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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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I 1 i Jo- KEJTjJCKy EDITIoTJliH i (1 1) 1 U.H 1 1 I sH 11 si I iir 4 126TH YEAR NO. 252 SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 17, 1966 PRICE 10 CENTS HOME DELIVERED 30c A WEEK Historic Move All Of iirooe ill Len Jiiar lo UN Invokes Oil Embargo On Rhodesia Our Symphony jmw" i il iiiiiijvwmi.m. wnpiK P' ItJ I BY HENRY S. HUMPHREYS Enquirer Music Critic Cincinnati's world -touring Symphony Orchestra will travel abroad again next year, The Enquirer learned exclusively Friday night. Lloyd Haldeman, manager of the symphony, disclosed that the 100-plece orchestra, directed by maestro Max Rudolf, has been invited by the leading impresarios of Europe to play in the major cities there.

Cities on the three-week itinerary include London, Paris, Berlin, Hamburg, Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Brussels, with possible dates In Frankfort (Germany), Maestro Rudolf's native city and a few others. Under present plans th mands that it "deplore" Britain's refusal to use force to overthrow the minority regime of Premier Ian D. Smith or the refusal of South Africa and Portugal to enforce voluntary sanctions voted against Rhodesia last May. The oil embargo was approved by a 14-0 vote, with one abstention, after Lord Caradon, British minister of state, expressed London's willingness to accept it. The order, contained in an African amendment to a British resolution proposing more moderate sanctions, compels all UN members to prevent: "Participation in their territories or territories under their administration or in land or air transport facilities or by their nationals or vessels of their registration in the supply of oil or oil products to Southern Rhodesia." Enauirer (Bob Free) Photo Friday at the Eden Park Conservatory.

A blue spruce, the giant tree is decorated with hundreds of leaves, seeds and pod containers formed to depict characters in the short but happy life of Frosty the Snow Man. Height Of Cheer Kindergarten children from Lockland School gaze wide-eyed at the Education Christmas Tree which went on display Tiny Tina Mom 's Big Girl 'Not Says Lodge WASHINGTON CP) Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge asserted at the White House Friday that he is "not worried" about the war in Vietnam. He said V. S. efforts there have protected "the great edge of Eastern Asia" from Red Chinese expansion.

The U. S. envoy to Saigon talked to newsmen in the White House after a lengthy conference with President Johnson, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Arthur J. Goldberg, ambassador to the United Nations.

Mr. Lodge said the President had asked him to come out and report on how things look in the war. Yank Bombs Hit Embassy, Peking Says UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) Ordering mandatory sanctions for the first time in its history, the Security Council Friday voted to embargo oil for white-ruled Rhodesia and decreed a ban on 10 of the runaway British colony's most vital cash-earning exports.

The Council rejected African demands for a comprehensive ban on the export of coal and all manufactured products from the rebellious territory. The Council also rejected an African "invitation" to Britain to enforce the oil embargo "by all means." This would have been tantamount to a UN order to Britain to impose a naval blockade which would have had to embrace the extensive coastline of Southern Africa, including South Africa and Portuguese territories. THE COUNCIL also refused black Africa's de Mrs. Triplett told police a faint was what happened at 6:30 a. m.

Friday, a half-hour after her husband had left for work at the W. R. Grace Co. plant at 4775 Paddock Rd. Her fall into the tub caused head and elbow bruises.

About one hour and 20 minutes later Mrs. Charles L. Calvert answered the phone in Evendale GE's office and got the mystery message: "My name is Tina Marie. My mommy is asleep in the bathroom and I can't wake her up." Mrs. Calvert pried from Tina that she lived on what sounded like "Allegheny Drive" but she couldn't seem to remember her last name.

She did say that they'd New Red China A-Blast Due, Officials Say PARIS American officials reported Friday night Red China soon may explode another nuclear device. The information was based on intelligence reports reaching Washington, the officials said. American authorities said they also believe the Chinese by the mid-1970s will have developed a long-range missile able to cany nuclear warheads. These were among the considerations that led Secretary of State Dean Rusk to put the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) on notice Thursday that almost all of North America could become a target of a Chinese nuclear attack. Informants said the secretary left no doubt in the minds of his fellow foreign ministers that, if such an attack is launched, the Americans would invoke the North Atlantic Treaty.

