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The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • Page 20

Location:
Orlando, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

20 A rlatiSo Srntinfl Cliuihrt OA Mill A I I ft. I Yi 1 J. AP Wlreptwto to Th Stntlntfl last night FOREIGN AID FOR WOUNDED U.S. SOLDIER South Vietnamese help Injured fighter to safety i Squeeze Play Hikes Cong Toll Car Theft Ring Charged To 15 CHICAGO (J) Federal agents in five states rounded up Saturday 15 men who, the FBI said, operated a ring specializing in stealing and selling late model cars. J.

Edgar Hoover, FBI director, said in Washington the arrests on suppressed indictments climaxed a months-long investigation during which 125 cars worth $500,000 were recovered. CARS WERE stolen in the Chicago area, license plates were switched and. fake titles drawn, Hoover related. The cars were recovered as far away as California and Florida. Arrests were made in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Alabama and California.

Those seized included a Gary, policeman who also runs a drive-in restaurant; a father and two. sons from Dolton, a Chicago suburb; three car salesmen in Youngstown, Ohio, and two dealers in Alabama. Arrests were made on two indictments returned by a federal grand jury in Chicago Nov. 12 but suppressed until the defendants could be apprehended. TWO DEFENDANTS were arrested previously and two are being sought.

Thirteen men have heen charged in a 30-count indictment and six in a six-count indictment alleging conspiracy and interstate transportation of stolen motor vehicles. Canon Law Code Due For Revision VATICAN CITY UP) Pope Paul VI said Saturday the Code of Canon Law the body of laws of the Roman Catholic Church. would be revised in accordance with the modernization measures of the Vatican Ecumenical Council. The need to update the rules and regulations concerning the conduct of ecclesias tical affairs, was expressed by the pontiff in a special audience granted to 60 cardinals and 70 experts of the Pontifical Commission for the Code of Canon Law. News Of Independence Cheered In Guiana GEORGETOWN, British Guiana I.T) Britain's decision to grant British Guiana Independence by May 26, 1966, was welcomed here by political parties and organizations, including Dr.

Cheddi Jagan's leftist opposition People's party. Putting Our Genie On An Overtime Schedule New Firm Seeks Channel 9 1 Drang Valley a few miles away where the Americans were moving northward to join the Vietnamese. THE BATTLE three miles east of Cambodia continued on a large scale for about V2 hours, then slowed down about 6:30 p.m. Saturday. Allied drives in the Chu Pong battle area were given another giant air boost Saturday by new strikes by B52 Strategic Air Force bombers from Guam.

The raids were the ninth and 10th missions flown by the eight-jet B52s in the Chu Pong area since Monday. Georgia Man Held For Threat To LBJ New York TimM Service ATLANTA, Ga. (J) A Summerville, house painter was ordered held for action by a U.S. District Court on a charge that he threatened the life of President Johnson. The decision came Friday after a key witness had refused to answer questions on grounds of self-incrimination.

BILLY RAY Pursley, 31, was ordered held for action by the court at Charlotte, N.C. His bond was reduced from $15,000 to $7,500. Witnesses identified Pursley in photographs and said he threatened to use a rifle on the President. FIRM SLEEP SET 0) 111 Sunday, Nov. 21, 3965 Riles Held For Victim Of Viet Nam OCALA The 17-year-old Ocala paratrooper who foresaw his death in the steaming jungles of Viet Nam was buried here Saturday with military services conducted by a detachment from McCoy Air Force Base.

"Harold M. (Hoppy) Golden, killed during one of the 173rd Airborne's most vicious battles with the Viet Cong, was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery. Over 300 mourners attended the two-hour ceremony. GOLDEN, who had only one more combat mission to perform before rotation to a non-combat zone, died Nov. 8.

On that day a relative in' Ocala received a letter in which Golden described a dream of his own death on Nov. 6. McCoy Air Force Base furnished pallbearers. Two members of the Ocala High Band played the bugles, one acting as the echo of the other and both dramatic in their delivery. GOLDEN IS survived by his parents, Earl T.

Golden and Mrs. Edmund Martineau, Ocala; brother, Dwayne; sister, Betty Nell; half-sister, Reva Lou Martineau; grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E.

Golden, and Mrs. Susfe Ogeltree, all Ocala. The young soldier's body arrived in Ocala Thursday night, shipped home by way of California. President Hopes For End To Strike TTj In Texas, acting Press Secretary Jack J. Valenti said Simkin had responsibility for trying to bring the two sides together.

