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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 6

Location:
Lafayette, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6 THE JOURNAL AND COURIER, LAFAYETTE, IND. Friday Evening, January 22, 1971 5'. Court Is Told City Officials This Funny World lation of public spending that I have ever seen in my tenure" with the board. The defendants are accused of using $365,000 of waterworks funds for a combined city garage and apartments for elderly persons and Didn't Profit $119,000 in sewage works construction funds for sidewalks. City Attorney James Cot-ner, who is defending Hooker and Young, said in his opening statement the officials saved Bloomington as much as $50,000 by using available funds.

ifc i U.S. 52 BY-PASS AT SALISBURY WEST LAFAYETTE PHONE 463-9711 KIRK DOORS HENKf ODft HOME COTN VTOEN OfilB bUOS RIRMil Janet, why don't we go to bed so these nice people can go home?" LEGISLATORS TO ADDRESS WOMEN VOTERS Tippecanoe County's three state legislators will be guests of the Greater Lafayette League of Women Voters Saturday morning at a "legislative breakfast" in Morris Bryant Inn. Sen. Jess Andrew R-West Point, and Reps. Frances Gaylord, R-West Lafayette, and Richard Boehning, R-Lafayette, will comment briefly and field questions.

The local league, along with leagues over Indiana, has completed a two-year study of Indiana's tax structure with special emphasis on school financing. Discussion will be directed toward those topics. Actress Rescued FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) Actress Susan Hay-ward was rescued by firemen today after a blaze trapped her on the balcony of her ninth floor apartment. The firemen had to break through triple locks on the hall door to reach Miss Hay-ward, who was alone in the apartment.

They got her out uninjured. Cause of the fire was being investigated. ALT HEIDELBERG DELICIOUS GERMAN BEER AND FOOD 1015 Main St. Dial 742-9102 PIZZA KING MARKET SQUARE -imm mm mmmm mmmm mmi N.O.F. CLUB For Single Young Adults 21-35 Next Partv Fri- Jan.

29th TAHOE SWIM CLUB 2112 Beck Lane 9:30 P.M.-2 A.M. 747-4793. T49-MM nr A Parolee Sought In Woman's Death Arrested SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) Larry Ronald Davis, a prison parolee wanted in Georgia on a murder charge in the death of a young Indiana woman, has been arrested here, the FBI said The FBI said Davis, 2.7, of Conyers, was charged with unlawful flight to avoid apprehension for armed robbery and forgery. The body of Susan E.

Doty, 25, Petersburg, was discovered Dec. 15, partly covered with leaves, beside a road near Atlanta. Miss Doty, a Girl Scout employe, had disappeared five days before. Davis was arraigned here and held on $50,000 bond. He waived a removal hearing and was lodged in the county jail to await officials to return him to Georgia.

The FBI said Davis was arrested in a stolen automobile. Davis had reportedly fled Georgia in a car belonging to. Miss Doty. Davis was indicted Jan. 18 on the murder charge by a grand jury in Cobb County, Ga.

The robbery charge stems from an earlier, unrelated incident. Miss Doty was last seen in a store in Atlanta's Buckhead section Dec. 10. Two Die as Bus Hits Truck On Toll Road MICHIGAN CITY (AP) Two passengers were killed and 25 other persons were injured when a chartered bus rammed the rear of a steel hauling truck on the Indiana Toll Road Thursday night. The Indiana Motor Bus with 33 persons aboard was chartered by National Standard Co.

of South Bend and was returning to South Bend from Chicago where persons who work with business machines attended a seminar Thursday. State police identified the men killed as Michael J. Fett, 31, South Bend, and Robert P. Barker, 29, Buchanan, Mich. The injured were taken to hospitals in Michigan City and LaPorte.

State police said the accident occurred one mile from the Michigan City interchange. They said the front end of the bus was ripped apart and the two passengers killed were thrown to the highway. One victim was struck by a car, police said. DELICIOUS SANDWICHES FAST CARRY-OUT 3247 Teal Road Ph. 474-8565 COUGAR IN IS" COLOR WILD ANIMALS SPARKLING STREAMS BREATHTAKING SCENERY A true wildlife adventure story 'WHISKERS' 1 ff COMING SOON JAN.

27 LAFAYETTE THEATRE 742-6915 A FAMILY FILM WEEKDAYS: 5, 7 P.M. 1, 5, 7 3, 5, 7 9 WXTIOWAL miTWPMAOL we. I 0mZ open Daiy I iu 10 I i Frf. and Sat. Show Times LAFAYETTE "There was a Crooked features at: 1:00, 3:10, 5:15, 7:25, 9:35.

