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Waukesha Daily Freeman from Waukesha, Wisconsin • Page 2

Location:
Waukesha, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

British Ready With 32,000 More Troops Irish Fear Violent Protestant Parade A Northern Ireland (AP) Gunmen killed three persons early today as Northern Protestants got rtady for their first big march of the summer. Automatic fire riddled a 19- year-old Protest art walking mrth father in a park in the town of Portadawn. hour later, five masked gunmen believed to be Protestant esBcutioners broke into a home in Belfast and murdered a 16-year-old Catholic. And the body of a hooded man, shot in the head, was found in Belfast, apparently another victim of the assassins who have terrorized the city for weeks. Meanwhile, the British gov- ordered 32,000 troops, police and militiamen into the streets of 18 cities and towns to keep the warring religious factions apart today while 100,000 Protestants of the Orange Order paraded.

Belfast was lit by scores of bonfires during the night, marking the advent of the It is the 282n.1 anniversary of the Sheriff's Leave Bid Is Delayed HERIFF EDWARD nor will have to wait a couple of weeks longer before his reuqest for another two year leave of absence is acted on by the county board, the Sheriff Civil Service Cam- mission learned Tuesday. Henry H. Buehhclz. chair- at it's no wonder fujica stTOI is our most popular seller AUGIE'S CAME SHOP 275 St 59 OUTDOOR P.M. SHOW DUSK HWY.

59 HtOM THE MASTER Of SHOCK I A SHOCKING MASTERPIECE 1 ALFRED A Deadly New Twist From The Original Hitchcock! New I Exciting! IfCEROINCX Sometimes a Great Notion "FLEA MARKET" EVERY SUN; -10 AJL TO 4 PJL- MATINEES DAILY Opon 1:30. show 2 M- PARK I NOW SHOWINGlTI and wonderful JACK lEflWflON-BARBARA HARMS 2nd BIG k.WEEK! AND (pomerl I JASON ROBAROSl 3, DAILY AT- 2.4.6. 8 610 s- MATINEES DAILY 1:30 Show 2 pjn. NOW SHOW a screwball comedy remember them? DAILY AT: 2B4B8 Bee Pnrrn 7 Waukesha Freeman Battle of the Boyne, in which the IVotestant armies of William of Orange defeated Roman Catholic forces ot James II. warnings that Northern Irleand is closer to civil war than at any time in the three years of communal violence, the militant Protestants of the Ulster Defense Association said their armed units would protect the marchers frcm attack by the Catholics of the Irish Republican Army.

Government forces cordoned the line of march Belfast to block attacks by Catholics enraged bv the display of Protestant dominance Catholics of the Anderson- stown, Ballymurphv and dovne districts sealed off their sectors with barricades of concrete and steel to keep out Protestant raiders. Trouble was feared in Portadown, a town of 13,000 population 25 miles southwest of Belfast. The route of the parade there ran through a Catholic section, and the IRA said it would not allow the marchers through. The UDA said it was prepared for a showdown. The buildup to the parades was ominous.

The Provisional wing of the IRA on Sunday night called off a truce it had ordered two weeks before, and the shooting and bjmbing since has been worse than ever. At least 16 persons have been killed, bringing the recorded toll to 420 in three years. The army said that in Belfast alone there had been 210 shooing incidents between 8 a.m. Tuesday and 4:30 a.m. today.

It said soldiers were not involved in 83 of them, implying that they were attacks of Catholics cn Protestants or vice versa. Viets Vie for Quang Tri S' man of the Justice and Enforcement told the commission the wording of the resolution was being adjusted and the Deputy union wanted to get their say on the matter. The commission and Justice and Enforcement have both given the nod to ext coding his present leave from his former job as juvenile administrator which was comparable to a sergeant. They feel a should be granted him because he took Gov. Patrick J.

appointment to the job under the old rules where office holders were required to get a leave of absence. They' now must quit. The bargaining agent for the union seemed walling to g-ant another leave, but want Henry H. Buchholz him to keep his civil service status, Buchholz said. Buchholz said he will take up the matter with the bargaining agent before introducing the resolution to the county board.

