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Tallahassee Democrat from Tallahassee, Florida • Page 2

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With D5T Arrival 2A-Sundoy, April 30, 1967 gallahagflflr Qmoit al Mooncraft Faults More Sunshine For Floridians Bared In Report attention by management to I Vjjg1 rmmm 1 K- it i i hi I 1 v. 1 If 'WV I I when to get up and when to go to bed." Another theater executive, Jerry Whaley, agreed. He said, "if the people are outside, they're not inside like at the movies." Some parents also objected, saying their youngsters would have to leave for school in the dark in some cases. Other mothers and fathers said it would be hard to get children to bed while it was still daylight. On the longest day of the year, June 21, the sky will be light until well after 9 p.m.

Said one man, a father ct five, "I don't want the kids up an hour longer. If it doesn't drive me berserk, it surely will drive my wife berserk." But a stern mother differed. She also has five children. "But, she said, "I believe in discipline. When it's time to go to bed, they go to bed.

We need daylight time. We're a recreation state." dreamed of being able to walk down the chapel aisle by herself when she got married. With her is William Neill III a physical therapist who was one of those largely responsible for her ability, to make the trip. (AP Wirephoto) 0 HER OWN Tiny Suzan Louise Smith realized the dream of a lifetime Saturday when she down the aisle of the Naval academy chapel to become the bride of Doug-1 las J. Stricken with paralytic polio' at age five, Suzan Storm not disclose how he obtained the report.

DAMAGE IS SEEN NASA Administrator James E. Webb told congressional in vestigators that release of the report would damage the agency's relationship with North American. Instead, at the suggestion of Rep. Olin E. Teague, chairman of the House NASA Oversight subcommittee, Webb submitted a summary of the report.

NASA's brief announcement Saturday said discussions are being held with North Ameri can, Aerojet General Boeing General Electric Lockheed Aircraft Corp, the Martin Co. and McDonnell Douglas Corp. NASA said the talks are to get the Apollo man to the moon program back to full operation as soon as possible following the Apollo accident. The space agency did not comment on" Ryan's release of the Phillips report. NORTH AMERICAN TARGET In general the 20-page report represents sweeping criticism of management, workmanship and engineering at North American.

Author of the report, Maj. Gen. Samuel S. Phillips, sent his findings to the president of North American," J. L.

Atwood, Dec. 19, 1965. In a cover letter, he said, "The conclusions expressed in our briefing and notes are critical. Even with due consideration of hopeful signs, I could not find a substantive basis for confidence in future performance." Among the findings of the report was that North American "must take immediate and effective action to improve the quality of workmanship and to tighten their own inspection. Performance goals for demonstrating high quality must be established and trend data must be maintained and given serious He Would Repeal U.S.

Requirement On Gold Reserve BOCA RATON" (UI) -Sen. Vance Hartke, a member of the Senate Finance Committee, Saturday called for repeal of tbe legal requirement that the United States maintain a 23 per cent gold reserve to back federal reserve notes and bank deposits. The U. S. dollar, backed by productivity of leading manufacturing nation, actually is the world's trading currency and needs no gold reserve, he said in remarks prepared for the marine transportaticn council here.

Hartke argued the U. S. goH supply has shrunk to the "dangerous 29-year low of some $13.1 billion, pnd a change in our gold policy is needed immediately." Board Revamped ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) St.

Louis University has announced a reorganization of its 28-mem-ber board of trustees to include nine non-Catholics. Weather Slightly WASHINGTON AP) A i congressman made public Saturday a 16-month-old National Aeronautics and Space Administration report harshly critical of the company that built tbe Apollo spacecraft in -which three astronauts perished. NASA announced it is meeting with present and prospective contractors to set up a new schedule for putting a man on tbe moon. Rep. William F.

Ryan, released copies of the so-called Phillips report, which detailed what the author viewed as widespread deficiencies in operations of North American Aviation, prime contractor for Apollo. Ryan had released excerpts covering most of the principal charges last week. Ryan, a member of the House Science and Astronautics Committee, distributed the report because, he said, NASA refused to do so. He said the report bears directly on the spacecraft fire in which three astronauts were killed Jan. 27.

