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Show 2 DESERET NEWS, Friday, September 1, 1969 2 Cameras r ' Debbie Cools Off, Won t Desert Series Join Hunt For 'Nessie' ! Insurant I X G T 0 N (UPI) inerea.smg outside pressures, the Nixon Admims-rrlratiois taking an official look at proposals for a nation-5"'i- l health insurant e program, was learned today. One plan would extend the Medicare program of health now' only for the 4 Insurance, elderly, la all age groups. 1IF1W Secretary Robert H. "Finch today released a letter which he asked Walter J. McNerney. nresident'of the Blue Cross Association and ijS Chairman of an HEW task force, to examine the idea and -make recommendations. I w'ould like to specifically yZ request that the task force consider, along with its other on Medicaid 0 deliberations jinedical care for the needy W A S II Under n j-- j'jri -- f EXHUMATION & Cr I & f Plan and related programs, what directions and initiatives you feel the Department of Health, Education. Welfare should purFinch sue in this area, wrote. He did not specifically refer to a national health insurance plan. McNerneys task force already is considering changes in the Medicaid program. Finch noted in his letter to McNerney that many states supported a national health insurance program at the National Governors recent Conference. United Auto Workers president Walter P. Reuther has a Committee of One Hundred for National Health to work out a Insurance program. ed LOCH NESS SCOTLAND The Loch Ness mon(UPI) ster had more company today, and the next picture the world gets of Nessie may fie available on instant replay The . of electronic age instant communication sent television two green-eyecameras to the depths of Scotlands Loch Ness today as part of Britains independent into television investigation the existence of the monster. The two underwater television cameras are capable of operation at depths up to 2,000 feet, using powerful lights which give off an eerie green glow. One of the cameras is being towed to a strategic point in the loch and the other is being planted by a diver. Both are constructed to pick up anything the sonar beams crossing which aie piercing the loch in search of the monster. WILKES-BARRE- PA. (AP) , Mary Jo Kopechnes parents said today will continue to challenge court all efforts by Massa- -- thusetts to exhume her body :::3or an autopsy. Attorney Joseph Flanagan d "jvjaid the parents are by allegations that Xjhere was blood in Mary Jos Counsel fcr amtn--presse- the cameras today. d OF BODY nose and mouth and on her clothing when her body was removed from Sen. Edward M. Kennedys submerged car last July 19. pist. Atty. Edmund Dinis of New Bedford, Mass., in an amended petition requesting an autopsy, said his investigators learned about the blood after the secretary was buried in Larksville, Pa. Flanagan said Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kopechne of Berkeley Heights, N.J., fighting the autopsy request since it was dont made in feel Dinis has come up with t, anything indicating foul play, criminal conduct on the part of anyone, or a different verdict of death. , Miss Reynolds, reportedly the highest paid actress in the medium at S25.000 a week, abruptly reversed her deci- sion Thursday and wired NBC to say naturally I will perform my obligations. Miss Reynolds said NBC explained to her the impossiof banning cigarette bility commercials from her show, sponsored in part by American Brands, formerly the American Tobacco Co. UPI Talephote Pennies Not For Hoarding Parents Fight Autopsy 4 HOLLYWOOD -(UPI) Debbie Renoi(L, who angrily quit her new television series because a cigarette commercial was aired during its premiere, was back in front of Mary T. Brooks, native Idahoan and 28th director of the Mint, had some advice as she took office Thursday: Unload those pennies. Its a waste for us to make billions of pennies for you to take home and put in the closet, she said. She was sworn into office by former Utahn David M. Kennedy, Treasury sec- retary. r. The brief split apparently stemmed from whether cigarettes were to be among the various products made by American Brands to be advertised on the series. - FULL PARDON Frank Savsyer, 70, a sports fan who says he ahvays pulls for the loser, was freed from Kansas State Prison Thursday with a full paition for a