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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 2

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

"i A'adna nor mmnpj i v. i O' I 4 cr r-rr Of Pair Hunled Here i urea tenet Alii i A A BU'j-NtSS COLLIGE Ind'onopwl-s. Muncie Lcjanport, Anderson, Th: the INC oers are ct Lntj'. A tattooed holdup man who to Peru, where his father Ccluir.bus. P-ctimond.

and Vincennes. in- in 1902 kidnaped a Dayton (O.) couple Charles kmsey, resides See, write, or phone the location preferred, cr Central Business College Indiana Business College Building 802 N. Meridian Sr. Indianapolis ME 4-8337 Besides two charges of armed robbery, Kinsey faces Federal charges of kidnaping and unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. and forced them to drive to Indianapolis yesterday was being sought by police in Indiana and Ohio.

Montgomery County sheriffs officials at Dayton said the wanted man is James R. Kinsey, described as a sandy-haired beatnick who refers to everyone as "Daddy-o." Kinsey has tattoos on both arms, including his name on his right arm. He is reported to have held up two service stations in the Dayton area, the first at about 2:30 a.m. yesterday. It promised that Belgian troops would be withdrawn as soon as the U.N.

convoy arrived. ACCORDING TO the Belgian advice, the paratroopers temporarily took over the town of Tshikapa and its airfield. Fierce Baluba and Lulua tribesmen have been waging war between themselves in the area for almost two years, with a death toll in the hundreds. This was the first time since trouble erupted in the Congo that the tribesmen have moved against whites. Leopold Ire Lonpo (LTI) The Belgians were reported yesterday to have sent paratroopers to the Kasai Province town of Tshikapa to protect white settlers threatened by warrior tribes.

The Belgian Defense Ministry informed United Nations headquaters here that 80 para-troppers were dropped in the area some 400 miles southeast of Leopoldville Monday. The Ministry said the action was taken after Belgian military authorities estimated that a U.N. force move to Tshikapa by road would not arrive in time to protect the Europeans there. DOWNTOWN The warring tribes hid been kept under control by the Congolese army before it went to pieces in the post-independence chaos of recent weeks. AT LEOPOLDVILLE, a U.N.

spokesman said yesterday the United Nations now has a total of 7,691 troops in the Congo. The spokesman said an additional 1,200 to 1,500 Ethiopians were flying directly into Stanleyville without passing through the U.N. headquarters at Leopoldville. (U.S. Air Force headquarters at Wiesbaden, Germany, announced yesterday that a force of 680 Irish soldiers and 112 tons of equipment will begin movement to the Congo today aboard U.S, planes).

The U.N. spokesman said that U.N. Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold would stay one day longer than originally planned at Leopoldville four or five days instead of three to four days. Hammarskjold is scheduled to fly to the Congo from Brussels tonight after a day of talks with Belgian government The UJmM. ock Eu GLENDALE' Special Sale! CHRISTMAS CARDS KlNSEY'S CAR developed transmission trouble after the second robbery and he found the couple, Mr.

and Mrs. Gary in a nearby self service laundry, as a 30-man search party was about to close in on him. He forced them at gunpoint to drive to Indianapolis. Kinsey told the couple "I'll be gunning for you if you tell them where I went" when they dropped him off in downtown Indianapolis. Gary Opdyke, 25, told Montgomery County officials that Kinsey warned him about driving within the speed limit.

Opdyke said Kinsey seemed to have a sprained right ankle. "He reeked with whisky," Opdyke said. After dropping Kinsey off, Opdyke called a friend, a constable in the Dayton area, who reported the kidnaping. Indi Caslro brim At Rally; No Foes Appear Las Mercedes, Cuba (AP) Prime Minister Fidel Castro, looking haggard and stern, drew cheers yesterday at a massive rally celebrating the seventh anniversary of the revolutionary movement that swept him to power. The crowds cheered as Castro arrived in a jeep with President Osvaldo Dorticos, who was all smiles and enthusiasm.

Pro-Castro radio and TV announcers sought to stir the thousands who fought rain, traffic jams and heat to get to this cradle of the revolution, into attacks on the United States with shouts of "Cuba, si. Yankee, no." That is the current popular slogan of the revolution. CASTRO WAS noticeably hoarse at a television interview he gave prior to opening the ceremonies. He said he was "far from satisfied" with the progress of rebuilding Oriente Province, where seven years ago he launched his rebellion against the government of Fulgencio Bastista with an abortive attack on a Santiago barracks July 26, 1953. There had been doubts that Castro, who has been seen infrequently in public since he was stricken recently by pneumonia, would appear for the celebation.

