The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 June 1965 — Page 5
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* r WHAT A RECEPTION!”—Gemini space travelers Ed White (left) and Jim McDivitt make the traditional salute as they come aboard the carrier Wasp for a rousing welcome that caused White to exclaim: "What a reception!” McDivitt wisecracked: “I knew we’d wind up in a hospital” as the two headed for the ship’s sick bay.
NEED FOR A PJCJJ-BfE-UP—Astronauts John Young (left) and Donald (Deke) Slayton (right) light up in relief after the news that fellow space travelers, , Ed White and Jim McDivitt, have been picked up gafely in the Atlantic. A tired Virgil (Gus) Grissom (center) is
glad it’s over:
Cape Kennedy’s- Launch Pad 19, where McDivitt and White made their fiery departure. It will be used for an attempt Aug. 9 to send fellow astronauts L. Gordon Cooper and Charles (Pete) Conrad into space for a week—outdoing even Gemini-4. For McDivitt and White, there was little time to consid-
er that.
As the Wasp steered a course
pertise of the engineers as by the calm, matter-of-faet bravery of the astronauts;”
Indiana Traffic Toll Now 575
By United Prt»» International ■ ' x A Muncle man was killed
young driver; her brother, Danny, 18, and Mary Morrison, 16, New Castle. Earlier, Doyle McConnell, 38, Indianapolis, died of injuries received last Sunday in a two-car crash on the southwest edge of the city. J. Tom Galloway, 42, Dayton, Ohio, was killed outright when Galloway’s car skidded out o' control on the wet pavement of Indiana 67 and smashed into a car driven by Emmett Dingus, 30, Martinsville.
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Tuesday, June 8, 196S
Two paratroopers and two American helicopter crewmen were wounded. On the troubled Saigon political scene, a Roman Catholic movement to topple the government of Premier Phan Huy
Quat picked up momentum There were new damands foi Quat’s resignation on the ground that he is soft on Communist and favors a neutralist policy with the North Vietnamese.
toward Jacksonville, Fla., they ear1 ^ today when his car faced doctors in the sick bay cras kcd in Delaware County, inwho pronounced them “in great creasiI1 g Indiana’s 1963 highway shape,” even better than that t0 l ea st 575 compared of Cooper after his return from wri *- h a y ear *g°-
a 34-hour voyage in space two
years ago.
"I knew we d wind up in a hospital,” grinned McDivitt.
They talked by telephone Sma " hed ^ t0 & ™ llmg ° n a with their anxious wives, who !° Unty r0ad ° n the wcst * dge of
Delaware County. The car then
Authorities said Phillip J. Chestnut, 21, was thrown from his car and killed when it
burst into flames.
Two persons were killed in j Hoosier highway accidents Mon- j
DOWN-TO-EARTH FEELING—Pat White (left) and Pat McDivitt don’t need any words to express their happiness as they talk to the reporters in Houston following the successful recovery of their astronaut-husbands from the Atlantic.
Honors Await U.S. Astronauts ABOARD USS WASP. At Sea UPI—The happy astronauts, James McDivitt and Edward White, headed toward dry land and home today to be honored by America as space heroes who squared the cosmic race with Russia. They shot into the heavens last Thursday as a pair of clean-shaven rookie trainees.
They returned on a fiery trail from space aboard a tiny Gem-ini-4 capsule Monday as grizzled, bewhisKered veteran astronauts, co-owners of every U. S. space record in the books and short only of the 199-hour Russian endurance record. Today, the two college chums who never flagged once in the spotlight of their nation's finest hour in space, relaxed aboard this aircraft carrier as it steamed off the Florida coast toward the mainland. They were resting for what astro-
nauts who have gone before have called the greatest ordeal of all—the hero’s welcome that awaits them at home. The Gemini-4 astronauts began the many hours it will take to tell of their fabulous. 97-hour 56-minute adventure. They will describe the space w r alk that White said w f as "enough to make me speechless," a missed rendezvous with another satellite, and problems with a faulty computer. Monday night, a Titan-2 booster rocket was raised on
awaited their return to Houston, Tex., and home Thursday. On board the Wasp they made up for the fact that Gem-
ini-4 had neither shaving nor day.
shower facilities. They sliced
away four-day growths of Virgil Floyd Guffey, 16, New beards and got under a hot "' a s killed when an auto shower. Their attire now be- driven h y Pe 8gy Williams, 15, came light blue flying suits and went out ot con trol and rammed
Planes Attack N. Viet Targets SAIGON UPI — American planes hit another industrial target in North Viet Nam today, raining tons of bombs and rockets on a power plant at Co Dinh, 80 miles south of the Communist capital of Hanoi. The raid was carried out as official sources in Saigon disclosed that nearly 1,900 government soldiers were killed, wounded or captured las week when Communist forces opened a rainy season offensive in South Viet Nam. At least 11 Americans were killed in what w'as described as “the bloodiest week of the war.” In another air action, eight U. S. Air Force Thunderchiefs. supported by 25 jets, dumped 23 tons of 750-pound bombs on the North Vietnamese supply depot at Vinh, a coastal city 160 miles south of Hanoi. Heavy anti-aircraft fire was encountered over Vinh. the spokesman said, but there was none at the power plant site. All planes returned safely. In southern Viet Nam. an airborne force of 150 U. S. Army paratroopers killed an estimated 35 Communist guerrillas Monday in an operation 30 miles northeast of Saigon. The area is near the American air base at Bien Hoa.
^YOO™
By LESTER L. COLEMAN, MJ>.
