Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 167, Ed. 2 Friday, August 28, 1964 Page: 1 of 4
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1
of the
land said.
man.
Just to be sure. the en-
By Bob McMHlin
many
summer.
She
i
beneath this sign.
Oklahoma City Times
ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED 1964 OKLAHOMA PUBLISMINO CO
38 PAGES—500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, FRIDAY. AUGUST 28. 1964
VOL. LXXV, NO. 167
Walkout
Flow Traced
Photos Show
Feared
FOR YANKS IN ASl
Lava on Moon At GM
i
L
J
New Riots
3,
r
- A
Break Out
a0,
been warned not to become
C
17
chief
11
w*/Bsa
t
particularly in the major
"to retrain from
t otficials
i
that by November we can situation. McCloskey
said
moderate and liberal Repub- Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh,
most parts of the state. It
licans from the GOP nomi-
8
Monday at midnight.
u • •
A
ans of Foreign Wars ends the 102 record high for this
Health Appeared Good
e.m.
Camera-Carryiag Satellite Orbited
The agency reported sev- planned.
Whas Inside
A
ents
Nimbus stinl will be able to
I
*
3
1
i
/
1
g
Big Rains
By Peggy O’Rear
speeding will not be toler-
ated," Maj. Stephens said.
Last year 22 Oklahoma
City school students were
injured going to and from
school. Even out of the
date made last year.
Sulphur reported the most
rain during the period. 2.11
inches. Tulsa had 1.94; Lena-
Friday with the election of a
new national commander.
and Cushing 1.75.
Lost Creek was overflow-
ing east of Blackwell flood-
306,190
Maminvemim
lily Circulation
suy An-
who
Khanh hold
crossing guards to help the
little ones across busy in-
tersections. but they must
have the unqualified sup-
port of Oklahoma City mo-
torists.
After a busy, carefree
..e
Page 12)
woumav
ea
i --
i
1
I
Bridge
Business
Classified Section
Comics
National Affairs
OH Reports
Our World Today
Sports
Tell Me Why!
TV Time
Vital Statistics
Women’s News
make Bums and Allen a
top act in show business
for 34 years, died Thurs-
day night after a heart at-
tack. She was 58.
him Thursday night tor a
full term as president and
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
said
official-
believed that
real power
FATALLY SHOT by a police judge’s son was Miss No-
reen Jones, 17, as she sought refuge in the Frankfort.
N. Y., city hall. Rumbling among citizens caused po-
lice to place the suspect, Bennie DiPiazo, 20, under
special guard. The suspect had threatened the girl and
her parents before the shooting Friday. (AP Wirepho-
to) Story, Page 2.
2”
appeared to have excellent
quality.
The 830-pound spacecraft
is equipped with television
cameras similar to those
that transmitted Ranger
Ts closeup pictures at the
moon back to earth.
The satellite went into
an oval orbit rather than
&3
22-ne
children who have been in-
jured by cars andithas
saddened Mm.
Little Robin will walk 3
en hours after the bunch-
ing that tracking stations
in South Africa and Alas-
ka confirmed the space-
craft’s solar panels had
deployed successfully.
The satellite is orbiting
the earth once every 98
minutes.
It has a low point at 262
miles and a high at 578 as
k circles the earth to a po-
lar orbit, rather than the
575 - mile - high orhit
for vice president, as
(I
There has not been a
school age child killed in
or near a school zone in
the past 25 years.
Safety officials want to
keep it that way.
phrey arrived at the LBJ
Thunderstorms continued ranch at 2:08 p.m. Friday
to sweep across Oklahoma for a round of campaign
tw«
"t
Gracie Allen
situation, said that now .
ppears that he is in-
,7
9 I
the United States always has
plans for the evacuation at
its naflanah from any coun-
try in case Hl —cm Bitty >
67
#
M
I
5
R
United States is concerned
and enjoys American sup-
tykes will be as frisky as
young deers. They may
leap without loooking.
Motorists must be on a
constant alert for such ac-
tions.
Sgt. Walter Kostiuk and
his 6-year-old daughter.
Robin, posed tor a picture
in the Interest of bringing
a safety message to our
readers.
Sgt. Kostiuk is a police-
blocks to Lafayette school
beginning Monday. —
will be in the first grade
-1
■ u
A
V
Attack Kills ‘Gracie
—J
spots at Saigon, Da
1 Hue - have been
12, 13
23
25. 26
26-37
24
4
25
6
20-22
23
10
12
14-16
2h
i
6
Space agency spokesmen
said the rhange in the or-
bit apparently resulted
from a premature cutoff of
f
zj
•••
9"92" - •go. ■ "eee
' l . -* ,
SILENCE IS ORDERED
A, \ '
s"n
cratic voters is
tween 10 and
ing S.H. 11 with approxi-
mately eight to 10 inches of
water. It appeared the water
would go higher, though the
highway was still open to
slow traffic.
