Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 17, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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    4.
HERALD AND
'Grounded
Astronaut
Leaves AF
HOUSTON (UPD - Maj.
Donald K. (Dcke) Slayton, 39.
: wfcose "grossly irregular"
heartbeat made him the only
''u'T.na U.S. Mercury astro
Jjt '. never to make a apace
,'"(L;ht, has given up his Air
:"force career.
He will continue with the na
tional space agency as a civili
an. "Maj. Slayton (eels that in a
civilian capacity, he can better
; carry out his supervisory ac
tivities," a spokesman for the
.National Aeronautics and Space
'"Administration (NASA) said.
Slayton said In his letter of
.resignation irom me Air Jrorce
'jiiat he felt that as a civilian,
! jie can participate in selection
tf Jlight crews without the pos
Ability of appearance of par
; 'tlality toward any one branch
of the service.
He asked that the resignation
be made effective Nov. 20, giv
: ing proper time for processing
'.oi his records. Slayton will then
I -Be appointed a civilian astro
Mjaut and coordinator of astro
naut affairs through civil serv
ice. :; He will be the third civilian
Astronaut among America's
Zhrst 16 chosen for space. The
Mothers are former civilian test
"pilots Neil Armstrong Jr. and
Elliot See.
"Being a civilian gives Slay
ton a sense of permanan
: y," the NASA spokesman said.
: "It means that he will not just
;3je assigned here as an Air
;3force officer, but will be here
;ith us permanently."
AH military astronauts are
loan to NASA from the vari
'ims branches of the service.
GATES OPEN AT 4:10 P.M.
SHOW AT 7:00 P.M.
FRIDAY
and
SATURDAY!
lAMES STEWAM
1 DOKI5 UAI i
INTO nJ"
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AND i
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PAGE 2A
GE
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F-5
DOUBLE-BARRELED EXCITEMENT!
burt kirk
LANCASTER DODCLAS
OK CORRAL
TVCMNKOiOII
(PtWUilUU
DOORS OPEN
TONITE AT 4S:45
it?
iJdseph E. Levine inenooelw win
Ely Landau Jack J. Dreyfus, Jr.
prttentt v
KATHARINE HEPBURN
RALPH RICHARDSON
iJASON ROBARDS, JR.
DEAN STOCKWELL
i Eugene O'Neill's
:L0NG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT
Eggl Starts SUNDAY!
NEWS, Klamath Falli. Oregon
Mrs. Givan, M. Brauner
Named On County Boards
Two long-time residents of
Klamath County have each been
named to serve on one of two
county boards, effective imme
diately, the Klamath County
Court announced late Wednes
day. The two appointees, Mrs. Jo
anna Givan and Martin F.
Brauner, have been named to
fill the unexpired terms of their
predecessors.
MRS. JOANNE GIVAN
Mrs. Givan, retired teacher
and librarian at Bonanza High
School, has succeeded M r s.
Margaret Whitlatch on the
Klamath County Library Board
and will serve with the five
member board through Jan. 1,
1964. Her predecessor, M r s.
Whitlatch, served a number of
years on the board before re
signing Aug. 31.
Mrs. Givan was born in vnis
county and has lived here all of
her life except for several years
when she attended Oregon State
University. Site is a resident of
Bonanza.
Brauner, owner and operator
of the local plumbing supply
house of that name, has re
lieved Dick Hicks as a mem
ber of the Klamath County
Parks Commission. Hicks, wild
MORS OPIN TONITS 6iJ
. aThoi'mnpThbiuj;
StampedeTiie Screen!
Technicol
22.
COLOR
I KIRK DOUGLAS
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ItCTUTlMiWJUKA
CftftAM
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OR MNAVIf'i
88
L fUm Pttval
Thursday, October 17, 1963
served on the now defunct city
park and recreation committee
with his successor some years
ago, resigned from the post Oct.
1 to open a business at Grants
Pass. His term on the board
was to expire Sept. 1, 1964.
Brauner was born in Idaho
and came lo Klamath Falls in
1934 where he was employed as
purchasing agent for the Lorenz
Company.
When that firm terminated its
business some eight years ago,
Brauner opened the supply com
pany now bearing his name.
He and his wife, Opal, live at
1010 North Seventh Street. They
have two daughters, Katie, a
sophomore at Oregon State Uni
versity, and Judy, a graduate of
Lewis and Clark, now residing
in San Francisco.
