The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 July 1967 — Page 3

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Thursday, July 6, 1967

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PETITIONING FOR REAGAN’S RECALL—Nancy L. Parr, a nurse, gets a signature in San Francisco from Jeracismos Tselendes for the recall of Gov. Ronald Reagan. She says Reagan is “inept and incompetent,” and is riding roughshod over the desires of both the legislature and the voters. She needs 780,414 signatures within six months.

U.S. jet pilots say ’'they won't fight"

DA NANG, Vietnam UPI — ’American jet pilots today challenged the North Vietnamese air force to “come out and fight.” •»- Pilots of the 366th Fighter Wing said they have only seen Yetreating tails of North Vietnamese MIGs fleeing to the sanctuary of Communist China The past month. ‘“They won’t fight,” complained Col. Robert Maloy of Coral Gables, Fla. "'When we come in, they go out. "When we leave they fly back 15 minutes later, probably so their propaganda can brag that two of their planes chased us back to South Vietnam.” The last MIG downed by the F4C Phantom jets of the 366th was June 6, near Hanoi, by MaJ. D u r w a r d Preister of Hampton, S. C., and Oapt. John Parkfaurst of Midland, Midi, fence then the North Vietnamese have fled to Chinese airspace where they circle immune from attack while the Americans carry out their bombing and strafing mission. Col. Frederick Blesse of

DANCE MOOSE LODGE Saturday, July 8th 9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Music By ‘The Morlan Band’ of Brazil Air-conditioned NO ADMISSION CHARGE

Tucson, Ariz., said the Communists undoubtedly were facing an accute pilot morale problem and plane shortage from the spring beating they absorbed from American pilots. “They lost 37 planes in a month,” the deputy commander of the wing’s operations said. “And all of them were in aerial combat. The Reds were fighting on their home ground with no antiaircraft protection, and still got licked. “I feel they have gone back to west China to retrain their pilots and build up their shattered morale,” he said. The 366th pilots fully expect the Reds to make another attempt to regain face. There have been two previous lulls this year, both after the Reds suffered heavy losses during the air war over the north. "We’ve been beating the pants off them in the air, and tearing them up on the ground,” Maloy said. "The question now is where are they going to fly from.” The MIG Is a limited range, defensive airplane and wheai forced to fly from Chinese bases It becomes practically worthless. “We would run them out of gas every time they show up.”

Three sentenced for conspiracy CHICAGO UPI — Three associates of reputed crime syndicate figure Marshall Caifano were sentenced Wednesday to prison terms ranging from three to four years for conspiring to defraud an Indiana man of 542,500. U.S. District Judge William J. Lynch sentenced John Fannon, 46, Miami, to a four-year term to turn concurrently with a 30- month term imposed in

Florida.

Three-year sentences were handed down for Dominic Donato, 53, formerly of Oak Lawn, 111., and Anthony Gallas, 40, Cicero, HI. Lynch sentenced Caifano on June 26 pronounced the others guilty of conspiring to fraud Arnold M. Henderlong, 48, a Crown Point, Ind., lumber yard

owner.

The government charged the defendants with lending Hen-; derlong 5250,000 worth of phony Commonwealth Edison Co. securities. Henderlong said he had intended to use the securities as collateral on a Gary, Ind., bank loan. A fifth defendant in the case Stanley Kielmar Jr., 46, Chicago, received a directed verdict of innocent. Gallas and Donato are freed on 54,500 appeal bonds. Fannon was taken to Cook County Jail.

Congo moves into state of emergency

KINSHASA, The Congo UPI —The Congo rushed into a state of emergency today in the wake of rebel uprisings in two eastern cities. Diplomatic sources said the attacks signalled the first

stages of civil war.

Strongman president Joseph D. Mobutu announced Wednesday that foreign mercenaries attacked the cities of Kisangani and Bukavu. He appealed to the United Nations for help. Mobutu clamped a strict 12hour curfew on all foreigners and closed the nation’s airports. He barred foreigners from leav-

ing the country and enforced a close check on their movements. Diplomatic sources said the assaults were aided by supporters of former premier Moise Tshombe, still under arrest in Algeria. They said the strikes were the first stages of a war aimed at overthrowing Mobutu and his government. Tshombe was kidnaped last weekend and pirated to Algeria while on a flight to Palma, Majorca. The Congo asked Algeria to extradite the proWestem Tshombe to Kinshasa,

where he Is under a death sentence for treason. Mobutu said Wednesday planeloads of “foreign troops” landed at Kisangani (formerly Stanleyville) Wednesday morning and that “foreign colonists” attacked the Congolese army in Bukavu. Unconfirmed reports said the rebels had taken the airport at Kisangani and that Bukavu, capital of Kuvu province, had fallen to the insurgents. A state department spokesman in Washington said Americans in Bukavu had been taken

to a “safe haven” and that they could be flown from the country on short notice if necessary. Mobutu said in a message to the United Nations Security Council that the Congo was “at present the victim of aggression on the part of Western Colonialist imperialists.” He asked the Security Council for action against the rebels but did not request a Council meeting. Mobutu’s message to the Security Council failed to mention Tshombe by name but did

say the attacks “can only be the fault of those . . . who support the lackey of the imperialists, whose name is aa abomination to us.” The informed sources said the rebels included elements of the Katangese gendarmes which Tshombe once commanded. In 1960, Tshombe seceeded Katanga province from the Congo and became its president. He later reunited Katanga with the rest of the Congo and became premier of the whole country.