Ryan told newsmen he could Anne Biddle, Maryland Senator Wed WASHINGTON (AP) Anne Bullitt Biddle and Sen. Daniel B. Brewster of Maryland were married Saturday night at the home of the senator's mother, Mrs. William F. Cochran in Glyndon, Md.

The private ceremony was performed by 0. T. Gosnell, clerk of the court of Baltimore County. The senator's brother, Andre Brewster, was the best man. The newlyweds will reside In Baltimore County and the sena-.

tor will be present at the Senate session on Monday, an aide announced. The spokesman for the senator said it was "a small, quiet, private wedding" and further details were unavailable. The senator's first wife divorced him in Mexico earlier this month. They had been married for 12 years and were the parents of two sons, 11 and 9. The mother retained custody.

The senator and his new wife both are 43. She is the daughter of the late William C. Bullitt, first U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union and later ambassador to France. U.S.

Sea Patrols Cut Red Supplies WASHINGTON (AP) U. S. ships and planes ranging the North Vietnamese coast have reduced the seaborne flow of Communist supplies by about 70 per cent. Navy officials estimated Saturday. They predicted that improving weather will enable the Navy "sea dragon" patrols to better that mark.

Big Bend The weatherman predicts fair to partly cloudy skies and warmer temperatures today and tonight. The high today will be about 85 and the low will be near 58. The high Monday will be about 83. Winds will be southerly to southeasterly from 5 to 15 miles per hour. OUTLOOK The outlook for Monday night and Tuesday calls for partly cloudy skies and warmer temperatures, with early morning fog.

MOOS Rite Set Rite Set 5:55 7.14 8:54 7:15 Today Mon. APALACWCOLA RIVER DATA AT BLOINTSTOWN Toda 6 falltnf Monday 0 ritinf RAINFALL Total 14 hr ending 7.30 t.tn. Total thit month 144 Total aince Jan. 1 14 71 Below normal lince Jan. 1 2 60 Below normal since April 1 3 05 f.flU' Show 0ey4rm iuftdOf lwi4 i S0 I By the Associated Press Floridians gained an hour of sunshine during the dark hours of this morning.

Those who failed to advance their clocks were in danger of showing up late for church and other appointments as Florida joined most of the rest of the country in adopting Daylight Saving Time. For many years, the state has remained on standard time during the summer. But this year, congress decreed daylight time for the entire nation except for states exempted specifically by their legislatures. There was a lot of talk about it in Florida's legislature. But nothing happened except defeat of a bill to let citizens vote on whether they wanted DST.

So the state will have daylight time until 2 a.m. the last Sunday of October. CITIES IS FAVOR Polls indicate that Florida's city dwellers generally favored daylight time. Most of those in the rural areas either were opposed or didn't care one way or the other. Advocates of daylight time have been defeated in the legislature in past years by small county lawmakers reflecting the feeling of farmers who complained, for example, that it would be impossible to get their cows to switch their milking schedules.

Many years ago, there was a partial adoption of daylight time in Florida with cities and counties deciding for themselves whether they wanted it. General confusion resulted and the practice was dropped. About the only organized Florida opposition to DST this year came from theater owners who "now will face competition from the outdoor activities which en extra hour of "sunlight permits. Said President Harry Glover of the motion picture theater owners of Florida. "You don't need Washington telling you She's Picked As World's Beauty Queen LONG BEACH, Calif.

