Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 June 1973 — Page 4

Pag* 4

Banner-Graphic, Greencastle, Indiana

Saturday, Jun* 30, 1973

Chilean Army Elements Attack Allende’s Palace

Dillin Seeks Softened Attorneys’ Stand

By WILL!A M F NICHOLSON Associated Press Writer SANTIAGO Chile (Af) Elements of a Chilean army regiment attacked President Salvador Allende’s palace in downtown Santiago yesterday. The Marxist leader was not there and in a nationwide broadcast from his home he said all other military units remained loyal to him. He declared a state of emergency throughout the nation. Four tanks and half a dozen

trucks carrying troops drew up to the palace during the morning rush hour and opened fire with machine guns on the palace guard, the carabineros, or national police. The tanks did not fire. People fled in panic. Witnesses reported seeing five persons dead. These reports could not be confirmed, but ambulances were seen carrying victims away. Allende said in his broadcast a “seditious sector” of the

Luxury Liner Hit With Disease; Nearly All III

MA1M1, Fla. (AP) — A luxury liner steamed at full speed toward Miami as three physicians aboard struggled to treat 1,020 passengers and crew, nearly all stricken with diarrhea, dizziness and fever. Officials in contact with the Norwegian Caribbean Lines Skyward said none of the passengers or crew was in serious condition. They all were scheduled to be quarantined when the ship arrives in Miami early Saturday. An official of the National Center for Disease Control in Atlanta said that it was believed that a virus infection had caused the outbreak which forced the Miami-based ship to cut short its Caribbean cruise and return home with its 720 passengers and 300 crew. “Fortunately two passengers on board are physicians and they are helping the ship’s doctor, who is on the job although by THOMAS JOSEPH

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he himself is ill,” said Wolfe, vice president of

Norwegian line.

Wolfe said nearly everyone aboard the cruise ship was suffering from the unknown ailment which produced diarrhea, fever and dizziness. Wolfe said a medical team would be waiting at dockside when the 525-foot ship arrives. The passengers, from throughout the United States, paid from S260 to $750 for the cruise, which began last Satur-

day in Miami.

The Coast Guard made an emergency airlift Thursday to supply the ship with paregoric, drugs and saline fluid to com-

bat dehydration.

The ship stopped in Haiti Monday, San Juan Tuesday and St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, Wednesday. It had been scheduled to visit Nassau in the Bahamas before returning to

Miami.

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One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

X DWWQ YXUV YPU KJBFF FBCP JW JZBUC WN JZPBM GBLPK XK JZPV QW WN JZPBM MPFBDBWU, UPDFPAJPQ RSJ XFGXVK JZPMP.-NMPVX KJXMC Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: PRACTICAL PEOPLE WOULD BE A LOT MORE PRACTICAL IF THEY WERE JUST A LITTLE MORE DREAMY.—J. P. MC EVOY (C 1973 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

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army was involved. Chilean armed forces have traditionally remained out of Chilean political affairs. The carabineros have been the nation’s most influential armed element. Allende said he had ordered loyal troops to converage on the palace. As they moved in, firefights spread to the streets around the palace. The state of emergency meant the armed forces had assumed control of public order and that some individual rights, such as the holding of public gatherings, were suspended. Allende took office Nov. 3, 1970, for a six-year term. H i s administration was formed of a coalition of Communists and Socialists and his announced aim at inauguration was to make Chile a Socialist state. Since Allende has been at the head of the government, prices have risen and food and other essential commodities have run short. This sparked demonstrations by anti-Marxists from time to time. Allende supporters have held counter demonstrations. Last week, half of Chile’s 10 million people were hit by general strikes called by Allende opponents and those who support him. The anti-Marxists were protesting Allende’s policies as well as supporting 12,000 copper miners who had been on strike for nearly two months to enforce their demands for 41 per cent wage increases to meet a record increase in the cost of living. On Thursday, Gen. Mario Sepulveda, commander of the Santiago military garrison, said military intelligence had uncovered a plot Tuesday by several civilians and low-ranking army officers. Sepulveda did not give any details other than to say that several persons had been arrested. Family To Do Anything To Get Zahn Back FRANKLIN PARK 111. (AP) — The family of a missing, and possibly kidnaped, drug company executive wants to do anything possible without police interference to get him back. Melvyn H. Zahn, 34, disappeared Wednesday night after leaving the suburban Melrose Park offices of the Louis Zahn Drug Co., of which he is president. His 1973 gray Mercedes-Benz was found, with its engine still running, blocking the driveway of a parking lot not far from Zahn’s office. Louis Zahn, father of Melbyn and founder of the 42-year-old drug company, said Thursday he has asked investigators not to interfere when and if a ransom is asked. The only contact so far with the alleged abductors was a telephone call the elder Zahn received Wednesday night. The anonymous caller told him “We’ve got your son,” and said he would find an envelope of instructions under a nearby mailbox. Zahn said he did not find the envelope. Police Lt. Donald Nolan of Franklin Park has said a witness told him he saw Zahn, 34, and another man arguing near where Zahn’s car was later found. The witness, whom police refused to identify, is supplying investigators with a composite sketch of the other man. He said he first saw Zahn’s car being followed closely by a car with possibly three men inside. Both cars stopped and Zahn and the driver of the other car got out and began to talk “in an unfriendly manner.” Millionaire Louis Zahn, 63, built his company from nothing into the largest wholesale independent drug company in the nation. His son has been its president since 1971. FBI investigators and police were still puzzling late Thursday over why there had been no further calls from the alleged abductors. They believe any persons possibly involved must have been familiar with both Zahn’s work habits and the elder Zahn’s neighborhood.

