The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 July 1966 — Page 3

Grand Jury Gets Speck Case Pattern On Her Success

Irish Fashion Designer

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CHICAGO UPI — State’s Atty. Daniel P. Ward planned to go before a county grand jury today and seek murder Speck, the man accused of slaying eight student nurses. The state's case was expected to be presented at 10 a m. CDT. There were indications that Coragon Amurao. the 23-year-old Filipino exchange student who survived the massacre.

No Suspects la Triple Slayings TUXEDO, N.C. UPI—Detectives looked today for some clue that could lead to a killer who bludgeoned two businessmen and a woman and arranged their bodies lying face-up in a semicircle in a woodland clear-

ing.

Two dozen investigators from the Henderson County Sheriffs Office, the Hendersonville police department and the State Bureau of Investigation were assigned to the case after the bodies were found Friday. There

were no suspects.

“We’re about where we were when we started,’' said SBI agent G. M. Satterfield. “We,

have a few leads, but there has and temperature were normal, been no big change.’’ . an< ^ added that the suspect has The woman was identified by 1 been out °f bed and walking

would be the state’s star witness before the grand jury.. Miss Amurao was reported doing “very well” by a spokesman at the South Chicago Community Hospital, where the slain girls studied. Ward also lined up detectives and investigators for an appearance before the grand jury, including the crime laboratory, technicians who police said identified Speck’s fingerprints in the bedroom of the dead girls’

apartment.

The state does not need to establish absolute proof of guilt to obtain murder indictments from the grand jury. Substantial evidence, sufficient to bring formal charges, is all that

is required.

Speck, 24, has been charged with murder in connection with the death of only one of the stu-

dent nurses.

He has been held in the city jail hospital since his capture a week ago Sunday, only three days after the slaughter. Doctors said he had suffered an inflammation of the sac around

his heart.

Jail superintendent C. William Ruddell said Speck's physical condition was progressing steadily. He said Speck’s pulse

relatives as 36-year-old Mrs. Louise Davis Shumate of Asheville, N.C. The men were Vernon Shipman and Charles Walter Glass, both 40. They were bachelors and partners in a Hendersonville, N.C. music store. They were last seen alive July 17, a Sunday, but were not reported missing until last Wednesday. Mrs. Shumate, who authorities said apparently didn’t know Glass or Shipman, was last seen leaving work at Arden, N.C., about 10 miles from her home, July 15th. The deteriorating bodies were laid out in a neat semicircle in a woodland clearing near Summit Lake. All were lying faceup. Mrs. Shumate was clad only in a shirt, but the men were fully dressed. Glass’ body was crossed with the erntehes he used since breaking a leg several weeks ago. Parts of a jack handle were used to form a cross on Shipman’s body. Menderson County Coroner games H. Wilson said the three died at massive head injuries from a blunt object, similar to a bumper jack. They were mauled almost beyond recognition. Wilson said Mrs. Shumate end one of the businessmen had also been stabbed wtih a sharp f pointed instrument like an ice pick or hat pin.

about his heavily guarded hos-

pital room.

Speck’s weakened condition has thus far prevented his being arraigned, although it was considered likely he will be brought into court sometime

this week.

44 CM

The eighth meet of the Our Fair Ladies was held June 19th at 10:00 am. The meeting was called to order by the president, Donna Schlomer. The pledge to the American Flag was lead by Linda Thomas and the 4-H pledge was lead by Elisabeth Krapp. Dues were taken and the secretary’s report was then read. There was then some discussion on the trip to the State Fair. Lynn Martindale showed how to make paper mache jewelry. The meeting was then adjourned.

Ringing Ears

FROME, England UPI —Former telephone engineer John Pearson, 50. says he will sue the General Post Office, which is also in charge of telephone

lines in Great Britain.

The Cloverdale 4-H Gay Jniors held their ninth meeting July 13, 1966. The meeting was called to order by President Judy Brown. Brenda Cummings led the group in the American Pledge and Myrna Sterchi led the 4-H pledge.

