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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1973)
Pog« Eight The Nyssa Gate City Journal, Nyssa, Oregon Governor Appoints Col. Miller As Adjutant General of Oregon Governor Tom McCall an nounced today the appoinknent of Colonel Richard A. Miller of Portland as Adjutant General of Oregon. The appointment was effective as of March 6. He will be nominated for promo tion to the rank of Brigadier General. Miller has been principal of David Douglas High School for the last seven years. He has resigned that position. He also has served since last year as deputy commander of the 41st Infantry Brigade,com posed of 4,100 officers and men. Miller succeeds General Donald N. Anderson as Adju tant General. Anderson retired, effective March 5. McCall said, "Dick Miller's administrative and personnel experience makes him emi nently qualified to assume com mand of the Military Depart ment. His promotion flows na turally from a distinctive pub lic service career spanning al most three decades.” Miller, 50, was born in Albany He earned a master’s degree in education at Oregon State University. He taught and served as assistant football coach at Grants Pass High School in 1948-49. He served as head football coach at St. Helens High School from 1949 to 1953, and head football coach at Hillsboro High School in 11th Airborne Division To Celebrate Reunion New» About SERVICEMEN 1953-54. He joined the David Douglas High School staff in 1954 when the school first opened. He served as head football and track coach, director of ath letics and vice principal before his elevation to principal seven years ago. Miller served in the Army from 1943 to 1946. He was commissioned a lieutenant at the Army's Officer Candidate School m Brisbane, Australia. He joined the Oregon National Guard in 1948 as executive of ficer of the 162nd Infantry Re giment. He has served as a company commander, regimen RM3c David Wilson tal plans and training chief, David Wilson, son of Mr. and personnel officer, G-3 Air and Mrs. Bob Wilson, returned Assistant Chief of Staff for the home in February after spen 41st Infantry Division, com ding two years an active duty tn mander of the Engineering Bat the Navy. The last 18 months talion of the 41st Infantry, ex was spent in Tapai. Taiwan at ecutive officer of the 41st In- • Taiwan Defense Command. fantry Brigade, and as a col David enlisted tn the Naval onel in the U.S. Army Reserve Reserve in February, 1970 and attached to the 82nd Support drilled at Boise. He went to Center of the Oregon ArmyNa- Radio School at San Diego on tional Guard. He was promoted reporting for active duty in to deputy brigade commander in 1972. tional Guard within the state. The Adjutant General is the Miller and his wife, Helen, full-time director of the Ore live at 1425 S.E. 120th Avenue gon Military Department, the in Portland. They have a son, supervising headquarters for David, who is a second lieu the Oregon Army and Air Na tenant m the Army National tional Guard. He also admini Guard, and two daughers, Kathy sters federal money and pro- and Ann. pertv made available to the Na- Thursday, March 22, 1973 TRENDS IN FEDERAL DOLLAR OUTLAYS Veterans of the famed 11th 11th landed at Batangas south of Airborne Division who, to Manila, while the 511th Para Infantry dropped on gether with the First Cavalry chute Division, liberated Manila in Tagaytay Ridge, near Lake 1945, will meet in Hot Springs, Taal. The 11th Airborne Division Arkansas to celebrate the thir tieth anniversary of the activa gained it’s nickname ■•Th«' tion of the 11th at Camp Mac Angels", from a daring raid behind Japanese lines to libe kall, N.C. in 1943. Commanded by Major Gen rate 1,247 internees at Los eral Joseph M. Swing, now re Banos Prison Camp, by land, tired Lieutenant General, the water, and parachute. The de fending force was wiped out, and March, 