Banner Graphic, Volume 10, Number 128, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 February 1980 — Page 6
A6
The Putnam County Banner Graphic, February 2,1980
Measure before full House Monday $147 million highway bill out of committee
By JAN CARROLL Associated Press Writer INDIANAPOLIS (API - A $147 million highway funding bill, battered and shaky as the roads it is designed to help, has been pushed out of committee bv lawmakers who admitted they weren’t pleased with their product. The discord that reigned Friday morning in the House Roads and Transportation Committee is threatening to spill over to the full House on Monday. when the measure is eligible for amendments. When the House adjourned for the weekend, Boonville Rep. Michael K Phillips, leader of the Democratic minority, said. "I would not expect any Democratic support for the bill on the floor." One of the major provisions of the bill, sponsored by Rep
Jury set to decide Judy's fate MARTINSVILLE, Ind. (AP) A Morgan Superior Court jury’ that heard a psychiatrist describe Steven Judy as “a psychopathic personality” was expected to begin deliberating his guilt or innocence today. Dr. John Kooiker, the last of 63 witnesses in Judy’s murder trial, testified Friday that although the defendant is psychopathic he was sane when he killed a young indianapolis woman and her three children last April. Kooiker. a psychiatrist and Indiana University professor, testified the 23-year-old Judy had little control over his impulses unless there was “a policeman at his elbow all the time." Psychopaths like Judy have “an intellectual grasp of right from wrong and the fear of punishment is a deterrent and control in his behavior,” he added. Kooiker said it was “consistent” with Judy’s psychopathic personality to fabricate testimony to minimize the degree of violence involved in the rape of the woman, Terry LeeChasteen. 21. The testimony corroborated an earlier assessment of the accused murderer’s mental state by court-appointed psychiatrist Larry M. Davis of Indianapolis. However, Dr. Cathy Widom, a defense-hired psychologist from Indiana University, agreed the defendant was psychopathic but argued he was sane at the time of the killings. Judy was accused of raping and strangling Mrs. Chasteen and drowning of her three small children in Big White Lick Creek near Mooresville last April 28. The defendant admitted on the stand earlier this week he committed the murders but said he acted on an uncontrollable impulse. He is pleading innocent by reason of insanity.
Judge recommends court-martial Garwood may face death penalty
By MONTE PLOTT Associated Press Writer CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood, hearing he will likely be court-martialed and could face execution, took the news like an “absolute stone wall,” his attorney said. Garwood. 33, a native of Adams, Ind., faces charges of desertion and collaboration with the enemy in Vietnam. If tried and convicted, he could be sentenced to death. “He’s an absolute stone wall, like always,” Dermot Foley of New York City, Garwood’s civilian attorney, said Friday after a military judge recommended court-martial. The judge emphasized the death penalty should be considered in a conviction. “Bobby has been in so many bad situations he’s hard to read,” Foley said after talking with the lanky Marine who
Nelson Becker. R-Logansport, is a gasoline tax increase that would mean an additional SIOO million in 1981 for highways. The bill changes the method of imposing the tax, putting it on the price of gasoline, rather than the number of gallons sold. Republicans and Democrats alike complained that they didn’t have enough time to study the 75-page bill, much less prepare coherent amendments toit. "We’ve spun our wheels for two or three years,” groused Rep. Ralph Duckwall, R Van Buren. "I’m not going to wear a crown of thorns if this bill is defeated because I don’t agree with the way it’s been handled.” "I can’t support the bill as it now stands,” said Rep Edward Goble, D-Batesville, who agreed to vote ves to send it to the floor
City won't pave his street, so he cries discrimination
TELL CITY, Ind. (AP) - A Tell City man, who contends that the city’s refusal to repave the street in front of his house is politically motivated, is filing a discrimination complaint against Mayor Walter Hagedorn.
'Breaking Away' But not at IU ATHENS, Ga. (AP) Northeast Georgia may seem a strange place to film a television show set at Indiana University, but a spokesman for the producers points out that the weather in Athens is warmer. “It’s snowing and blowing there, and this is a nicer town,” said assistant producer Jim Wynorski, who said an agreement was signed this week to use the University of Georgia campus for filming of a pilot based on the 20thCentury Fox movie, “Breaking Away.” The pilot, called “The Cutters,” is being shot for ABC. In the hit movie, written by Steve Tesich, four local youths in Bloomington, Ind., compete with college students in the annual “Little 500” bicycle race at the Indiana University campus. The film premiered in Bloomington the night before the race and won critical acclaim nationwide. Park Robins, vice president for development and university relations at the University of Georgia, said school officials were pleased about the chance at television stardom. “It’s a very interesting script which takes up where the movie ends,” Robins said. “It depicts Indiana University at Bloomington, and even though it will show the University of Georgia, it will be called Indiana University in the movie.” Jackie Earle Healey, who played “Moocher,” one of the main characters in the movie, is to repeat his role. A broadcast date for the pilot has not been set. If the pilot turns into a television series, he said, the producers will be back in Athens for more filming during the spring and summer.
