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The Herald from Crystal Lake, Illinois • Page 3

Publication:
The Heraldi
Location:
Crystal Lake, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Regional State national Scene By Un tec Press International Police search for guns in Libertyville slayings Any tollwavin a storm DE KALB. Ill UPI By the time the state trooper had radioed in his report about an airplane 50 feet above the EastWest Tollway. the single-engine plane had landed on the road Heavy ram and hail forced the private plane to land on the tollway Saturday morning just west of town, police said The harsh eather conditions forced dow the Piper Cub piloted bv John Spiegel of Geneseo about 10 am. State Police Trooper Bill Schmidt said No injuries were reported Schmidt said Trooper Merlin Clausen was on the tollw ay at the time and called in with a report that the plane was about 50 feet overhead Shortly thereafter the plane landed Spiegel moved the plane onto the grassy median strip, then aited for the weather to clear The Diane took off about 1 1 a Sehmidtsaid LIBERTYYILLE. LI UPI Investigators worked around the clock during the weekend in an effort to solve the shotgun slayings of a wealthy service station owner and his wife Bruce Rouse.

44 and his wife. Dariene. 36. were found dead in the bedroom of their home on Friday During the weekend, police searched for missing guns on the grounds around the home The collection of guns, including shotguns and nfies. was missing when the couple's teen-age daughter.

Hubm. found the bodies The Rouses had two other children. Kurt. 20. and William.

1j Detectives searched for the gun collection on the 7 5-acre estate that surrounds the 12 room home Police said thev were trving to learn Carter proposes plan for gasoline rationing International Mews Talks mav start anew Egyptian and Israeli negotiators may travel to Washington this week in a backed effort to start up the stalled Palestinian autonomy negotiations and head off a planned European peace initiative for the M.d.tieEaM A formal announcement that the negotiator- will gather in 'a as.n'.ngton could come as early as today State-controlled Egyptian newspapers repcrted that Egyptian Foreign Minister Kama! Hassan Ah ill be going to ashtr.gton Prime Minister Menachem Begin said he ill send interior minister. Josef Barg Ah and Burt; are their nation cruet negotiators in the ta.Ks and they are expected to meet ith special envoy Lmow it; in an effort to res i' me the talks Various reports said the meeting coaU: come -ometime this week, but some officials in Cairo said Egypt was in no hurrv to resume the talks and that All Joes not plan to travel to asnir.gton within the next few day the effort to renew the talks came in a special call from President Carter to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat Secertary of State Edmund Muskie said Sunday i expect the talks to resume nut added that could not put a time frame on i President Carter was asked on his return to the White House from a weekend at Camp David. Md whether he expected the talks to resume soon Washington "I don't know I hope so." he saul Egypt broke off the talks last month to protest tne introduction of a bill before the Israeli parliament that would make a unified Jerusalem Israel capital They had originally been targeted to end May 26. The United States is anxious for an early resumption of the negotiations to loi estall a est European peace initiative that may be announced later this week at the Venice summit of the European Economic Community The European initiative is believed to r-e more n.vorable to the Palestinians than Israel want- Battle rages on NEW DELHI. India UPI Afghan guerrillas fought raging battles with let troops in a wide arc around Katml today sunering heavy casualties up to 1 killed and 2.ooo wounded reports reaching India said But hundreds oi rebels slipped past a cordon Sov tanks into the in a prelude to what could be the decisive battle for the capital.

Aghan reports said I ii to non guerrillas were killed and 2 were wounded in fighting the capital est i mates coming from the tgr.ar. capital said Soviet casualties were also reported, heavy rut there were no exact tigures available capons boomed at least 1J sites around the capital nh the sound of the gunfire reaching the capital reports trom the Afghan capital Carter visits riot site WASHINGTON I PI President Carter, defeated by Congress in his attempt to impose a dime-a-gallon gasoline fee. plans to send Congress a new standby gasoline rationing plan this week, a White House official says. The plan is expected to require the government to mail out monthly coupon authorizations to the owners of the country's 155 million registered vehicles, the official said Sunday night. Coupons would then be required for gasoline purchases The president could initiate coupon rationing upon receiving congressional authorization or declaring existence of a 20 percent nationwide petroleum shortage In March 1979.