The Chickaskia River east
of Blackwell was well within
(See WEATHER—Page 2)
Let her, and all little
boys and girls like her,
still be walking to school
when they are seniors in
high school.
ty.
At the time of her retire-
ment in 1958, Burns ex-
doing and saying anything
that might be construed at
provocative."
| There art between 16,000
and 20,000 U. f. military
|‘,advi»^r«•, in the country.
TreoppOgrn,"et
where they are assisting
against the guerrillas. There
also are lam lira ils of civiian
U. S. officials and depen-
bulent political situation.
The department also con-
firmed that the U. S. ambas-
sador ' to Saigon, General
Maxwell D. Taylor, has post-
poned Ms trip to Washington
cratic national committee
More convention news.
Pages 3, 10
,$.ta
across the nation, according
to polls, the president said.
He said, "Let's try to rea-
son with them . . . Give
pah, 2.16; Claremore.
WASHINGTON • — Ranger 7 pictures of the moon
show definite traces of lava flow and areas apparently
buried in material "splashed" out from the huge crater
Tycho, space agency experts told a news conference Fri-
day.
Dr. Gerard P. Kuiper, director of the lunar instru-
ments section at the University of Arizona, said analysis
of the pictures shows many of the small craters in the
Ranger impact area were caused by debris from Tycho,
some 600 miles away, rather than from Copernicus. 200
miles north of the impact point, as was first believed.
The pictures also show that a crater near the impact
point that had appeared to have a large rock in its cen-
ter actually has several blocks of material.
This particular crater apparently is 600 feet across
and about 150 feet deep — deep enough to provide shade
for visiting astronauts.
"The slope is steeper than 23 degrees, so if you were
looking for shade you would find it there,” Kuiper com-
mented.
Harris W. Schurmeier, Ranger project manager for
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., said the
accuracy of the Ranger launching was so great that the
craft landed within six miles of the proposed impact
area? and within 18 seconds of the time predicted.
--------------------------------- -------- ----- ... ... .
running be- them a little time end hope molested in the chaotic
15 percent.....
ATLANTIC CITY (JT» — pg AaAV
President Johnson, in confi- CLOUVI
dent spirits, told the Demo-
Through this door a
child may pass
Don’t let your careless
driving be the reason.
School doors open for
more than 75,000 Oklaho-
ma City children Monday
and every school zone will
again be a potential death
trap.
School zone signs will
again be up warning mo-
torists that slow speed
must be maintained.
thousands who are en- The city has hired 57
was the third straight day
3-yearold pact would expire of rain for parched Oklaho-
rolled. 22 is too high a fi-
gure. Dr. Lonnie Gilliland,
school safety director, said
Friday.
"We would like to re-
duce this figure to a big
zero, this year," Dr. Gilli-
‛ 004.4' ' O “41,42 9
Late Bu lletins
plained why Gracie quit:
"She's never missed act-
ing for a minute. She nev-
er was a ham, anyway.
Her husband, comedy “She deserved a rust,
actor George Burns, was She had been working all
at her side at Cedars of her life and her lines were
JOHNSON CITY, Texas
• — President Johnson
and Sen. Hubert H. Hum-
ma.
By afternoon Friday, skies
had cleared up throughout
the state Tefhperatures
were still cool compared to
P.
• cz.
Clear to partly cloudy.
Cooler Friday night. Over-
night low 55 (Details,
Skies Clear Jahmsoncheer"Fronulan”
Following GOP Losses Claimed
nee. Barry Goldwater of I and promised to revise the
nvolved in the nation's tur.
Friday that this year the
party has its greatest oppor-
tunity "to build a true na-
DETROIT (P — Leonard
Woodcock, director of the
United Auto Workers Gener-
al Motors department, said
Friday that GM’s 354,000
production workers might
stage wildcat strikes be-
cause of unrest over con-
tract negotiations.
Woodcock said there is un-
happiness among GM work-
ers because Chrysler Corp,
was picked Wednesday night
as the UAW’s No. 1 bargain-
ing target.
Feeling Called Sharp
The 300 members of the
UAW GM workers' council
were summoned to a Satur-
day meeting in Detroit.
Woodcock said he would ex-
plain to them the reasons
which led the UAW execu-
tive board to pick Chrysler.
"There are some very
sharp feelings among our
people and some of them
wonder why September 9
where UAW President Wal-
ter Reuther and the national
Chrysler UAW council were
planning their next move
against Chrysler.
Reuther will lead the UAW
team to the Chrysler bar-
gaining table Friday after-
noon.
‘Give’ Sign Seen
Meanwhile, the first sign
of “give” in new contract
bargaining between the
UAW and the automotive in-
dustry's big three came
from Ford Motor Co., Thurs-
day.