Port Commission schedules meet INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The Indiana Port Commission scheduled a meeting next Wednesday at the port site on Lake Michigan at which contracts are expected to be awarded for the last major construction work on the multi-million dollar project. The commission opened bids on dredging, site preparation, landfill and construction of dock walls June 27 and received 10 bids, none of which was allinclusive. The commission tentatively had hoped to meet Friday to award bids to two or more companies for the work, but Lewis B. Grafft, commission secretary, said the meeting was rescheduled for July 12. The work involved is expected to cost approximately 56 million. A contract for other work already underway at the site near Bums Waterway was for approximately 510 million.

Indiana firms found guilty of unfair labor practices

WASHINGTON UPI — A trial examiner’s decision that Ralston Purina Co., of Corydon and Pekin, Ind., was guilty of unfair labor practices was affirmed by the National Labor Relations Board, It was announced Tuesday. Harry Hinkes, the examiner, ruled unfair only one of several instances that District 50 of the United Mine Workers cited in their complaint against the

company.

According to Hinkes it was discriminatory for a supervisor to change the type of work perpomied by one employe as a result of unionization of the plant. The examiner dismissed protests of other allegations in

company policy lodged in the complaint, including one that a supervisor broke the law when he inquired of a worker “where did you get that union badge? Did you go to the zoo or some-

think?”

The remark carried no threat, restraint or other interference with an employe’s right, according to Hinkes. “At the most it is merely derisive. Derision is not necessari- | ly synonymous with coercion,”

he said.

Household Auction At I have told my homo and moving into an apartment I will offer the fallowing itamt of portonol property to the highett bidder at public ^auction, in Roachdale, Indiana (corner Columbia A Meridian Streets), on Sat., July 8, 1967 STARTING PROMPTLY AT 10:30 A M. G-E upright frooior, like new; Signature 30 in. gat range, like new; Frlgidaire refrigerator; breakfast tat with * chairs, lika now; utility tabla; Admiral staroa hi-fi record player, lika new; lot of records; lata model 6 piece bad ream suite,, walnut finish, nice; lika now double bad, camplata with spring A mattress, with bookcase headboard; full size rollaway bad; cedar chest; beak case; Eureka sweeper, complete with attachments; dining roam suite with A chairs A matching buffet; 2 extra nice 9x12 wool rugs; taupe brawn 2 piece living roam suite, extra nice; late model RCA Victor television sat; gold rocker; platform swivel rocker; matching and table A comer table; kneehole desk A chair; beveled glass mirror; antique table; lot of dishes, antique bawls; lot of linens, doilies A bedding; Sunbeam Mixmaster, with attachments; Wearever cooking set; Sunbeam electric skillet; lot of cooking utensils; bath scale, single door utility cabinet; add pictures; let af whatnots; bed lamp; tree lamp; 2 floor lamps; table lamps, add tables; let af throw rugs; hassock; magasine rack; lot af flowers. Also Maytag automatic washer, less than year eld; Hamilton gas dryor; aluminum parch chairs; cabinat basa; Spaed Queen wringer type washer; twin tubs; nice picnic table; dehumidifier; straight chair; kitchen cabinet; antique night table; eld buffet; garden hose; 2 wheel chairs; pipe visa; largo visa; hydraulic jick; hand teals; fittings; alactrical supplies; 2 motors; alactric fan; paint; 2 lawn mawars, ana with garden attachments; lawn sweeper; croquet set; garden tools; step ladders; outdoor grill; kitchen sink; radio; hat plate,- lot fruit jars; and other items too numerous

nos: Cask Nat responsible far accidents MARIE SUTHERLIN OWNER Max Kckol, Auctioneer Roachdale Bank A Trust Company, Clerk This is an extra nice, clean line of household items. Plan new to attend this sale.

Smuggle cactus plant into U.S. SAN LUIS POTOSI, Mexico UPI—Large amounts of peyote, a hallucinatory cactus plant, are being smuggled into the United States from the Mexican desert, a scientist reported Wednesday. Dr. Fernando Medellin, director of the Desert Research Institute, said the desert was being picked clean of the plant which he said is needed for biological research. Medellin said the smugglers were working on a large-scale basis, taking out huge truckloads of peyote. Export of the psychedelic cactus is banned by law. Peyote has a good market In the United States where college students chew it for Its hallucinatory effects, Medellin said.

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