Congress rejected another standby rationing pian and asked the administration for revi sions Those changes are to be included in the plan given Congress this week. Douglas Robinson, deputy chief of the Energy Depart merit's Economic Regulatory Administration, outlined the plan last week for a Senate energy subcommittee ASHINGTON UPI President Carter was going to Miami today for discussions with local government of -ficials and black leaders on aid to victims of the recent nor- and ways to foreclose future racial violence The president had an early morning meeting with the Congressional Black Caucus or. a variety" of issues He also planned to announce the strengthening of government-w ide consumer programs Before departing for Florida. Carter was to present Medals of Freedom to 14 outstanding American? several of them posthumously to the late President Johnson. Sen Hubert Humphrey and others Miami is the stop on a two-day "non political" trip that also ill take Carter to Seattle here he ill spend the nigh! and address the annual meeting of the Mayors Conference Tuesday While Seattle Carter will receive a progress report from government officials on relief efforts for the Mount St Helens eruption Also addressing the mayors during their Seattle conierence were Carter's probable opponents in the fall election campaign Ronald Reagan and Rep John Anderson.

R-111 Carter will return to Washington Tuesday evening Carter said he wanted to visit Miami shortly after noting broke out there last month, but local officials urged him to postpone the trip until the situation cooled The long-brewing racial problems were aggravated by heavy unemployment among Macks and ot oviel rrm.ps backed by more than out of villages in the hills in front ot ante time, tour division- were "bombing the hell 'he Paghinan IlloUll a ins that stretch north trom about 12 miles west ot Sealift brings criminals KEY WEST. Fla I PI Over i percent of Cuba's population has left the island during the -W-day refugee sealift but the recent arrivals have been a few small boats containing mostly single young men described as "undesirables The vessels that crowed the Florida Straits Sunday brought about 200 Cubans ami pushed the relugee total above the 112.ooo mark The island's population is 10 million They also brought further ev idence that Fidel Castro's gov eminent is using the last few boats participating the "freedom flotilla, which began April 21. to empty hi prions of com mon criminals A Customs officer. who withheld his identity, said mol or the Cuban-arriving in the past few days are young, single men undesirables We are getting very tew family members By late Sunday. even floats had arrived The Coast Guard reported it was towing two craft to Kev West wr.etrier any employees one Rou four gasoline station- been fired recently There were no suspects the case said Kcuse had been beater, ana repeatedly through tr.e hear- an: n-y.

at close range in the r.ead sr gun. police said Mr House killed by a shotgun tiat ut. -p ere performed Friday Lae County Sheriff Thomas Brown said investigators had deter rr.ir.ed no motive in the vengeful killing However, he said robbery had been ruled out since a ft and some jewelry in plain the bedroom had been let: untouched He said detectives were around the clock on the cast- ne.ghtened by the influx ot i unans rr.atiy of whom have taker. trad: held by blacks He was expected to "re job program scviai unrest during the summer There was no word or. wr.t-tr.t-: Carter would take time out inspect the complex Cur-an refugee situation during rt stay Miami A group named the United irganizaiion called or.

i Americans to attend a mass r. of the Miami Beach hotel wr.t-rr Carter was to speak to an annua. vacation of Opportunities I r. canalizations Centers a inc Wiitredo Navarro, general ot the group, said he expected people to attend the We vvunt f.neni to hand petitions tailing on the pre-. oe.it to bring tamily member- tr.

ir -ome uther cmintry rr.ehow get tnem out Cta Navarro said By the end the week badge r-ureau official- are expected Carter a plan "fit pr. cessing and re-etrlernen'. he-refugees. They already have Congress the could run as n.gr. as $300 million Carter returned to the H--u-e Sunday evening trom amp La.i where he relaxed and prepared -r a busy eek ahead The president flew torrs mount a t.