Hopeful News In Medicine
THE lobster claw has become a strange but important symbol of modern advance. The Greek word for the lobster claw is “chele.” Out of this a new scientific term has been born—chelation. Strange-sounding at first, the word chelation will soon be H beard with more and more regularity by the layman because of its peculiar characteristics. A chelating chemical is one that attaches itself with clawDr. Coleman like firmness to rid the body of toxic heavy metals. Dangerous lead and arsenic poisonings have been treated successfully and rapidly with these nev^ chelating agents. The severe complications of heavy metal poisonings have been alleviated dramatically within 24 hours. One of these agents, EDTA, is being studied with growing enthusiasm for many body conditions that previously have resisted treatment. EDTA, an abbreviation for the chemical Ethylene - diaminine - tetraacetic acid, is valuable and life saving in the treatment of industrial poisonings with radioactive strontium and plutonium. It is even hoped that the chelating agents may yet prove important in the control and •we of some forms of cancer.
The peacetime use of atomie and nuclear energy is a source of great hope. A recent survey written by Dr. Solomon Silver, of the Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, outlines the notable medical achievements of the past decade with radioactive isotopes. The activity of the thyroid gland can be studied more accurately with radioactive iodine. Many parts of the body, inaccessible to ordinary methods of examination, reveal their secrets to radioactive chemicals. Tiny “Geiger” counters follow the tracer drugs into the deeper crevices of the bones, the skin, the liver, the lungs and even the eyes and the brain. Hidden diseases are ferreted out, to be treated with greater accuracy and success. In addition to the diagnostic resources of radioactive drugs, there are valuable methods of treatment by closely allied substances. The restlessness of medical science takes curious paths of investigation in far distant realms, seeking and pursuing the answer to the prevention and treatment of all disease. These columns are designed to relieve your fears about health through a better understanding of your mind and body. All the hopeful new advances in medicine reported here are known to doctors everywhere. Your individual medical problems should be handled by your own doctor. He knows you best
canvas sneakers.
a tree on a Henry County road
(C IMS. King Features Syndicate, IncJ
STATE OF INDIA MA COUNTY OF PUTNAM
IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT APRIL TERM. l»6s
IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF Zell* Ruth GobeL
DECEASED
Estate Ne 10 J03
T®A
THE FUN STMTS WITH A’65 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE
(GIUAIBa
Their first real meal since at> out three miles west of New Thursday came Monday night. Cast l e - It was steak and mushrooms. ... . . peas and carrots, baked pota- TZ , Z * ** ^ toes, hot rolls and lemon pie. ^ ^ CalIed t0 ^^igate There was "laughter and fri- the accidcnt - whlch ^red the volity”—a stark contrast to the | -
almost tasteless “space dinners” and the tinny voices of ground controllers who kept them company along their 1.7million mile course through
space.
Flight Hailed
In West Europe LONDON UPI—Newspapers j in Western Europe splashed the story of astronauts James A. McDivitt and Edward H. White 1 across front pages today. Behind the Iron Curtain, the Communist press reported the
recovery of the Gen,i„i.4 space-1 E "SS fZSXXZrjS ship in detail. the same ■will come up for the ex'rv.a T r„ ■ _ . .... , , aminatlon and action of said Circuit The Soviet Union withheld Court , on ^ 6th of July , , t congratulations on the flight whlch tlme * u versons interested in . , j , said estate are required to appear In charging instead that racial sa id court and show cause, if any prejudice has tainted the U. S there be ' why 5aU1 » c eount should not
be approved. And the heirs of said de-
space program. ; cedent and all others Interested are The official Tass news agen- also required to appear and make
proof of their heirship to any part ol
cy revived the week-old charge said estate. by U. S. Air Force Capt. Ed-1 Jack p Rinkle ward J. Dwight Jr. that he was Clerk of the Putnam rejected for astronaut duty be- circuit court
cause he is a Negro.
In the Far East, Japanese newspapers said the Gemini flight had laid the goundwork for an American trip to
moon.
Communist China, as usual,
made no comment.
NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE
OF Zella Rath Coital
In the matter of the Estate of Zella
Ruth Gobel, deceased.
No. 10 JOS
Notice is hereby tiven that Elaine Conner and Mary Ruth Barnes as CoExecutrixes of the above named estate. I have presented their final account In
** ; -Tswr* . /.
Summer fun starts with savings! And the savings on Plymouth’s Roaring ’65 start at Plymouthland. So follow the fun now...while the trades are sky-high!
Attorney for Estate Frank G. Stoessel
8-15-21
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
the ; In the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana.
■.-V ' > <•
Notice Is hereby 8iven that Elizabeth Ensign was on the 20th day of May.
, .... , 1965. appointed: Admrz. of the estate Sir Bernard Lovell, director 0 f Ann M. Ensign, deceased.
of Britain’s Radio Astronomy ' „ . . . ..
•'All person* hiving claims against
Laboratory, said the flight was said estate, whether or not now due,
dear proof that both tha United
States and the Soviet Union first pubDcation of this notice or .aid could send a man to the moon cl Dated" at "creeneaetle^lndiwe, this without "insurmountable diffi- j Mtb d »y °t May, list, culties.” Lovell said a moon p rob ate Cause No. 10,518
landing was possible by either
nation by 1969 or 1970. The London Daily Express
said the world was stirred "not Lyon ft Boyd so much by the technical ex- : Attorneys
Jack F. Hinkle
Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County. Indiana.
JS-Jun# 1-8-31
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