1971, and graduated with the internees who had suffered over three years imprisonment a rating of RMSN. He was promoted to RM3c in declared that 'they looked like July, 1972 and will take his exa angels descending from hea mination for RM2c in Boise in ven". After Luxon was secured, the August. He is back drilling with the Boise Naval Reserve unit. 11th was the first American unit David is a 1970 graduate of to land in Japan for the surren Nyssa High School and attended der, and occupied that country Southern Oregon College at until 1950 when it moved to Ashland one term. He will en Fort Campbell, Kentucky. roll at Oregon State University Anyone desiring information next week for Spring term. of the reunion, planned for July 13 through 15, 1973 may contact CpI. Clyde Martin Glenn Ward, Adrian Oregon, CHERRY POINT, N.C.--Ma telephone 372-2171 for further rine Cpl. Clyde L. Martin, son details. of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Duncan of Route 1, Nyssa, was awarded a Meritorious Mast while serving at the Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, N.C. "Heredity i> » theory you believe in when your child '« A Meritorious Mast is a report card i> all A’a" (E personal commendation from E Kenyon) his commanding officer. (•»timafedl HUMAN AND PHYSICAL RESOURCES 3 l £ CAN \ OTHER NATIONAL DEFENSE CRISCO ’I ?’«. MR BCSTtN ZLfc Pkfc kors OF I / v \EAT F ishsticks >98!]iwEwgrl»? Good only M CLOVER FARM STORES E Coupon «xp^w MARCH 24 ?b 197 3 $1AQ I XJUNF' ch UO. u AAC BANANAS+ CARROTS * TWIN 6KINNEP CwjSvfce> FANCY bet ALL GRIND'S ä yS? * COFFEES 33 w/0 COUPON.... 4 2. ©7 |PONALPPUCK'^ge¿^ BANQUET 0or TV0PT LIQUID « iürkey MEAT PIES®- Z/35*|Ä DETERGENT T a R&^'S ïze » 43e ■ gm ^ c ',sOYEP f-APV jBcoupor .xp.-H MARCH 24 rp. 1973 .HMIT 1 COUPON KSEVh£fifi0BMKCn6KKSKI NAPKINS 10' LUX LIQUID DETERGENT •SKIPPY PEANUT BUTTER • cmu . ky Ifeoe PUREX BLEACH 5 « mart size NABISCO CHIPS AHOY i+>zoz ?<& REG. PARKAY MARGARINE 1* BLUE MOUNTAIN P0& f000 CHUlfT.N gWE MOUNTAIN PO&FOOP FMHMi. rib U CHICK THIS PRICE size Th«1 Parma Wool Pool of 16,500 neecekconsigiM'dbypro ducers in South-western Idaho and Malheur County sold Wed nesday for $1.1596 per pound. The high bid was submitted by J.R. Coodrin for the Carroti Spinning Mills of Rochelle. Il linois. Other blds received by th«- directors of the pool included The Top Company of Boston, represented by Charley Ste wart; The North Central Wool Marketing Association of Min neapolis, Minnesota, from their representative, Robert Pat terson. Provost Lefebvre of Boston represented by Scott Smith. There are about two-hundred form flock operators consigning wool to the pool John Riddle, Caldwell, president of th.- pool, said the < lips will be received and stored for ship ment at the J.C. Watson ware house in Parma The buyer will receive and ship the wool about the middle of May. Riddle urged growers to be as careful in their shearing and packing operations as possible to insure clean, high quality wool This year, Riddle said, producers must tie their hegs with regu lar paper wool strings furnished by the pool. Sacks tied with other than wool strings such as binding twine, baler twine, wire and other matt-rials »ill tie re jected at the warehouse. Directors of the pool repre senting Malheur members are Jim Wilcox of Vale and Leroy Sprague of Nyssa. Producer» »h<> have 11 pied contracts »1th the pool mav receive their sack* and strings from these directors. A supply of sacks and strings arc also available to Ontario area producers in the Malheur County Extension Office in the Ontario City Hall. We re out to help. S a » I m '||> II* 1 Jf k l< Mlliu «»I till’ l»IK |«»I>S 411 »II IM I II'* II The Army Reserve. K pays to go to meetings. FASHION PO NTS JOHN60N < JOHNSON |2>i 0« fe" I HTTUE PR.UNE B ny Î û N' ôîâ « z/ H ar knee hi __________ »WHITE 99 F DOUBLE !! GOLD STRIKE STAMPS.