Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News Wedhesday, October 25, 1972
Page 10
Jackson Birthplace
U.S. President Andrew
Jackson was born in either
North Carolina or South Car
olina — no one really knows
which. Jackson believed he
was born on a farm near
Waxhaw settlement, S.C.
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< ' * 41
MANUKA—Alejandro Melchor Jr. (1) executive secretary to Filipino President Ferdinand E.
Marcos, confers with Japanese Ambassador to the Philippines, Toshio Urabe (r) and Toshiro
Onada, elder brother wounded Japanese WWII straggler Second Lt. Hiroo Onada, as search
continues on Lubang Island for the wounded man. Onada was wounded and a companion
straggler, Kinshichi Kozuka was slain when they emerged from hiding and tried to, apparently,
steal food from an island farm. (UPI)
Newsman out of jail;
thinks he won fight
By JOHN NEEDHAM
NEWARK, N.J. (UPl)—Car
rying a brown paper bag with
his prison number scrawled on
it, newsman Peter Bridge left
the jail where he had spent 21
days for refusing to answer
grand jury questions. "I won in
the end, I think,” he said.
Bridge was the first newsman
imprisoned for contempt of
court since the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled June 20 that
newsmen could be compelled to
answer grand jury questions
concerning crime.
Superior Court Judge James
R. Giuliano said Tuesday the
Essex County Grand Jury
accused the reporter for the
defunct Newark Evening News
of “a misguided reliance upon
principle, especially when such
reliance interdicts an attempt
to obtain full disclosure of the
facts.”
Bridge, 36, said he would be
willing to stick by his principles
and go to jail for the same
reasons again.
He walked out of the Essex
County Jail Tuesday when
Giuliano dismissed the grand
jury and ordered Bridge freed.
Bridge said he was notified of
the move five minutes before
his court appearance.
He was jailed Oct. 4 for a
term to last as long as the
grand jury. It finished its
investigation of the Newark
Housing Authority (NHA) 10
days ago, but law required that
Bridge not be released for
another 10 days so public
officials named by the grand
jury could have time to appear.
The jury found there was no
substance to allegations that
organized crime had been
involved in the selection of the
NHA’s director.
Dressed in a green blazer and
black trousers, Bridge told
newsmen, “The prosecutor won
in court. I won in the end, I
think.”
“My plans right now are to
flk flk
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NEWARK, N.J.—Newsman Peter Bridge, displaying a big
smile and carrying his belongings, leaves the Essex County
Jail. He was jailed for 21 days for refusing to answer a grand
jury’s questions on grounds his replies might reveal
confidential information. (UPI)
go home,” he said. He is
thinking about writing articles
and perhaps a book about his
experience, has published a
jailhouse diary in a New York
newspaper and has received
several invitations to appear on
TV shows, Bridge said. In
addition, several news organiza
tion contributed about $2,000 to
him, said Bridge, who had been
idled by a lengthy strike
against the newspaper before it
folded.
Giuliano said the grand jury
claimed that “by reason of the
Briton, American win Nobel prize
STOCKHOLM (UPI) - John
R. Hicks of Britain and
Kenneth J. Arrow of the United
States today won the 1972 Nobel
Prize for economic science, the
Royal Swedish Academy of
Sciences announced.
Hicks and Arrow were
awarded for “their pioneering
contributions to the general
economic equilibrium theory
WRESTLING
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Free Parking Telephone Reservstions 228-0960
Laos leader
coming to U.S.
By NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Lao
tian Prime Minister Souvanna
Phoumk flies to the United
States today to confer with
Secretary of State William P.
Rogers on the latest Indochina
peace moves.
The Embassy said
Prince Souvanna would fly to
New York from Paris this
evening and come to Washing
ton Thursday.
State Department officials
said his visit had been “in the
gestation period for some time”
and was an annual visit. But
they acknowledged that
Souvanna was expected to
discuss a wide range of issues
with Rogers, including
Indochina diplomacy and U.S.
military and economic
assistance to Laos.
position taken by Mr. Bridge,
our investigation was hindered
and is incomplete.”
