jest a minute - townnews · jest a minute two streakers decided to stop dating—they thought they...

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Jest a minute Two streakers decided to stop dating—they thought they were seeing too much of each other. Established ia 1&58 Waterloo, Iowa, Friday, June 7,1974—30 Pages— 3 Sections Saturday's weather Chance of rain ' Complete weather forecast—Page 2 15 Cents Bill Severin's Column Boating confusion Lack of uniformity between United States Coast Guard regulations and Iowa law is resulting in the arrest of some Iowa boaters plying the boundary waters of the state. While the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers are generally regarded as federal waters, an Act of Congress passed 128 years ago gives adjoining states concurrent jurisdiction over any river or lake that forms a common boundary between states. : THIS SIMPLY means that when you are cruising the Mississippi or Missouri Rivers you may be subject to three sets of laws—the federal law and the laws of the states on either shore. Unfortunately, these laws are not always uniform. Northeastern Iowa boaters, who are in compliance with Coast Guard regulations regarding fire extinguishers, are being ar- rested on the Mississippi River because they are not in \compliance with Iowa's more restrictive law. The\ Coast Guard* does not require fire extinguishers on outboard motorboats less than 26 feet in length and not carrying passengers for hire if the construction of the boat will not permit the entrapment of flammable gases. Iowa law requires a fire extinguisher on every outboard motorboat powered by more than 10 horsepower. Roy Downing, head of the water section of the Iowa Conservation Commission, concedes that the lack of uniformity between the Coast Guard and the various states having the Mississippi as a common boundary is un- fortunate. But he says the District Coast Guard office in St. Louis has indicated to Iowa, officials that they prefer the more restrictive Iowa regu- ]ations"to their own. HE CONCEDES that the federal authorities and those representing the various states should get together o uniform regulations so that if a boater is legal in one jurisdiction he will be legal in all of them. He says a meeting between the various agencies in August will attempt to attain this goal. In the meantime, boaters operating out of . Northeastern Iowa ports would do well to' familiarize themselves with the boating laws of ali the states whose'boundary waters they may enter, as well as Coast Guard regulations. Some Northeast Iowa boaters, in the course of a summer, may well come under the jurisdiction of four states—Iowa, Illinois, Wis- consin and Minnesota. This sort of confusion does nothing to improve a citizen's respect for the law. The Coast Guard and the various states should get together promptly and agree on uniform regulations to be enforced by ail agencies involved. THE WATERLOO Commission on Human Rights Thursday upheld Mayor Leo Rooff s suspension of commission director Willie Mosley pending an investigation into charges against him. Story on Page3. IOWA CITY home economist suggests methods for decreasing Ihe amount of salt in daily menu plans. SCHOLASTIC WRESTLING News has named West Waterloo High wrestling coach Bob Siddens its Coach of the Year. See Courier Sports Editor Russ L. Smith's column on Page 13. Cedar Falls News ..... 6 Church News 10 Classified Advertising 18-22 Comics 11 Editorial 4 Jeane Dixon Horoscope 11 Markets 23 Metropolitan and state Deaths 5 Northeast Iowa 12 Sports ...13-15 Television 11 Theater 16,17 Waterloo News 3,5 You and Your Interests 7-9 [ On the Deny assistance WASHINGTON (AP) — A White House spokesman Friday said President Nixon a year ago "expressed a willingness to assist" two former aides in meeting their Watergate legal expenses but denied that the President ever arranged any financial assistance for them. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren's comments came in response to a report that the Senate Watergate Committee had been told thai a close friend of Nixon's controlled a $400,000 fund for the legal defense of presidential assistants. Highway deaths drop CHICAGO (AP) Lower fuel supplies and driving speeds have slowed the death toll on the nation's highways to its lowest pace in years, according to the president of the National Safety Council. "The live-saving trend in traffic accidents that appeared last winter at the onset of the energy crisis still seems to be with us," Council President Vincent Tofany said Thursday. Angry judge blasts Nixon LESS THAN two hours before Russell Fitz was arrested in connection with the murder of two-year-old Shelly Day, Fitz was questioned on the front porch of his apartment building at 925 Commercial St. by Police Waterloo girl found slain Sgt. William Derr. Shortly after the officers left to resume their search for the still missing girl, Fitz told a Courier reporter of his love for her. The arm tattoo reads "'Born to Lose." (Courier photo by Jim Wigdahl) Suspect tells of fondness for strangled youngster, 2 WASHINGTON (AP) — A visibly angry federal judge said Friday President Nixon's refusal to live up to an agreement over access by John D. Ehrlichman to files he left behind in the White House "borders on obstruction." The comment from U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell came at the end of a 2Vz-hour hearing, ordered by Gesell, that could lead to a contempt citation against the President. Gesell adjourned the session saying that he intends to write an order and opinion bearing qn Nixon's refusal to yield documents sub- poenaed by Ehrlichman. REFERRING to the exclusion of Ehrlichman's lawyer from the room where Ehrlichman's files were kept, Gesell said he could not agree to a procedure where the lawyer waits outside with Ehrlichman coming out periodically to confer. •. • "1 don't see how I can agree to a procedure that is so totally offensive," Gesell said. "It is offensive, sir. It borders on obstruc- tion," the judge added. Earlier, Gesell told St. Clair "When you make a commitment in open court, you make it to me. You broke it." St. Clair said he acted on President Nixon's orders. ' " Ehrlichman .said he was informed by.St. Clair on Wednesday when he went'to the White House to look at the files that his attorneys would not be allowed access to the documents as set out in an agreement between Gesell and St. Clair in open court last Friday. Ehrlichman has subpoenaed the files. The agreement was based on a letter from President Nixon in which Nixon : said Ehrlichman and his attorneys would be allowed to go through Ehrlichman's White House files to select documents they felt were needed for Ehrlichman's defense in an upcoming trial in connection with a burglary at the office of the psychiatrist of Pentagon Papers figure Daniel Ellsberg. IN HIS letter, Nixon said he would make the final decision on what material would actually be made available as evidence. GeseU accepted the agreement to allow Ehrlichman and his lawyer to review the .material but said he (Gesell), 'not the President, would make the final decision on what material would be used as evidence. Gesell reiterated that stand Friday. "I will determine what will be put to the 0 jury, not you, not the President, not Mr. Ehrlichman," Gesell told St. Clair. Gsell then began a hearing on who has legal custody of the material and to determine whether sufficient cause "exists to 'hold, a contempt of court hearing. GESELL ordered the hearing after asking St. Clai: "You are saying he (the President) will not comply with the court's order." U.S. District Judge Gerhart A. Gesell asked Nixon's lawyer, James D. St. Clair: "You are'. saying he (the President) will not comply, with the court's order." -• '•'•'.' •'"• "I think that's a fair reading," St; Clair responded.- r " ' - ... •'•_", Gesell, who had said earlier 'that, unless Ehrlichman geis^ all the material from his .own White House files that he deems neces- sary for his defense, he might have to dismiss the conspiracy case against Ehrlichman, then said: ' "I PROPOSE to have a hearing into who has custody and control ...' so I can take appropriate action under the contempt stat- ute. - '••••• By JIM WIGDAHL Courier Staff Writer The man charged in the strangulation death Thursday of a 2-year-old Waterloo girl said in an interview less than an hour before his arrest that he had often, in jest, told her father "She's so cute, I'd like to kidnap her." The murder .suspect, 27- year-old Russell Fitz, sal on the front porch steps of his apartment building at 925 Commercial St. and related, between sips from a can of beer, how he had come to love the victim, "like a father." "She was real cute," Fitz. said, drawing on a cigarette. "I loved her probably as much as her parents did. "I really feel bad about this, that she's still missing and all." Shortly after 10:30 p.m., about 45 minutes later, Fitz was chased down and ar- rested in the 600 block of Jefferson Street. THE FRIZZY-HAIRED, mustachioed . suspect was charged. Friday with first degree murder in connection with the death of little Shelly Day, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Day, 211 Courtland St. He was held in city jail without bond. Police said they found the girl's lifeless body in the attic of Fitz's second floor apart- ment about 10:30 p.m., nearly five hours after she had been reported missing. County Medical Examiner Dr. Paul O'Keefe, called to the scene, said the girl had been strangled with an elec- trical cord. 0"-Keefe said there were signs the girl