Delegates from the first Latin American Youth Congress and Iron Curtain countries helped swell the throng that gathered in Las Mercedes, little more than a collection of shacks and shanties in the foothills of the sierra maestra. GOVERNMENT officials claimed the celebration would attract a1 half million persons but observers on the, scene placed the crowd at less than 250,000. Uniformed militiamen and women made up at least 90 per cent of the gathering. Thousands who began the rugged, wearing trip to this remote region turned back hours before the program started. Rain had turned the area into a quagmire and roads were all but impassable.

Stiffling heat that followed the rain took its toll. An emergency hospital was packed with heat victims. Through midafternoon there was no report of any organized activity by anti-Castro groups, although there had been predictions of demonstrations to protest the growing influence of Communism in the I officials. (Orig. 1.00 to 6.25) 44 cool calm and gracefully composed brilliant black anapolis police were alerted about an hour after the couple arrived here.

FIRST REPORT of Kinsey's crime spree came when he threatened a sister-in-law liv A Special Group Of Cards Of Various Designs Now At This Unbelievable Price! Also Includes Family Cards 2 of Us, 3 of Us, etc. 25 Cards In All Boxes Shop early for best selection! 1.98 I) I I v41 ft it Pi 1 7 is ing north of Dayton. Kinsey is reported to have told her, "I'm going to become a big- time gangster." It was minutes later that AT BRUSSELS, Belgian cabinet sources said yesterday that Belgium would suggests to Hammarskjold that the U.N. assume economic as well as peace-preserving duties in the Congo.) Asked whether Hammarskjold would stop at Elisabeth-ville, the capital of secessinist Katanga province, the U.N. spokesman refused to make any statement.

"When leaving Leopold-ville," he said, "Hammarskjold will then proceed to South Africa to undertake conversations there which the Security Council has invited him to do." CONGOLESE Finance Minister Pascal Nkayi, meanwhile, told a news conference at Leopoldville that a financial development agreement made by Premier Patrice Lumumba with an American group was not valid because the cabinet was not consulted regarding it. Nkayi made the statement through his chief of cabinet, Albert Ndele. American financier Edgar Detwiler told newsmen Sunday that his firm, Congo International Management Corpora Kinsey robbed the first station, Favorite "find" for every woman's wardrobe. Completely basic, wearable now right into Fall. The cool celanese acetate Surprise Clearance Table! Drastically Reduced Items for you to tuck away 'til later.

Christmas Gift Wrap Rolls 1.00 to 2.50 NOW Vl Price herding the owner and three customers at gunpoint into a back room. The owner told police the gunman had the name "Kinsey" tattooed on his arm. An attendant got the license number of Kinsey's car. About 10 minutes later an: other station north of Dayton was robbed. In both robberies the same car was used.

Kinsey was traced through the license number and his tattoos. KINSEY IS described as being highly dangerous. He has sandy hair and green eyes and weighs about 160 pounds. He may be armed with a .38 caliber revolver, a hunting knife and a shotgun. and rayon fabric is impervious to wrinkles.

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Hatfield, convicted I no balance problem I j- murderer sentenced to die Aug. 22, in the electric chair at the Indiana State Prison, was granted a stay of execution yesterday by the Indiana Supreme Court. The 27-year-old Hatfield, a house painter, was convicted of first degree murder April 13 in Elkhart Superior Court for the brutal slaying of his 17-year-old wife, Mrs. Leavy Jane Hatfield. THE PRETTY teen-ager's body was found Dec.

6 behind an Elkhart church. She had been bludgeoned to death by a heavy piece of lumber, ac cording to deputy sheriffs. Hatfield was given the The swing is to "better your living1' with a death sentence by Judge Frank Treckelo after the jury had recommended the penalty. MERCHANTS The stay of execution was ordered by Chief Justice Amos mm W. Jackson in order to per tftUAL UltUMNb AU.UUNI mit Hatfield time to appeal the conviction to the Supreme Court.

6 Cubans Arrested Miami, Fla. (AP) Six Cubans were arrested yesterday for throwing beer bottles loaded with red paint at the homes of Fidel Castro supporters. Yesterday was the anniversary of Castro's revolutionary movement. No minimum balance required. No monthly service charge.

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Pages Available:
2,551,912
Years Available:
1862-2024