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The Times from Munster, Indiana • 8

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Munster, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WW TllE TIMES Monday, November 5, 1973 i -I i 1 y-y Actress Liz Taylor arrives at the Hilton hotel, Amsterdam, to act as guest auctioneer at an auction of the Collective Israel Action Committee. Dutch Henry Wijnberg escorted her. Garry "Cotton" Adamson, an inmate at Colorado State Penitentiary in Canon City, was married to actress Sue Lyon Sunday. He is serving two 40-year sentences for robbery and murder. Actress Sue Lyon carries her corsage and Bible to the examining counter prior to entering the Colorado State Penitentiary in Canon City to marry inmate Garry "Cotton" Adamson.

Sen. Henry Jackson, Washing- Sen. Edward Brooke, lis-ton, appeared on NBC's "Meet the tens to a question Sunday during his Press" Sunday in Washington. He spoke appearance on ABC's "Issues and Anon the implications of Soviet Union in- swers" program from Washington. He tervention in the Middle East dispute.

said he thought Nixon should resign. Girl Bribes Cops New Mideast Dr. John G. Neihardt, designated Nebraska's poet laureate by the state legislature 52 years ago, died in Columbia, at the age of 92. He was the author of more than two dozen volumes of poetry, fiction and philosophy.

NEALE RITES SET TUESDAY PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP) Funeral services are scheduled Tuesday for former football coaching great Earl "Greasy" Neale, who died Friday in Lake Worth at the age of 82. Neale, the only man in history to play in a World Series, coach a Rose Bowl football team and coach a championship professional football team, began his athletic career in 1909. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) She would wave and get policemen to stop their cars, talk a little and then sometimes have sex with them, says a teenage blonde.

"They were real sweet to me," she adds. Charlotte Tyler, 19, of Paris, told reporters Sunday of sexual involvement with officers, not only in Memphis, but also in Arkansas and Missouri. "I'm not ashaned about nothing," she said. Police Director Jay W. Hubbard said hours of polygraph tests confirmed the young woman's allegations, "including some of the more serious ones." Asked how many officers she'd been involved with in Memphis after her arrival Sept.

1, she said, "I do not-want to state it. No offense." Wearing a metallic gold jump suit with a cowboy belt around the waist. Arabs Boost U.S. Oil Cut to 25 A- X- i zrx 1 Mrs. Tyler said, "I didn't want to get them in trouble." Police sources have said that up to 200 officers on the man force may be involved, but Hubbard has said he believes it is more like 20.

Mrs. Tyler allowed reporters, minus cameras and recorders, into her police-acquired motel suite, where officers said they had been questioning her for three days, she was flanked by a priest, two matrons and investigators. She said she is divorced and the mother of a 2-year-old daughter being cared for by her parents. Inspector H. H.

Leatherwood, head of the Internal Affairs Bureau, said Mrs. Tyler gave names of officers and took lie detector tests after saying she wanted to to assist police in answering questions. withdraws from occupied Arab lands. The total embargoes against the United States and the Netherlands followed. WASHINGTON (AP) Americans may be forced to drive their automobiles slower, and some could find themselves shivering in the dark ecause of the fuel shortage, federal officials say.

In a magazine interview published Policemen (Continued From Page One) feel more points should be given for job performance. A new proposal offered by the Fraternal Order of Police, the official police organization, reverses the emphasis. A candidate for promotion may get up to 60 points for job performance, 20 on a written exam and 20 on the oral. This proposal was sent to the safety board and is under study. Dr.

Edward L. C. Broomes, safety board member, said he was in full agreement with the F.O.P. recommen and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger.

Kissinger leaves today for Morocco, first stop on a Middle East tour that also will take him to the Egyptian, Jordanian and Saudi Arabian capitals. Israeli Foreign minister Abba Eban flew to Romania, the only member of the Soviet bloc that still has diplomatic relations with Israel. There was speculation that the Romanians were following up their offer to act as an intermediary between the Arabs and Israel. Syrian President Hafez Assad met separately with President Houari Bou-medienne of Algeria, Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy, the deputy premier ind foreign minister of South Yemen and Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kuznetsov. No information on their discussions leaked out.

The Arab oil countries met again in Kuwait and announced a new cut in production of oil for countries friendly to Israel. They hedged by saying that countries friendly to the Arab cause would not be affected, and it was not immediately clear what cuts would be levied against which countries. The Israeli military command reported that Israeli and Egyptian troops exchanged small-arms fire for about an hour Sunday near Ismailia, in the central sector of the Suez Canal, and near Bur Taufiq, at the southern end of the canal. Otherwise the ceasefire lines were reported quiet. But Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan said Egypt "definitely can be expected to renew fighting" along the canal front.

Egypt warned again that it might resume the war unless Israel complied with the Security Council resolution calling for a return to the Oct. 22 lines. Syria declared that fighting will resume unless Israel withdraws from all occupied territories and "restores the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people." An Israeli communique said Israel and Egypt had agreed to exchange 44 wounded Israeli prisoners of war for more than 400 wounded Egyptians "but the Egyptians continue to delay the implementation of he agreement." It said only one wounded Israeli had been returned. However, Egypt's top military spokesman, Gen. Izzedin Mu-khtar, told a news confernce in Cairo that Egypt handed over "a number" of wounded Israelis to the International Red Cross.

