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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 5

Publication:
Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAYTON DAILY NEWS 11NAL EDITION 64 Paae THE WEATHER ClAft windy, cold, snow Burma tomorrow; high Licht rain, cooler today, tonight. High 46, low 34. Wtlmr M.p on Price 10 Onto mmS CUm PixtiM Pi id ii Uiytvo. Ottio Vol. 88, No.

91 Dayton, Ohio. Thursday. 19, 1964 HOORAY, RED, WHITE. BLUE ER, BLUE, WHITE, RED Huge $10 Million Steel Canopy Designed for New AF Museum Tt may be "Hooray for the red. while and blue." but when you paint or display the colors of the American Nag, it's blue, white and red, from top to bottom.

And that may create a major problem for the Post Office department. Those spanking new mail boxes Dayton has about a dozen have Ihe flag colors reversed. And, according to the Flag Code, adopted in 1942. any person who intentionally violate the code is subject to a fine of up to $250 and a jail sentence of up to six months. Dayton Postmaster Hugh Albright claims complete innocence.

He says the boxes were painted at the factory by government contract and he's not about to squeal or to correct the matter locally. 8-Acre Unit Scheduled For Completion in '67 By JACK JONES. fail News Stuff Writer The Air Force Museum foundation today unveiled designs for a new $10 million Air Force Museum. The new structure, to be lo- hIm pl. Till'- NEW structure will re- i mm on mi iuhii.iu I )q mr jiii i in murium oi i i- of Wright lield.

is scheduled to terson Held, housed in a iormcr completed in 19K7. engine overhaul shop. The Museum foundation, a private, non-profit organization, will conduct a national campaign to i raise funds for the project. A model of the museum was unveiled at a luncheon today at i the Wright-Patterson Air Force base Officers club attended by trustees of the foundation. Assistant Secretary Robert H.

DESIGNED BY Rot he "1 Eero Saarincn and Associates, the new museum will be basically a gigantic, eight -acre steel canopy to shelter historic planes from the elements and yet provide an open, outdoor atmosphere. Supported at only four iwints. the big wedge-shaped shelter ill be 300 feet wide at ground level soaring lo a 700-foot wide open Chailes, speaking for Air Force i arch feet alxne the surface Secretary Eugene Zuckert, who at ihe other. was unable to attend, expressed' official Air Force appreciation foi It will face generally east, ni uinlnir I thn runii'iiv anrnn the plans and em- museum impor where the latest planes will be the MODEL OF NEW AIR FORCE MUSEUM WHICH WILL BE LOCATED AT WRIGHT FIELD Structure Will House Largest Exhibit of Military Aviation in World tance in giving Americans a parked for display. Massive U.S., Viet A I.

"I DESPITE RAIN, DECORATIONS (JO UP Christmas Just Ahead. Staff Photo by Koehler CHfUV TONIGHT Winter Peeks In; Flurries Coming Tonight's expected light rain should turn to wind-whipped snow flurries tomorrow as the season's first real sample of winter weather blows in. The weatherman says it will deeper understanding and a greater awareness of the story of air and aerospace power. "It seems to me there can be no more fitting site for this museum than Dayton," he said. The site is only a few miles from Huffman prairie where the Wrights made their first flights after Kilty Hawk.

The open arch of the museum will face the Wright field laboratories, center of Air Force research and development since 1927. EUGENE Kettering, foundation board chairman, presented the design and said: "U'e have worked for more than a year to achieve final plans for an aviation museum worthy of the purpojte. "We did not want an ordinary building for this museum," Kettering said, "but rather one which would be spacic us. fireproof and modern enough to house the latest products of aerial technology as well as the wood and fabric of the early days of aviation." THE MUSEUM will occupy a 190-acre site provided by the Air Brooklyn, Portsmouth Yards to Close be colder, with a high of 38 expected tomorrow. THE SNOW should blow through by Saturday when clearing skies and temperatures in the mid-30s are expected.