(AP) A dark-haired model from Buenos Aires was chosen Miss International Beauty on Saturday night at the Long Beach Auditorium in the nationally televised Miss Argentina. Mirta Teresi- ta Massa, 19, was selected for the $10,000 first-place prize over 82 contestants from around the world. First runner-UD was Miss Is rael, Yaffa Sharir. 21. a student from Haifa; second runner-up was tne American entry, Pamela Elfast, 19, of East Orange, N.J..

who had been named to represent the United States last week; third runner-up was Miss Peru, Martha Quimper, 19, of Lima, and the fourth runner-up was Miss Hong Kong, Gisella Ma Wai Kit, 19. Miss Massa. an onlv child. hopes to be an actress. Before tne final judging, she said she would travel around the world to buy antiques if she won.

and added: "I also want to buy a house for my parents and give them every comfort. I shall also buy a cruiser." Rather slender for her 5 feet 7, the new queen admits, "I don't take care of mvself and I don't diet at all." But at 120 pounds her measurements are 35l2-24-354. Miss Sharir. who will resume studies at the University of Is rael in the fall, was a popular runner-UD. The 82 contestants, in a secret ballot, named Miss Georgia, Julia Anna Bickerstaff.

20. of Clayton, as Miss Friendship. 5tie is a journalism major at the University of Georgia. Hard Swing By Surveyor Dents Moon PASADENA, Calif. (A) -America's Surveyor 3 took a hard swing at the moon, but dented the crust very little, scientists reported Saturday.

"We dropped the soil sampler on the crust six times," a spokesman at the Jet ropul-sion Laboratory said, "We dropped it from six inches, 12 inches and 24 inches, and the maximum penetration of the soil was about 14 inches." He said scientists haven't studied all the data received yet, "but so far, the only thing it indicated is we din't break the scooper." Continued surveys with the 620-pound craft's camera were ordered, and, "We shot 994 pictures in today's program. That brings the total up to 4,626 pictures." The spindly-looking three-legged craft, which touched down on the moon April 19 after a 65-hour flight from Cape Kennedy, is sitting in the dry Ocean of Storms, just left of the center of the moon. correct this unsatisfactory cond ition." Phillips said in testimony be fore congressional investigating committees that he found in a return study four months later that North American had cor rected some of the deficiencies And he said the firm was mak ing satisfactory progress toward correcting the rest. But Ryan said the Apollo review board on the accident lis ted many of the same deficien cies found in the Phillips report Therefore, Ryan argues, "The only reasonable and objective conclusion is that North American Aviation did not clear up the deficiencies pointed out in the -Phillips report and that NASA did not exercise proper supervision thereafter." The 20-page report, headed "NASA Review Team Report, was based on studies at North American's Downey, plant between Nov. 22 and Dec.

6, 1965: The restudy was made in April 1966. The astronauts died in a flash fire in the spacecraft as it was on the launch pad at Cape Kennedy for what were considered nonhazardous tests. Ryan says that "apparently, because of failure by NASA and Its contractor, North American Aviation, their lives were unnecessarily sacrificed." U.S. Starts Evacuation In Yemen WASHINGTON (AP) Evacuation of Americans from Yemen began Saturday while the U.S. diplomats continued to seek freedom for two U.S.

aid officials arrested on sabotage charges. State Department officials reported that a chartered Ethiopian DC3 airliner ferried 34 American officials and their families from troubled Ta'izz. a principal Yemeni provincial city, across the Red Sea to Asmara in Eritrea. More Americans are slated to be flown out of the tiny Arabian Peninsula republic Sunday in the wake of Friday's U.S. deci sion to close its aid mission and pull out most Americans there.

About 120 U.S. diplomatic, aid and other official personnel and their families are in Yemen. Some 77, including 62 with the aid mission, have been at Ta'izz, where a mob assaulted the U.S. Embassy and aid build ings Wednesday. State: Department, officials said that despite continued U.S.

efforts for their release, the Yemenis still are holding U.S. aid officials Stephen Liapis, of Grand Forks, N.D., and Harold Hartman of Baltimore, Md. The two were seized on Yemeni charges that they tried to blow up Ta'izz by firing bazookas at ammunition dumps. The United States has denounced the allegations as "a total fabrica tion." Washington authorities said that the Egyptians have given a polite hearing to the U.S. request for Cairo's help in assur ing the safety of U.S.

citizens in Yemen and in obtaining freedom for the two under arrest. But they said they did not know to what extent the Egyptians were actually acting on the U.S. plea. Egypt wields considerable influence with the Republican Yemeni regime and has thousands of troops there. Maddox Against Pgrimiituel Bets ATLANTA (AP) Any move by the legislature to legalize parimutuel betting in Georgia would be vetoed, Gov.