had been sexual- ly molested. In an interview with Filz, who authorities during the search had believed to be the last person to have seen her before she disappeared, he candidly told of his love for the girl and unraveled a bizarre tale of how' he be- lieved someone had tried to kill him while he slept the night before. "I loved her and she seemed attracted to me," Fitz said. "1 told her father, kid- dingly several limes, that she's so cute I'd like to kidnap her." Fitz, a former Wcstgate resident, said he often played with the girl and claimed she liked to sit on his knee while he joked and told her stories. . FITZ SAID he played with her again Thursday after her mother, Aileen, brought the girl and her 4-year-old brother, Roger, to slay with their babysitter, Mrs. Georgia Hilmer, who occupies an apartment in the 12-unit build- ing. "I last saw her," Fitz said, "when I went upstairs to my apartment to take a nap. That was about 4: 15 p.m." About 20 minutes later, Filz Suspended sentence to MR. AND MRS. William Day, 211 Courtland St., comfort each other mo- ments after they were told that their daughter, missing for more than five hours Thursday, had been found dead in the apartment of murder suspect Russell Fitz. About two hours earlier, Fitz sat in the same place on the front steps of'the apartment building at 925 Commercial St. and toM of his rela- tionship with the victim. (Courier photo by Rick Chase). Neighbor: Young victim liked suspect WASHINGTON (AP) Former Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst Friday received a suspended one-month jail sen- tence and a ?IOO fine for refusing to answer "fully and accurately" questions about the ITT antitrust case before a Senat committee. U.S. District Judge George L. Hart Jr. said Kleindienst was entitled to the light sen- tence as a man of highest integrity. HART SAID that when Kleindienst testified before the Senate Judiciary Commit- tee in 1972, he ".was not bent on deception." Rather, Hart said, Klein- dienst was attempt to protect someone else, an apparent reference to President Nixon's order that Kleindienst drop a big antitrust suit then pending against the International Tele- phone & Telegraph Corp. The sentence imposed on .the former attorney general was the minimum possible. Kleindienst'broke into tears as he left the courtroom. Composed later, he told re- porters he was "very humbled and very flattered." He said, "We all have duties to perform, judgments to make. I did mine and here lam today." KLEINDIENST continued to defend the propriety'of his testimony in the ITT case and his failure to "tell the Senate committee of Nixon's instruc- tion to drop the suit. "The direct question was never put to me," he said. "I have never felt in my heart that I perjured myself." He "said Nixon's call oc- curred before the beginning of negotiations which led ul- timately to a settlement drop- ping the government antitrust suit but allowing ITT to keep the big Hartford Fire Insur- ance. ' After the sentencing, Klein- dienst declined to respond to .repeated questions from re- porters about Nixon, and whether the President was involved in wrongdoing. But Kleindienst said, "I had no evidence when I was at- torney general that indicated to me the President knew anything" about the Water- gate affair. HE STOOD outside the courthouse answering re- porters' questions for about a. half hour, then said, "it's Richard KJciBdienst been a'tryyig day : for : me and . I think I want to go hprhe:" . . He ieft.with his lawyers and son, -Wally, who had waited in the car while his-father was sentenced.; : ..--- .. . " Kleindienst, the second U.S. Cabinet officer ever to be convicted, of a crime, was accused under ;ah obscure statute making : it illegal, to withhold information or .docu- ments from a congressional committee.. : The charge was brought after lengthy negotiations be- tween Kleindienst and Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski. Kleindienst pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor charge on May 16. . SEVERAL members of the special prosecutor's staff in- volved in the .ITT investiga- tion have since resigned, re- portedly because they felt Kleindienst should have been charged with perjury, which is a felony.. Terming Kleindienst's con- viction a technical violation of the law. Hart said his motives were loyalty and an attempt to preserve the reputation of another. See CHILD Continued on page Z, col. 3 By GEORGE SAUCER Courier City Editor "Shelly liked Russ," de- clared a neighbor of the man accused of murder in the strangulation slaying of two- year-old Shelly Day late Thursday afternoon. The neighbor, Mrs. Sheila Neuenkirk, 927 Commercial St., told of the outgoing per- sonality of the child whose body allegedly was found in the attic of the apartment occupied by Russell Fitz, 27, 925'A Commercial St., after a five-hour search. Mrs. Neuenkirk, whose own daughter, Erica, played with the murder victim when she stayed at the apartment build- ing with a babysitter, said: "SHELLY just loved any man. She liked to gel up into their laps...She liked Russ or any man." Shelly, found strangled with an electric cord when police . searched the 12-unit apart- ment following her disap- pearance from her babysit- ter's apartment at 925 Com- mercial St., was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Day, 211 Courtland St. Mrs. Neuenkirk, along with other neighbors and volun- teers, joined police in searching for the young child after she turned up missing about 5 p.m., -with.the under- riding fear she had fallen into the Cedar River a block away. SHE LATER related, as police scoured the Fitz apart- ment after finding the body, that Fitz had several times remarked of the dead child, "'1 wish I could keep her. I want a dozen like her.'" Mrs. Neuenkirk added that Fitz, "Who I figured adored Shelly," sat on the front steps of the apartment building dur- ing much of the search lime drinking beer. She said Fitz, booked later Thursday on an open charge of murder, at one point com- mented, "'I wonder where ahe could be?'" as the search went on. SHELLY was. familiar to residents of the apartment building. She and her four- year-old brother frequently stayed , with their babysitter there, Mrs. Georgia Hilmer. Richard Neuenkirk, Mrs. Neuenkirk's husband, said the suspect had been drinking heavily Thursday. Neuenkirk reported he be- lieved Filz was home all day A friend, Mrs. Beverly Murphy of 101 Roseland Dr., who heard of the missing child on a news broadcast, said she came to aid in the search. She said Fitz was drinking beer and tossing empty beer cans on the ground, saying, '"The cops won't mind a few beer cans around.'" SHE REPORTED Fitz asked her at one point to drive him to a tavern, but she declined. Mrs. Neuenkirk said her family formerly lived in the apartment unit occupied by Fitz, and that the entrance to the attic was through a trap door in the ceiling of the bathroom. She described Shelly as "the cutest little button you ever saw." The .child's body was re- moved from the building she visited so often by firemen about 1:30 a.m. Friday after police completed their in- vestigation at the scene. Jobless rate climbs WASHINGTON (AP) Higher unemploy- ment among teenagers boosted the nation's jobless rate to 5.2 per cent in May, the first increase in" four months, the government reported Friday. The turnaround is expected to continue in the coming months, rising to between 5.5 and 6 per cent by the end of the year, according to administration forecasts. THE LABOR Department said 4.7 million Americans were unable to find jobs last month, an increase of about 170,000 from the previous month. Unemployment has hovered in the 5 - 5.2 per cent range since January, after rising from a 3'A-year low of 4.6 per cent in October. It was 5.2 per cent in January and February, 5.1 per cent in March and 5 per cent in April. Total employment in May, at an adjusted 86 million, rose slightly after showing little growth during the winter and spring months. Over the past year employment has expanded by two million. Average hourly earnings of production workers rose 1.5 per cent in May while the •work week increased by 1.2 minutes, the government reported. Weekly earnings averaged |151.52 last month, an increase of $3.78 from April and |9.07 from a year ago. The Labor Department called the jump unusually large and said it reflected cost of living increases in a number of major industries and the May 1 increase in the federal minimum wage. THE SEASONAL rush of teenagers into the labor market increased the size of the civilian labor force by 370,000 in May to 90.7 million, the first increase since January. But as more youths entered the labor market they found it difficult to obtain jobs and the teen-age unemployment rate rose from 13.8 per cent to 15.8 per cent in May. Jobless rales for most adult workers either remained unchanged or declined slightly last month. The rate for married men declined from 2.5 to 2.2 per cent over the month while the rate for adult women rose from 4.9 to 5.1 per cent. At 33.5 per cent, the jobless rate for black teen-agers continued to be more than twice the white teen-age rate. ; FOR VIETNAM era veterans age K to 34 years old their unemployment rale o( 4.8'per cent showed little change from earlier this year. However, for veterans aged 20 to 24 the rale climbed from 9.2 per cent in April to 10.3 per cent in May. - . Among the major industries, the govern- ment said the jobless rale for durable gbodi workers declined to 4.5 per cent in May from the 5 per cent level of the ; preview four months.