Point Road
Will Get
Seal Coat
The Klamath County Court has
indicated that a seal coat would
be applied to an eight-tenths
mile strip of road near Rocky
Point sometime early next year,
it developed about noon Wednes
day during a session between
the county commissioners and
representatives of the Upper
Klamath Lake Grange.
The members of the grange
told the commissioners that the
unimproved strip of road bear
ing north from the paved high
way to P.ocky Point was the
source of voluminous clouds of
dust created by passing auto
mobiles. The dust is a continual dis
comfort to summer home own
ers in the area, the representa
tives said.
They also pointed out that
traffic has increased along the
road since the Klamath County
Chamber of Commerce has had
road signs erected indicating
that the thoroughfare is part of
the route on Pelican Loop Tour
No. t
Seal coating of the road has
been deferred until after next
winter when the project will be
of greater benefit to property
owners in that area, the com
missioners said. Representing
the grange were William Glide
well, Warren David Baker and
Ira G. Parish. County commis
sioners include Ken Allison,
Judge Robert Walker and Frank
Ganong.
Park Wins
Korea Vote
SEOUL, Korea (UPD-For-mor
President 'Posun Yun con
ceded defeat today In Korea's
presidential election in a tele
gram congratulating the win
ner, military Junta leader Park
Chung Hce.
Park, tlie ex-general who
overthrew the last civilian gov
ernment in 19iil, won by little
more than 150.000 votes and
failed to get a majority of
votes cast.
It was the first time the
loser of a Korean election had
sent such a message to the
winner.
Wednesday, Park cabled Yun
urging him to participate in
forwarding Korean Interests.
In an apparent reference to
Hie narrow margin of victory,
Yun's message urged Park to
"strive (or tltc development of
democracy of our country, pity
ing due respect to the people's
mind expressed in tho elec
tion." Official returns compiled by
(lie central election committee
in Seoul gave Park a margin of
151,595 votes, with only 20,000
still uncounted of the 10.857.0d2
votes wist.
New Spacemen
Will Be Named
HOUSTON lUPP - A new
class of 10 to 15 astronauts ill
he introduced lo the world Fri
day by the United States space
agency.
Three women hud applied for
tlte elite corps, hut apparently
none was accepted.
$crali)aTiii$rt0;s
Klamath Pitta OrHM
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Kltmith Plni"f ClfflMM
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AUDIT OUKIAU OP CIRCULATION
ivtMriHn nt rtcatvhic airvrv
Tfettr HaraM aM Nawt. a4M aaa
rmaa Mill arar ? .
A.I.C. RAYMOND HILL
Hill Named
Top Airman
A.I.C. Raymond M. Hill, ra
dar operator for Kcno Air Force
Station, has been selected Air
man. of the Month for August.
As recipient of the honor, Air
man Hill has received a $25
check and a three - day pass
from Major John A. Murphy,
electronics officer for the sta
tion. A native of Tacoma, Wash.,
Hill entered the Air Force in
1956 and came to Kcno from
Labrador last July.
STAR
Br CLAX
JK Your Doily Activity Guld M
According to tho Slon.
To develop message for Friday,
rood words correspond ing to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
1 Shore 31 Don't St Helpful
2 Photography 32 Mor-V 62 Ff itndl
3 Plan 33 Against 63 Home
4 Buiirtra 34 PlMMire 64 Idtat
K19-21-38.jd
jf TAUIUI
Jv APH.2I
i
1- 7-10-431
'69-71-83-90
5 An
6 And
7 Your
8 Outdoor
9 Art
lOGood
II, Work
12You
13 Designing
14Somethltvj
15 Should
16 Moke
17 Be
IB Should
19 You
20 Don't
21 Sparkle
22 Your
23 Outing
24 Moterialixe
25 Pull
26 Fine
27 Toke
28 Plant
MAY 22
JUNE 22
1 4 4J Tit
CANCIK
JUNE 23
JULY 23
trv
13
II-48-594J
'74-77-84391
110
j JULY 24
L.AUO. Z
52 Good
Oil 4-1 8-24-29
5iTo
vwoo
AUG. 34
SEPT. 22
29 Much
30 Much
16-2278-4SI
g)Good Advene fuuS
'J1.A7.70
F102 Lost
Near Base
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPD
A member of the 317th Fighter-Interceptor
Squadron from
Elmondorf' AKB here was miss
ing and presumed dead when
his F102 jet fighter crashed in
Cook Inlet, 10 miles southwest
of here Wednesday, the Air
Force said.
