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Show W fc me A wqfratfAa a TT"- DZSIklT NTVS, Monday, May 26, 196? 2 Dirks! - WASHINGTON ') Afir- v. poks oi krl!rg t'.c Nxon AdmurMi ilm.i i.ou N it lu- - Fr i nnnut .: nrcp.sai tur S(v m ,iu)) onl ie of t'lP Suk'gu.uil .iiiltnu-.'Sv item. Gonato laguthhi ,m l.fx.F r M. I Oilmen said n .1.1 i nervicw he is conf'dun! "tap lutes will tip thpre wlmi liip issup cone's l)fmp Hip Spii-aipr.svibly post mouth w (! he Although Dttk-eknoi of two swii. lips among wlw rune mil Rp ul)!",aiiearly against ABM hut have lia.i thoughts, lie declined lo mention any names or to (leal in numb-"1- . lie dr dined aria lu name env of those who had sa itched - - - V&f SwntWH intfffr Sees ABM Okay Fom the uncommitted column to tl e edi iiumi iitioi: side. Tins i a delica'e mat:.-.,ii ii I'm iv i eo.i g to p it ain-l- i i on ti.e pot," L)i rk - ii s.ijii Tim ailim.i, 'mt.on's vvi-ou- s liiwed tl senate-- -, committed to ote for 4b committed hut against. That meant it needed six more voles, plus that of T. Vi e President Spit a Agnews who can vote o:Tv d tneie is a tie, if all Sena tots answer a toll (all. But the Senate seldom marshals all of its members f ,r such voles. Illness or pnor commitments often keep some couple of GlP away. It opponents found it conven nt pull Sife-gutit'- . COUNTRY SAGE i h;!: iffsl i ' the moon ,d tunes, and gave die tinal go for Apollo 11 to land two astion.mts on the moon July 211. Without Apollo 10 it could not take plat e. From stuit to finish, it ,i suceesMwl ; pectucul.ii ly a ' Men study to loarn how to do liings which then don t seer, i worth doing a w add regaid tiiat aiti'ai as alistactfav. Senate Democratic l.f.iCi r Mike Mansfield ol Mont; r i ser med lo have some su''i sail. iiion in iiimd whmi 1,p su'd in a weekend in'eiview th.it d ' the admin-- nation puls on it could win hv a pit'ssure of one to rnaigin "I suspect it will yet a b'Fe bit hotter a the June deadline rolls around, lie said. Sen. Hugh Scott, the assistant GOP Leader and a Safeguard backer, said no one wou'tl dare to try to put pressure on most Senators. He said he would be a little happier politically if lie were on the anti side. He reported 6.000 letters opposing ABM and only a lew hundred supporting it. But he said the situation could change. Mansfield's cjnttn-tiothat this nnght be a woilh less t'aiei victory it cost ihe a Iministrations altitude appears to be that it w ill take any kind ol victory it Mansfield lu.s c,ui get. opposed ABM. Sen. Richard S. Scimetker, , an ABM critic, said in n lvi-tlii- broadcast Penrsyvama Sunday l.e had felt some House prpssuie lo While ( nange irs stance but it as b"en within bounds and quite reasonable' mi f. r. thieo voi.s. D. spile !Z SALT LAKE c CM I OGDEN COTTONWOOD Y 4JT A V J&HV-- ' J' ATS-- Astronauts End Voyage With Fiery Dash Conlinnwl from First Pai; r the to he absent, artmini-va-ti- " Staffotd and Cernan flew within 9 3 nnles of the lunar urf.ice in the type of landing craft which will touch down there with Apollo 11 astronauts Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. Buzz" Aldrin. Protesters -- Destroy Draft Data - bug-hk- e Apollo 10 wound up its flight he eighth one day after anniversay President John of F. Kennedy's message to Congress committing the United States to a manned landing on the moon by 'he end of the decade. CHICAGO (AP) Antidraft protesteis broke into a Selective Service office, poured paint and tar on lerorrts, then carried flip documents outside and threw them on a bonfire. For tiie army were persons Eighteen arrested in the disturbance Sunday, including two priests and a man v lio first identified himself as a seminarian and then as a piiest. Chicago them with police charged arson, burglary criminal damage to and prejierty. Firemen summoned to the Maze said the group was sing- ing and dancing around the fire. The federal government placed no charges pending an FBI investigation. Col. John Seigle, assistant chief of the field division of ihe Illinois Stlective Searvice s System, ai! nin.-- i of the of Chicago's largest draft board were destroyed. Seigle said duplicates are available. re"-ord- of people around the world who guided the astronauts through space and stood hy to p.ck them up in the Pacific, it was the end of a mission with the highest marks yet lit) per cent of its planned objectives according to Flight Director Glynn Lun-lio- For astronauts Armstrong, Aldrin and Michael Collins, it was go for the moon. Stafford, Cernan and Young put on the last of their color television transmissions while they were 41,060 miles out, bringing to 7 hours and 3 minutes the total TV time, more than ail previous black and w bite transmissions by American spacemen. Happy and they also paid tribute to the Cnarlie Brown spacecraft which took them to the moon clean-shave- and back and the Snoopy" lunar lander whim took Stub foid and Cernan skimming the lunar surface. durk-Mii- The began at 10:22 a. m. M!)J when Apollo 10, 2.173 miles high. pullnd free of l the service module which its big locket engine and turned