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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 6

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TUCSON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER I. 171 THE ARIZONA DAILY STAR PAGE SIX SECTION Sudsy Solution Building Leveled, Homes Rattle As Gas Tanks Explode Leslie bacon AIIZONA UICI STOCK 0 Warrant For Declared To Today In Arizona's History r.iysie Wtiea your.wasning machine overflows because of too much suds, pour a little vinegar into the water. The suds will be reduced immediately. MlLLSBl'RY, Mass. (AP) A fierce five-second chain-reaction explosion struck an estimated 200 propane gas tanks Thursday morning, lev eling a building and shaking homes in neighboring towns.

Two men were slightly injured. The resultins fires burned for slightly more than five hours. Officials said they were investigating the cause of the explosion. Be Illegal SEAGONDOLLAR MUSIC 3221 I SMlDtH 795-3213 hCLOSED MONOAYSl 3400 E. SPEEDWAY RANCHO CENTER OPEN NIGHTS Til 9 SUNDAYS 104 Da Oct.

1. 18(4. the first legislative art of the Territory ef Arizona was passed. It empowered the governor to appoint a commission to prepare and report on a code of laws for the use and consideration of the Legislature of the territory. On Oct.

1. 18M. Camp Cameroa was established ia the Santa Kita Mountains. refusing to answer some questions put to her after being granted limited immunity. The office of her San Francisco attorney, Benjamin Dreyfus, said Miss Bacon currently is in New York City.

The 9th Circuit Court last June 24 upheld the contempt citation but allowed her to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court On the same day that decision was issued, a federal grand jury in New York indicted her on a charge of conspiring with six other persons to firebomb a branch of the First Nat-ional Bank. The indictment charged that Miss Bacon took part in a rehearsal of the attack in New York which was thwarted by the police and of manufacturing incendiary bombs. Miss Bacon formally denied the charse. In its decision Thursday, the federal appeals court, in an opinion by Judge Ben.

Duniway with Frederick G. Hamley and M. Oliver Koelsch concurring, said there must be a showing of probable cause to believe that a person will not answer a subpoena before a arrant can be issued. There must be a judgment that a person's testimony is material and that it is important to secure a witness presence, the court held. "Mere assertions will not do," the court said.

"No probable cause to believe Miss Bacon would ignore the subpoena was given. Therefore, the warrant was invalid." SUNDAYS NEW YORK (AP) The arrest warrant used to seize Leslie Bacon as a material witness in the bombing of the U.S. Capitol as declared illegal Thursday by a federal appeals court in San Francisco. Miss Bacon's lawyer said here afterward that the antiwar activist would sue the government for false arrest. 'In a sense, the ruling is a vindication," said her New York attorney, William H.

Schaap. after the decision as announced on the West Coast. "But Leslie spent two months in jail because of a hearsay affidavit," he said. "We have a substantial false arrest suit against the government. It may involve substantial damages." Schaap said he expected to announce details of the suit within the next few days after meeting ith Miss Bacon and others in New York.

He said he as not certain In which city the action would be filed. Acting on a habeas corpus petition, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the government should have subpoenaed her first, before seeking a arrant of arrest "Then she would have had 'the opportunity to decide whether or not to answer," the 24-page opinion said. Miss Bacon, 19. of Atherton, was arrested last April 27 in Washington, D.C..

and originally held on $100,000 bail a material witness in the Capitol bombing. She was transferred to Seattle and was held in contempt by a federal grand jury there for Bobby Fischer Defeats Russian In First Game BUENOS AIRES (AP) ace Bobby Fischer won the first game of his semifinal chess tournament with Tigran 1'etrosian of the Soviet Union Thursday night, scoring the victory in 40 moves. The opening was a Sicilian detense, which I'ctrosian played in black. Petrosian, a former world champion, played a new move on his Uth turn that seemed to give him an advantage but Fischer equalized by exchanging several pieces. In the end, Fischer outplayed Petrosian and forced the win of a knight Petrosian resigned at that stage.

Fischer. 28, from New York, and the 42-year-old Petrosian thus ended in about four and a half hours the first game of their 12-game tournament to determine who will meet world champion Boris Spassky for the title. The matches extend through Oct. 31. No Controls Wanted Now a great collection of fashion's newest love the dashing Cape.