spent nearly 14 years in Vietnam. “Whether his reaction is accurate or the guy is ripping apart inside, I just don’t know,” Foley said. Garwood was a 19-year-old jeep driver when he disappeared near Danang in September 1965. He resurfaced last year, coming home in March and declaring he had been held prisoner for all those years. A military hearing, roughly equivalent to a civilian probable cause hearing, ended at Camp Lejeune Friday and, based on evidence presented at the hearing, the recommendation was for court-martial. Maj. T.B. Hamilton Jr., a military judge, was the hearing officer. He pointedly said he was unimpressed by Garwood’s defense. Garwood’s lawyers claimed their client was merely one of many American prisoners of war who cooperated with Vietnamese communists out of
“I’m going to vote no and I’d vote it a hundred times if I could,” said Rep. Dean Mock, R-Elkhart. “I just think this is ridiculous,” said Rep. Gordon Harper, R-Indianapolis. “Nelson might have some good points in his bill. We haven’t had a chance to debate these facts.” The fate of the highway bill might be influenced by what happened in the Ways and Means Committee on Friday. There, the Republican-domi-nated panel voted out a $37.7 supplemental pay raise bill, rejecting eight Democratic amendments. At the beginning of the session, Democratic leaders said they were willing to cooperate on a highway funding solution if the Republicans would accept some of their programs. “We extended the hand of as-
state
Paul Stabile, whose complaint against the administration may be unique in the state, maintains the alleged discrimination stemmed from his support of Hagedorn’s Republican opponent in the November mayoral election.
fear, and they said Garwood went to Vietnam suffering from a head injury which affected his behavior. Former prisoners of war testified during the hearing they encountered Garwood in communist prison camps in the late 19605. They said Garwood carried guns, helped guard other Americans and claimed to be a lieutenant in the North Vietnamese army. “If believed,” Hamilton said at the end of the hearing, “the evidence clearly supports the inference that the accused engaged in the conduct alleged for the express purpose of escaping the fate of all the others.” Pointing out that many POWs. died in captivity, Hamilton said if Garwood is tried and convicted, he should be “placed in risk of the same spectrum of fate endured by those from whom he freely disassociated himself over a decade ago.”
sistance earlier this session,” he said. Because of the complications with the highway funding debate, other legislation, including the Chrysler aid bill, is in trouble too, Phillips said. “It has no higher priority to members of our caucus than the highway funding issue and the general budget funding concerns,” Phillips said of the Chrysler bill passed by the Senate and currently in Ways and Means. When the committee reports were filed on the pay raise and highway funding bills, House Democrats were just returning from a party caucus. Boonville Rep. Michael K. Phillips, leader of the Democratic minority, objected that Speaker Kermit 0. Burrous, R-Peru, had pushed the committee reports through before the Democrats arrived
James Tableman, Hagedorn’s executive assistant, denies Stabile’s charge and says the street commissioner determined that Stabile had good access to his home and that repaving wasn’t necessary. Stabile’s house is located at the end of a dead-end street. He says city road crews began repaving the street last year, but stopped when they reached his house. And he says the street in front of his house is in far worse shape than sections of the road that were repaved. Tableman contends that Stabile is “making a mountain out of a molehill,” and notes that half the residents on the repaved portions of the street also supported the opposition party in the election. But in a letter to the city council, Stabile called the city’s failure to repave his section of the street “an obvious discriminatory act perpetrated by the mayor of Tell City against me and my family.” “As a taxpayer and a citizen of Tell City, I can only protest this as an act of outright discrimination.” Stabile says he thought about hiring a lawyer to represent him in the case, but that he considers it unfair that he should have to pay legal fees to fight city hall. He says he decided to file the civil rights complaint after two complaints to the city council hrnnoht nn r^cnltc
Hamilton’s recommendation will go to Brig. Gen. David B. Barker, commanding general at Camp Lejeune. Barker will make the final decision on a court-martial. The recommendation is not binding, but Foley said a courtmartial “has been pretty well put in the bag” by Hamilton’s decision. The hearing dealt with seven specific allegations against Garwood. Hamilton recommended dismissal of two charge that Garwood was on unauthorized absence for nearly 14 years and that he tried to cause insubordination among other POWs. Foley said the only real surprise for him at the hearing was Hamilton saying Garwood should face the possibility of the same fate as other POWs, many of whom died in captivity. Foley said the remark “sounds like the U.S. should do what the Viet Cong did to those guys.”
