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The Morning Call from Allentown, Pennsylvania • 12

Publication:
The Morning Calli
Location:
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A-12 BUNDAT CAIX-CHKONICIE. Allentown, Pi, July 1971 Airlines Increase Security To Meet President's Edict i- spokesman in Washington said the carriers lacked the manpower to enforce the new rules. cent" security checks of all passengers and luggage at some airports to a good deal less than that at others. Some carriers said all carry-on luggage would be screened and ticket agents warned passengers to expect delays; others said security would be tightened but declined to say how or when. One spokesman for a major airline said he would like to By United Press International Major airlines Saturday began stepping up security precautions to comply with President Nixon's emergency order requiring strict anti-hijacking measures on all domestic commuter flights.

The response to the President's order, issued Friday by the Federal Aviation Administration, ranged from "100 per comply with the President's order but said he wasn't sure what it meant or how to implement it if he did. Rules Outlined According to an FAA spokesman, the new rules state that all passengers must submit two pieces of identification and submit to body searches if warranted and that all carry-on luggage must be searched. The new rules are in addition to existing federal laws requiring airlines to use at least three of four check methods. They are: metal detection devices, spot checks of baggage and checking of passengers against the FAA hijacker profile and spot checks of passenger identi Big Chess Clash In New Trouble "We are complying the best, we can given the manpower and, money situation," he said, add-1 ing that TWA would not make i body searches unless airline em- ployes, using the FAA profile, felt that a passenger evi-denced a behavioral trait found common among hijackers. In New York, Boston and': Pittsburgh, Eastern Airlines, spokesmen said security had been stepped up with inspectors' "opening everything that's car-' ried on" the airplanes.

Eastern: in New York advised passengers to check in a half-hour before departure instead of the usual 15 minutes on shuttle flights. i Meanwhile, Eastern and Pied-' mont Airlines spokesmen at 5 a 1 1 h-Durham Airport in North Carolina said they had not put the president's order into ef-i feet. Eastern said they would in-: spect baggage "only when war- ranted" while Piedmont relied1 on electronic surveillance. On the West Coast, agents for Pacific Southwest Airlines, i which has had two jets hijacked this week, continued to "greet and observe" boarding passengers at Los Angeles and San Francisco International air-, ports. lit I 'V! mmmmum iNWW hit faiifea have seen before" could cause some problems.

"But they are not important enough to wreck the match," he said. Cramer said Fischer was "absolutely relaxed and feeling great." He said he and Fischer came out of hiding Friday night and dined in public in a Reykjavik restaurant. Funnily enough, nobody recognized Bobby," Cramer said. "He had a great time. He loves the fish here in Iceland and he had fresh boiled salmon and orange juice.

CHANGES MIND Terry Lewis, 21, of New Orleans, threatens to Jump off the Mississippi River Bridge. The Rev, Peter V. Rogers, chaplain of city's police and fire departments, leaned over railing and persuaded Lewis not to take the plunge. Lewis was reported desponded and confused. Doctors Pose Strike As Militant Mood Increases Threat even if it meant abutting down everything temporarily, 38 per cent would never strike and 19 per cent didn't know what they would do.

Await Reaction "Events, of course, will gov ern the application of physicians' opinions on this issue," the magazine said. "National or ganizations will be keenly watching their members' reac tion to the predicted explosion of post-election health legislation." Various proposals for national health insurance are expected to be considered by the next Congress. The American Medical Association's governing body, the House of Delegates, acting at the AMA's annual meeting last month, referred for further study proposals to establish a "study commission to determine the most effective legal way to permit collective bargaining." The proposals grew out of the recent formation in several parts of the country of doctors' unions or guilds. NEW YORK (AP) Perhaps more than half of America's doctors would go on strike as members of physicians' guilds or unions, although few would close down hospitals or clinics totally, according to a survey conducted by a magazine for doctors. The magazine Medical Opinion said Saturday its survey detected "a real and unexpectedly militant mood for some form of physicians' guild or union" in the face of impending changes in medical practice such as a national health insurance pro gram, "A significant number of, American doctors perhaps more than half would strike if collective bargaining broke down and their organizations ordered it," the magazine said.

The results are based on 752 replies to 3,000 questionnaires sent to selected doctors. The magazine claimed the replies are a "balanced representation" of doctors of medicine and osteopathy. Forty-eight per cent said some REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) The Boris Spassky-Bobby Fis cher world chess championship match, already delayed for nine days, ran into new problems Saturday when the chief arbiter left Iceland. U.S. chess sources said Fis cher, the 29-year-old American challenger, is "at peak form and raring to go" into the first game Tuesday against the world champion, Russia's Spassky.

But the sources said there might have to be another postponement until Thursday since chief arbiter Lothan Schmid will not be back in town until then. Schmid, a West German grandmaster and the owner of book publishing firm in Bam berg, flew home Saturday morn ing and said he would return Thursday. He laid he was leav ing because one of his sons had been injured in a traffic Schmid's assistant arbiter. Gudmundur Arnlauggson of Iceland, will be in charge of final preparations, which include the touchy job of picking the chess sets and board to be used. Schmid laid he had Invited the two piayeri to come to the hall together on Sunday to check on the facilities and hopefully ap prove them.

But this meeting was called off Saturday after fcchmid left. Spassky also left town and went north with Icelandic friend and chess player, Freysteinn Thorbergsson, on a salmon fish ing trip. Russian officials said Spassky would be back Monday, at the latest. Thorberggson also invited Fis cher along, but the American turned down the invitation to ob serve his Church of God's Sabbath from Friday night until Saturday night. Before leaving Spassky said he was not going to argue about tne practical arrangements or the picking of sets and boards "I will leave that to Bobby it makes no difference to me," the 35-year-old champion told news men.