crime he did not commit in 1932. Kansas Gov. Robert Dorking pardoned Sawyer and said the convict stooped, did not rob a Fort Scott, Kan., bank in 1932. Alvin Karpis, former public enemy No. 1 and a member cf the Ma Barker gang, admitted earlier thi year that he, and not Sawyer, held up that bank. gray-haire- d ner. He said in an interwew many astronauts are going into side businesses that do not conflict with their duties iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuinuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii People as spacemen. Shepard became the nation's first space flier when he iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitimiiiajiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii PRESIDENTIAL sub-orbit- THANKS William Y. . Meteorologist Tilson of Mobile, Ala., has received the personal thanks of c President Nixon for his ing idle during the recent Hurricane Camille. The' Prudent said in a letter Thurs-cay- : It is no easy task to tell people they must leave to seek refuge, yet I understand you brought the urgent message to people along the Gulf Coast with a compassion arid concern that hastened their departure and resulted in saving the lives of thousands. life-sa- TRIPLE TREAT - A fa- ther and two of his children headline different shows tonight on the Las Vegas strip. Their name: Sinatra. enFrank opens a three-wee- k gagement at Caesars Palace, Nancy is finishing at the International HoteL Frank Jr. is near the rd of a stand at the Frontier Hotel. By juggling their hours, each will attend the others shows. AstroNEW SIDELINE naut Alan Shepard has joined the new Los Angeles broker-gafirm of Thomas, Power & Coogan as a nonvoting part e rode a Mercury capsule 116.5 miles abeve the earth on May 5, 1981. He is slated to command the future flight of Apollo 14. - DEATHS John F. Buckle, director of the Office of Maritime Affairs, died in his State Department office in Wash- ington Thursday, according to State Department officials. Buckle, 48, was born in Utah, Sept. 22, 1920, and joined the State Department in 1948. . . . Alexander E. Bogonioiov, 89, Soviet ambassador to Britain during World War 11, died Wednesday in Moscow. He was retired and had been ill for some time. i ON THIS DATE In 1881 American President Janies Garfield died in Elberon, N.J., of gunshot wounds inflicted by a disgruntled office seeker on Ju'y 2 . . . In 1934 Bruno Richard Hauptmann was arrested in New York and charged with the kidnaping of the infant son of A. Col. and Mrs. Charles Lindberg . . , In 1955 Argentine President Juan Peron was ousted from office after a three-darevolt by the army and navy. y Hello-Se- nd A Plumber Simon Ramon makes tele- phone call from a Lub- bock, Tex., service sta- tion telephone booth' Thursday as high water caused by more than live inches of rain in a period rises above his knees. two-ho- -- ur ROPE "',"1 "f from Many Sizes String to Heavy Pur. Sisal Rope XETCHUM'S 4t!i So. at 7th W. Opt t:30 .m. Sunday 4 .m. 355-465- to 4 p.m. to 4 p.m. An associate medical exam- iner in Massachusetts listed death as asphyxiation from immersion, or drowning. See your next car the o 1970 4 i Police Chief Dominick J. Arena of Edgartown, Mass., said he saw no blood when the body was removed from a all-ne- w pond on Chappaquiddick Island. CHRYSLER DESERET NEWS SALT LAKI CITY, UTAH at FREED'S Editorial Office, 34 I. First Sauth Advartisinii and Circulation 143 $. Main St. Salt lake City, utalt Wilt Established June 15, 1850. Published aach evening. Entered at the Sait taka CiCy Post Office as iecond class matter according to Act of Congrats, March 3, 1179. The Deseret News Publishing Company assumes no respons biiity for manuscripts and photographs contributed. Photographs are articles may be reprinted only with wntttn permission given in advance. CARRIER DELIVERY RATES One month (daily only) $ 2 00 $12 00 Six months (daily only) On year (daily only) $24 00 One month (daily and Sunday) $3 0000 Six months (daily and Sunday) $10 One year (daily and Sunday) $36 00 MAIL DELIVERY RATES $3 00 mo. Daily (Sunday by carrier) $2 25 mo. Daily only $3 50 mo Daily and Sunday 4 mo. 3 50 Saturday only yr. 6 00 4 mo. 2 00 Church News only yr. 3 50 All melt subscriptions are payable in advance. Member 4udit Bureau of Circulations. 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