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Daily News from New York, New York • 33

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 19r C5 Something to Remember You By Goodness Florence. No Makeup? Mab 2 in Model's Death by Abortion An East Side divorcee and a liquor store proprietor were being held for investigation by Newark police yesterday in the case of a 30-year-old model and receptionist who died here Saturday after an abortion. Named as materia as material witnesses i CI A were Mrs. Svlvia Rothschild. of lilt) K.

5Xth ani J-1 Kenel, of 3i16 Henry Hudson Parkway. Also being questioned in New Jersey was a Newark dtx-jor. Mrs. Rothschild and Kenel were picked up shortly after a Kellevue, Mll J- w'V-js2 I 1 in- hi S-MA (i i jgl pi' At Kilmer Atom bombs and other atomic weapons all imaginary were used yesterday at Camp Kilmer, JJ. in Operation Raindrop II, a tactical map exercise in which 2,000 Army regulars, reserves and national guardsmen took part.

Observers estimated that the First Army pushed te "enemy" back 20 miles toward the Rhine River in Germany. I.t. Gen. Thomas Herren, 1st Army commanding general, i autopsy report showed that Helen Barker of Tsui K. 5th St.

was the victim of "an illegal operation." Site died Saturday in Manhattan General Hospital. Mrs. Rothschild told police that she was a friend of both the dead woman and Kenel, and enlisted the hitter's aid when Miss Barker revealed recently that she was pregnant. Met by 2 Women The doctor in Newark was contacted, and a couple of weeks ago a woman who gave only the name of "DeHa" phoned, Mrs. Roths said that goals set for the exercise were met.

248 Guggenheim Grants Awarded The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation yesterday announced grant of fellowships totaling to 248 Americans. Among the recipients were child said. Arrangements were then made for Miss Barker to Dr. Arthur H. Compton, atom scientist and Nobel Prjze winner; authors Saul Bellow and Hor-tense Calisher, and Dr.

John Kenneth Galbraith, Harvard University economist who testified in the recent "friendly" Senate investigation of the stock market. (BvTWAI It's spring, and a feller hates to leave his gal friend. One-year-old Houston Slade Krown busses his girl friend, Kenee Jarohi, 2, as he boards a plane at International Airport for a trip to Rome with his mother. The young fellow hails from San Francisco and the girl is from Jamaica, Queens. meet Delia a Newark railroad station on April 15.

The price of the abortion was set at JStiOO. Kenel said he drove Miss Barker to Newark, where they met Delia and a "Mrs. Novak." Miss Barker then drove off with the two women, he said. Mrs. Rothschild said she called Newark the nevt day ami was told that Miss Barker was "OK but weak." She said she knew nothing more about the case.

Kenel said he picked up Miss Barker at Newark airport on April 1G and drove her to a New York hotel. He said he stopped in to visit her Saturday, and when he found that she was critically ill drove her to a physician's The doctor took Miss Barker to the hospital. Death Clues Hunted in Fall River Stymied at every turn of their investigation in the city and upstate, state police hopefully turned to cops in Fall River, yesterday for a solid lead to the ride liv Al Florence Henderson, leading lady in the musical hit "Fanny," lost her compact on a isit to Boston. But tihe still Uxik good as she arrives I.a Guardia Field. 1,000 Firemen At Communion The St.

Ceorge Association of the Fire Department held in lKt.h annual Communion breakfast yesterday in the Hotel Roosevelt, with more than members attending. The organization presented $2,500 to the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies iml $1,500 to the Protestant Council of New York City. Commissioner Edward F. CavanaK'i principal speaker, praised organizations within his Earlier, the firemen attended a Communion rervice at It Church of the Incarnation. Madison Ave.

and 35th and pa slaving of boxer Al Frias Balloons 6 Take Bibfe to Commies Stuttgart, April 24 fl'i An American evangelist said todav the first of 100,0110 hydrogen-filled ballons to carry Bible pamphlets to Iron Curtain countries will be launched tomorrow. Billy James Hariris of Tulsa, said the project, sponsored by the International Council of Christian Churches with headquarters in Amsterdam, would take four or five months. near Tuxedo Park, N. early Friday. None of the friends or associates -the 26-year-old welterweight had in New York had seen Frias on his last trip here, the state investigators indicated.