One government source said the scheduled Dec. 4 launching of Gemini 7 from Cape Kennedy, might have to be postponed if a settlement is not reached this weekend. SIMKIN and his aides met with representatives of McDonnell and the Striking International Association of Machinists (IAM) for nearly two hours Saturday morning at his office before a lunch break and another session in the afternoon. The mediators planned to work day and night through the weekend. Simkin expressed the cautious view that "some progress" was made in talks that lasted well into the night Friday but he would go no further in his assessment.

Nearly 17,000, union members struck McDonnell at midnight Thursday in a dispute over wages and benefits, job restrictions and contract language. McDonnell's St. Louis, headquarters and four other installations, including Cape Kennedy, were affected. About 200 IAM members honored the strike at the Cape, where they are needed to make final checks of the two McDonnell-manufactured Gemini capsules that are to carry four astronauts on near-rendezvous space flights next month. MCDONNELL sent 43 of its own supervisory engineers and technicians to the Cape Saturday to take over the work of the striking machinists.

With Gemini 7 astronauts Frank Borman and James Lovell scheduled to begin their 14-day flight on Dec. 4, any lengthy check out delays would postpone the blastoff. The launch of Gemini 6 rendezvous pilots Walter Schirra and Thomas Stafford follows Gemini 7 by nine days. The salaried technicians from St. Louis were filling the key gaps left by the walkout of 215 of McDonnell's hourly-paid workers at the launch site.

NASA officials were hoping that a quick contract settlement could be reached by McDonnell and IA? officials meeting with federal mediators in Washington so a delay with the Gemini launches could be avoided. Bread Rationed As Bakers Strike LONDON ift Britons over a widespread area faced a weekend without bread Saturday as a bakers' strike brought bread rationing back for the first time since 1948. In scenes reminiscent of the bleak days immediately after World War II, hour-cwives formed bread lines in south Wales, the midlands, Liverpool and northeastern England. More than a million homes were affected. THE STRIKE was in support of a wage hike for British bakers who now earn $32.20 for a 42-hour, five-day week.

They are demanding a weekly wage of $42 for a 40-hour week. HAVERTY'S REPEATS PREVIOUS SELL-OUT! Price Slashed Almost ONE-HALF OFF! SOUTHERN The official military communique also disclosed that S. -military strength in South Viet Nam soared to 165,700 men. Saturday's fighting near. the-Cam-bodian border some 210 miles north of Saigon was the first time South Vietnamese government forces had taken a major share of the running battle around Vhu Pong, the brunt of which had been borne by the U.

S. 1st Cavalry. THE VIETNAMESE paratroopers drove along the border behind the Chu Pong Mountains and west of the la Drang Valley in a move to join the 1st Calvary against North Vietnamese troops trying to protect a major Communist base and supply area in the highlands. The Vietnamese were airlifted into the area Thursday. At first they met only sniper fire from Communists concealed in the head-high elephant grass in the area.

AT 3 P.M. Saturday, however, they met a rain of "heavy" Communist fire and called in air and artillery support. Vietnamese air force pilots flew 28 support strikes with napalm bombs. U. S.

pilots flew eight other similar strikes and the 1st Cavalry's artillery fire poured in from the la CROSS FINEST res correct leepNXV mm 4 Federal Bureau of Investigation, served as Miami's city manager after leaving the service, engaged in the automobile business (Ford) in Florida and now practices law in the capital. Others named in the articles of incorporation and the number of shares each will have are: J. ROLFE DAVIS, former Orlando mayor, 10. Frank M. Hubbard, chairman of the board of Hubbard Construction a road building contractor, 10.

Austin A. Caruso, president of Southern Fruit Distributors (the Bluebird label), 10. Benjamin F. Smathers, Orlando attorney, 10. Robert F.

Lilley, local 10. Grover Bryan, real estate broker, 10. Don McAllister, advertising agency executive and former local radio and TV personality, 4. Mark V. Barker McAllister's business associate, formerly with Orlando's channel 6.

T. E. Triplett, C. M. Potter, Harry W.

Bower, Angus S. Barlow and C. A. Peterson, all of the accounting firm of Potter, Bower 2 each. Steve Willis, former newspaperman and currently information director for Orange Memorial Hospital, 5.