Fred Cramer, vice president of the U.S. Chess Federation, said the arrangements although "far superior to anything we DOUBLE SLANTS Reg. $223.. SPEC. $168.

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Save $60 wir 'I Ellsberg's Trial Opens Tomorrow LOS ANGELES (UPI) The long-delayed trial of Daniel Ells- berg for theft of the Pentagon Papers gets under way Monday. more than a year after the pub lication of the documents dealing with the origins of the Viet nam War. Tne 40-year-oid lormer re searcher for the Defense De partment faces the possibility of a long prison term, as does codefendant Anthony J. Russo, if they are convicted by a lury of charges of espionage, theft of government property and con spiracy. The main points of the defense are expected to be that the 1940 espionage law under which they were indicted does not apply to their actions and that the re moval of classified documents and disclosure to the news media is a common government practice.

Ellsberg had frankly admitted that he turned over sections of tut; ocucir oiuujr tir urc new York Times and other papers but, contrary to a widespread impression, the "leaking" of the Pentagon Papers is not an issue in the case. The New York Times, which won a Pulitzer Prize this year for its handling of the docu ments in June, 1971, is not even mentioned in the indictment which deals only with Ellsberg's allegedly illegal removal and possession of them. Sections of the papers, some of them itill unpublished, are expected to be read to the jury by the prosecution in an attempt to show that their disclosure was or could be harmful to the national interests of the United States. The defense, on the other hand, has indicated it would like to call as witnesses top government officials including Henry Kissinger. One lawyer said he would lik to ask Kissinger about his off the record brief ings with newsmen on the basis of his own highly secret infor mation.

Ellsberg was first indicted on June 28, 1971, but in December another grand jury widely broadened the charges a new indictment alleging espionage and also charging Russo, 35, Ellsberg's former coworker at the Rand Corp. "think tank" in Santa Monica, Calif. Both men theoretically face maximum prison terms of 115 years if convicted on all 15 counts of the indictment. Jury selection is expected to require about a week. Most of the questioning will be done by U.S.

District Judge Matt Byrne who was elevated to the bench last year after serving as United States attorney in Los Angeles. Secretary Becomes Princess BARNWELL, England (AP) -Birgitte van Deurs, an attrac tive 25Syer-old blonde Danish secretary, married Prince of Gloucester on Saturday and became a royal princes! in line for the throne, The ceremony was In the 13th century Church of St. Andrew, Prince Riohard is a cousin of Queen Elizabeth It and loth in line of succession to the throne. It was a royal wedding but all the pomp and pageantry of a state occasion was absent from the rural peace surrounding the told rose-covered stone cottages with thatched, roofs nestling round the church. The 400 inhabitants of the village turned up to see the 27-year-old prince and his bride.

Both he and his bride have worshipped often at the church and many of the local people have known him since he was a child. Shortly before the ceremony Prince Richard and his brother Prince William, who was best man, strolled under umbrellas through the rain to the church from Barnwell Manor, family eat of the Gloucester. Prince Charles, heir to the throne, arrived from London by helicopter. He hurried through the rain unsheltered. Other royal guests arrived by car.

The tDuchess of Gloucester, mother of the bridegroom, wore a white coat and a blue hat. Queen Elizabeth, the queen mother, was dressed all in blue and carried a plastic see-through umbrella. Other royal guests included the queen's sister Princess Margaret. The queen herself, her husband Prince Philip and their daughter Princess Anne Were in Scotland and did not attend. The bride arrived with her fa dher, an eminent Danish lawyer, and was dressed in a white Swiss organdy dress with bands of lace trimming, a white veil and carried a bouquet of white flowers.

After the ceremony the prince led his bride to a waiting car and drove off to Barnwell Manor for the reception. Because of the rain, the royal couple had to cancel a walk back to the house through meadows lined with school children ome of whom had waited more Khan seven hours to see the bride and groom. trp il Li LJ Vw LJ a.LJ wJ mlW (o(P)(Pl MtiM battel ieettel fej-rf iiffitS kuil jT nf LJ Li mm k-1 Li umk tmJ iuaM lutflM 'n I. I' 11 MliH fMSi wad fication. But the details of the new rules are yet to be worked out, according to some airline spokesmen around the country'.

"In the long run you're going to see increased diligence in security by airlines but the White House is going to have to spell out what it means," said a spokesman, for United Airlines at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago. "The last thing we want to do is cop out but we don't know what to do at this point," he said. A Trans World Airlines County type of doctor' union or guild Is inevitable. Sixteen per cent laid organizations such as the Amer. ican Medical Association will be able to handle the situation; another 16 per cent said specialty societies will become the spokesmen.

"Three of five would join today," Medical Opinion said, "expressing little support for organizations currently charged with representing medicine in federal negotiations." The article did not attempt to define the difference between a doctors' union and guild, but it appeared the word guild did not seem to have the connotation of labor union militancy. Thirty-five per cent of the doctors responding said they would join either, but of the remainder only 3 per cent said they would join a union. Twenty-three per cent said they would join a guild. Asked about striking, 38 per cent said they would strike provided emergency services were covered, 11 per cent would strike under certain other conditions, 4 per cent would strike 3fl HAVE QUALITY EASTERN Kim 1 2IAO Spec. '335 Save $60 Spec.

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Pages Available:
3,112,024
Years Available:
1883-2024