He said Israel had failed to live up to the agreement. The U.S. Air Force delivered 70 Finns from Helsinki to Cairo Sunday for the U.N. peacekeeping force along the Suez Canal, and U.S. planes were scheduled to take in 134 Irish soldiers today and Tuesday.

Soviet planes were reported flying another 300 Finns to Cairo today or Tuesday, which would swell the force to about 1,500 men. A total of 7,000 are expected. with Sex Mrs. Tyler said she would like to get on a police department and work in the vice squad. "I bet I know more about it than a lot of people," she said.

She declined to say whether she had sexual encounters in police stations, where Leatherwood said she sometimes was around at roll call. Mrs. Tyler responded to a question, "In squad cars? Some." She said she likes officers because "they are well trained, they know their work, they are good people." Her activities were not for money, she said, although it was her arrest Oct. 8 on a charge of soliciting that led to the investigation. At the time of a required medical examination, police said she was found to have gonorrhea and to have remarked to the vice squad that a lot of policemen must have it too.

Sunday, White House energy chief John A. Love held out the possibility that residents in ome parts of the country could find themselves short of electricity this winter. "If the Arab boycott continues for 1 an extended period, and the American people do not take steps to conserve energy, then additional government action will be necessary or we will, in fact, have blackouts or brownouts," Love told U.S. News World Report. Pressured dations.

He said he had no knowledge about the Thursday vote and said "I'm sorry if it actually happened." He said if the proposal goes through, policemen would once again be placed in the position of having to please only one man." "A man may be subjected to the passions and influences of people outside the police department," he added. "While Chief Stiglich has the most splendid qualifications, what's to prevent some future police chief from catering to his own cronies?" he said. According to the newspaper: A transcript, prepared by a Standard newsman from a tape recording of Saxbe's remarks, quoted Saxbe: "I think the President is right on standing on his rights not to disclose the tapes. "I personally wish I had never heard of the tapes and, unless they're incriminating, I think he should give them up. If they're incriminating, they should be destroyed and I'm sure he will." Hong Kong Chamber President Herbert Minich, having read Chang's transcript, said it appeared to be accurate, the Post said.

A Taste Of Winter Colder weather is forecast tonight for the Calumet Region. The Western plains and the Northwest. Snow is predicted for the northwestern areas. Region skies will be mostly clear. SUNDAY'S TEMPERATURES: High, High, 44; low, 33.

TUESDAY'S' FORECAST: High, 40s; low, 20's. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The diplomatic maneuvering in the wake of the Arab-Israeli war shifted from Washington to the Middle East today in the wake of warnings from Israel, Egypt and Syria that new fighting threatened. Israeli Premier Golda Meir and Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fah-my flew home from their meetings in the U.S. capital with President Nixon All TWA 'Stewardi' On Strike WASHINGTON (AP) About 5,000 U.S.-based cabin attendants struck Trans World Airlines at one mminute after midnight EST today when negotiators failed to reach agreement on a new contract here. The airline said all flights in progress when the walkout began would continue to their final destinations but that all other flights were canceled.

The strikers are members of the Airline Stewards and Stewardesses Association, local 550 of the Transport Workers Union. Negotiators for TWA and the union had met throughout the week at the offices of the National Mediation Board, seeking to head off the midnight strike deadline. A TWA spokesman had said at mid-evening that several issues, including wages, fringe benefits and working conditions, remained to be ironed out. The talks broke off when the strike began, but an airline spokesman said the company stood ready to resume negotiations at the call of the mediator. The attendants had been working without a contract since the last pact expired Aug.

1, 1972. They last struck TWA for 29 hours in 1970. In a statement to employes, David J. Crombie, TWA's vice president for industrial relations, said "our latest proposals to the union negotiators include wage and fringe benefits representative of those in the flightattendant agreements of our major competitors." Union officials said a key issue was the number of hours flown by the attendants. They said TWA was seeking to increase the number from the current 235 hours in each three months.

Oil Price Hike Aired if Atiki, after Saxbe Voiced Tape Kill Continued From Page One) tain, and the Arabs have accused West Germany of abetting U.S. supply shipments to Israel. Japan, which imports 86 per cent of its oil from the Middle East, is under growing pressure to take a clear stand on the side of the Arabs. The new cuts have no effect on the oil situation in the United States since all 10 nations already have stopped all shipment of oil to America. Five of the nations also have stopped shipping to the Netherlands.

Kuwait officials said a major question at the meeting was how to ship oil to friends and prevent their sharing it with enemies. The oil states delegated two oil ministers Algeria's Abdel Salam Belaid and Saudi Arabia's Ahmed Zaki Yamani to isit Western capitals, including Washington, to explain the Arab position. The other Arab countries involved are Kuwait, Iraq, Syria, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Bahrain, Egypt and Libya. After a meeting on Oct. 17, OAPEC announced monthly reductions in production of five to 10 per cent until Israel HOTEL THEFT UNDER PROBE CHICAGO (AP) Two detectives have been assigned exclusively to investigate the theft of jewelry and cash from seven rooms of the Ambassador East Hotel and the Federal Bureau of Investigation may be called in on the case.

