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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 6

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Location:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

t-A St. Ptferiburg Times, Sunday, July 1972 TT 1 v. WEBB'S CITY OPEN TODAY 12 ''til 6 Portrait Of A 0 0 OPEN WEEKDAYS 9 TIL 9 FREE WHILE SHOPPING WEBB'S ii what he wanted and always managed his affairs very well air, and very confidently. The family, which moved to Manassas from Omaha, in 1970, first noted a change when the young helicopter mechanic returned from a 10-month tour in the Central Highlands of Vietnam In WithlnttM Ptt Stole WASHINGTON A 21-year-old soldier from Manas-sas, who surrendered' to the FBI early Friday ater hijacking a California jetliner was described by his father as a "self-possessed, stable, knowledgeable young man" severely affected by "a bad experience" during ten months in Vietnam, Sp. 4 Francis M.

Goodell, a helicopter mechanic absent without leave from Ft. Riley, surrendered in Oakland, at about 4 a.m. after hijacking a Pacific Southwest Airlines jet for (455,000 ransom. didn't Identify with any cause as far as I knew." GOODELL, obviously shaken, spoke to reporters about his son from his front porch in Manassas. Goodell said his son had called him from the Oakland police station and had "expressed regret for what he had done.

He seemed confused and uncertain about what happens next," Goodell aid. The younger Goodell, oldest of five children In a seemingly close-knit, stable family, was described by his father as someone who always knew LLOYD TURNER, a Call-fornia Highway Tatrol officer on board the jet who persuaded Goodell to give himself up, said the soldier had complained that the Army wouldn't let him marry a Vietnamese girl he had met. "We knew about the girl," Goodcll's father said. "Maybe this could be a motivating factor." The FBI did not comment on Goodell's possible motives. 'He was a very avid reader and history was a particularly avid interest of his," said Goodcll's father, Francis C.

Goodell, a 44-year-old national park service official. "But ha April. "He was very nervous and had taken up smoking, some thing he had never done be fore," Goodell said. "He com plained of being cold, and wore a jacket in the warmest weather. Indicating to me there was something physical FRANCIS M.

GOODELL expressed regret. JULY 15, 1972 PHILCO The better Idea people. ly wrong." AfJDCAVE! And A Victim PHILCO-FORD CORPORATION enough to violence to accept the killings," he added. "I am Quiet Beauty! Top Performance! DtcoraWttylvd with handiom simulated wood front end Hidtaway centrals and "nglnctrad to a whiipar" to assure quitt cooling without loss of cooling capacity, ovon at top sptod. in total and complete disagreement with, what hap A Supporting Role PERU, Ind.

10 Lowell Elliott, 64, a farmer who found $500,000 in a soybean field, apparently has gone Into seclusion, the Peru Tribune reported Friday. Elliott found the bag of money In the field south of Peru June 26, two days after the hijacker of an American Airlines plane apparently lost it in a parachute Jump. The farmer -turned the money over to authorities. Elliott rebuffed an offer of a $10,000 gift from the airline June 28 and said he thought he should get at least $25,000. iV f.

pened." His father, a 66-year-old re tired Canadian railway con ductor who came to California seeking a retirement home, was hit by two bullets fired by the hijackers, the FBI said. S. P. Fay, American's Indianapolis manager who offered the check, said he made no further attempt to deliver it "and the matter is in the hands of our New York office." "I talked to the FBI by telephone in Banff," Carter said while here making funeral ar The Tribune said newsmen had been unsuccessful in efforts LOWELL ELLIOTT disappeared. rangements.

"They said, 1 to contact Elliott. SUPER POWER ROOM AIR-COMDITIOIJER fmm PHILCO-FORD DELUXE C00O BTU CAPACITY 'Well, we saved a lot of lives. If, your daa died, we're SAN FRANCISCO The FBI was "playing Dick Tracy at someone else's expense" when four agents stormed a hijacked Pacific Southwest Airlines jet, the eldest son of a passenger slain in the ensuing blaze of gunfire is quoted assaying. E. H.