As brisk northwesterly winds begin to pour colder air into the area tonight, the mercury's due to drop to about 34 and the rain will switch to snow. Yesterday's high was 48. The overnight low was 39. Rain amounted to .08 of an inch this morning. Assault lops I rant lml V- Win- htIi-m SAIGON, Nov.

19 American an I Vietnamese troops pressed a massive offensive against Communist guerrillas northwest of Sai-! gon today but the element of sur-! prise as gone. It was the largest heliopier assault of the war. The $1 million operation eap-tr I a motorbike, 13 hand na.Ks and 3 small i 'si was estimated by a U.S. military spoMiman. IV ANOTHER development, the United States discloed it has ent another 1.200 military men into South Vietnam this month.

More American air transport units also have been thrown into the struggle. The disclosures came less than 24 hours alter it was announced lhat Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor will fly back to Washin gton to oien a sweeping rev ievv of the South Vietnamese situation with President Johnson and his top military and diplomatic advisers on Nov. 27. the additional manpower brings U.S.

military strength in WASHINGTON. Nov. 19-UP' -Congressional sources said today the Brooklyn, N. and Ports SIZE OF NEW MUSEUM IS SHOWN IN DRAWING OF WHITE HOUSE IN SCALE WITH GIGANTIC ARCH Open Sides. End, Steel Canopy Will Give Exhibits a Cathedral of Air, Point to Sky While uthcr rititt await word on cutback, XV right-Pat It mis headed for growth, Paie S.

120 BIKES 'NO-FUTURE ROBINSON NOW MOST VALUABLE Baseball scouts old Brooks Robinson: "You have no future in baseball." The Baltimore third baseman Hoover Blasts King. Warren Unit, Judges Negro Nolicl Peace Prize Winner mouth. N.H.. Navy yards are among those felected by the Defense department for shutdown. A well placed source here said that not only the big Brooklyn Naval installation but also two other bases in New York the Force.

Adjacent will be a spa-; ok us parking lot. Attendance at the present museum, with 98.000 square feel ol floor space, has grown from 10.000 to 592,000 annually in the iast nine years. More than a million visitors a year are expected at the new. 350.000 square foot facility, according to a survey made by the loundation. IT WILL I5E operated, as the present facility, by the Airj Force as an activity cf the Air named American league's Most Valuable landslide vote.

Bage 11. was just Player by I- a Liar. He Chifgef Mom Told Son to Steal, Police Sax CINCINNATI, Nov. 19-UP A mother accused of telling her 10-year-old son to steal some 120 bicycles and tricycles in the last three months is being held by police for questioning. Mrs.

Edith Stancheck. 47, l-'runi llrtlly News Wire ServieM ASHINGTON, Nov. 19 FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has blasted the Warren commission as "unfair and unjust" and called Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

"the most notorious liar in the country." fig i iiii'Mi University command. "IF VOL BELIEVE in a community, you just can't sit back and look." says Mrs. Virgil Strolger, who has given countless hours to the Dayton Boys club. She's one of this year's Top Ten Women of the Miami Valley. Page 34.

MAYOR SOMKItS hopes county commission will make the incinerator ques The new museum will use both Indoor and outdoor space. Early the troubled area to about 21,200 up 5.000 since midsummer, sources said. The big pudi, launched yesterday, bore a sti resemblance lo a government offensive last Aug. 12. II also involved a huge fleet of American helicopters and occurred in the same general area.

That operation also lacked the key factor of surprise and failed to produce the hoped-for Communist casualties. U.S. MILITARY sources said the Viet Cong guerrillas had apparently been briefed on the strategy of the August airborne assault. The force of 1,000 Viet Hoover boiled over on these and other matters, including lenient "bleeding heart judges," in a lengthy interview yesterday with a group of women reporters. HE ANGRILY charged the War Mrs.

