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Daily News from New York, New York • 251

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
251
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

to Press Hunt for Killer By MICHAEL HANRAHAN Police continued their search yesterday for a stocky man, 25 to 35 years of age, in the savage stab-slaying of the attractive red-haired daughter of a prominent Long Island attorney. hair, a ruddy complexion, is 5 feet 11 and about 190 pounds. A woman resident of the area saw him driving a late-model Chevrolet Nova and also on foot near the spot where the girl's body was found. Police said the girl was murdered about 2 p.m., a half hour after she left her school and started to walk toward her home at 150 Asharoken some two miles from the school. Although the Asharoken area was in a state of alarm and shock as detectives questioned motorists and residents who might provide some clue to the murderer, many Northport coeds were seen yesterday blithely hitchhiking home from school.

The body of the girl, Amy Igu-ehi, 16, a junior at Northport High School, was found Wednesday night in a heavily shrubbed area off Eatons Neck Road in the affluent residential area of Asharoken, northeast of North-port. She was the daughter of York and Patricia Iguchi. Man Described Authorities said that she had not been raped but that her clothing had been pushed up over her head and that she had been stabbed at least 30 times in the chest, back and throat. Deputy Chief of Suffolk Detectives Herbert Armltt, in charge of the investigation, said the man being sought has light-brown in in a a 00 to News photo by Jim Moonev Amy Iguchi. 16, stabbed tm ile-itft on Wednesday.

Buried Alive in B'klyn Cave-In By BRYANT MASON A young workman was killed yesterday in a cave-in at a sewer project in Brooklyn's Bush Terminal Industrial Park when he was buried under tons of sand and debris. After a six-hour search, police the hujre sand heap. Several times he tried to peer through the hole, but couldn't see what was happening. He was at the scene at 4 :45 p.m., when the body was located. emergency rescue squad workers found the bodv of Antonio Acosta, 26, of 225 53d of Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, in 10 feet of dirt near the offices of the Atlantic Balancer Manufactur i 5 Whale Square.

Authorities said that Acosta, and three other Atlantic Balancer employes, had been searching for sewer lines beneath the roadway abutting the plant. The workers had no prior ditch-digging experience and had failed to "shore up" the hole with planks as they proceeded, according to workmen at the scene. Working With Others Police said that Acosta wis working with Raymond Acevedo, Hector Riviera and i 1 Osorio at 10:50 a.m. yesterday when the cave-in occurred. Within seconds, thev said, the hole filled.

Reporting that the initial opening was only 3 feet by 2 feet, rescuers said that they then had to inch through the opening, one at a time, through a 10-foot tunnel to reach the point where Acosta went down. A spokesman for the manufacturing company, which produces bicycle parts, refused to comment on the accident or release details about the project. As rescuers searched for the body, Acosta's cousin, Ronald, stood shocked and tense next to Plan Comet-Chaser Seattle. Sept. 27 (AP) A solar-powered rocket, capable of such high-energy space missions as a comet rendezvous, is being studied by the Boeing Aerospace Co.

Boeing officials said preliminary studies were financed bv a $3:50,000 contract from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. NEWS BRIEFS 3d Mental Checkup Slated for Jackson Alleged mass murderer Calvin Jackson was ordered examined by a third court-appointed psychiatrist yesterday after the Manhattan, district attorney's office challenged two earlier independent reports declaring him mentally unfit to stand trial. At a hearing, Criminal Court Judge E. Leo Milonas "held in abeyance" an additional request by Assistant District Attorney Kenneth Klein that the 26-year-old Jackson be examined by a psychiatrist chosen by the DA's office. "The degree of (Jackson's) depression is such that it is highly questionable if he could function as a defendant," Milonas said.

"There is no question he needs psychiatric help." Milonas ordered that the third psychiatrist be chosen from the staff of Bellevue Hospital. At Jackson's arraignment Sept. 13, Klein told the court that he had implicated himself in 10 West Side murders besides the one he was charged with the slaying of Mrs. Pauline Spanierman, a G9-year-old widow of 40 W. 77th St.

The chief medical examiner said Thursday that six of those deaths were from natural causes and Jackson has subsequently said that he is responsible for none of them. Klein and Manhattan DA Richard Kuh refused comment on those developments. D. J. Saunders Nixon Book Rights Bring $3 Million The right to publish the memoirs of former President Richard Nixon was acquired for an estimated $3 million by Warner Publishing it was announced yesterday.