top retreat Friday afternoon taking homework that included hnetir.g papers on his tour-nation eight -day European trip that begins was allowed more movement room for longer periods or ine jur ing the weekend Jordan was wounded on by a sniper a- r.e returned -room in the Marriott Inn rr. te. following a talk to the For Urban League and -top tor the home ot a director ot ay ne affiliate The investigation tru-trate-t a series of dead-end lead- dramatically curing the trwr.c Investigators have exhausted more than l.ooo leads and infer iewt-d 4ki persons in the case They r.ae questioned some witnesses under hypnosis and others have taken poly graph tests The most recent lie detector 'e-' was given to Martha Coleman the Fort Wayne Urban League director who acompamed Jordan the morning he as shot few days" before he would have seen the long-awaited printing ot his last major work written ov er 4o ear-ago Miller died Saturday age His publisher. Noel Young, said his death did not come as a surprise He had been suffering from clogged artenes that fed into his head and was too old to have a bypass opera tion." Young said He died at home in the arms of his housekeeper. Bill Pickerei Funeral plans had not been unannounced as of early today Young said he had just received a copy of Miller's last major work.

"The World of Law rence The book concerns another author who battled the censors DH Lawrence, who rote Lady Chatterly Lov er Young said Miller las! work is "what he called a passionate ap preciation of Lawrence. It was his last major work, which was written in the "3os when he Miller was in his prime and had not been reieas ed until now "It's something he very much wanted to see in book form, and he missed seeing it by a matter of few days." Among Miller's other well known novels were Black Spring. the trilogy "Nexus." Plexus." and "Sexus." "The Smile a' 'be Fmt at the Ladder." and Iht iiop.c oi Capricorn" Jordan has more surgery The coupons could be used to buy gasoline or the recipients could sell them at market prices Administration economists have estimated that each one-gallon coupon could bring from S2 to So under the severe shortage required to trigger coupon rationing. The administration plan would set aside special gasoline allocations to be held in reserve by state and federal governments as well as for emergency and farm vehicles Administrative costs for the coupon program have -estimated at S2 billion Energy Department officials have characterized coupon rationing as a last resort to make Americans share the burden of another gasoline shortage rather than as a gasoline conservation measure. Last week, the Senate and House rejected Carter's dime-a gallon gasoline fee Both chambers overrode Carter's veto of a bill killing the fee.

the first time a Democratic Congress has overriden a Democratic president's veto since the early 1950s I guess this is the slowest day vet." said a I Immigration officer checking the new arrivals at the Truman Annex docks Sunday We're just getting the stragglers now. it appears About 45 men who arrived Saturday said they had been shipped directly from prisons to the embarkation port of Mariel where they were put aboard American boats for the 1 10-mile voyage to Key West They admitted to having been imprisoned for a variety of crimes, ranging from suspicion of plotting against the government and petty thievery to murder and rape In Washington. Secretary of Stale Edmund Muskie said Castro had sent some 800 hardened Cuban criminals and mental cases to the United States in violation of international law and we have sent Mr. Castro a strong protest note bringing that to his attention Ericson sacked earlier this year for alleged expense account and tax fraud turned up as the surprise guest star at a Stockholm nightclub last week. Flanked by chorus girls dancing the can-can.

he played trombone and swapped gags with the star of the show. George Carl. Says Ericson. "You earn a darn sight more in the music business than you do in the Transport Union. For an encore, he's working on an album tentatively titled "Sin and Shame QUOTE OF THE DAY: Ben Bova, science fiction writer and executive editor of Omni magazine: "The next time you hear Sen.