SMATHERS only last week resigned as a director of the Outlet Company of Providence, R. owner of the competing channel 6 here. Temporary officers of the new corporation are Davis as president; Danner, executive vice president; McAllister, vice president; Barker, secretary; Lilley, assistant secretary; and Triplett, treasurer. Latest available records of channel 9 stockholders show holders of 615 shares of Class stock out of a total of 2,000 authorized and 1,400 shares of Class stock out of 3,000 authorized. Class "A Holders John Baker, Orlando lawyer and former city solicitor, 35.

Martin Segal, attorney, member of the Florida State Racing Commission, and secretary of Mid-Florida, 25. HERSCHEL STUART, insurance man and WFTV vice president, 35. Marion Brechner, assistant secretary-treasurer of WFTV, 109. Dr. A.

H. Spivak, surgeon, 70. Dr. A. H.

Savage, dentist, 70. Joseph Brechner, WFTV president and treasurer, 25. IRVING GIBBS, ladies wearing apparel, 35. Robert Heintzelman, Ford dealer, 35. Harriet Donges, Windermere, 28.

Harris H. Thomson, Moorestown, N. 19. L. A.

Johnson, fuel oil dealer, 25. REGGIE MOFFAT, general manager of the Johnson firm, 10. H. A. and Julia Sullivan, Winder-emere, 35.

Morris S. LaBellman, furrier, 20. Tim Merrill, president of O'Neal-Branch 14. Harold A. Gilliam, builder, 25.

IN ADDITION, 85 shares formerly owned by Donn and Lee Colee were apparently bought in by the corporation treasury and present ownership is not known. Class Holders Joseph Brechner, 800. Vasil Poloyvois, Washington, D. 308. Harris Thomson, Moorestown, N.

210. Marion Brechner, 82. AUTHORITY to operate channel 9 has been in litigation before the FCC and various courts including the U. S. Supreme Court, for more than a decade.

Chief point of contention was TTDuocflGcairaGOs ''f RICHARD G. DANNER Biggest stockholder alleged "improper conduct" by an attorney for the successful applicant in making ex parte representations (made in the absence of the other party to the cause) to an FCC commissioner. In a four page opinion decided March 4, 1905, the appeals court ordered the channel proceedings opened to new applicants. IN SUMMATION of the case, the court noted this case has been beset throughout by a variety vof dubious circumstances" and further noted: "We are not prepared to say the Commission is wrong in its appraisal of the significance to be accorded with the lapses with which each party has been charged in these proceedings; and we would agree that, absent any new evidence bearing upon them, the time has come to end litigation about them. "Neither are we parepared to say, however, that the guardianship of the public interest, entrusted by Congress to the Commission, is adequately effectuated by confining the choice to these two applicants in the light of facts put on the record over ten years ago.

"WE THINK this proceeding should be reopened, with an adequate opportunity provided for the receipt of new applications from persons who have not here appeared herein." City May Get Floral Clock Present city hall, located in the block bounded by Orange, Jackson, South and Boone, is to be demolished when Orlando Utilities Commission vacates space in the present city hall and the police department is moved from the ancient building. Buell Duncan, president-elect of Orlando Kiwanis, said Saturday that it had been suggested that the city might want to consider an underground parking garage under the park to provide income for the city. THE CLOCK project was first suggested to the club by Dr. William Kadel, then pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. The late Linton E.

Allen, Orlando banker and philanthropist, was also interested in the clock and on his trips abroad viewed and photographed many similar attractions there. He regarded it as an outstanding tourist attraction, Duncan said. The closest floral clock to Florida is believed to be in Kentucky. It annually attracts thousands of visitors. John F.

Kennedy Film Sells Out In Japan TOKYO (UPI) A Tokyo theater sold out all seats and standing room Saturday for five showing of a 90-minute film on the presidency and assassination of John F. Kennedy. At the end, the audiences of more thjfh 500 filed out slowly and silently. A few people clapped with the fading of the last scene of the flame at Kennedy's grave in Arlington National Cemetery. So0c0l 59.90 While They BOTH PIECES! Pay 6.S0 Month! Engineered GMiutnOy 'A Correct back support at 4 vital pressure YW SAVE SUPER POSTURGUARD gives you -iJ with support where it really counts.

It will never sink in, its full rebuilt borders won't sag evert if you sit on the edge. SUPER POSTURGUARD gives you the kind of rest that will make you feel' better and when we feel our best WE LOOK OUR BEST! Covered in an expensive handsome 8-ox. beige ticking! Full or twin size! ORDER BY MAIL OR PH. 241-5371 COLLECT! (100 Milt fret Delvery) HURRY TO 421 NO. ORANGE AVE..

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Pages Available:
4,732,775
Years Available:
1913-2024