Stanley Carter was killed Wednesday as two hijackers went down in a hail of bullets at San Francisco International Airport. "From what I've seen in the papers, it's my judgment the FBI was playing gangbusters shoot things up," Robert Carter, 29, said in an interview appearing in Friday's San Francisco Examiner. The Examiner gave this account: Carter, a consultant on anti-hijacking measures for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and th Van- B.C., airport, said: "We've had three hijackings recently where i the RCMP went aboard and talked the hijackers into giving They were unarmed." "Apparently the American people are accustomed The use of armed agents was an outright mistake dur Takes Arbiter OH; sun OUT CHASSIS I ing the hijacking by two Bul garian-born men demanding I jJl4Xr $800,000 ransom and passage to Siberia, the embittered son mm nmwM' auto: SHIFT said. Ch Match "The airplane could have In Ait nil Sweeps From to Wall and Shifts its cooling speed ess gone to Siberia," he insisted. "All that would have hap tft fit the cooling need AUTOMATICALLY! pened is the passengers would Jlf.fl iv have seen another part of the 'WOrld.

"Instead, now I'm going to 1 'I 1,000 BTUHR cooling capacity hike NOISELESS dtsign to a wfiijptr -Striking dworotor front with Hidt-Away controls take my dad home in a box' Carter died in his wife's arms. Gudmundur Arnlaugsson of Iceland, will be in charge of final preparations, which include the touchy job of picking the chess sets and board to be used. Schmid said he had invited the two players to come to the hall together today to check on the facilities and hopefully approve them. But this meeting was called off Saturday after Schmid left SPASSY ALSO left town and REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) The Boris Spassky-Bobby Fischer world chess championship match, already delayed for nine days, ran Into new problems Saturday when the chief arbiter left Iceland. U.S.

chess said Fischer, the 29-year-old American challenger, is "at peak form and raring to go" into the first game Tuesday against the world champion, Russia's u', i BUT THE SOURCES said. there might have to be another postponement until Thursdaysince chief arbiter Lothar Schmid will not be back in town until then. Schmid, a West German grandmaster and the owner of a book publishing firm in Bamberg, flew home Saturday morning and said he would return Thursday. He said he was leaving because one of his sons had been injured in a traffic accident, Schmid's assistant arbiter, Adjuitablt thtrmoitat 3 cooling and 3 fan tpcidt Stale air exhaust Double Dirt Curtoin air fillir No-drip dthumidilicotion philco Crd Hazards Plague The Schuylkill REG. WITH TRADE $269.95 Model AC8D3 EXPERT INSTALLATION AND WIRING AVAILABLE north with Icelandic (' ur PHILADELPHIA ffl The leal detoxification experts was asked to come to the area Sat Schuylkill, Its banks still PIIILCO AIR COIIDITIO'IER SPECIALS urday to deal with the threat of poison from the floating drums that had not been re- JMAACP's Wilkins To Retire? J2)00 BTU 12 Amps, 115 Volts, Slide Out Chassis.

Reg; tyty 88 WITH TRADE Edward Furia, administra tor of the EPA's Atlantic Region, said at least four drums found along the river had been labeled "ethyl para- BTU 1212.5 Amps, 205230 Volt, Slide Out Chassis. "4 1 111 WITH Reg. 329.95, TRADE an insecticide de-. scribed as extremely danger ous to humans and animals, friend and chess player, Frty-steinn Thorbergsson, on a salmon fishing trip. Russian officials said Spassy would be back Monday, at the latest Thorbergsson also invited Fischer along, but the American turned down the Invitation to observe his Church of God's sabbath from Friday night until Saturday night Before leaving Spassy said he was not going to argue about the practical arrangements or the picking of sets and boards.

"I will leave that to Bobby it makes no difference to me," the 35-year-old champion told newsmen. FRED CRAMER, vice president of the U.S. Chess Federation, said the arrangements although "far superior to any. thing we have seen before," could cause some problems, "But they are not important enough to wreck the match," he said. fa -if i So far, Furia said, tests re AP18A4 18,000 BTU 12.513 Amps, 208230 Volt Slide Out Chassis.

0 WITH Reg. 349.95 OOuI TRADE blackened with oil spilled during the flood two weeks ago, faced one potential new danger Saturday 'and narrowly escaped another. The new danger was barrels and drums floating down- stream or washed up on the shore. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said some of the drums might contain "potentially hazardous material." Earlier, the river' was spared another oil spill when 20,000 gallons of dirty crankcase oil leaked out of a. storage tank.