INDIANAPOLIS Ind.(AP)U.S. District Judge S.Hugh Dillin sought Thursday to get suburban school attorneys to soften stands against sending Negro pupils from Indianapolis schools to those in surrounding corporations. Dillin is hearing a trial to determine whether a city-subur-ban exchange of pupils would be legal and necessary to desegregate the city schools.

Dillin’s debate was with William F. Harvey, attorney for Carmel-Clay schools, and Lewis Bose, counsel for Lawrence, Wayne and Warren townships. On the stand was Dr. Merle Strom, chairman of educational administration at Ball State University. He was testifying on the way public school pupils can transfer from one school system to another. The testimony stressed how much independence school systems in In-

diana have from state jurisdiction. Strom had noted a school system may refuse to accept a pupil. “If the defendants would accept transfers of black students, we’d save a lot of time," Dillin interjected. Harvey argued against Dillin’s reference to a right of transfer. Dillin replied, “If students have a right of transfer, and if

all the defendants would agree to accept students who wish to go to your schools, without two or three years of suits — are you speaking in good faith about being willing or will your client resist?” Harvey said the Carmel-Clay schools “always are in good faith" but he was not authorized to speak on the subject of accepting transfers from Indianapolis. Bose said, “Our policy is one

Vote Set For Firestone Contract

AKRON Ohio (AP) —United Rubber Workers union members around the country have scheduled ratification votes this weekend on a proposed threeConrt Bars Woaaa From Moving Body INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—A lower court order which kept a widow from moving the body of her husband to a new cemetery was upheld Friday by the Indiana Court of Appeals. Jacqueline Hickey had wanted to move the body of her husband, Melvin J. Hickey,’, from the family’s plot in South Bend’s Highland Cemetery to a grave in Southlawn Cemetery. Jon Hickey, the dead man’s brother, obtained an injunction from St. Joseph Circuit Court prohibiting Mrs. Hickey from moving the body. Hickey was interred beside the body of his mother.

year contract with the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. Eight of the 12 Firestone plants were in full operation this week. In ratification votes already held, the pact has been endorsed once and turned down twice. Workers began returning to jobs at most plants last weekend, less than a week after the 18,000 URW members at the Firestone plants walked off their jobs. Union spokesmen said that talks between the company and the union would automatically resume if the pact is not ratified this weekend. Resumption of the strike would have to be endorsed by the international union headquarters in Akron, the union said. Although the union and company officially have declined to disclose the salary increase contained in the contract proposal, the raise reportedly was less than the average 80.8-cent hourly figure cited in the other

Hog Cholera Discovered; Animals Being Destroyed

WEST LAFAYETTE Ind. (AP)—Animal health officials Friday began destroying hogs from two herds in northern Hamilton County in which highly contagious hog cholera was found. It was the first outbreak of the disease since Feb. 2, when hog cholera was discovered in the experimental herd at Purdue University here. Last year, more than 18,500 hogs were destroyed when a hog cholera epidemic broke out. Indiana was the hardest hit among 13 states affected. State and federal officials said the current outbreak was in two herds in Adams and Jackson townships in Hamilton County. About 400 breeding stock and market animals were to be destroyed. The source of the outbreak has not been identified. State and federal animal health regulatory officials said Market CHICAGO (AP) — Wheat No 2 soft red 2.65n Friday; No 2 hard red 2.55n. Corn No 2 yellow corn 2.18n. Oats No 2 extra heavy white 91n. Soybeans No 1 yellow 9.75n. No 2 yellow corn Thursday was quoted at l.lVAn. Soybeans, Meal, Oil Falls, Options Recover CHICAGO (AP)—Soybeans, meal and oil futures prices fell the daily limit on the Chicago Board of Trade yesterday but new crop options later recovered. New crop wheat advanced the limit of 10 cents a bushel at one time but backed away at the close. Corn futures advanced, but oat prices were mixed. The limit selloff in the soybean complex followed a one day halt in trading. The government had put a ban on exports of these commodities, and the exchange wanted time to evaluate the action. At the close, soybeans were some 15 to 80 cents a bushel lower, July 10.00; wheat was up 9 cents, July 2.68)4; corn was up some 7 cents, in new crop months July 2.15!^ and oats were mixed July 89 cents.