Lester Maddox says. "I will resist it with all the powers of my office," Maddox said Friday. House Speaker George L. Smith assiened a seven-member committee Friday to study -the possibility of using betting as an additional source of state revenue. "I'm getting so disgusted with people who say let's do this because we'll get some money out of it," Maddox said.

'Dollars are important but so are our boys and girls." eallaliaasrf lUmcrnd J0' EAST CALL STREET TALLAHASSEE. FLORIDA. 3230J Telephone All Departments 234-7181 Published Afternoon Monday through Friday Saturday and Sunday Mornlnft Second Class Postage Paid at Tal lahassee. Florida. SHANNON CULLEN.

Inc. Ch cago. New York. Atlanta, Detroit, Cleveland, Hollywood. San Francis co, National Advertising Represent tatives.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally and Sunday By Carrier City Suburban Motor Rout (Mail Sunday Only) $10.40 ts.20 $2o si or RETAIL ZONE INCLUDES Leon, Gadsden, Jefferson. Madison, Taylor, Wakulla, Liberty and Franklin Counties. Payable In Advanca 1 Yr. 6 Mo. 3 Mo.

1 Mo. (24.00 112.00 $8.00 12.00 Mail (Retail and All Other Zones 1 $24.00 113.00 W.00 $2 The Lena G. was taken ashore at Victoria Beach in Nova Sco tia and the 26-year-old canoe rider was found on a tiny island in nearby St. Margaret's Bay. Nova Scotia rescue ships were standing by three other fishing vessels that had called for help after the storm struck.

The vessels were not believed to be in danger of sinking. At the height of the storm, the Coast Guard said, wind gusts were recorded up to 90 miles per hour with waves more than 50 feet high. Snow cut visibility to less than half a mile. Heavy battered the coast line, rolling in far above the normal high tide line. In Biddeford, Maine, surf washed away about 50 feet of land, as the ocean rolled to within 10 feet of road pavement.

The front yard of a home In Biddeford, facing the ocean, was washed away when the waves broke through a bulkhead. At Cape Ellis, another home was flooded when a log washed over a sea wall and broke through a door. The missing vessel Deep Water had radioed she was in immediate danger after taking on water off Nantucket. The message said her wheelhouse was smashed and her engines out. Her skipper, George Ed wards, said the only dory aboard was destroyed.

A Coast Guard spokesman said chances of finding any of the six-man crew alive were not very good. Runaway Motorcycle Hurts Girl A 15-year-old girl was admitted to Tallahassee Memoria Hospital yesterday after a motorcycle she didn't know how to ride carried her about 75 feet before crashing onto a cement driveway. Elizabeth Ann Thurman, 415 Ingleside Drive, reportedly got on the motorcycle about noon yesterday in the 400 block of Ingleside and was attempting to "only crank it" when the cycle sped off with her. Police officer B. A.

Vaugh was told the girl "didn't know how to ride it" and investigation revealed the cycle traveled across Ingleside, onto a yard, and hit a three foot embankment, spilling the lone passenger onto a cement driveway. The girl, according to a police report, was not charged. Damage to the cycle was estimated at $35. In other accidents, Leona W. Tookes, 521 Hampton Avenue, was treated for injuries and released from A 4 Hospital along with a son Darryl, 11, after the car they were riding in, smashed into a parked car.

Mrs. Tookes, 521 Hampton' Street, was charged with failing to have her vehicle under control and causing an accident. Police said she was driving down Boulevard Street about 10 a.m. when her car hit a car owned by Theora C. Floyd, University Guest House.

Damage to the Tookes car was estimated at $300 and $100 to the Floyd vehicle. An accident at the corner of Carolina and Monroe Streets early yesterday afternoon caused a total of $1300 in damages to the two vehicles involved. Philip Walz 1828 Ivanhoe Drive, was charged with disregarding a red light, after his truck smacked into a station wagon driven by Leonard Clark, 2335 Old St. Augustine Road. Damage to the Walz truck was estimated at $1000.

