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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 1

Publication:
Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SECTION DAYTON DAILY NEWS 2 4 PAT, WE WEATHER Cloudy, rather windy, warmer loday. High 50. Ixw tonight 38. Fail-, mild Monday. High 48.

Weathrr Map on Pair Dayton, Ohio, Sunday, December 5, 1965 Vol. 89, No. 107 Second Claaa Fostafa Paid at r. Ohla 192 Page 20 Centi 2 Airliners Collide in Air; One Lands, Second Crashes Six Bodies Removed From N.Y. Wreck Site NORTH SALEM, N.Y., Dee.

1 Two incoming airliners collided in gray autumn skies two miles above New York City's northern suburbs today. One plane crashed and burned but the other stayed aloft, and the death toll was miraculously light. Of 112 persons aboard the two I aircraft, state police said six! plane and we're going (o make were known dead. crash landing," White ad- I vised his passengers, giving THE VICTIMS were on a pro-, them time to fasten their seat peller driven Eastern Airlines I belts. FRANK BORMAN WITH SENSOR Attached to Head for Trip IIM LOVELL DRAGS OXYGEN Just Before Donning Suit Hood Constellation shuttle that went down after colliding with a Trans World Airlines Boeing 707 transcontinental jet about 50 1 miles north of New York.

Bit 111 BIMS8hBk flKnEn a 9 mmwmwKsmwmm Gemini Pilots Report Mysterious Space Objects The other pilol. Carroll, at the controls of the TWA jet flight from San Francisco, had 30 feet of his left wing ripped away and his brakes knocked out. A 19- ear-old Maine soldier aboard the Constellation said there was little panic after the collision. GARRY' Fieket! of Mfllbridee. The Constellation crashed on Hunt's mountain near the Connecticut-New York border.

Oscar Baake, regional director of the a 1 Aviation agency, surveyed the wreckage in a light snowfall thai set in am mmmmmm Bonn an, Lovell Gel OK For at Leas. 17 Loops after the crash. He said of the Maine, had his hair singed in death toll the crash but otherwise was un- "That's unbelievable. All I injured. He was taken to Dan-can say is that it is fantastic lUI7.

hospital for a pre-that people walked away. This I cautionary examination. By JACK JONES, Daily News Staff Writer CAPE KENNEDY, Fla Dec. 4 Astronauts Frank pilot must have done a wonder- Borman and James Lovell, circling the earth after a fuj j0D Fickett, who was returning lo Ft. Dix, N.

from his home, said, "We were flying above the Turn to GIANT, Page 16A, Col. near periecl start on what tney nope win oe tne worm longest space flight, spotted two mysterious objects. On their second orbit Borman The jetliner's pilot, Capt. Thomas H. Carroll, 45, of Nor-walk, declared: BROKEN LEFT WING OF TWA 707 JETLINER This Plane Landed Safely at New York's Kennedy Airport.

-I PI suddenly shouted: "Bogey at ten o'clock high. Gemini Pilots Star Gazers He also had "WE SAW the other aircraft just before we hit. We took evasive action." Carroll failed to avoid collision. But his last instant ma ASTRONAUTS Borman and Lovell are sighting stars neuver may have minimized the "cuvrl Ihn rough a simple navigational vice, but test results won't force of the s.desmpmg impact. de seen the spent second stage of their Titan booster in sight at the time.

Bogey is a pilot's term for an unidentified plane. be known until they land. trol of ground monitors at the lime. Page 23A. 1 1 Jones while firing threaten to I A COUPLE 1 of hours later I the spacecraft HH 'HaVlaHalflaA ValHMIiMHffiyCTHHI The jetliner reportedly was assigned to 11,000 feet altitude, while the Constellation was supported to be at 10,000 feet.

There was no immediate explanation of how they happened onto a collision course. TWA SAID in a statement that its Boeing 707 jetliner was flying "at an assigned altitude of 11,000 feet and on its assigned flight path." The Civil Aeronautics board declined to reveal the altitude of AS GEMINI-7 astronauts orbit earth, final tests are set Wednesday for the moonshot escape mechanisms. Page 23A. MRS. JAMES Lovell may give birth to her fourth child while husband is in orbit, 210 miles from earth.

Page ASTRONAUTS will give thorough to space-ground communication by laser, the versatile high-intensity light beam. Page 23A. PROSPECTS brighten for RUTH KEETON "Why" Important She Works For Better Future Ruth Keeton thinks the "why" of her participation in community activities is more firing second Gemini space- SMOKE RISES FROM FUSELAGE OF CONSTELLATION Eastern Air Lines Craft Crashed Near Danbury, Conn. AP the EAL Constellation, but it was learned from a reliable source that this plane was flying at an altitude of 10,000 feet. The sources said that ini- change orbital heights, Lovell 1 suddenly noticed a strap or a piece of tape flapping against 1 his window.