the Muni end of Ihe sp.cecr.dt toward the air. Rucket enghies on the service module fired, kicking it into the atmosphere to burn up. "Separation was normal, " Stafford said. Apollo 10 was just crossing the West Australian coast. y tell beautiful. I of the target." you this thing is exclaimed Young. Just before then, two laid, shattering booms resounded over the sea as the spacecraft broke through the sound harrier. At 10:42 a.m., the two 7.2 foot pilot parachutes pulled the three orange and white striped main paraihutes out minutes after of the big io( lief. The spacecraft was 400,000 loot high off the cast coast of Australia. of y "Were all ready to go," Young said just before the blackout. "Everything looks good, said Stafford. Even before communicatwo tions were circling rescue planes already had the spacecraft in s'glit in the first rays of dawn over the Soutli Pacific. beautiful." Were practi- reullv Nine minutes alter the spacecraft hit the air, Ihe two 16.5 feet drogue paiaciiutes were fired out of the spacecraft by mortar. Apollo was 23,000 feet high at the time. The parachutes opened in stages to slow the craft from about 300 miles an hour to about 175 miles an hour. The capsule carrying Cernan and Young ford. touched the first fringe of air Only IS seconds after touching the air. superheated electrically charged gasses from the blazing enveloped the space capsule, ending with radio communications the ground for about tluee minutes. During those tluee minutes, the crew felt the projected peak gravity forces, weighing at one point C.8 times their normal weight. is Staffoid said. cally on tep Staf- 1C skv. e This cer-ltc- at 10:37 a.m., breaking free as millions watched Then the transfixed on television spacecraft, glowing like a meteor, was spun dimly in the the capsule. The para- chutes, opened in two stages, are 83.3 feet in diameter and slow the spacecraft from 175 miles an hour to about 22 miles an hour. enjoy the savings reg. 1 plush carpet 6.9S iq. yd. 12 fine selection roll end and remnants now you can save sq. yd. wool face, extra woven back. Variety of decorator colors, 12 ft. width, in a famous brand you'll recognize. Luxurious plush thick and heavy -- r- 100 Kara-lo- c up to ZCMI CARPETS 50 off - all iteret i ' j Then Stafford came tip on the radio: "Boy, it's leaky good!" Paper Boat Starts Voyage 5,000 Years Into Past Continued from First Page tug milled ihe boat, the Ra, slowly till to sea wlieie Heyerdahl I oped oifsltore breezes would lie. Too wind still didn't come. SO the tug pulled the vessel out 30 moie miles, where it caught the wind and moved oil its own. If Heyerdahl's do ion make it ail oss ho neaii they think it will take i.iem at monv.s there least three may tie moie wmls Fan they want waiting lor thorn, snue it will lie tiie stait at :he in s(MSoii tiie Caith-bean- . Heyeulald, a Norwegian, the expedition to organized prove anodict n his anthropological theories lie g lined fame m 1!)!T when he igiuued the words of i vinos and sailed the balsa ralt Kon Tiki across the Pacilic. fmm Feiu to Polynesia, to show that ancient men could li. vc niignt-etii.it way. Now he wains to pi we the Egyptians and Phoenct l.tns could have crossed tic, intentionally or ind discovered the 2. ('00 years lietore Heyerdahl the Atlanotherwise. Americas Columbus. believes un- currents westward from limited ocean Alri-c- a swooning caught up sailois nullenta ago and transfeired their to tiie New World. To make bis experiment as valid oras pov.iMp Iloyoidahl dered tiie Ra built as the ancient Egyptians would have cut of long porous reeds. They woio wntersoaked for days to make them uiisinkable. Expeits trom Chad built tiie Ra a lew hundred yards from pyramids wlieie diewings of similar boats were discov-ciecul-tnt- o Named sun god. long, up 4 3 toot after tiie Egvptian the Ra is 48 feet lo 15 feet vmle and thu k. Its bundled curve to reeds points at both ends. canoe-lik- e is Expedition equipment limited. Only a radio, a photographic light generator, a rubber raft and a lew medical liistiuments are moderfn. Tiie rest is wh.it the Egyptians would have had: a few live chickens and ducks, some dried fiuit and flour, water in casual out in the open sunning in our patio shop sit-dow- ns earthen jars. Fresh aluminum loungers 3 pieces to freshen your patio in bright olive floral vinyl. Rocker, chair, chaise lounge with urethane foam filled fish from tiie sea will lie tiie main staple. Willi 51, aie Heyerdahl. Norman Baker, tiie navigator from New Rochelle, N.Y. ; Dr. Yuri Senkevirh of tiie Soviet Abdoulav I'nion; Djibrine conChad, v l.o supervised struction; cameramen cushions. director chairs, care-fre- e travelers for beaching it or campfire songs. Geor- ges Sounal of Egypt and Carlo Mauri of Italy, and a Mexican anthropologist, Prof. Santiago Genovese, who also serves as cook. Chose your favorite in solid colors with black, natural, white frames; heavy canvas. canvas cot in vat dyed green and easy to fold alloy aluminum frame. Pack up for vacations goes anywhere. 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