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The Indianapolis Star du lieu suivant : Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 67

Lieu:
Indianapolis, Indiana
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67
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THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR WEATHER TODAY Showm, Cool High, 74; Low, 57 Yratrrday High, 71; Low, SI TODAY'S CHUCKLE You cannot expect become i skilled conversationalist any longer- antil cm lean bow to put your foot tactfully through the television set 'Where the ipirit of the Lord it, there Liberty" II Cor. 317 VOL. 70, NO. 30 Asians Hail Korean Peace WEDNESDAY, AT DELAYING CHESS MATCH -it RUSSIAN TAKES HIS TURN American Prisoners Transferred To Bobby Bows In, But Boris Bows Out BOBBY FISCHER (LEFT PHOTO) ARRIVES IN ICELAND; U.S. Chess King Buys Magazines After Arriving At JULY 5, 1972 BORIS SPASSKY Keflavik Airport; Keith Bulen in Campaign Communicators a Republican political public relations organization.

He was employed in that capacity during Mayor Richard G. Lugar's successful re-election bid last year. Finneran formerly operated his own advertising agency, which is now defunct. THE NEWLY CREATED position will pay $12,000 a year, said Leak, who added, "He'll also be responsible for the fire department, dog pound and safety director plus the police department." However, Finneran's office will be next to Churchill's in the police wing of the City-County Building. The office was formerly occupied by Maj.

Frank A. Spallina, Churchill's former administrative assistant. "We don't want to keep the press from stories we want the public to know what we are doing," said Leak. Finneran actually will start work today in a "learning capacity" to acquaint himself with his task, Leak disclosed. Although the new safety program has not been outlined, Leak commented that young people are not heeding the Now You Know By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL The longest word ever to appear in literature occurs in the Ecclesia-zusae, a comedy by Aristophanes about 400 B.C.

In the Greek it contains 170 letters but transliterates into these 180 letters in English: lopadotenachoselachogaleokraniolcip-sanodrimhygotrimmatosilphioparaomci-tokatakechymenokichlepikossyphophat-toperisgeralektryonoptekephalliokgklop-elciolagoiosiraiobaphetraganopterygon. The term describes a goulash of 14-day leftovers. USE FALLOUT SHELTER 'Free POW Chief Says He Knows Copenhagen, Denmark (AP) The Rev. Paul A. Lindstrom, national chairman of the Remember the Pueblo Committee, said yesterday he had "positive information" that American war prisoners were being transferred from North Vietnam to China.

Lindstrom gave a news conference during an airport stopover on his way to Sweden. He said that transports of American prisoners to China mainly by boat-had been speeded up since April 20. He said that as recently as June 4-6, nine American pilots had been transferred from North Vietnam camps to China. HE CLAIMED that Henry A. Kissinger had tried, but failed, to get these or any other prisoners released.

Kissinger, President Nixon's special adviser, was at Peking last month. Lindstrom complained that no one ever thought of the American prisoners in the hands of the Pathet Lao in Laos. The Remember the Pueblo Committee was founded after the seizure of the United States Navy vessel Pueblo by North Koreans in 1968 to press for the release of the 82 crew members. IN 1969 IT expanded its activities to seek to secure the release of any U.S. citizens "illegally imprisoned" in any foreign country.

Lindstrom is visiting Scandinavia to win support for the Douglas MacArthur Brigade a group of U.S. Vietnam veterans and mercenaries recruited to rescue American prisoners. Lindstrom said influential military men in Saigon wanted to organize raids to free the prisoners, but were denied permission by Washington. The brigade of 150 men is ready to liberate the war prisoners soon, Lindstrom said. The planned raids would be aimed at North Vietnam, north Cambodia and north Laos, he said.

At a later news conference in Jonkoping, Sweden, Lindstrom said about 200 U.S. prisoners had been taken in Laos by the Pathet Lao. Today's Prayer Help me to live by and for truth, and not by or for or with lies and half-truths. Help me to establish my personal life on the eternal foundation of love and right. Help me to make the welfare of all the supreme principle of my actions.