Strolger liohinson tion their first order of business. Page 42. ren commission with "a classic example of "Monday morning quarterbacking" in discussing its "eport on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy The commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, has ASS AIM LT DRIVERS better than teenagers? The Daily League Youth Forum suggests testing every three or four years to prove it. Page 4.

fragile planes will be protected in a sunken, covered area at the narrow end of the wedge. The larger, more modern planes will be located near the open end, where the ceiling is highest. The model shi us an exhibit of missiles just outside the roof arch. But the Titan II. currently the Air Force's largest at 103 feet tall, could easily fit under the giant span.

Exhibits for the new museum Hoover King OTHER FEATl RES IN TODAY'S NEWS namese drops was almost caught In an ambush by an army of guerrillas twice that size. said the FBI failed to notify the Secret Service that the assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, was in Dal Amusements 28, 29 Ai Uuchwold I VI'HOON IN PHILIPPINES MANILA, Nov. 19 I Ty- was arrested yesterday in suburban Covedale after Ptl. Ralph Gramke. in plain clothes, bought three bicycles from her in answering a newspaper ad-veitisement.

Police checked the serial numbers and deter-mined the bikes had been stolon. district police said Mrs. Stancheck kept her son out of school and drove around with him until she spotted a bicycle or tricycle in a yard. She would then send the boy to get it. put it in the car.

and drive away, they said. John Stancheck. a long distance truck driver, told police he did not know about his wife's thefts. Stancheck said he asked her about the many bicvcle around the house, and she told him she was in a partnership with a man who ran a hobby shop. Mr.

phoon Louise lashed the central i Philippines todav with rains and las last Nov. 22. the day Kennedy was slain. being designed bv Herb Ros- vu 163-milea-oer hour winds. The are Ask and Answer Betty Fairfax Business News Camera News Classified Comics 39 38 52 17 53-61 62.6:: Editorials 30 Federal Diary 10 Obituary Notices 53 People 50 Ralph IfcGH 49 Spitl 22-27 Star Gazer 29 Television 63 Uncle Ray 48 Vital Statistics 64 Victor Riesel 13 Women's Pages 34-39 Brooklyn Army terminal which employs about 2.000 persons and Ft.

Jay on Governor's island -also are among the bases slated for closing. SEN. RICHARD Russell i said he understands Hunter Air Force base at Sav annah, is also on the list. Russell said the shutdown is unjustified and that he would oppose it. Sen.

Thomas J. Mclntyre announced earlier that the Portsmouth shipyard also was among the bases to be closed, jit is the nation's oldest yard. ONLY TWO Iga, tor-elect Robert F. Kennedy appealed for continued operation of the Brooklyn yard at a meeting with Sec of Defense Robert S. McNamara.

He also met with McNamara to talk the yard before the Nov. 3 election With Kennedy at the last Pentagon meeting were Sens. Jacob K. Javits and Kenneth B. Keating, New York Republicans, and Mayor Robert F.

Wagner of New York. TDK BROOKLYN wild employs about 9.000 to 10.000 workers and New York members of Congress have said a shutdown job loss there would have a serious economic impact. About 2,000 work at the Brooklyn Army terminal. Mclntyre said he had been assured by McNamara that the 1 0-year phase-out time would be allowed for the Portsmouth yard. Other bases reported to closed are Schilling Air Force base in Sahna.

and Olm-stead Air Force base in Middle-town. Pa. The office of Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa confirmed that the Philadelphia Naval ship yard will remain oen.

complained, 7,000 persons would! Manila weather bureau reported enthal. primary designer for the have to be taken out of eircula- the typhoon was 82 miles south- Century 21 Exposition Seattle, tion every time a President east of and was moving IIe sajd tno exhibit! will por-makes a public appearance if it! northwest at 14 miles an hour. M.av t)lr rciatjonshi) In yesterday's raid an estimated 115 U.S. Army helicopters flew a reported n.OOO government soldiers into action. Hours later, military authorities i-C)or1ed the assault netted only two guerrillas and one Communist suspect.

