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The Times Recorder from Zanesville, Ohio • 1

Location:
Zanesville, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ecordler jme Good Reading On The Inside Zanesville's Doug Kane Races For World Calvary Baptist Circus Featured At Boggs Road. Comprehensive Zanesville Plan Outlines Progress. Big Muskie Waits Quietly To Take High Hill Farm. I-D Dr. Increase Mathews Home Serves As Museum.

I-D 110TH YEAK NO. 14536 PACES 6 SECTIONS ZANESVILLE, OHIO, 13701, SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, 1973 TWENTY CENTS H'iUIIIIIIIIPIII'I'IWBllilli I II II III mi Justice Douglas Reinstates Decision ifti 'i iL v. 1 1 VSM rW IV i PI "Ilk j' i ,1 1 fcT" fflrf PL itm Orderec WLiM i 1 .1 i mA vl mam i tw jtfi Lirlif i iil'j i miAm. III I a wmA usual appeals process without advance Supreme Court intervention. Marhall said the July 27 bombing halt was "stayed pending further order by this court." This seemed to indicate the justices fully expected to receive an appeal from the 2nd U.S.

Circuit Court of Appeals in New York, which now has the case, no matter which way that court decides. In his five-page opinion, the staunchly liberal Douglas, 74, said he was ordering an immediate bombing halt to avoid further bloodshed in Cambodia. "This case in its stark realities involves the grim consequences of a capital case," he said, and to deny it "would catapult our airmen as well as Cambodian peasants into the death zone." the bombing ended at once, Marshall reversed his action by granting a Justice Department request to block the original bombing halt ordered by a lower court effective July 27. It was the second time in three days that Marshall had gotten the case challenging the bombing as unconstitutional. And for the second time, Marshall ruled that the case must make its way through the WASHINGTON (UPI) With the backing of his other colleagues, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall Saturday wiped out a decision by fellow Justice William 0.

Douglas and the hopes of antiwar forces for an immediate halt to U.S. bombing in Cambodia. A few hours after the vacationing Douglas telephoned from Yakima, ordering Willi I 'MM iiir im, Vim -fllliill til ii. Ir II WW'iJ ii hi 1 4 iiiM Skylab Crew Undaunted i 1 1 1 1 ill ii! I I iii' I if flfa)''! 1 1 I. i ii.

in ''ii ii I Bp I ii Vif: I is i ii 1 1 i I'm 'i if By Troubled Space Ship i i 1 i i nllll "1 1 Si i mm 'i i n' M) 11 1 11 I I i 1 i Ti i' i 1 Hi i 11 1 i Ms sa iiifii 111 I lllll I ii 1 11 Ii! I'll 1 ,1 1 I I I I. I III I .11 II i Ii 'I Hflwap; i I li hiiH ii IllPSii'll' L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma to fly home in their crippled Apollo ferry ship.

Flight director Charles Lewis said as it now stands, the Apollo would be used only if there were a major problem aboard Skylab requiring a quick evacuation by the astronauts. A rescue ship being prepared at Cape Kennedy will not be ready for launch until Sept. 10. The most significant of Saturday's problems was a "large magnitude" short circuit between two major electrical distribution systems in Skylab's sun-watching observatory. Lewis said it knocked out one of two television systems in the observatory but did not affect Skylab's main power system.

Barring further problems in the observatory, it appeared the short would not interfere with the ship's research of the sun. Flight controlers told the astronauts to refrain from turning on the observatory's telescopes until engineers studied the situation. Lewis said for a while it appeared there was a major By BRUCE E. HICKS UPI Space Writer HOUSTON (UPI) A short circuit in the sun observatory, several minor problems and a false alarm plagued edgy ground controllers Saturday but the Skylab 2 astronauts went on with their research and photographed an 11,000 miles swath of earth. Engineers in the Mission Control Center kept a close watch on technical data being radioed down from the big space station, watching for any problems that could force Alan .1 1 1 1 1 1, Oil 1 1 1 'Ii ill IS 1 'I "I i I I I II III I II: If Ihf1 ififflpMH ir'ii iiiMiifililiiaitii iii III iiliil iiiiuiljiiii! lilliil ililiitakj I But Marshall polled his other fellow justices by telephone and said all 'agreed on the narrower technical point that they should await the appellate court's decision before they act.

The appeals court has scheduled a hearing on the bombing challenge for Aug. 8 one week before all U.S. combat activity is scheduled to end in Cambodia under orders from Congress. Marshal cancelled out Douglas' order just as Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman, who took the bombing challenge to court in the first place, issued a short-lived statement rejoicing over Douglas' decision.

