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Show IS, 1975 Sunday, July L 1 McClellan, EUGENE V.RISCKER SAN CLEMENTE, CaLf. (UPI) -President Nixon interrupted his working vacation Saturday to attend funeral services for an aunt and then met with Secretary oi State William P. Rogers who returned from a trip on behalf of the President. By round-the-wor- ld Rogers emerged from meeting with the President encouraged by some slight Paris peace negotiations but hold out too much hope." NEW ORLEANS (UPI)-T- he first stage SIC booster that will launch America's Skylab space station in 1973 was rolled out at the Michoud assembly facility Friday in preparation for delivery to NASA. Rep. F. Edward Hebert, the principal speaker at the rollout ceremonies, called the manned space station program "the beginning of the the Earlier Saturday, the President flew by helicopter from the Western White House to the Acheson and Graham Mortuary in Riverside where 8 short, simple service was held for his aunt, Edith Timberlake, who died Tuesday night at the age of 92. Following the service for Mrs. Timberlake, who helped finance his education in law school, Nixon returned to the Western Wwle House. Encouraged by Paris Talks Rogers came to San Clemente to report to the President on his trip during which he attended a SEATO meeting in Canberra, (UPI)-O- ne of 113 passengers aboard a hijacked National Airlines jetliner, whose captain was injured when he leaped from the cockpit to the runway, says the pilot "saved our lives." Capt. Elliott M. Adams, 55, here remained hospitalized Saturday with injuries and dizziness. He jumped from the cockpit of the Boeing 727 Wednesday night after two hijackers tried to force him to take off with insufficient fuel in the tanks. beginnings in the exploration of space." chairman of the Hebert, House Armed Services Committee, said he was confident that Congress would support the space program "for years to come." Skylab, successor to the Apollo flights, will orbit a manned space station to house three-ma- n teams that will live and work aboard it for 65 days at a time. "A crew member said we only had enough gas to make it to the end of the runway and epublican gubernatorial rt Heart Surgery Killed In New World Leader In -R- candi- date Nicholas Strike, in an open letter to the State Department of Highways, says closing of median openings along south State Street is damaging to businessmen in the area. Strike voiced his approval cf corrective action taken to decrease recent traffic accidents State Street, but condemned what he termed a shotgun solution to the problem. "I call upon the State Department of Highways now to suspend this program until a complete and full hearing can be held and a thorough study made to arrive at the best possible solution to the problem," Strike along said. "Only those interactions proven to be hazardous should be restricted and not those openings which are vital to the progress of the business in the area," he said. (UPI)-Floodw- aters S i "There are some slight nuances that give us some encourageme; 1 but I don't want to hold out too much hope," Rogers said of the talks. "I was more encouraged by the feeling throughout the world that now is the time for peace." 'f, i A, X I He was asked to comment on & report from Paris thp Hanoi's negotiator, Le Due Tho, had ofertd to meet with Henry Kissinger if the President's foreip policy Adviser had anything new to offer. "I don't think statements made publicly have much importance," Rogers said. "I think most of the things said publicly are made for propaganda purposes." In addition to Australia, Rogers also visited Indonesia, Ceylon, Yemen, Bahrein, Kuwait, Greece, Romania, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Italy and Spain. tour he undertook for the President, that Democrat George McGovern 's Vietnam peace program was hindering efforts by the Nixon administration to achieve a negotiated settlement. d Raps McGovern Without exception in all the countries he visited, Rogers said, President Nixon's foreign programs had been received with warmth and enthusiasm and he added: "I can say without reservation that President Nixon is regarded as a world leader in the cause of peace." "Any proposal which gives the enemy exactly what he wants makes it difficult for us to negotiate," Rogers said. He said the proposals put forward by Nixon for ending the war "are reasonable proposals and I think they are looked on by other nations as reasonable proposals." Rogers said he agreed with former Treasury Secretary John B. Connafly, who reported to Nixon Friday on a longer round- - Steps Taken By Braniff DALLAS .Bank ft Cards Honored niff By United Press International Egyptian Prime Minister Aziz Sidky P.ew home Saturday from a visit to Moscow which diplomatic sources in Beirut said may have been cut short because of the reported power struggle- - in Iibya. Libya is linked with Egypt and Syria in li Federation of the Arab Republics. BROS. U LOW The Stars and Stripes flag was adopted June 14, 1777. Series 1900 1 ,(... (or years and years! STANDARD OFFICE SUPPLY 40W.100N. Phone 0 .'