Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, February 7,1976
Page 14
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People
Singer honored
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) — Singer Bette Midler has
been chosen “Woman Os The Year” by Harvard’s Hasty
Pudding Club.
She will be feted in a gala parade followed by an award
presentation and a preview of the theatrical club’s 128th
production, an original musical comedy.
The award is given as a tribute to women of the theater
who demonstrate “great artistic skill and feminine quali
ties.”
Chapin wins parole
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Dwight L. Chapin, who was
appointments secretary to former President Richard
Nixon, has won parole from jail.
The U.S. Parole Board decided Friday to let Chapin out
of the Lompoc, Calif., minimum security prison April 2,
after Vh months of imprisonment for his conviction on
charges of lying to the Watergate grand jury.
U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell reduced
Chapin’s sentence from 30 months to 10 months and
recommended that Chapin be “paroled as soon as
possible.”
They love him
CINCINNATI (UPI) — They may boo him in Boston, but
they love him in the Bahamas.
Cincinnati Reds outfielder Ed Armbrister, the Bahama
Island native involved in the biggest controvery of last
year’s World Series against the Boston Red Sox, has been
selected “Bahamian of the Year” for 1975.
Boston claimed Armbrister had interfered with Red Sox
catcher Carlton Fisk on a key play which helped the Reds
win the third game of the series.
Allman arrested
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Rock musician Greg Allman,
husband of entertainer Cher Bono Allman, was arrested
on the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood Friday for failure to
pay a traffic ticket.
A deputy sheriff halted Allman’s car for failing to have
a current tag on his license plate, and a radioed check of
the license number revealed a computer record of a
warrant for Allman’s arrest. The warrant was from
Beverly Hills for failure to respond to a ticket issued for
not posessing the car’s registration.
Anthrax
death
reported
MORRO BAY, Calif. (UP!) —
Dennis Friend, a small time
California weaver, died last
month of anthrax. On Friday,
the Consumer Product Safety
Commission said balls of
Pakistani yarn infected with
the disease may be in retail
stores across the country.
Health authorities in San Luis
Obispo County said Friend, 32,
owner of the Friend of the
Loom Co., died of an anthrax
strain extremely rare in the
United States. He was only the
15th American victim this
century.
Friend caught the disease
from anthrax spores carried in
goat wool he imported from
Pakistan, officials said.
The yarn was distributed by
Tahki Imports Ltd. of Teaneck,
N.J., which cooperated with
safety commission officials in
Washington in issuing a war
ning. It carries labels which
read “Tahki Imports Ltd. —
imported from Pakistan.”
The commission said the
contaminated balls of yam,
which may have been distribut
ed to retail stores across the
country in the past year, were
of various types, including 100
per cent camel’s hair, camel’s
hair combined with both gray
and black goat’s hair, wool and
wool combined with goat’s hair
or rayon.
Persons having the yarn balls
on garments made from them
should not try to destroy them
but seal them in an airtight
double plastic bag and contact
state or local health authorities,
the commission said.
Welder left
SIOO,OOO
for institute
CHICAGO (UPI) - A welder
who did more than 20 years of
volunteer work for the Field
Museum of Natural History,
has left the institution about
1100,000.
The museum said Friday that
Adolph Marx, a welder, died
last October at age 81.
A spokesman for the museum
said the gift “came as a
complete surprise.”
He said Marx appeared at the
museum more than 20 years
ago and offered to take charge
of “visitor services,” at first
working three hours a day
gratis. The spokesman said
Marx spent his weekends at
two other museums.
<
Now at
General Tire
Whitewall Tire
Sale
1976 New Car T * re
7he famous glass-belted
BA General Jumbo 780. The same
! ■ I I TTF tire you’H see on many of
Hw tEBbI Detroit’s 1976 new cars.
I ■BO $ 99 95
size A7B-13
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•' plus $1.75 Federal Excise Tax
Charge it
atGenerai BankAmericard
weuvgnrwt • Diners Club
~ ' Amer ' Can Express
POPULAR SIZES TIRE SALE
DEC. 1975 WHITEWALL DEC. 1975 WHITEWALL
REGULAR SALE REGULAR SALE
SIZE PRICE PRICE F.E.T. SIZE PRICE PRICE F.E.T.
*7843 $31.95 $22.95 $1.75 H7B-14 $*3.95 $34.95 $2.83
£7844 $35.95 $27.95 $2.27 G7B-15 $41.95 $32.95 $2.65
67844 $40.95 $31.95 $2.60 H7B-15 $«-95 $35.95 $2.87
SALE ENDS FEBRUARY 14, 1976
RAIN CHECK: Should our supply of some sizes or lines run short during this event, we will honor any orders
placed now for future delivery at the advertised price.
® MID-GA. BANDAG, INC.
Slorwt. Compel- f
itlwly priced at _ ,
dealer* displaying 812 Everee Inn Road Phone 227-3355
th* General sign
*■ Sooner or later, youll own Generals ————-
Patty
may tell
of SLA
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Patricia Hearst’s lawyers say
there’s “a good chance” she’ll
talk publicly for the first time
Monday about her days with
the Symbionese Liberation
Army.
Her forum would be a
hearing before U.S. District
Court Judge Oliver J. Carter on
the admissibility of evidence on
her activities after the April 14,
1974, bank robbery for which
she is standing trial.
Al Johnson, partner of chief
defense counsel F. Lee Bailey,
told reporters after court
recessed for the weekend it is
likely Miss Hearst will be
called as a witness during the
hearing.
The hearing will decide the
course of Prosecutor James L.
Browning Jr., who finished
presenting testimony Friday on
the holdup of a San Francisco
bank by Miss Hearst and four
SLA terrorists on April 15,1974.
During the first two days of
testimony, the prosecution pre
sented 19 witnesses and and 80-
second movie of the robbery to
establish without question that
Miss Hearst carried a carbine
into the bank and fled with the
bandits. The defense already
had conceded those points.
But two of the government’s
witnesses also said flatly that
Miss Hearst pointed a gun at
them, threatened with foul
language to kill them and
forced them to lie on their
faces on the lobby floor.
Bailey managed to cast
considerable doubt on the
account of a bank guard, but he
ran into a tough witness in a
bank customer, who stuck by
his story that the defendant
was the one who threatened,
with a burst of obscenity, to
blow his head off.
Nancy has surgery
BOSTON (UPI) — Nancy
Kissinger will be able to
continue her hectic life-style if
surgery to remove part of her
stomach is successful, accord
ing to the chief surgeon at
Massachusetts General Hos
pital.
Dr. Gerald Austen was
scheduled to operate on the
wife of Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger today to
remove a gastric ulcer, which
has bothered her for nine
years.
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JOHN
KATHARINE
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PwdMOD, ARTHUR R DUBS Mt*!* STEWART RAEfIU. I*Sonp dv LEE DRESSER
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2nd Week
PARKWOOD CINEMA I
New Showtimes
Sat. 4 Sun. 8-8-10 P.M.-Weekdays 8-8 P.M.
Mrs. Kissinger, accompanied
by her husband, checked into
the hospital at 4:15 p.m. EST
Friday. She was examined by a
team of physicians shortly after
her admission and the decision
to operate was announced about
7 p.m.
“The operative plan will
depend on findings at time of
surgery, but will almost cer
tainly consist of removing the
distal portion of the stomach,
that portion which empties into
small intestine,” said Austen.