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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 13

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Location:
Nashville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sm 4 THI NASHVILLE TINNESSEAN. Tfcimfey. Mmfc l. UTO 13 Mutiny Involved 5: Captain Draff Education Program Slated The Nashville Moratorium Committee will sponsor a day at Wesley HalL 420 21st to coincide with this weeks observances of National Moratorium. "Anti-draft Week." Speakers will be two men who have refused to be drafted into military service, Joe Mulloy of the Southern Conference Educational Fund and Walter Collins, a black com- draft and "the relation of the draft to peace and political repression." Workshops will be held on "High School Students and the Draft," "Alternatives to the Draft" and "The Draft as a Political and Social Tool of the Government." munity organizer in New Orleans.

MULLOY'S conviction of draft evasion is being appealed to the Supreme Court. Program sponsors said the speakers will discuss their individual expressions with the draft education program to- McKay and Glatkowski as a rijuana-smoking hippies who opposed the Vietnam war. The ship, privately owned but operated by the military, was taking munitions to Thailand for use in Veetnam. Jerry W. Friedheim.

a Defense Department spokesman, said Swann radioed that one of the two mutineers had ii-dicated there would be mors such hijackings. In his cable to Thayer, Swann said he was forced at gunpoint to take his ship to Cambodia, maintaining radio silence. WASHINGTON (UPI) The captain of the hijacked SS Columbia Eagle believes Woman Charged In Dope Case A North Nashville woman was charged early yesterday morning with possession of narcotics, including a powder believed to be heroin, police said. Mary Osborne, 27, of 1929 16th Ave. was arrested at her home by Metro vice squad officers, who said they made a thorough search of the house.

Seized in the search were two packages of a "white powdery substance which is believed to be heroin, a cooking spoon which held a white residue, an assortment of red and black pills, about 15 empty clear plastic capsules containing a white residue, and a number of needles," Tom Fulton, a vice squad officer, said. "unable to prove but believed" that the three others were involved. He did not elaborate. HE ALSO said the Cambodians gave no indications bow long they would keep the ship and crew. But the State Department said yesterday the vessel was being "detained temporarily" while Cambodian authorities investigated to determine how it came to enter their waters.

The Defense Department, meantime, said Adm. John McCain commander of all U.S. forces in the Pacific, rejected suggestions from subordinates that the Navy forcibly retrieve the Columbia Eagle from Cambodia, which granted political asylum to McKay and Glatkowski. McCain's headquarters in Honolulu sent a message to him in Washington, where he was visiting at the time, and suggested a "contingency option" that called for the Coast Guard cutter Mellon, which was near Cambodian waters, to take over the Columbia Eagle, a spokesman said. SOURCES DESCRIBED that as many as five crewmen might have been involved in the mutiny that diverted the munitions ship to Cambodia, it was disclosed yesterday.

Capt. Donald Swann said in a cablegram that the ship was seized by "two armed hippies, Clyde McKay and Al-vin Glatkowski," but that three other seamen were believed to be "involved to some extent" He identified them as Don Monin, Bruce Gray and Maurice Sather. THE DISCLOSURE was made here by Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, who released the contents of a cablegram from Swann to I.

C. Thayer, president of the Columbia Steamship which leased the vessel to the Military Sea Transportation Service. In Portland, Thayer's company listed Monin as being from Phoenix, Gray from Merrick, Long Island, N.Y., and Sather from Motley, Minn. Glatkowski, 20, is from Long Beach, Calif. McKay, 25, is from Escondido, Calif.

Swann cabled that he was licide Prober New on Southern! KS1dSl) to Given Transfer Charles Hendricks, a homicide investigator for the past 13 months, has been transferred to the general crimes section, reportedly for failure to complete a report adequately. Sources in the department, however, said the transfer followed dispute with Homicide Lt. Kenneth Reasonover. CAPT. W.

A. (Mickey) Mc-Daniel, head of the detective division, said that Hendricks' transfer had nothing to do with misconduct or dereliction of duty. Asked by a reporter if the reason for the transfer was personal in nature, McDaniel said: "That is none of your business. I can move my men wherever I choose. I put them where I think they are best suited." Hendricks, who was intru-mental in solving two recent murders, could not be reached for comment last night.

Sources in the department said Hendricks was transferred out of the homicide division at the request of Reasonover. The sources added that Hendricks had made "some kind of comment about Reasonover's being replaced." Reasonover said he had never heard anything about Hendricks' making a comment like that and "the transfer certainly had nothing personal involved." However, Reasonover refused to disclose the reasons behind the transfer. (( CHARLOTTE AVE. at 11th 259-3300 cHmuCMilsT be )i 11 tf AT THE FOOT OF THE STATE CAPITOL SOLD IN THE N8XT 7 DAYS I I DURING STAR'S I SPRING SALE I JJJI "You'll Save Lots of 2( II "HUH!) IS 3fl' 131:11 fe-TT 1 'rtTJTrivv vnoti-3- Chrysler imperial II I Mrirk NEW YORKER LE BARON I (lMfes4 000 )( 1300 11 1 DISCOUNTS DISCOUNTS I t.K: 'D Cor Cor Norn, Plolt 1,1 7, I A II II I 1 1 UULM The fastest flight time. Southern has the earliest departure at 7:20 a.m.

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Pages Available:
2,723,576
Years Available:
1834-2024