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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 14

Location:
Lafayette, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

14 THE JOURNAL AND COURIER, LAFAYETTE, IND. Saturday Evening, January 16, 1971 Jordan's Plan Next On Mideast Agenda New GOP Leader Dole Says He'll Speak Out for President party; "it's our hope that we will be attracting people to the party." (AP) U.N. mediator Gun-nar V. Jarring has now heard Middle East peace proposals from both Israel and Egypt, and has scheduled a meeting Monday to hear Jordan's position. Jordanian Ambassador Mu-hammed H.

el-Farra told a reporter Friday night that he would see Jarring Monday and convey to him "the position of the government of Jordan on the implementation" of the 1967 U.N. "Security Council resolution that laid down conditions for a settlement of the Middle East crisis. Mohammed H. el-Zayyat, the Egyptian ambassador, presented his country's recommendations to the Swedish diplomat late Friday, a week after Jarring had received Israel's proposals during a visit to Jerusalem. The Egyptian ambassador said he had received instructions from his country and had replied to the Israeli pro-, posals "on paper" to Jarring.

He declined to give details of the reply. Diplomatic sources have said, however, that the Arabs had found nothing new or promising in the Israeli plan, which is understood to demand establishment of recognized boundaries in advance of talk about withdrawal of Israeli forces from territory occupied in the 1967 war. Jarring presented the Israeli plan to El-Zayyat and El-Farra earlier this week at U.N. headquarters after returning from a weekend trip to Israel. Israel's deputy premier, Yigal Allon, arrived in New York Friday and said the Big Four powers were frustrating efforts for peace in the Middle East.

Allon told newsmen that intervention by the Big Four the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain and France has "fostered illusions and encouraged an attitude in the Arab states which militates against peace." Allon is in the United States for a two-day fund-raising effort. In another development, the Lebanese government lodged a protest with the U.N. Security Council against a raid by Israeli commandos on a Palestinian guerrilla base 28 miles inside Leabnon. The Israelis swept through the fishing village of Sara-fand Thursday night to blow up two shoreside guerrilla strongpoints, but the Lebanese government and guerrillas said the attack was repulsed before the commandos reached the main base. Newsmen were barred from the scene and unable to verify the reports.

The base was used by the Palestinians to smuggle men and weapons to Arabs in the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military command said, adding that the raid was a retaliatory action for guerrilla raids into Israel from Lebanon. About 800 miles to the southwest, the Aswan Dam on the Nile River was dedicated by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Nikolai V. Podgor-ny, the Soviet chief of state, at a ribbon-cutting ceremony on top of the $1 billion dam. r-l 'MiiMiHaMiMUrliiiMiiaa know that we are a party united firmly behind a great president and a great program' Dole said. Dole, who took over Friday as chairman, said he will set to work immediately to help re-elect Nixon in 1972.

The Kansas senator said winning a new term for Nixon will be his primary role as head man in a new three-way leadership arrangement rec-mmended by Nixon and ratified without dissent Friday. "Above all, our responsibility is to the President," the 47-year-old senator said. "We serve at his pleasure, we leave at his pleasure." Thomas B. Evans 39, of Wilmington, was named o-chairman for administration and organization, and Anne Armstrong of Armstrong, was appointed co-chairman for special programs. The are new ones.

While Dole, as chairman, appointed the two co-chairmen, the selections were ratified by committee vote and they, like Dole, will serve at the pleasure of the national committee. It was part of a complex arrangement worked out in advance to placate Republicans dissatisfied with the choice of Dole and insistent on the selection of a fulltime politician to run the national committee. Evans will fill that role. Dole said Nixon did not want him as chairman to be an administrator, "and I didn't want to be an administrator. As national chairman, you are spokesman for your party.

Dole was elected to succeed Rep. Rogers. C. B. Morton of Maryland, who is leaving the committee and the House to become Nixon's secretary of the interior.

Morton's parting advice to the national committee: Keep up with the times, provide room in the' party for all Americans, lest Republicans merely "perfect the art of being second." Morton said Republicans must seek to enlist minorities and the poor in its ranks if it is to fashion majority votes. The newly elected Dole said he isn't going to be reading any Republican out of the Hardin Awarded Citation ciation. It was presented to Hardin by Don-old E. Foltz, Clinton, a former director of the Indiana Conservation Department and newly-elected president of the alumni association. Hovde was honored at the association's annual fish fry in the Purdue Armory.

(Staff Photo) Secretary of Agriculture Clifford M. Hardin (left) who came to Purdue University Friday to pay tribute to Purdue President Frederick L. Hovde on his 25 years of service to the university was himself a recipient of a citation. The citation came from the Purdue University Agriculture Alumni Asso Calley Trial To Hear Of Combat Mentality WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Robert J.