to prevent debate on the bills. After a brief procedural debate, Burrous ordered the House adjourned for the weekend, over the protests of 46 legislators who wanted to proceed with the day’s business. He also declined to have a recess day on Monday to give lawmakers Democratic and Republican alike a chance to study the highway proposal. When Burrous came down from the podium, he was intercepted by Phillips who said, “That’s a foolish thing to do.” As approved 11-3 by the committee, the highway funding bill: —Replaces the eight-cent-pergallon gasoline tax with an 8 percent tax on the average price of gasoline. It is expected to raise SIOO million in the first year. —Sets aside 3 percent of all sales tax collections for highway funding, generating an estimated $32 million annually. Currently, sales tax revenue is allocated 50 percent to the property tax relief fund and 50 percent to the general fund. Under the new formula, the property tax fund’s share would remain at 50 percent, but the general fund share would drop to 47 percent. —Gives counties the option of imposing a 2-10 percent surcharge on auto excise taxes and a separate $5-40 wheel tax. —Raise most motor vehicle registration fees, excluding passenger cars, by 25-30 percent, generating about sls million. The committee deleted provisions which would have imposed a tax on out-of-state trucks which operate in Indiana, expected to raise $lO million a year for mass transit, and to fund state police exclusively from the general fund, which would have freed up about $25 million from the highway fund. The measure does not include a proposal to allow counties to break the property tax freeze for the cumulative bridge fund and to use the proceeds for bridges and roads. Chairman Thomas Coleman, R-New Castle, said he would be agreeable, to including such a provision as an amendment on the floor.
Worry Clinic
By Gsorge W. Crane, Ph.D., M.D.
Doris should realize that the best psychiatric prescription to stop moodiness and even suicide is A-C-T-I-O-N. So she must snap out of her “Sedentary Hypnosis”, which often leads to suicide. CASE T-696: Doris J., aged 39, is the moody wife who even flirted with suicide. “Dr. Crane,” she tearfully protested, “I feel deserted, for the children are gone to college and I suffer from a feeling of melancholy. “What can I do to snap out of this depression?” SALUTE YOUR BRAIN God gave us human beings a superior brain so we’d make it Captain over our unruly emotions. Other animals merely let their emotions mutiny against their brain, so they are literally slaves to their fear or rage or hunger. Enshrine your brain, whether you are in a puppy love infatuation or an affair with a married man, or in the usual subconscious stage of erotic self-pity, typical of wives who fear they have lost their romantic appeal to their husbands. And by all means memorize this psychiatric axiom: “You can’t be active and still feel blue!” Moody, melancholic people, as well as incipient suicidal prospects are too inactive! Did you ever hear of a jogger who committed suicide while doing his morning 3-mile run? Has any newspaper ever headlined the suicide of a busy waitress who was rushing around at the noon hour to handle several tables? Even if a college youth were ready to pull the trigger or swallow an overdose of dangerous drugs, if the telephone were to ring at that moment, it would neutralize the “sedentary hypnosis”, which is another term for the suicidal state.