MARS "Catch 22" (R); features at 1:15, 3:25, 5:30, 7:35, 9:40. CINEMA WEST Now showing "Lovers and Other Strangers" (R); today 7:30, 9:30. (G General audience: All ages admitted; GP Parentol guidance suggested: All ages admitted; Restricted: No one under 17 admitted unless accompanied by parent or adult guardian; Restricted: No on under IS admitted). if Ri When he was good, he was very, very good. And when he was bad it was murder.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) A former State Board of Accounts examiner testified in the trial of two Blooming-ton officials charged with misapplying funds that he found no evidence they profited personally. The witness was Richard Worley, former chief examiner for the board. Mayor John H. Hooker Jr.

and City Controller Howard Young went on trial Monday in Monroe Circuit Court on charges of misapplying city funds and misconduct in office. Kenneth Beasley, current chief examiner of the accounts board, testified he considered action by the defendants the "most flagrant vio ooooooooooo DIAL 92u7 FM ooooooooooo LUCKY STEER STEAK HOUSES 2 LOCATIONS 119 N. RIVER ROAD, W.L BYPASS 52 and TEAL ROAD Indiana's Finest Cocktail Lounge THEATRE LOUNGE WILLIAMSPORT, IND. DANCING NIGHTLY MONTICELLO DRIVE-IN THEATRE CLOSED FOR THE SEASON We Thank You for Your Patronage DANCING NIGHTLY Wmmm LIVE BAND NIGHTS SHAWNEE ANDTAVERN 3231 UNION ST. PH.

447-W53 23 8 p.m. Music Strip s3.95 DINNER M.69 COME TO GILTNER'S j' SOUTHLAND Good Food Family Service .1 OPEN :00 A.M. TO 8:00 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY 11-7 ROAD 43 SOUTH Visit the HOTEL ATTICA for the Best Prime Rib and Catfish moiiiH FEATURE AT 1:003:105:15 7:15 :35 hist nn mil to see rrr Archer WinsHn. Mew Itofc PoC OTHER STRANGERS" RICHARD CASTELLANO BOB DISHY DOORS OPEN SAT.

1 P.M. -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Time CATCH-22' says many things that need to be said again and again! Alan Arkin's performance as Yossarian is great!" -Joseph Mcrgensttm, NEWStVtt 1 "THE FUnrJIEST OUiE I UE SEEN THIS YEAR! Oil Slick Battlers Making Progress SAN FRANCISCO (AP) After four days of around-the-clock, operations, officials say they are beginning to get the upper hand in their battle against a huge oil slick. The Coast Guard reported after an aerial survey Thursday that most concentrations of the slick had been cleared out of San Francisco Bay, although huge amounts remained in the Pacific Ocean. About 1,000 oil company workers and uncounted thousands of volunteers had been spreading straw on the oil, raking it ashore and hauling it away since two tankers collided in thick fog early Monday, spilling 840,000 gallons of ship fuel oil.

On the water, tugs, charter boats and a fleet of skim bar-g with suction pumps worked to lift out the thick oil. if gallery 1C AT HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZ: PURDUE CONVOCATIONS PRESENTS HIGHEST RATING "A BEAUTIFU PLAY COMPASSIONATE AND FUNNY." A rare, rewarding screen mm Bill Would Make Fatal Blast Murder INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) Terrorists and other persons convicted of triggering a bomb that caused a fatality could receive the death penalty under terms of a bill introduced in the Indiana Senate. The measure was one of four bills offered Wednesday dealing with crimes of violence. All four would increase penalties for various crimes, including a possible death sentence for "the unlawful and malicious use or detonation of any explosive" that causes a fatality. Sen.

Leslie Duvall, R-Indianapolis, introduced the proposed amendment that would define as murder deaths caused by deliberately-caused explosions. The penalty provided for first degree murder under this section of the existing law is life imprisonment or death. Duvall also introduced a bill to increase the penalty for conviction on committing a felony while armed to "not less than 10 years nor more than 30 years." A measure introduced by Sen. George R. Rubin, R-Indianapolis, would expand the penalty of trespass to include buildings, fenced or enclosed land.