.V; ; " J IN nt'inn ANY OFFICE I sale has. ol Furni- and buy. nittlnrliuo OMir kit. y reonllll 'i thwfi and Arab countries in their point of view which calls for the use of all possible means to liberate territories occupied by Israel." why oHer re,used! liviB' Roi,m iei""m' all indud- Dinettes, Mattresses and Home Attessories but the best part is the Yti )ots around smiliiig lor a long time, savings . . . you'll-wal- IT.On.nS dead- no-wa-r, lock in the Middle East. The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al Ahram said Sidky returned with reassurances that the "Soviet Union joins Egypt details. t? $t8t, No current "Ny ITMES AT BROWN 1000'$ of FURNITURE PROVO! Your response to our bid and buy been overwhelming. Over V Million Dollars is IIKuded for you to bid on ture A f 0 3S Arab newspapers said Sidky went to Moscow to try to heal relations between the countries, which had deteriorated sharply in recent weeks because of the the of Kremlin's support The semiofficial Egyptian Middle East News Agency (MENA) reported Sidky's arrival in Cairo and said he described his talks with Soviet leaders as "cordial." He told newsmen that he held lengthy discussion on relations between Moscow and Cairo and other important subjects but gave no BID & BUY SALE l Saturday. anti-Israe- re a lot . our continue .. to going if and flew back to Cairo early Sidky did not explain, either, he had apparently cut short his visit to the Soviet Union. He was reported to have planned to spend three full days In 1822 Capt. William Beck-ne- ll in Moscow but actually spent led the first wagon train only one. He arrived late over the part of the Santa Fe Thursday, held talks with Trail that crossed the Oklaho- Communist Party Secretary the Leonid I. Brezhnev and Prema Panhandle through mier Alexei N, Kosygin Friday, Desert. Cimarron it s ! Rangers estimated total fire damages may run as high as $200,000, including timber and watershed. The cost of putting out the fire has not been determined. Fire fighters were still busy isolating and cooling off which could breed larger fires in the 10,000 foot moun- (UPI)-Bra- In- ternational announced Friday it would immediately implement a major step to guard against hijackers by making it impossible to open the rear stairways on all its 727 aircraft. "Air pirates and skyjackers have capitalized on the fact that these rear steps which can be lowered beneath and behind the aircraft are the only methods of parachuting from a commercial airliner," a Braniff spokesman said. "The 727s are the only aircraft in the Braniff fleet which have these rear steps," he said. Braniff also announced that it was adding several other measures to its antihijacking security program but said it would not reveal details. condition. iTilJt ieras-l- p ji Egypt's Sidky Cuts Moscow Visit Short Anti-Hijac- k w yO ( vJ J ty li "s N- - J, - 4 1 I! f JJ ' 1 Comeiothefunl TTTTS. I ? si ,r't i hit-spc- ts tains. Hot, dry gusts of wind fanned the fires for over three days in the isolated canyons and mountains, most of which have no roads. COBLESKILL, N.Y. (UPI)-- Dr. 10 foreign languages, including Forestry officials said the first two blazes were ignited by Charles K. Friedberg, chief Chinese. He also was founder and lightning, the third by sparks of cardiology at Mt. Sinai journal from the first two. Hospital and one of the world's editor of the leading heart specialists, was "Progress in Cardiovascular one ot four persons killed Diseases." In 1971, Friedberg Friday night in an auto became editor of the leading accident near here. journal in the field of cardiolo"Circulation," official orThe physician was gy of the American Heart gan a passenger in a cab involved Association. collision with in a head-o- n As a OGDEN, Utah (UPI) His work in the field of another vehicle driven by of Utah's hot and consequence Middle-burgan him of cardiology gained Dwight Pickett, 24, weather, new Forest ServPickett, his wife, Diane, international reputation and dry ice fire restrictions