This lays down that an unprovoked attack on the territory of any member nation is to be regarded as an attack on all 15. Peking announced last October 27 the successful testing of a guided missile with a nuclear warhead. in the European festivals in July Lucerne, Switzerland, Athens, Greece and Dubro-vinik, Yugoslavia, Mr. Haldeman said. The manager pointed out November is the prime time for major music events in Europe; that the CSO was offered participation in several important summer festivals.

However, the festivals were rejected In favor of the autumn events, which will be in the major concert halls of Europe's major cities. Heretofore this has been a privilege reserved for such U. S. orchestras as the New York Philharmonic, the Boston and Philadelphia orchestras. Bus Fares 'Holding' For 1967 Wallace Power, city utilities director, looks for bus fares of the Cincinnati Transit to remain pegged at present levels throughout 1967.

"In my opinion and in the company's opinion there will not have to be a fare increase next year," Mr. Power stated late Friday. Mr. Power provided bus riders with this encouraging news after receiving the company's fare adjustment statement for the first six months of 1967, indicating no need for increases. Mr.

Power said the statement projects a net return on capital investments in the first half of next year of $127,094.62. This is substantially more than the minimum 3 allowed by the franchise, but well under the $178,214.63 permitted at the maximum 6, Mr. Power noted. There were indications that Mr. Power would approve the overall fare adjustment statement he has five days to act even though he might find some fault with certain items.

The company raised the cash fare from 25 to 30 cents last July 1 after its projection for the final half of this year showed it would not attain its minimum allowable return. The token fare was kept at 25 cents. Thieves Take 472 Xmas Trees Off Newport Lot Theft of 472 Christmas trees worth $1062 from a lot at Sixth and Oak Newport, was reported to Newport police Friday by William Knock, 509 Third Dayton, the lot proprietor. Patrolman Ronald Collins said the trees were there when he checked the premises at 4 a. m.

Friday. The theft was reported to police at 9:10 a. m. The trees were valued at $2.25 each. entourage will leave the United States October 30, and return on about November 20.

(The tour will not disrupt the regular subscription series, which will begin on September 23.) This time the tour will not be like last summer's round-the-world tour which was under the sponsorship of the U. S. State Department. Instead, it will be backed by private capital of Cincinnati music patrons, Mr. Haldeman said.

The principal backers will not be named until a later date, he said. The invitations grew out of the tremendous acclaim received by the orchestra in its last tour, especially city limits similarly went unrecognized. The U. S. Military command in Saigon issued this denial: "A complete review of reports and photographs showed that all ordnance expended by U.

S. strike aircraft was in the military target areas (five miles south and six miles northeast of the city's center). None fell in the city of Hanoi." A STATEMENT by a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, broadcast from Peking, said: "On the afternoon of December 14, the United States sent large numbers of pirate planes to carry out renewed wanton bombing raids on Hanoi and brazenly dive bomb the Chinese Embassy in the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam, causing serious damage to its premises "This is clearly a grave provocation which the U. S. imperialism has carried out deliberately against the Chinese people.

"The Chinese government and people express great Indignation over this and strongly protest against the U. S. government. "We hereby warn the U. S.

government: Your bombing of the Chinese Embassy is a mere death-bed struggle and can only further arouse the unbounded indignation of the Chinese people against U. S. imperialism; you will certainly receive redoubled punishment for your crime." -Enauirer (Cochran) Photo Heroine At 5-Tina Marie i with "reward" from daddy coloring book and crayons In a Northbrook home Friday three children five, three and two years old were crying by the bathtub in which mother lay "asleep" They cried until "acting mother" Tina Marie Trip-lett, the five-year-old, lifted the phone at 9815 Allege-heny Dr. and randomly dialed a number. After that in a General Electric Co.

office eight miles away, a group of workers postponed jet-age responsibilities until they could find out who frightened child Tina Marie was and, more importantly, where she was. THE CREW did find out then, thanks to them, police and neighbors converged on the Allegheny Drive home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Triplett to find that Mrs.