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Page 1: Jest a minute - TownNews · Jest a minute Two streakers decided to stop dating—they thought they were seeing too much of each other. Established ia 1&58 Waterloo, Iowa, Friday,

Jest a minuteTwo streakers decided to stop

dating—they thought they wereseeing too much of each other.

Established ia 1&58 Waterloo, Iowa, Friday, June 7,1974—30 Pages— 3 Sections

Saturday's weatherChance of rain '

• Complete weather forecast—Page 2

15 Cents

Bill Severin's Column

Boating confusionLack of uniformity between United States

Coast Guard regulations and Iowa law isresulting in the arrest of some Iowa boatersplying the boundary waters of the state.

While the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers aregenerally regarded as federal waters, an Act ofCongress passed 128 years ago gives adjoiningstates concurrent jurisdiction over any river orlake that forms a common boundary betweenstates. :

THIS SIMPLY means that when you arecruising the Mississippi or Missouri Rivers youmay be subject to three sets of laws—thefederal law and the laws of the states on eithershore.

Unfortunately, these laws are not alwaysuniform.

Northeastern Iowa boaters, who are incompliance with Coast Guard regulationsregarding fire extinguishers, are being ar-rested on the Mississippi River because theyare not in \compliance with Iowa's morerestrictive law.

The\ Coast Guard* does not require fireextinguishers on outboard motorboats less than26 feet in length and not carrying passengersfor hire if the construction of the boat will notpermit the entrapment of flammable gases.

Iowa law requires a fire extinguisher onevery outboard motorboat powered by morethan 10 horsepower.

Roy Downing, head of the water section ofthe Iowa Conservation Commission, concedesthat the lack of uniformity between the CoastGuard and the various states having theMississippi as a common boundary is un-fortunate.

But he says the District Coast Guard office inSt. Louis has indicated to Iowa, officials thatthey prefer the more restrictive Iowa regu-]ations"to their own.

HE CONCEDES that the federal authoritiesand those representing the various statesshould get together o uniform regulations sothat if a boater is legal in one jurisdiction hewill be legal in all of them. He says a meetingbetween the various agencies in August willattempt to attain this goal.

In the meantime, boaters operating out of. Northeastern Iowa ports would do well to 'familiarize themselves with the boating laws ofali the states whose'boundary waters they mayenter, as well as Coast Guard regulations.

Some Northeast Iowa boaters, in the courseof a summer, may well come under thejurisdiction of four states—Iowa, Illinois, Wis-consin and Minnesota.

This sort of confusion does nothing toimprove a citizen's respect for the law. TheCoast Guard and the various states should gettogether promptly and agree on uniformregulations to be enforced by ail agenciesinvolved.

THE WATERLOO Commission on Human RightsThursday upheld Mayor Leo Rooff s suspension ofcommission director Willie Mosley pending aninvestigation into charges against him. Story onPage3.

IOWA CITY home economist suggests methods fordecreasing Ihe amount of salt in daily menu plans.

SCHOLASTIC WRESTLING News has named WestWaterloo High wrestling coach Bob Siddens itsCoach of the Year. See Courier Sports Editor RussL. Smith's column on Page 13.

Cedar Falls News .....6Church News 10Classified Advertising

18-22Comics 11Editorial 4Jeane Dixon

Horoscope 11Markets 23

Metropolitan and stateDeaths 5

Northeast Iowa 12Sports ...13-15Television 11Theater 16,17Waterloo News 3,5You and Your

Interests 7-9

[ On theDeny assistance

WASHINGTON (AP) — A White House spokesmanFriday said President Nixon a year ago "expresseda willingness to assist" two former aides in meetingtheir Watergate legal expenses but denied that thePresident ever arranged any financial assistance forthem.

Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren'scomments came in response to a report that theSenate Watergate Committee had been told thai aclose friend of Nixon's controlled a $400,000 fund forthe legal defense of presidential assistants.

Highway deaths dropCHICAGO (AP) — Lower fuel supplies and driving

speeds have slowed the death toll on the nation'shighways to its lowest pace in years, according tothe president of the National Safety Council.

"The live-saving trend in traffic accidents thatappeared last winter at the onset of the energy crisisstill seems to be with us," Council President VincentTofany said Thursday.

Angry judgeblasts Nixon

LESS THAN two hours before Russell Fitz wasarrested in connection with the murder of two-year-oldShelly Day, Fitz was questioned on the front porch ofhis apartment building at 925 Commercial St. by Police

Waterloo girl found slain

Sgt. William Derr. Shortly after the officers left toresume their search for the still missing girl, Fitz told aCourier reporter of his love for her. The arm tattooreads "'Born to Lose." (Courier photo by Jim Wigdahl)

Suspect tells of fondnessfor strangled youngster, 2

WASHINGTON (AP) — A visibly angryfederal judge said Friday President Nixon'srefusal to live up to an agreement over accessby John D. Ehrlichman to files he left behindin the White House "borders on obstruction."

