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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 2

Publication:
Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAYTON DAILY NEWS Tuesday, July 4, 1972 Vegas Get 3rd Recall; Axle Shaft This Time 2 Koreas Join in Pact To Strive for Unification DOG POUND NOW HAS BIGGER JOB LS ANGELES (UPI) The pound may have to get larger cages and the dog catcher may have to learn how to use a lasso. Effective today, the estimated 11,000 horses, ponies, donkeys, burros and mules in the city must have license tags just like dogs. The $10 equine license tax, approved by the city council earlier, is expected to raise $110,000 annually with a portion of the revenue going toward maintenance of equestrian trails. carburetor bracket that could cause the throttle to stick in an open position. Some owners whose 1972 model was involved in the April recall campaign and also in the one announced in May, may not have had that work done yet.

Those owners can now wait until they get the certified letter telling them of the latest recall and have all the repairs done at once. In the latest recall, Chevrolet said it had reports of 59 defective shafts. Chevrolet said Vega owners, upon receipt of their recall letters, can take their cars to their dealers where the axle inspection will take about 10 minutes and free replacement axle shafts, if needed, can be installed in about one hour. DETROI T-(UPI)-A11 Chevrolet Vegas built since the car was introduced have been involved in at least two recall campaigns. Now many have been called back a third time.

The latest recall campaign was announced a by General Motors which said it wanted to inspect some 500,000 subcompact Vegas nearly every one built in the 1971 and 1972 model years for a defective axle shaft that could cause rear brake failure and the axle itself to fall off. IN APRIL, 130,000 of the current 1972 models were recalled for a fuel and exhaust system correction. Then, in May, 350,000 of the 1971 and 1972 models nearly all produced to that time were recalled for repair of a faulty in the talks was Lee Hu-rak, director of the central intelligence agency. In Pyongyang, he met with Kim Young-joo, director of the North Korean government's organization and guidance department and younger brother of Premier Kim. North Korea's second deputy premier Park Sung-chul, came to Seoul for the talks here.

The United States and Japan issued statements saying Seoul had informed them of the developments and they approved of them. State department press officer Charles W. Bray said in Washington the agreeing." The Japanese foreign minis-ment was "most encourag- capitals, the announcement said. It was the first such contact reported between North and South Korea since before the 1950-53 Korean war that took 2 million lives, including 54,246 Americans fighting for the South. The three-year conflict ended in an armistice July 28, 1953, and the two Koreas are still officially at war, with even mail exchange cut off.

KOREA' a Japanese colony from 1910 through World War II, was. divided into U.S. and Soviet occupation zones after the defeat of Japan. The zones became separate republics in 1948. The South Korean negotiator SEOUL 10 South and North Korea announced to their surprised citizens today they have agreed in high-level secret i to set up machinery to work for unification of the long-divided peninsula.

Simultaneous announce-ments in Seoul, the South Korean capital, and Pyongyang, capital of Communist North Korea, said a new accord provides for a telephone hotline between the two cities to prevent accidental war and for a joint political committee to open exchanges in many fields and to promote unification of North and South through peaceful means without outside interference. THE TWO governments also agreed to refrain from armed provacations and from slandering or defaming each other and to avoid accidental military incidents. The agreements were reached at meetings in Pyongyang May 2-5 and Seoul May 29-June 1. The top leaders. South Korean PresidentChung Hee Park and North Korean Premier and Communist party chief Kim II Sung participated in the talks in their respective try spokesman praised "the courage and leadership of the two Korean governments" and expressed hope they will settle their differences.

$30,000 BOND Peter N. Lazaros (right), a self-proclaimed payoff man for the Mafia, walks with his attorney, Percy Forman of Houston to Lazaro's arraignment in Easton county, Mich, circuit court on charges of forgery in a property deed scheme. Lazaros was released on $30,000 bond pending a further court appearance in Charlotte, Mich. July 17. 1 Trail Goes Nowhere; Another Blacked Out 2-PANTS TROPICALS TROPICAL SUITS Entire Stock of Reg.