The flow was stopped by a small dam at the end of a spillway and officials said no oil got into the river. The new spill occurred at the same oil plant where 6-million gallons of the sludge was carried downriver. Meanwhile, a team ochem- DETROIT ffl Roy Wilkins, executive director of the NAACP the nation's oldest 'and largest, civil rights group will reportedly retire from jthe post he has held for al-fjnost 20 years. Usually reliable NAACP sources said Saturday that PWilkins, 71, would probably retire as soon as the board of directors completed pension vealed no poisoning of the water but he warned persons not to touch the drums If they were located. AS7M3A 6700 BTU Auto Cool, 1 15 Volts, 3 Speed Fan, Slide Out 01 0 Chassis.

Reg. 239.95 I 88 WITH TRADE ROY WILKINS almost 20 years. talks, Wilkins refused to confirm cf deny the reports, saying-, "I will remain head of the NAACP as long as I can the NAACP's board of directors. The median age is 54 The chairman of the Board, Bishop Stephen G. Pksna 894-7151 Ext.

314 for In Survey of Your Air Conditioning Heeds, lb Obligation Of Course. THmjAUGU3T31 I physically and mentally man-. Spottswood, is 75, age it." 'I have a great deal of re 1 Mtm i The civil rights organization, which held its 63rd annu-. 'rI convention in Detroit this 'week, has long faced criticism" its younger members 'Clock Kit in solid 34" American) these re totally PRE- a mooeu 75W CUT KITS! All Mitre-Cuts and Sub- wamer gam iscner was "absolutely relaxed and feeling great." 4 He said he and Fischer came but of hiding Friday night and dined in public in a' Reykjavik restaurant. i "Funny enough nobody recognized Bobby," Cramer said.

"He had a great time. He i loves the fish here in Iceland and he had fresh boiled ialm-. on and orange juice." spect for these one NAACP youth member said. "They're the deans of civil rights, but the world is changing and so must the NAACP." One aspect of the organization that many delegates to the convention wish to see is a repudiation of its non-partisan stance toward the presidential election. Assemblies have been made for ou MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY! wrrr mMn mmir mmim vabout the age of its leaders, and reports of Wilkins' retirement have punctuated almost every convention in recent v.

There are 64 members on HOOtt nvuv rmvc rniuc ST. PETERSBURG 149 3rd Street N. (Ntl to Mooi tret.) CLEARWATER, Stars Towa and Othtr locotioni Inn ftiKiio mm tin not TSC 7Si16i10 Chmy J10J II 0 IWeilmln'itir Chiim Mowumi WHN Tmw Fiiail Out CI PImj ini fm Ifxlniri ICMck Mottj Otta SEk)om4 SAVI51.07 ON THIS FINE REFRIGERATOR PRICED LOWER THAN MOST 14 CU. FT. MODELS Poll Indicates Doctors ADDKSS.

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Make a dress in class. Phone or Visit your Singer Sewing Center NEW YORK ffl Perhaps more than half of America's doctors would go on strike as members o( physicians' guilds or unions, although few would close down hospitals or clinics totally, according to a survey conducted by a magazine for doctors. The magazine Medical Opinion said Saturday its survey detected "a real and unexpectedly militant mood for some form of physicians' guild or union" in the face of impending xhanges In medical practice such as a national health Insurance program. "A SIGNIFICANT number of American doctors perhaps more than half would strike if collective bargaining broke down and their organizations ordered the magazine said. The results are based on 752 replies to 3,000 questionnaires sent to selected doctors.

The magazine said the replies are a "balanced representation" of doctors of medicine and osteopathy. Forty-eight per cent said some type of doctors' union or guild is inevitable. Sixteen per cent said organizations such as the American Medical Association will be able to handle the situation; another 16 per cent said specialty societies will become the spokesmen. "THREE OF FIVE would join today," Medical Opinion said, little support for organizations currently charged with representing medicine In federal negotiations." The article did not attempt to define the difference between a doctors' union and guild, but it appeared that the word guild did not seem to have the connotation of labor union militancy. Thirty-five per cent of the doctors responding said they would join either, but of the remainder only 3 per cent said they would Join a union.

Twenty-three per cent said they would join a guild. Asked about striking, 38 per cent said they would strike provided emergency services were covered, 11 per cent would strike under certain other conditions, 4 per cent would strike even If it meant shutting down every-' thing temporarily, 28 per cent would never strike and 19 per cent didn't know what they would da coia controls tor freezer and refrigerafor, 15.8 cu. ft. capacity Available In Color REG. $309.95 anaKegistertoaay.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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