« ON ALL PURCHASES MON .TUES. WED. Helping Western Families Live Better Pattern vourveN y u* new How? Pile on ', checks with stripes and dots ■* As long as you keep the colors in the family, the par tit ulars can run wild' Fashion anyonw? You're healthy and gorgeous in tennis inspired separates for city streets Meanwhile back on the courts, rally with shocking pink or chrome yel low It s a whole new game halvi XjQí* valué now ..^^ American sportswear is truly liberated fashion An infinite variety of lifestyles packaged in one It) Idler word A word that promises unlimited options and ihrowsout veslerdav s rulebook at the same time 3A hat fun it is too Now vou can be all the people you are any wav you like it All it lakes is a little inspiration Here's some they'll all be ihe right looks for ’73 some will be |ust right lor you Make a big splash You re contempo rary and mysteri ous. Over your barely-there bikini an equally bcguil ing caftan-y sand sweeper Which is the real you’’ both' B BABY 6HAMFW L 1.2% The New Sportswear And Hou To Wear It 41 I < xm . HMlT1 COUPON PER ITEM ~ I £KKUKS0»SKKS0E£ EEE ESE» ZEE AÔ5T. FW WRAP 60 COUNT PK&. .1% by Sally Green g MJH ANO TECHNOLOGY j. | e gM.TB SPAC£ R(S[ARCH NATIONAL DEFENSE /---------------------------------------------- a' fBAR6GAP4/39<| GRWEFWfT t « W/0 COUPON... 4/ 64 Ê » WO * ’ - • X. J J »mMniwmTWTHTwtwrw I k UUX 4 BARG RE6UUAR SPACE RESEARCH AHO TECHNOLOGY Parma Wool Pool Sells 16,500 Fleeces gjK -JssCUT TASTY MEAT I ■ —- - 79 l\ t turkey GOVERNMENT In less than two decades the proportion of federal Outlays lor National Defense and Human and Physical Resources has been reversed Outlays tor National De tense, as a percentage of the federal budget have been cut in half During the same period, the percentage of outlays tor Human and Physical Resources have nearly doubled These outlays cover education and manpower, health, income security, veterans benefits and services, agriculture and rural development, nat ural resources and environment, commerce and transportation, community de velopment and housing The slight gam m space research and technology is due to the tact that the space program was )ust getting underway in 1955 This program pe.iAcd in 1966 and has been declining smee that time WIENER'S drumsticks ROUND STEAK HUMAN ANO PMYS,CM «SOURCES OTNIR GOVERNMENT FRIENDLY SERVIC risto 1974 1955 <pr. mi »«« nutrivi MARCH 22,25,24 thl WE GIVE GOLD STRIKE STAMPS EVERY DAY mafeS NYSSA, OREGON Lay on the lengths If you showed a leg yesterday you'll look ever so more in teresting in that ankle length skirt today Keep them guess ing lake it from the top Easy, mexpen sive look for a multitude of images. Just switch your top from halter to mohair sweater to tiny tummy-haring midriff and back to the classic shirt Ah, mystique. I he dress? yes? Keep «hanging your pace To day's dresses are different I hey reflect all the games people play Some have swim suit tops others the tennis look, even the shirtwaist is making con temporary news in sensuous knit fabrics and prints Shall we pants? What would I red Astaire have to say .ilvoul the new loose legged swingers’’ Prob ably that they look great So do the new rich girl jeans Post graduate jiedal pushers are fabulous too If you think you re inspired now wait until you see what's in store for you in your local sportswear departments You wouldn t have thought you could wear so many looks so well As much as sportswear is a sign of the times how ever OIIC hull sign ilix-sn t change I hat familiar union label found in so many great American made sjiortswear designs It gives you the ex tra satisfaction of having bought a garment that stand» for skilled workmanship, de sign creativity and the impor tance of American jobs For more fashion points on the new sportswear, write for your free booklet. "Sportswear Superstars for You ILGWU Union Label Department. MS2. 22 West lb St New York, N.Y. 1001«.