Banner Graphic, Volume 12, Number 39, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 October 1981 — Page 2

A2

The Putnam County Banner-Graphic, October 21,1981

Weather fugitive nabbed in Brink's robbery

NANUET, N.Y. (AP) - Katherine Boudin, a Weather Underground fugitive since 1970, was arrested and charged with murder in connection with a Brink’s armored car robberyin which a guard and two police officers were killed, authorities said today. The announcement was made by Rockland County District Attorney Kenneth Gribetz. Ms. Boudin had been a fugitive since an explosion destroyed a Greenwich Village townhouse that was being used as a bomb factory by the radical group. Rockland County District At-

Appeals process only recourse

Court won't halt Indy stadium suit

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The city of Indianapolis will have to go through the normal appeals process to dispose of a suit that’s holding up bonding for the domed stadium project, the Indiana Supreme Court says. The justices voted 4-1 Tuesday not to get involved in the dispute at this stage. The high court was asked to declare an end to a lawsuit which challenged constitutionality of the Marion County food and beverage tax to pay for the stadium. Justice Donald H. Hunter was the lone dissenter. “We are very disappointed,” said Indianapolis Deputy Mayor David R. Frick. Republican Mayor William H. Hudnut 111 and the Capital Im-

Halloween teaches lesson about fear

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Halloween serves a good purpose in teaching young children about fear, an Indiana University psychologist says. Myrtle Scott, professor of educational psychology and a member of lU’s Institute for Child Study, says some fears are necessary for survival. “Trying to protect a child from all fear can leave the child ill-prepared to live in the real w6rld.” She emphasized that parents, teachers and siblings should be careful not to make the fears too real. This could cause some serious problems, she said. Everyone needs to sort out from their environment those things which can cause them harm, she pointed out. While witches, ghosts and bats are associated with Halloween tales of terror, hobgoblins do not always fit the

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torney Kenneth Gribetz said Miss Boudin had identified herself as Barbara Edson, 38, after she was arrested Tuesday at a roadblock where two Nyack police officers were killed following the robbery. An armored car guard was killed earlier by the team of bandits. Miss Boudin was being held without bail in the Rockland County Jail in New City, for a court appearnce Friday, Gribetz said. She is the daughter of Leonard Boudin, a lawyer well known for his defense of leftwing figures. Miss Boudin had been

provement Board sought to terminate the suit, filed by Marion County Democratic Chairman Knute Dobkins and Democratic Sen. Julia Carson of Indianapolis. Lawyers for the city claimed bonds can’t be issued until the legal cloud over the stadium project is lifted. "It was a long-shot on our part when we went into it, and we knew it,” Frick said of the petition to the Supreme Court. “If we don’t keep this project moving, the taxpayers are going to end up paying a lot more for the project, and that’s what’s unfortunate.” In a hearing last week, Indianapolis lawyer Daniel Kelley said it would cost Marion County taxpayers millions of dollars to wait to issue the bonds until the case is finally resolved. The

missing since the blast that destroyed the home of John Wilkerson on Manhattan’s West 11th Street, killing three members of the Weather Underground. She and Wilkerson’s daughter, Cathlyn, fled the scene naked. Miss Wilkerson surfaced July 18, 1980, and surrendered to 10-year-old charges of criminally negligent homicide and flight to avoid prosecution. She was sentenced to three years in jail. Gribetz said Miss Boudin’s father “can’t believe his daughter’s been arrested.” Gribetz declined to comment on

city came to the Supreme Court for the extraordinary action because the lengthy appeals process wouldn’t protect the county’s taxpayers from the additional expense, he said. Kelley argued the lawsuit came under Indiana’s public lawsuit statute, which covers cases which challenge public improvements and the like. But he said the plaintiffs in the case didn’t post a $2.5 million bond, as ordered by Marion County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Johnson, nor did they appeal his order requiring the bond. Since they did neither, Kelley said, the case should be over. “It was the feeling of the members of the court that whether the appeal was timely

traditional pattern. Today’s children, for example, may be more likely to respond to stories of Martians and other space monsters, Ms. Scott said. v “Children tell each other stories about hobgoblins that their culture says are the bad guys. This may vary from culture to culture. In some sense it is a thrill in being made afraid, but it is also a way of socializing in peer groups. If you are not afraid of a truly malicious person or a grizzly bear, for instance, you can be in a lot of trouble. It’s important to be able to recognize those things that will help you get along in life and those things that will hinder you.” Older people tell children stories that teach them to be afraid and what to be afraid of. Hobgoblins, she said, are in a fantasy world which reflects the fears of normal life

whether the others arrested with her might have been part of a radical underground. Besides Miss Boudin, three other suspects two men and a woman were arrested and all the stolen money was recovered, but police searched the area today for as many as eight other suspects. A third police officer, two other Brink’s guards and p suspect were injured. The armored truck was picking up the day’s receipts at the Nanuet National Bank, at a shopping mall in Nanuet, at around 4 p.m. Tuesday when at least four bandits opened fire

taken should be left up to the appeals court to decide,” said Lloyd Hutchinson, administrator for the Supreme Court. “The city lost this round by being unable to stop the thing,” he added. “It doesn’t mean the stadium is down the drain for good.” Frick said for every month the stadium project is delayed, the city incurs additional cost of $894,000. The city had planned to issue bonds last July, Frick said, but because of the lawsuit was unable to do so. In that time, the interest rate on bonds has gone up from 11 percent to 14 percent, he said. “That’s where we’re really going to be hurt on the project, the interest,” he said.