By ROBERTA ROESCH Sometimes your best opportunities begin at a time when it looks as though your good ones have ended. In a way that is the crux of the story of pretty Clodagh O’Kennedy who, at 28, is Ireland’s youngest fashion designer and manufacturer. “When I was in my teens,” Clodagh told me when she was in New York, “my plans for the future were raising and training horses. But after I broke my back in an accident, that was out of the question." Parental Dicision While she was recovering, Clodagh went on to explain, her parents decided that she should go to college to study history and the classics. But the active young Clodagh had no desire to put off working that long, so she turned her attention to her love and flair for color and clothes and drew on the art she had studied as a child. Then she took up a pattern cutting course instead of going to col-

lege.

"When I finished that shortterm course, I had some very individual ideas I wanted to work out,” Coldagh said, “so I made up my mind I would start out on my own at once. “In the beginning, I did custom work instead of ready-to-wear, and while one girl sewed my creations, I worked to get my fashions known. ! Learned It AU “I also made it my job to learn how to keep books, how to type—since I had no secretary — how to make decisions and how to do everything else connected with running a business.’* With talent and youth on her side, Clodagh managed to keep going the business she launched 11 years ago, at age 17, with her first full scale couture collection. Now, she can look back at the beginning of an enviable career—one that came into being after it looked as though her best opportunities were

gone.

Besides being a designer and manufacturer, she has acted as fashion coordinator for Dublin’s most exclusive department store, where she had a boutique for three years. She also has two “haute boutiques”—one in a tiny resort shop at Kinsale in southern Ireland and the other in her Georgian business house in Dublin. Her current schedule includes designing a Clodagh shoe line, creating crochet patterns for an American publication, developing a special collection for an American mail order house and

Designer Clodagh O’Kennedy Known For Individual Ideas selling her fashions to leading stores all over the world. Maternity Clothes Clodagh has a husband and three little boys—and her maternity fashions came into being when the first baby was on

the way.

“For me, it was the right thing to jump right in and start doing everything I wanted to do while I was very young,” Clodagh said. “I often think that I might have studied and prepared myself for so long that I would have become specialized and inflexible. I might have started saying “that’s not my job when actually everything I am connected with is part of it, as it is with any one who is interested in the total picture of the work to be accomplished.”

Heavy Rainfall In Some Areas ty United Press International Widely scattered thunderstorms hit some sections of the nation with heavy rain during the night. High winds, severe lightning and heavy downpours slammed through Cleveland’s east side, dumping nearly inches of rain in two hours. Nearly an inch of rain hit Tucson, Ariz., while more than % of an inch fell at Dalhart,

Tex.

Temperatures remained near or above normal through most of the country. Temperatures ranged from 45 degrees at Meacham, Ore., to 101 at Needles, Calif., early today. More than 2 inches of rain fell Sunday at Port Clinton, Ohio, a Lake Erie community hit hard by floods and rains less than three weeks earlier. The storm knocked out power in some parts of the city.

Fighting Rages On Land, In Air SAIGON UPI—U.S. Air Force B52 bombers today struck Communist troop concentrations from one end of South Viet Nam to the other. Viet Cong units at the same time attacked 10 times near Saigon in stepped-up guerrilla activity around the capital. The eight-jet Strategic Air Command (SAC) Stratofortresses made the raid today in support of U.S. Marines in Operation Hastings. The Leathernecks are trying tq crush a North Vietnamese division moving through a 300-mile area just south of the 17th parallel. The Guam-based B52s also hit a Viet Cong troop area 35 miles north of Saigon and a Guerrilla base camp in An Xuyen province, 150 miles southwest of the South Vietnamese capital deep in the Mekong Delta. U.S. Air Force, Navy and Marine pilots Sunday flew 82 missions over North Viet Nam, striking oil depots, communications lines and transport facilities. The American airmen reported inflicting heavy damage qn the targets. Fighting in the Operation Hastings area, in the northwest corner of South Viet Nam near Laos, was reported heavy through Sunday. One Leatherneck unit battled about 100 North Vietnamese for seven hours. Another came under a heavy mortar barrage Sunday

night.

U.S. spokesmen in Saigon reported marine casualties were ’ “light” despite bitter fighting at grenade range. Marine officers said the operation in 11 days has accounted for 698 known Communist dead. They listed another 658 as “probable” kills for a total of

1,356.