Dole of Kansas said today that, as Republican National Chairman, he will speak as effectively as possible in support and in defense of President Nixon "I shall not-lend the credit-ability of silence to slurs and slanders." ''1 shall not let unjustified attacks on the President go unchallenged," Dole told the Republican National Committee. "We cannot afford the luxury of ignoring the misrepresentations, innuendos, half-truths and out-and-out falsehoods that stream from the mouths and pens of those who wish the President or our party ill." Dole pledged his unyielding and continuous support to Nixon. "The President has a right to expect it and he deserves as much," Dole said. He said he hopes to serve as a unifier and a missionary of the GOP. "I would hope that during the next two years we can iron out any real differences so that the public will clearly BIRTHS HOME HOSPITAL Jan.

15 Daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Dean Deardurff, 1824 Elm-wood Ave. Daughter to Mr. and Mrs.

William Rubright, Rt. 1, West Lafayette. Daughter to Mr. and Mrs. James C.

Todor, 825 N. Salisbury West Lafayette. Son to Mr. and Mrs. David Nichols, Delphi.

Son to Mr. and Mrs. Mar-garato Basaldua, Wheatfield. Son to Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Simon, Frankfort. Son to Mr. and Mrs. Cordell Strug, 6.21 S. 10th St.

Son to Mr. and Mrs. Larry McCall, 261 Green St. ST. ELIZABETH HOSPITAL Jan.

15 Son. to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Barrett, 3700 Union St. Daughter to Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Patterson, Rt. 8. A daughter, Jeanette Irene, was born Jan. 8 to Mr.

and Mrs. Lawrence Hicks of London, England. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank D.

Colburn, 1915 Congress St. A daughter, Michelle Christie, was born Jan. 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schae-fer of London, England.

Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John M. Bundrick, 1293 Shenandoah Paternal grandparents are Mr. and.

Mrs. William E. Schaefer of Indianapolis. WINEGARD ANTENNAS G.E. TUBES Buy Today Call Your Nearest TV Dealer CWY Advertisement SINGER CENTER SEWING A Trademark of the Singer Hi and Main Sts.

Mfg. Co. Phone 742-6925 SWATT'S Shell Service COMPLETE CAR 21 N. th HER BOOTS ELSE. MORE SHOCKING THANpSY(JJig MORE SENSUAL THANREFUlS0jn MORE NERVE RIPPING THANBAiwjArir! CARE CONCRETE BUILDING SUPPLIES Von Tobel Lumber Mar-Jean Village Ph.

447-2128 HOME OF THE WHOPPER BURGER KING By MSI 52 Next To Market Square 1 ic COLD BEER COCKTAILS COZY LOUNGE 3312 South St. CHEF'S PANTRY The Good Place to DOWNTOWN Main St. at 2nd St. Eat RADIO-TV PARTS ofid SUPPLIES LAFAYETTE RADIO SUPPLY, INC. E.

North St. Ph. 742-4W4 408 SANCHELLI'S PATIO DRIVE-IN Next To Holiday Inn On 52 Bypass Phone 447-1938 Carry-Out Orden Hours Sun. thru Thurs. 10-10 Fri.

and Sat. 10 A.M.-11 P.M. DOOR gallery fine arts ceramics of 40 Indiana Artists Wed. thru Fri. 1-4 p.m.

Friday Evenings p.m. Sundays 1-4 p.m. WEST LAFAYETTE (Entrance in Rear) 510 U.S. 52 BYPASS "ACROSS FROM WABASH VILLAGE" FLAMING HEARTH RESTAURANT Speedway, Indiana Now appearing through January 23 The comedy and songs of "JOEY and LUIGI" (Only 60 minutes away from Lafayette) 5650 Crawfordsville Road. umaimmHMm-K mswi A MIKE NICHOLS FILM ALAN ARKIN mnriui uri i rn JOSEPH KELLER jack era.

buck henry, bob nembt, IfOlEHT ORSON WELLES tiMummmMummmmimuumuiMmm If Show Times LAFAYETTE features at: 1:25, 3:25, 5:25, 7:25, 9:30. MARS "Catch 22" (R); features at 1:15, 3:25, 5:30, 7:35, 9:40. CINEMA WEST Now showing "Tora, Tora, Tora" (G); Saturday and Sunday, 1:45, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40. (G General audience: All ages admitted; GP Parental guidance sua. gested: All ages admitted; Restricted: Na one under 17 admitted unless accompanied by parent or adult guardian; Restricted: No on under 18 admitted).

Panel Discussion Frank Bozarts, ecology coalition lobbyist, will take part in a panel discussion before the Medical Auxiliary at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the YMCA. Bozarth, of the Indianapolis Tuberculosis Association, will be joined by Dr. James Etzel, chairman of environmental engineering at Purdue, and Mrs. Joseph Wick, Cleaner Air Week chairman.