"For the first time in 10 years, this country will not be at war," she said. "No more desperately needed tax dollars will go any more to fuel this unconstitutional war." The Justice Department had told Douglas at a hearing Friday that ending the bombing now would be "extremely disruptive." When he received word of Douglas' decision Saturday morning, Deputy Solicitor General Daniel M. Friedman promptly asked the Supreme Court to stay the original U.S. District Court bombing halt order. Throughout the day of legal maneuvering, the Pentagon continued its bombing operations in Cambodia without interruption.

A Pentagon spokesman said there would be no interruption of the air raids as long as administration lawyers were seeking to circumvent Douglas order in the Supreme Court. The White House had no comment on Douglas ruling, but Sen. James B. Allen, called it "a monstrous and arrogant power grab." The bombing and all other U. S.

combat activities In Cambodia wer. scheduled to end anyway at 'midnight, 14, a deadline imposed by Congress and reluctantly accepted by President Nixon. Defense Secretary James R. Schlesingcr issued orders to American commanders Friday to cease all operations in Cambodia as of Aug. 15 except for unarmed reconnaissance flights and shipments of $187 million worth of military -equipment to the Cambodian army.

The Pentagon, informed of Douglas' decision at 9 a.m. (EDT) Saturday, said 2Vi hours later the bombing would continue uninterrupted for the time being, in view of the government's legal maneuvering to override Douglas' order. The United States has been flying about 40 strikes by B52 bombers and 150 to 200 sorties by tactical bombers daily in support of Cambodian government forces defending the capital of Phnom Penh from Communist attack. Douglas' ruling was a tentative victory for Rep. Elizabeth Holtman, D-N.

and four Air Force officers who have fought a see-saw battle in the courts 1o end the Cambodian bombing immediately as an unconstitutional presidential exercise of Congress' war-making powers. Weddings And Wheclbarroivs John Larson wheeled his bride along Main ed the wheelbarrow carriage but acknowledged street In Zanesville some five blocks to it was not what she had dreamed of all thes reception hall following their wedding at St. years. The couple plans to honeymoon In Cin- Nieholas Catholic Church Saturday. The clnnatl.

(Photo by Don Durant) bride, the former Miss Kathleen Gess, accept- Cambodians Oblivious To Steady Air Attacks Admits Firing At Kent State Man Shot WASHINGTON (UPI) A man claiming he worked for the FBI may have fired a shot that sparked the killing of four Vnvt Ctna Tniirsrcif it cflfafltfi new problem in the Apollo, involving a helium leak, but the trouble was traced to nothing more serious than difficulty with instruments on the ground. The Apollo, which earlier lost two of four control rocket units, was all right this time. "That gave us a real scare with the problems that we've got presently in the command module," Lewis said at a news conference. "It was very tense and quiet in the MOCR (mission control center). It was sort of spooky." The astronauts had a false fire alarm in Skylab in the afternoon.

The shrill alarm went off while Lousma was talking to mission control and Bean said the warning came from the ship's wardroom. "Now, we're down here looking around and there's no fire, obviously, but we're a little bit puzzled," Bean said. The commander said a fire sensor may have been triggered by sunlight or an area of radiation above the South Atlantic Ocean. A television tape recorder also failed and the astronauts discarded into space a jammed instrument designed to measure a faint glow of light in the distant sky. The instrument, which was extended through an airlock in the side of the space lab, could not be pulled back inside because of a mechanical failure.

Flight controllers directed the pilots to jettison it so a powerful camera could be installed in the airlock to view earth. "We tried all the things we could think of and still no luck so we Bean reported. "There she goes." The crewmen beamed back television pictures of the 22-foot instrument as it drifted slowly away from Skylab, with the blue and white earth 270 miles below. The astronauts conducted their second photographic survey of earth resources during a 39-minute, 11,000 mile sweep across the stales of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas and Louisiana and into the Gulf of Mexico and over parts of South America. Socialist White People's Party, a successor to the American Nazi party.

The authors of the letters were not named by Bayh. Guardsmen summoned to the Kent State campus in Ohio have said they opened fire on the students only after a sniper shot at them. Tape recordings of the campus antiwar demonstration on May 4, 1970, record a single shot of unknown origin, followed by firing from the guardsmen. Bay speculated that the unexplained first shot prompted the guard response. "In my judgment," he said, "it is entirely possible that one Terrence Norman was the catalyst." Attorney General Elliot L.

