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The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • 155

Location:
Orlando, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
155
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 Friday, Aug. 21, 1973 tntirifl Orludi, Iterate Young Gunman Refuses To TJ Body In Dump May Be Orlando Girl 1 wrfwi 1 If I '-z Vi hT: 1- -4 "fcklfc, ml iiV.l.'V;,.r,i,toni'ilr4....... (Ls, From 1 death on either corpse because of the advanced state of decomposition. 1 the only possibility Tor positive Identification, he added, will be through dental records. Miss Harbcrts'.

parents, who live in South Florida, have been asked to provide dental records to investigators, Dr. Thomas Hegert, Orange County medical examiner, said. ONE OF the discrepancies, he said, involves a ring that was found at the site, The ring an 18 carat birthstone ring with -a-name engraved on the Inside does not match the description of a ring police believe Miss Harberts was wearing when she disappeared, Goode said. Dr. Thomas Hegcrt, Orange' County medical examiner, said the STOCKHOLM A young gunman holding four hostages in a Stockholm bank warned police today after 20 hours of siege: VI have no plans to give up.

ltnWcnough pep pills to stay awakefrMvyo days." Police sail 22-year-old Kaj Hans-son, a Swede wUhVa wife and child in the. United StateTused to release one man he waX Bblding the government had demand for in caiU.ai!; conduct out of the" ounfiUl himself and THE POLICE -told-1 lansson they' would give him -the -money and safe passage only If he released the hostages. But he" said he was going to take at least one of them with him. Chief Inspector Sven Thorander said Hansson jet him enter the bank several times during the night to negotiate. "The talks are almost deadlocked, but we are still optimistic we can persuade him to free the hostages," Thorander said.

Fugatc Parole body was so decomposed that positive identification will be impossible without dental records. The. young woman's parents, who live in South Florida, have been asked to provide these records, HCgert said, adding they may not be available until Monday. SPRINGS police and Seminole County deputies spent most 'of Wednesday sifting through garbage, the dump, searching for clues, and more bodies. The.

dump is located north of Lake Lotus near SR 436. Investigators originally thought there were three bodies, but Dr. G. Seminole County medical examiner; said4 after a preliminary autopsy Thursday afternoon that he believes skull fragments found some distance from the, two bodies actually belong to the. body tentatively "Identified as a male.

7 7. Neither of Vhe bodies was buried, although pieces of a cardboard box covered one. Bones with pieces of flesh in the area; probably by animals, officers said. Altamonte Springs Police Chief Justus East; said the underwear and the ring were the only two pieces of evidence found. Since the accidental discovery of the bodies by a man dumping trash, more; than 100 persons and law enforcement agencies have jammed the Altamonte Springs police said, asking for information1 about runaways and missing persons.

4 Car Stripped With Saw Orange County sheriff's deputies recovered this stolen Porsche car, but not before it was cut apart' with electric saw to gain parts for homemade motorcycle. Car belongs to Theodore Geltz, 23, 2630 Scan Court, Free on $1,000 bond on charges Tf receiving and concealing stolen property is Salvatore Neglia, 31, 4616 Julie Lane. of the missing youths came from the same neighborhood but police did not suspect foul play. PR. GARAY said the tests indicated the bodies had been there at the secluded dump between two and four weeks.

No cause of death has been determined. East said search operations at the dump were halted Thursday afternoon. "We don't think there's anything else out there. We've searched the area thoroughly," said East. EAST AND Seminole County Sheriff John.

Tolk called in equipment -Thursday morning to help sift through the trash and garbage, after searching until dark Wednesday. Up to 20 men scoured the dump between intermittent rain, while, curious bystanders stood on the edge, of the roped-off woods, watching the work. The remains were discovered Tuesday by an unidentified Eaton-ville Who was apparently illegally dumping trash in the area. Police said he noticed an odor from a densely wooded area off one of several dirt roads that crisscross the area. He followed the.odor to where the bodies were, about 30 feet into the.