David Page, president of the Lafayette Environmental Action Federation, (LEAF) will moderate the panel discussion. McKINNISS ELECTRIC Industrial Commercial Residential Electric Wiring 3031 Union St. Ph. 447-5238 Greater Credit Lafayette Association SHE DIED WITH AND HOT MUCH Hospital HOME HOSPITAL Friday, Jan. 15: Evelyn Babcock, Monticello; Mrs.

Martha Bell, Monticello; Mrs. James Bishir, 1619 Alabama Floyd Blocher, Flora; Mrs. Gary Buettner and daughter, Muncie; Anthony Carlson, Brinkhurst; Robert DeVault, Chalmers; Infant girl Firth, Monticello; Mrs. John Fitzgerald, 811 S. 5th Troy Goodman, Otter-bein; Mrs.

Lind Greenburg, 2315 Berkshaff Drive; Mrs. Orpha Hanson, 826 S. 27th Mrs. Ira Hipsher, Wil-liamsport; Mrs. Mary Hof-stetter, Monticello; Mrs.

Myrtle Kennedy, Wingate; Miss Nettie Lambert, Remington; Mearl Lasley, Rom-ney; Mrs. Fred Leming, 925 Greenwich Rex Linback, Monon; William Logan, Wina-mac; Mrs. Ro a 1 McClimans, 201 S. 6th St. Mrs.

Donald Overton, 1002 S. 29th Mrs. Rayford Patrick, 2706 Oxford Duane Pepple, Frankfort; Mrs. Clarence Renfro, Stockwell; Mrs. M.

Hazel Rigby, 2921 E. Union Herman Rothen-berger, Mulberry; Mrs. Grace Shaffer, Delphi; Mrs. Ethel Smeltzer, Rossville; Mrs. Richard "Smith, 2517 FoxhalL Drive; Brian Stultz, Attica; Merrill Townsley, 4455 S.

150 East; Carl Utz, Rt. Richard Van Denoever, 2312 N. 20th Stacy Woods, 2724 S. 18th Stacy Woods, 2724 S. X8th Newton High, 2511 Newman Road, West Lafayette.

ST. ELIZABETH HOSPITAL Friday, Jan. 15: Maud Biery, Rt. Dale Carnahan, 1817 Wilson Margaret Clemons, 614 N. 8th Charles Craw, Rt.

10, West Lafayette; Deborah Duch-arme, 2225 Yount Mrs. Willard Farrell, 2026 Perrine Mrs. William Fischang, 843 Sparta West Lafayette; William Flinn, Earl Park; Mrs. Ernest Foerman, CHINESE VILLAGE OPEN EVERY DAY 11 A.M. TILL P.M.

EXCEPT TUESDAY FAMOUS FOR CHINESE AND AMERICAN FOOD CHINESE FOOD CARRY OUT AVAILABLE AT ALL TIMES 409 COLUMBIA STREET PHONE 742-4966 charged with premeditated murder of at least 102 Vietnamese men, women and children. The Army court-martial manual defines murder as premeditated "after the formation of a specific intent to kill someone and consideration of the act intended." The sanity board would examine Calley at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington. When the defense raised the prospect of psychiatric testimony earlier, prosecutor Abu-rey Daniel complained: "A year ago, I asked the defense if capacity to stand trial or ability to comprehend the charges would be an issue. Has anything changed?" Defense lawyer George Latimer replied that the doctors would testify only about "the stresses and strains of combat, the confusion that exists." "There is always mental abnormality about what people can do and what people can understand in combat," he said. "Anything that would indicate a lack of premeditation and lack of general intent to kill is relevant." The psychiatrists will be on the stand Monday out of the hearing of the jury so Judge Kennedy will have a chance to sample the testimony.

Clinician Joins Hospital Staffs Miss Leslie Mayer had joined the staffs of Home and St. -Elizabeth Hospitals as speech and hearing clinician. A native of Indianapolis, Miss Mayer is a graduate of Ball State University, and received -her master's degree from the University of Michigan in 1969. She taught at the Indiana School for the Deaf from 1967-1968, and worked as a speech therapist at the Mon-tebello State Hospital in Baltimore, Md. Dismissals Monticello; William Fuqua, 1920 Scott Miona Gordon, 2 2 3 1 Elmwood Carl Haines, 5074 Swisher Road, West Lafayette; Mrs.

Anthony Hendricks and daughter, Maples Mobile Home Park, West Lafayette; Charlie Hen-son, Thayer; Virgil Kelley, 1104 S. 4th William Kirts, Rt. 13; Mrs. Lindberg Lau-d a 1 Flora Mayme Lynch, Delphi; Mrs. Joseph Magee, Mulberry; Mrs.