Richardson announced Friday the Justice Department was reopening its inquiry into the killings as a result of unspeci- fied new evidence. One of the letters made public Saturday, Bayh said, came from the commander of a guard company which arrested a man identified as "Terry Norman." The senator released two more letters from guardsmen who said they participated in the arrest. The company commander's letter said he did not personally arrest Norman, but auestioned "several others" who were present. He said four enlisted men made the following statement: "As Norman ran toward our line, people were chasing him, yelling 'slop that man he killed Another man, a lieutenant, overheard Norman tell the campus police, 'I think I shot one of the students grabbed at me and. started beating me, so I grabbed my thunder this year but not much rain." Government radio stations broadcast continuous announcements of brilliant military victories on all fronts, but some of the generals have packed off their wives and children to Paris.

Cambodian leaders have been inviting U.S. Embassy officers to an increasing number of luncheons these days with such attractions as "hot dancing" for entertainment. an all-out effort to save the regime of Prime Minister Lon liol before the Aug. 15 bombing leadline. The Cambodians, however, seem almost oblivious to the roar of the air strikes and to the unhappy military fads that prompted them.

Phnom Penh residents simply raise their voices in an attempt to drown out the bombs and only occasionally will someone crack the already stale joke, "a lot of PHNOM PENH (UPI) The mood in Phnom Penh is one of free-wheeling gaiety despite the crumbling of the capital's outer defense perimeter and the creeping possibility of the capital's "fall" to surrounding Communist troops. "Musiquc Monsieur Nixon" the Cambodian nickname for the the thunder of American B52 bombers has reached an almost deafening volume in the city as the United States makes by National Guardsmen in 1970, according to letters released Saturday by Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind. Authors of the letters said the man whom Bayh identified as Terrence Brooks Norman, 24, now a District of Columbia policeman, told them he had fired a shot. Questioned Saturday, Norman declined comment.

"I will have to consult with my attorney," he said. Bayh said FBI Director Clarence Kelley- told him Norman had never been under contract or directly employed by the FBI, but had received $125 in April, 1970, for providing information on the National Ex-Inmate Kills Three News Digest Hearings Drone On TRACY CITY.Tenu. (UPI) a Michael Gregory," Judkins id In Watergate Case which Seagroves made his escape was found abandoned a short time later. Authorities said the shooting occurred about noon in the parking lot between a grocery and hardware store and a funeral home. Grundy County Chief Deputy Austin Patterson said Seagroves was apparently shot by one of the four occupants of the car after grabbing the child.

The blood-stained truck in Man Who Shot Dillinger Dies At VeCs Hospital Inside The Times Recorder Page Sec. legal battle over the secret White House tapes. Further court action is expected next week, with special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox and the Senate committee seeking judicial orders for Nixon to comply with subpoenas demanding disclosure of the tapes. Next week also will mark the end of the first phase of the Senate hearings, with Chairman Sam J. Ervin adjourning, them until after Labor Day and concluding the inquiry into the bugging of Democratic national headquarters and the ensuing cover-up.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -After hearing 37 witnesses give testimony spanning more than 6,000 pages over 35 days, the Senate Watergate Committee is tired, cranky and still without definitive answers to the key questions confronting it from the start. For the four Democrats and three Republicans on the panel, the most crucial unknowns concern President Nixon's role what did he know about the scandal, when did he find out and what did he do about it. How much ultimately is learned about the President and his top aides will depend heavily on the outcome of the Builders Page 5 Classified Pages 4-7 Crossword puzzle 5 Deaths and Funerals 2 Jeane Dixon 4 Feature Page 1 Financial News 7 Page Sec. Predmore, Minnie 5 Profiles 6 Question of Week 3 A Sports 2-4 Stamps 8 Television News 3 Theaters 6 Weather Map 2 Week In Review 6 A Women's News 1-5 A prison inmate who was paroled less than a week ago shot and killed three persons and wounded his cx-wife outside a grocery Saturday before fleeing with his 2-year-old son, authorities said. State troopers threw up roadblocks within a radius of this mountain community Saturday night searching for the suspect, Alvin Seagroves, 26.

Seagrovcs was shot in the face and was last reported seen traveling in a black car with a woman companion. He stopped in his flight long enough to leave his son, Bryan, at the home of the child's grandmother, Mrs. Essie Mae Seagroves. Authorities said the child was not injured. Seagroves' ex-wife, Phyllis, was reported in critical condition in a Sewanee, hospital, The dead were identified as Michael Gregory, her husband, Edward Metcalf, and Metcalf's wife, Joan.

All were from Tracy City. Stewart Judkins, information officer for the State Corrections Department, said Seagroves was paroled from the state prison in Nashville last Monday. "There was a special condition of his parole he was not to associate with his ex-wife or Dillinger would be attending the showing of "Manhattan Melodrama" at the Biograph. Winstead recalled Dillinger attempted to run into an alley and reached for his gun. Winstead and Hurt both fired simultaneously.