Add fun to' your wardrobe. The styles are new and exciting. All machine washable. Acrylic knit A) long Sweater Cape brownwhite border design, $22.00 B) Inco pattern camel with gold, $18.00 C) Hooded Cape; lip front; brown, $20.00" Walter Cronkite Says Politicians Should Leave News To Journalists D) Tweed with fringe gold and navy, 516.00 IEARN TO DANCE AT THE Cronkite's proposal would strip the FCC of licensing authority but leave it responsible for strictly technical matters, such as seeing that stations do not wander off their frequencies. The idea was received non-commitally by subcommittee Chairman Sen.

Sam J. Ervin D-N. C. Ervin said after hearing, haven't got a closed mind or it. It's worthy of serious consideration.

Very serious con sideration." CENTRAL i He proposed the Federal Communications Commission be stripped of its authority to review a station's program content and the balancing of its news shows in the regular license renewal process. Left alone to operate without the "cloud" of government interference, Cronkite said, television and radio newsmen would act "with the same variety of motives, principles and performance that have worked pretty well in publishing." Cronkite said that when the YMCA by GREG HERRINGTON WASHINGTON (AP) The politicians should leave the radio and television business to the broadcasters and journal-ists, CBS newsman Walter Cronkite said Thursday. The veteran newsman proposed as "the cleanest and perfect solution" to what he sees as government intimidation of broadcast news the elimination of all government control of broadcasting. "The time is past," Cronkite told the Senate constitutional rights subcommittee investigating freedom of the press, "when there can be any legal justification for controlling broadcasting's program content." fill DANCE CUSS STARTS TUIS. OCT.

STN CIoum on fun, Ook Kmoi To Teunf! Mt Ntw fi-H Sioglat Of Covpto Wflcomt PROfESSIONAl lNSTUCTO JUAMTI MARE ARM W. 124-7471 325-4904 CENTRAL YMCA FCC, whose members are ap-v pointed by the president, even questions a station's program content that action can affect the station's news report. If a small station gets a call 7TT316 N. 5th Avt.7o "Any news medium depen dent upon government per mission for its existence a precarious position," Ervii said. The subcommittee als( heard George Washington University Prof.

Jerome A. Barron argue in support of gov ernment controls on th ground that they help insure that broadcasters will make an effort to present both side! of an issue. A defense of the under by LawTcnce Learner, a for ground press was presentee mer Newsweek magazine edi tor and current freelanct writer. "The underground pres stands at the forefront of Ok First Amendment" to the Constitution, Learner said. "The underground press' only crime is to use that freedom." '(ONVEKTCir Hill -til TMj mmmm from Washington, Cronkite suggested," "It might frighten then.

'Let's not take any chances and offend anyone for a Cronkite said a station manager might reason. In the case of a major network, he said, it, too, could be intimidated by a series of license examinations on the network's member stations, speeches by high administration officials and FCC mandates for the broadcast industry to "put your house in order." "They all add up to this atmosphere of intimidation," Cronkite said. fsaofmompatdbla. iy-'-i! iffI A FUU QUALITY FEATURED SHIRT-POCKET ond it converts PORTABLE RADIO compltti nitb S-pc. gift cnstmbl.

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iW assassinate Iraq Kurdish leader Mullah Mustafah Barazani by hurling more than 50 hand grenades, but failed and were slain by his pards, Baghdad radio reported Thursday night. Barazani escaped unharmed, but three of his guards were killed in the attack, the broad- vtML cast said. A broadcast statement from the ruling Baath party command denounced the attack as an attempt to undermine the 1970 declaration that reconciled the government with the rebel Kurds in northern Iraq. The radio did not say where the incident occurred, or how many attackers were in- The LAUREATE C41SW .3495 volved. Barazani's stronghold is in the village of Dimin in the mountainous Kurdistan region.

I s. The radio said the attackers came as visitors and started to throw grenades immediately as Barazani appeared. Barazani, 68, has championed the Kurdish cause for 40 years. i His 10-year independence war with Iraq ended on March 11, 1970, and autonomy was granted for his 2.5 million Kurds. The attempt on Barazanl'i life comes while Iraq is re-ported deep in a power struggle in the absence of President Ahmad Hassan Al Bakr from the political scene because of ill health.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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