The comment from U.S. District JudgeGerhard Gesell came at the end of a 2Vz-hourhearing, ordered by Gesell, that could lead toa contempt citation against the President.

Gesell adjourned the session saying that heintends to write an order and opinion bearingqn Nixon's refusal to yield documents sub-poenaed by Ehrlichman.

R E F E R R I N G to the exc lus ion ofEhrlichman's lawyer from the room whereEhrlichman's files were kept, Gesell said hecould not agree to a procedure where thelawyer waits outside with Ehrlichman comingout periodically to confer. • • •. •

"1 don't see how I can agree to a procedurethat is so totally offensive," Gesell said.

"It is offensive, sir. It borders on obstruc-tion," the judge added.

Earlier, Gesell told St. Clair "When youmake a commitment in open court, you makeit to me. You broke it."

St. Clair said he acted on President Nixon'sorders. ' "

Ehrlichman .said he was informed by.St.Clair on Wednesday when he went'to theWhite House to look at the files that hisattorneys would not be allowed access to thedocuments as set out in an agreementbetween Gesell and St. Clair in open court lastFriday. Ehrlichman has subpoenaed the files.

The agreement was based on a letter fromPresident Nixon in which Nixon :saidEhrlichman and his attorneys would beallowed to go through Ehrlichman's WhiteHouse files to select documents they felt wereneeded for Ehrlichman's defense in an

upcoming trial in connection with a burglaryat the office of the psychiatrist of PentagonPapers figure Daniel Ellsberg.

IN HIS letter, Nixon said he would make thefinal decision on what material would actuallybe made available as evidence.

GeseU accepted the agreement to allowEhrlichman and his lawyer to review the.material but said he (Gesell), 'not thePresident, would make the final decision onwhat material would be used as evidence.

Gesell reiterated that stand Friday.

"I will determine what will be put to the0

jury, not you, not the President, not Mr.Ehrlichman," Gesell told St. Clair.

Gsell then began a hearing on who has legalcustody of the material and to determinewhether sufficient cause "exists to 'hold, acontempt of court hearing.

GESELL ordered the hearing after askingSt. Clai: "You are saying he (the President)will not comply with the court's order."

U.S. District Judge Gerhart A. Gesell askedNixon's lawyer, James D. St. Clair: "You are '.saying he (the President) will not comply,with the court's order." • - • '•'•'.' •'"•

"I think that's a fair reading," St; Clairresponded.- r " ' - . . . • ' • _ " ,

Gesell, who had said earlier 'that, unlessEhrlichman geis^ all the material from his •

.own White House files that he deems neces-sary for his defense, he might have to dismissthe conspiracy case against Ehrlichman, thensaid: '

"I PROPOSE to have a hearing into whohas custody and control ...' so I can takeappropriate action under the contempt stat-ute. - ' • • • • •

By JIM WIGDAHLCourier Staff Writer

The man charged in thestrangulation death Thursdayof a 2-year-old Waterloo girlsaid in an interview less thanan hour before his arrest thathe had often, in jest, told herfather "She's so cute, I'd liketo kidnap her."

The murder .suspect, 27-year-old Russell Fitz, sal onthe front porch steps of hisapartment bui lding at 925Commercial St. and related,between sips from a can ofbeer, how he had come to lovethe victim, "like a father."

"She was real cute," Fitz.said, drawing on a cigarette."I loved her probably asmuch as her parents did.

"I really feel bad aboutthis, that she's still missingand all."

Shortly after 10:30 p.m.,about 45 minutes later, Fitzwas chased down and ar-rested in the 600 block ofJefferson Street.

THE F R I Z Z Y - H A I R E D ,mustachioed . suspect wascharged. Friday with firstdegree murder in connectionwith the death of little ShellyDay, daughter of Mr. andMrs. W i l l i a m Day , 211Courtland St. He was held incity jail without bond.

Police said they found thegirl's lifeless body in the atticof Fitz's second floor apart-ment about 10:30 p.m., nearly

• five hours after she had beenreported missing.

County Medical ExaminerDr. Paul O'Keefe, called tothe scene, said the girl hadbeen strangled with an elec-trical cord.

0"-Keefe said there weresigns the girl had been sexual-ly molested.

In an interview with Filz,who authorities during thesearch had believed to be thelast person to have seen herbefore she disappeared, hecandidly told of his love forthe girl and unraveled abizarre tale of how' he be-lieved someone had tried tokill him while he slept thenight before.

"I loved her and sheseemed attracted to me," Fitzsaid. "1 told her father, kid-dingly several limes, thatshe's so cute I'd like to kidnapher."

Fitz, a former Wcstgateresident, said he often playedwith the girl and claimed sheliked to sit on his knee whilehe joked and told her stories. .

FITZ SAID he played withher again Thursday after hermother, Aileen, brought the

• gir l and her 4 - y e a r - o l dbrother, Roger, to slay withtheir babysitter, Mrs. GeorgiaHilmer, who occupies anapartment in the 12-unit build-ing.

"I last saw her," Fitz said,"when I went upstairs to myapartment to take a nap. Thatwas about 4: 15 p.m."

About 20 minutes later, Filz

Suspendedsentence to

MR. AND MRS. William Day, 211Courtland St., comfort each other mo-ments after they were told that theirdaughter, missing for more than fivehours Thursday, had been found dead inthe apartment of murder suspect

Russell Fitz. About two hours earlier,Fitz sat in the same place on the frontsteps of'the apartment building at 925Commercial St. and toM of his rela-tionship with the victim. (Courier photoby Rick Chase).

Neighbor: Youngvictim liked suspect

WASHINGTON (AP) —Former Atty. Gen. Richard G.Kleindienst Friday received asuspended one-month jail sen-tence and a ?IOO fine forrefusing to answer "fully andaccurately" questions aboutthe ITT antitrust case beforea Senat committee.

U.S. District Judge GeorgeL. Hart Jr. said Kleindienstwas entitled to the light sen-tence as a man of highestintegrity.

HART SAID that whenKleindienst testified beforethe Senate Judiciary Commit-tee in 1972, he ".was not benton deception."

Rather, Hart said, Klein-dienst was attempt to protectsomeone else, an apparentreference to President Nixon'sorder that Kleindienst drop abig antitrust suit then pendingagainst the International Tele-phone & Telegraph Corp.

The sentence imposed on.the former attorney generalwas the minimum possible.

Kleindienst'broke into tearsas he left the courtroom.Composed later, he told re-porters he was "very humbledand very flattered."

He said, "We all haveduties to perform, judgments

to make. I did mine and herelam today."

KLEINDIENST continuedto defend the propriety'of histestimony in the ITT case andhis failure to "tell the Senatecommittee of Nixon's instruc-tion to drop the suit.

"The direct question wasnever put to me," he said. "Ihave never felt in my heartthat I perjured myself."

He "said Nixon's call oc-curred before the beginning ofnegotiations which led ul-timately to a settlement drop-ping the government antitrustsuit but allowing ITT to keepthe big Hartford Fire Insur-ance. '

After the sentencing, Klein-dienst declined to respond to

.repeated questions from re-porters about Nixon , andwhether the President wasinvolved in wrongdoing.

