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Redlands Daily Facts from Redlands, California • Page 2

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Redlands, California
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ALL IN and Gerald Snyder jokingly point to a poster on the wall of their home in Sterling, saying "Keep Your Hands Off My Wife." Mrs. Snyder caused a sensation when newspapers around the world carried a photograph of her in a low cut gown dancing with President Nixon at an inaugural ball. See photo on Page 1. UPI Telephoto. During first three months Court rules doctor to be sole judge on abortions (Continued from Page 1) from the majority opinion.

The Court took these other major actions before taking a two-week recess: to examine a 1972 New York state law aimed at assisting financially pressed parochial schools by the use of special tax credits, tuition grants and maintenance payments. A similar case from Pennsylvania also was accepted for arguments and a EB and FLO ruling either this spring or next fall. however, to stay a lower court decision which barred parents of children in Ohio nonpublic schools from receiving income tax credits. to stay a lower court ruling which would have allowed antiwar priests, Phillip and Daniel Berrigan, to travel to North Vietnam. Both are on parole from federal convictions stemming from their protest By Paul Sellers TAKE HO NOTICE.

MOTHER, HES IN ONE OF FUNHYKVovzl New bumper protects passengers at 50 MENLO PARK (UPI) of cars that crash at 50 miles-per-hour could be protected by a light aluminum bumper being developed by Ford Motor it was announced Sunday. Scientists at Stanford Research Institute said scale model. tests of the bumper North Vietnam regiments pinned down SAIGON (UPI) South Vietnamese infantrymen and armored units kept two battered North Vietnamese regiments pinned down in deep jungles north of Saigon today while U.S. Air Force B52s pounded the retreating Communists, military spokesmen said. Six waves of heavy bombers roared over the Michelin rubber plantation Sunday night and dropped more than 500 tons, of bombs on the Communist troops pulling deeper into the heavy jungles, according to U.S.

Command reports. Fighting broke out suddenly' 40 miles north of Saigon Friday afternoon when the. Communist force was caught, trying to sneak in near the capital area to grab land after a cease-fire. The two South Vietnamese battalions that made the initial contact were outnumbered and were mauled immediately. Military sources listed Communist regiments at about 1,600 men and the South Vietnamese troops at 1,000.

The Saigon command said 325 Communists were killed and South Vietnamese losses were 46 killed and 116 wounded. system were performed by SRI as part of Ford's Experimental Safety Vehicle Program to meet federal Department of Transportation specifications. Using Ve scale models weighing about six pounds, SRI accelerated the vehicle to 50 mph and then released it to coast freely into a rigid pole. Results showed that an aluminum bumper weighing about 50 pounds could meet Ford's needs, an SRI spokesman said. The bumper system includes shock absorbers and collapsible members between the bumper and the passenger the bumpers absorb the crash energy instead of the occupants.

"It is much the same as the difference between jumping on a rubber foam pad and a cement floor," said SRI. "In one case the foam rubber absorbs the energy, and in the other, it is transmitted to the Besides providing several workable designs that meet the safety requirements, the project demonstrated that testing scaled-down models can save firms time and money, SRI said. Buffet QQC I Smorgasbord Lunch 33 Qmner Noon to 2:30 P.M. 5 to 9 P.MJ activities. to decide whether U.S.

district courts can halt administrative hearings while they consider requests for disclosure of government records under the Freedom of Information law. for the time being a state court ruling which deprived all Elk lodges in Maine of their liquor licenses on grounds of racial discrimination. Chicken prices to drop; food still 'bargain' WASHINGTON (UPI) Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz foresees lower chicken prices by spring and reduced pork prices next fall but is not certain about a drop in beef prices. Butz also said in a UPI Washington Window interview Sunday that Americans still are "getting a bargain on the whole" for food and this year will spend less than 16 per cent of their take-home pay for food.

He said government price controls on farm products would produce black markets and shortages rather than bumper crops. Butz said he believed several steps taken recently to increase food supplies would result in some lower prices in coming months. "I think we're going to see some changes next fall and winter in hog prices for example, and in the price of pork," he said. "We expect there to be a very substantial increase in the production of hogs in the latter part of 1973. Cattle prices we're not quite so sure about." Butz said he expected a drop in chicken prices in eight to 12 weeks.

Butz also made these points. prices are not expected to rise as fast this year as last, taking the year as a whole, and will not prevent attaining President Nixon's goal of bringing annual inflation down to 2.5 per cent. should be a continued market for U.S. grains in the Soviet Union. AUTHENTIC CHINESE WU'S BAMBOO HOUSE REDLANDS PLAZA CLOSED 3:30 FRTDAY" AFTER SUNSET DAILY FACTS, Redlands, Calif.