Police said burglars took more than $32,000 in jewelry and $6,000 in cash was taken between 7 and 11 p.m. Friday. Comedian Don Rickles told police he lost an estimated $5,000 in jewelry belonging to his wife, who was staying with him at the hotel. The biggest individual loss was reported by Paul Kohner of Los Angeles. Kohner, who identified himself as an actor's agent, said about $9,000 worth of jewelry and $5,000 in cash was missing from his room.

Figure Shew low Temperature Expected Until Tuetday Morning Itoloted Precipitation Not Indicated Consult The Weather Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hi Lo Pre Otlk Albany Albu'que Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Ruffoln 47 35 60 34 57 34 23 08 69 53 79 60 80 64 22 9 46 41 52 38 42 35 cdy clr rn cdy rn rn .12 rn cdy rn cdy cdy 20 'lO o' so Chicago Denver Des Detroit Duluth Fort Helena Honolulu Houston FLOYD FITHIAN in the ring Fithian To Seek Election MERRILLVILLE-Floyd Fithian today announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination to the U.S. House of Representatives from the second congressional district. He announced his decision at press conferences in Merrillville and Valparaiso. He will hold a Tuesday press conference at Indianapolis Democratic state headquarters. Fithian was an unsuccessful contender for the representative post in 1972 against Rep.

Earl F. Landgrebe, Valparaiso. Fithian came closer in 1972 than any other Indiana Democrat to ing an incumbent Republican congressman. Landgrebe won a third term by slightly less than 20,000 votes with a 55 per cent majority. Friends said Fithian felt he could have beaten Landgrebe if 1972 had been a normal year, but was knocked out by President Nixon's landslide presidential victory in Indiana.

"I intend to finish the job I started in 1972," Fithian said, "and that is to bring to the people of this district a positive and constructive voice in Congress." Fithian operates a farm in Tippecanoe County and teaches American history at Purdue University. The candidate said, "This decision to run for congress a second time is a product of long' and careful analysis and I made it knowing full well the job which lies ahead." Fithian said he feels the fundamental issue of the campaign is "the quality of man we want to represent our district in Washington." He stated that he entered the campaign without "any obligations of the past which could prevent my unfettered pursuit of what is the greatest good for the people of the second district." The 45-year-old Fithian is a graduate of Peru (Neb.) State College. He served in the Navy as an ensign in Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam. He completed 20 years of active and reserve duty as a commander in the USNR last year. He received his master's degree in 1956 from the University of Nebraska.

After teaching hish school from 1956 to 1959 he received his PhD in American history in 1964 from the University of Nebraska. Fithian's family operates a small farm near Buck Creek. His family includes his wife Marj, (c.q.) two daughters, Cindy and Judy and a son, John. Fithian workedas assistant coordinator for Sen. Birch Bayh's, Ind.

1968 senatorial race in Tippecanoe County. In 1970, he acted as Tippecanoe county manager of Phillip Sprague's congressional ramnJ'lfn. WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. William B. Saxbe, whom President Nixon has nominated as attorney general, has been quoted as advocating in August the destruction of Watergate tapes "if they're incriminating," the Washington Post reported Monday.

The newspaper said the Ohio senator was quoted Aug. 23 by the HHONG Kong Standard in a speech to the local chapter of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong. Saxbe was unavailable for comment. A spokesman for the Ohio Republican said Sunday, "he doesn't remember making any statement to that effect." Call from NATIONAL WEATHER StRVICE, NOAA, U.S. Dtpl.

of Coromerc Local Forocait VC60 ED 70 As 3 1 Juneau Kansas City Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville. Marquette Memphis Miami Milwaukee New Orleans New York Okla. City Omaha Orlando 39 28 Philad'phia 55 40 40 32 Phoenix 83 53 55 47 Pittsburgh 49 38 68 50 Ot'landOre. 45 36 55 41 Pfland Me 45 25 Rapid City 17 0 67 47 Richmond 62 40 82 77 St. Louis 47 29 40 23 Salt Lake 42 33 32 14 San Diego 68 52 82 69 SanFran 59 52 51 40 Seattle 41 35 51 40 Spokane 33 25 35 21 Tampa 80 70 83 69 Washington 60 45 Charleston Charlotte Cincinnati Cleveland Moines Fairbanks Worth Ind'apolis Jacks'ville 78 63 70 57 44 29 52 33 48 39 30 26 39 20 47 29 24 12 10 0 74 50 16 14 85 71 86 74 51' .36 84 51 rn rn clr .28 cdy cdy .04 clr clr cdy cdy cdy sn clr .01 4n .05 clr Kuwaiti oil minister Abdul Rahman left, confers with Jamshid Amoz-egar, the Iranian oil minister on Sunday 1 the Organization of Oil EXPORTING Countries met in Kuwaitto discuss oil price hikes..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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