59.95 AC RON WOOL Entire Stock of Reg. 69.95 DACRON WOOL SUITS the car before the day of the murder." MISS BUTLER had been an eighth-grade science teacher at Fairborn Central junior high school from September of 1967 until June of 1968. Sometime in the spring of 1968 Miss Butler accepted a position to teach computer programming at the National Cash Register Co. headquarters in Dayton. She planned to start on her new job at NCR on July 1.

After the close of school she visited her parents at their home in Westerville. While she was at home she complained about the oil and tar on her car. and pointed out the splatterings to her father. Miss Butler left her parents' home on Tuesday, June 11, and returned to her Dayton apartment that evening. When she left her apartment for the store the following day, she SUITS New 1972 styles and tan noftornc Contemporary 1 972 models in solids, stripes and plaids.

70 Dacfon polyester30 wool. utuiiv ului in. 55 Dacron polyester 45 wool. Plaids, stripes and latest patterns SPORT COAT SPECIALS By WILLIAM A. CLARK I went to Kettering police headquarters and asked the detective in charge of the Butler investigation, "Where is the roommate? Why did she skip town?" Detective Sgt.

Jim Tobias answered, "She is in the Columbus area. She did not skip town she had previous plans to move out of the apartment on Thursday evening. I cannot class her as a suspect." I asked for her address. "MISS GRAY has requested that her whereabouts not be divulged." Tobias then claimed that Barbara Butler's death had delayed, not encouraged, her roommate's departure from the Dayton area. "Miss Butler and Miss Gray had both resigned their teaching jobs this Third in a Series spring.

Barbara was going to stay on in the apartment, but Miss Gray was moving to Columbus in order to attend summer school at Ohio State and then get married sometime in August." "What kind of girl was Barbara Butler?" "We have learned from interviews with the dead girl's friends that she was a normal-type person who had a normal number of dates. One of these men 'broke up' with the victim a week and a half before her death." I ASKED about the boy friend that Miss Butler had unsuccessfully sought a pool pass for on the day of her death. I was told that police had verified that he was 150 miles north of Dayton in the Toledo area on the day of the killing. I drove to the Woodman Park Drive apartments hoping that someone there would be able to tell me what kind of neighbor Miss Butler had been. I asked for and got directions to the former Butler-Gray apartment.

I found 4957 Woodman Park Drive to be a block of 10 Reg. 39.95 and '45 TROPICALS, Reg. $35 and 39.75 KNITS, DENIMS, STRETCH WOVENS, townhouses, constructed in sidewallto-sidewall rows of five houses each. Thus each town-house had only one door a front door. The courtyard was an unpaved parking lot.

I walked along the edge of the dirt parking lot until I came to the driveway leading into it from Woodman Park Drive. I started at the asphalt driveway. The asphalt had the look of fresh pavement. A rolling machine was parked alongside the driveway. Several sawhorses were stacked next to the rolling machine.

MY MIND clicked into gear and raced away: Fresh asphalt fresh tar tar and oil splatterings on the undercarriage, wheels and fenders of Barbara's Volkswagen Was this driveway being paved the day the girl died? If so, did she get all of that tar on her car just from driving over this driveway on her way to the store? She could have seen the tar in daylight and probably would have driven around it but at night, when somebody driving that car and body back to the parking lot couldn't see the tar I went to a phone and called a coroner's investigator. He told me that paving work on the driveway was in progress on the a of Miss Butler's disappearance. But, he added, "You're barking up the wrong tree if you think that the oil and tar on her car means that the victim returned to her apartment from the store and then got murdered. The tar and oil splatterings were on and KNITS Polyester and wool tropicals, all polyester seersucker knits and white polyester Great new styles in bright seersucker stripe looks, solid linen looks and plus fancy solid and striped denims pocket bonded knits. stretch wovens in herringbone or random cord solid self patterns.

did not have to drive over the freshly paved driveway because her car was not parked in the lot in front of her apartment door at this time-it was parked in another lot some distance away. The investigator said, "Now let me tell you about the tape on the victim's arms. The tape wasn't just wound around her a i was put on very neatly, one loop at a time. We think that the arms were taped together behind the victim's back. BUT THERE is no way to tell for sure.