William Proxmire of Wisconsin try to knock the NASA budget as a waste of the taxpayer's money." ask him how he voted on the milk-subsidy bill a federal budgetary item dear to the heart of Wisconsin's dairy industry The federal milk subsidy cost the American taxpayer S246.673.000 in the fiscal vear 1979." GLIMPSES: Jason Robards on his way to New Mexico for his role in the Marble Arch production of "The Legend of the Lone Ranger." after cohosting the 34th Annual Tony Awards with Mary Tyler Moore Stephen Sondheim is in London for rehearsals of his musical. "Sweeney Todd" which, under Robert Stigwood, will star Denis Quilley and Sheila Hancock Penthouse Pet of the Year Cheryl Rixon will kick off New York Mayor Ed Koch's proclaimed "Festival of Fragrances" the eek of July 1 by-giving away 500 gift packages of frou-frou for men Fashion model Patti Hansen has been signed for an important role in Peter Bogdanovich's "They All Laughed, costarhng Audrey Hepburn, Ben Gazzara and John Ritter People Talk FORT WAYNK. Ind I PI National Urban League Director Ver non Jordan, who underwent additional surgery to repair a problem caused by a slight inieetir. remained sr. serious but stable condition today doctors said Dr Jeftrey Towles the doctor attending Jordan during the wounded civil rights leaders recovery, said Sunday the operation was necessary "because of a breakdown of the incision of the abdomen caused by a.oscess Jordan 44.

was reported as awake alert and talking following the bnet surgery by Towles His condition was unchanged from the previous ween He stiH was listed in serious but stable condition and recovering in the intensive care unit at Parkview Memorial Hospital officials said the new surgery should not slow his progress. Jordan --itiiaii sui tt Hut the sheer number of rebels, about 2 who gathered last week 'he Paghman mountains for the all-out campaign toousf Sov iet troops trom Kabul, made it impossible tor the heavy cordon ot Soviet armament to keep them from reaching the city the reports said The lighting is heav Bagram and Char Kar to the north oi Kabul. Kalangar to the South. Pagman to the west and Sohira-tan to the southeast, the sources said Fighting also is heavy in Jalalabad, the major city east of Kabul, here reiiels claim to hav de-troy ed a police station The renels have said they are counting on support from dissident students who have closed down schools and universities in Kabul lor nearlv two months and residents who have been helpless against the Soviet forces until now The rebels have taken heavy casualties in the fighting, with estimates id up to 1. ooo killed and tw ice that number wounded Although no figures tor Soviet casualties were reported, several sources said the campaign as costly in Sov let liv es as well Clark cites apology Ramsey Clark, called a traitor by some in the United Slates and a spy the Iranian media, was on his ay home today from his controversial mission to Tehran, defending the trip and declaring that America owed Iran an apology I am hopeful that the hostages who to my knowledge are all safe, ill shortly released peacefully it only trie United Mates has patience and acts rationally." the tornier attorney general said after arriving Paris Sunday who faces possible after he returns to the United States Tuesday lor making the trip to Iran said 1 believed I had the highest moral obligation to accept the inv itation to attend the conference on American interventions' in Iran We have to talk to them." he said They know that holding the hostage- is rone but they think don't care In an interview on ABC-TV's Issues and Answers program.