Monday, January Gunmen surrender quietly NEW YORK (UPI) Four gunmen who held nine hostages for nearly two days in a sporting goods store stocked with ammunition surrendered quietly Sunday when police talked them out of dying in "a hail of bullets." The hostages had escaped in a daring break up a secret stairway. The gunmen who identified themselves with black Muslims and said they wanted to unite the world against "opressive infidels" were booked today on murder and robbery charges. One policeman was killed and two wounded in the 47-hour ordeal "which began Friday night, apparently as an attempt to rob John and Al's Sporting Goods Store of guns and ammunition, as well as money. One of the gunmen was wounded in the exchange of gunfire with police. The weary hostages escaped unharmed through the actions of Jerry Riccio, a co-owner of the Brooklyn store who knew of a stairway from the second floor to the roof.

Riccio's problem was that the opening to the stairs was covered with plasterboard. After convincing the gunmen to let the hostages stay on the second floor, Riccio broke open the plasterboard when the gunmen rushed to another part of the floor believing police were trying to tunnel into the building. Come on, we've got you covered," police on the roof yelled as the hostages scrambled up the stairs to safety. Riccio danced a jig with a fellow hostage when they had all made it. When the hostages escaped about 1 p.m:, the gunmen fired shots into the roof but none hit the hostages or their police rescuers.

Then as the hours dragged by, the gunmen were convinced to give up by talking over a specially installed telephone with Deputy Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward. Dr. Thomas Matthew, a physician who had treated the wounded gunman during the long weekend, released a statement quoting the gunmen as saying earlier: "This is the end. This is glory. We'll go out in a hail of bullets." "We used all our resources to reach their for paradise," said Ward, who is head of the civilian review board.

He said he explained to them that if they had a story to tell "they had to come out alive." Police had cordoned off the area since Friday night, at times using up to 500 men. Three of the alleged gunmen, Shulab Abdul Raheem, 23, Dawd Abdullah Ar-rahm, 22, and Salih Ali Abdullah, 25, were booked on murder and robbery charges early today. A fourth suspect, Yusuef Abdullah Almussiq, 22, wounded in the shootout, with police, was booked at his hospital bed. Cold? Who cares ABERDEEN, S.D. (UPI) Terry Bagus, an announcer at radio station KABR, decided to celebrate his last day on the job Sunday by offering a free record album to any girl who showed up at the KABR studios wearing a bathing suit.

The tempertature was a brisk 27 degrees, and three inches of new snow blanketed the ground. Forty-eight females ranging in age from 3 to 35 from this college community of 25,000 residents showed up. One shapely lass was barefooted. Three young men, wearing girl's bathing suits, also reported in. Save on Kodachrome Processing I LIMIT: ONE ROLL PER ORDER REGULAR KODACHROME PROCESSING 8MM MOVIE SUPER 8MM MOVIE OR SLIDES $106 PER I ROLL LIMITED OFFER-EXPIRES Jail.

31 The Complete Drug Store with Service You Expect Gtt" WINN'S DRUG STORE Corner tolton Orange 793-2104 Graham proposes reading 10 Commandments in school WASHINGTON (UPI) Evangelist Billy Graham has proposed the daily reading of the Ten Commandments in the nation's schools as a less controversial religious exercise Khan the offering of classroom prayers. Graham made the suggestion Sunday at President Nixon's interfaith worship service. The initial reaction was not favorable. "I believe that every Jew, Catholic and Protestant would agree that the Ten Commandments should be read every day in every classroom in America," Graham said in his sermon. "Our young people flounder because they are uncertain as to what is right and wrong.

They wait desperately for someone to tell them." Speaking with a reporter later, Graham said he was making the proposal to see what the reaction would be. He said actor Charlton Heston, who starred in the movie, "The Ten Commandments," thought it was "a great idea." The Supreme Court twice has ruled against the mandatory offering of prayers in the classroom, and a proposed constitutional amendment to authorize such prayers has failed in Congress to date; Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who was at the service, said the reading of the Ten Commandments could not take place "at this time." "So far even the Psalms are unconstitutional," he said. Rabbi Edgar F. Magnin, Wilshire Boulevard Temple, Los Angeles, and Roman Catholic Archbishop Joseph L.

Bernardin, of Cincinnati, who also gave sermons, expressed their support of the content of the their reservation about reading them as Graham suggested. "I would certainly agree with the main thesis that the Ten Commandments are as valid today as they ever were and that we have an obligation to teach them to our people and to relate them to our situation," the archbishop said. "But whether they ought to be taught in this way, that's another matter, and I'm not prepared to comment." Said the rabbi: "I know he means, that the gist of it is that the Ten Commandments should be taught. But it would bring up in the minds of thousands of people the question of church and state. It would be controversial." "The Ten Commandments are the basis of moral law," Graham said.

