Kokomo Tribune (Newspaper) - October 9, 1975, Kokomo, Indiana Newspaper publishes SLA document SAN FRANCISCO AP Members of the Liberation Army kidnaped Patricia Hearst in tion for the arrest of two comrades in the murder of an Oakland school according to an SLA document published in part by the San Francisco Examiner The newspaper which did not say how it gained access to the material printed lengthy excerpts from an SLA manuscript which explained the Feb 4 1974 kidnaping of Miss Hearst whose father Randolph A Hearst is president of the Examiner The manuscript was included in a variety of written material from the San Francisco ment where SLA members and Emily Harris were living when they were arrested on Sept 18 Miss Hearst and artist Wendy Yoshimura were ar- rested later the same day at another apartment they shared here The manuscript quoted in the Ex- aminer apparently written by several SLA members said the Hearst was aimed at securing the release of SLA soldiers Russell tle and Joseph Remiro who were ar- rested Jan 10 1974 for the slaying of Marcus Foster We didn't have any doubt that the Hearst family could arrange for a re- lease of Osceola Little and Bo but we needed to know whether the pressure of their kidnaping would be enough to put this power into the manuscript said We were that the pigs had our two brothers and we all made a commitment at that time to come back strong One of the objectives of Continued on page 8 THE KOKOMO TRIBUNE THURSDAY OCTOBER 9 1975 Page two Taylor teacher negotiations continue with some agreement By PASQUALE ROCCHIO Negotiations between the Taylor Education Association TEA and the Taylor School Board are continuing Galen Hodge board president said Wednesday night Yet to be initialed are the school endar teacher hours and salary Proposals have been handed back and forth and the board went into tive session after its meeting to discuss a teacher salary proposal Agreement has been reached on ex- pay coaches salaries and a grievance procedure Negotiation between TEA and the board began in February An unfair labor practice charge was filed May 19 by TEA against the board tions continued into June but stalled until a decision was reached on the charge A decision in favor of the teachers was handed down Aug 19 In the deci- sion the board was ordered to all the items which had been in the 1970 teachers contract On Aug 27 the board met with John City Council Hot Line promises to give answers A new service to provide immediate answers to questions relating to fairs of the Kokomo Common Council will go into operation Tuesday Dubbed City Council Hot the service will originate from the of- fice of Linda Boyd city clerk but seeking information are asked not to call the clerk's regular tele- phone number Instead to receive a response on council matters callers are to dial The new number will be operational Mondays through Fridays between 8 and 4 p.m according to Mrs Boyd who said problems can be dis- cussed with her or directly with the councilman involved through a tele- phone conference arrangement I know there have been times when people had a complaint or a problem and didn't know whom to Mrs Boyd stated noting that by use of the new service questions can be cleared up within minutes Extended office hours and the vice of the clerk's violation bureau have been beneficial to the public in the past four years and hopefully the Council Hot Line will be another community service that will benefit the clerk remarked Mrs Boyd said she is not adding personnel to her office to handle the new service and its only cost will be for the telephone billings For some reason fall leaves are brighter reds this year By TONY BARKER Anderson Daily Bulletin Written for Associated Press The colors may be brighter but briefer as Indiana tourists make their annual autumn pilgrimages in search of the state's renewed foliage The next two weekends may be the best times to view the annual cle according to Dave Herbst tor of Indiana state parks The colors will start to peak this he said This year it's ahead by about a week probably due to the amount of precipitation The wetness could however bring a quick end to the fall delights After mid-October when we have a few rains the leaves are loose en- ough that they are washed Herbst said They're definitely at their peak now State parks will stay open through early November offering all Beg your pardon Because of a Tribune error a story about James Henderson 20 115 E North St Tipton and Timothy Hiatt 21 Tipton 4 was incorrect in Wednesday's edition The pair was released from Tipton County Jail after spending 71 days be- hind bars not 17 days ties found during the summer except swimming The Mecca for those in search of fall beauty is Brown County State Park where the full time naturalist gram is in full swing Tom Fulton property manager at Brown County park said tourists may find something extra this fall For some reason the leaves are brighter this year than before with brighter reds and he said We've kicked it around here trying to find the reason but we can't put our finger on it The best time is from this point on We have the brightest colors now and it's continuing to improve I think it will peak this week and the lowing week Tourists have flocked to Brown County in the usual overwhelming numbers with no weekend motel remaining and only few rooms available during the week Adding to the annual attraction are fish fries bluegrass music and square dancing on weekends but those ents are hardly restricted to Brown County The State Division of Tourism lists several fall festivals throughout the state highlighted by the annual Covered Bridge Festival in Parke County E Fell Jr to discuss the charge The board had 20 days from Aug 19 to peal the ruling before the Indiana Employes Relations Board Deciding not to appeal the board began negotiations Sept 1 Since that time five