A company spokesman said the work would be published in either one or two volumes and would probably focus on Nixon's quest for peace, his relationship with other world leaders, the 1972 reelection and Watergate, which eventually led to his resignation. The spokesman said Nixon had not decided when he would start work on his memoirs. Permissive Supermarket Is Lauded The Pathmark Supermarket decision to allow customers the right to open store-packed merchandise when they wish to purchase only one item was commended yesterday by the city's Department of Consumer Affairs. Unlike many stores, Pathmark has posted signs in English and Spanish informing customers of their right, for example, to buy only one apple even if apples are being sold in packages of six. Noting that legislation that would require all stores to adopt a similar policy is now being drafted, Consumer Affairs Commissioner Elinor Guggenheimer said stores such as Pathmark, that voluntarily adopt such plans, "make our job much easier." Western Electric to Reimburse Women The Western Electric Co.

announced yesterday it will pay 2,000 women employes $800,000 under the terms of an agreement with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The company said the action is a result of policies prior to Jan. 1, 1970, which may have discriminated against women in its manufacturing division by preventing them from obtaining certain jobs and promotions. Accused of Slaying Wife, Stabbing Self A 24-year-old Brooklyn man who was separated from his wife stabbed her to death early yesterday morning in the hallway of her apartment building and then attempted to kill himself after she refused to listen to his pleas for a reconciliation, according to police of the Wilson Ave.

station. 9 Herbert Neals arrived at the apartment of his wife, Doris, 22, at 86 Wilson hoping to work out marital differences, witnesses told police. When she refused to listen, police said, he pulled out a knife and stabbed her to death before inflicting serious wounds on himself. Neals was in critical condition at Wyckoff Heights Hospital. Net 3 on Bookie Rap in Mount Vernon Police sledge-hammered their way into a Mount Vernon apartment yesterday and arrested three persons alleged to be bookmakers who had been in business at the place only 45 minutes, using tapes to record bets, Westchester Sheriff Thomas J.

Delaney said. The trio, called a "gypsy" band, did business at various locations, moving as frequently as every 72 hours, police said. Cassettes, tape cartridges and other paraphernalia seized reflected an estimated $50,000 a week in baseball, football, and horse-racing action, police said. Arrested on first-degree felony charges were William Augustine, 27, and Louis Sposato, 50, both of Mount Vernon, and Dominic Infurna, 38, of Manhattan. John Randazzo Shootout Suspcet Charged With Robbery A man whose two companions were killed in a shootout with police on the Connecticut Turnpike Tuesday has been charged with first-degree robbery.

Bond of $50,000 was set for the suspect, Alfred McQune, 24, of Brooklyn, who was reported in satisfactory condition in Greenwich Hospital, with several bullet wounds. McQune and his two companions are suspected of having robbed the widow and mourners at the home of a Darien man who died on Monday. Beaten Songwriter in Critical Coma George Forrest, a 59-year-old songwriter who teamed with Robert Wright on "The Song of Norway," "Kismet," and other hits, remains in a coma and in critical condition at Long Island College Hospital after he was beaten and robbed on a quiet Brooklyn Heights street corner early Monday morning. Forrest, who underwent five hours of surgery, was returning to his apartment at 138 Columbia Heights from the Cadman Plaza Garage when he was attacked at Pineapple and Willow and robbed of his wallet and jewelry, police said. He was admitted to the hospital as "John Doe" because he had no identification.

It was not until Tuesday evening that he was identified by Wright, with whom he shares an apartment. 153s This picture was taken in Munich in 1958 when Rheingoid won the Gold Medals at the World's Fair in Brussels and the International Exposition in Munich. 'i nifriilff-r ihi irimftTMrfrwiTOTi 11 1 1 1 mmi nr- -ti TiTi-i hi ii iiiih iiiii is 153 153 153 ig 151 151 151 153 153 153 153 153 L53 153 153 153 153 153 153 153 15) 153 The Honorable Thomas Wimmer Lord Mayor of Munich in 1958 51 01 01 G1 El 01 The same brewmasters are still at Rheingoid brewing the same beer! 1 01 I 1.

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