Amen. Veteran Jet Young People Primary Target Of New City Safety Program CAtmi ocLiviRce ic eca 1 rw MOToa oelivirio nc eaa 4 eo China? Hope Seen For Area Stability Hong Kong (UPI) Asian nations generally welcomed the start of a detente between North and South Korea yesterday as a step toward peace in the Pacific. They saw the opening of negotiations between the North and South, divided since World War II, as a hopeful sign for the region. Veteran diplomat Carlos P. Romulo, the Philippines' foreign secretary, said the Seoul-Pyongyang agreement to end hostilities "is welcome news and it is t0 be hoped that it will lead ultimately to the reunification of the great Korean people." AT WASHINGTON, American officials, while expressing great pleasure at the agreement between North and South Korea to begin substantive negotiations, warned against undue optimism at this time.

They said the situation is much the same as that between West Germany and Communist East Germany was when those two countries more than two years ago first began discussions to try to eliminate some of the outstanding irritants between them. The goal of German reunification still is far in the future, if it ever occurs. But tensions between the two countries have been greatly eased, in part due to continuing pressure from the Soviet Union and the United States on their respective friends. (THE WASHINGTON Post said yesterday Nixon administration specialists had described the Korean agreement as a "major change" in the East Asian political landscape one bound to have far-reaching consequences. (According to the Post, the experts believe the announcement of the secret negotiations represents a particularly severe psychological blow to North Vietnam in view of the heavy commitment of South Korean troops to the war against the Communists in South Vietnam.

(Moreover, the Post quoted the experts as saying, the decision by North Korea to negotiate with fiercely anti-Communist South Korea further isolates Hanoi diplomatically and ideologically as the only Communist state still unwilling to compromise with its rival.) IN JAPAN, which stands to benefit from an opening of trade with North Korea, Foreign Minister Takeo Fukuda issued a statement saying the Korean dialogue is of "historic significance" Turn to Page 17, Column 4 Inside Today's Star News Summary On Page 3 Amusement Pages .36, 37 Billy Graham 25 Bridge 25 Collins 62 Comics 40 Crossword .25 Editorials ...20 Finance Food Obituaries Sports TV-Radio Want Ads Weather Women's .48 .32 .30 44-48 ...16 50-61 .61 11-13 61 Court News And Statistics Star Telephone Numbers Main Office 633-1240 Circulation 633-921 1 Want Ads 633-1212 Scores After 4:30 p.m. 633-1200 cooler. When I come home in the evening I spend about three or four hours here, cooking supper and relaxing. My wife uses the main kitchen." Most shelters were built during the era of the Cuban missile crisis 10 years ago this autumn. Contractors did a booming business but as the urgency of protection fell off, so did the fallout shelter trade.

"The number of inquiries since the Cuban situation has tapcrci off very rapidly," Kenneth LaTourette, the state Civil Defense operations officer, said In Turn to Page 17, Column 1 By MONTE I. TRAMMER Appointment of a safety co-ordinator is among steps being taken by the Indianapolis Department of Public Safety in a new program' to make the citizens more safety conscious particularly concerning drownings and fires. A co-ordinated effort among the police and fire departments will begin Monday when Patrick J. Finneran begins his work in the capacity of safety co-ordinalor, William A. Leak, director of the Department of Public Safety, announced yesterday.

Young people are the primary target of the safety effort, Leak declared. ALTHOUGH THE I I assumes the title of safety co-ordinator, Finneran, in effect, will be the public information director for the Indianapolis Police Department that Chief Winston L. Churchill has sought for the last two years. Finneran presently is employed by L. Reykjavik, Iceland (AP) Now it's Boris Spassky's turn to say no and the world chess championship is off again.

