Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 June 1973 — Page 6
Page 6
Banner-Graphic, Greencastle, Indiana
Friday, June 22, 1973
Led Zeppelin Draws Giant Crowd
Keeortl-breaking tour au- < I if rices and masses have been claimed by a lot of rock groups Beatles. Bolling Stones, lliree Dug Night, Brand Funk Bailroad. Now Bed Zeppelin is claiming one biggest au-
dience for one act ever in the United States. This was May 5 at the Tampa Stadium, the night after the British group started its U.S. tour in Atlanta. Attendance in Tampa was 56,800, with a $809,-
Peron Spends Night In Tight Security
fli WII.LIA M F- mc hoi so V AssociateJ Press Hr iter BUI NOS AIRI S Argentina (AH) Argentine strongman Juan I). Peron spent his first night home from exile under tight security after guntyre left 13 persons dead by official count and more than 250 wounded in a huge welcoming crowd. Peron and his third wife, Isabel. were at the official presi- , dential residence in suburban Olivos Security measures there were stricter than those around his chalet in another neighborhood. I he former dictator planned to hold a news conference tonight. the violence erupted Wednesday morning when gunfire crackled through a throng ot two million gathered near Buenos Aires airport to greet the 77-year-old leader. local newspapers, after checking hospitals, put the death toll between 20 and 30 and the number of wounded around 400. Rival Peronist factions and
antigovernment snipers were blamed for the hail of bullets that turned the joyful welcoming ceremony into a scene of panic. fhe violence forced the chartered jetliner bringing Peron from Spain, where he had lived since his ouster from power 18 years ago, to land at a secure air force base several miles from the airport. After his arrival. Peron canceled his appearance before the vast crowd. But he spoke on television and radio during the night to express his sorrow at the clashes. “I give you a thousand apologies for not having had the opportunitv to greet you personally." he said. Bv his side was President Hector J. Campora. a Peron loyalist elected last March on a campaign platform ot "Campora to Government, Peron to Power.” The shooting was a bitter blow to the Peronists because the ceremony was to have marked their leader's return to influence in Argentina.
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000 gross. Bed Zeppelin is on a 33-con-cert, 80-city tour, during May and July, with June off for vacation, expecting a total gross of $8 million. The quartet performs without an opening act or intermission, for two and a half hours. The group has been popular ever since it started in 1008. largely because lead guitarist Jimmy Page was especially well known already from being in the Yardbirds until that group folded. But if anybody thinks they're blase about plav ing to such a big crowd as in Tampa, he’s wrong. We spoke later by phone with lead singer Bobert Plant in New Orleans. He said. "1 think it was the biggest thrill I've had. I pretend — I kid myself — I'm not very nervous in a situation like that. I try to bounce around just like normal. 'But. if you do a proportionate thing, it would be like half of Kngland's population. It was a real surprise. Tampa is the last place I would expect to see nigh on to (10,000 people. It s not the country's biggest city. It was fantastic. One would think it would be very hard to communicate; with (10,000 people some have got to be quite a distance off. lliere were no movie screens -.bowing us, like m Atlanta. The mly thing they could pick on was the complete vibe <if .what music was being done." ■We've only done eight tours in America. Compared to most Knglish groups that's very few, to do the sort of business and get the attention we have done. I«ist summer when the Stones were in America we were doing a tour concurrent with theirs. We had no coverage. We were b e a t i n g their attendance, though. • And we had a good rapport with the audiences. It's responsible for bow well we play. Some groups use a stonified approach. I don't consider that the way to do it. I don't mean we shout. Tome on and clap hands.' But it's like telepathy really. We can feel the audience's enthusiasm; they’re
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Negotiations Continue In An Attempt To Settle Rubber Workers Contract Dispute
KOBKKT PB.WT on stage in Tampa
there giving the okay to us." Bed Zeppelin hasn't, in the past, sought much press coverage. So why the willingness to talk this year? Plant says. ■ We'v e been aware of how well we've been doing for a long time. And I really think some people ought to know what we've done. I'm proud of what we've done and are doing, and so many more people could dig it. That is the idea. ■‘But, I like to talk to people without them knowing who I am, to get a picture of what is going on in our society. It's always my ambition to walk down a street and be completely unobserved. If I was built up to be Flvis Presley, I wouldn't be able to make genuine contact. This attitude has influenced my writing a lot; I've got right to the root of everything, rather than living on the sugary surface of adoration." Plant and Page write most of the group's songs. Some are a collaboration of all four. Gold albums have been ‘ Bed Zeppelin," "Bed Zeppelin II," "Bed Zeppelin III" and "Houses of the Holy," Atlantic, the latter being the best-selling album in the U.S. for the first two weeks of May. The group also has a gold single, "Whole Botta Bovin'." But singles are not a big item with Bed Zeppelin. "You can't pick up on what we do in three minutes." Plant adds that some people thought the group was heavy, sexy rock from its hit single. "Now I think they realize there is more. They realize we have subtlety and a spectrum. You can t keep sending out heavy rock all the time. "Kvery time we make an album, our musical leanings advance more and more. A person won't be repetitious if he has any artistry at all. It sounds egotistical but I think
this group has the most talented musicians in Kngland. Jimmy Page has played backup with innumerable people from Burt Bacharach to the Bolling Stones. He is like the ‘ather of the group. Bassist John Paul Jones has done arrangements for people who are world-famous. 1 came roaring out of the blues and drummer John Bonham used to be like me. "After bashing out infectious rock, we've started to level out into an artistically leaning group. There's been no big by pe behind it at all. The music sort of seeped through to people. The first album was sensitive, traditional songs like Joan Baez had done. Since then it has gone from strength to strength. An audience can never anticipate in advance what our next album will be like. "Bive, we do a lot of improvising. The numbers will be more or less the same numbers. but what goes on inside, apart from the melody lines, will alter each night. There's a lot of phrase tossing between drummer, bassist and guitarist and I've been renowned for using my voice as an instrument. "A lot of groups are too frightened to play away from the track of the records. You see them twice and know exactly what you'll hear the third time. Florida had seen us twice before but they came along knowing full well the second one was removed from the one before and this one would ue different from both. This is the way to bold people. "And it's the reason why our group has never changed personnel. A lot of groups pack it up and form again. There’s internal strife because of musical Ixiredom — plugging away at the same old thing. We stay creative; I think that is exactly what we’re known for."
