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The Journal Times du lieu suivant : Racine, Wisconsin • 2

Publication:
The Journal Timesi
Lieu:
Racine, Wisconsin
Date de parution:
Page:
2
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

tho Journol Tlmos, Wedrmday, Oct. 24, 1979 Shah has exploratory sioirgery Weather Fair tonights low In the ftpptr ft to low Mb. Thursday wMMtly sonny, continued cool; high In the mid to upper Ms. Winds light northwesterly Hi mph. For Wisconsin: Fair to portly cloudy tonight; low In the mid 20t north.

Thursday mostly sunny, continued cool; high In the 40s. Oct. 1171 Sunrise 7:19 a.m. Sunset 5:99 p.m. For 24 hours ending at 8 a.m.

today. Journal Times Weather Station Downtown: Temperature 41-32. Racine's official Weather Station Uptown: TemperatureJ42-31. Record high for today 81 (1899); record low 24 (1942). High one year ago 99; low 41.

Month's total precipitation: Downtown 2.02 Inches. Uptown 2.02 Inches. Month's average precipitation 2.07 Inches. Month's average snow .12 inches. Highest wind gusts 94 mph.

Burlington temperatures 42-27. Precipitation .01 Inch. It laid the chemotherapy recently had become lets effective and the shah bad developed a high fever and lost weight. CBS and the Dolly Newi, meanwhile, reported the shah would undergo gallbladder surgery today. Blockage of the ducti through which bile leaves the liver can be caused by tumors, in-, flamrhatiori and gallstones.

The new government of Iran, led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khonieinl, hai put a $139,000 price on the shah'l head and promised asylum to the per son who assassinates him. A Tehran newspaper has offered a free trip to Mecca, the burial place of the prophet Mohammad and Islam's holiest shrine, for anyone who kills the ruler deposed In a January revolution. New York -Cornell has an International repu-ation for treating a variety of diseases, Including heart Illness and cancer. co on Monday night. A spokesman, Robert Armao, described the shah as In good spirits, saying he was "happy to be In the United States." Armao said reports of the shah'l condition had been exaggerated.

A hospital administrator said reports on the shah's condition would be updated today, but declined to say what Information, If any, had been obtained through various tests already completed. A State Department source, who asked not to be Identified, said the shah, who will be 60 on Friday, had a blocked bile duct and was suffering from Cancer. He did not specify the type of cancer. The New York Daily News today quoted unidentified sources as saying the shah had lymphoma, canoer of: the lymph system, and ha'" been receiving chemotherapy treament lot years. NEW YORK (AP) Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi underwent exploratory surgery today, an assistant to the shah'l physician said.

There was speculation the operation Involved cancer' for which the shah reportedly has been under treatment for years. Dr. Benjamin Kean -iclan of the deposed Iranian ruler, began exploratory surgery along with a team of surgical specialists at New York Hospital this morning, said Kean's office man-' ager, Mary Wilson. Miss Wilson described the surgery as exploratory because she said the doctors did not know what they would find. Various news accounts said the surgery was for removal of the shah's gall bladder.

Meanwhile, Empress Farah, wife of the ailing ruler, arrived at the hospital around 7 a.m., under the eyes of a heavy security force the shah brought with him when he flew here from Mexi- i SHAH MOHAMMAD REZA PAHLAVI Temperatures across the nation are not available today. Analyst says ration plan years away drastically from some strong suggestions made by the conference committee that came up with the final bill. They Include: Allowances for the past pattern of gasoline consumption by states, which could allot more fuel to states with large driving distances between cities, or those heavily dependent on tourism. Possible Issuance of ration coupons per licensed driver rather than, for Instance, per registered vehicle. Gasoline rations assigned according to the needs of the users.

Provisions to meet the needs of the handicapped. Availability of fuel for suburban and rural areas without adequate public transportation. The possibility of using local rationing boards to help decide fuel distribution. WASHINGTON (AP) Despite prediC tions from congressmen that gasoline rationing could bo needed at any time, an Energy Department analyst says It could take a Couple of years to whip a workable plan Into shape. Under a compromise given final congressional approval Tuesday, the president can Order rationing any time there is a shortage of 20 percent in gasoline or diesel fuel supplies in the United States.

