The Times Recorder (Newspaper) - January 8, 1971, Zanesville, Ohio Today's Chuckle Sign octette IB te Get The Times Your Today's Weather FORECAST and mot as today with a snow Page 107TH PAGES 43701 8, 1971 TEN CENTS 1 Withdrawal Date Set It's Hard To Believe beard of hard water this is Seems to be the thoughts of this Mallard drake as he examines the face Park After a night of he awoke to find his favorite end hid gotten by Machine Eats Old Cars that shreds old cars to the size of large cornflakes was in operation The huge machinery complex was installed at Iron and Metal Co. 'The process was described as. the first of its kind in the United The which weighs 2.1 million pounds with its was built and erected from component parts developed by 13 different For several years efforts have been directed towards improvement of junk car The goal was to lower the copper reduce the melting loss and cut processing costs to the demanding criteria of the steel singeing and magnetic separators work together in the to scorch and separate the ferrous and nonferrous Elzinga and a Holland construction firm which provided the concrete bases and lie engineering and design for the that cost nearly said the operation provides the refinement sary to satisfy the steel A complete junk less tires and is fed onto a at one end of the machine and emerges two minutes later at the other end like One operator can control the machine from a 20-foot elevated control A panel board shows the ing condition of each component and signals or delays Chat might Held WASHINGTON first federal census of city and county jail inmates showed that more than half had not been convicted of the charges for which they were being the government reported Of the persons who were in the nation's local lockups March 15, the date of the 35 per cent had been arraigned but were awaiting trial and 17 per cent still had not appeared in court at all or were being detained for other The total inmate population Included The done by the U.S. Census Bureau for the Justice Department's Law ment Assistance Administration also found that many city and county jail inmates kept in than human for various The made public by Attorney General John N. were gathered as part of a broad study of the nation's jails and provided what was described as the accurate measurement of jail Richard W. associate said the full report win be issued later tins year it will contain detailed information on such critical areas as over- lack of facilities and age of The jails surveyed are those which confine inmates 48 hours or State facilities and local lockups like drunk tanks were not Velde said preliminary sis of the census data showed that of the jails in cities and counties with over About 85 per cent had no recreational or educational facilities About SO per cent had no medical facilities and about 25 per cent were without visiting Nixon Denies Columnist Calif. Nixon denied Thursday that his tion was seeking in any way to obtain criminal indictments on outgoing Speaker of the House John W. Press Secretary Ronald ler said the President was disturbed by published reports that while publicly honoring the retiring Boston Democrat for half-century of public service he was behind bis back to pin criminal charges on The allegations were made by Washington columnist Jack Anderson who said titat three of McCormack's dose friends who were invited to a White House for him were before a grand jury investigating the veteran maker's would like to state quite categorically that any tion that the Nixon tion is trying in any way to pin criminal charges on Speaker as the column suggests is totally and ly false and without any foundation Ziegler the President also requested that I as he said before that he has the highest admiration and respect for Speaker The denial was an unusual departure from the normal White House procedure of ignoring such charges and was an indication of the American Harassed In Moscow MOSCOW sian men stopped an American diplomat outside a Moscow the diplomat said grasped him by his lapels while his wife looked on and would you like to be treated the way Zionist thugs treat our diplomats in The Wednesday night street scene marked the first incident of physical harassment suffered by Americans since the Soviets indicated Tuesday there could reprisals for attacks upon Russians in the United State ment spokesman John F. King disclosed that the United States had again rejected a Soviet contention that it might not be able to insure the safety of Americans in A steady stream of Soviet citizens delegations entered the U.S. Embassy peaceably to deliver protest letters over the report abuse of Russians in At least five such numbering about 23 persons ranging from factory hands to had visited the embassy by The who asked not to be said he talked his way out of the tense situation and parted with a round of Wil 1 Vietnam Combat WASHINGTON ground combat role in South Vietnam will end with the completion of the current phase of U.S. troop withdrawals May 1, administration officials said Defense Secretary Melvin R. in on a inspection said that most U.S. forces a combat assignment or a combat will been withdrawn by May 1. The remaining ground com- bat in he would be assigned a security Concern Expressed On Drugs SAIGON man of a House Armed Services subcommittee probing drug abuse by American servicemen said Thursday night that if the downfall of G. Elliot and four members of his subcommittee arrived in Saigon 24 hours after the U.S. command released a 50- page directive to units outlining steps to check an explosion of drug use by American men in Hagan said he was about the findings in the which said up to 45 per cent of all American servicemen In Vietnam are believed to naive used hard drugs or It said deaths due to drugs were as much as 70 per cent higher than previously Besides providing an amnesty program for soldiers on the directive