The Russian titleholder launched his counterattack yesterday wilh a stern protest, some sharp criticism, a walkout and a demand for a two-day postponement of the start of the match with American Bobby Fischer. Fischer slept through it all. He had arrived in the morning from New York and went straight to bed to rest up for the first game, set for 5 p.m. When Fischer woke up he found that the title series had been put off until tomorrow at the earliest. It was to have begun last Sunday.

SUMMING UP the day, Max Euwe, president of the International Chess Federation, said: "When Spassky is here, Fischer doesn't come. As soon as Fischer comes, Spassky runs away." The Russians turned up in force at noon for what was to be a drawing of lots to decide who would play white, and have the first move, in the opener. They refused to draw with Fischer's second, a Roman Catholic priest, the Rev. William Lombardy, and read a statement calling Fischer's delaying holdout intolerable. They protested Euwe's decision to tolerate it.

When Fischer failed to appear Sunday as he should have, Euwe allowed him until noon yesterday to show up at Reykjavik or forfeit his shot at Spassky. FISCHER'S refusal to come by Sunday was based on a dispute with the organizers over money. The argument was settled Monday when British financier James Slater offered to sweeten an aiready record pot with a donation of 50,000 British pounds about $130,000. Fischer said he would play. The organizers were offering a purse of $125,000, five-eighths or $78,125 going to the winner and three-eighths or $46,875 to the loser.

Slater's donation is in addition to this. Each player also is to get 30 per cent of the $250,000 paid for television and movie rights to the match. The Russians said yesterday that Fischer had violated the rules of the match. They demanded a personal apology from Fischer. Spassky has been quoted as saying Fischer had "insulted" the Soviet Union.

Euwe reported they had some harsh words for him as well. "I'm a bad boy," the 71-year-old Dutchman said with a smile. Spassky read his statement from what looked like an official document in Russian. It created the impression that he was acting on Moscow's orders. A DISPATCH by Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said Spassky had Turn to Page 17, Column 1 Pilot Dies THE WRECKAGE was found from the air by Wendell Hinkle of Fortescue, a pilot who took off from a private airfield nearby.

Morrison's body was discovered by Albert Brown, also of Fortescue, who said he was drawn to a grove of trees by straps hanging in the limbs. The straps were from the pilot's flight suit. The pilot spent Friday night in Missoula, Saturday night in Sunday night in Rapid City, S.D., and Monday night in Sioux Falls, S.D. The Federal Aviation Administration said Morrison had not filed a flight plan. While piloting the open aircraft, Morrison wore a football helmet, smoked goggles and a flight suit.

The entire The Wcalhcr Joe Crow Says: It's rather unusual to find a couple of chess players who can't make up their minds. Indianapolis Variable cloudiness and cool today with chance of showers. Mostly sunny and mild tomorrow with low of 50, high of 72. Indiana Partly cloudy and cool today north; chance of showers central and south. Mostly sunny and mild tomorrow with lows In upper 40s north and 55 south.

In Crash (AP Wirmholos) HOLDS CAR DOOR FOR COMPANIONS Russians Stage Protest Walkout safety instructions they receive in school. The present safety education programs must be strengthened to provide guidance of the young when school is out, he said. It is very difficult to interest youths in attending voluntary safety education programs outside of school, he added. IT IS HOPED, Leak said, that the safety co-ordinator can pinpoint spots where area residents meet informally such as parks or community centers so police and firemen can be sent to talk to both adults and young people about ways to save their own lives. In his discussion of the new safety program, Leak cited a recent fire and two drownings.

If firemen had been notified earlier, he said, they might have been able to rescue two persons who died in a fire Monday night in a residence at 3148 East Iowa Street, Leak observed. The victims were Mrs. Charlene Matthews, 40, and her 6-month-old granddaughter, Dana Matthews. Although fire prevention men have been working diligently, they "have been spinning their wheels" as far as results are concerned, Leak said. MEANWHILE, a $6,000 appropriation for scuba-diving equipment has been made in an attempt to reduce the drowning death rate, Leak said.