THE RAID uccuned in Communist-infested Tay Ninh province. The troops landed in an area 40 miles northwest of the big Bien Hoa airbase, Crossword Puzzle 63 DearAbby 37 Deaths, Funerals 53 Drew Pearson 30 deemed deemed jeach of 80 to 90 aircraft and the 'history that spawned. A series of smaller or "micro-museums" will present various phases of the history of Air Force, its men and I machines. Phljl News Tips to City Editor, 223 J11J Today Chuckle Some girls believe the only foundation lor true love is a large stone. DRUNK FINED $110 were necessary to remove every individual who migK "threaten the safety of the President." However, the FBf director said, his office is turning over to the Secret Service the names of "thousands of beatniks, crackpots and kooks." HE SAID there is "not a scintilla" of jealousy between the FBI and the Secret Service, which is charged by law with protecting Presidents.

Efforts to reach the members RIGGEST OF KIND' Stomach Ache No Excuse For False Alarm-Judge Museum Is Brainchild Of Irish-Born Architect of the Warren commission, some of whom are traveling abroad. Turn to HOOVER, I'age II. Col. 1 By JOE I EN LEY Daily News Statl Writer Having a stomach ache doesn't excuse turning in a false alarm, Municipal court Judge Maurice A. Russell ruled today.

Paul Allen Meadows, 23, of 1 Lexington was before Judge on charges of turn-n the false alarm and He pleaded guilty. NEWS Man standing in Belmont bm glaring at seated woman icho has packages filling up rest of seat. told the judge that a fire alarm was received at 1:39 a.m. today and that four pieces of equipment and a fire chief responded. When two engines, one truck, a special unit and the chief made the scene, said Swank, they found Meadows stretched out on the sidewalk.

"I HAD STOMACH cramps," said Meadows. Shank said Meadows told firemen he pulled the alarm to summon aid. Taken to Good Samaritan hospital. Meadows was diagnosed as having alcoholic gastritis. At the hospital, said Swank, Meadows denied turning in the alarm.

He was arrested and booked op the two charges when hospital officials released him. "HE CAN'T have people pulling a lire alarm every time they get a stomach ache." said Judge Russell. "Then where would we be?" Meadows was then fined $10 and costs on the drunk charge and $100 and costs on the lire alarm charge. A 30-day workhouse term on the alarm charge was suspended. "I'll suspend it since this is your first offense." said the judge.

opening up to a clear arch "00 feet wide and 130 feet at the open end. It will be 380 teet deep. KOCHK SAID it Bp baW is the biggest thing of this kind ever attempted, but he not sure. "It's rather difficult to check." he said. Visitors to the museum will enter underground, walking through a tunnel at the narrow end of the wedge.

The walls and roof of the Turn to IRISHMAN'S Page Col. A dramatic canopy --upportcd by a network of interlaced steel cables and covered with a steel deck will be the key element of the new Air Force museum. It's the brainchild of a slender, intense Irish-bom architect named Kevin Roche? ROCHE SAID it will be something like an odd shaped handkerchief, stretched and supported at four comers by huge steel pylons imbedded in the ground. The mof will dip in a catenary curve but its edges will Bellboy trying to ake vp celebrant in do ntoivn hotel lobby, finally giving up with comment. "It's okay as long as he doesn't snore." plead?" Prosecu- Rosenthal DO YOI Assistant City ck Duncan.

Roche a beam 25 feet ROME HI siLINC. AG AW ROME. Nov 19--i The eternal city snapped back to its normal bustle today, freed from the I redom and inconvenience of 24-hour stnkc of shops, bais. h--taurants and caies. Leadri- ihe proprietors who shut their businesses all day yesterday termed the strike a great success be stiffened by did it." said Meadows, ing the alarm at Lexing- deep.

The wedge-shaped strut tine will be 300 feet wide at its narrow, ground level and Man throning out soda pop left in freezer until it's a solid block of ice. and Bryn Mawr Dr. Inspector Sam Swank.

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