will become five-ma- n on the 23, and their membership effective July 15 along the son, Joseph, also died in the council of the National Heart Wasatch Front and the Oquir-r- h council The Institute. and crash. Lurg Mountains. last year distributed more than The cab driver, The restrictions, which apply in research grants. million $400 Ernest Probst of Cobleskill, to all National Forest, State, was charged with driving while and private lands along the intoxicated, police said. Front and the Oquirrhs, prohibit setting open fires jf any kind, had been associatTwo V''?V J. 0 York Auto Accident I VV fr Jr n V 1A T J IMT X H"' I 1 X. ' V I ' ' 1XJXPA -- and they will do it with utmost Q BSjjJ .IVSJ fBO g For the Primary Hospital ItolOOpennies txX LsJS ,Sm ojA7 i ' MIv V " , Who's ever birthday it is today, Come out to Brown Bros. Furniture Warehouse way, CiL c . I Sc!"' gleeo New Fire Laws Put Into Use - h. ld Friedberg Typhoons ed with Mt. Sinai for more than Central TOKYO (UPI)-T- he 42 years. He was graduated of Columbia the from Meteorological Agency warned College Homeless Physicians and Surgeons in 1929 today that two typhoons were and began his internship at Mt. heading toward Japan with one MANILA Sinai in the same year. expected to hit Tokyo and of seven days receding after Yokohama by tonight attendbecame an Friedberg monsoon rains have left $1.6 in at Mt. Sinai Heavy rains, flooding and ing physician 171,231 in damage, million 343 killed have landslides 1953 and was designated "first persons temporarily homeless 4 police since to in the July Red Japanese cardiologist hospital" and 47 dead, Philippine aaid. Another 90 persons have 1956. He became head of the Cross officials said today. and of cardiology been missing division dereported the hospital's indicated Officials that 90,0u0 estimate in the and a clinical in police the professor struction and death toll left homenorthern Philippines could go Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in persons have been less. 1969. up when final reports from said typhoon Weathermen Friedberg was the ev.thor of remote areas are in. The monsoon rains were "Diseases of the Heart," a Phyllis could hit Japan as early the as tonight. Typhoon Rita, preceded by two destructive work that has been called south of Japan, had an typhoons, a tropical depression "Bible of Cardiology." It has reported been translated into more than uncertain path, they said. and a tropical storm. 171,231 i - that we would all be killed if engineer's neck, demanding the plane took off," Allen B. immediate takeoff. Adams started the huge craft Sommers, 22, Claymont, Del., said. "Captain Adams saved down the runway and suddenly, under full power, angled it our lives." across a grassy tield toward Michael Stanley Hijackers then Green, 34, and Lulseged Tesfa, the terminal building, and came 22, who surrendered to the FBI reversed the engines on a small airstrip near to a halt barely 100 yards from the terminal. Houston, Tex., Thursday, comAn airlines employe watching Miami-to-Nemandeered the York flight and forced it into the drama said the pilot the cockpit "like Philadelphia International Air- plunged from a sack of potatoes" and landed port. The jet taxied to within 1,000 on the runway. He was picked who yards of the main terminal and up by Philadelphia police raced out in a cruiser. the men demanded $600,000, The passengers and six crew three parachutes and refueling. remained in the The men apparently became members hot plane for nine hours nervous when ground crews stifling electrical the after system gave the and craft approached out. Following lengthy negotiapointed a shotgun at the flight tions with the FBI, the hijackers released the passengers, many of whom had grown ill in the stuffy cabin, and took off in a second craft with the ransom and parachutes. Adams was kept under police guard at the hospital, where he was described in "stable" word was that the fires were controlled by late Saturday afternoon. The men aro stan-pading on a ridge near Baldwin Peaks, ! I i Pilot Commended for Brave Act In Thwarting Hijack Attempt PHILADELPHIA IV 1 He also said the leaders in the countries he visited felt that President Nixon would win reelection in November and this should encourage Haiioi to be more reasonable in their Utah. SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) V- - Rogers told a news conference he was encouragsd by the general feeling in all the capitals he visited that President Nixon's proposals for the ending the Vietnam conflict were generous and should be