Officer Troy Brewer investigated the accident the peak of construction of th two pioneering planes. He said 1,700 now are assigned to the program. 113 ON ORDER Boyd told newsmen that the airlines have ordered 113 of the supersonic transDort nlanpi which are intended primarily ior longnaui operations. He said 300 are erpected to be made and sold adding the figure is based on tne most Dessimistic readini of prospects. The Soviet Government anrl a French-British combine each is expected to have supersonic transports in commercial serv ice in 1971, well ahead of the United States.

It was believed the Russians were trying to have their TU114 at next month's Paris air show but informed sources said two weeks ago it would not be ready. They said, however, the Soviet aircraft factory, named for designer Andrei N. Tupolev, is hoping to get the plane into the air for a test flight by late this year. This would be ahead of the French-British Concorde, a plane it closely resembles. The test wgnt date fo rthe Concorde is next Feb.

28. The French-British Concorde is expected to be about 20 per cent slower than the projected U.S. SST and have a 50 per cent lower passenger capacity. SST Mutton In Beef; It's Seized I'nlted Press International The Florida Commissioner of agriculture ordered 21,660 pounds of meat from New Jersey seized Saturday becaused it was laced with mutton and sold under a beef labeL Commissioner Doyle Conner ordered an additional 5,984 pounds of finished chopped beef patties withheld from sale in the state until tests can be made to determine if mut-on had been added. Department of agriculture inspectors were ordered to seize 16,200 pounds of partly defatted chopped meat for use in processed meat products now" in' storage at a Dade County (Miami) processing plant.

The jneat was shipped into Florida by the Philadelphia Refining and Packaging Camden, N.J. A stop use order was struck on an additional 5,460 pounds of chopped meat shipped into the state by Thenco, Inc. of Kearney, N.J. The product was turned over to federal meat inspectors in Miami Conner said the packages containing the beef products were mislabeled because the labels did not state that mutton bad been added. Conner said he plans to ask U.S.

Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman to halt shipments adulterated meats into Florida. critical questions and even ridicule. At the close of the hearing, Chairman Olin E. Teague, of the committee told Baron that the Apollo 1 board of review and North American had found that at least some of the charges in his report were true. "It has caused North American to really search its procedures," Teague said.

Baron had been iTemployed since leaving North American. He and his family lived in a trailer home near here in Mims. The Florida Highway Patrol reported that the accident occurred at a rail crossing marke dby the standard X-shaped warning sign. Baron's car had proceeded parallel to the tracks and then turned to cross the railroad. Troopers estimated that the switch engine was travelling about 40 miles per hour and Baron's car about 30 MPH when the collision occurred.

Baron's car was dragged about 30 feet and then flipped end over end into a ditch. He, his wife Marlene, and a stepdaughter, Penny, 4, were thrown from the car and killed. A second stepdaughter, Robin, 6, remained in the car and survived. She was in serious condition at a nearby hospital. 2 Ships Missing Atlantic Abates BOSTON (AP)-An intense storm that lashed the Atlantic with hurricane force winds continued with only slightly less fury Saturday after it left two fishing vessels missing with 12 persons aboard and swept two crewmen overboard from a So viet motor vessel.

The Coast Guard reported Saturday a distress call from the Soviet vessel Kaspijsk about 130 miles east of Cape Cod. The vessel reported two men were washed overboard at 4:30 p.m. riaay ana assea ior a Coast Guard plane to conduct an air search for them. An air plane from the Salem toast Guard base, already in the area on a searcn mission, was dispatched. A Coast Guard spokesman said the temperature of the sea in the area is 38 degrees.

"A man could live for half an hour in that water," the spokesman said, "and those men have been in it for a day." Rescue ships and a U.S. Coast Guard plane raced out from New England and Nova Scotia to help the fishing vessels trapped and battered by the raging storm that was gradually easing. The Liberian freight er tosta mean was in danger of breaking up after it went aground on rocks near the harbor approaches to Halifax, Nova Scotia. The crew made it to safety. The six-man crew of the 94- foot lobster boat Deep Water, out of New Bedford, was miss ing after the vessel vanished about 100 miles south of Mar tha's Vineyard Island Friday.