Monday, July 25, 1966

Tho Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana t

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Sheinwold^Bridge

California Lawyers Shows Bridge Is Game of Skill By.Alfred Shienwold Whenever Burton Marks, a Los Angeles lawyer, makes a bad bridge play he is sure to hear a lot about it because a few years ago he argued the case in which the California Supreme Court decided that contract bridge is a game of skill. More often, Marks makes the kind of play shown in today’s hand. South deafer Both sides vulnerable NORTH A K943

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West led the deuce of spades, and Marks thought carefully. Then he made the key play of finessing with dummy’s nine of spades. When East played low, dummy won the first trick. Declarer cashed the top diamonds, ruffed a diamond with the jack of spades, got to dummy with a club and ruffed another diamond with the queen of spades. Marks then cashed the ace of spades and gave up a heart. No matter what was returned, declarer could ruff the next heart in dummy and draw the last trump with the king of spadea

Dummy’s good diamond and declarer’s good clubs took the rest of the tricks. MORE DIFFICULT The hand is far more difficult if South plays a low trump from dummy at the first trick. He wins with the jack of spades and can start the diamonds and ruff a diamond with the queen of spades. South gets to dummy with a club, ruffs another diamond with the ace of spades and then can stake the slam on leading the five of spades and finessing with dummy’s nine. If this lost. South would be down. Marks took his finesse with the nine of spades when there was no risk. If East produced the ten of spades, South could win and perhaps play for the hearts instead of the diamonds. The time to take a risk is when you can recover from bad luck. Only a gambler would take his risk when it was too late to recover, and Burt Marks has already demonstrated that contract bridge is not a gambling game. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with 1 NT (16 to 18 points), and the next player passes. You hold: S-K 9 4 3; H-5; D-A 10 7 6 3; C- K 10 6. What do you say? Answer: Bid two clubs, the Stayman Convention. This asks partner to show a 4-card major suit if he cam. If he bids spades, you will raise to four spades. Otherwise, your next bid will be three notrump.

Wall Street Chatter NEW YORK UPI — Jay F. Gershkoff of Philips, Appel & Walaen says he swings in the Dow Jones industrial average have begun to accelerate in frequency, and possibly suggest that available offerings have thinned out. He also points out that advances attracts volume and that trading slackens during declines. The analyst feels the base the market is now constructing seems to be strong enough to support a sizeable rally In the months ahead.

Standard & Poor’s says the market has reacted well to the monetary problems facing it as well as to the flow of second quarter earnings. The company believes this could spur a selective rally in the weeks ahead.

HEAVY EQUIPMENT NationwicU construction fobs are paying up to $200 and more por weak. Fast practical training on actual oquipmont. Also tochnical training on provontivo maintonanca, grado stakos, construction drawings and cost ostimating. Send name, ago, address, telephone number and hours at homo for free brochure. UNITED SCHOOLS 130 East 30th Street Indianapolis, Indiana

CAREER OPPORTUNITY IBM OPERATORS SERIOUSLY NEEDED $350>$700 This is a future in • big industry for men and women ago 1149. Short training period required; all inquiries acknowledged. Reply la Director IBM Automation, Box Na. AC care of Tho Daily Banner giving Name, Address, Ago and Phono No.

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Roll call was then asked for. The subject was on “Your favorite Pet.” Some of the girls In Pewson say, he plans to Me

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the GOP for “acoustic shock’ because his phone call was interrupted “three or four times with a loud series of clicks, bangs and buzzes” which made his head ache and ears ring.

Avoid spills by placing a strip of adhesive tape around the top of a child’s drinking glass. It gives him a better grip-

To preserve fine wood furniture, don’t place it where there is strong sunlight Excessive exposure to sun will bleach finishes and may cause them to crack.

Karen Cummings and substitute, Jam Ziegelman, led the Gay Juniors in a variety of songs. Next Friday, July 22, is community judging in Cloverdale so everyon be sure and complete your project. We discussed our completion trip and we decided on going either to Riverside Amusement Park or to the Indiana State Fair on 4-H Day. The meeting was then adjourned. Refreshments were served by Vickie and Brenda Cummings.

ANNOUNCING Effective August 1st WHITE’S CHAIR RENTAL SERVICE Renting folding chair* far Reunion* and *p*cial occasion* whore extra chair* art needed. PICK UP OR DELIVERY Rhone Ol 3-4291 Delbert White, Prop. "Folding chairs far any accasien."

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