Triplett, 24, had wakened from a faint and managed to wobble to bed Twice hospitalized for a heart ailment since August, against him, and he was sentenced to the Workhouse for six months next day on that charge. His attorneys, Donald Roney and Burton Signer, filed a motion for a new trial, however, claiming, among other things that the atmosphere in Criminal Court was "hostile." WHEN MR. SIGNER told Judge George S. Heitzler, Laskey had an alibi in a girl friend at the time he was supposed to have followed Mrs. Chapas, hearing on the motion was continued to December 20.

The girl friend, a go-go dancer who performs in local swing spots, was out-of-town when Mr. Signer appeared before Judge Heitzler. She is expected to return to town this Indicted On Of Murder thrown some covers on mommy. (When police arrived they found that Tina apparently also had tried to give breakfast to Mike, three, and Teresa, two.) FROM TIME to time Tina left the phone to try to wake her mother. Mrs.

Calvert asked her to go to a neighbor's for help but Tina said she wasnt allowed to leave the house! There was also the problem of keeping Tina on the phone while the office staff traced the call. Murray Solomon relieved Mrs. Calvert on the line; said he was Santa's helper; managed to keep Tina occupied with Christmas chitchat while Mrs. Barbara Wood, Ed Meyer, Francis Estes and Bill Schindler 'sweated" over county map, directories, calls to the telephone company, calls to police. Tina finally said her father's name was 'Triplett Jack" and the GE'ers found 'Triplett, Jack in the phone directory.

They contacted neighbors who hastened to the house. Deputy Sheriff Stanley Duffy also responded to the alarm. They found Mrs. Triplett, still feeling a bit groggy but in no real danger. GE officials were proud of that office crew who put so much heart and effort into solving the mystery of caller Tina Marie.

The crew? 'We're chipping in to buy some Christmas presents for the children," said a spokesman. "That way we'll atone for deceiving Tina by saying we were Santa's helpers!" Private Rites Held For Disney HOLLYWOOD (UPD Private services were conducted Friday night for Walt Disney at the Little Church of the Flowers, Forest Lawn Cemetery, in nearby Glendale. No prior announcement was made of the service. Mr. Disney died Thursday at the age of 65.

To help the Neediest Kids Of All, donations may be made to The Cincinnati Enquirer, 617 Vine or The WKRC Stations, 1906 Highland Ave. Please make checks or money orders payable to "Neediest Kids Of All." List of contributors, page 4. To Date: $16,946.00 Thanks! says he assaulted and robbed her of $28 when she was working in the church office. LASKEY WILL BE arraigned before Common Pleas Judge William R. Matthews at 9 p.

Monday. He is being held in the Workhouse without bond on probation violation charge. He was on probation in a 1965 conviction for assault and battery on a woman when picked up a week ago. Laskey's automobile license number had been copied shortly after midnight of the morning Miss Kerrick was strangled, when a suspicious neighbor noticed a man follow a young Court Street woman into her apartment building. Mrs.

Sandra Chapas, 22, signed an assault warrant TOKYO Red China charged Friday that U. S. planes dive-bombed and seriously damaged its embassy in Hanoi and hit the nearby office of the New China News Agency (NCNA) Wednesday. Coupled with this was a Chinese threat of "redoubled punishment." From Hanoi came a broadcast declaration that American pilots fired rockets at the embassies of both the Chinese and Communist Romania during raids in the area of the North Vietnamese capital Wednes day. This broadcast said nothing about damage.

NEITHER mentioned casualties. A French account had reported that the Chines Embassy was "touched by a projectile," a phrasing ambiguous both as to the origin of any such projectile and the result. Peking, Hanoi and other Communist centers ignored American statements, issued in Washington and Saigon, denying that any American bombs had fallen within Hanoi during attacks Tuesday and Wednesday on a truck park and railroad yards flanking the city. In rapid succession, leaders of four East European Communist countries accused the United States of bombing nonstrategic targets in Hanoi. The govern ments of Romania, Czechoslovakia and Hungary and Bulgaria's national assembly labelled the Hanoi area raids as an escalation of the war and a new threat to world peace.

