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mission, had requested the assistance of his North Korean counterpart “in returning the helicopter and personnel if in fact the light helicopter is down in North Korean territory.”
PHILIP BLAIBERG
Man Is Killed in Early Blaze
Firemen responded to a gen-eral-alarm at a midtown residence shortly before 6 a. m. Sunday and found an occupant' fatally burned.
The coroner’s office identified the victim at 815 N. Lopez as Harold Savoy, 43. The body was found lying face down on the floor of the third room from the entrance door.
The origin of the blaze was uder investigation by the Fire Prevention Bureau.	j
Fire alarm headquarters said damage to the single- j story wooden residence was j about $12,000 and damage to the contents was $1,000.
MILD EARTHQUAKE JOLTS JAPAN AREA TOKYO (AP)—A mild earthquake jolted northern J a p a n | Sunday night but no damage or I casualties were reported. The| Central Meteorological Agency localed the focus of the tremor j 75 miles underground near lake j Shikotsu in Japan’s northern-! most vain island of Hokkaido.
said. Blaiberg is to be buried at [5 p.m. Monday in Cape Town.
Doctors did not make an immediate statement on the cause o' death but it was believed to be the body’s tendency to reject implanted organs, plus general tissue degeneration.
Blaiberg was admitted to Groote Schuur last Thursday for the third time since his operation, after suffering a serious relapse Aug. 11. Twice before doctors had fought and overcome the rejection process, but Blaiberg’s health had been poor for several months since his last release from hospital May 23.
RECORD CHANGES With Blaiberg’s death, the longest surviving heart transplant patient is a French Dominican priest, the Rev. Charles Boulogne, 46, known in his Marseilles monastery as Father Damien. He received his new heart May 12, 1968, in the Brous-sais hospital, Paris. The surgeon was Prof. Charles Dubost.
Father Boulogne was hospitalized with slight rejection symptoms last May, but has
Cont. in Sec. 1, Page 3, Col. 1
Gist of the News
—Monday Morning, August 18, 1969—
International Affairs
U. S. military spokesmen say enemy attackers in Vietnam appear to have tapered off.	—Sec. 1, Page 4
Israeli jets cross Suez Canal and strike Egyptian artillery positions in Dwad Suwar area.	—Sec. 1,	Page	6
U. S. negotiator Henry Cabot Lodge arrives in Washington this week.	—Sec. 1, Page 12
International House trade and cultural mission greeted I warmly upon arrival in Australia.	—Sec. 1,	Page	12 j
One Green Beret lawyer petitions Army for speedy trial or! dismissal.	—Sec. 1,	Page	17 j
National Affairs	j
Limiting foreign oil imports means consumer will pay more for petroleum products.	—Sec. 1,	Page	4
Calls for tighter regulation of dangerous cargoes	increase
in wake of recent phosgene shipments.	—Sec. 1,	Page	5
Austin, Tex., becomes key federal center as result of de-
in God.
“I’m certainly not an a ist,” said Armstrong. He however, he did not have a denominational identification.
WORD PUZZLE Armstrong was unable to settle a grammatical puzzle that has arisen from his first words after stepping on the surface of the moon.
The phrase as it was understood on the ground was “that’s one small step for man.” But Armstrong said he intended to say “a man.”
“I can’t confirm the words,” he said. “I know what my intentions were, but I can’t confirm I said those words.”
Aldrin said that despite warning lights flashing from an onboard computer, he and Armstrong were “a good ways away from a condition calling for an i abort” during the final few seconds before landing on the jmoon. Armstrong said he and 'Aldrin were determined to continue toward a landing if they (could, even though the computer was malfunctioning. Fuel was running low and he had to | quickly take manual control of ' the spacecraft to avoid its landing on a boulder-strewn crater.
NOT ‘DO OR DIE’
But, the Apollo 11 commander said, the determination was not “do or die.” They were prepared to accept failure if necessary.
“We were not content to come back without landing,” he said. “But we were resigned to that
Measurei
STORM’S WINDS
All Precautions Taken, Says Miss. Solon
By LANNY THOMAS
(Times-Picayune Staff Corrssoondent)
GULFPORT - “About all we can do now is just pray.”
Mississippi state Sen. Nap Cassibry echoed what must have been the thoughts of thousands of other persons Sunday night as the winds of Hurricane Camille began hitting Gulfport.
“And I’m not being facetious,” he said in the tense Civil Defense headquarters where he was coordinating operations. ■‘After all, these are God-given elements.”
Sen. Cassibry said everything possible had been done to prepare for the storm and “I hope we haven't left any loopholes.”
Asked how he thought the Gulf Coast would withstand the hurricane, Cassibry said, “I just don’t know. We’ve never had 190-mile-an-hour winds here before.”
By 8 p. m. the tides were al-ready lapping at the road's
tisions made during LBJ presidency.
—Sec. 1, Page 13
Massive aerial seeding planned today in effort to tame Hurricane Debbie in Atlantic.	—Sec. 4,	Page 19
Local Affairs
Red Cross, Civil Defense	give	advisory	and list	disaster
shelters in Orleans area.	—Sec. 1,	Page 8
South Central Bell urges all persons to use phones only in case of emergency.	—Sec. 2,	Page 2
Mayor orders evacuation of Lake	Terrace, Lake Vista area;
streets are closed.	—Sec. 4,	Page 17
Oil drilling companies evacuate all personnel from rigs off Louisiana coast.	—Sec. 4,	Page 19
Cont. in Sec. 1, Page 16, Col. 3
Absentee Voting Starts Monday
Absentee balloting dates for two upcoming elections were announced by New Orleans Civil Sheriff Milton L. Stire.
Ballotting will start Monday at 9 a. m. for the Democratic second primary for state | representative for Wards 6 ! and 7 and will continue ! through Aug. 30.
Balloting for the general elecetion for Senatorial Dis- ! trict No. 23, Wards 8 and 9, will begin Thursday at 9 a. m. and will continue through Sept. 2.
Ballots may be cast at the Civil Sheriff’s office, 421 Loy- , ola Ave., Mondays through ; Fridays from 9 a. m. to 12 noon.
The second Democratic pri- ! mary for state representative is set for Sept. 6, and the general elecetion for the Senatorial District No. 23 schedule for Sept 9.
Cont. in Sec. 1, Page 16, Col. 1
NOPS1 Hopes to R Todav to Str<
New Orleans Public Service, Inc. officials said Sunday night they hoped to have full transit service Monday morning on all streets safe to travel.
NOPSI service was discontinued at 9:11 p.m. Sunday because of high winds and rain from Hurricane Camille.
A spokesman for NOPSI said Camille also knocked out about 16 to 17 per cent of its electricial distribution by 9 p.m. Sunday. He said NOPSI has about 187,000 electrical customers in New Orleans.
Most customers without power were in the Gentilly and uptown areas where heavy concentrations of trees con- : tributed to outages, said the ■ spokesman. Gas service was j reported normal.	j
Some 10,000 electrical cus- I tomers of Louisiana Power [


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