The House and Senate will get a crack at rejecting whatever detailed rationing plan the Carter administration concocts before the standby plan goes "on the shelf" for possible future use. Moreover, either bouse w6uld have the option of blocking actual implementation of rationing at the time the president tried to put it into effect. Rep. John Dingell, a principal Regulations and Energy Planning, said it may take several weekl to draft a plan, which then would be opened up for public Comment. That process could mean it will be months before a final plan is sent to the Congress fdr What could be a tlme-consum-ing review.

Fang said planners believe that, practically speaking, it would take 18 to 24 months from the time a plan gets the congressional go-ahead to have it ready for work. The time would be consumed, he said, by such things as establishing procedural rules, drafting and printing forms and printing rationing coupons in addition to those already in storage. Although theoretically starting from scratch, it seems unlikely the Energy Department would be inclined to depart too author of the compromise bill approved 301-112 by the House Tuesday, said conditions requiring gasoline rationing "could occur Bt any time." Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Shore-wooa, cast the only dissenting vote from the nine-man Wisconsin delegation In the House. It is contingency planning which Energy Department analyst Andy Fang says will take time.

There is no standby plan at the moment because the Energy Department could not prepare one until Congress spelled out what it would insist on having in It. And Fang said it could be two years or more before a rationing plan is ready for practical operation. "Gasoline rationing is not here tomorrow," he said in an interview. Fang, a program analyst In the Office of FTC orders AM A to end MB restraints News briefs Mom jumps; baby lives MINNEAPOLIS (AP) An 8-month-old Infant, cradled in his mother's arms as she plunged from a Mississippi River bridge, survived the 80-foot fall that killed the 24-year-old woman, police said, Jean Krauser of Minneapolis died Tuesday soon after reaching Hennepin County Medical Center. Her son.

Ryan, was in satisfactory condition late Tuesday, hospital offl-' dais said. Two employees of the Minnesota Department of Transportation who were working on bridge repairs said they saw a woman holding a baby climb the bridge railing and jump over the side. The woman landed about 30 feet from the water's edge. Ryan was found about four feet away, face down and crying, authorities said. Mary Anne Frank, nursing supervisor at Hennepin County Medical Center, said Ryan was being held for observation, "but so far he Is doing Meg assassin's target? LOS ANGELES (AP) Behind the quiet pomp that surrounded the visit here last week of Britain's Princess Margaret was a flurry of police activity set off by a report from Scotland Yard that an Irish Republican Army assas-' sin was stalking the princess, the Los Angeles Times says.

the alleged assassin, the Times said In today's editions, was here under orders of the IRA's Provisional wing. The assassin reportedly had targeted the princess' dedication of a Culver City Rolls Royce facility last Friday, the Times said. The report said the assassin was being sought in connection with the murder in August of Britain's Lord Mountbat-ten, Margaret's cousin. The Times said the alleged IRA hit man, who State Department and police officials declined to identify, operated out of a West Los Angeles motel. The assassin, evidently tipped off to the intensive police activity, failed to surface during the princess' five-day visit and his whereabouts are not known, the report said.

Suicide leaves bloody items SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A car full of blood-soaked sheets and clothing was left behind by a young man who leaped to his death from the Golden Gate Bridge, police investigators say. "We don't know whose bipod this is or where it came from," San Francisco homicide Inspector Ronald Schneider said Tuesday Police say the young man, who has not been identified, abandoned the car in the middle of the bridge and leaped over the rail. A witness told police the man did not have any visible injuries and did not leave a trail of blood on the pedestrian walkway. Police say a bloody, six-inch steak knife also was found in the car and that the blood on all the items was fresh. The station wagon, registered to a Diablo Valley College student, contained a mattress, several items of tlothing, a number of textbooks and personal papers.

FBI says U.S. crime up 2 WASHINGTON (AP) The FBI reported today that the crime rate in America in 1978 rose 2 percent over the previous year. Violent crimes, the bureau said, increased 5 percent and property crimes rose 2 percent. 1 More than 11 million crimes were reported to law enforcement agencies last year, the FBI said. Preliminary statistics released by the department in March said the crime rate rose by 1 percent in 1978.

The number of reported crimes had decreased in 1977 until a turnaround in the middle of last year. More recent preliminary figures show that the crime rate has jumped sharply in 1979, rising by 9 percent for the first half of the year when compared with the same period in 1978. The final 1978 figures released today showed that 5,109 offenses were committed for each 100,000 persons living in the country. thus severely inhibiting competition among health care providers," commissioner David Clanton said in the FTC opinion. "It is especially important that price advertising remain as unfettered as the opinion added.