The Implication that shells or missiles fired by Communist antiaircraft crews accounted for any havoc wrought within the Want To Be A Landlord? If you've got a house to rent, for heaven's sake take advantage of The Enquirer Classified columns. It's consistently been our experience (most recently in the case of Mrs. David Reece) that when houses are advertised, there are hundreds of responses. Call 421-6300 to place an ad that will make you a landlord in no time. mmmmmmmmmmwmm Laskey Charge Posteal Laskey a suspect in six strangulations of middle-aged and elderly women, was indicted on a first degree murder charge Friday in the death of a 31-year-old Price Hill secretary.

Miss Barbara Bowman, 2909 Warsaw was stabbed and run over, apparently by a stolen taxi-cab, shortly after she left a Corryville cafe August 14 with a man posing as a taxicab driver. Laskey, 29, of 1820 Freeman picked up a week ago following the killing of Miss Lula Kerrick, 81, in an elevator at the Brittany Apartments, Ninth and Race drove for the Yellow Cab Co. for six months in 1963. THE INDICTMENT returned against Laskey in the Bowman killing contained two counts: purposeful and premeditated murder and murder when perpetrating a robbery. Miss Bowman was known to have been saving money for a vacation.

It has not been found. The Hamilton County Grand Jury returned two other indictments against the goateed, guitar-playing Laskey: Two counts of robbery and assault to rob Mrs. Delle S. Ernst, 69, at her home, 2012 Edgecliff Walnut Hills, October 4. Two counts of robbery and assault to rob Mrs.

Virginia Hinners at the New Thought Unity Center, 1401 E. McMillan September 21. Mrs. Ernst, who has identified Laskey as her assailant, told police he hit her in her face, knocked her to the floor and fled with her purse containing $130 when she entered the hallway of her home. And Mrs.

Hinners, who also has Identified Laskey, World-Wide HELD IN JAIL: U. S. lawyer denied access to American client held in Russian jail on currency, theft charges. Page 42. DISNEY: Newspapers all over the world note the death of Walt Disney in sorrowful comment.

Page 42. gam The Nation A NEW Gov. Warren E. Hearnes Mo.) says unless President Johnson changes his approach, Democrats should seek a new candidate for the nation's top office in 1968. Page 5.

BATTLE OF THE BOOK: Mrs. John F. Kennedy opens court fight in Manhattan to prevent publication of controversial book about assassination of her husband the late President. Page 26. New Enquirer Feature Traces Family Names Your family's name In history and its origin can be traced through the fascinating study of coats of arms.

In a new six-days-a-week feature in 'Monday's Enquirer, Joe T. Boyes will explore "The World of Heraldry." Family names perhaps yours will be explained, and the coat of arms shown along with recognition of famous members of the family tree. You can even send for more Information or a reproduction of your family coat of arms through this new Enquirer feature. Did you know, for example, that Harrison is No. 103 on the list of America's biggest family names? Namesakes range from Presidents to pop singers.

Do you know why Eskimos build totem poles? Why Indians were war paint? Joe Boyes explains the background. Coats of arms developed in medieval days when knights In armor had difficulty telling the good guys from the opposition. Family arms have distinct colors, designs and shapes. Look for this new feature on family names, begin-ning Monday in The Enquirer. Page Amusements 10-11 Book Reviews ...26 Business 14-18, 27 Church News 18-19 Classified Comics 24-25 Court News 7 Crossword 25 Deaths 27 Editorials 6 Kentucky News Variable cloudiness and little change in temperature.

Low in the low 30s, high in the upper 40s. Tonight mostly cloudy and cool, low near 30. Sunday mostly cloudy and not so warm. Precipitation probability: 10 chance of showers today and 30 tonight. Details, Map On Page 8 Page Horse Sense ....24 Restaurant Guide 14-15 Society News ....4 Sports 26 Star Gazer 25 TV-Radio 8 Van Dellen 25 Word Game 24 Word Jumble ....9 2, 4, 18, 22, 27 Temporarily Stop Sunday Delivery Call Before Thursday P.

M. Telephone 721-2700 Classified 421-6300, 8 a. m. to 5 p. m.

Closed en Sunday, CIRCULATION SERVICE To TO SERVE YOU BETTER CALL EARLY.

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Pages Available:
4,581,924
Years Available:
1841-2024