He arrived in the city from his Fall River home on Tuesday, apparently with about $1,500. He was shot dead around 4 A. M. Friday. In between, except for comings and goings from his West Side hotel room, his movements remained a mystery.

The $1,410 found in his room also remained, a mystery, though police still leaned to the theory it was robbery loot, and Fall River cops were believed checking recent stickups for a possible connection to Frias. Rifle Kills N.J. Boy Philadelphia, April 24 (U.R. William C. Albright, 13, of Riverside, N.

died in a hospital today after being shot accidentally by a companion while they were hunting rats. He was shot in the head in a back yard near his home, when a rifle carried by George Slater, 14, aho of Riverside, went off last night. i Burned Fightinq Fire Armand DeStefano, 37, of 570 K. lK7th Bronx, suffered burns on both hands yesterday in beating out a fire started when a cigaret fell on a painter's drop cloth in his si tor's apartment, adjoining his own. De Ste-fano was finishing a painting job in the apartment.

Rockefeller Reelected David Rockefeller has been elected to his ninth successive-term as president of Morningside Heights. a neigblmi hood The late Al Fria No lead in hin mlaying raded to the. Roosevelt. (Picture in Centerfold) DON'T BE MUGGER BAIT! Cop Goes on Trial Today in Death of Boy, 15 A Zz-year-okt probationary cop will go to trial in Kings County Court today for fatally shooting a 15-year-old boy fleeing- from a window-smashing incident last Feb. 13.

Patrolmen's Benevolent Association. Police line organizations and the individual officer are waiting with keen interest, Herwitz declared yesterday, to see what hap- i the scream, noticed four boys fleeing up the stict. The cop said he jumped out of the cab, shouted that he was a policeman and fired three warning shots. Then he fired again and Sterling fell mortally wounded. The slain youth, a second-year vocational high school student, lived with his morth.

Mis. Mary Fllen Schwartz at 207 liOth Brooklyn. Surrey lives at 540 50th Brooklyn. Assistant District Attorney Joseph lloey will present the state's case. Judge Samuel S.

Leibowitz will preside. Toyko May Cleanup Tokyo. April li J.R. Japa Vi itli limber luikiff even in oi k' quiet rc-i-dtnlidl areas, don't mi I It article by Charles Harry i1 i It- precaution tMI can lake avoid llie- Tlicre are oilier lip. Urn, with the -If-mcntarv one of yelling (when can! if you are iiiifort uiute enougli to be mugged.

And, for tlnt-e who elect to dot battle, bow to break a tliroat-loi so you base a chance to bite, tkle and throw. See tomorrow's DAILYa NEWS MEW TO IOCS ftCTUU HLtrirAPU The jury chosen to try sus- pended Patrolman Robert Surrey will be asked to determine whether he was guilty of first degree manslaughter for putting a bullet in the back of John Skinny Sterling 'in the heat of passion," as a grand jury charged. But in the eyes of Police Commissioner Adams and the ''entire city administration," according to Assistant Corporation Connsel Victor Herwitz, Surrey is being tried for the unfortunate consequence of a zealous but proper act in the line of duty. ide Interest in Trial At the written request of Adams to the corporation counsel, Herwitz will defend Surrey with the assistance of James Tully, retained in the cop's behalf by the panes to a man who in good faith was performing his duty." Hears Woman Scream Surrey was off-duty at the time of the shooting. He was in a taxi, escorting a girl friend home from a party.

Sterling and three other youths were walking along 17th Brooklyn, after attending a i sweet 16 party. In front of 453 17th the youths tipped over an ash can and it bounced into the window of a ground-floor apartment. A woman inside the apartment screamed, and Surrey, hearing nese authorities dicloseit today i that they will bejjin a drive next month to clean up obscene litera- tuie, movies and records in an effort to halt the increa-e of 1 teenage Bex crimes. Patrolman Surrey Hi trial to ttart.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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