Business Opportunity OWN AND OPERATE candy, confection vending route. Greencastle and surrounding area. Pleasant business. High profit items. Start part-time. Age, experience not important. Requires *1,995 to *3,995 investment. Write, include phone number, Box 411, Owatonna, Mn. 55060. 2/1/2P *356.00 WEEKLY guaranteed. Work 2 hours daily at home. Free brochure. Reply to W.E.E. Route No. 4, Box 384, Greencastle, In. 46135. 1/16/30P TURN SILK flowers into a profitable business. Call 6534897 for information. 1/28/6T Mobile Homes NEW HOME. 12' x 14' kitchen with bay window and appliances, 17' x 14' living room with wood burning fireplace, 12' x 14' master bedroom, 10'8" x 11' second bedroom, full bath, utility area, carpet and drapes. Less than $15,000. Ottawa Instant Homes, 1216 S. Bloomington St., 653-3222. Legal Notices NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT Estate No. 80-6 Notice Is hereby given that Rita S. Garrett was on the 23rd day ot January, 1980, appointed administrator ot the estate of Grace F. Sackett, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate whether or not now due, must tile the same in said court within five months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 23rd day of January, 1980. Sharon L. Hammond Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court George W. Langvell Attorney Jan. 26fFeb. 2/2T NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT Estate No. 80-7 Notice is hereby given that Blanche M. Wean was on the 23rd day of January, 1980, appointed executor of the will of Jane Farmer Hays, deceased. All persons hsving claims against said estate whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within five months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 23rd day of January, 1980. Sharon L. Hammond Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court LYON & BOYD Attorneys Jan. 26/Feb. 2/2T
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In fact, if at the moment of pulling the trigger, a big dose of Epsom salts was to gripe his colon, the potential suicide would drop the gun and rush to the bathroom. For “action”, whether muscular, intestinal or mental, checks bad emotions! So Doris needs to substitute constructive action to take the place of her many household duties and shopping chores for her children before they left for college. “Idle hands,” runs an old truism, ‘‘are the Devil’s workshop.” That applies not only to teenagers who resort to vandalism and gangster feuds, but also to women like Doris who sit in an easv chair too much as they indulge in self-pity as they imagine they are entering the age bracket of 40 to 50, wherein they erroneously imagine their sex appeal will be negligible. Doris should join the YWCA and exercise with other fatties who wish to restore their own, and especially their husbands’, interest in romance and boudoir cheesecake. She should likewise be involved in other community and altruistic activities, as of her church, Red Cross and precinct political organizations! For active participation in a church also gives you a feeling of “belonging” and thus banishes that “all alone” moodiness. It also reminds you that we are on this Earth not just for our own enjoyment but to accomplish worthy goals. For suicide is merely a case of playing hooky from our duties in this Earthly Classroom in God’s Cosmic School System! (Always write to Dr Crane. Hopkins Bldg , Mellott, Indiana 47958. enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 25' to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.)
Classifieds:
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by THOMAS JOSEPH
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here’s how to work if AXYDLBAAXR is LONGFELLOW 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 wonis are ali hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTES FHB JKV AEGKJL K WGNNGE CGEIHV RUNL FHBE TUSG NLKV RUNL FHBE TUAC - HTUPGE YHTMCIUNL Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: THE SENSE OF HUMOR IS a SUBJECT THAT NEVER FAILS TO INTEREST SCHOLARS WHO HAVEN’T ANY.—UNKNOWN ORIGIN OLARS © IWO Kin* Feature* Syndicate, Inc.
For Rent HOUSE: Three rooms and bath, well insulated, close to town, no children or pets. Call . after 5:00 p.m., 653-9066. 1/31/2P i \ 3 BEDROOM home in Green- ' castle and 3-4 B.R. in country. ERA Hearthstone Realty, 653- * 5158 after hours, 653-5098. * 2/1 /TF \ FOR RENT: 12 x 60 mobile J home with garage and patio J in Cloverdale. Call 795-4190. ■$ FOR RENT: Two bedroom, 12 x J 65 mobile home. Call after » 5.00 p.m., 596-5641. 1/29/5T ’ FOR RENT: 12' x 55' two * bedroom mobile home, 2 mi. J E. of Cloverdale. Call 795- h 4561. ' ■»- 1/31/36. ROOMS FOR RENT by week or. month. No children, no pets.' Call 653-3317. * *. FOR RENT: 3 B.R. house, IVi * baths, combination kit--chen/family room. Range,*, refrig., & disposal & dishwasher; air conditioned; at-* tached garage; low utilities on Vi acre lot in Greenbriar. Call'* 653-9054. 1/30/6T % Lost and Found LOST: Set of keys between-• Cannons and Prevos. Call 653-C 9279. > 2/2/3T; Help Wanted > AGRICULTURAL SALES Career.-** Opportunity knocks for a sue--* cessful agricultural sales* career. The individual we are’’ seeking will be selling farm> and commercial buildings.. Would prefer someone-* residing in the area some . time. This person will have the * advantage of proven building design (Bonanza Buildings) and will be representing one of the oldest firms in the contraction business. The sales person we are seeking must be farm oriented and have had some sales experience. Send resume to Moore Farm . Buildings Company, Box 27, ’; Charleston, Illinois 61920. 1/28/6P :
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Z-Z Yesterday’s Answer
11 Dirk Bogarde’s “The 12 Compact 16 Legal claim 19 Field 21 Farms: noted racing stable 22 Winter pear 23 Tiers
24 Antitoxins 26 Most unadorned 28 Role for Judith Anderson 32 Merit 33 Run along 35 Sprite 36 U.S. air group