meetings have been held Current teacher contracts expire Dec 31 and both sides hope that will not last that long Edwin Berndt board member fied the board that through tions his insurance company now dles the school corporation's ance The Hardy Agency which had been been awarded the insurance last year was sold to the and Hatch Insurance Agency On Oct 1 the agency of fully bid on the business of that agency Berndt told the board he will re- sign if the board thinks he should However Hodge said that he sees no conflict of interest now because the bid had been accepted when Berndt was not a part of the agency He added that there may be a conflict when insurance bids are requested again by the board Dr Gerald Essington ent said that the construction and renovation approved by the board is almost complete The tennis courts and all-weather track have been aled the electric capacitor have ved and soon will be installed the storeroom at the Indian Heights mentary School is near completion Dr Essington also asked about the feasibility of placing a repair service for buses on retainer He said he had contacted Steve's Service town but no decision had been re- ached The board agreed that it would be a good idea A dinner for previous board bers and township trustees is set for Nov 7 in the Taylor High School The Home Economics Club will cook and serve The High School Swing Choir will perform Stars meet Hirohito LOS Charlton Heston left and John Wayne center are introduced to Emperor Hirohito of Japan at a civic reception in Los Angeles Wednesday Shakes hands with stars for the Emperor and Empress Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley is at right Each of the Americans is about 6 feet 4 inches tall The royal couple is in California for three days AP Wirephoto Hirohito greets Mickey Mouse LOS ANGELES AP Japanese Emperor Hirohito fulfilled a long cherished desire in a daylong visit here eating California avocados amid mariachi music and shaking hands with two of his favorite personalities John Wayne and Mickey Mouse The emperor was scheduled to fly to San Diego today for a tour of the city's acclaimed zoo and to visit the Scripps Institute of Oceanography in nearby La Jolla He flies to San Francisco late in the day for his stop on a U.S tour The emperor's plane circled the Grand Canyon briefly before arriving here from Chicago on Wednesday and he later rode a tiny steam-engine train through a Disneyland exhibit showing the evolution of the national landmark The emperor and Em- press Nagako were greated at the amusement park gate Wednesday by Mickey Mouse and the Seven Dwarfs then were seated on wrought-iron chairs for a command performance of the park's musical salute to the tennial America on Parade Hirohito and his wife earlier were hosted by Mayor Tom Bradley and other state and local officials ing Gov Edmund G Brown Jr at a lavish luncheon in the downtown sic Center The lunch included filet and California wines and Hirohito's inter- est was piqued by the avocados in his salad and the music of a Mexican mariachi band in the hall He toasted the mayor and citizens of Los Angeles before stopping briefly to chat with actors John Wayne and Charlton ton on the way out Hirohito is a Wayne fan and had met Heston some years ago in Tokyo ing the Japanese premiere of the movie the emperor's news secretary said The emperor ended his day by ing with members of the community Biofeedback appears to be curing illnesses TUCSON Ariz AP back a technique that is still pretty much of a is curing chronic illnesses by teaching patients to tap power within their own minds doctors reported at a national medical seminar Speakers at the first National Con- gress on Integrative Health said that patients using back have learned to alter their blood pressure stop migraine headaches and control asthma attacks simply by concentration Biofeedback is the yoga of the said Dr Elmer Green head of the psychophysiology laboratory at the Menninger Clinic in Topeka Kan an institution pioneering re- search in the technique He said biofeedback harnesses the placebo the well-documented phenomenon of patients improving merely from suggestion after taking a fake medicine The placebo effect is one of the most powerful things known to said Dr Green That power hasn't been utilized Biofeedback uses sensors that tor a patient's skin temperature brain function or nerve action These signals are amplified and then dis- played on a dial The patient is shown the dial reading and told to change it simply by concentration Dr Green said that patients in fect are taught to consciously affect some bodily functions which normally are controlled by the unconscious mind A high rate of success of the nique has been shown for matic illnesses or ailments with a mental instead of physical origin Dr Green claims that 50 to 80 per cent of all medical complaints originate from psychological stress Dr Arthur E Gladman a nia psychiatrist reported he has used biofeedback to treat successfully such disorders as migraine headache Disease a circulatory asthma peptic ulcer and chronic pain He said he has used the technique on 175 patients and some degree of success with each one but he admits backs is still pretty much of a tery His patients ranged in age from 11 to 84 and all had ailments caused by some type of emotional and stress He said that often the beneficial went far beyond the original complaint Many patients feel they are at the control of outside said the psychiatrist When they develop a way to control internal forces they develop a new awareness of self It en- ables individuals to view the world in a new way The reports came on the first day of the meeting sponsored by the demy of Parapsychology and cine It has attracted doctors from 30 states PROCLAIM USA With Portuguese opponents 80 injured in leftist clash President's airline proposal meets with strong opposition States LV