woods. THE MAN did not report his find until Wednesday morning, apparently, because he feared getting jnto trouble for dumping in an illegal area, officers said. An Orange- County sheriff's spokeswoman said there is no evidence, at this time to believe the victims are among those the department has listed as missing. A search in June for Susan Ingram and Sharon Wood, both 16, ended when the teen-agers were found safe, several weeks after they were reported missing. Officials earlier ruled" out possibility that the bodies could belong to a missing DeLand couple, Mr.

and Mrs. Austin Clifton, since the bodies at the dump were much younger than the Cliftons, who vanished from their home March 2. Plenty Package Bomb Explodes On London Stock Floor Now Possiblc Neb. fiP) Caril Ann Fugate, who- traveled with Chafes Starkweather in a 1358 murder spree in which 11 persons died, cleared a hurdle today that that could lead to her parole. The three-member, state parole board on a majority vote recommended to the state pardon board that it commute 'her sentence 'to a definite term of years, a necessary preliminary to parole.

ment offices and organizations in London, and 15 small incendiary devices have been planted in leading department stores, causing slight damage. Scotland Yard reported that one of the letter bombs was delivered to Prime Minster Edward Heath's office-residence and lay partially open in a. mail tray for hours before a secretary realized its lethal contents. 7 Front Page 1 Stehli said, voice trailing off In A note of frustration. Laura "had attended her coworker's, wedding the Saturday before she; vanished.

She was, reported missing by her roommate days later, HER FRIEND said Laura had no special boyfriend but she frequented two local nightclubs. She had lived in Orlando about eight months and had taken the job at Orange" Memorial last February. 'Since' Aug. 5, Mrs. Stehli said, Laura's friends have tried to piece together' the puzzle of her' disappearance.

"We just didn't understand it. She' always let someone know where she would be." The country's stronger trade recent devaluations of the U.S. farm products and machinery and transport equipment. LONDON A package bomb exploded today on the 22nd. floor of the London Stock Exchange building, injuring a 25-year-old woman worker on the stock market staff.

She' was the first casualty in the wave of incendiary and letter bombs that began in London last Saturday. Scotland Yard blames "the Irish Republican Army, fighting a guerrilla war against British control of Northern Ireland. Police were c'alled to the towering new 'exchange building at 9:25 a.m. to investigate a suspicious parcel, a police spokesman said, but the package blew up at 9:30 before they arrived. Two other persons were hospitalized suffering from shock.

Ten letter bombs were received earlier this week by various govern THE RECENTLY discovered mass murders of young boys in Houston, Texas may have prompted the calls from all over the country. East said there was; little information he'could give callers, but all the Information was tabulated for future reference. Maj. Goode said Orlando' plots all missing rpersons' addresses on a large map, so it can be detected if a large number of persons is missing from any neighborhood. The method, he will prevent a situation similar Houston, where many SHE WAS 14 when she, accompanied Starkweather, who died in the electric chair in 1959 for the of murders in Nebraska1 and Wyoming.

Starkweather, then; 19, was her boyfriend. Miss Fugate, now 30, was sentenced at age 15 to a life term for one count. of first-degree murder- She is currently imprisoned at the York Women's-Reformatory. Japan Nixes Talks TOKYO The Japanese cabinet today postponed talks with members of the South Korean cabinet, demonstrating a sudden deterioration in relations between the two Asian neighbors. 1.

Astronauts Mate Repairs In Space Embassy Burglary Not New HOUSTON (UPI) -The Want 'em? It walk, and Garriott was to then work his way out to the solar observation in-! struments and put new filmj in them. He was also to try: fixing minor problems with some of, the equipment while he's -1 The Skylab! gyros(' working in three different axes. which the ship flies, keep it steady in orbit. The astronauts will leave the best working gyro in each axis plugged in, and use We got em! Skylab 2 astronaut walk In space for the second time today to install a new set of indispensable stabilization gyro.se opes and reload their battery of sun study cameras. Rookie astronauts Owen K.