But Kleindienst said, "I hadno evidence when I was at-torney general that indicatedto me the President knewanything" about the Water-gate affair.

HE STOOD outside thecourthouse answering re-porters' questions for about a.half hour, then said, "it's

Richard KJciBdienst

been a'tryyig day:for:me and .I think I want to go hprhe:"

. . He ieft.with his lawyers andson, -Wally, who had waited inthe car while his-father wassentenced.; : ..--- .. .

" Kleindienst, the second U.S.Cabinet officer ever to beconvicted, of a crime, wasaccused under ;ah obscurestatute making :it illegal, towithhold information or .docu-ments from a congressionalcommittee.. :

The charge was broughtafter lengthy negotiations be-tween Kleindienst and SpecialProsecutor Leon Jaworski.

Kleindienst pleaded guiltyto the misdemeanor charge onMay 16. • .

SEVERAL members of thespecial prosecutor's staff in-volved in the .ITT investiga-tion have since resigned, re-portedly because they feltKleindienst should have beencharged with perjury, whichis a felony..

Terming Kleindienst's con-viction a technical violation ofthe law. Hart said his motiveswere loyalty and an attemptto preserve the reputation ofanother.

See CHILDContinued on page Z, col. 3

By GEORGE SAUCERCourier City Editor

"Shelly liked Russ," de-clared a neighbor of the manaccused of murder in thestrangulation slaying of two-year-old Shelly Day lateThursday afternoon.

The neighbor, Mrs. SheilaNeuenkirk, 927 CommercialSt., told of the outgoing per-sonality of the child whosebody allegedly was found inthe attic of the apartmentoccupied by Russell Fitz, 27,925'A Commercial St., after afive-hour search.

Mrs. Neuenkirk, whose owndaughter, Erica, played withthe murder victim when shestayed at the apartment build-ing with a babysitter, said:

"SHELLY just loved anyman. She liked to gel up intotheir laps...She liked Russ orany man."

Shelly, found strangled withan electric cord when police

. searched the 12-unit apart-ment following her disap-pearance from her babysit-ter's apartment at 925 Com-mercial St., was the daughterof Mr. and Mrs. William Day,211 Courtland St.

Mrs. Neuenkirk, along with

other neighbors and volun-teers, j o i n e d p o l i c e insearching for the young childafter she turned up missingabout 5 p.m., -with.the under-riding fear she had fallen intothe Cedar River a blockaway.

SHE LATER related, aspolice scoured the Fitz apart-ment after finding the body,that Fitz had several timesremarked of the dead child,"'1 wish I could keep her. Iwant a dozen like her.'"

Mrs. Neuenkirk added thatFitz, "Who I figured adoredShelly," sat on the front stepsof the apartment building dur-ing much of the search limedrinking beer.

She said Fitz, booked laterThursday on an open chargeof murder, at one point com-mented, "'I wonder where ahecould be?'" as the searchwent on.

SHELLY was. familiar toresidents of the apartmentbuilding. She and her four-year-old brother frequentlystayed , with their babysitterthere, Mrs. Georgia Hilmer.

Richard Neuenkirk, Mrs.Neuenkirk's husband, said the

suspect had been drinkingheavily Thursday.

Neuenkirk reported he be-lieved Filz was home all day

A f r iend , Mrs. BeverlyMurphy of 101 Roseland Dr.,who heard of the missingchild on a news broadcast,said she came to aid in thesearch.

She said Fitz was drinkingbeer and tossing empty beercans on the ground, saying,'"The cops won't mind a fewbeer cans around.'"

SHE REPORTED Fitzasked her at one point to drivehim to a tavern, but shedeclined.

Mrs. Neuenkirk said herfamily formerly lived in theapartment unit occupied byFitz, and that the entrance tothe attic was through a trapdoor in the ceiling of thebathroom.

She described Shelly as"the cutest little button youever saw."

The .child's body was re-moved from the building shevisited so often by firemenabout 1:30 a.m. Friday afterpolice completed their in-vestigation at the scene.

Jobless rate climbsWASHINGTON (AP) — Higher unemploy-ment among teenagers boosted the nation'sjobless rate to 5.2 per cent in May, the firstincrease in" four months, the governmentreported Friday.

The turnaround is expected to continue inthe coming months, rising to between 5.5 and6 per cent by the end of the year, according toadministration forecasts.

THE LABOR Department said 4.7 millionAmericans were unable to find jobs lastmonth, an increase of about 170,000 from theprevious month.

Unemployment has hovered in the 5 - 5.2per cent range since January, after risingfrom a 3'A-year low of 4.6 per cent in October.It was 5.2 per cent in January and February,5.1 per cent in March and 5 per cent in April.

Total employment in May, at an adjusted 86million, rose slightly after showing littlegrowth during the winter and spring months.Over the past year employment has expandedby two million.

Average hourly earnings of productionworkers rose 1.5 per cent in May while the•work week increased by 1.2 minutes, thegovernment reported.

Weekly earnings averaged |151.52 lastmonth, an increase of $3.78 from April and|9.07 from a year ago. The Labor Departmentcalled the jump unusually large and said it

reflected cost of living increases in a numberof major industries and the May 1 increase inthe federal minimum wage.

THE SEASONAL rush of teenagers into thelabor market increased the size of the civilianlabor force by 370,000 in May to 90.7 million,the first increase since January.

But as more youths entered the labormarket they found it difficult to obtain jobsand the teen-age unemployment rate rosefrom 13.8 per cent to 15.8 per cent in May.

Jobless rales for most adult workers eitherremained unchanged or declined slightly lastmonth. The rate for married men declinedfrom 2.5 to 2.2 per cent over the month whilethe rate for adult women rose from 4.9 to 5.1per cent.

At 33.5 per cent, the jobless rate for blackteen-agers continued to be more than twicethe white teen-age rate. ;

FOR VIETNAM era veterans age K to 34years old their unemployment rale o( 4.8'percent showed little change from earlier thisyear. However, for veterans aged 20 to 24 therale climbed from 9.2 per cent in April to 10.3per cent in May. - .

Among the major industries, the govern-ment said the jobless rale for durable gbodiworkers declined to 4.5 per cent in May fromthe 5 per cent level of the; preview fourmonths.

Page 2: Jest a minute - TownNews · Jest a minute Two streakers decided to stop dating—they thought they were seeing too much of each other. Established ia 1&58 Waterloo, Iowa, Friday,

Frl., June 7, 1974 Waterloo Courier

Sown hitby tornado

„• FORREST CITY, Ark. (AP)-A tornado ripped through this.• east Arkansas town of 12,500, killing at least four persons,~ injuring more than 100 and leaving hundreds homeless.

- "We are still going through the debris, but we do feel like we* have all the victims out." Police Chief David Parkman said

Friday.Parkman said damages were estimated at $5 million.

THE BODIES of two young women were found in the'shoulder-high rubble that once was a 45,000-square foot"Gibson's discount store. A 25,000-square foot supermarket was. also destroyed, and both stores were crowded with shoppers•' when the tornado struck Thursday evening.I Fire Chief Jack Rice, who stayed on the scene most of the

night with members of his rescue unit, said rescue operationswere hampered by a hard rain that began about 4 a.m.