respected by the other side. BEAVER, Utah (UPI) -Three stubborn fires which blackerod 2,000 acres of heavily timbered land in Fish Lake National Forest were reported under control Saturday. Forestry Service officials said crews totaling about 500 men would stay in the area overnight in case one of the three fires broke out again. The volunteers came from throughout the intermountain region and included Indians from the Ute Reservation near Vernal, Highway Action y Australia, and visited 11 other countries, three of them in Eastern Europe. Timber Fire At Fish Lake Controlled Strike Attacks 1 negotiation approach. nine-wee- groups. WATTING FOR AIRLIFT to a gully in the background is this small group of firefighters, of some 500 men who battled three blazes in the Fish Lake National Forest area. Late 1 hour-lon- g to say he was nuances in the "I dont want to His comment was the first official high level reaction from the administration to the Vietnam peace talks which resumed Thurk interim. sday after a Skylab Booster Completed Boeing-bui- lt " 1 chairman of the Senate Government Operations Committee. The GAO report of last April said that sanitary conditions in on widespread unsanitary conditions found in food processing the food industry are deteriorating and that FDA lacks the plants. The department advised Con- mcney and manpower to cope gress it agreed completely with with me situation. Investigators of a General the findings reported finding in some plants rodent excreta and urine, Accounting Office (G0) Invethat brought cockroach and other insect stigator's report infestations in or around raw the situation to light. "This report has already bsen materials, finished products and will continue to be useful to and processing equipment; FDA (the Food and Drug improper use of insecticides Administration), HEW, the near food processing areas; use Congress, the food industries of unsanitary equipment and and consumers," the HEW other similar conditions. Food industry representatives statement said. GAO is a such as the National Canncrs congressional watchdog agency. HEW said it concurred with Association objected that the all nine recommendations made sampling of 97 plants was too to draw absolute concluby the investigators, including a small more effective government use sions and that the report did An not specify the criteria for of consumer complaints. automated data system for unsanitary conditions. Among recording complaints is being the products made or processed implemented on a nationwide at the plants were candy, fish, basis to provide FDA field flour, cheese, ice cream, fruits, vegetables, popcorn, jams and managers "with the information needed to follow up on jellies, macaroni, spices and complaints referred to states or other items. Consumer complaints about other regulatory bodies for corrective action," HEW said. products falling under FDA A spokesman said the sysregulatory jurisdiction will be tem, already at work in the monitored by the new data the Baltimore area, will be expand- system to determine ed to other cities. disposition and to The department's response to industry and product trends, criticism of HEW said. This includes the sweeping conditions in food processing complaints by individual consuindustries was sent by HEW mers as well as consumer Secretary Elliot L. Richardson - 11- f Nixon Hears Report om Secretary Rogers Requiredlmmediatelyl to Sen. John Utah-P- age ;.'.y, y Consumer Assistance Anninct Fnorl Porkers WASHINGTON (UPi) -- The Health Education and Welfare Department announced Saturday it will try to enlist consumer help to crack down THE HERALD, Provo, except campfires at improved campgrounds, picnic areas, or permanently improved places of habitation. Smoking is prohibited except at improved places of habitation and improved recreational sites or in enclosed motor vehicles or launched boats, while wading in a stream, or on a cleared spot of ground at least 18 inches in diameter. The Salt Lake Valley has gone ' jC , y"rr Uf- f - ' j I K H l SkAngusWe Says: have no door busters I - 'r4u :i ' ... ... j X . . "Come to Brown Bros. and you will see the quality is high . and the prices are wee ! r. If M'fcf AVv. 0 : no leaders no traffic items just the lowest everyday prices in all of Utah! n I j3 Njv h j, "5 1-- 1 TUW H i ft Aff pSV W. SJ J s, consecutive days without measurable precipitation, said 27 MeteoAssistant rologist Harry S. Hassel of the National Weather Service. The same weather pattern was forecast for the next five days. Fire-Weath- PaiTitr.s , . iMmi wJ V |