The action comes in the wake of the drowning of two youths. The two young drowning victims in the last eight days in Indianapolis, Ross Allen Painter, 14, 7928 East Penway Street, and Michael A. Kelly, 15, 4559 North Carrollton Avenue, are reported to have said they could swim the distance that proved fatal, Leak pointed out. Kelly drowned Monday, while fishing, when he waded into White River in the 1100 block of White River Park-Turn to Page 17, Column 4 wine cellars, dens, tool shops, or children's playrooms. Some persons who built the shelters were reluctant to talk about them.

Others said their shelters were scaled several years ago. LAUER, HOWEVER, uses his regularly. The Westfield resident called it "a home away from home." "I get a lot of pleasure out of it," he said. "I have police radios, television, cooking facilities, a refrigerator and canned food storage." 1 sleep here in the summer. It's Of Old-Fashioned Plane Repl ica plane was scarcely wider than the cabin of the 747 jet he usually flew.

THE PLANE WAS completed by Roy (Buck) Wheat's aviation class at Big Bend Community College at Moses Lake. It had an 85 horsepower about double the power of the original Pusher in which Morrison soloed in 1932. The wing was mounted on struts above the fuselage and just behind the cockpit. The engine was located at the rear of the wing, facing backward. The aircraft carried a battery-operated two-way radio for contact with control towers at small airports.

The cross country flight takes less than half a day in the kind of plane Morrison piloted as an Eastern captain. DURING AN interview before he took off, Morrison, who had only eight months to go before retirement, said he expected his biggest problems to be the mountains of Idaho and western Montana, the danger of sudden thunderstorms In the Midwest and rugged terrain near Chattanooga. He said then that if he ran into trouble he would try to land on a highway or in an open field. The Pusher carried only enought fuel for 2V4-hour jumps at a time and Morrison had to land about every 150 miles to refuel. Morrison, who had logged more than 50,000 hours of flying time, said he had gone through six weeks of intensive training when he learned to fly the 747 Jumbo Jets.

The widow, Mrs. Lil Kirk Morrison, was traveling overseas with her son, Morrison. St. Joseph, Mo. (AP) -Junius D.

Morrison, a veteran jet pilot who wanted to fly cross-country in the kind of plane he first soloed in four decades ago, was killed yesterday when hig open-cockpit aircraft crashed in a field near Napier, Mo. The body of the 59-year-old Morrison, an Eastern Airlines 747 Jumbo Jet pilot from Miami Shores, was found about 1,000 feet from the wreckage of the aircraft, which he was flying from Moses Lake, to his home. "I LEARNED to fly in a plane like this 40 years ago, and I thought it would be sort of a lark to take my vacation and fly across the country in one," Morrison said during a stopover at Rapid City, S.D. The replica was built to resemble a Curtiss-Wright "Pusher" plane. Morrison left Moses Lake Friday afternoon and was making 150-mile hops, averaging about 60 miles an hour along the way.

Melvin Eugene Hutton of Fortescue, who was driving a car on a county road, said: "1 saw the plane go into a spin and saw an object fall from the craft apparently the pilot's body." C1U Mil ALEUT F.inerqpnen Only Other iCl.l-.lOOO Firs Rescue (First Aid) 634-1313 Enrgency Ambiance 630-7111 Want Cool Place To Cook, Sleep, Store Wine, Let Children Play? Newark, N.J. (AP)-Mrs. William Weiss keeps her Bordeaux wines there. Mrs. Aaron Bernstein's children use it to store fish tanks.

Raymond Lauer finds it's a great place to relax and cook a quiet dinner. They all have found a new use for an old fad: the fallout shelter. In the early 1060s home owners fearing a nuclear holocaust brought in the bulldozers, tore holes In their backyards, and built private bomb shelters. Ten years later, a spot check of owners around New Jersey show most of trA shelters have been converted to.

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