The dead were identified as Inez Spears. 19, Lois JeanSmith, 17, and Harvey Hampton Sr. and Johnny Davis, both intheir 70s. Hampton" was the father of University of Arkansasfootball player Harvey Hampton Jr.

; CITY Patrolman C. E. Kennedy said he followed theprogress of the twister and that it stayed on the ground for 2Vimiles. He said he saw two distinct funnel clouds and that they

_ seemed to converge near the stores. He estimated that thestorm was traveling about 30 miles an hour.

"It was yellowish-brown," Kennedy said. "Stuff would go upin the middle, then fall out the side.-"You could see halves of homes. TVs, beds, couches ... just

going straight up. Every time it hit a power line sparks wouldfly and the line would blow. Natural gas lines also burst andsome caught fire." .

At one point, a live electtric wire dropped on Kennedy'spatrol car. He was not injured, but said the incident "joltedme."

State police said they had confirmed four deaths. ForrestCity police and the St. Francis County sheriffs office said atleast six persons were killed.

State police also said they confirmed that 48 persons had:;been admitted to Memorial Hospital at Forrest City and thatt'. 17;6ther. persons were admitted to hospitals in Memphis,'Tenn.-< In addition, more than 50 persons were treated at the Forrestij City hospital and released. ..v A •spokesman said most of those hospitalized at Memphis», were in critical to severe condition.r » . . ; ' .-: .;=••. • . - • • • • " . . . • ' .v;; SfATE police also said 150 to 250 homes had been destroyed/by the storm. Earlier reports said 350. homes had been•' destroyed and as many as 2,000 suffered at least minor

damage. • • .• . • •About 150 of the city's .homeless were being housed at the

Washington Street Community Center.Lt. Bill Lawson of the state Military Department said Gov.

Dale Bumpers had ordered 50 National Guard members fromthe Forrest City area to go on duty to prevent looting.

The tornado, which a spokesman for the sheriffs office said"stayed'mi'the ground all the way," missed the downtown,business district by about two blocks. .

Nixon asksi

jury reportdisclosure

WASHINGTON (AP) — Now that the secret is out. PresidentNixon wants formal court disclosure that a federal grand jurylinked him with the Watergate.cover-up.

The matter was to be argued Friday before U.S. DistrictJudge John J. Sirica, who barred such disclosure in the firstplace.

AFTER IT was reported Thursday that the Watergate grandjury voted 19 to 0 to include the President among unindictedcoconspirators, Nixon asked Sirica to lift the protective order.

There was no indication whether special prosecutor LeonJaworski would agree or contest the matter. The motion wasfiled by White House lawyer James D. St. Clair minutes beforethe court closed Thursday.

"The reasons for the continuance of the protective order areno longer compelling," St..Clair said.

He referred to "the grand jury's naming of certainindividuals as coconspirators," indicating that Nixon was notthe only person on the list.

THE NAMES were expected to be made public eventuallywhen prosecutors file a "bill of particulars"- for the formerNixon aides and campaign workers scheduled to go on trial -Sept. 9.

Such a bill insures that defendants are aware of allegationsagainst them and is almost routinely requested before trial.

Legal experts said the grand jury's inclusion of thePresident weakens his legal argument for continuing towithhold subpoenaed tapes and documents.

Jaworski's attempt to pry 64 tape recordings from the WhiteHouse is scheduled to be heard by the Supreme Court next

1 month, focusing on whether executive privilege entitles thePresident not to release evidence requested for the coveruptrial.

Senate refusestroop reduction

Extended outlookIOWA: Sunday through Tues-

day:Chance of showers or thunder-

showers through the period. Highsmostly from mid-70s to low 80s.Lows from mid-50s northwest tomid-60s southeast.

FORECASTIOWA: Showers ending east

Friday night. Partly cloudy westand central. Cooler. Low upper40s northwest, upper 50s .south-east. Partly cloudy Saturday.High in the 70s.

WATERLOO TEMPERATURESFriday 7 a.m.(official) 56Friday 9 a.m.(official) 60Friday 11 a.m.(official) 60

Sunset Friday 8:44 p.m., sun-rise Saturday 5:32 a.m.. sunsetSaturday 8:45 p.m., sunrise Sun-day 5:31 a.m.

CEDAR RIVER STAGENormal River Stage 38.96Fridays River Stage 40.40(Courtesy Iowa Public ServiceCo.)

MississippiRiver stages

(flood stages in brackets)LaCrosse (12) 7.3 rise .6Lansing (!8) 8.7 no changeDam 9 (18) 16.7 no changeMcGregor (18) 9.1 fall .1Guttenbrg (15) 7.9 rise .1Dubuque(17) 10.5 rise .1Davenport (15) 9.0 rise .3Keokuk(16) 11.1 fall .1

ABOUT 1:30 \M. Friday, WaterlooBremen carry the small, lifeless body of

' two-year-old Shelly Day down a woodenstairway behind an apartment buildingat 925 Commercial St. Police found her

body about three hours earlier whilesearching the apartment of murdersuspect Russell Fitz. (Courier photo byRick Chase)

'Checked neighborhood

Moscow stopfor Mona Lisa

PARISj (AP) rr-- The:MonaLisa ,wll make a stopover inMoscow, nexjt, week 6n its wayhome from a seven-weekshowing in Tokyo, the Frenchmuseum administration an-nounced today. -

Leonardo da Vinci's lady• with the enigmatic smile endsher Tokyo run June 10 andwill go on view June 14 at thePushkin Museum "at the re-quest of the Soviet govern-ment," the announcement

.said.The duration of the. paint-

ing's Moscow stay was notannounced. There had been noprevious hint of the Sovietrequest.

The Mona Lisa was flown toJapan in April. The painting,which normally hangs in theLouvre in Paris, has had onlyone other previous showingabroad— in the United Statesin 1962.

Good idea

Hospital said they would am-putate the leg of Jeff Craig,H, this afternoon.

and

FULTON, Mo. (AP) — TheFulton Area Chamber of Com-merce thought it was a prettygood idea.

The chamber offered freecow manure so that peoplecould spruce up their flowerbeds and help beautify thetown.

What was described as a"goodly amount" of manurewas piled up at a convenientlocation, and the townspeoplewere all poised to pick up agood amount and start spruc-ing.

There was just one difficul-ty. Somebody came along andswiped all of the manure.

City Attorney Granville Col-lins said with tongue in.cheek: "I'll ask a grand juryto investigate."

To lose legCORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) —

A teen-ager who crashedthrough a window during astreaking attempt last week,•at Western View Junior HighSchool will lose a leg.

Doctors at Good Samaritan

another studentschool roof on a

rope in an effort to gainaccess to a gymnasium wherea dance was being held.

Craig lost" his grip and oneleg crashed through the win-dow. A ' dance chaperpne iscredited with saving his lifewith first aid techniques whilean ambulance was en route.The other streaker, unawareof the mishap, ran through thegym.

Hospital spokesman saymajor damage to arteries,veins and nerves is creatingcirculation problems in theyouth's leg.

Pizza suitCEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa

(AP)—The owners of Tony'sPizza in Linn County areseeking a court order barringTony's Pizza Co. Inc. of Kan-sas from advertising and dis-tributing pizza products in thecounty under the name Tony'sPizza.