ordered air and ground searches for marijuana fields and ordered barracks and baggage and mail It also ordered a 13-fold increase in dogs trained to sniff out Hagan am very impressed the amnesty I'm delighted to see action has been The subcommittee has held hearings on the problem for more than six when we began this the situation looked pretty he committee has taken testimony that most of the front line troops police he of them wants to be next to a man that's high in a combat These people indicate tha it's mostly a leisure time and weekend Page A B B Church A B B A A Earl B Financial B Hospital A Jeane A Memory A Police A State A Sports B A Women's A protecting themselves and the remaining support Both Laird and Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim emphasized that U.S. and artillery forces still would be shooting and being shot at after the phase of the war is And ese units wiH continue to be heavily laced with U. S. But there will be no new combat missions initiated on the no new military objectives and sent beyond the ibase camp officials A mild dispute arose over the number of combat personnel that will remain in South Vietnam after the May 1 target when total U.S. troop now is ed to be below said more than combat troops would but other sources said only few would be retained in the security The actual total probably will not be known for some and seemed likely to somewhere between these two of file dispute involved The which defines combat troops to include everyone in fire bases and forward camp said the ratio in Vietnam has been maintained at about six support troops to four combat Laird was using that tion when fie said last October that 40 to 60 per cent of the residual force would have a security role after the phase one ground combat mission Cambodia Supply Airlift Studied PENH authorities were reported Thursday to be considering establishment of a Berlin to fly desperately needed fuel supplies to to ease a Communist blockade of road and river shipments to the Cambodian Diplomatic sources in Phnom Penh said American military transport planes may have to be used Co transport petroleum to the capital if the Communist stranglehold on 4 to the country's only oil refinery in the southwest cannot be The Communists also have been turning back oil barges trying to reach the city up the Mekong sources said they were predicting an American airlift but it is quite They also said they expected tighter gas in the Cambodian capital in coming Frederick C. deputy U.S. com- mander in South flew to Penh Thursday to confer with Premier Lon concerning the fuel crisis and the general deterioration in Cambodia's military Defense Secretary Melvin R. who is to arrive in. Saigon may make the determination as to whether the is a scheduled meeting with Adm. John S. commander in the 1948 and 1949, after the Soviets blockaded ground traffic to West the United States and Britain set up a marathon to supply the isolated transporting more than two million tons of food and Elsewhere in bombers struck the northern corner of South Vietnam for the third time this week in effort to shut off new Communist supply To the South Vietnamese troops sweeping the U Minh a longtime Viet Cong stronghold in the Mekong killed 41 Com- military spokesmen Just outside the coastal city of Qui a huge South Vietnamese ammunition dump blew up early touching off a series of daylong explosions of thousands of tons of Three civilians were killed and two others Soviet Sentence MOSCOW Soviet army court martial Thursday sentenced Jewish Maj. Wolf Zalmanson to ten years in prison for his part an the Leningrad hijack Jewish sources said on Diamonds Stolen ZURICH lone dit Thursday forced two em- ployees of a downtown jewel business to hand over unset diamonds valued at then escaped into noontime police Vienna Blackout VIENNA power failure blacked out Vienna's historic and five other of tide city's 23 districts for 33 minutes late company officials blamed the failure on overuse of the system due to the current cold The ature was 16 degrees below zero at the 21 Persons Drown SEOUL passenger ferry collided with a fishing boat outside the port city of Thursday and Police said 21 persons Survivors estimated 90 sons were aboard the 24-ton ferry which was hit by a 60-ton fishing boat off 200 miles south of Mercury May Force Oi f Market WASHINGTON Food and Drug Administration issued reassuring statistics Thursday on mercury content of canned tuna but it said there was so much mercury in swordfish it might vanish from the American The half finished with sample tests of the nation's entire canned tuna said ft found excess mercury in less than 2 per cent and was recalling 1.2 million cans from the market in addition to nearly one million cans recalled last Initial announced Dec. 15, found excessive mercury in 23 per cent of a much smaller Even the FDA Yesterday It Was Vacant Today it's rented thanks to a fast acting want ad RENTED FIRST PAY 2 and Maple Ave Water sewer Ph. or Ph To place your ad just dial 452- 4561 and ask for Classified The Times Recorder said tuna was safe to The new findings reinforced that FDA officials Virgil 0. director of the Bureau of said test of other indicated housewives need not fear their diet is tainted with the poisonous liquid done a market basket survey on a broad variety of foods and we supplemented this with spot Wodicka told a news the only problem area we've found is the problem were tuna and and in neither of these is the problem critical enough for the housewives to worry Mercury content above the safety limit of 05 parts per million was found in 89 per cent of the swordfish but Wodicka said FDA tions were keeping tainted fish off the market Since burden of proof lies with the most wholesalers are rejecting swordfish catches unless the supplier can prove the mercury content is not FDA of said expect swordfish to go off the market unless a solution is