principles, weigh less than MO.OOOtli-pound. The seeds may be Dorno more than a mile from the parent tree by vagrant winds. MM. . , PROTECT your DRAPES and SLIPCOVERS with miracle Sot'-K-'D. This amazing new development from Sanitone guards against spills . . . wards off common soils . . . prolongs life of fabrics. Call on us today. chev" and this in effect what it was. At the most 300,000 turned out in East Berlin to greet Khrush chev compared to the 1.5 million West Berliners who cheered Ken nedy. The enthusiasm of the crowds could not be compared. Kennedy got a six-minute ova tion when he appeared in West Berlin to speak. Communist cheer leaders managed to keep low key shouts for Khruihchev going be fore the East Berlin City Hall for 40 seconds. When the West Berlin rally ended 400,000 persons gathered at city hall were reluctant to go home. They shouted again and again for Kennedy. The 10.000 at the East Berlin City Hall Friday raced to leave once the rally was over. There were no shouts for encores. t rw . wv omX kit, oJliU uii ... 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