Alfred Marquis and son, 227-15 Arnold Drive, West Lafayette; Mrs. Floyd Mitchell, Battle Ground; Matthew Myers, Fowler; Mrs. Dannie Neal, 1109 Southlea Drive; Maxine Pollard, Thorntown; Coy Ramey, 1121 N. 7th Mrs. Eugene Riley, New Market; Troy Ritchardson, Colfax; Gary Schultz, Morocco; Elizabeth Schutter, Earl Park; Gladys Servies, Craw-fordsville; Robert Spear, Attica; Katrina Spiker, Earl Park; Mrs.

DeWayne Sundt, Attica; Mrs. Boyd Thurman, Frankfort; Alfred Tindall, Morocco; Brian Van Hyfte, Attica; James Whitus, 1016 Cincinnati Eric Williams, 3033 Commanche Trail; Lester Burger, Brookston; Amy De Groff, 2525 Derbyshire Minnie Hartz, Crammer; Richard Holzl, Frankfort; Alice Lingle, 124 N. 10th David Oakes, 400 S. 3rd St. Russell F.

Davis, Inc. General Contractors "An Equal Opportunity Employer" Phone 474-1456 SEE THE VW today UNIVERSITY MOTORS, INC. 200 Bypass 52. W.L.. 463-1511 NITE! 3 WINNERS NIGHTLY! OFFICE OPENS 6:30 CLOSES AT 10:30 P.M.

SHOW STARTS 7:00 P.M. ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS Plus 2nd BIG THRILLER! AT 10:15 P.M. AFTER DRAWING METROCOLOR Gb Go "ftS FOR OUT-OF-TOWN RESERVATIONS CALL TOLL FREE 1-800238-5222 FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) The mental makeup of the soldier dogging an elusive enemy in Vietnam will be explored next at the court-martial of Lt.

William Calley. His lawyers hope it will help explain what happened at My Lai. But under limits imposed by' the trial judge, the testimony of three psychiatrists will deal only with hypothetical questions not with the' defendant Should the psychiatrists stray outside those lines, the government would have the right to turn Calley over to Army psychiatrists for examination a process that might interrupt the trial for three or four weeks. The prosecution said it has not had Calley examined by a psychiatrist. "Anything that goes to a mental, character or behavioral disorder," said Judge Reid Kennedy, "I would have to have him examined by a sanity board." The limit, he said, "is anything that goes to the capacity to form intent" The 27-year-old Calley, a platoon leader in the March 16, 1968, assault on My Lai, is FLOOR COVERING 2522 N.

SALISBURY PHONE 443-254 3 SOUND PRODUCTIONS Your Stereo Headquarters Purdue Service Center 743-3572 FROZEN CUSTARD DRIVE-IN CLOSED FOR THE SEASON WATCH FOR OPENING IN MARCH Now 4th and FINAL WEEK! W.v Si The incredible as told from Japanese mmwm mcz UrrfAi BIG FREE DRAWING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WESTERN BOOTS! JACKETS! JEANS! FROM RAPPS SIRE SHOP! IS THE MOST MOlirJG. HOST INTELLIGENT JHE MOST HUMANE OH, TO HELL WITH IT! IT'S THE BEST AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR! It comes as close to being an epic human comedy as Hollywood has ever made! Alan Arkin as Yossarian provides the film with its continuity and dominant style. Arkin is a deadly serious actor, he projects intelligence with such mono-maniacal intensity, he is both funny and heroic at the same time. Nichols remains, as he was before, one of our finest directors." "IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD, SAVAGE AND CHILLING COMEDY! Firmly establishes Nichols' place in the front rank of American directors." bruce Williamson, playboy "Viewing Arkin is like watching Lew Alcindor sink baskets or Bobby Fischer play chess. A virtuoso player entering his richest period! A triumphant performance!" -tme magazine attack on Pearl Harbor both the American and sides.

The epic journey of lour generations cf Americans who carved out a country with their bare bands jj STARS! d.ystu- 4 '-flMs COLOR T-ZZ i A "THIS EXPLOSIVE BLOCKBUSTER TOPS EVEN 'THE LONGEST DAY AS ENTERTAINMENT" Cosmopolitan TEZT SCALE THE HEIGHTS WHERE EAGLES DA1E 4 liVdWw I Film Ever Made. j. chard Burton Clint Wii't The Most Spectacular mm balsaM; mm benjamin, artnuh mmm, ANTHONY PERKINS; PAULA PSENTKS; MARTIN SHEEN; JON rmm- Eastwood Doors Open Sot. Sun. 1:00 P.M.

Feotures At: 1:454:20 7:009:40 FEATURE AT: 1:153:255:30 NOW SHOWING FEATURE 1:25 1:25 7:30 9:30 NOW SHOWING M-.

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About Journal and Courier Archive

Pages Available:
1,422,278
Years Available:
1850-2024