Ford agreed in principle to
extension of its current con-
tract with the UAW until
September 9. Normally, the
U. S space agency offi- the circular orbit at which
rials said the first pictures it was aimed, the civilian
—of Florida, Louisiana space agency reported in
and the Gulf of Mexico— Washington
HOLLYWOOD (P — Gra-
cie Allen, whose scatter-
brained comedy helped
Spy Filming Weather in Space
G
was picked as the extension
date," said Woodcock.
He said that as GM and
the UAW continued negotia-
tions Thursday at various
eifies on a plant level some
GM officials chided the u-
ionists as to why they had ।
not taken on GM and had
asked “Is GM too big for
you guys?" .
Reuther Leads
Woodcock’s comments to
newsmen came as he en-
tered the meeting room
tire enforcement wing of
the police traffic division
will be placed on extended
duty.
Maj. S. W. Stephens,
traffic division command-
er, Friday declared en-
forcement will be strict.
Radar units will be used
and special motorcycle
squads will pay particular
attention to the areas
around Oklahoma City
high schools.
2303272729
El Reno Inmate Flees
EL RENO (UPI) - A federal reformatory inmate
walked away from the institution’s dairy Friday. He to
identified as Paul Allen Horsley, 20, serving 14 months
for interstate transportation at a stolen vehicle.
Hundreds Flee Congo City
DAR E8 SALAAM, Tanganyika m-A fleet of ca-
noes and other small boats brought hundreds of refugees
to Tanganyika Friday from the embattled Congolese city
of Albertville. At least 2,Mt are believed to have fled
across Lake Tanganyika in the last few days. (Related
Story, Page 8)
U. S. Fires Atomic Shot
WASHINGTON (B — The Atomic Energy Commis-
yield nuclear test shot at its Nevada testing grounds. It
was the 14th weapons related tost announced by the
United States this year.
Florida Tagged Disaster Area
WASHINGTON e — All sections of Florida battered
by Hurricane Cleo were designated disaster areas Fri-
day by the Small Business Administration. (Earlier Sto-
ry, Page 2)
Kiwi Reactor Test Success
JACKASS FLATS, Nov. -The Kiwi nuclear-pow-
ered reactor, forerunner to a future atomic-powered
rocket system, was tested successfully Friday at Jack-
ass Flats.
The Kiwi attained M percent of its designed power
capacity of 1,000 megawatts. Scientists at the nuclear
rocket development station held the reactor at aa aver-
age of about 85 percent of full capacity for more than
eight minutes.
tional party.”
"The American people are
1 52 going to win one of their fin-
- est victories in November,”
Lebanon Hospital when the toughest in the world
she died. to do.”
William Burns, George’s Miss Allen, one of four
brother, said the popular daughters of Edward Al-
comedienne had been in len, a song and dance
seemingly good health be- man, met Burns in Union
fore being stricken. Hill. N. J., where they de-
He said she had expert- tided to become a comedy
enced mild heart attacks team. They were wed in
in the past, but remained Cleveland three years lat-
activein Hollywood socie- er on Jan. 7, 1926.
£ frnfc CENTS
he declared to applauding
committee members.
The “white backlash"
from some normally Demo-
*jefil
te
. ’ 4
Ecat
J ’
about 30 percent.
•When you can get 3 to 1
it’s always satisfying.”
Johnson said.
“We welcome the backlash
to come back and the front-
lash to come forward." he
quipped.
Johnson described the con-
vention which nominated I
VANDENBERG AIR
FORCE BASE, Calif. IB —
A camera-carrying Nimbus
satellite rocketed into orbit
Friday and began taking
"excellent'' pictures ex-
pected to provide history's
first day-and-night watch
on the world’s weather
from space.
President Johnson takes time out at the airport in hand to watch his departure for Texas. (AP Wire pho
Atlantic City Friday to shake hands with the crowd on to)
new constitution which
sparked student and Budd-
Friday morning, soaking strategy sessions.
grdvens-n
1’
IMPERATUR•
rs am
i
'• * a.m.
nW .m,
pm
in ;m
Improve that situation."
Republicans, he said, have
a "frontlash problem” —
what he called defections of
Convention Closing
CLEVELAND (B — The
65th convention of the Veter-
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In Saigon
• - E
WASHINGTON (UPI) —
The state department dis-
dosed Friday that Ameri-
cans in South Viet Nam have
e. ’. .i . • Cjl^y Seb—1 D—ra Open for75,000 , -f • a
Mr. Driver, Will You Kill a Child This Fall?
' 37
By Bob McMHlin Just to be sure, the en- "Careless driving and land said. summer. many at the man. He has seen little
•. r"' •
-rPMmr-n A % •
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 167, Ed. 2 Friday, August 28, 1964, newspaper, August 28, 1964; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1845245/m1/1/: accessed June 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.