Prosecution Grandin, Mo. case wants tapes made public WASHINGTON(UPI) The prosecution in the Watergate case today renewed its attempt to make public the bugged conversations of Democratic party officials. The prosecution asked for a re-hearing by the U.S. Court of Appeals on its order last week that the tape-recorded conversations could not be introduced in evidence. Witness Alfred C.

Baldwin III had testified he had made the tapes in a motel across the street from the Democratic National Headquarters in the Watergate building where at least one telephone was said to have been bugged. Baldwin was scheduled for: cross-examination by defense attorneys today but was delayed getting to Washington by bad weather at his Hamden, home. Baldwin had testified he was hired by the security chief of President Nixon's Re-election Committee, James W. McCord to monitor conversations with sophisticated wire tapping equipment supplied by McCord. Last week a U.S.

Court of Appeals panel ruled 2 to 1 that the actual contents of the conversations which Baldwin monitored could not be admitted as evidence in the trial. Three suspects held for slaying banker GRANDIN, Mo. (UPI) A small explosion at a Poplar Bluff, garage apparently resulted in the arrest of three suspects in the murder of Grandin banker Robert Kitterman, his wife and 17-year-old daughter. Authorities said a tipster told Butler County Sheriff Clyde Hendrix he had seen one of the suspects, Dallas Ray Delay, 33, at the garage a few days before Kittermans were murdered. The tipster reportedly told authorities Delay had a pistol and something resembling a dynamite stick, which he exploded with gun powder.

"I'm going to use this to rob a bank," authorities said the tipster quoted Delay as saying. Ripley County Prosecuting Attorney James Hall said Sunday Delay, Lloyd Dwaine Cowin, 21, and Jerry Rector, 22, each would be charged with three counts of first-degree murder. The three lived in Van Buren, about 15 miles northwest of Grandin. Authorities said the trio had been camping in a wooded area where a fake bomb and currency were found. The makeshift campsite was about seven miles from where the bodies of Kitterman, 43, his his wife, Bertha, 38, and their daughter, Roberta, were found last Wednesday.

The victims had been tied to small trees and each was shot once in the head. About one hour before the bodies were found, Kitterman had rushed into the Bank of Grandin, of which he was president, and scooped about $11,000 from the vault. He told a bookeeper that his wife and daughter were being held by extortionists. Kitterman said dynamite had been strapped to his chest. Authorities said a device consisting of a short fuse, a small metal box and a set of wires and batteries was found at the campsite.

They also found money in a blood-stained blue pillowslip, a .32 caliber automatic and a sack, bearing the words "please return to Bank of Grandin." The amount of money recovered was not revealed. It was believed the mans may have been killed because they knew the extortionists and could identify them to police. Hall said Kitterman served on a jury three years ago that convicted Delay of auto theft. Now You Know By United Press International Death Valley is the hottest place in the United States. Two perish in channel boat mishap By United Press International Small craft warnings were posted for most of the weekend, during which heavy surf and deep swells were blamed for three boating accidents that claimed two lives and left one man in critical condition in La Jolla.

The bodies of two lobster fishermen were recovered off Santa Catalina Island after their 28-foot cabin cruiser overturned in 20-foot swells north of Avalon. Witnesses said the victimsr- Loehrer, 24, and Ken Thompson, 30, both of Los en route to San Clemente Island Saturday when the incident occurred. Two San Diego men 'were spilled into the sea off La Jolla when their 14-foot boat capsized in 6-foot surf. The craft righted itself and the propeller gashed Richard Cromer, 37, in the foot, then dragged his companion John Silvey, 26, underwater by the shirt. Cromer was released after treatment, but Silvey, who was given resuscitation ashore and whose heart and lung action was later stopped, remained in critical condition.

Two miles off the Oxnard coast, in the wind-whipped Santa Barbara channel, a sailboat with seven persona aboard, including four children, capsized Saturday. A passing sailboat rescued the group, all from Camarillo. They were identified as Camarillo City Engineer David Atkinson and his son, Jeff, 12; assistant city engineer Joseph Howard and his daughter, Terry, 11, and Leslie Meredith, his son, John 8, and daughter Laurie. 10. A Thousand Oaks man, Carl Johnson, sailing to Anacapa Island, heard their cries of distress and pulled them aboard with the aid of his companion Joseph Parham, Hollywood.

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About Redlands Daily Facts Archive

Pages Available:
224,550
Years Available:
1892-1982