Clark said the United States was more responsible ior causing the 2iy-day crisis because of its support of the deposed shah who he called a 'tyrant We owe the Iranian people an apology he -aid i say holding the hostages is wrong but I understand the anger leading up to it After 25 years of brutality, we are suddenly the offended ones Clark has agreed to set up a commission in the United States to investigate American actions in Iran Referring to the Iranian media's characterization ot him as a "pig and the vilest ot American agents dark said he didn't expect any miracles" when he and nine other American- went to Tehran for the conference, but believed the trip did some good The conference, which was called by Ayatoiiah Kuhollah Khomeini after the aborted April 25 mission to rescue the 5U American hostages, bitterly denounced the United States a finai resolution but made no mention of the captives Clark and the nine other members the now scattered American delegation face up to lo years in jail and a o.to fine each should the Justice Department decide to bring charges against them for defying President Carter's ban on travel to Iran Oil unity sought ALGIERS. Algeria UPU Iraq has worked out a plan to unify OPEC's erratic prices, adding between 2 and .5 cents a gallon tor American consumers, but hard-liners favor continuing the oil price free-for-all The United States" largest supplier. Saudi Arabia, also is opposed to the Iraqi-sponsored pian to unify crude oil prices at $32 a barrel, and Iranian Oil Minister Ali Akbar Moinfar said flatly he did not agree to the proposal for a common benchmark price Iraqi Oil Minister Tayeh Abdel Kenm said before today's biannual price-fixing session that his pian calls for a s-Ua-barrel Saudi increase from its current rock-bottom S2S level, a 52-per-barreI boost by other moderate producers and a freeze on further increases by high-priced Algeria. Liby a. Nigeria and Iran The Saudi increase would largely account for most of an estimated 2 cents to 3 cents a gallon price rise tor gasoline and heating oil in the United States, analy st said Taken all together, the Iraqi proposal is aimed at restoring a vaguely-unified world oil price, which broke down after the OPEC meeting in Caracas.

Venezuela, last December, setting off the present spiral in the cost of petroleum. If those selling at a very high price are willing io stay where they are until the end of the year, we are willing to go upward a little to meet them." said Mana Said al-Otaiba. oil minister of the United Arab Emirates, in outlining the possible compromise He added, however, that the time was not right" for a total reunification of the prices by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries that now range trom the low of Sa -n Arabia $28 lo Algeria's $38.21 a barrel. Henry Miller dies at 88 TENOR OF THE TIMES It was Luciano Pavarotti's hour The reigning tenor of New York's Metropolitan opera was celebrating his1 first movie contract MfJM's Giorgio" in which he'll play an Italian pro lessor of music ho meets a lady doctor in America, etc. etc The lady hasn't vet been cast, but the bash Hollywood threw for him last week drew its own cast of luminaries Kirk Douglas.

Sally Struthers. Carroll O'Connor. Charlton Heston. Angie Dickinson, Cary Grant. Bernadette Peters, and Dean Martin Pavarotti had a ball, trying on different hats, making tennis dates with Heston and Douglas and finally, signing an autograph for a fan Carol Burnett Even for a star, it was a spotlight to remember BOOTS AND SIDE SADDLES Fern Robbins rides out of the fashionable Society Hill section of Philadelphia on an Old Paint of a Mercedes and calls herself "Eastern Cowgirl Fern For sure, the West wouldn't recognize her She's a mixture of funky diso.

Main Line Philadelphia chic and urban rodeo, and she confounds nearly every cowpoke she meets. Says Fern. They don't understand my journey Most people initially think I'm just another whacko actress, but I give to others more than I take Actual ly. she's a comic strip says she'll soon have her own in syndication. It will, of course, be called "Eastern Cowgirl Fern." Watch out Brenda Starr This one might be gaining on ou STILL IN THE SPOTLIGHT Even for a discredited labor leader, there's still show biz.

and Hans Ericson. the 52 year-old ex-boss of Sweden's Tranjort I mon. has decided the show must go on. PACIFIC PALISADES. Calif i UPI Author Henry Miller, whose audacious, spicy novel "Tropic of Cancer" introduced the four letter word info polite society, died just a Russian vessel seized JUNEAU.

Alaska UPI A Rus sian fishing vessel has been seized by the Coast Guard off the coast of Alaska for allegedly underlogging its catch of mackerel in violation of federal law The Coast Guard Cutter Midget sent a boarding party aboard the stern trawler "Mys Prokofyeva Sunday 65 miles southwest ot Shumign Island in the Gulf of Alaska Sunday Officers said the vessel violated the federal Fishing Conservation and Management Act by underlogging its catch of atka mackerel by as much as 65 percent. The Midget escorted the Soviet boat to Kodiak for 'eeal action by tr. Attorney 's olii.e in Anchoi dgr Alaska.

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Pages Available:
134,452
Years Available:
1875-1985