It is possible that the forearms were taped together in the form of a cross up against her chest. Now, what kind of people are taught to tape arms together like that?" "People who prepare bodies for delivery to a morgue?" "Correct. Nurses have to be prepared to do things like that sometimes, don't they?" "Nurses? Miss Butler's two neighbors are nurses! One of them found the body!" SLACKS SALE Reg. '12 and '14 DACRON WOOL BLENDS Q88 Reg. 8.95 DURA-PRESS DACRON BLENDS 65 rayon 5 Quality perma-crease $1 9 70 Dacron R30 wool 2 PR.

11.50 2 PR. stretch fabrics also 50 DacronV50 cottons. fabrics. Mostly straight leg, belt-loop styling. Solids, plaids, stripes and neat over-all patterns.

Ban-Rol waistbands. Belt-loop, straight leg styling in 6 popular colors. Flares in white only Fischer Ends UoldouU Arrives in Iceland HALF-SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Rag. 3.95 Reg. $5 LONG-SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Reg.

$6 Reg. $7 SHORT-SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS Reg. 3.95 to 12.95 LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS Reg. $5 to $30 I LOOKED up Loretta Car-mody's number in the phone book and dialed it. A girl's voice answered.

I identified myself and asked, "May I speak to Miss Carmody, please?" "Speaking." "Miss Carmody, I want to do a feature story about Miss Butler. I wonder if you would take some time to talk with me about her?" "I've said it all; you just check with the The next thing I heard was a click; she had hung up. Neit: Barbara's Last Days. 99 2" 3" 4" 5" Big selection of styles and fabrics but not every size and color, so shop early. 3 for 14.85 3 for 17.85 Solids, stripes, prints.

Most with 2-bulton cuffs. Knits and broadcloths in easy care fabrics. Many can be worn with a tic. 3 for 8.85 3 for 11.85 Stock up at savings in solids, whites, stripesjaaiuard and prints. ALSO GREAT SAVINGS ON NECKWEAR AND ROBES! ft REYKJAVIK, Iceland III Ending his holdout which threatened to wreck the world chess championship series, American grandmaster Bobby Fischer arrived in Iceland today about 10 hours before he was scheduled to meet Soviet titleholder Boris Spassky for their first game.

The 29-year-old American challenger flew from New York after accepting London banker James D. Slater's offer tomatch the $125,000 purse put up by the Icelandic Chess federation. Now the winner of the 24-game match will get $156,250 gate receipts. EACH WILL also get 30 per cent of the $250,000 paid for the TV and movie rights to the match, or $75,000 each. The match, which could last two months, was to start Sunday afternoon, but I stayed In New York, demanding a 30 per cent cut of the gate receipts.

The International Chess fed-e a 1 1 postponed the first game 48 hours and told USE YOUR RICHMAN CHARGE, BANKAMERICARO OR MASTER CHARGE Richman Fischer he had to be in Reykjavik by noon today or forfeit the match. He arrived about five hours before the deadline. A STEWARDESS on the plane said Fischer appeared calm during the flight of 4 hours and 40 minutes from New York but slept for only a few minutes at a time. Slater came forward with his to put up 50,000 pounds, saying, "Fischer has said that money is the problem. Well, here is." "I like chess and have played it for years," said Slater.

Fischer said Slater's offer was "stupendous incredible and generous and brave," according to a representative in New York. This spokesman, lawyer Paul Marshall, claimed Fischer's holdout had been a matter of principle: "He felt Iceland wasn't treating this match or his countrymen with the dignity that it and they deserved." 700 fussy WE RENT FORMAL WEAR tailors BROTHERS Free Bus Rides Even in Failure ROME (fl Rome's two-month experiment with free bus service to reduce traffic ended in a failure Sunday. The bus lines said their riders Increased about 10 per cent, but traffic was about as bad as ever. Now the city is going to try books of bus tickets at reduced rates. At least it will bring In some revenue to the city government, whose debt is $2 5 billion and increasing $1.5 million a day.

I STORE HOURS: 5 STORES IN GREATER DAYTON DOWNTOWN 32 SO. MAIN ST. to 8 FOREST PARK MALL TOWN COUNTRY SUBURBAN STORES SALEM MALL DAYTON MALL OPEN EVENINOS.

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Years Available:
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