There was no immediate ex I planation for either occurance. I The first object possibly was another satellite. Borman re- ported a large number of parl-1 icles floating in space about I the same time. I The two men were circling I the earth tonight after a near i perfect start on what they hojie will be the world's longest I manned space flight. I Only a flickering little warning light gave any indication that there might be a problem I with the fuel cells the pesky electrical generators thai gave I Last CAR Team Heads For Wreck WASHINGTON, Dec 4.

(1 The Civil Aeronautics board ordered its last available inves-: tigative team in Washington night to the scene of the Eatsl- em Airlines plane crash near North N.Y. In addition, practically the 'entire 13-ttnan slaff of the i CAB's New York regional oilier was dispatched to New York's Kennedy airport to examine a TWA 70V airliner involved in tonight's sky collision. THE EARTERN airliner plummeted to earth, but the TWA 707 landed safel at the airport. Pieces of the Eastern Constellation were lodged in a wingtip of the 707. CAB teams of aerodynamic experts and witness interview-I ers are assigned to investigate the causes of every major air i crash and probes were under way before today in six crashes which have killed 141 person an Michigan, Utah, California and Kentucky since Aug.

16. "Our last team is moving out," a top CAB official said. "We're even bleeding ol the investigative squads which are now at work in other states. If i here's another bad crash well, we'll hav to start assigning top supervisory personnel from here to handle them." Tas Reports real Without Comment craft after inspection shows damage to launch pal from yesterday's shot was "less than normal." Page 20A. A 1 Ti 4 ft i 0butv IT) i Hal reports indicated both planes were supposed to be in level flight at the time of the collision.

There was no immediate explanation as to what caused them to collide. FalL Winter Play Peekaboo So far, ol' man winter's staying away from the Miami valley New Television Station Approved for Kettering FCC Giv! Go-Ahead for Channel 16 Operation hv kittyhavik Broadcasting Plans for an ultra high-frequency television sta BUT, according to the CAB. headaches on the last door' we,) be spring i a indications were that the tail so many well, almosl of the Eastern Constellation me the left Wing of the TWA tion in Kettering: were approved this week by the Fed- important than the list of them. It's this attitude that won her a spot as one of the Top Ten Women of the Miami Valley for 1965. She is concerned with the problems that she thinks will arise as her chosen community of Yellow Springs grows, and she hopes her efforts will help head off some of them.

You'll meet this quiet but highly effective civic worker in the women's section of today's Daily News. This preliminary conclusion era Communications commission. grew trom an eyewitness report Thp FCC issuei construction given by an occupanl of a small Kiftyhawk Broad- nriva aii'cvaf flvinc in he 1 Gemini flight in August. 'HIIS TIME space agency officials were confident that the I trouble was simply in the indi- calor light and that the cells would continue producing elcc-I trical power from their supplj I of hydrogen and oxygen. I In any event, the Geniini-7 astronauts had a "go" for at The weatherman looks far considerable cloudiness, rather windy weather and warmer temperatures today.

The expected high is oO. Partly cloudy and not so coo) is the prediction for lonighl, with a low of 36. Monday's forecast is fair and mild with a high of 48. Bv way of comparison, the 1 ri The channel in transmitter will be located a I 2500 K. River in the city of Moraine, and will be over 300 feet hich.

casuiiK Illllllt-U 1HSI. Mai-ch by six area husiness men, lo operate on channel 16. area at 6,000 feet. Pilots of both ships responded magnificently to the dire FRAME SAlt) the station vice initially will broadcast from 4 ROBERT H. FRAME least 17 orbits about 24 hours with all indications pointing to- high Dec 5 last year was 30 and the- iw The rerord hiffh was the low 25.

The record high was president and treasurer of Kitty-hawk, said the corporation will THE EASTERN Airlines pilol, Capt. C. White of Rye, p.m. to midnight. Programming is still very much up in the air; everything is premaime ward a good chance to continue enroute from Boston to Newark, proceed immediately with final 6.3 in 1012.

The area shivered with a low of 6 degrees back in 1301. until you get I he paper got foughl off a spin of his four-: plant for construction of a $500 Turn to GEMINI, Page 5A, Col. 1 engined Constellation, alei-ted 000 station headquarters build-ate rnaay, name saw. his passengers to their peril, big at 1212 E. Stroop Rd.

The corporation plans ful CRASH AREA WeslvhPHter County Kshkol Hospitalized JERUSALEM, Dec. 4 color programming. then Pancaked into an umn- The existing structure on" that MOSCOW, Dee. 4 (UFJ) Tiw official news agency Tas reported in a 105-word dispatch the launching of Cemini-7, Thei was no com men I. JU ANITA'S PARENTS GONE naDitea nmsiue.

me snip formprlv the Kettering olor in I he sudden uput pionea a Olirsl Ot orange YMrA anH hoadnuar. li. flame buf most of the 54 persons 'nZ MUV 1 love Frti- Ihx Usl ormo fTiamhap i Israe I I 11 It milllMfi i u. aboard escaped with their lives. nionrns nas cieaieu a ii finen- of Commerce, will be razed, j0us backlog of orders for color Kshkol was hospitalized today TSM said the aim of the fhghi was to study weightlessness nnH if hoped lo achieve a linkup ith (temint-ti.