U.S. 'go-it-alone policy' hurting NATO: Mondale

c. 1981 N.Y. Times NEW YORK Former Vice President Walter F. Mondale criticized the Reagan administration Tuesday for its approach to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, charging that it had sapped both the economic strength and the com-

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“without warning” on the three guards, Rockland County District Attorney Kenneth Gribetz said early today at a news conference. A 49-year-old guard, Peter Paige of East Brunswick, N.J., was killed. The getaway cars were spotted about five miles away at a roadblock at an entrance to the New York State Thruway, and four police officers from the town of Nyack, 25 miles north of New York City, stopped the van to question the driver. A man and a woman were sitting in the front seat and the officers, including Waverly

world/state

Soviet 'strike' warning costs general his job

c. 1981 N.Y. Times WASHINGTON - The chief military adviser on the National Security Council was dismissed from his job Tuesday in the wake of his remarks in a speech that the Russians had achieved strategic superiority over the United States were “on the move,” and were ‘‘going to strike.” The White House disavowed the comments by Maj. Gen. Robert L. Schweitzer, who told the annual meeting of the Association of the U.S. Army that the Soviet military buildup is producing a “drift toward war.” President Reagan said he disagreed with Schweitzer’s remarks, telling reporters that increased American emphasis on defense has prevented such a movement toward war. “I think this country could have been on a road that could be described that way when we were

mitment to principle of the alliance by a “go-it-alone policy.” In his first major foreign policy speech since the Carter administration was voted out of office last November, Mondale dwelled on arms control, saying the Reagan administration had

Brown, 45, of Spring Valley, ordered them out. Sgt. Edward O’Grady, 32, of Pearl River walked around the side. “Suddenly the side door was flung open and men armed with automatic weapons burst out, instantly shooting Officer Brown,” Nyack Police Chief Thomas Coffey said at this morning’s news conference. The robbers moved to the back of the truck and shot O’Grady at least three times in the back and abdomen, Coffey said. The gunman and the man who was sitting in the front seat of the truck stole two cars from

unilaterally disarming and had a widening window of vulnerability and narrowing margin of safety,” he said. Reagan added that the administration’s military buildup was designed “so there won’t be a drift toward war.” Schweitzer, 53, was removed from his job at 7:15 a.m. Tuesday by Richard V. Allen, Reagan’s national security adviser. He will be reassigned to a post in the Pentagon, White House officials said. Allen, who indicated he had neither seen a transcript nor heard a tape of the remarks, said Schweitzer was dismissed because he did not clear his remarks in advance. “The fact of the matter is that in the National Security Council there is a rule that speeches will not be given unless they are specifically cleared by me and the content of the speeches are known in advance,’ he said.

divided the United States from its European allies by showing little interest in negotiating with the Soviet Union. “This administration has put us in the astounding position of appearing that it is we, and not the Soviet Union, which is unwilling to talk,” he said in an address to the Foreign Policy Association at the Pierre Hotel in New York City. Mondale charged that the administration’s support of high interest rates damaged the economies of European countries and made it harder for them to fulfill their pledges to increase military expenditures. Moreover, he contended that by playing down the importance of arms control and nuclear

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bystanders and escaped, Gribetz said. The woman, identified by Gribetz as Barbara Edson, 38, was caught by an off-duty New York City Transit Authority policeman who was in the crowd that had gathered. Brown, who had two grown daughters, died where he was shot, Coffey said. O’Grady, a 12year police veteran who had a wife and three children ranging in age from less than 12 months to 7 years, died in surgery at Nyack Hospital. All four suspects were held on charges of second-degree murder.

Allen refused to disclose what information or documents formed the basis for Schweitzer’s remarks, and added that he himself has not told Reagan that he perceives a drift toward war. Schweitzer, who told the group the United States was “in the greatest danger that the republic has faced since its founding days,” said the Soviet Union had achieved superiority in the strategic triad of land and sea-based missiles and in air power. “The Soviet Union knows that for the first time they have superiority in every leg of the (strategic) triad,” Schweitzer said. The White House swiftly responded that Schweitzer’s comments were “his own.” At a news briefing Tuesday morning, Allen said he believed Schweitzer overstated his case. Schweitzer refused to comment on the incident, but

WALTER MONDALE Rips Reagan policy non-proliferation, ignoring underdeveloped countries, backing off from human rights stands and befriending South Africa, the Reagan administration jeopardized future support of the alliance by

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KATHERINE BOUDIN 1970 photo

Gergen said he understood the general believed that his remarks were off the record and that he was speaking freely among his “army buddies.” -; “Being a member of the staff of the administration meads one must be doubly careful arjd weigh every word,” said Allen. In his other remarks, Schweitzer, regarded as an expert on Latin America, said, “The seed of pacifism is sweeping over Europe, and we’re not immune to it in this country, where bishops and churchmen have been extremely unhelpful in trying to deal with the realities of the (Communist) threat down in Latin America.” Schweitzer also suggested that congressional rejection of the proposed sale of AWACS radar planes to Saudi Arabia might produce a “backlash” in the United States against security and arms requests from Israel.

alienating the young, especially in Europe. “When we do these things,” he said, “we surrender the most powerful weapon of the West, the arsenal of principles.” Mondale said that with the alliance facing exceptionally complicated problems. President Reagan was not meeting the test of leading it. “We have sown doubt and confusion about our ability to act as a full partner with Europe,” he said. "Our allies cannot help us, unless we take them into our confidence and create trust in our leadership. ” Mondale warned about the effect of American elections on relations with NATO, saying. “Partisanship has its place, but as NATO’s superpower, neither we nor our allies can afford a quadrennial lurch in U.S. foreign policy.” He did not put all the blame for problems in the alliance on the United States. He said some European nations had fallen behind on their commitment to increase military spending.

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