Sens. Herman Fanning, D-Terre Haute, and Keith McCormick, R-Lebanon, also offered a measure to require the Indiana Scholarship Commission to deny or revoke scholarships to any student who "shall have been convicted of the illegal use of physical force or violence during a public demonstration in which he is participating." SPECIALIZING INczr-j CATFISH HILL HOUSE RESTAURANT BAR ROAD 43 SOUTH PH. 474-9963 GOOD FOOD RANCH HOUSE ON THE BYPASS KNICKERBOCKER OLDEST BAR IN INDIANA 117 N. 5th SERVING DELICIOUS HOME COOKED NOON LUNCHEONS and EVENING DINNERS ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS AMERICAN DREAM ART GALLERY Originals only OIL PAINTINGS $3.95 Landscapes Seascapes Floral Modern Portraits A wonderful opportunity to purchase an original work of art in all sizes and styles at a reasonable and sensible price. Hours: Monday thru Saturday 10 to 5 Closed: Tuesday and Thursday 64 S.

Main, Frankfort Phone 659-1320 -k4 WdH, Jr, Ihw Vtit THEO BARNES IN experience. Not Verk Oily Nm GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE LEAST 50 OFF All Merchandise Must Be Sold MAKE US AN OFFER wwm THE INTERNATIONAL SMASH HIT 'Hysterically funny from beginning to end. You will laugh ail the NOW LOVERS AND BONNIE BEDELIA MICHAEL BRANDON IE lill I ymi a 1ST JANUARY Elliott Hall of Saturday and Sunday 'HI 5 or by appointment dial 742-0520 or 743-9819 11th and main sts. wry-; 328 WABASH AVE. Phone 742-4948 arm, way through it! AnM GuMm.1.

WCBS dto Mil COLOR Public $4 $3 Students $1 SOc with validated passports Hall of Music Box Office Open 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., weekdays HALL OF MUSIC SERIES I illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli ABC nCTUIECOII. mesents DAVID susskind moouction NOW PLAYING BEBE SWEET i "THE GERMAN BEAUTY" also SUZEN SLADE and THE DEAN'S TRIO OPENING MONDAY, JANUARY 25TH ANNIE FANNY 5 FLOOR SHOWS NIGHTLY I besTbut 1 STEAKS and SEAFOODS I Lj FRESH (NEVER FROZEN) SERVING DELICIOUS NOW THRU SUN. BOX OFFICE OPEN AT :30 ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS SAFE! WARM! CAN'T BURN! 9USG, 10ST BIT, THE K0ST KU- SIZZLING CHARCOAL New York Filet COMPLETE 'Mti-m, TO HELL WITH IT! JAi ERITT EKLAND II t.mn BEATRICE ARTHUR TODAY! STARTS IS 11 "IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD SAVAGE AND CHILLING COMEDY! Firmly establishes Nichols' place in the front rank of American directors. Alan Arkin's finest screen performance to date.

'CATCH-22' would be an important event in any movie year. COLOR snwwr ol jLJiiJLJ I -IT'S THE BEST ASlCilH I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" And introducing our popular JET STEAK CHOICE OF SALAD, POTATO, ROLLS I shown First I PETER FALK --o I ItflUWf Iflorinda bolkan li 2nd FEATURE tmmV lL AND 3RD NEW HIT I ABOUT 11:00 P.M. Shown Sooner or latepflPpri are going to get it. I RATED "Viewing Arkin is like watching Lew Alcindor sink baskets or Bobby Fischer play chess. A virtuoso player entering his richest period! A triumphant performance! 'CATCH-22' is, hard as a diamond, cold to the touch and brilliant to the eye!" nWEMAGAONC ALAiy ARKIN MSKIWfflflKiVHIT JOSEPH HF1LER 1 i jillr iJ.Vi iJJ tfai fijAjj i 1 U.S.

BYPASS 52 LAFAYETTE LAMPLIGHTER ROOM MARTIN BALSAM, RKMD BENJAMIN; ARTHUR BARFDNKEL- JACK GILFORD. BUCK HENRY. BOB NEWKART; ANTHONY PERKINS, MOU PRENTISS-MARTIN SBfill; JCNVOT8 ORSON WELLES SCREENPIAY BY BUCK HENRY PRODUCED BY JOHN GALLEY MARTIN RANSOHOff DIRECTED BY MIKE NICHOLS Uimyil liLLt.LV uii iivhwwmi Wl WVIHIWILkLI now FEATURES AT: 1:153:25 5:30 7:359:40 jj ju.

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