Garriotf 'and Jack R. Lousma to perform tbqir second outside venture, while mission commander Alan L. Bean 'remained inside to assure 1 WASHJNGTDN The "FBI cofrtmtiusd burglaries steaf Intelligence infor-'mation from inside the embassies 'of foreign nations during the Johnson, Kennedy 'and Eisenhower' administrations, former FBI officials say, Published documents indicate the breakins were aimed at getting code books and other cryptographic information. Lots of school stuff that the orbiting station the six new ones to replace stays on course while the gyros are being replaced. for gyros that have been misbehaving off and on i the station was launched more than three months A fit V---.

8.99 to 12.99 TWO FORMER high FBI officials estimated Thursday that fewer than 10 such breakins took place each year. One source said they went on for 15 to 20 years before being stopped in 19M. a hile the White Hduse 'stuck to' President Nixon's disputed assertion that FBI vere BEAN, GARRIOTT and Lousma had to hook up their ship's backup cooling system It works like a car, radiator, to keep down the temperatures of equipment. '-1 LOUSMA WAS to float out of the 100-ton orbiting ship first inspect the faulty gyros that have to be replaced, and then return toJhestation and drag out-a 22-foot long cable connected to the fresh set, which are mounted inside. He'll -unplug six of the original nine spaceship gyros and plug in new ones, contained in a small "six-pack" the crew brought with them when they were launched.

The installation was expected to take only a small part of the four-hour space- They turned off the 1 i 1 i 1 System, which wiaespreaa ana leaking fluid well known during two ry. cooling had -been ,7 appar- u. 0 mic administra-entlydiscovered the source the leak "in an-tmexi Deputy White House pected placed theVApo)lo' SecretarV Gerald L. fprrv shih'rffvk a- Warren, speaking in San Clemente, refused the' end of the lab; More Papers Cut Bucl (I ki ij 1 Iff ilx'-JL" l4' 1 m- $pX ir 4K 9 IX-1 s-, iv rfh At ir In Seventeen to' add any details. Other White House officials indicated Nixon personally ordered them to keep quiet about the matter.

DESPITE THAT, one Nixon aide said FBI breakins were made in civil rights cases during the Kennedy and Johnson years, as well as in national security cases. He gave no other information. The former FBI officials said the embassy breakins differed from the Ellsberg burglary because the codes sought in them were of obvious intelligence value. "According to FBI standards there is no way the Ellsberg job could be called a national security operation," one said. It wasn't clear when the embassy breakins or who first authorized them.

Former Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell, who was but we are taking steps to reduce the waste of paper." The A i 0 a Republic pir( the Phoenix Gazette last Sunday discontinued their earliest edition and rut the number of papers available on newsstands and in vending machines. Several smaller Arizona newspapers said they were down to two weeks' worth of paper. John G.

Trezevant, executive vice president for publishing for Field Enterprises Publishing in Chicago, said Field has reduced newsprint consumption by 10 per cent this year. mil1M F. Llndsev. px-ec utive director of the Colorado Press Association, said the GrpeW" Triiy une, founded in the late By Unltw) Press International Shipments of newsprint that are arriving as late as four weeks behind schedule have forced some of the nation's newspapers to reduce the size of their editions and 'others to cut out entire issues. Ted Duffy, advertising manager of the Laramie (Wyo.) Daily Boomerang, said the last shipment of newsprint for his newspaper arrived a week late because of strikes against paper mills in Canada.

"WE THOUGHT we were going to be in a real bind," he said. Kenneth' 'Fleming, general business and production manager of the Tulsa Daily World and Tulsa Tribune, said, "We hope we don't have, to cut back on size, although it is getting real tough Shipments a're running three-four weeks behind." THE EDITOR of the Sacramento Union, Pete Hayes, said, "We haven't been immediately affected bv the newsprint shortage, What's in motion now! Latigo looks. Saddles riding high. during Dwight D. ie.

ment Dotty pcrfs. Suede and smooth. 3 big on the Klew sock action, for $1 and SI .1 9. Put together with latigo look bag at $7.99. Fun and choices start Sorry, no COD't i enhower's "administration refused to comment.

nut yuunaiiuig on oaiur davs to save newsprint. "One of the: problems" miir 4 i was new subscribers. The jjqci was averaging hv pages more a week than rfci last year, so the Saturday paper was given up," he ORLANDO FASHION SQUARE WINTER PARK MALL.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1913-2024