CLEVELAND. Ohio (AP> Negotiations continued here Thursday in an attempt to settle a contract dispute between the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. and the striking United Rubber Workers union. Neither the company nor the union commented on the status of the talks, but no progress was reported in bargaining Wednesday. The URW called out 18,000 members at Firestone plants across the country early Wednesday at the conclusion of a marathon bargaining session which ended without a new contract agreement. A strike deadline against Firestone had been set for midnight Tuesday. URW International President
Peter Bommarito denied a company claim that the union was trying to get a better settlement with Firestone than had been negotiated with three other major rubber companies. “No useful purpose can be served by trying to place the blame on either party for the inability to reach an accord on the issues,” he said. “If a finger of accusation is to be pointed, it should be directed at the unprecedented increase in the cost of living that has taken place in these United States in the past five to six months." Bommarito said the union's immediate objective was to "try to reach a settlement as quickly as possible so as to bring the least amount of hard-
ship on the workers in the plants who already are the victims of an unfair and unbalanced economic system.” Firestone’s contract with the URW expired April 20. It is the only one of the Big Four rubber companies without a new contract agreement. Settlements with other members of the Big Four called tor an average pay increase ot 80.8 cents an hour over three years, plus increases in pensions and improvements in other fringe benefits. Agreement with the Goodyear lire & Rubber Co. and Uniroyal Inc. was reached without a strike. The settlement with the B F. Goodrich Co. followed a 24-day strike.
Halvorsen Talks Of Berlin Airlift On 24th Anniversary
by H L BERT J- ERR Associated Press Writer BERLIN (AP) “It was November before I began to feel confident we won,” Gail Halvorsen said. “We had zero-zero weather hut we kept going anyway. The radar was working we knew then we could really do something.” In November 1948 Halvorsen was a first lieutant, U.S. Air Force, a pilot in the greatest airlift ever assembled, not for war, but to save a city. West Berlin and its 2 1 /: million people. Halvorsen, from Salt Lake City, Utah, joined the lift almost from its beginning on June 26. 1948, when the Russians imposed a land blockade on West Berlin. Peter Downward, then a captain in the British army, also was posted to the airlift, joining Royal Air Force crews because of a shortage of transport pilots. He agreed with Halvorsen, “There was a point when all pilots realized that the airlift operation could he broken." Downward, 49, went back to the army after the blockade. He now is a brigadier and commands the British Berlin Brigade. Each has the chance to compare the Berlin of 1948-49 with the Berlin of today. Halvorsen, 52, now a colonel, commands the Air Force installation at Tempelhof Airfield, the main terminus of the airlift that ended formally Sept. 30. 1949. The Russians lifted their
blockade May 12, 1949. but the allies kept (lying in supplies to build a year's reserve that is maintained to this day. In all, 2,343,301'/’ tons of everything from candy to coal were flown in via three air corridors the Russians never tried to close. Halvorsen spoke for both when he declared. “I can remember it all as though it were yesterday." "We had problems in the early days ... no landing radar ... then had weather with planes pouring m from all over. I hey told you to hold at 10,000 feet and once, in the soup, we were suddenly nose to nose with another C54. We both yelled and the controller on the ground
came hack. ‘Shut up so I can help.'" I he C'54 was the Skymastcr. a lour-engine transport just coming of age in time for the airlift, a coincidence that some sav made success possible. I he airlilt pilots wore warned they might be shot down it they strayed out ol the air corridors where the Western aireratt still today have a right ol way. With the advent ot ground radar and ground direeted approaches. Halvorsen said, in the midst ot extremely had weather with zero visibihtv in any direction, it became apparent the Russians had lost their gamble to force the allies out.