Tlie pilot was Capt. Terry F.
Olmsted, 29. East Peoria. 111.
His wife, Shirley, and three
young children live here.
Alaskan Air Command offi
cers said Olmsted was making
his final approach for landing
at Elmendorf. in a formation of
four other F102s returning from
Tyndall AKB. Fla.. where they
had competed last weekend in
the Air Force's world wide
ueapons meet.
The team had finished second
in live F102 competition and the
317(h's commander, Lt. Col. Jo
seph V. Rogers was the lop
FI02 pilot in live competition.
Rogers .and three oilier mem
bers of the team had landed
prior to Olmsted's crash, three
miles offshore.
Scranton Says
He Won't Run
WASHINGTON HTn-Penn-sylvania
Gov. William W.
Scranton says he will block any
move to draft him as a Repub
lican presidential candirlale in
Scranton. who will go to the
National GOP convention nel
year as a "favorite son'' can
didate, said Wednesday, "We're
no longer in the Harding era
where your friends surprise
you with a diait. lt can't be
made without one's knowl
edge." Scranton. Itere to attend a
meeting o( his Council on Sci
ence and Technology, often is
mentioned as dark-horse
presidential or vice-presidential
candidate.
?
35
BUSOTEIS
SaiTKlttST!
(
Official
WASHINGTON (UPH-South
Vict Nam's traveling first lady.
Mme. Ngo Oinh Nhu, appears
to be peeved at the reception
or lack of it accorded her vis
it by official Washington.
The Capitol debut of the
sharp-tongued sister-in-law of
Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh
Diem took place Wednesday in
a hotel only a few blocks from
the White House, but there
were only two administration
officials in attendance.
She criticized the Kennedy ad
ministration and said the "Viet
namese government looks much
more anti-Communist than the
American government." She
claimed there were "distortions
and blackouts" in news dis
patches from Saigon.
The administration's studied
coolness was not the only re
buff Mme. Nhu suffered
Wednesday. She sought in vain
for a meeting with her father,
Tran Van Chuong, who quit as
Vietnamese ambassador to the
United States this summer in
protest against the actions of
his daughter and his govern
ment in repressing the Bud
dhists. She went to Chuong's home
in northwest Washington
Wednesday night but he was
not home. He has said he will
not see her.
The cold shoulder from her
father may have hurt South
Viet Nam's first lady, but it
was the chilly non-reception ac
corded her by official Washing-
GAZER
SL POLLAN'
UMA
SEPT. 21
Oct. 23
10-iS-33-XC'
pl-SMl V
SCOIPIO
OCT. 24
NOV. 22
35Doy 65 lo
36 Thoie 6o Sotiifoerion
37Ti 67 Inttrettad
38 With 68Alona
39 It 69Wi!h
40 In 70 Partiet
At Who've 71 Someone
42Golned 72 That'll
43 Fortune 73 Dacorotian
44 In 74 Develop
45 Knort 75 Spirits
46 Together 76Goin
47 Attractive 77 The
48 Allow 78 To
49 By 79 And
50 New 80 All
51 To SI Goad
I6573-8M2V&
1. 0.11.1'
SAaiTTARIUS
NOV. 21 Am
ESS
CAHKOIN
dec;
JAN.
3- 5- 8-230
B728
AOUAtJUS
82 Favored
JAN. 21
53 Opportunity 83Who'i
FEB. 19
84Uppv
55 Your 85lmprH
56 8tn 84 Arfvie
57Niely 87 Ambitious
58 May 88 Ptwplt
59Pof 89Hond
12-15-17.40't;
152-75-79-8
87
PISCES
FEB. 20)2i
0 LliUnlna 90 ArxirtcioHvw
WAR. 21 t.
30.39-42.49TI
1-864
TUBBY-TIME
IN PLASTIC
Reg. 59c
NOW
TRUSHAY HAND LOTION
By Bristol Myers W C
Reg. 33c plus
SHAMPOO &
98c VALUE
PLASTIC GARBAGE BAGS
BAG OF 20
LEAK PROOF
FRESH PINE SCENTED
STORM
KITS
PER KIT
KIT CONTAINS TWO
30" x 72" PLASTIC
WINDOWS
U ff jr?W
250 COUNT
NOTEBOOK PAPER
PACKAGE
w n$
'Cold Shoulder' Bothers Mme. Nhu
ton that bothered her more.