The grand jury questioned
Bridge about an article in
which he quoted NHA Commis
sioner Pearl Beatty as saying
she had been offered a SIO,OOO
bribe for her vote on a new
NHA executive director. Bridge
answered more than 35 ques
tions relating to the printed
story but contended that
questions concerning unpub
lished material might endanger
confidential sources.
and welfare theory,” the
academy said.
The economy award is worth
SIOO,OOO like the other Nobel
awards. But it is not one of the
original prizes. It was instituted
four years ago by the Bank of
Sweden in memory of Alfred
Nobel.
Hicks, of All Souls College in
Oxford, England, and Arrow of
The Royal Laotian govern
ment recently resumed discus
sions with the Pathet Lao, the
Laotian Communists.
The Laotian official said in
Paris Monday that he expected
an Indochina cease-fire to be
announced before the end of the
month but that a full peace
settlement would come later.
Souvanna was quoted as
saying “it’s difficult to tell when
actual peace will come” but
that a “cease-fire will come
inevitably, I think before the
end of the month.”
Souvanna’s visit to Washing
ton follows a visit to Laos last
week by William H. Sullivan,
deputy assistant secretary of
state for East Asian affairs and
former ambassador to Laos.
Sullivan, the State Depart
ment’s top Vietnam expert,
visited Saigon in the party of
presidential adviser Dr. Henry
A. Kissinger last week.
A State Department official
said that before coming to
Washington the prime minister
would meet at the United
Nations on Thursday morning
with U.N. Secretary General
Kurt Waldheim.
Souvanna will return to Paris
on Saturday.
Buildings
would fall
in quake
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—
About 1 per cent of the tall
buildings in the San Francisco
Bay area would collapse or
suffer severe damage in a
major earthquake, an engineer
ing expert warned Tuesday.
Karl V. Steinbrugge, profes
sor of structural engineering at
the University of California,
told a joint legislative commit
tee on seismic safety that
damage to the 1 per cent could
cause the loss of more than
1,000 lives.
If 2 per cent of the area’s
high-rises—buildings taller than
eight stories—collapsed, more
than 3,000 persons could die,
Steinbrugge said.
He said many of the potential
deaths are avoidable and urged
engineers to remember that
quakes could incapacitate ele
vators or collapse stairs,
trapping people in upper floors
of tall buildings.
Swim Program
Young seals can’t swim at
birth and have to learn to
swim, with aid from their
mother. When tired, the pup
is usually given a lift on the
mother’s back.
Harvard University, Cam
bridge, Mass., will share the
prize.
Hicks, bom in 1904, was
educated at Oxford and then
taught at the London School of
Economics from 1926 to 1935.
He served as a lecturer at
Cambridge until 1938 when he
was appointed a professor at
the University of Manchester.
He moved back to Oxford as a
professor in 1946.
Arrow Takes Degrees
Arrow, born 1921, took his
masters degree at Columbia
University, New York, in 1940
and his Ph.D. in 1951.
He served in the U.S. armed
forces 1942 to 1946 then started
his scientific career as a
research member of the Cowles
Commission in Chicago. Arrow
became a professor of econom
ic science of statistics at
Stanford University in 1949 and
moved to Harvard in 1968.
He served as an economic
adviser to President John F.
Kennedy in 1962 when he was a
member of the Council of
Economic Advisers.
Arrow is the third American
to win the prize which has been
awarded three times before. In
1970 Paul A. Samuelson was
awarded and last year Russian
born U.S. economist Simon
Kuznets won the prize.
He is also the eighth
American to win a share in the
1972 Nobel awards. Americans
have earlier won the awards
for chemistry, physics and a
share of the medicine prize. Sir
John is the first Briton to win a
share in the economy award.
747 HUACK
On Aug. 2, 1970, the first 747
jumbo jet was hijacked to Cuba
while en route from New York
to Puerto Rico.
A
SYRACUSE, N.Y.—Vice President Spiro Agnew holds the
gold whistle he is using lately to quiet hecklers that disrupt
his campaign speeches. When demonstrators drowned out
part of his speech in Utica, N.Y., Agnew blew his whistle
loudly and said, “Tliat’s five personal fouls, you’re out.”
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SAN DlEGO—Julie Nixon Eisenhower hears an explanation
on an electron microscope while touring Scripps Clinic and
Research Foundation during a visit here. (UPI)
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