Although the AMA had no immediate comment today, the association is thought likely to appeal the FTC's ruling to a federal court. In advance of the decision, the. AMA said it would appeal any unfavorable ruling. In permitting the AMA to publish "rea- sonable ethical the commission recognized that the association has a valuable role to play in deceptive advertising by physicians, i a WASHINGTON (AP) The American Medical Association illegally restrained competition among its physician members by restricting their advertising and solicitation of patients, the Federal Trade Commission decided today. The commission ordered the AMA to stop "imposing the restrictions.

But, reversing an earlier initial decision by an FTC administrative law judge, the commission ruled that the AMA may formulate "reasonable ethical guidelines" governing acceptable advertising. "Ethical principles of the medical profession have prevented doctors and medical organizations from disseminating informa-. tion on the prices and services they offer, In allowing some self-regulation of advertising and solicitation, the FTC declined to follow the law judge's preliminary ruling, which came nearly a year ago. That decision would have barred the AMA from any regulation of physician advertising for two years and would have allowed the AMA to issue advertising guidelines thereafter only with FTC approval. The law Judge, Ernest G.

Barnes, had said the AMA's prohibition against its members soliciting patients has developed into a device for insuring physicians' profits. Barnes said the AMA's rules for its members prevent customers from beng told what health services are availa ble. "The costs to the public in terms of less expensive or even, perhaps, more improved forms of medical services, are great," he said. State and local medical societies can take disciplinary steps against violators that can make it very difficult to practice medicine. The AMA, which represents about 60 percent of the nation's physicians, is the parent for many of the state and lo-' cal medical associations that enforce the AMA codes.

Association lawyer Newton Minow, in urging the commissioners to overrule the law judge, said doctors' advertising has led to instances of patients being lured to doctors who cause them physical harm, tMWWTOllIWWI mm at I I Three Mile Island water pipe cleared Treat yourself to our HALLOWEEN SPECIAL (NOW THRU OCT. 31) W-mUMT (D8. 2400 RAPIDS DR. MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP) A water pipe was unblocked overnight at the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear generating plant, allowing technicians to begin filtering radioactive water again, authorities said today.

Sandy Polon, spokesman for Metropolitan Edison said the system was freed at midnight and about 2,500 gallons of water had been purified by morning. "Processing is continuing and if the system continues' to function properly, it is expected that a total of 6,000 gallons will have been processed by late tonight," Po- LEONID BREZHNEV Gift Certificates Available Anytime 15 OFF SHIRTS SUSPENDERS (A All Transfers Only Brezhnev appears in public MOSCOW (AP) Leonid I. Brezhnev made his first public appearance today since Oct. 8, firmly putting to an end rumors that the 72 -year-old Soviet leader had died. "Say hello to a good buy" Ion said.

"At that time, the system will be shut down for a performance review." Efforts to start the $5 million filtering system were halted Monday after the' flow of Water through a 200-foot intake pipe was blocked. Technicians speculated an air bubble had developed in the pipe. During the height of the nuclear crisis seven months ago, a hydrogen bubble gummed up emergency cooling procedures. But the latest one if that was what caused the problem was merely air that kept the pumps from working. The filtering system was started and then shut down on Monday after decontaminating only 100 gallons of water, Arnold said.

The system was designed to treat 400,000 gallons of water at a rate of up to 15,000 gallons a day, passing it through organic resin filters to remove radioactive cesium and strontium. The Eplcor II system is now linked to a main storage tank in the plant's auxiliary building. Technicians want to draw water from this tank because they can pump other water into it using the existing plumbing system. The decontamination of the 400,000 gallons of water is the first major step in planned $400 million, four-year effort to clean up the plant and its damaged reactor. thc'IoiirnalTlnies (USPS 453-580) 212 Fourth Racine, Wis.

634-3322 Publlthad dally by Tha Journal Dalton Tlmat, axcapt an tht follawlna nalldayc Ntw Ytar'i, Mtmerlal Day, tn at July, Laear Day, Thankialvlna and Chrlitmai, unlaii day full an a Sundayi ewnad by Laa cntarprttai, incarperam, i Eatt Sacand Straal, Oavanport, la-wa, S2MI. Subtcrlpflen rata Nawttand JlnflU Copy: Oafly 10c lundav JM. Mama dallvary ratal by earriar: 11.40 par waak. Wall iuotriptian ara payaow in advanca and avallaWa anly In araat whara tarrlar ar malar rauta arv-Ica It nt avallabla. Ralat will ba turnlthad upan raquatt.