She told the Women's Nation
al Press Club Wednesday that
though hers was an unofficial
visit and "I cannot expect the
red carpets, there are hundreds
of ways" in which the U. S.
government could have shown
"more courtesy" in welcoming
her.
She said she had evidence
that some Kennedy administra
tion officials have "no eager
ncss to win the war against
Communists" in South Viet
Nam.
Mme. Nhu criticized as polit
ical pressure a recent withhold
ing of U.S. commercial aid to
Saigon. "I cannot see how such
a thing can be done without
reason against a government
which is winning the war."
The state department has or
dered a delay in payment of a
reported $12 million in grants
this month which would help
South Viet Nam finance com
mercial imports. The move was
interpreted here as a mild form
of pressure to remind tlie re
gime of Mme. Nhu's brother-in-law,
Ngo Dinh Diem, of the
heavy support it gets from the
United States.
Mme. Nhu said the aid re
striction "shows real evidence
there is no eagerness to win the
war against the Communists."
She said the Vietnamese gov
ernment "surely is more anti
Communist than a few mem
bers of the 'Kennedy adminis
tration," emphasizing the word
"few."
She also explained her much
criticized phrase, "Buddhist
barbecue," which she used to
describe Buddhist monk protest
suicides-by-fire. She said her 18-ycar-old
daughter picked up the
CONTACT
LENSES
ON
. rrjmiTi
We give iJf
Green Stamps
.COLUMBIAN
OPTICAL CO.
730 Main TU 4-7121
Dm. Omar J, Noles
nd Robert Pater
BUBBLE BATH
JLC DM I
39
TOY AC
25
tax M plus
tax
BATH SPRAY
89
C
59
c
WINDOW
Jf
59
HALLOWEEN
MASKS &
COSTUMES
L.r.eetee.i.BaeI -
c
EVERYTHING FOR THE
WONDERFUL WORLD OF SPOOKS
expression from Americans she
overheard in a Saigon snack
bar. Mme. Nhu said she her
self used the expression hoping
to prevent future suicides
through ridicule, but that she
FOR
THE SEASON'S NEWEST COLOURS! ALL SIZES!
REGULAR STOCK! ALL LENGTHS!
NOTHING CHANGED BUT THE PRICE!
MEN'S
BOOT
SOCKS
mm
69e PAIR XJ $ WORTH WNS;N0IJLD?&
2Da,r$r I flfir SHAMPOO
L PO r 1 1 C New By Maker, of
mmmmmmmmmmmm fA I ll II Creit Too,hPe Z
BRIGHT BEAUTY 28 U K ,Q - ffl
SPRAY lei
89' II
15-Oi. CANS f
$1.69 VALUE Sjg
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MEN'S SOCKS
ONE
GROUP
4 1
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BOYS' SOCKS
ONE GROUP
WHITE CREW
6 p
CCS
PEECHEES
Low, Low Prices PLUS Green Stamps
hi
4410 South 6th
meant no harm,
"So you see." she said, "I
am only the victim of Ameri
can advice."
It was the "Buddhist barbe
cue" phrase that finally promp
A LIMITED TIME ONLY!
k
TOC Kl N
Style: Reg. Sale Sale You
Without Seams Poir Poir Box Sove
760 End-O-Run 1.75 1.39 4.15 1.10
680 Agilon Stretch 1.65 1.32 3.95 1.00
540 Heel & Toe Reinf. .. 1.39 1.11 3.30 .87
610 Heel & Toe Mesh .... 1.39 1.11 3.30 .87
525 Main
AT BON
IMjM COUPON I
we HAVE A FINE SELEC
TION OF PYREX, CORN.
INGWARE, PFALTZGRAFF
POTTERY AND MANY
OTHER NICE GIFT ITEMS.
FEDERAL
oo
CARTON
OF 500
REGULAR $8.00
$1
00
CHRISTMAS WRAPPING
We hove large supply of Chriitmoi wroppinf
materia ll, ribbeni and tiei . . , buy new while
pricei ore law and the election it good. We're
clearinf roam fat new merthandiie.
6 PAPER QQC
ROLL OR FOIL 70
2115c
1U M
Neif
ted her father to quit his em
bassy post after nine years.
Chuong is a Buddhist. Mme.
Nhu, who is a Roman Catholic,
claimed Wednesday her father
didn't quit, he was fired.
l U . i,,
'""i r'
BAZAAR
VISIT OUR WELL-STOCKED
GIFT SECTION
.22 LONG RIFLE AMMO
$698
to Ortoon food
ft