ChildContinued from page 1

said, he was awakened by thegirl's brother, who was stand-ing outside the door yelling,"Hey, is my sister in there?Have you seen Shelly?".Fitz said he then wentoutside and checked aroundthe neighborhood but couldn'tfind her. . f ;.. ,. Shortly after 5 p.m., -thebabysitter,; Mrs. Hiimer,called Waterloo police to re-port that the girl had disap-peared.

Mrs. Hiimer and the girl'smother had already begun asearch for the girl, Mrs. Daysaid in an interview about 45minutes before' police .dis-covered her daughter's body.

Mrs. Day said she hadcoffee with Mrs. Hiimer afterdropping the girl off, anddiscovered the girl was miss-ing when she tried to find herto kiss her goodby beforeleaving for work.

"The first place we went,"the distraught Mrs. Day said,"was to the river."

The Cedar River flowsabout two blocks north of thealleged murder scene.

"Then when we didn't findher there, we looked aroundthe neighborhood and after westill couldn't find her wecalled police," she said.

Within minutes police began

a massive search, but afterfailing to find.her, called involunteer auxiliary police andmembers of the NortheastIowa Citizens Band RadioClub for assistance.

ONE MEMBER of the clubsaid every house and businessplace within a mile of theapartment building wassearched as well as" bushesand grass along'the. shores ofthe river. •"'

Meanwhile, several hundredpersons, some of whom as-sisted in searching the neigh-borhood, stood in clusters out-side the apartment awaitingword on the girl.

And sitting on the porch infront of his apartment wasFitz, chain smoking cigarettesand sipping beer.

After telling of his rela-tionship with the girl, Fitz,who-displays a tattoo on hisleft forearm proclaiming"Born to Lose," told of howhe believed someone had triedto kill him while he sleptWednesday night.

"I woke up-' and smelledgas," Fitz said. "I went to mykitchen and found someonehad turned the gas on mystove on and had left the ovendoor open.... . .

"I got sick," he claimed,adding that he felt so ill thathe didn't report to work.Thursday. Fitz said he

worked for a Waterloo con-struction company.

"I really think someone'strying to kill me," he added,flipping an empty can of beeronto the sidewalk.

ABOUT 40. minutes laterpolice, while searching Fitz'sapartment, found a trap doorin the bathroom, climbed intoan attic and discovered thebody of the girl. •

Fitz, who reportedly heardthat his apartment was beingsearched, allegedly ran fromthe scene and was ap-"prehended about 25 minuteslater in the 600 block ofJefferson Street after, officersclosed in to seal off the area.

The girl's parents brokeinto sobs when police toldthem that the girl had beenfound, and ironically sat downon the porch steps where Fitz,who only moments" before satwatching the activities outsidethe apartment.

Mrs. Day's mother, Mrs.Ailene Philp, 60, of 520 Ne-vada St.; collapsed after hear-

WASHINGTON ( A P ) —Heeding Nixon administrationadvice, the Senate has refusedto order U.S. troop reductionsoverseas.

Cuts of 125,000 and 76,000proposed by Sen. Mike Mans-field, D-Mont., were rejectedThursday on roll call votes.

The action duplicated Houserejection last month of anamendmen t to r equ i rewithdrawal of 100,000 of theapproximately 430,000 U.S.ground troops and airmenstationed on'foreign soil.

SECRETARY of State Hen-ry A. Kissinger had warnedthat, unilateral reduction ofU.S. forces in Europe wouldundermine negotiations withRussia for mutual cutbacks inopposing forces of NATO andthe Warsaw Pact alliances.

The Senate defeated, 54 to35, Mansfield's amendment tocut U.S. overseas forcesworldwide by 125,000.

A second amendment call-ing for a 76,000 reduction wasrejected 4644.

Mansfield said Americansare spending $19 billion this.year to support 313,000 troopsand 235,000 dependents in Eu- .rope alone. Sen. Walter F.Mondale, D-Minn., 'a sup-porter of overseas troop cutsin the pasi, said Watergatehad a bearing on his rateagainst the reductions. '

" MONDALE said President• Nixon "does not have suffi-cient .support to substitutepolitical commitments for a

ence in crucial overseasareas."

The Senate was to proceedFriday to other amendmentsto the $21.8billion annualweapons procurement billsupported by the SenateArmed Services Committee. ~

Adopted Thursday by voicevote was an amendment bySen. Edward M. Kennedy, D--Mass., to stop what he called"surreptitious stockpiling" ofweapons and ammunition forSouth Vietnam, South Koreaand Thailand.

Kennedy said the DefenseDepartment had received $525million in appropriations inthe past two years and budg-eted another $490 million nextyear under the heading "warreserve mater ials ' 1 forpurchase of munitions for thethree Asian countries.

THE amendment would re-designate the stockpiled mate-rials for'the sole use of-U.S.forces unless Congress specif-ically authorizes their de-livery within established for-eign aid ceilings to SouthVietnam, South Korea andThailand. '

An amendment by Sen.Vance Hartke, D-Ind., to re-

EMERGENCY CALLSTHURSDAY. 1:02 p.m., to cor-

ner of Ansborough and UniversityAvenues, car accident, TonyO'Malley, 12, son of JosephO'Malley, 1110 Randolph St., lac-eration of forehead and possiblebroken pelvis, taken to St. Fran-cis Hospital.

THURSDAY, 2:03 p.m.. to 1712W. Fourth St.. Edward Wireman.27. ot 835 E. Donald St.. sustainedundetermined injuries in car"acci-dent.

THURSDAY, 3:30 p.m.. toRidgeway and Ansborough ave-nues, motorcycle accident, EdwarAllen. 26, of~211 Gilbertyille Rd..Elk Run Heights, sustained pos-sible fracture of right arm andleg.

THURSDAY. 7:39 p.m.. to 27'A.E. Fifth St., Florey Burman. 74,chest pains, administered oxygenfive minutes, taken to Allen Me-morial Hospital.

THURSDAY. 8:10 p.m., to 1313Columbia St.. Logandale Apart-ments. Sal Bass, 13. of 408 LoganAve.. hurt when hit by car, nottransported.

THURSDAY. 8:41 p.m., to JoeStaub field. Fairview and ParkRoad, William Nieth, 34. of 739Kern St., fractured right ankle,taken to Schoitz Memoiral Hospi-tal.

THURSDAY. 10:48 p.m.. to 925Commercial St.. Ailene Philp, 60.of 520 Nevada St.. collapsed,taken to Allen Memorial Hospital.

THURSDAY, 11:14 p.m., to 1501Grandview Ave., Ruth Algyrc, 65,of 520 Center St., ill, reaction tomedication, taken to Schoitz Me-morial Hospital.

FRIDAY. 12:19 a.m., to 92o'.iCommercial St. Shelly Day, 2.daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WilliamDay, 211 Courtland St.. dead onarrival, body taken to St. FrancisHospital.

FRIDAY. 3:09 a.m., to 723 W.Fifth St., Carmen Schumann. 30,put right hand and arm throughwindow, taken to Alien MemorialHospital.

