Mormon woman dmits to drowning daughter BARNSTABLE, Mass. (AP) - A woman who tried to become a Mormon eacon said she was asked by church diers in an interview, "Did you ever kil anybody?" and startled them by confessing she drowned her daughter 10 years ago, a prosecutor said yesterday. Nlancy Cross, 41, of Acton, was indic- ted: Monday on a first-degree murder charge in the death of Wendy Lynn Cress, 8, who drowned Sept. 20, 1973, off Nauset Beach on Cape Cod, authorities said. At the time the drowning was ruled cidental. Although police noticed a discrepancy of two hours between the time of the drowning and the time it was reported, the case was closed. "Apparently the girl was very sweet and gentle, and the mother just carried her out to the beach and held her under the waves," said State Trooper Michael McComiskey. "She told police then that a wave took her out," he said. "But she told up that he was afraid her own child would be used. "She was abused as a child herself, and she had such serious emotional and psychological problems, she didn't want the same thing happening to her daughter," said McComiskey. He said the mother told authorities she took the child out to the deserted beach late in the afternoon and held her under the water until she stopped moving. Cross told authorities she wanted to come a deacon in the Mormon Chur- ch, and said she made her admission during an interview with church elders. They advised her to tell legal authorities, according to Cape and Islands First Assistant District Attor- ney James O'Neill. District Attorney Philip Rollins told a news conference yesterday that the elders asked her the direct question: "Did you ever kill anybody?" Rollins aii she made the admission at that int. It was not immediately clear why church officials granted Cross an inter- view, since women have never been allowed to hold any priesthood offices in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints. Deacon is the lowest of several offices in the priesthood struc- ture. Cross came forward to the district at- torney's office with a written statement SA months ago, authorities said. Rollins said Cross will undergo psychiatric evaluation. When asked if it was possible that Cross was motivated by guilt over an accident, he replied, "IS it a guilt trip? You'll see for your- self when you see her in court." She is scheduled for arraignment April 16. Until then she is "out free," said Assistant District Attorney Don Carpenter. tourt throws out Ferency's speeding gicket LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - The Michigan Court of Appeals - in dismissing a ticket challenged by ac- tivist Zolton Ferency - ruled yesterday that radar speedmeter evidence must meet certain standards of reliability. The ruling reversed Ferency's Gratiot County conviction for driving 65 mph in a 55 mph zone. THE COURT said standards are eeded to protect motorists' legal ' ghts in proceedings involving the use of moving radar speedmeters. Under the standards, the officer using the device must have adequate training and experience, the device must be in proper working condition, road conditions must leave a minimum possibility of distortion and the speed of the :patrol vehicle must be adequately verified. The court also said the speedmeter ust be retested at the end of the of- ficer's shift, the vehicle must be in the range of the radar beam and the unit mush be certified for use by a qualified agency. Ferency said the state guidelines on radar speedmeters were supposed to be used by all officers, but have been "abused in the process. "Many, many police officers were writing and testifying on radar tickets who had not adhered to those The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 4, 1984 -Page 5 Indian boards Soviet rocket AP Photo Octopulling A motorboat pulls an inflatable octopus down the Charles River in Cambridge, Mass. yesterday. The advertising stunt brought morning rush-hour traffic to a halt as motorists stopped for a better look at the "monster." Students question computer merger From AP and UPI MOSCOW - A Soyuz T-11 rocket blast- ed off from the Central Asian desert yesterday, carring India's first cosmonaut - with his own supply of curry, guavas and mangoes - and two Soviets to the Salyut-7 space station. Soviet television showed the spacecraft roaring off in a fiery blaze at 8:08 a.m. EST from a launchpad at the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakstan, 1,200 miles southeast of the capital. IT WAS THE first televised launchi since a Soviet-French mission 22 mon- ths ago. The 160-foot rocket rose into a cloudless blue sky and the first stage fell away two minutes after ignition. Mission control reported all systems were functioning normally on the 55th manned Soviet space flight. India's first man in space, Rakesh Sharma, 35, and Soviet cosmonauts Yuri Malyshev, 42, and Gennadi Strekalov, 43, were shown briefly during liftoff braced against the force of gravity. THE SOYUZ capsule is carrying a supply of curry, guavas, mangoes and other tropical Indian food for Sharma. As usual, foreign reporters, including Indians, were banned from the space center. But the rare live television coverage showed the white rocket with its fiery tail roaring into the purple evening sky. Sharma and the two Soviet cosmonauts will join cosmonauts Leonid Kizim, Vladimir Solovyev and Oleg Atkov. The international crew is to return to earth on April 10. THERE HAS been no word on how the three men will return. But previous missions of this kind have used the Foyuz capsule with the space station. The 11th flight of the U.S. space shut- tle, with five astronauts, is scheduled to begin Friday from Cape Canaveral, Fla. The 11 men in space after that launch will be a record. Soviet space officials said last week that the Indian-Soviet crew will conduct 43 experiments in space, including an extensive photographic survey of In dia. Sharma will do an experiment aimed at determining the effect of yogaon weightlessness, moin sickness and the psychological pressures of prolonged space flight. "Leaving on the space mission, I am taking with me portraits of the leaders of my country, a handful of soil of my native India and the national flag," Sharma said before the launch.sr He told the government newspaper Izvestia that he had no problems during his training for the flight "besides the language" - which he appears to speak correctly. "We work well . . . and can understand each other without words," he was quoted as saying of his Soviet colleagues. Sharma and -the other cosmonauts will talk to Indian Prime Minister In- dira Gandhi in a space-Earth linkup planned for tomorrow night. (Continued from Page 1) Angell Hall, and engineering students take their courses in the East Engineering Building. Frieder said that the middle wing of East Engineering should be renovated by May 21 to make room for students in the new depar- tment. ' Three years from now, the depar- tment will have a new building on North Campus, Frieder said. DANIEL Atkins, associate dean of engineering, said at the meeting that attempts to offer computer education in three departments created redundancy and confusion. "Because our computer programs were so diffuse," Atkins said, "we found it hard to be ranked as a top computer department, and it was also difficult to get funds because com- panies were unsure what (computer department) would be using the money," he said. But although the University may at- tract more funds with the merger, some students, like engineering sophomore Kathy Kedzior, left the meeting un- satisfied. "They don't know what the curriculum is going to be, requirements and all," she said. lder women are getting it these days. You'll know PLAYBOY's pictorial study as Vikki La Motta and Rita Jei on famously with younger men why the instant you see May guide, featuring such vital ladies Y ' S 1' Y S .x. } '.E; i May PLAYBOY has many other pleasing and provocative features. Like Playmate Patty Duffek initiating the rites of spring. Sportswriter Thomas Boswell on the upcoming baseball season. An interview with Calvin Klein. 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