According to Buchholz, the position is that a sheriff who holds his rank his term would have to bump lower ranking men when he returned to the force, possibly reverberating all through the force. Former Sheriff Robert Baird, for instance, was granted four leaves of absence under the old rules, and kept his rank of lieutenant for all eight years he was in office. Heavy fighting was reported on three sides of Quang Tri City as tank-led North Vietnamese forces for the sixth straight day blocked a government drive to recapture the provincial capital. The Saigon military command claimed 198 North Vietnamese soldiers were killed and four tanks destroyed in five battles north, east and south of Quang Tri City on Tuesday and today. First reports said 29 South Vietnamese soldiers were killed and 69 wounded.

Nearly all of the government casualties were reported in the helicopter landing of several hundred South Vietnamese marines a mile north of Quang Tri City at noon Tuesday. Three U.S. Marine helicopters were shot down, and two of the American crewmen were reported wounded. The North Vietnamese launched one counterattack just before dawn today and seized hilltop positions from South Vietnamese paratroopers to the southwest, Associated ss correspondent Dennis Neeld reported from the front. Neeld said several battalions of South Vietnamese paratroopers on the edges of Quang Tri City were being pounded by long-range North Vietnamese artillery fire.

Allied planes were striking ot the city, field reports said, but they were hampered by windstorms whipping up sand and reducing the visibility. Radio Hanoi announced today that a Communist Revolutionary Committee was established last month to rule Quang Tri Province, which the North Vietnamese captured in May ar.d are now defending against the South Vietnamese counterattack. The broadcast quoted a communique by the Viet National Liberation Front dated July 5 but gave no reason why the announcement had been held up for a week. The U.S. 7th Fleet in a delayed report announced that the destroyers Robison and Hull sank 13 barges off the coast of North Vietnam 30 miles northeast of Dong Hoi before dawn Monday.

The barges were unloading supplies from a freighter, presumed to be Chinese, but the freighter was not attacked, sources said. In the air war, U.S. fighter- bombers flew more than 290 strikes against North Vietnam on Tuesday, the U.S. Command said, and knocked out a 300-foot highway bridge 40 miles northeast of Hanoi with laser-guided bombs. North Vietnam claimed that six U.S.

planes werre shot Elks Split on Race Bar Clause ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) As the national Elks convention readied for a vote on a resolution to end the Elks all-white membership rule, two groups claiming to be lobbying for integration of the organization accused each other of ulterior motives. Thomas J. Wynn, an attorney who heads a three-man Waukesha Freeman An Ntwapaptr Established 1859 Wednesday, July 12, 1972 Publtsncd na Monday throuxr. and Saturda- morning Published every afternoon except Sunday by the FREEMAN PRINTING COMPANY 200-104 PARK PLACE 53186 HOME DELIVERY PRICES By carrterboy: Weekly $.60.

3 mos. (13 wka) $7.80 months (26 weeks) 6u yearly (33 weeks) 931.20 By motor route dilvn Monthly 93.00. Quarterly (3 mos.) Semi-annual (6 mos.) 916.95. Yearly 933 20 MAIL SUBSCRIPTION PRICES 1 month 93 00 3 months $8.00 9 months 914.00 One year 925 u0 Ask for department or pereon desired. Private exchange.

942-2501 or 567-9791 Entered at tha Waukaaha. Wisconsin, post office as second dase matter. All unsolicited manuscripts, articles, letters and pictures addressed to the Freeman, are aent at the owner's risk. The Associated gress la entitled exclusively to the for repubil- catlon ot eU the local news printed In the newspaper, as well as au AP news dispatches. Articles and photos supplied by The Christian Science Monitor Service (CSM) ere copyrighted by The Christian Science Publishing Society.

lobbying team, stressed Tuesday that his team was not in any way connected with the Committee to Integrate the Elks (CITE), which he termed third party organization attempting to interfere with the internal affairs of the Representatives of CITE said statement was a intended to put the blame on their group should the integration resolution fail. Wynn said he and his colleagues were sent by the Middleboro, Mass. lodge effect a A two-thirds affirmative and proper change with re- vote is required for passage. C-atholic priest of Massachusetts who was recently censured by the Middleboro lodge for unbecoming an following his efforts to integrate the lodge. Wynn is the same attorney who represented the Middleboro lodge when it refused to admit a said Fr.