rubber contracts this year. Unofficial sources in Akron said the union settled for a lower over-all raise in order to achieve fringe benefit hikes. The URW had settled for lower wage jumps for workers at certain plants to win similar cocessions from the other rubber companies. Firestone plants remained closed in Des Moines, Iowa, Salinas, Calif., and Bloomington and Decatur, 111., the company said. Locals in Des Moines and

Bloomington rejected the contract, while Salinas workers were to vote Saturday and Decatur workers Sunday. Tire plants were open in Akron, Pottstown,Pa„ Los Angeles, Memphis, Tenn., and Albany, Ga., as well as a tube plant in Russellville, Ark., and industrial rubber plants in Noblesville and New Castle, Ind. Pottstown workers endorsed the pact last Sunday, with the other seven locals scheduled to ballot this Sunday.

Hiring Handicapped Veterans Is Urged by Banking Activist

inspectors were visiting farms in about a six-square-mile area to try to check the possible spread of the disease. A quarantine will be imposed for the area after the check has been made, probably within two days. Under the quarantine, movement of hogs in and out of the area is prohibited without a state or, federal veterinarian’s permit. The first cases last year were reported the last week in August. The first outbreak was from White County, but the hardest hit was Carroll County. Other counties in which the disease was noted last year were Wells, Randolph, Delaware, Henry, Madison, Hancock and Dubois. Indiana is the nation’s third largest pork producer, raising some seven million hogs each year for an annual income of about $500 million. Ironically, the first confirmed case of hog cholera last year came only a week after the state had received its cholerafree status certification and plaque, having gone since May 1971 without a reported case of the disease. Prison Converted To Med Center COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) — The Ohio Penitentiary, which once contained more than 1,600 maximum security inmates, was converted Friday into a temporary medical center. Gov. John J. Gilligan signed an executive order phasing out the penitentiary. The medical center, James Hospital, and the prison power plant are currently operated by 297 inmates. The inmates will be transferred to medium security institutions as soon as the State Department of Public Works takes over the power plant and James Hospital has been relocated. A spokesman said the changeover will take several weeks to complete. All maximum security inmates at the penitentiary will have been transferred to the new Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville by the end of next week, he said. The honor dorm, containing 126 inmates, will be phased out more slowly, he said.

By EVE SHARBUTT AP Newsfeatures Writer NEW’ YORK i AP i — Beatrice McCann wants everybody to be ”on board.” To her, that phrase means involved in every way. That's what she expects of government, industry and the disabled veterans with whom she works, matching men to meaningful jobs. Miss McCann is personnel specialist for the Bankers Trust Company and the banking industry representative on a presidential committee for hiring disabled veterans Her own firm began hiring handicapped veterans in 1968. ”We realized there was a segment of the population that nobody was using. We decided it was ridiculous. So we began working out our own system for contacting disabled veterans, telling them jobs were available and matching men to jobs,” Miss McCann said. ’’The Veteran’s Administration (VA) had no time for us then, so we went through the back door. We talked to people in hospitals and veterans organizations.” Now about one sixth of the 9,000 employes of the bank are handicapped. The program has earned several awards, but Miss McCann emphasizes it was not a policy that came from a board chairman. ”We initiated it, and got supervisors to go along. We appealed to their patriotism at first, and finally, after they saw how well it worked out, everybody wanted to get ’on board,’ ” she said. “Industry is ‘on board’ to giving handicapped veterans jobs. My effort now is to help them get meaningful jobs,” Miss McCann added. “The handicapped have the same career potential and desires for job stability and satisfaction that other people have." Those who are not on board' to helping hire the disabled veterans are, according to Miss McCann, the VA, its clinics and vocational counselors. ’ The VA refuses to open its clinics at any time other than 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. That means, if a man needs care, he has to choose between a job and treatment of his problem. He may well lose his job. And all it would take from the VA would be clinic hours a couple of evenings each week or maybe a Saturday morning clinic. ’’The VA serves itself, at its own convenience, and the veteran has to wait until the VA is ready to help him. He can’t make an appointment at the clinic. Indeed, he often must wait for hours,” Miss McCann added

Baker Appeals To Nixon To Give Account Of Dean Meetings

By BROOKS JACKSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - The Republican vice chairman of the Senate Watergate committee has appealed to President Nixon to give a sworn account of his meetings with his accuser, ousted White House counsel John W. Dean III. Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R-