Dillinger began to "spin like a top and fell dead." A laboratory analysis revealed that two of the three bullets which hit Dillinger were fired by Winstead. Gift of Roses 4 A Ohio News 6 A TR-ACTION 8 Tanaka Relaxes SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Japanese Prime Minister Ka-kuei Tanaka stopped in San Francisco Saturday for a day of golf and relaxation en route home, from his meeting with President Nixon. Peron Nominated BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -The Justicialista party Saturday nominated former dictator Juan D. Peron for president and his wife, Isabel, as his running mate in Argentina's Sept. 23 elections.

Tuo Killed MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI) -Harry E. Devinney, 23, and Linda L. Jordan, both, of here, were killed Saturday when their, car crashed on Ohio 603 in Richland County. Four Persons Slain ROMEOVILLE, 111. (UPI) -Four persons, including three teenagers, were found bludgeoned to death in a Romeo-ville residence Saturday and police said a Florida truck driver would be charged with their murders.

Queen Returns Home LONDON (UPI) Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip returned Saturday night from opening sessions of the Commonwealth conference in Ot-' tawa. Jazz Great Eddie Condon Dies ll Pay ALBUQUERQUE, N. Mexico (UPI) The man credited with firing two of the three bullets which killed gangster John Dillinger outside the Biograph Theater has died, lie was 82. Charles Winstead, for many years considered one of the FBI's most accurate pistol experts, died Friday at the Albuquerque Veteran Hospital. Winstead, a native of Sherman, spent much of his early years in the FBI chasing the gangster duo of Bonnie and Clyde through Texas and Louisiana but his meeting with Dillinger on that night of July 22, 1934 was the most publicized event of his career.

Winstead and another FBI agent, Charles Hurt, now of McAlester, were credited with gunning down Dillinger when he emerged from the Chicago theater accompanied by two women, Anna Sage and Polly Hamilton. Winstead later recalled that Dillinger was blanked by his two women companions when he emerged from the theater at about 9:30 p.m. It was Anna Sage, the "woman in red," who had tipped off the FBI that ATTENTION Hitijoint refriu. Tup freezer. $S0.

Ill" range elec. Extra burners if). RACA 15-8 TV. Stand, romntn control $90. "It pays to advertise.

All prices met, so I'm glad to share the price of my ad." Those words are an exact quote made by the advertiser when the bill was paid. The Want Ads really work. For best results start with the 10 day plan 3 lines for 10 days for $9.90. Cancel when you get results and pay only for the days used. Ph.

432-4561 Ask for Classified setting up his own club. Condon's sidemcn were legion, but many of his best records featured such stars as trumpeters Wild Bill Davison and Billy Butterfield and trombonist George Brunies. Condon was the author of three books on his life in jazz "We Called It Music," "Treasury of Jazz," and the latest, to be published soon, "Eddie Condon's Scrapbook of Jazz." In his last public appearance, July 6, 1972, he played at Carnegie Hall during the Newport Jazz Festival in New York City. In 1925 he and Red McKenzie formed the Chicago Rhythm Kings, whose records are now collectors items. He and McKenzie moved to New York in 1928 and started another band, the Mound City Blue Blowers, consisting of four instruments tne banjo, guitar, and became the hit of New York cafe society until big band swing came into vogue in the 1930s.

During those years Condon played in Artie Shaw's band, and helped spearhead a rival of Dixieland style jazz in the 1940s, organizing jazz concerts in Carnegie Hall and then He was bom Albeit Edwin Condon in Goodland, Nov. 16, 1904. His family moved to Illinois wlien he was two because, joked Condon, who was as fast with a quip as he was with his guitar, the Hoosier State "went dry and I couldn't take that." Condon quit school at 15 and headed for Chicago's Roaring Twenties night spots where a new school of jazz Chicago style was being nursed into life by such youngsters as Bix Biederbeck, Gene Krupa, Bud Freeman, and Joe Sullivan. He joined a Chicago band, Homer Peavcy's Jazz Bandits. NEW YORK (UPI) Jazz great Eddie Condon whose driving, Chicago style of guitar playing sparked bands for 40 years from the 1920s to the 1960s, died Saturday of a bone disease at Mt.

Sinai Hospital after a lengthy illness. He was 68. Condon, whose guitar was a rarity in basic jazz, helped make New York City a mecca for fans who flocked to his famous club, Eddie Condon's, in Greenwich Village in the post World War II years, and later when he moved It uptown in the days when 52nd Street rang with great Jazz bands. Weather FORECAST Sunny with highs In 80s and lows in 60s. (Details on Page 2-D).

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1885-2024