Mackenzie, a member of CITE. case is still pending in federal district court in It was the priest who called statement smear The resolution, proposed by the Madison, lodge, comes up for a vote Thurs- speet to elimination of the clause from the motives were questioned by Rev. William M. Mackenzie, a 32-year-old If passed the action would be subject to ratification by a majority of the more than 2.000 lodges with a membership of more then 1.5 million. ount Obituaries Mrs.

L. E. Gittner Graveside rites will be conducted at 11 a.m. Thursday at Prairie Home cemetery for Mrs. Lillian E.

Gittner, 75. A former Waukesha resident, Mrs. Gittner died Monday at the Ormond Beach, INO'S Hwy. 18 at Hwy. A PI mm Call For Rtstrvatiens PHONE 547 6161 WITH THIS COUPON Quality U.S.D.A.

CHOICE (Approx. 12 oz. each) TOP SIRLOIN Dinner For 2 Includes Baked Potato. Salad Bowl with Choice of Dressings, Titer-Top with Chives, Rolls, Coffee or Tea. VdM July 13 thru July 19, 1972 You Must Present Coupon to Waitress With Order Fla.

Hospital. The Gittner family moved to Ormond Beach about 18 years ago. In Waukesha, Mrs. Gittner and her husband, Charles lived at 1302 E. Broadway.

Gittner was secretary- treasurer of the Gittner Coal and Supply Co. Mrs. Gittner was a member of First Presbyterian Church of Waukesha. Survivors are her husband, Charles, and one son, Charles H. (Bud) Gittner Jr.

The Rev. Richard dinger, minister of First Presbyterian Church, will officiate. The Rudolph Funeral Home is in charge. down during Tuesday's raids The U.S. Command announced one loss, a Navy F4 Phantom downed about 30 miles northeast of Hanoi.

The two crewmen were listed as missing. The U.S. Command also disclosed the loss of a Marine A6 fighter-bomber that was shot down last Friday 33 miles southwest of Quang Tri City. It said the two crewmen were missing. Dem Reform Plan Appears To Be Doomed MIAMI BEACH, Fla.

(API A proposal to rebuild the Democratic party on the basis of the 1972 convention reforms appears doomed, victim of the California credentials fight, strong apposition from organized labor and party pros, and general apathy. The plan, which would establish a national Democratic party with dues-paying members and run by grassroots-controlled organizations, is unlikely even to come to a vote at the convention. It takes a special resolution from the Rules Committee to send it to the floor, and the committee was unable to act Sunday when it was supposed to because of a fight over California delegate seating. With that opportunity gone, sponsors of the charter fear it will be lost in the convention rush toward ruminating McGovern and a running mate. Most of the opposition to the charter by established party leaders is centered cn proposals to triple the size of the Democratic National Committee.

N.B. School Forum Set for Candidates NEW BERLIN School district voters will have a chance to meet School Board candidates at a forum next week. It will be Wednesday July 19 at 8 p.m. at the Community Center Library, 14750 W. Cleveland Ave.

Sponsor is the League of Women Voters. Five candidates seek two oositions. They are incumbent Thomas Bryan, A. Vernon Jensen, Raymond J. Sell, Carl R.

Steffen and his son Robert. term expires this year, along with that of Joseph Stein. The election will be held Monday July 24 at Eisenhower High School from 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. Information booklets on all candidates will be distributed to those attending the forum.