Homemakerlooks for aid

BIRTHS REPORTEDSt. Francis Hospital

SMITH, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald,437 Woodbridge St. boy (correc-tion). . ,

SINK, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel,1208 Orchard Dr., CedarFalls, girl.

FIRE ALARMSTHURSDAY, 11:49 a.m.. to 5535Dysart Rd., Lot 125, mobile homeowned and occupied by Rod John-son, fire in kitchen well caused bybroken gas pipe, slight loss.

THURSDAY, 7:44 p.m.. to 2112Kimball Ave.. fire in car ownedby Donna Kerns. 1103 Bauch St..caused by defective carburetor,considerable loss to engine..

FRIDAY. 1:20 a.m.. to HannaBoulevard and Upton Avenue, carowned by Audrey Bowe. 120 Val-ley Rds., caused by .electricalshort, severe loss to cars.

LICENSED TO WEDEugene Edgar Averhoff. 19,

5231 Mt. Vemon Rd., and SherryLouise Mills. 21. Rt. 3.

Bruce Alan Nalvig, 21. 5535Dysart Rd.. and Donna Mae Rice,21. Decorah.

Matthew Lewis Hoffman, 18.Hudson, and Jeanne FrancesWood. 18.3234 Randolph St.

Steven John Kirschbaum, 20,1823 Falls Ave.. and Theresa AnnSchuler. 17.1828 Cornwall Ave.

Joel Fletcher. 21. 303 Clay St..Cedar Falls, and CatherineFumiko Kudo. 21. Kaulapuu, Ha-waii.

Paul Carl Brandt, legal age. 107Independence Ave.. and LenoraAlvina Zwanziger, legal age, 2015Lincoln St.. Cedar Falls.

Andrew James Brustkem. 20,800 Wellington St.. and JeanMarie Lovell. 19. 1924 W. EighthSt.

Gaylord Lee Billerbeck, legalage. Reinbeck, and GladyceDarlene Roehr. legal age, 1115Meadow Lane, Apt. A-l.

Jon Ray Platz, 30, 920 RandolphSt., and Delores Loree Taylor. 26.1201 Saint Andrews.

Kenneth Gerard Snyder. 21. 216Western Ave.. and MichelleYvonne Day. 20,1150 Bertch Ave.

Joe Nathan Austin, 27, 317Sumner St., and Maren NielsenePlager, 29, Mason City.

NEW YORK (AP) — Ensur-ing variety and nutrition ineach meal is a difficult task,

, .. , ... according to an in-depth studycompute reUrement annu.ties . homemakers cond£cted fo*for rruhtary_ service veterans Hoffmann-La Roche Inc.returning since 1949 on the

In a petition filed in LinnDistrict-Court the local res-taurant company claimed ithas been operating under thename in Linn County since1965 and has registered thename with the county re-corder and secretary of stale.

It alleges that in about 1973'the Kansas company beganadvertising and distributingpizza products under the samename and that the productsare not of the same qualityand caliber as the plaintiffs.

.It's a recordGREATEST FALL BY A

CAT: "Fat Olive," a blackand white tomcat of Toronto,Canada, survived a fall on.grass from a 160-foot-highpenthouse on July 18, 1972. Heonly broke two legs. (From'the Guinness Book of WorldRecords)

Dime call on way outNEW YORK (AP) — Tourists in Louisiana may be

surprised to learn that the dime they deposited for apay phone call was a nickel too much. And phonebooths don't make change.

Travelers at the Dallas-Fort Worth regionalairport, meanwhile, have been known to respondangrily upon discovering it takes a quarter to makea pay phone call.

The two areas represent the apparent extremes ina nation full of phone companies beginning to raisethe prevailing 10-cent rate for local pay phone calls,a rate that has endured nearly everywhere for morethan 20 years.

The first statewide 20-cent pay phone rate wentinto effect May 15 in North Carolina. Washingtonalready has a I5-cent rate. Six other states in theAmerican Telephone & Telegraph Co.'s sprawlingBell system have requests pending for rate in-creases.

ing the news of :her grand- ^significant U.S. military pres-aughter and was taken toAllen Memorial Hospitalwhere she was reported .insatisfactory condition Friday.

Within minutes, word of thegirl's death passed among thecrowd outside, and severalwomen broke down and wept. •

About three hours later, aWaterloo fireman carried thegirl's rx<dy, wrapped in ablanke'., down a wooden stair-way at the rear of the apart-ment building and placed it ina waiting ambulance.

Some 25 persons, who hadremained at the scene, stoodsilently while the ambulancepulled away.

Defense helpBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) —

Kuwait has agreed to giveLebanon eight ground-to-airmissile batteries to strengthenLebanon's defenses againstIsraeli attack, Beirut news-papers reported Thursday.

DiversionEVERETT, Wash. (AP) —

A teen-age boy has beenaccused of doing cartwheelsin the nude in a conveniencemarket while his companionsallegedly stole beer.

The teen-ager is one of fivebeing held in a youth center.They are charged with pettylarceny, illegal consumptionof alcohol, illegal possessionof drugs and investigation ofarmed robbery.

In addition, the streaker ischarged with indecent ex-posure.

The youths were taken into•custody by a Snohomish Coun-ty deputy after,a clerk at themarket reported the incident.The sheriffs office said beerand a pistol were found in thebrush near their auto.

basis of January 1972 payscales was adopted 57 to 20.Hartke said its first-year costwould be $343 million.

Senate.-consideration of thebill' is -^expected to extendthrough Tuesday of next weekwith a possible closed sessionMonday:: to discuss nuclearweaponspolicy.

Sen. Thomas J. Mclntyre,D-N.H.'£ has proposed anamendment to eliminate fromthe bill three new programscosting $77 million to improvethe yield and accuracy of U.S.strategic missiles.

"The food industry bearsthe responsibility for givingthe homemaker the guidanceshe needs," said John Gage,Roche food-nutrition market-ing manager. "And one of thebest ways is eas ier- to-understand food labels withclearer nutritional informa-tion."

Crisis Calls"Alcoholics

Anonymous 234-9434Cedar Falls ...277-1453

•Northeast Councilon Alcohol ism 235-5571

•Black Hawk CountyDrug Council 233-9288

•Ambulance •(commercial! 234-0361

•Birthright CrisisLine ". 233-7288

•Crime Check 291-4274•Crisis Line 234-6603•Fire Department

andinhalatorunit ..291-4277-•Dial-A-Devotion 234-4517•Police Dept. Suicide

Prevention SevereEmotional or MentalProblems 291-4264

•Venereal Disease ....291-2417•School Information

Service ... .235-6780, 235-6789•Joynt

Inc..-. !..(319) 277-3141

Tour canceledLONDON (AP) — The Jack-

son Five, an American rockgroup, has canceled a tour ofBritain for fear of a repetitionof the mass hysteria thatgreeted singer David Cassidy.

A 14-year-old girl suffered afatal heart attack at a Cassidyconcert in London as 35,000other fans surged forward tosee the singer.

A spokesman for Ihe Jack-son Five said Thursday thetour scheduled for this monthwas called off after "lengthytransatlantic telephone con-versations."

The narcotic hashish ismade from the tops and ten-der parts of hemp.

I?.

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