Postmaster: Send form 3579 to the Journal Times, 212 4th Racine, 53403. lac and clau poittaa paid at Ra- cina, Wli. MINIM ASSOCIATED Mill AiulM ftiMau aA Ireula. He turned out with other top Kremlin officials to greet visiting South Yemeni leader Abdul Fattah Ismail, the Soviet news agency Tass reported. Brezhnev's airport appearance for the arrival ceremony marked the first time he had been seen in public since he returned from a trip to East German- The Soviet president's absence from public view' and his failure to meet with visiting Syrian President Hafez Assad last week had prompted a flurry of rumors that Brezhnev was gravely ill or dead.

Syrian officials had been told that Brezhnev was ill, but the specific nature or medical seriousness of his malady was not disclosed. Tass said Brezhnev was joined by Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, Defense Minister Dmitri F. Ustinov, Politburo alternate member Boris N. Ponomar-yev and other Soviet officials In welcoming Ismail.

The Yemeni state leader, who is also general secretary of South Yemen's Socialist Party, flew into Moscow from Tashkent, capital of Uzbekistan in Soviet Central Asia. Man. Inland Dally Pratt Attalalan, witcantw mawtoapar iain mud Amarican Mawipaaar Publlth- you pay (Continued from 1A) 1 Kareksaid she knows Dalton has been married at least three times before she married him in 1976 in Chicago. She said she first met Dalton in November of 1971 through a mutual friend and lived with him starting in 1972. Those three previous wives Included Linda Griese, a Racine woman that Dalton married In Racine under the name of William Bies in 1970.

Karen said Linda was Dalton's third wife. She said his first wife's name was Barbara Bies and the second wife was, "a named Marilyn." She said she isn't sure where any of those women are now and also said she'd known Blanchie Penna for three years after meeting her through Catherine Penna. She said she was close to the Penna family and had lived with the Penna's In May of 1977 and January of 1978. Kar en testified she had been convicted of a crime once, when she used a fraudulent name on a driver's license application In Racine in 1974. Karen and Lawrence Dalton and Filipski still face charges In Lake County 111., for the alleged abduction and sexual abuse of a 14-year-old girl from Brooklyn, N.Y.

Lawrence Dalton currently is scheduled to go on trial in Lake County next month on charges of rape, deviate sexual assault and taking Indecent liberties with a child in connection with that case. No date has been set for Lake County charges against Kareo Dalton and Filipski. When the 14-year-old girl escaped from Dalton's home last April, it started the chain of events which led to the discovery of Blanchie Penna's body and thje arrest in Cleveland, Ohio, df Lawrence Dalton. Keyes delivered no opening statement, reserving that for the opening of the defense portion of the trial. Judge Scott made no formal ruling on the husband-wife question.

Landa said be may caJJ a many as 30 witnesses, and Laid what happened wai bo accident. Th trial expected to continue into next week. ara AttalatkM. TWaaiftlainaliilTmiP.iai STIHC CHA1NSAWS Tha AP It aiclutlvaty anttnaa (a rha uta ar raaubllcatlan at all nawt icradltad ta ar nal arnarwita crad-itd In mil papar and alia tha lacal wt auomnao narain. nailw journal toundad January.

lilt. fcMBM Mb IM ltU; ll- clna Tlmat Call abiarbad In Juna, Bring in this ad be fore 0t. 30, 1979 for a too much for your last pair of eyeglasses? If they didn't come from Shopkols Optical Center, chances are you did! Snopko's Optical Center quality prescription service, convenient location and low prices realty worth looking Intol OPENING SOON in Racine. MO lJ. OF'ICS HOUR ACCOUNTING Man-Frl MttoS CLAtSIlfO ADVERTItINO Maa-Prl i DISPLAY ADVIRTISINO Man-rl CIRCULATION Svktcrlaart ra'ltna Hi racaiyf thalr nawtpapar: Piaaia call yaur carrtar tf FORI callM IM Jaurnal Tlmat.

it wHI kiuirt discount on any now regular priced Stihl Chain Saw latMr dailvary. until Man-Fri Sat and 7 530 fraabrtHt US-1001 4117 Fari at b. fchffvtaa Vol. 123 No. 293 Wednesday, Oct.

24, 1979 (..

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Années disponibles:
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