Each candidate has been asked to give his answers to these questions: 1. Why are you running for the Board of Education? 2. What do you consider to be the strong and weak points of education in the New Berlin public schools? 3. What is your evaluation of our middle school program and what would you do to improve it? GUwi 781 6566 PROUDLY INTRODUCES 781-6566 Our Solution To Carpet Pollution Steam Extraction Process HALL AVAILABLE FOR BANQUETS I WEDDINGS WWW Wednesday, July 12, 1972 An mmaziiif new CABPET CLEANING PROCESS that removes the DIRT and OLD SHAMPOO RESIDUE You can actually see it be astounded by the amount of actual DIRT removed from your CARPET Protect your Carpets STEEM EXTRACTION CLEANS. Call for a free estimate Residential Commercial Tom Brooks Capsules Censorship Is Asked WASHINGTON (AP) Strict controls over news on air line hijackings might help cut down on hijack attempts, acceding to til? Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO).

John F. Leyden, the PATCO president, called for immediate blackout on skyjacking in a letter to Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe Tuesday. twisted ininds which contrive these heinous schemes receive their instant expertise through elaborate detailed accounts of previous attempts in the newspapers and he said. often vivid details depicted by the media serve as an incentive to an already unbalanced mind which would even contemplate a crime of such serious he added.

Leyden said PATCO was not seeking to directly suppress news, but that it wanted change in the method used in disseminating that He did not elaborate. Police Fight Suspensions WISCONSIN DELLS, Wis. (AP) Police officers Dean Willard and William Jax are fighting their suspensions from the force, which were ordered after they helped transport a traffic accident victim to a Baraboo hospital. Dr. James Lewis of Baraboo has filed an affidavit with the Police and Fire Commission stating the pair be credited with helping the life of the woman he treated May 24 after she was struck by a car about four miles from Wisconsin Dells.

Police Chief Hans Mickelson suspended Willard and Jax without pay because he said they violated a department rule by leaving the city. Nixon to Meet Soviet SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP) Just a day before Vietnam peace talks resume in Paris, President Nixon has scheduled an informal but serious meeting here with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin. The ambassador and Mrs. Dobrynin, described as guests of Henry A.

Kissinger, the principal foreign affairs advisor, were invited by their host to visit the Western White House today. Ronald L. Ziegler, press secretary, said the chief executive and the visiting Russian would meet at some point during the day. In response to a question, Ziegler declared, want to describe it as a courtesy Asked if substantive matters would be discussed, he replied, Israel OKs Confession LOD, Israel (AP) A military court agreed today to admit a confession of Japanese terrorist Kozo Okamoto cn the Lod Airport massacre. The three-man court snid the 'Jtyett- old Japanese radical kftw that a swddt provision he had signed in exchange for the confession was no longer valid.

The presiding judge, Lt. Col. Abraham Frisch, ruled that the suicide agreement not interfere with free will at the time the statement was made. We decide to admit the statement and the confession of the The agreement to let Okamoto commit suicide after he made a confession was disclosed Tuesday in testimony by Maj. Gen.

Rehavam Zeevi, whose military command includes the airport area. Fischer's Money Stalled LONDON (AP) British financier James Slater has been stalled in his efforts to get the $120,000 prize money he put up for the world chess championship between Bobby Fischer and Bans Spassky in Iceland. Under foreign exchange control regulations, he cannot the money out of the country until the Bank of England says so. bank spokesman said Slater had applied for permission to get the money to the players but declined to say whether bank approval would be forthcoming. Slater, a chess fan, cannot transfer the money from his worldwide banking and investment empire to foreigners or open bank accounts for either Fischer or Spassky in Britain without the approval.

The mos the can do is pay $720 a year. the maximum gift payment permitted to go to nonsterling areas from Britain. Slater. 43, put up the money to get Fischer to Reykjavik after he appeared reluctant to play because the $125,000 purse offered by the Icelandic Chess Federation was not enough. The extra prize enticed Fischer to do battle.

DNR Will Appeal MADISON, Wis. (AP) Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources officials say they will appeal a Circuit Court ruling which they feel favors annexation prerogatives over the pollution abatement efforts. The decision by Judge William Sachtjen upheld a law passed by the legislature last year which forbids the DNR from ordering cities to hook unincorporated areas into their sewage systems. The issue was described as one of urban development versus tion by the judge..

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About Waukesha Daily Freeman Archive

Pages Available:
147,442
Years Available:
1859-1977