New stomps WASHINGTON The U.S Postal Service Wednesday an- designs for two new stamps which will be issued in con- with proposed new postage rates expected to take effect shortly after Christmas At top is a Liberty Bell stamp and at bottom it a can Flag over Independence Hall stamp AP Wirephoto OPORTO Portugal AP supporting mutinous soldiers clashed with opponents over- night and hospital authorities said be- tween GO and 80 persons were injured two with bullet wounds Most of the victims including six soldiers were injured during battles between the two groups they said It was impossible to fix the origin of the shots in the general confusion At the height of the demonstration rebel troops fired blanks at the crowd of several thousand and drove a tank into the midst of the crowd in an at- tempt to break up the demonstration outside their barracks The demonstration grouping about members of the centrist Popular Democratic party began in the heart of Portugal's second largest city 175 miles north of Lisbon The demonstrators shouted their support for Portugal's current moderate Large sections of the crowd then crossed a bridge over the Douro River and headed for the rebel artillery re- barracks where they were confronted by a few hundred leftists who are camping outside the quarters in support of the mutineers There were battles and charges behind makeshift wooden shields by both sides before the firing broke out and the military regiment sent in its tank The mutineers arc demanding the reinstatement of leftist activists ged from military units Fear of civil war has increased in Portugal as more and more army un- its have taken sides between ate leftists who control the ment and the radical left which preaches revolution The moderates led by the Socialists and the Popular Democrats who won two thirds of the vote in April's tional elections seek restoration of traditional discipline within the tary while the Communists have promoted dissent The current Portuguese ment is the sixth since military re- formers overthrew the old rightist regime in April 1974 The Communists say the ary ferment in the armed forces is not chaos and anarchy but a lively expression of the struggle of working people and an affirmation that der in the armed forces can only be at- by removing reactionaries from posts of command Seeking to avoid conflict that could escalate into civil war the northern military command Wednesday Senior Citizens Center dedication to be Friday Dedication of the new addition to the Senior Citizens Center in Foster Park will take place 10 Friday The recreation center has been ex- to provide more space for ior citizen's activities Mayor John M Peacock who will preside over the ceremony said the project had been for the past 12 years and has finally come to reality He explained county and city senior can use the building for meetings and recreation Stale and regional directors of the Council on Aged and Aging will attend the ceremony a full alert in the northern tor and began trying to talk the into ending their rebellion A command spokesman said 500 diers of the Serra do Pilar artillery re- giment were joined by 150 soldiers from other units in the mutiny which began Tuesday Hospitalized Martha Mitchell estranged wife of former Arty Gen John N Mitchell is hospitalized for a serious bone marrow disease says Dr Thomas E O'Brien who is treating her O'Brien said Tuesday night that Mrs Mitchell has a type of nancy that is not a cancer in the strict sense of the word AP photo WASHINGTON AP President Ford's plan aimed at stimulating competition in the air transportation industry is drawing strong opposition from airlines Ford announced Wednesday he is asking Congress to remove some of the authority of the Civil Aeronautics Board to allow airlines more freedom to raise and lower fares and to start and stop service between cities Administration officials contended the legislation would result in lower over-all air fares for the public by stimulating competition Major airlines objected to the posal saying it would lead to higher prices and turn the nation's tation system into chaos The heads of House and Senate subcommittees involved with ies of airlines indicated agreement with the effort to make air travel more affordable but withheld diate judgment on the Ford proposal Rep Glenn Anderson chairman of the House Public Works aviation subcommittee called Ford's proposal commendable Sen Howard Cannon head of the Senate Commerce Committee's tion subcommittee said I admit there is too much regulation I am not ready to form a judgment on the lation until I sec it Much opposition to the Ford posal was aimed at a provision that would let airlines start or stop service on routes This proposal which would be effective Jan 1 1981 would allow airlines to begin flights on routes which they now have no CAB ity to serve It also would let them halt service on unprofitable routes unless the federal state or local government agreed to subsidize losses The Air Transport Association resenting scheduled airlines said Ford's proposal would tear apart a national air transportation system recognized as the finest in the world Federal fund exceeds million Kokomo's and Howard County's receipts from federal FRS exceeded million Thursday as the result of checks covering the third quarter of 1975 W Mary Craig auditor reported that the county's latest share was in the amount of According to Controller John F Daly the city's new portion of FRS is Each of those two units of ment is expected to receive ble sums for the fourth quarter of 1975 and the first and second quarters of before the current law Index Editorials 4 Farm News 7 Stocks hospitals births and deaths 5 Ing the expires June 30 Family news Sports Television 28 Comics 30 Classified ads Since the program began in late 1972 the city's FRS receipts have amounted to while those for the county have totaled