Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, March 10, 1977, Page Page 13, Image 13
Relatives of hostages can’t relax By VICTORIA GRAHAM Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - “Relax and be patient,” says the sign under the big red cross on the door of the church. But the people inside are not relaxed. They are not patient. “How can we relax? Our mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers — the people we love are there,” asks a girl who waits. Ebbing and flowing, about 100 people wait for word about the fate of their relatives and friends who were taken hostage by terrorists Wednesday at the B’nai B’rith headquarters several blocks away. They wait in a brightly lit, cot-lined basement of the Foundry Methodist Church. The mood is quiet, almost fragile. People speak very gently and politely. Two women hold hands, relatives embrace. But there is a current of anger. Here and there, angry young men in jeans and track shoes huddle and mutter. They come in. They leave without explanation. One young man exercises on the floor, stretching his legs, while a man being interviewed on television spouts hatred for Jews. The young man curses and sneers. Later in the evening, the families meet with Dan Thursz, executive vice president of B’nai B’rith. He is trying to compile an accurate list of hostages, and he begins reading names from payroll records, guest books > OPEN HOUSE 2 A March 11 and 12 L ? Friday 4-6 P.M. Sat 2-5 P.M. 4 » • .• *«.■ 3 bedroom, 2 full baths Cedar Home. Great room > with fireplace. Nice big deck on back - Formal A t) dining room. Central heat, air and vacuum systems UR. fl - intercom system - many, many extras. Crescent S School. Directions: Go S. 6th St., turn right on Maddox - fl y then left on Middlebrooks Road to Cedar Hills jkf Subdivision-Look for Sale Sign in front of L •S) house. 154,900.00 ? £ A&D Realty I 4 924 W. Taylor St. 228-6666 A I jMBf MR * p* ne : □ ill laaal t |3 AJF\ ' *" H '^** — ** _ * |3 a *** ' SS Sa R*X’ I 1 S 3 il, MATTRESS AND BOX IKSHhHHHM' H| I springs INCLUDED I ’ H n ’ J^»!l MATTRESS AND BOX IlSagS^MI» H >*3» SPRINGS INCLUDED BBeE !> □ 8 p c< . TOUR CHOICE —» u Bedroom Group R?/ $ 399\ S O • Double Dresser • Chest • INCLUDES * K • Mattress • Box Springs • Rails X ? crG/zAH MATTRESS & X Qp r X»s£* !* M _———__| _. BOX SPRINGS / ° 3 W X AT NO x Bedroom Group 3 S CHARGE! • Double Dresser • Mirror • Chest • Bed jj W • Mattress • Frame 3 | We Save You Money I I Every Time You Buy! I and any other source he can find. These are the people he thinks were in the building when the terrorists struck. About 50 hushed people cluster around. Occasionally, a name is called and someone says that person is safe. “Are you sure?” Thursz asks. A name is taken from the list. But that happens rarely, and when Thursz is done, there are 120 names still on the list, still presumably on the eighth floor of the B’nai B’rith building. “I think it’s going to be a long wait,” Thursz says. Everyone clusters around the television for news -bulletins. Afterwards, the room is almost silent and the , television becomes a grotesque silent movie of comedies, commercials, singing and dancing. One woman takes out her knitting. One woman listens to a radio. A girl with a T-shirt that says “Shalom” picks away at a plastic cup. One man puffs a cigar. Another straddles a chair and buries his head in his arms. A woman declines a tranquilizer and gulps strawberry soda. Someone munches tuna sandwiches and ginger snaps. Joking, someone wonders if the hostages will be allowed kosher food. “They are very quiet and very controlled but the place reeks with fear, anger, and resentment,” says a woman bystander. After hearing of the gunmen’s demands, the people who wait shake their heads. “Fanatics,” says one man. “They’re crazy,” says another. ■Jr jmS »•<■ w MMKHMNMr' 1 ' -I • *'" * ’• ’? • • r Bp Protecive helmet LAUDERHILL, Fla.—Six-year old Patty Lovejoy Usses her mother after playing In a park. Patty wears a protective helmet during most of the day to protect her when she falls as a result of epilepsy. Patty has sometimes as many as 50 seizures a day. A $50,000 operation can help control the seizures but, so far the attempts to raise money has netted only $2,000. (AP) t t&r\ I 1 J C - JC — l — V , t{ - \_t ' l ,b CENTER |\W yx.VD&SocQtAaiq cl li_ .Cl /,sr) (J) i (/zi cc c B&ct HEAaXMRT^iD?7^77j?^CS2 Q CL Mh® TW°pI DisniEFia yfeS'lfeSjljl i I □□tjsCoftih’Fvhon Ave.'[ WASHINGTON, D.C | Map locates the three buildings, all within about a mile and a half from the White House, where in three apparently related assaults Wednesday, bands of riflemen, described as black Muslims, invaded the headquarters of the Jewish B’nai B’rith Organization, the Islamic Center, and the District Building, Washington’s city hall. (AP) Carter wishes gunman luck WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS, Ohio (AP) - Armed only with a good luck wish from President Carter, surrendered gunman Cory Moore is in county jail awaiting probable indictment on kidnaping charges resulting from his two day siege at City Hall here. Moore was jailed Wednesday after receiving a telephone call from Carter. Secret Service agents permitted no one to monitor the call. But as Moore was taken to the Cuyahoga County Jail in Cleveland in lieu of bonds total ing $200,000, he told reporters, “He (Carter) wished me luck.” As he had said he would, the unemployed ex-Marine surren dered peacefully Wednesday morning after a White House news conference in which Car ter mentioned Moore. Carter admitted that promis ing to talk to Moore even with the stipulation that he first re lease the second of two hostages might be setting a “dangerous precedent.” But moments after Carter completed the news conference — which Moore was watching Page 13 on a television he had swapped earlier in the siege for 17-year old hostage Shelley Kiggans — Moore freed police captain Leo Keglovic, 49, and gave him the two handguns he used to keep police at bay for 45 hours. Moore began the siege at the suburban Cleveland municipal office complex on Monday afternoon when he fired three shots from a .38 caliber revolver and took Keglovic and Miss Kiggans, a city employe, into a nearby room. Moore did not eat, drink or sleep for the duration of the siege. He spoke frequently on the telephone. Early in the takeover, he de manded that whites leave the Earth or at least bum all their money. For a while, he insisted that Carter broadcast an apolo gy for the way blacks have been treated in America since 1619. Police said Moore would go before the grand jury on the two kidnaping charges. Maximum punishment for the state 'charges is 25 years on each count and up to SI,OOO in fines per count. — Griffin Daily News Thursday, March 10,1977 Stic Him" Cady with: a Mighty Message,, A,: West College Baptist Church v *. 11 March 12 (Sat.) 7:30 P.M. . \ Hfe® In Griffin ■H 0 )• “Little Evelyn” "34 Inches of Dynamite” And The Davis Trio From Dallas, Ga. ★ Unusual testimony and miraculous experiences ★ ★ Music ministry across America & Canada ★ ★ ★ Gospel Record Artist Pastor, Rev. W. M. Coe Students ATLANTA (AP) — A group of students from Nancy Creek Elementary School in Atlanta left by train Wednesday to visit former classmate Emilv Pow ell, daughter of President Carter’s press secretary Jody Powell. About 40 fourth and fifth grade students, parents and teachers made the trip and were expected to arrive in Washington in time to take part in today’s ceremonies welcoming British Prime Minister James Callaghan to the United States. Deep! Deep! 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