The fishing vessel Elizabeth out of New Bedford with a crew of six, was reported miss ing Saturday. A spokesman for the New Bedford Seafood Pro- dacers Association said it was last seen Thursday noon off Nantucket Island. Winds were recorded at up to 50 miles per hour Saturday, churning up waves 20 feet high The U.S. Weather Bureau said the storm center, some 400 to 500 miles southeast of Nantuck et Island, was moving slowly eastward. But the storm effects, it said, would be felt through today.

The coast Guard cutter Acushnet, battled for hours to attach a two line to the 102-foot Boston trawler Plymouth with five men aboard about 75 miles east-southeast of Nantucket and began to tow it to shore. A Coast Guard plane dropped a pump to the Plymouth earlier, then flew on to the New Bedford fishing vessel Noreen, also in trouble off Nantucket The Noreen. with crew of 11, con trolled the flooding and appar ently was out of danger. Five persons reported missing off the coast of Nova Scotia four aboard the fishing vessel Lena G. and one in a canoe were found Saturday.

Death View PROVINCETOWN, Mass (AP)- The Massachusetts Chiefs of Police Association has adopted a resolution saying capital punishment should remain as a penalty for murder. With Wife, Daughter Moonship Critic Dies In Car-Train Crash NATION Atlanta 72 40 .00 Charleston, S. C. 71 51 .00 Charlotte 7 .00 1 Chicago 5 4 .001 Cincinnati 63 42 .00 Columbus 65 37 .00 Houston ') 70 .00 1 Indianapolis 67 39 .00 Kansas City 73 61 .00 Knoxville 71 37 .00 Uttle Rock 75 4R .001 Los Angeles 65 47 .11 Louisville 71 41 .00 Memphis 73 SO .00 Mobile -81 54 .00 Montgomery 79 45 Nashville 7S 41 .00 1 New York 6 43 .00 Philadelphia 63 41 Pittsburgh 60 30 Portland. Maine 86 39 .00 Richmond 67 37 .00 St.

Louis 62 52 .46 1 San Antonio 71 .00 Savannah 75 .00 Seattle 55 39 .00 STATE Apalachicola 74 JR .00 Daytona Beach 74 65 .00 Ft. Lauderdale 77 50 .00 Fort Mvers S2 55 .00. Gainesville 73 41 .00 Jacksonville 75- 46 Kev West 61 7 .00 Lakeland 76 56 .00 Miami 76 6 i Ocaia 65 54 1 Orlando 60 53 .0" Pensacola 77 53 .00 Sarasota 84 49 .00 St. Petershurf go 60 .00 TALLAHASSEE 61 41 .00 Tampa 63 47 .00 W. Palm Beach 77 68 .00 M.

60 TITUSVILLE (UPI) A former Apollo quality control inspector who told' congressional investigators numerous shortcomings i America's moonship program has been killed with his wife and stepdaughter in a car-train collision. Thomas R. Baron, 29, died when his car was struck by a Florida East Coast railway switch engine at a road crossing north of here Friday night a week after he testified for more than an hour before a House subcommittee inquiring into the Apollo 1 tragedy. Baron, discharged by North American Aviation before the Jan. 27 fire that killed three astronauts, accused the company of poor management and sloppy workmanship.

North American builds the Apollo spacecraft. He wrote a 55-page report before the accident occurred listing his charges and after the moonship disaster he expanded the document to more than 500 pages. Both were submitted to the House Space bcommittee investigating the spacecraft fire. Baron testified before the committee at a special session at the nearby Kennedy Space Center for more than an hour April 21. He fielded numerouj WEATHER FORECAST Rain and snow showers are forecast today in intermountain region, Northern Plains and upper Mississippi Valley.

Rain is expected from Texas through Gulf Coast to Great Lakes. ItH be colder in Mississippi Valley End warmer along the Atlantic coast and North-, east. (AP Wirephoto Map).

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