Rescue Workers Ready Jump In Mexican Jungle
PUERTOVA1I.ARTA, Mexico (AP) Four rescue workers prepared to make a hazardous parachute jump into dense jungle today hoping to find survivors of an Aeromexico passenger plane which crashed near here.
The plane, a DL'9 (lying from Houston, Tex., spurted flame and crashed into a rugged mountain about 25 miles south of this Pacific coast resort Wednesday night. It carried 27 persons, including several Americans. Witnesses said the plane ap-
Foundation Seeks to End the Cry Of 4 Oh, My Aching Head!’ Victims
By AP Nevvsteatures NEW YORK (AP) Migraine gives women a real pain Of more than 10 million Americans who suffer from migraine headaches. 75 to 80 per cent are women, according to the National Migraine Foundation Dr Seymour Diamond, foundation president, profiles the typical migraine sufferer as female. intelligent, trim and a hard-driving perfectionist with a history of headaches. Plach year. 2.000 persons have a new migraine headache, he added Diamond's organization is two and a half years old and was patterned after the British Migraine Foundation, a unit of lay people, and Migraine Trust, composed of physicians and scientists When I visited Great Britain to talk about my headache studies. I was amazed by the amount and quality of research being done on migraine. There
is widespread financial support among lay people for research, and this in a nation where there's no income tax deduction for contributions," Diamond said I was impressed with the character and type of research. Almost all of our work is drug oriented because it is supported by pharmaceutical donors. Diamond said the Chicagobased migraine unit is the first to study headache in the United States on a massive scale. So far the foundation has awarded two grants for migraine study to colleges. T would say that 90 per cent of the headache problems seen by the average physician are psychogenic in nature Fight per cent are vascular, one-sided or cluster migraine Two per cent of headache complaint is caused by organic disease, he added. If a person has migraine headaches, it is likely his parents suffered from them. also. After heredity, factors which
system Eventually the National Migraine foundation plans to establish clinics for headache across the nation Diamond believes there are enough migraine sufferers around the country to support such clinics. Hudolf Diesel of Germany developed the first engine to operate on a compression-ignition system. Wednesday was named after Woden, a god in German mythology also known as Odin. Kuala Bumpur is the capital of Malaysia. Caviar is a salty relish made of roe of sturgeon.
pea red to explode or hiir>t into flame as it made its final approaeh to the Puerto Vallarta airport. It then plowed into I I Moro Mountain between the villages of C'himo and ( hocala in an area so rugged that rescue workers could not reach the site on foot. I he four parachutists, members of a especially trained Red Cross unit from Mexico City, waited for a low cloud cover to clear before attempting the jump. Officials directing the rescue operation said they had no definitive word on the fate ot the 23 passengers and 4 crew members hut those who had flown over the site at low altitude said they saw no sign of life. The area where the plane crashed is one of the most rugged on the Mexican Pacific coast. Chimo is so remote that the fastest way to reach it from Puerto Vallarta is by boat, a trip of 25 miles. By unpaved road it is a trip of 49 miles. I he officials said they had no idea what caused the crash. The plane was over the Pacilic, or over Banderas Bay, when the last contact was made. A flight controller at the airport here said the pilot tested his landing lights just before radio contact broke oft and that was when he saw a fiery burst in the sky. Pedro Vega, the Puerto Vallarta police commandant, said a schoolteacher made his way from Chimo to Puerto Vallarta by boat to report on the location of the wreckage. Aeromexico, formerly known as Acronaves de Mexico, is a government-owned airline, that has many international flights. This was the line's first major crash in several years.
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DU. SFYMOl K DIAMOND cause the headaches involve personality Intelligent people w ho are compulsive and precise often suffer from migraine Diamond said that more than $400 million is spent annually on across the counter headache remedies. That's why we want to learn the cause of migraine, develop methods of relief and organize treatment* centers throughout the nation We need to educate the medical community and the public about migraine. he said In addition to drug therapy, ue are investigating biofeedback Volunteers are working with special equipment to learn to control the temporal artery every time they feel a migraine coming on This has worked quite well with younger people, but it seems to be difficult for older individuals to learn to control the autonomic nervous
Pilot Error Causes Japanese Plane Crash
NEW DELHI (AP) - Pilot error caused the crash of a Japanese Airlines DCS in India a year ago killing 89 persons,a judicial commission reported yesterday Judge Prakash Narai of the Delhi high court said, “A comparatively inexperienced pilot was in command (of the air. crait) although technically and legally he fulfilled the require, ments.” The findings of the commis. sion were released by a Civil Aviation Ministry official. The plane crashed on the banks of the Jumna River near Delhi on June 14, 1972.
The report said the crew showed inexperience, lack of orientation, unfamiliarity with terrain, inadequate or incorrect briefing and noncompliance with approach procedures in the airline’s manual. “All these factors infer in. adequacy of checks, super, vision and perhaps training of the crew,” it said. The co-pilot, it continued, made an approach for landing “in spite of his inexperience” and the pilot ignored the alti. tude so that the aircraft reached the critical landing position “before it was realized the runway was not actually in sight,”