Tenn., said in a television interview that he hopes Nixon will respond in some way acceptable to him but said he believes the Constitution prevents the committee from compelling testimony from the President. He said he thought a presidential news conference “would be the very worst forum” for Nixon to respond to the accusa-

tions against htn: He said “I think it’s very important” that some way be found to test whatever sworn statement the President makes. He mentioned the possibility of a deposition, interrogatories and cross-interrogatories, but said this would be a cumbersome method. “It’s far better to face and

discuss and have a colloquy with the man,” Baker said. Last May 22 Nixon issued a statement denying generally that he knew of the Watergate cover-up before March 21 and denying also that he ever authorized any offer of '.xecutive clemency or discussed clemency for any of the original seven Watergate defendants.

She works with the New York VA office where, she says, her voice is not exactly welcome on the telephone. She has been able to get cooperation to the point that when a veteran shows his identification card from her bank, an appointment is made for his treatment. "But for those places where nobody like me is hollering, men are still kept waiting all day for treatment. We’ve got to force the VA to change, and the only way is to bring this problem to the attention of the media, so that somebody knows what a rotten thing is going on.” she said. Miss McCann tells supervisors hiring the disabled veteran to call her if they have any problems. That keeps them from giving the veteran a "nothing” job, she said. Permanent Task Force Decision Expected

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—A decision on formation of a permanent State Task Force on Juvenile Justice is expected to be made today a t a seminar on juvenile justice. The seminar, called by an ad hoc planning committee for attacking the problem of juvenile crime and justice, opened here Friday. The chairman of the ad hoc committee is Howard Circuit Court Judge Robert C. Kinsey. Kinsey said at a news conference Friday the use of volunteer helpers on a one-to-one basis with juveniles in trouble has reduced the Kokomo rate of repeat offenders to 5 per cent. “It can work—I know it can work—in a metropolitan community,” the judge said.

Stocks Sink Lower

NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market sank lower in very light trading as investors appeared confused over what West Germany’s upward revaluation of the mark would mean. The 2 p.m. Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 2.86 points at 891.78. The Dow opened lower, gained ground, and dropped to an almost minus-four stance before starting to come back a bit. Declining issues on the New York Stock Exchange led advancing issues 677 to 562. General Foods was the most active issue on the Big Board, down 7 /s at 25 5 A- A 212,000-share block was traded at 25'A, off I. H.J.Heinz was second-most-ac-tive, down Va at 40 3 A. Most of that action came in a 172,900share block traded at 41. Gulf Oil was third-most-ac-tive, down 3 A at 22%. A 33,900share block was traded at 22, off s/g. The 2 p.m. broad-based NYSE index of some 1,500 common stocks was down 0.16 points at 54.88.

of not taking cash transfers but we do take transfers approved by the other school system and paid by it.” Cash transfers are paid by parents in another school system. Dillin declared two years ago that Indianapolis schools were segregated by policy of the Board of School Commission-

ers.

The board told the judge Thursday it was prepared to carry out desegregation of all schools on about a 60 per cent white and 40 per cent Negro basis “in the event the Indianapolis school boundaries remain the same this fall.” Dillin did not respond when Lawrence McTurnan, city school attorney, reported the board’s decision. The trial was recessed until Monday on attorneys’ requests. Meat Production Up 18 Per Cent WASHINGTON (AP)—Meat production in May rose is per cent from April but was down 4 per cent from May 1972, the Agriculture Department says. The department said that during the first five months of this year, red meat production was 14.5 billion pounds, a 5 per cent decline from a year earlier. The May production of beef, veal, pork, lamb and mutton totaled 3.04 billion pounds, reflecting an increase in each category over the April figures. But for the first five months, beef totaled 8.688 billion pounds, down 4 per cent from a year earlier; veal 147 million, down 21 per cent; pork 5.454 billion, down 6 per cent; and lamb and mutton 213 million, down 7 per cent. Violent Crime Up 6 Per Cent WASHINGTON (AP)—Violent crime rose 6 per cent but property crime declined 2 per cent during the first three months of 1973, the Justice Department said yesterday. The FBI’s quarterly crime statistics showed that the overall number of serious crimes in the nation fell 1 per cent in comparison with the same period a year ago. But Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson said the decline occurred because of a technical change in the method of compiling crime figures. Had there been no change, he said, the overall crime rate would have increased 1 per cent. Increases in violent crime categories ranged from 4 per cent for robbery to 9 per cent for aggravated assault. Forcible rape was up 7 per cent and murder 6 per cent. Though burglary rose 2 per cent, the other property crime categories fell. Larceny dropped by 4 per cent and auto theft by 1 per cent. The department said crime fell 4 per cent in cities of 100,000 or more but rose by 5 per cent in suburbs and 6 per cent in rural areas.

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