Newspaper Page Text
Page 8
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, November 21,1974
Saxbe wants to give
legal lottery nudge
WASHINGTON (UPI) - At
torney General William B.
Saxbe wants Congress to pass a
law legalizing the publication
and broadcast of state lottery
numbers before it goes home in
December.
Otherwise, he told a Senate
judiciary subcommittee Wed
nesday, the Justice Department
might start enforcing federal
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• gambling laws and seeking
injunctions against the 13 state
lotteries.
Lotteries are operated in
Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois,
Maine, Maryland, Massa
chusetts, Michigan, New Ham
phire, New Jersey, New York,
Ohio, Pennsylvania and Rhode
Island.
Saxbe said he supported
legislation proposed by Sen.
Philip Hart, D-Mich., to permit
mailing and broadcasting lot
tery information within a state,
but prohibiting interstate ac
tivity.
He also endorsed a similar
bill by Sens. Hugh Scott, R-Pa.,
and Richard S. Schweiker, R-
Pa., which would allow inter
state activity if it included an
amendment prohibiting such
information from going into
states which rejected lotteries.
In other testimony New York
lottery official Ronald Mai
orana said annual sales in that
state’s lottery could be in
creased about 50 per cent if the
federal prohibitions were
removed “thereby generating
additional millions of dollars
for public education.”
Current federal law forbids
the moving of lottery material
across state lines, mailing or
broadcasting lottery informa
tion and participation of feder
ally chartered banks in lottery
operations.
Patient Research
Madame Curie’s work to
isolate the element radium
was made difficult by the
fact that one ton of
pitchblende, the ore she was
using, contains only one
tenth of one gram of radium.
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Rescue worker with body of child killed in crash.
Airline tragedy investigated
By RAYMOND WILKINSON
NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) -
West German officials launched
an investigation today into the
“mysteries” behind the first
fatal crash of the world’s
biggest commercial airliner.
A Lufthansa Boeing 747 with
157 persons aboard faltered
seconds after takeoff Wednes
day and plunged tail first into a
muddy field a mile from the
end of the runway at Nairobi
International Airport.
A Lufthansa official said
today 59 persons were con
firmed dead and 98 survived.
Officials said the fate of one
passenger was still unknown.
The Johannesburg-bound jet
apparently lost power seconds
after leaving the ground and
fell back onto the field.
The five-story tall plane hit
the ground, snapping off with a
great splintering crash. The
plane twisted in an 180-degree
arc and exploded in flames.
Pilot Christian Krack said he
“was taking off normally. The
plane broke up and was
suddenly going down. I don’t
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know what happened.”
Lufthansa sent nearly 100
West German investigators to
Kenya to uncover the cause of
the East African crash.
“We have only mysteries,”
Lufthansa spokesman Karl Win
genroth said. “It was a normal
takeoff. We just don’t know
what happened.”
It was the first crash of a 747
jumbo jet since the giant
aircraft went into service five
years ago. The 747 is consid
ered by pilots to be one of the
safest passenger planes in the
world.
Survivors praised the pilot
and the cabin crew for their
calm and efficiency in getting
passengers out of the plane
before it exploded.
“We hit a huge mound and
then the roadway,” said 51-
year-old Edmund Senkier of
Seattle, Wash. “But for that
I’m sure the pilot would have
brought her down safely with
few casualties.”
His wife, Elinor, said she
didn’t even have time to be
afraid.
“I saw the ground coming up
quickly and thought ‘Oh my
God,”’ she said. “We hit the
ground and spun around about
180 degrees. All the overhead
plastic luggage racks collapsed
on us like a pack of cards.”
Samuel Ouma, a Kenyan
cameraman and one of the first
to reach the burning crash, said
bodies were flung in a wide
area around the plane.
A Kenyan civil aviation
official said the aircraft’s flight
recording box was saved.
Airline experts said sabotage
was not suspected.
SHE CAME BACK
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
(UPI) — An East Palo Alto
woman who gave a local food
market a SSO check that
bounced was arrested when she
returned the next day.
Sheriff’s deputies said Jean
Barker, 37, had 36 such checks
outstanding against her.
She told officers she returned
to the same market to “take
advantage of the sale. I haven’t
seen sausage priced that low in
a long time.”