"We've been hit by another Frame said. from weakness and Goodfellows Soften A Child's Tragedies i broadcasting equipment i suffering Krame noted. "It will probably fajM(, be nine months before we get all the equipment we need." Channel 16 will be broadca.sl on a visual power of 250,000 NEWS PREVIEWS The terrible bagedies of her life are not revealed in Juanita's large brown eyes. The three kilowatts and sound power of 25 kilowatts. Frame said thai is comparable to the power of the three exisiting television outlets in Dayton.

year-old girl is 1 young to understand. victim WM of a ious il Hnfnpl INSIDE; UD Squeaks Past t. Kentucky 7269 It took four free throwa in the final seconds by Gene Klaus to wrap up a 72-69 University of Dayton basketball victory at Kaslern Kent tick v. Sports writer Bill Clark, Page ID. reclassification of University of Michigan students from deferred draft status to 1-A after Vietnam protect demonstration stirs widespread arguments pro and eon Page 3A.

TERROR wave feared in Saigon after hotel blasl kills II as guerrillas are expected to continue sabotage lo mark anniversary of Viet Cong's National Liberation Front. Page II A. OTHER FEATI'RES IN TODAY 'I NEWil Rhodesrunner: What's He After? Lilce checker champion ready to jump either way. That'i Ohio Gov. James A.

Rhodes. Is he laying groundwork for a presidential bid in 1968? Robert T. Endicott of The Daily News Columbus bureau takes a look at Ohio's punling traveling governor in tomorrow's editions. Pearl Harbor Memorial It was 24 years ago when the planes with red dots on their wings came in over Hawaii. A Dayton area couple, at Pearl Harbor on that Dec.

7, relive 3 .1 a i I a's mother is dead and the child may never see her father again. FRAME IS president of Robert Frame Advertising. Inc. Kenneth D. Caywood, an account executive with the adv ertising firin, will serve as operational head of the new station.

He is also executive ice president and secretary Ktfty-hawk. Other principals are Am, president of FHlm Associates, and presideni of Kittyhawk: H. Pearce, ray of sunshine into the bleak world of unfortunate children like Nita by giving lo the iood-fellow fund. This marks the 24th year that the Goodfellow club, working through the Family and Children's service and the Catholic Charities, is launching a campaign to place unadoptable children in foster homes. The Children's service currently has approximately 95 children in foster homes.

Catholic c'hnrities has been averaging about 45. THE GOAL is always a per-manenl home for the child, but varying circumstances fre-quentlj prohibit a child from being placed on the adoption Ult, The Goodfellow club helps provide the $50 per month needed lo cure for Nita and others, Your dona lion lo The Daily Sfewj annual Christmas project mav he mailed to the Goodfellow club, co The Daily News, I i.i ton, Ohio 45401. Or you may Slaff Writer Ben Mine their experiences with Amusements 16. 171 Ask and Answer 10B Betty Beale 4B Business News 18-21D Dear Abby 6B Deaths and Funerals fiC Editorial Pages 2, 8C i iolden 21B Maggie Fitzgibbons 2B Obituary Notices 10C Sports 1-14D Tally Ho 18B Victor Riesel 17D Women Paget 140 in Tuesday's editions. Squail Her parents were born of educated, aristocratic Cuban families.

Her father, guerrilla fighter, managed to smuggle his wife out of me country to the U.S. jusl neven months before Jutflitf was bom. hopes for a happy reunion died with the girl's mother an automobile crash short after Juanita was horn. Her father was last hoaid from one year ago. Nita, as she is affectionately known, lives happily with her foster parents.

Unadoptablc for medical reasons, she has undergone one operation and more Will follow. In the moanlinic. her tempo rary parents provide the love ice Ntghl itli tin- vice president of Moraine Read Mix John A. Kemper, managing partner in John A. Kemper and Victor .7.

Cassano, presideni of the Cas-sano chain of pizza houses. Frame said channel 16 was the lasl television outlet authorized under current FCC regulations, in the Davion area. D-plication for the const ru lion pcrmil was submitted in oday's V.huvhtp Wliy is il lhat a person VOU1 own age alway looks olnW limn you do? INSII1K lA ION LEISI RE The toughest, nastiest job on the police (oice belongs to the vice squad. Staff Writer Paul Hemmeter spent a night following the men who follow the pimps, junkies and thieves. His report will appear in Wednesday's editions.

You Gel More Nawi In the Daih LVewi i louse of the eefc Music and Art 28 Outdoon Records 42 Senior Citizens 20 Ski Tracks 40 Teens 21 Telev ision 22 Anuiscinenls Book Reviews 24 Dayton Dates Do-It-Yourself 3Q Evening Out 15 Food 16 Furniture Gardens 25 itile drop it off at the counter in the main lobby of The Daily and secui csschiihI to girl's life. News building, Fourth and l.nd low Sts. Ol TOO, can help buns a.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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